- Imports:
- interface
wasi:sockets/[email protected]
- interface
wasi:sockets/[email protected]
- interface
wasi:io/[email protected]
- interface
wasi:sockets/[email protected]
- interface
wasi:sockets/[email protected]
- interface
wasi:io/[email protected]
- interface
wasi:io/[email protected]
- interface
wasi:clocks/[email protected]
- interface
wasi:sockets/[email protected]
- interface
wasi:sockets/[email protected]
- interface
wasi:sockets/[email protected]
- interface
Import interface wasi:sockets/[email protected]
An opaque resource that represents access to (a subset of) the network. This enables context-based security for networking. There is no need for this to map 1:1 to a physical network interface.
Error codes.
In theory, every API can return any error code. In practice, API's typically only return the errors documented per API combined with a couple of errors that are always possible:
unknown
access-denied
not-supported
out-of-memory
concurrency-conflict
See each individual API for what the POSIX equivalents are. They sometimes differ per API.
-
Unknown error
-
Access denied.
POSIX equivalent: EACCES, EPERM
-
The operation is not supported.
POSIX equivalent: EOPNOTSUPP
-
One of the arguments is invalid.
POSIX equivalent: EINVAL
-
Not enough memory to complete the operation.
POSIX equivalent: ENOMEM, ENOBUFS, EAI_MEMORY
-
The operation timed out before it could finish completely.
-
This operation is incompatible with another asynchronous operation that is already in progress.
POSIX equivalent: EALREADY
-
Trying to finish an asynchronous operation that: - has not been started yet, or: - was already finished by a previous `finish-*` call.
Note: this is scheduled to be removed when
future
s are natively supported. -
The operation has been aborted because it could not be completed immediately.
Note: this is scheduled to be removed when
future
s are natively supported. -
The operation is not valid in the socket's current state.
-
A new socket resource could not be created because of a system limit.
-
A bind operation failed because the provided address is not an address that the `network` can bind to.
-
A bind operation failed because the provided address is already in use or because there are no ephemeral ports available.
-
The remote address is not reachable
-
The TCP connection was forcefully rejected
-
The TCP connection was reset.
-
A TCP connection was aborted.
-
The size of a datagram sent to a UDP socket exceeded the maximum supported size.
-
Name does not exist or has no suitable associated IP addresses.
-
A temporary failure in name resolution occurred.
-
A permanent failure in name resolution occurred.
ipv4
:ipv4-address
ipv6
:ipv6-address
-
sin_port
-
address
:ipv4-address
sin_addr
-
sin6_port
-
sin6_flowinfo
-
address
:ipv6-address
sin6_addr
-
sin6_scope_id
ipv4
:ipv4-socket-address
ipv6
:ipv6-socket-address
Import interface wasi:sockets/[email protected]
This interface provides a value-export of the default network handle..
----
Get a handle to the default network.
- own<
network
>
Import interface wasi:io/[email protected]
A poll API intended to let users wait for I/O events on multiple handles at once.
pollable
represents a single I/O event which may be ready, or not.
Return the readiness of a pollable. This function never blocks.
Returns true
when the pollable is ready, and false
otherwise.
self
: borrow<pollable
>
block
returns immediately if the pollable is ready, and otherwise
blocks until ready.
This function is equivalent to calling poll.poll
on a list
containing only this pollable.
self
: borrow<pollable
>
Poll for completion on a set of pollables.
This function takes a list of pollables, which identify I/O sources of interest, and waits until one or more of the events is ready for I/O.
The result list<u32>
contains one or more indices of handles in the
argument list that is ready for I/O.
This function traps if either:
- the list is empty, or:
- the list contains more elements than can be indexed with a
u32
value.
A timeout can be implemented by adding a pollable from the wasi-clocks API to the list.
This function does not return a result
; polling in itself does not
do any I/O so it doesn't fail. If any of the I/O sources identified by
the pollables has an error, it is indicated by marking the source as
being ready for I/O.
in
: list<borrow<pollable
>>
Import interface wasi:sockets/[email protected]
#### `type network` [`network`](#network)
#### `type error-code` [`error-code`](#error_code)
#### `type ip-socket-address` [`ip-socket-address`](#ip_socket_address)
#### `type ip-address-family` [`ip-address-family`](#ip_address_family)
#### `record incoming-datagram`
A received datagram.
-
The payload.
Theoretical max size: ~64 KiB. In practice, typically less than 1500 bytes.
-
remote-address
:ip-socket-address
The source address.
This field is guaranteed to match the remote address the stream was initialized with, if any.
Equivalent to the
src_addr
out parameter ofrecvfrom
.
A datagram to be sent out.
-
The payload.
-
remote-address
: option<ip-socket-address
>The destination address.
The requirements on this field depend on how the stream was initialized:
- with a remote address: this field must be None or match the stream's remote address exactly.
- without a remote address: this field is required.
If this value is None, the send operation is equivalent to
send
in POSIX. Otherwise it is equivalent tosendto
.
A UDP socket handle.
Bind the socket to a specific network on the provided IP address and port.
If the IP address is zero (0.0.0.0
in IPv4, ::
in IPv6), it is left to the implementation to decide which
network interface(s) to bind to.
