wizard-engine
javy
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wizard-engine | javy | |
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6 | 6 | |
272 | 0 | |
- | - | |
9.7 | 5.3 | |
8 days ago | 11 months ago | |
WebAssembly | Rust | |
- | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
wizard-engine
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Wasmtime 1.0
Congrats to the Wasmtime team on the 1.0 release!
I'm happy to see that more runtimes are maturing and getting use on production cases... I can't wait to see and show what the future entails for WebAssembly on both the server side and the browser!
Keep up the good work. Also I'd like to use this message to congratulate other runtimes that I'm excited about (apart from Wasmer, of course!): Wizard Engine [1], Wazero [2] and Lunatic [3].
The future is bright in Wasm land :)
[1] https://github.com/titzer/wizard-engine
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A fast in-place interpreter for WebAssembly
Wizard: An advanced WebAssembly Engine for Research - https://github.com/titzer/wizard-engine
javy
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Are there plans for WebAssembly as compilation target?
I don't think you can compile JS to WASM... You can run your JS code in a sandboxed runtime implemented in WebAssembly, which... I guess gives you sandboxing, but not much else.
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Is it possible to run a containerized SvelteKit/Node-based website as WASM module?
Yes exactly! Thanks for nudging me in the direction of: - https://github.com/Shopify/javy - https://github.com/WebAssembly/design/issues/219
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QuickJS Running in WebAssembly
Iām not sure if anyone has done so yet for Go, but Shopify has done this for Rust.
https://github.com/Shopify/javy/tree/main/crates/quickjs-was...
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Wasmtime 1.0
> - JS is notably missing from the list of languages supported on the front page. But I see mentions of a Spidermonkey.wasm in the blog post. Is running JS on top of wasmtime in production a realistic prospect today? If so, where can I read more? (mainly interested in this for the instantiation time benefits, though maybe all/most of that will be negated by the embedded JS engine?)
Shopify and others use QuickJS as their JS engine of choice. See https://github.com/Shopify/javy as a starting point. The real benefit is allowing authors of plugins to write JS and not AssemblyScript, not any performance or instantiation time benefits.
> - How should I go about building a typical web service on top of wasmtime? Can wasmtime itself handle network requests/connections or would I need to build the web server in some other host language and pass request data to wasmtime modules? Haven't been able to find anything in the docs about this.
There are a lot of choices for this. None I would consider mature, but some leads:
What are some alternatives?
Viceroy - Viceroy provides local testing for developers working with Compute.
VectorVisor - VectorVisor is a vectorizing binary translator for GPUs, designed to make it easy to run many copies of a single-threaded WebAssembly program in parallel using GPUs
wasmer - š The leading Wasm Runtime supporting WASIX, WASI and Emscripten
spidermonkey-wasi-embedding
lunatic - Lunatic is an Erlang-inspired runtime for WebAssembly
define-function - quick.js based eval
wazero - wazero: the zero dependency WebAssembly runtime for Go developers
js-compute-runtime - JavaScript SDK and runtime for building Fastly Compute applications
Web49 - Web49: WebAssembly Interpeter
WASI - WebAssembly System Interface
wasmtime - A fast and secure runtime for WebAssembly