1 use crate::prelude::*;
2 #[cfg(feature = "std")]
3 use crate::runtime::vm::open_file_for_mmap;
4 use crate::runtime::vm::{CompiledModuleId, MmapVec, ModuleMemoryImages, VMWasmCallFunction};
5 use crate::sync::OnceLock;
6 use crate::{
7     Engine,
8     code::EngineCode,
9     code_memory::CodeMemory,
10     instantiate::CompiledModule,
11     resources::ResourcesRequired,
12     types::{ExportType, ExternType, ImportType},
13 };
14 use alloc::sync::Arc;
15 use core::fmt;
16 use core::ops::Range;
17 use core::ptr::NonNull;
18 #[cfg(feature = "std")]
19 use std::{fs::File, path::Path};
20 use wasmparser::{Parser, ValidPayload, Validator};
21 #[cfg(feature = "debug")]
22 use wasmtime_environ::FrameTable;
23 use wasmtime_environ::{
24     CompiledFunctionsTable, CompiledModuleInfo, EntityIndex, HostPtr, ModuleTypes, ObjectKind,
25     TypeTrace, VMOffsets, VMSharedTypeIndex, WasmChecksum,
26 };
27 #[cfg(feature = "gc")]
28 use wasmtime_unwinder::ExceptionTable;
29 mod registry;
30 
31 pub use registry::*;
32 
33 /// A compiled WebAssembly module, ready to be instantiated.
34 ///
35 /// A `Module` is a compiled in-memory representation of an input WebAssembly
36 /// binary. A `Module` is then used to create an [`Instance`](crate::Instance)
37 /// through an instantiation process. You cannot call functions or fetch
38 /// globals, for example, on a `Module` because it's purely a code
39 /// representation. Instead you'll need to create an
40 /// [`Instance`](crate::Instance) to interact with the wasm module.
41 ///
42 /// A `Module` can be created by compiling WebAssembly code through APIs such as
43 /// [`Module::new`]. This would be a JIT-style use case where code is compiled
44 /// just before it's used. Alternatively a `Module` can be compiled in one
45 /// process and [`Module::serialize`] can be used to save it to storage. A later
46 /// call to [`Module::deserialize`] will quickly load the module to execute and
47 /// does not need to compile any code, representing a more AOT-style use case.
48 ///
49 /// Currently a `Module` does not implement any form of tiering or dynamic
50 /// optimization of compiled code. Creation of a `Module` via [`Module::new`] or
51 /// related APIs will perform the entire compilation step synchronously. When
52 /// finished no further compilation will happen at runtime or later during
53 /// execution of WebAssembly instances for example.
54 ///
55 /// Compilation of WebAssembly by default goes through Cranelift and is
56 /// recommended to be done once-per-module. The same WebAssembly binary need not
57 /// be compiled multiple times and can instead used an embedder-cached result of
58 /// the first call.
59 ///
60 /// `Module` is thread-safe and safe to share across threads.
61 ///
62 /// ## Modules and `Clone`
63 ///
64 /// Using `clone` on a `Module` is a cheap operation. It will not create an
65 /// entirely new module, but rather just a new reference to the existing module.
66 /// In other words it's a shallow copy, not a deep copy.
67 ///
68 /// ## Examples
69 ///
70 /// There are a number of ways you can create a `Module`, for example pulling
71 /// the bytes from a number of locations. One example is loading a module from
72 /// the filesystem:
73 ///
74 /// ```no_run
75 /// # use wasmtime::*;
76 /// # fn main() -> Result<()> {
77 /// let engine = Engine::default();
78 /// let module = Module::from_file(&engine, "path/to/foo.wasm")?;
79 /// # Ok(())
80 /// # }
81 /// ```
82 ///
83 /// You can also load the wasm text format if more convenient too:
84 ///
85 /// ```no_run
86 /// # use wasmtime::*;
87 /// # fn main() -> Result<()> {
88 /// let engine = Engine::default();
89 /// // Now we're using the WebAssembly text extension: `.wat`!