If the port is zero, the socket will be bound to a random free port.
invalid-argument
: Thelocal-address
has the wrong address family. (EAFNOSUPPORT, EFAULT on Windows)invalid-state
: The socket is already bound. (EINVAL)address-in-use
: No ephemeral ports available. (EADDRINUSE, ENOBUFS on Windows)address-in-use
: Address is already in use. (EADDRINUSE)address-not-bindable
:local-address
is not an address that thenetwork
can bind to. (EADDRNOTAVAIL)not-in-progress
: Abind
operation is not in progress.would-block
: Can't finish the operation, it is still in progress. (EWOULDBLOCK, EAGAIN)
Unlike in POSIX, in WASI the bind operation is async. This enables
interactive WASI hosts to inject permission prompts. Runtimes that
don't want to make use of this ability can simply call the native
bind
as part of either start-bind
or finish-bind
.
- https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/bind.html
- https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/bind.2.html
- https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/winsock/nf-winsock-bind
- https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=bind&sektion=2&format=html
self
: borrow<udp-socket
>network
: borrow<network
>local-address
:ip-socket-address
- result<_,
error-code
>
self
: borrow<udp-socket
>
- result<_,
error-code
>
Set up inbound & outbound communication channels, optionally to a specific peer.
This function only changes the local socket configuration and does not generate any network traffic.
On success, the remote-address
of the socket is updated. The local-address
may be updated as well,
based on the best network path to remote-address
.
When a remote-address
is provided, the returned streams are limited to communicating with that specific peer:
send
can only be used to send to this destination.receive
will only return datagrams sent from the providedremote-address
.
This method may be called multiple times on the same socket to change its association, but
only the most recently returned pair of streams will be operational. Implementations may trap if
the streams returned by a previous invocation haven't been dropped yet before calling stream
again.
The POSIX equivalent in pseudo-code is:
if (was previously connected) {
connect(s, AF_UNSPEC)
}
if (remote_address is Some) {
connect(s, remote_address)
}
Unlike in POSIX, the socket must already be explicitly bound.
invalid-argument
: Theremote-address
has the wrong address family. (EAFNOSUPPORT)invalid-argument
: The IP address inremote-address
is set to INADDR_ANY (0.0.0.0
/::
). (EDESTADDRREQ, EADDRNOTAVAIL)invalid-argument
: The port inremote-address
is set to 0. (EDESTADDRREQ, EADDRNOTAVAIL)invalid-state
: The socket is not bound.address-in-use
: Tried to perform an implicit bind, but there were no ephemeral ports available. (EADDRINUSE, EADDRNOTAVAIL on Linux, EAGAIN on BSD)remote-unreachable
: The remote address is not reachable. (ECONNRESET, ENETRESET, EHOSTUNREACH, EHOSTDOWN, ENETUNREACH, ENETDOWN, ENONET)connection-refused
: The connection was refused. (ECONNREFUSED)
- https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/connect.html
- https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/connect.2.html
- https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/winsock2/nf-winsock2-connect
- https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?connect
self
: borrow<udp-socket
>remote-address
: option<ip-socket-address
>
- result<(own<
incoming-datagram-stream
>, own<outgoing-datagram-stream
>),error-code
>
Get the current bound address.
POSIX mentions:
If the socket has not been bound to a local name, the value stored in the object pointed to by
address
is unspecified.
WASI is stricter and requires local-address
to return invalid-state
when the socket hasn't been bound yet.
invalid-state
: The socket is not bound to any local address.
- https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/getsockname.html
- https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/getsockname.2.html
- https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/winsock/nf-winsock-getsockname
- https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?getsockname
self
: borrow<udp-socket
>
- result<
ip-socket-address
,error-code
>
Get the address the socket is currently streaming to.
invalid-state
: The socket is not streaming to a specific remote address. (ENOTCONN)
- https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/getpeername.html
- https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/getpeername.2.html
- https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/winsock/nf-winsock-getpeername
- https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=getpeername&sektion=2&n=1
self
: borrow<udp-socket
>
- result<
ip-socket-address
,error-code
>
Whether this is a IPv4 or IPv6 socket.
Equivalent to the SO_DOMAIN socket option.
self
: borrow<udp-socket
>
Equivalent to the IP_TTL & IPV6_UNICAST_HOPS socket options.
If the provided value is 0, an invalid-argument
error is returned.
invalid-argument
: (set) The TTL value must be 1 or higher.
self
: borrow<udp-socket
>
- result<
u8
,error-code
>
self
: borrow<udp-socket
>value
:u8
- result<_,
error-code
>
The kernel buffer space reserved for sends/receives on this socket.
If the provided value is 0, an invalid-argument
error is returned.
Any other value will never cause an error, but it might be silently clamped and/or rounded.
I.e. after setting a value, reading the same setting back may return a different value.
Equivalent to the SO_RCVBUF and SO_SNDBUF socket options.
invalid-argument
: (set) The provided value was 0.
self
: borrow<udp-socket
>
- result<
u64
,error-code
>
self
: borrow<udp-socket
>value
:u64
- result<_,
error-code
>
self
: borrow<udp-socket
>
- result<
u64
,error-code
>
self
: borrow<udp-socket
>value
:u64
- result<_,
error-code
>
Create a pollable
which will resolve once the socket is ready for I/O.
Note: this function is here for WASI 0.2 only.
It's planned to be removed when future
is natively supported in Preview3.
self
: borrow<udp-socket
>
- own<
pollable
>
Receive messages on the socket.
This function attempts to receive up to max-results
datagrams on the socket without blocking.
