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This repo contains a prototype built to demonstrate the
viability of a WebAssembly polyfill. Work is ongoing in other repos to design
the actual standard binary format. This prototype also makes no attempt to call
native browser decoding and so it is not, technically, a polyfill but rather a
pure JS library.
A real (non-prototype) polyfill would hook into an ES6 Module loader
polyfill so that loading a
WebAssembly module will Just Work. The scheme described here is just a proof of
concept for how the polyfill can avoid massive copying, string manipulation and
garbage.
On the main thread, the client kicks off a load of a URL by calling
loadWebAssembly
and receives a Promise<Function>.
The polyfill library starts up a worker containing asm.js code compiled from
unpack.cpp
concatenated with the glue code in
load-wasm-worker.js.
The worker glue code fetches the binary via XHR then copies the result into the asm.js heap.
The asm.js code decodes the binary into asm.js in the form of UTF8 bytes in a separate region of the asm.js heap.
The worker glue code creates a Blob (a read-only copy) from a view of just the asm.js UTF8 bytes.
The Blob is postMessage()ed back to the main thread (a non-copying
operation) where it is loaded as a script element with script.src = URL.getObjectURL(blob).
When the asm.js script is executed, it passes the asm.js module function
object to a callback which resolves the promise in step 1.
Build instructions
The library in jslib/ should be ready to use, just copy both files and call loadWebAssembly().
Running make compiles the C++ implementation into the JS files in jslib/ and
into native executables in tools/. (The Makefile is currently super-unportable.
Sorry! Patches welcome.)
Packing asm.js into the binary format
The polyfill also comes with a tool (tools/pack-asmjs) that compiles a single JS
file (containing only asm.js) into the (experimental) WebAssembly format decoded by
the library. Given an existing asm.js application, one can experiment with this
polyfill (perform direct size/load-time comparisons) by following the steps:
Separate the asm.js module out into a separate file.
Run tools/pack-asmjs to produce a .wasm file.
Refactor the code that called the asm.js module to instead call loadWebAssembly()
(which returns a promise that resolves to the unlinked asm.js module function).
Future work
Decode while downloading (using HTTP Range requests or splitting into separate files)
Perform generic compression on top of the .wasm file (e.g.,
lzham gives a further 24% boost over gzip).
About
Experimental WebAssembly polyfill library and tools