90 /// let module = Module::from_file(&engine, "path/to/foo.wat")?;
91 /// # Ok(())
92 /// # }
93 /// ```
94 ///
95 /// And if you've already got the bytes in-memory you can use the
96 /// [`Module::new`] constructor:
97 ///
98 /// ```no_run
99 /// # use wasmtime::*;
100 /// # fn main() -> Result<()> {
101 /// let engine = Engine::default();
102 /// # let wasm_bytes: Vec<u8> = Vec::new();
103 /// let module = Module::new(&engine, &wasm_bytes)?;
104 ///
105 /// // It also works with the text format!
106 /// let module = Module::new(&engine, "(module (func))")?;
107 /// # Ok(())
108 /// # }
109 /// ```
110 ///
111 /// Serializing and deserializing a module looks like:
112 ///
113 /// ```no_run
114 /// # use wasmtime::*;
115 /// # fn main() -> Result<()> {
116 /// let engine = Engine::default();
117 /// # let wasm_bytes: Vec<u8> = Vec::new();
118 /// let module = Module::new(&engine, &wasm_bytes)?;
119 /// let module_bytes = module.serialize()?;
120 ///
121 /// // ... can save `module_bytes` to disk or other storage ...
122 ///
123 /// // recreate the module from the serialized bytes. For the `unsafe` bits
124 /// // see the documentation of `deserialize`.
125 /// let module = unsafe { Module::deserialize(&engine, &module_bytes)? };
126 /// # Ok(())
127 /// # }
128 /// ```
129 ///
130 /// [`Config`]: crate::Config
131 #[derive(Clone)]
132 pub struct Module {
133     inner: Arc<ModuleInner>,
134 }
135 
136 struct ModuleInner {
137     engine: Engine,
138     /// The compiled artifacts for this module that will be instantiated and
139     /// executed.
140     module: CompiledModule,
141 
142     /// Runtime information such as the underlying mmap, type information, etc.
143     ///
144     /// Note that this `Arc` is used to share information between compiled
145     /// modules within a component. For bare core wasm modules created with
146     /// `Module::new`, for example, this is a uniquely owned `Arc`.
147     code: Arc<EngineCode>,
148 
149     /// A set of initialization images for memories, if any.
150     ///
151     /// Note that this is behind a `OnceCell` to lazily create this image. On
152     /// Linux where `memfd_create` may be used to create the backing memory
153     /// image this is a pretty expensive operation, so by deferring it this
154     /// improves memory usage for modules that are created but may not ever be
155     /// instantiated.
156     memory_images: OnceLock<Option<ModuleMemoryImages>>,
157 
158     /// Flag indicating whether this module can be serialized or not.
159     #[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
160     serializable: bool,
161 
162     /// Runtime offset information for `VMContext`.
163     offsets: VMOffsets<HostPtr>,
164 
165     /// The checksum of the source binary from which this module was compiled.
166     checksum: WasmChecksum,
167 }
168 
169 impl fmt::Debug for Module {
170     fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
171         f.debug_struct("Module")
172             .field("name", &self.name())
173             .finish_non_exhaustive()
174     }
175 }
176 
177 impl fmt::Debug for ModuleInner {
178     fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
179         f.debug_struct("ModuleInner")
180             .field("name", &self.module.module().name.as_ref())
181             .finish_non_exhaustive()
182     }
183 }
184 
185 impl Module {
186     /// Creates a new WebAssembly `Module` from the given in-memory `bytes`.
187     ///
188     /// The `bytes` provided must be in one of the following formats:
189     ///
190     /// * A [binary-encoded][binary] WebAssembly module. This is always supported.
191     /// * A [text-encoded][text] instance of the WebAssembly text format.
192     ///   This is only supported when the `wat` feature of this crate is enabled.
193     ///   If this is supplied then the text format will be parsed before validation.
194     ///   Note that the `wat` feature is enabled by default.
195     ///
196     /// The data for the wasm module must be loaded in-memory if it's present
197     /// elsewhere, for example on disk. This requires that the entire binary is
198     /// loaded into memory all at once, this API does not support streaming
199     /// compilation of a module.
200     ///
201     /// The WebAssembly binary will be decoded and validated. It will also be
202     /// compiled according to the configuration of the provided `engine`.