The returned list may contain fewer elements than requested, but never more.
This function returns successfully with an empty list when either:
max-results
is 0, or:max-results
is greater than 0, but no results are immediately available. This function never returnserror(would-block)
.
remote-unreachable
: The remote address is not reachable. (ECONNRESET, ENETRESET on Windows, EHOSTUNREACH, EHOSTDOWN, ENETUNREACH, ENETDOWN, ENONET)connection-refused
: The connection was refused. (ECONNREFUSED)
- https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/recvfrom.html
- https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/recvmsg.html
- https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/recv.2.html
- https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/recvmmsg.2.html
- https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/winsock/nf-winsock-recv
- https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/winsock/nf-winsock-recvfrom
- https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/previous-versions/windows/desktop/legacy/ms741687(v=vs.85)
- https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=recv&sektion=2
self
: borrow<incoming-datagram-stream
>max-results
:u64
- result<list<
incoming-datagram
>,error-code
>
Create a pollable
which will resolve once the stream is ready to receive again.
Note: this function is here for WASI 0.2 only.
It's planned to be removed when future
is natively supported in Preview3.
self
: borrow<incoming-datagram-stream
>
- own<
pollable
>
Check readiness for sending. This function never blocks.
Returns the number of datagrams permitted for the next call to send
,
or an error. Calling send
with more datagrams than this function has
permitted will trap.
When this function returns ok(0), the subscribe
pollable will
become ready when this function will report at least ok(1), or an
error.
Never returns would-block
.
self
: borrow<outgoing-datagram-stream
>
- result<
u64
,error-code
>
Send messages on the socket.
This function attempts to send all provided datagrams
on the socket without blocking and
returns how many messages were actually sent (or queued for sending). This function never
returns error(would-block)
. If none of the datagrams were able to be sent, ok(0)
is returned.
This function semantically behaves the same as iterating the datagrams
list and sequentially
sending each individual datagram until either the end of the list has been reached or the first error occurred.
If at least one datagram has been sent successfully, this function never returns an error.
If the input list is empty, the function returns ok(0)
.
Each call to send
must be permitted by a preceding check-send
. Implementations must trap if
either check-send
was not called or datagrams
contains more items than check-send
permitted.
invalid-argument
: Theremote-address
has the wrong address family. (EAFNOSUPPORT)invalid-argument
: The IP address inremote-address
is set to INADDR_ANY (0.0.0.0
/::
). (EDESTADDRREQ, EADDRNOTAVAIL)invalid-argument
: The port inremote-address
is set to 0. (EDESTADDRREQ, EADDRNOTAVAIL)invalid-argument
: The socket is in "connected" mode andremote-address
issome
value that does not match the address passed tostream
. (EISCONN)invalid-argument
: The socket is not "connected" and no value forremote-address
was provided. (EDESTADDRREQ)remote-unreachable
: The remote address is not reachable. (ECONNRESET, ENETRESET on Windows, EHOSTUNREACH, EHOSTDOWN, ENETUNREACH, ENETDOWN, ENONET)connection-refused
: The connection was refused. (ECONNREFUSED)datagram-too-large
: The datagram is too large. (EMSGSIZE)
- https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/sendto.html
- https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/sendmsg.html
- https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/send.2.html
- https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/sendmmsg.2.html
- https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/winsock2/nf-winsock2-send
- https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/winsock2/nf-winsock2-sendto
- https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/winsock2/nf-winsock2-wsasendmsg
- https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=send&sektion=2
self
: borrow<outgoing-datagram-stream
>datagrams
: list<outgoing-datagram
>
- result<
u64
,error-code
>
Create a pollable
which will resolve once the stream is ready to send again.
Note: this function is here for WASI 0.2 only.
It's planned to be removed when future
is natively supported in Preview3.
self
: borrow<outgoing-datagram-stream
>
- own<
pollable
>
Import interface wasi:sockets/[email protected]
#### `type error-code` [`error-code`](#error_code)
#### `type ip-address-family` [`ip-address-family`](#ip_address_family)
#### `type udp-socket` [`udp-socket`](#udp_socket)
----
Create a new UDP socket.
Similar to socket(AF_INET or AF_INET6, SOCK_DGRAM, IPPROTO_UDP)
in POSIX.
On IPv6 sockets, IPV6_V6ONLY is enabled by default and can't be configured otherwise.
This function does not require a network capability handle. This is considered to be safe because
at time of creation, the socket is not bound to any network
yet. Up to the moment bind
is called,
the socket is effectively an in-memory configuration object, unable to communicate with the outside world.
All sockets are non-blocking. Use the wasi-poll interface to block on asynchronous operations.
not-supported
: The specifiedaddress-family
is not supported. (EAFNOSUPPORT)new-socket-limit
: The new socket resource could not be created because of a system limit. (EMFILE, ENFILE)
- https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/socket.html
- https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/socket.2.html
- https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/winsock2/nf-winsock2-wsasocketw
- https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=socket&sektion=2
address-family
:ip-address-family
- result<own<
udp-socket
>,error-code
>
Import interface wasi:io/[email protected]
A resource which represents some error information.
The only method provided by this resource is to-debug-string
,
which provides some human-readable information about the error.
In the wasi:io
package, this resource is returned through the
wasi:io/streams/stream-error
type.
