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<div align="center"> <h1><code>jco</code></h1> <p> <strong>JavaScript toolchain for working with <a href="https://github.com/WebAssembly/component-model">WebAssembly Components</a></strong> </p><strong>A <a href="https://bytecodealliance.org/">Bytecode Alliance</a> project</strong>
<p> <a href="https://github.com/bytecodealliance/jco/actions?query=workflow%3ACI"><img src="https://github.com/bytecodealliance/jco/workflows/CI/badge.svg" alt="build status" /></a> </p> <h3> <a href="https://bytecodealliance.github.io/jco/">Contributing</a> <span> | </span> <a href="https://bytecodealliance.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/409526-jco">Chat on Zulip</a> </h3> </div>Overview
Jco provides a fully native JS toolchain for working with WebAssembly Components in JavaScript.
Features include:
- "Transpiling" Wasm Component binaries into ES modules that can run in any JS environment.
- WASI Preview2 support in Node.js & browsers (experimental).
- Component builds of Wasm Tools helpers, available for use as a library or CLI commands for use in native JS environments, as well as optimization helper for Components via Binaryen.
- Run and serve commands like Wasmtime, as JS implementations of the Command and HTTP Proxy worlds.
- "Componentize" command to easily create components written in JavaScript (wrapper of ComponentizeJS).
For creating components in other languages, see the Cargo Component project for Rust and Wit Bindgen for various guest bindgen helpers.
Installation
npm install @bytecodealliance/jco
Jco can be used as either a library import or as a CLI via the jco
command.
Example
See the Example Workflow page for a full usage example.
CLI
Usage: jco <command> [options]
jco - WebAssembly JS Component Tools
JS Component Transpilation Bindgen & Wasm Tools for JS
Options:
-V, --version output the version number
-h, --help display help for command
Commands:
componentize [options] <js-source> Create a component from a JavaScript module
transpile [options] <component-path> Transpile a WebAssembly Component to JS + core Wasm for JavaScript execution
types [options] <wit-path> Generate types for the given WIT
run [options] <command> [args...] Run a WASI Command component
serve [options] <server> [args...] Serve a WASI HTTP component
opt [options] <component-file> optimizes a Wasm component, including running wasm-opt Binaryen optimizations
wit [options] <component-path> extract the WIT from a WebAssembly Component [wasm-tools component wit]
print [options] <input> print the WebAssembly WAT text for a binary file [wasm-tools print]
metadata-show [options] [module] extract the producer metadata for a Wasm binary [wasm-tools metadata show]
metadata-add [options] [module] add producer metadata for a Wasm binary [wasm-tools metadata add]
parse [options] <input> parses the Wasm text format into a binary file [wasm-tools parse]
new [options] <core-module> create a WebAssembly component adapted from a component core Wasm [wasm-tools component new]
embed [options] [core-module] embed the component typing section into a core Wasm module [wasm-tools component embed]
help [command] display help for command
For help with individual command options, use jco <cmd> --help
.
Transpile
See the Transpiling Docs for more background and info.
Bindgen Crate
To directly call into the transpilation in Rust, the bindgen used in Jco is also available on crates.io as js-component-bindgen.
Run & Serve
For Wasm components that implement the WASI Command world, a jco run
utility is provided to run these applications in Node.js.
jco run cowasy.component.wasm hello
Using the preview2-shim WASI implementation, full access to the underlying system primitives is provided, including filesystem and environment variable permissions.
For HTTP Proxy components, jco serve
provides a JS server implementation:
jco serve --port 8080 server.wasm
Wasmtime generally provides the most performant implementation for executing command and proxy worlds to use. These implementations are rather for when JS virtualization is required or the most convenient approach.
Componentize
Note:
jco componentize
is considered experimental, and breaking changes may be made without notice.
To componentize a JS file run:
jco componentize app.js --wit wit -n world-name -o component.wasm
Creates a component from a JS module implementing a WIT world definition, via a Spidermonkey engine embedding.
See ComponentizeJS for more details on this process.
API
transpile(component: Uint8Array, opts?): Promise<{ files: Record<string, Uint8Array> }>
Transpile a Component to JS.
opt(component: Uint8Array, opts?): Promise<{ component: Uint8Array }>
Optimize a Component with the Binaryen Wasm-opt project.
componentWit(component: Uint8Array, document?: string): string
Extract the WIT world from a component binary.
print(component: Uint8Array): string
Print the WAT for a Component binary.
metadataShow(wasm: Uint8Array): Metadata
Extract the producer toolchain metadata for a component and its nested modules.
parse(wat: string): Uint8Array
Parse a compoment WAT to output a Component binary.
componentNew(coreWasm: Uint8Array | null, adapters?: [String, Uint8Array][]): Uint8Array
"WIT Component" Component creation tool, optionally providing a set of named adapter binaries.
componentEmbed(coreWasm: Uint8Array | null, wit: String, opts?: { stringEncoding?, dummy?, world?, metadata? }): Uint8Array
"WIT Component" Component embedding tool, for embedding component types into core binaries, as an advanced use case of component generation.
metadataAdd(wasm: Uint8Array, metadata): Uint8Array
Add new producer metadata to a component or core Wasm binary.
Contributing
See the Contributing chapter of the Jco book.
License
This project is licensed under the Apache 2.0 license with the LLVM exception. See LICENSE for more details.
Contribution
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in this project by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.