203     ///
204     /// # Errors
205     ///
206     /// This function may fail and return an error. Errors may include
207     /// situations such as:
208     ///
209     /// * The binary provided could not be decoded because it's not a valid
210     ///   WebAssembly binary
211     /// * The WebAssembly binary may not validate (e.g. contains type errors)
212     /// * Implementation-specific limits were exceeded with a valid binary (for
213     ///   example too many locals)
214     /// * The wasm binary may use features that are not enabled in the
215     ///   configuration of `engine`
216     /// * If the `wat` feature is enabled and the input is text, then it may be
217     ///   rejected if it fails to parse.
218     ///
219     /// The error returned should contain full information about why module
220     /// creation failed if one is returned.
221     ///
222     /// [binary]: https://webassembly.github.io/spec/core/binary/index.html
223     /// [text]: https://webassembly.github.io/spec/core/text/index.html
224     ///
225     /// # Examples
226     ///
227     /// The `new` function can be invoked with a in-memory array of bytes:
228     ///
229     /// ```no_run
230     /// # use wasmtime::*;
231     /// # fn main() -> Result<()> {
232     /// # let engine = Engine::default();
233     /// # let wasm_bytes: Vec<u8> = Vec::new();
234     /// let module = Module::new(&engine, &wasm_bytes)?;
235     /// # Ok(())
236     /// # }
237     /// ```
238     ///
239     /// Or you can also pass in a string to be parsed as the wasm text
240     /// format:
241     ///
242     /// ```
243     /// # use wasmtime::*;
244     /// # fn main() -> Result<()> {
245     /// # let engine = Engine::default();
246     /// let module = Module::new(&engine, "(module (func))")?;
247     /// # Ok(())
248     /// # }
249     /// ```
250     #[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
251     pub fn new(engine: &Engine, bytes: impl AsRef<[u8]>) -> Result<Module> {
252         crate::CodeBuilder::new(engine)
253             .wasm_binary_or_text(bytes.as_ref(), None)?
254             .compile_module()
255     }
256 
257     /// Creates a new WebAssembly `Module` from the contents of the given
258     /// `file` on disk.
259     ///
260     /// This is a convenience function that will read the `file` provided and
261     /// pass the bytes to the [`Module::new`] function. For more information
262     /// see [`Module::new`]
263     ///
264     /// # Examples
265     ///
266     /// ```no_run
267     /// # use wasmtime::*;
268     /// # fn main() -> Result<()> {
269     /// let engine = Engine::default();
270     /// let module = Module::from_file(&engine, "./path/to/foo.wasm")?;
271     /// # Ok(())
272     /// # }
273     /// ```
274     ///
275     /// The `.wat` text format is also supported:
276     ///
277     /// ```no_run
278     /// # use wasmtime::*;
279     /// # fn main() -> Result<()> {
280     /// # let engine = Engine::default();
281     /// let module = Module::from_file(&engine, "./path/to/foo.wat")?;
282     /// # Ok(())
283     /// # }
284     /// ```
285     #[cfg(all(feature = "std", any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch")))]
286     pub fn from_file(engine: &Engine, file: impl AsRef<Path>) -> Result<Module> {
287         crate::CodeBuilder::new(engine)
288             .wasm_binary_or_text_file(file.as_ref())?
289             .compile_module()
290     }
291 
292     /// Creates a new WebAssembly `Module` from the given in-memory `binary`
293     /// data.
294     ///
295     /// This is similar to [`Module::new`] except that it requires that the
296     /// `binary` input is a WebAssembly binary, the text format is not supported
297     /// by this function. It's generally recommended to use [`Module::new`], but
298     /// if it's required to not support the text format this function can be
299     /// used instead.
300     ///
301     /// # Examples
302     ///
303     /// ```
304     /// # use wasmtime::*;
305     /// # fn main() -> Result<()> {
306     /// # let engine = Engine::default();
307     /// let wasm = b"\0asm\x01\0\0\0";
308     /// let module = Module::from_binary(&engine, wasm)?;
309     /// # Ok(())
310     /// # }
311     /// ```
312     ///
313     /// Note that the text format is **not** accepted by this function:
314     ///
315     /// ```
316     /// # use wasmtime::*;
317     /// # fn main() -> Result<()> {
318     /// # let engine = Engine::default();
319     /// assert!(Module::from_binary(&engine, b"(module)").is_err());
320     /// # Ok(())
321     /// # }
322     /// ```
323     #[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
324     pub fn from_binary(engine: &Engine, binary: &[u8]) -> Result<Module> {
325         crate::CodeBuilder::new(engine)
326             .wasm_binary(binary, None)?