To provide more specific error information, other interfaces may
offer functions to "downcast" this error into more specific types. For example,
errors returned from streams derived from filesystem types can be described using
the filesystem's own error-code type. This is done using the function
wasi:filesystem/types/filesystem-error-code
, which takes a borrow<error>
parameter and returns an option<wasi:filesystem/types/error-code>
.
The set of functions which can "downcast" an error
into a more
concrete type is open.
Returns a string that is suitable to assist humans in debugging this error.
WARNING: The returned string should not be consumed mechanically! It may change across platforms, hosts, or other implementation details. Parsing this string is a major platform-compatibility hazard.
self
: borrow<error
>
Import interface wasi:io/[email protected]
WASI I/O is an I/O abstraction API which is currently focused on providing stream types.
In the future, the component model is expected to add built-in stream types; when it does, they are expected to subsume this API.
#### `type pollable` [`pollable`](#pollable)
An error for input-stream and output-stream operations.
-
last-operation-failed
: own<error
>The last operation (a write or flush) failed before completion.
More information is available in the
error
payload.After this, the stream will be closed. All future operations return
stream-error::closed
. -
The stream is closed: no more input will be accepted by the stream. A closed output-stream will return this error on all future operations.
An input bytestream.
input-stream
s are non-blocking to the extent practical on underlying
platforms. I/O operations always return promptly; if fewer bytes are
promptly available than requested, they return the number of bytes promptly
available, which could even be zero. To wait for data to be available,
use the subscribe
function to obtain a pollable
which can be polled
for using wasi:io/poll
.
An output bytestream.
output-stream
s are non-blocking to the extent practical on
underlying platforms. Except where specified otherwise, I/O operations also
always return promptly, after the number of bytes that can be written
promptly, which could even be zero. To wait for the stream to be ready to
accept data, the subscribe
function to obtain a pollable
which can be
polled for using wasi:io/poll
.
Dropping an output-stream
while there's still an active write in
progress may result in the data being lost. Before dropping the stream,
be sure to fully flush your writes.
Perform a non-blocking read from the stream.
When the source of a read
is binary data, the bytes from the source
are returned verbatim. When the source of a read
is known to the
implementation to be text, bytes containing the UTF-8 encoding of the
text are returned.
This function returns a list of bytes containing the read data,
when successful. The returned list will contain up to len
bytes;
it may return fewer than requested, but not more. The list is
empty when no bytes are available for reading at this time. The
pollable given by subscribe
will be ready when more bytes are
available.
This function fails with a stream-error
when the operation
encounters an error, giving last-operation-failed
, or when the
stream is closed, giving closed
.
When the caller gives a len
of 0, it represents a request to
read 0 bytes. If the stream is still open, this call should
succeed and return an empty list, or otherwise fail with closed
.
The len
parameter is a u64
, which could represent a list of u8 which
is not possible to allocate in wasm32, or not desirable to allocate as
as a return value by the callee. The callee may return a list of bytes
less than len
in size while more bytes are available for reading.
self
: borrow<input-stream
>len
:u64
- result<list<
u8
>,stream-error
>
Read bytes from a stream, after blocking until at least one byte can
be read. Except for blocking, behavior is identical to read
.
self
: borrow<input-stream
>len
:u64
- result<list<
u8
>,stream-error
>
Skip bytes from a stream. Returns number of bytes skipped.
Behaves identical to read
, except instead of returning a list
of bytes, returns the number of bytes consumed from the stream.
self
: borrow<input-stream
>len
:u64
- result<
u64
,stream-error
>
Skip bytes from a stream, after blocking until at least one byte
can be skipped. Except for blocking behavior, identical to skip
.
self
: borrow<input-stream
>len
:u64
- result<
u64
,stream-error
>
Create a pollable
which will resolve once either the specified stream
has bytes available to read or the other end of the stream has been
closed.
The created pollable
is a child resource of the input-stream
.
Implementations may trap if the input-stream
is dropped before
all derived pollable
s created with this function are dropped.
self
: borrow<input-stream
>
- own<
pollable
>
Check readiness for writing. This function never blocks.
Returns the number of bytes permitted for the next call to write
,
or an error. Calling write
with more bytes than this function has
permitted will trap.
When this function returns 0 bytes, the subscribe
pollable will
become ready when this function will report at least 1 byte, or an
error.
self
: borrow<output-stream
>
- result<
u64
,stream-error
>
Perform a write. This function never blocks.
When the destination of a write
is binary data, the bytes from
contents
are written verbatim. When the destination of a write
is
known to the implementation to be text, the bytes of contents
are
transcoded from UTF-8 into the encoding of the destination and then
written.
Precondition: check-write gave permit of Ok(n) and contents has a length of less than or equal to n. Otherwise, this function will trap.
returns Err(closed) without writing if the stream has closed since the last call to check-write provided a permit.
self
: borrow<output-stream
>contents
: list<u8
>
- result<_,
stream-error
>
Perform a write of up to 4096 bytes, and then flush the stream. Block until all of these operations are complete, or an error occurs.
This is a convenience wrapper around the use of check-write
,
subscribe
, write
, and flush
, and is implemented with the
following pseudo-code:
let pollable = this.subscribe();
while !contents.is_empty() {
// Wait for the stream to become writable
pollable.block();
let Ok(n) = this.check-write(); // eliding error handling
let len = min(n, contents.len());
let (chunk, rest) = contents.split_at(len);
this.write(chunk ); // eliding error handling
contents = rest;
}
this.flush();
// Wait for completion of `flush`
pollable.block();
// Check for any errors that arose during `flush`
let _ = this.check-write(); // eliding error handling
self
: borrow<output-stream
>contents
: list<u8
>
- result<_,
stream-error
>
Request to flush buffered output. This function never blocks.
This tells the output-stream that the caller intends any buffered
output to be flushed. the output which is expected to be flushed
is all that has been passed to write
prior to this call.
Upon calling this function, the output-stream
will not accept any
writes (check-write
will return ok(0)
) until the flush has
completed. The subscribe
pollable will become ready when the
flush has completed and the stream can accept more writes.
self
: borrow<output-stream
>
- result<_,
stream-error
>
Request to flush buffered output, and block until flush completes and stream is ready for writing again.
self
: borrow<output-stream
>
- result<_,
stream-error
>
Create a pollable
which will resolve once the output-stream
is ready for more writing, or an error has occurred. When this
pollable is ready, check-write
will return ok(n)
with n>0, or an
error.
If the stream is closed, this pollable is always ready immediately.
The created pollable
is a child resource of the output-stream
.
Implementations may trap if the output-stream
is dropped before
all derived pollable
s created with this function are dropped.
self
: borrow<output-stream
>
- own<
pollable
>
Write zeroes to a stream.
This should be used precisely like write
with the exact same
preconditions (must use check-write first), but instead of
passing a list of bytes, you simply pass the number of zero-bytes
that should be written.
self
: borrow<output-stream
>len
:u64
- result<_,
stream-error
>
Perform a write of up to 4096 zeroes, and then flush the stream. Block until all of these operations are complete, or an error occurs.
This is a convenience wrapper around the use of check-write
,
subscribe
, write-zeroes
, and flush
, and is implemented with
the following pseudo-code:
let pollable = this.subscribe();
while num_zeroes != 0 {
// Wait for the stream to become writable
pollable.block();
let Ok(n) = this.check-write(); // eliding error handling
let len = min(n, num_zeroes);
this.write-zeroes(len); // eliding error handling
num_zeroes -= len;
}
this.flush();
// Wait for completion of `flush`
pollable.block();
// Check for any errors that arose during `flush`
let _ = this.check-write(); // eliding error handling
self
: borrow<output-stream
>len
:u64
- result<_,
stream-error
>
Read from one stream and write to another.
The behavior of splice is equivalent to:
- calling
check-write
on theoutput-stream
- calling
read
on theinput-stream
with the smaller of thecheck-write
permitted length and thelen
provided tosplice
- calling
write
on theoutput-stream
with that read data.
Any error reported by the call to check-write
, read
, or
write
ends the splice and reports that error.
This function returns the number of bytes transferred; it may be less
than len
.
self
: borrow<output-stream
>src
: borrow<input-stream
>len
:u64
- result<
u64
,stream-error
>
Read from one stream and write to another, with blocking.
This is similar to splice
, except that it blocks until the
output-stream
is ready for writing, and the input-stream
is ready for reading, before performing the splice
.
self
: borrow<output-stream
>src
: borrow<input-stream
>len
:u64
- result<
u64
,stream-error
>
Import interface wasi:clocks/[email protected]
WASI Monotonic Clock is a clock API intended to let users measure elapsed time.
It is intended to be portable at least between Unix-family platforms and Windows.
A monotonic clock is a clock which has an unspecified initial value, and successive reads of the clock will produce non-decreasing values.
An instant in time, in nanoseconds. An instant is relative to an unspecified initial value, and can only be compared to instances from the same monotonic-clock.
u64
A duration of time, in nanoseconds.
Read the current value of the clock.
The clock is monotonic, therefore calling this function repeatedly will produce a sequence of non-decreasing values.
Query the resolution of the clock. Returns the duration of time corresponding to a clock tick.
Create a pollable
which will resolve once the specified instant
has occurred.
when
:instant
- own<
pollable
>
Create a pollable
that will resolve after the specified duration has
elapsed from the time this function is invoked.
when
:duration
- own<
pollable
>
Import interface wasi:sockets/[email protected]
#### `type output-stream` [`output-stream`](#output_stream)
#### `type pollable` [`pollable`](#pollable)
#### `type duration` [`duration`](#duration)
#### `type network` [`network`](#network)
#### `type error-code` [`error-code`](#error_code)
#### `type ip-socket-address` [`ip-socket-address`](#ip_socket_address)
#### `type ip-address-family` [`ip-address-family`](#ip_address_family)
-
Similar to `SHUT_RD` in POSIX.
-
Similar to `SHUT_WR` in POSIX.
-
Similar to `SHUT_RDWR` in POSIX.
A TCP socket resource.
The socket can be in one of the following states:
unbound
bind-in-progress
bound
(See note below)listen-in-progress
listening
connect-in-progress
connected
closed
See https://github.com/WebAssembly/wasi-sockets/blob/main/TcpSocketOperationalSemantics.md for more information.
Note: Except where explicitly mentioned, whenever this documentation uses
the term "bound" without backticks it actually means: in the bound
state or higher.
(i.e. bound
, listen-in-progress
, listening
, connect-in-progress
or connected
)
In addition to the general error codes documented on the
network::error-code
type, TCP socket methods may always return
error(invalid-state)
when in the closed
state.
Bind the socket to a specific network on the provided IP address and port.
If the IP address is zero (0.0.0.0
in IPv4, ::
in IPv6), it is left to the implementation to decide which
network interface(s) to bind to.
If the TCP/UDP port is zero, the socket will be bound to a random free port.
Bind can be attempted multiple times on the same socket, even with different arguments on each iteration. But never concurrently and only as long as the previous bind failed. Once a bind succeeds, the binding can't be changed anymore.
invalid-argument
: Thelocal-address
has the wrong address family. (EAFNOSUPPORT, EFAULT on Windows)invalid-argument
:local-address
is not a unicast address. (EINVAL)invalid-argument
:local-address
is an IPv4-mapped IPv6 address. (EINVAL)invalid-state
: The socket is already bound. (EINVAL)address-in-use
: No ephemeral ports available. (EADDRINUSE, ENOBUFS on Windows)address-in-use
: Address is already in use. (EADDRINUSE)address-not-bindable
:local-address
is not an address that thenetwork
can bind to. (EADDRNOTAVAIL)not-in-progress
: Abind
operation is not in progress.would-block
: Can't finish the operation, it is still in progress. (EWOULDBLOCK, EAGAIN)
When binding to a non-zero port, this bind operation shouldn't be affected by the TIME_WAIT state of a recently closed socket on the same local address. In practice this means that the SO_REUSEADDR socket option should be set implicitly on all platforms, except on Windows where this is the default behavior and SO_REUSEADDR performs something different entirely.
Unlike in POSIX, in WASI the bind operation is async. This enables
interactive WASI hosts to inject permission prompts. Runtimes that
don't want to make use of this ability can simply call the native
bind
as part of either start-bind
or finish-bind
.
- https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/bind.html
- https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/bind.2.html
- https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/winsock/nf-winsock-bind
- https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=bind&sektion=2&format=html
self
: borrow<tcp-socket
>network
: borrow<network
>local-address
:ip-socket-address
- result<_,
error-code
>
self
: borrow<tcp-socket
>
- result<_,
error-code
>
Connect to a remote endpoint.
On success:
- the socket is transitioned into the
connected
state. - a pair of streams is returned that can be used to read & write to the connection
After a failed connection attempt, the socket will be in the closed
state and the only valid action left is to drop
the socket. A single
socket can not be used to connect more than once.
invalid-argument
: Theremote-address
has the wrong address family. (EAFNOSUPPORT)invalid-argument
:remote-address
is not a unicast address. (EINVAL, ENETUNREACH on Linux, EAFNOSUPPORT on MacOS)invalid-argument
:remote-address
is an IPv4-mapped IPv6 address. (EINVAL, EADDRNOTAVAIL on Illumos)invalid-argument
: The IP address inremote-address
is set to INADDR_ANY (0.0.0.0
/::
). (EADDRNOTAVAIL on Windows)invalid-argument
: The port inremote-address
is set to 0. (EADDRNOTAVAIL on Windows)invalid-argument
: The socket is already attached to a different network. Thenetwork
passed toconnect
must be identical to the one passed tobind
.invalid-state
: The socket is already in theconnected
state. (EISCONN)invalid-state
: The socket is already in thelistening
state. (EOPNOTSUPP, EINVAL on Windows)timeout
: Connection timed out. (ETIMEDOUT)connection-refused
: The connection was forcefully rejected. (ECONNREFUSED)connection-reset
: The connection was reset. (ECONNRESET)connection-aborted
: The connection was aborted. (ECONNABORTED)remote-unreachable
: The remote address is not reachable. (EHOSTUNREACH, EHOSTDOWN, ENETUNREACH, ENETDOWN, ENONET)address-in-use
: Tried to perform an implicit bind, but there were no ephemeral ports available. (EADDRINUSE, EADDRNOTAVAIL on Linux, EAGAIN on BSD)not-in-progress
: A connect operation is not in progress.would-block
: Can't finish the operation, it is still in progress. (EWOULDBLOCK, EAGAIN)
The POSIX equivalent of start-connect
is the regular connect
syscall.
Because all WASI sockets are non-blocking this is expected to return
EINPROGRESS, which should be translated to ok()
in WASI.
The POSIX equivalent of finish-connect
is a poll
for event POLLOUT
with a timeout of 0 on the socket descriptor. Followed by a check for
the SO_ERROR
socket option, in case the poll signaled readiness.
- https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/connect.html
- https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/connect.2.html
- https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/winsock2/nf-winsock2-connect
- https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?connect
self
: borrow<tcp-socket
>network
: borrow<network
>remote-address
:ip-socket-address
- result<_,
error-code
>
self
: borrow<tcp-socket
>
- result<(own<
input-stream
>, own<output-stream
>),error-code
>
Start listening for new connections.
Transitions the socket into the listening
state.
Unlike POSIX, the socket must already be explicitly bound.
invalid-state
: The socket is not bound to any local address. (EDESTADDRREQ)invalid-state
: The socket is already in theconnected
state. (EISCONN, EINVAL on BSD)invalid-state
: The socket is already in thelistening
state.address-in-use
: Tried to perform an implicit bind, but there were no ephemeral ports available. (EADDRINUSE)not-in-progress
: A listen operation is not in progress.would-block
: Can't finish the operation, it is still in progress. (EWOULDBLOCK, EAGAIN)
Unlike in POSIX, in WASI the listen operation is async. This enables
interactive WASI hosts to inject permission prompts. Runtimes that
don't want to make use of this ability can simply call the native
listen
as part of either start-listen
or finish-listen
.
- https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/listen.html
- https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/listen.2.html
- https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/winsock2/nf-winsock2-listen
- https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=listen&sektion=2
self
: borrow<tcp-socket
>
- result<_,
error-code
>
self
: borrow<tcp-socket
>
- result<_,
error-code
>
Accept a new client socket.
The returned socket is bound and in the connected
state. The following properties are inherited from the listener socket:
address-family
keep-alive-enabled
keep-alive-idle-time
keep-alive-interval
keep-alive-count
hop-limit
receive-buffer-size
send-buffer-size
On success, this function returns the newly accepted client socket along with a pair of streams that can be used to read & write to the connection.
invalid-state
: Socket is not in thelistening
state. (EINVAL)would-block
: No pending connections at the moment. (EWOULDBLOCK, EAGAIN)connection-aborted
: An incoming connection was pending, but was terminated by the client before this listener could accept it. (ECONNABORTED)new-socket-limit
: The new socket resource could not be created because of a system limit. (EMFILE, ENFILE)
- https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/accept.html
- https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/accept.2.html
- https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/winsock2/nf-winsock2-accept
- https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=accept&sektion=2
self
: borrow<tcp-socket
>
- result<(own<
tcp-socket
>, own<input-stream
>, own<output-stream
>),error-code
>
Get the bound local address.
POSIX mentions:
If the socket has not been bound to a local name, the value stored in the object pointed to by
address
is unspecified.
WASI is stricter and requires local-address
to return invalid-state
when the socket hasn't been bound yet.
invalid-state
: The socket is not bound to any local address.
- https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/getsockname.html
- https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/getsockname.2.html
- https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/winsock/nf-winsock-getsockname
- https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?getsockname
self
: borrow<tcp-socket
>
- result<
ip-socket-address
,error-code
>
Get the remote address.
invalid-state
: The socket is not connected to a remote address. (ENOTCONN)
- https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/getpeername.html
- https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/getpeername.2.html
- https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/winsock/nf-winsock-getpeername
- https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=getpeername&sektion=2&n=1
self
: borrow<tcp-socket
>
- result<
ip-socket-address
,error-code
>
Whether the socket is in the listening
state.
Equivalent to the SO_ACCEPTCONN socket option.
self
: borrow<tcp-socket
>
Whether this is a IPv4 or IPv6 socket.
Equivalent to the SO_DOMAIN socket option.
self
: borrow<tcp-socket
>
Hints the desired listen queue size. Implementations are free to ignore this.
If the provided value is 0, an invalid-argument
error is returned.
Any other value will never cause an error, but it might be silently clamped and/or rounded.
not-supported
: (set) The platform does not support changing the backlog size after the initial listen.invalid-argument
: (set) The provided value was 0.invalid-state
: (set) The socket is in theconnect-in-progress
orconnected
state.
self
: borrow<tcp-socket
>value
:u64
- result<_,
error-code
>
Enables or disables keepalive.
The keepalive behavior can be adjusted using:
keep-alive-idle-time
keep-alive-interval
keep-alive-count
These properties can be configured whilekeep-alive-enabled
is false, but only come into effect whenkeep-alive-enabled
is true.
Equivalent to the SO_KEEPALIVE socket option.
self
: borrow<tcp-socket
>
- result<
bool
,error-code
>
self
: borrow<tcp-socket
>value
:bool
- result<_,
error-code
>
Amount of time the connection has to be idle before TCP starts sending keepalive packets.
If the provided value is 0, an invalid-argument
error is returned.
Any other value will never cause an error, but it might be silently clamped and/or rounded.
I.e. after setting a value, reading the same setting back may return a different value.
Equivalent to the TCP_KEEPIDLE socket option. (TCP_KEEPALIVE on MacOS)
invalid-argument
: (set) The provided value was 0.
self
: borrow<tcp-socket
>
- result<
duration
,error-code
>
self
: borrow<tcp-socket
>value
:duration
- result<_,
error-code
>
The time between keepalive packets.
If the provided value is 0, an invalid-argument
error is returned.
Any other value will never cause an error, but it might be silently clamped and/or rounded.
I.e. after setting a value, reading the same setting back may return a different value.
Equivalent to the TCP_KEEPINTVL socket option.
invalid-argument
: (set) The provided value was 0.
self
: borrow<tcp-socket
>
- result<
duration
,error-code
>
self
: borrow<tcp-socket
>value
:duration
- result<_,
error-code
>
The maximum amount of keepalive packets TCP should send before aborting the connection.
If the provided value is 0, an invalid-argument
error is returned.
Any other value will never cause an error, but it might be silently clamped and/or rounded.
I.e. after setting a value, reading the same setting back may return a different value.
Equivalent to the TCP_KEEPCNT socket option.
invalid-argument
: (set) The provided value was 0.
self
: borrow<tcp-socket
>
- result<
u32
,error-code
>
self
: borrow<tcp-socket
>value
:u32
- result<_,
error-code
>
Equivalent to the IP_TTL & IPV6_UNICAST_HOPS socket options.
If the provided value is 0, an invalid-argument
error is returned.
invalid-argument
: (set) The TTL value must be 1 or higher.
self
: borrow<tcp-socket
>
- result<
u8
,error-code
>
self
: borrow<tcp-socket
>value
:u8
- result<_,
error-code
>
The kernel buffer space reserved for sends/receives on this socket.
If the provided value is 0, an invalid-argument
error is returned.
Any other value will never cause an error, but it might be silently clamped and/or rounded.
I.e. after setting a value, reading the same setting back may return a different value.
Equivalent to the SO_RCVBUF and SO_SNDBUF socket options.
invalid-argument
: (set) The provided value was 0.
self
: borrow<tcp-socket
>
- result<
u64
,error-code
>
self
: borrow<tcp-socket
>value
:u64
- result<_,
error-code
>
self
: borrow<tcp-socket
>
- result<
u64
,error-code
>
self
: borrow<tcp-socket
>value
:u64
- result<_,
error-code
>
Create a pollable
which can be used to poll for, or block on,
completion of any of the asynchronous operations of this socket.
When finish-bind
, finish-listen
, finish-connect
or accept
return error(would-block)
, this pollable can be used to wait for
their success or failure, after which the method can be retried.
The pollable is not limited to the async operation that happens to be
in progress at the time of calling subscribe
(if any). Theoretically,
subscribe
only has to be called once per socket and can then be
(re)used for the remainder of the socket's lifetime.
See https://github.com/WebAssembly/wasi-sockets/blob/main/TcpSocketOperationalSemantics.md#pollable-readiness for more information.
Note: this function is here for WASI 0.2 only.
It's planned to be removed when future
is natively supported in Preview3.
self
: borrow<tcp-socket
>
- own<
pollable
>
Initiate a graceful shutdown.
receive
: The socket is not expecting to receive any data from the peer. Theinput-stream
associated with this socket will be closed. Any data still in the receive queue at time of calling this method will be discarded.send
: The socket has no more data to send to the peer. Theoutput-stream
associated with this socket will be closed and a FIN packet will be sent.both
: Same effect asreceive
&send
combined.
This function is idempotent; shutting down a direction more than once
has no effect and returns ok
.
The shutdown function does not close (drop) the socket.
invalid-state
: The socket is not in theconnected
state. (ENOTCONN)
- https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/shutdown.html
- https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/shutdown.2.html
- https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/winsock/nf-winsock-shutdown
- https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=shutdown&sektion=2
self
: borrow<tcp-socket
>shutdown-type
:shutdown-type
- result<_,
error-code
>
Import interface wasi:sockets/[email protected]
#### `type error-code` [`error-code`](#error_code)
#### `type ip-address-family` [`ip-address-family`](#ip_address_family)
#### `type tcp-socket` [`tcp-socket`](#tcp_socket)
----
Create a new TCP socket.
Similar to socket(AF_INET or AF_INET6, SOCK_STREAM, IPPROTO_TCP)
in POSIX.
On IPv6 sockets, IPV6_V6ONLY is enabled by default and can't be configured otherwise.
This function does not require a network capability handle. This is considered to be safe because
at time of creation, the socket is not bound to any network
yet. Up to the moment bind
/connect
is called, the socket is effectively an in-memory configuration object, unable to communicate with the outside world.
All sockets are non-blocking. Use the wasi-poll interface to block on asynchronous operations.
not-supported
: The specifiedaddress-family
is not supported. (EAFNOSUPPORT)new-socket-limit
: The new socket resource could not be created because of a system limit. (EMFILE, ENFILE)
- https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/socket.html
- https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/socket.2.html
- https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/winsock2/nf-winsock2-wsasocketw
- https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=socket&sektion=2
address-family
:ip-address-family
- result<own<
tcp-socket
>,error-code
>
Import interface wasi:sockets/[email protected]
#### `type network` [`network`](#network)
#### `type error-code` [`error-code`](#error_code)
#### `type ip-address` [`ip-address`](#ip_address)
#### `resource resolve-address-stream`
Resolve an internet host name to a list of IP addresses.
Unicode domain names are automatically converted to ASCII using IDNA encoding. If the input is an IP address string, the address is parsed and returned as-is without making any external requests.
See the wasi-socket proposal README.md for a comparison with getaddrinfo.
This function never blocks. It either immediately fails or immediately
returns successfully with a resolve-address-stream
that can be used
to (asynchronously) fetch the results.
invalid-argument
:name
is a syntactically invalid domain name or IP address.
- https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/getaddrinfo.html
- https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man3/getaddrinfo.3.html
- https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/ws2tcpip/nf-ws2tcpip-getaddrinfo
- https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=getaddrinfo&sektion=3
- result<own<
resolve-address-stream
>,error-code
>
Returns the next address from the resolver.
This function should be called multiple times. On each call, it will
return the next address in connection order preference. If all
addresses have been exhausted, this function returns none
.
This function never returns IPv4-mapped IPv6 addresses.
name-unresolvable
: Name does not exist or has no suitable associated IP addresses. (EAI_NONAME, EAI_NODATA, EAI_ADDRFAMILY)temporary-resolver-failure
: A temporary failure in name resolution occurred. (EAI_AGAIN)permanent-resolver-failure
: A permanent failure in name resolution occurred. (EAI_FAIL)would-block
: A result is not available yet. (EWOULDBLOCK, EAGAIN)
self
: borrow<resolve-address-stream
>
- result<option<
ip-address
>,error-code
>
Create a pollable
which will resolve once the stream is ready for I/O.
Note: this function is here for WASI 0.2 only.
It's planned to be removed when future
is natively supported in Preview3.
self
: borrow<resolve-address-stream
>
- own<
pollable
>