327             .compile_module()
328     }
329 
330     /// Creates a new WebAssembly `Module` from the contents of the given `file`
331     /// on disk, but with assumptions that the file is from a trusted source.
332     /// The file should be a binary- or text-format WebAssembly module, or a
333     /// precompiled artifact generated by the same version of Wasmtime.
334     ///
335     /// # Unsafety
336     ///
337     /// All of the reasons that [`deserialize`] is `unsafe` apply to this
338     /// function as well. Arbitrary data loaded from a file may trick Wasmtime
339     /// into arbitrary code execution since the contents of the file are not
340     /// validated to be a valid precompiled module.
341     ///
342     /// [`deserialize`]: Module::deserialize
343     ///
344     /// Additionally though this function is also `unsafe` because the file
345     /// referenced must remain unchanged and a valid precompiled module for the
346     /// entire lifetime of the [`Module`] returned. Any changes to the file on
347     /// disk may change future instantiations of the module to be incorrect.
348     /// This is because the file is mapped into memory and lazily loaded pages
349     /// reflect the current state of the file, not necessarily the original
350     /// state of the file.
351     #[cfg(all(feature = "std", any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch")))]
352     pub unsafe fn from_trusted_file(engine: &Engine, file: impl AsRef<Path>) -> Result<Module> {
353         let open_file = open_file_for_mmap(file.as_ref())?;
354         let mmap = crate::runtime::vm::MmapVec::from_file(open_file)?;
355         if &mmap[0..4] == b"\x7fELF" {
356             let code = engine.load_code(mmap, ObjectKind::Module)?;
357             return Module::from_parts(engine, code, None);
358         }
359 
360         crate::CodeBuilder::new(engine)
361             .wasm_binary_or_text(&mmap[..], Some(file.as_ref()))?
362             .compile_module()
363     }
364 
365     /// Deserializes an in-memory compiled module previously created with
366     /// [`Module::serialize`] or [`Engine::precompile_module`].
367     ///
368     /// This function will deserialize the binary blobs emitted by
369     /// [`Module::serialize`] and [`Engine::precompile_module`] back into an
370     /// in-memory [`Module`] that's ready to be instantiated.
371     ///
372     /// Note that the [`Module::deserialize_file`] method is more optimized than
373     /// this function, so if the serialized module is already present in a file
374     /// it's recommended to use that method instead.
375     ///
376     /// # Unsafety
377     ///
378     /// This function is marked as `unsafe` because if fed invalid input or used
379     /// improperly this could lead to memory safety vulnerabilities. This method
380     /// should not, for example, be exposed to arbitrary user input.
381     ///
382     /// The structure of the binary blob read here is only lightly validated
383     /// internally in `wasmtime`. This is intended to be an efficient
384     /// "rehydration" for a [`Module`] which has very few runtime checks beyond
385     /// deserialization. Arbitrary input could, for example, replace valid
386     /// compiled code with any other valid compiled code, meaning that this can
387     /// trivially be used to execute arbitrary code otherwise.
388     ///
389     /// For these reasons this function is `unsafe`. This function is only
390     /// designed to receive the previous input from [`Module::serialize`] and
391     /// [`Engine::precompile_module`]. If the exact output of those functions
392     /// (unmodified) is passed to this function then calls to this function can
393     /// be considered safe. It is the caller's responsibility to provide the
394     /// guarantee that only previously-serialized bytes are being passed in
395     /// here.
396     ///
397     /// Note that this function is designed to be safe receiving output from
398     /// *any* compiled version of `wasmtime` itself. This means that it is safe
399     /// to feed output from older versions of Wasmtime into this function, in
400     /// addition to newer versions of wasmtime (from the future!). These inputs
401     /// will deterministically and safely produce an `Err`. This function only
402     /// successfully accepts inputs from the same version of `wasmtime`, but the
403     /// safety guarantee only applies to externally-defined blobs of bytes, not
404     /// those defined by any version of wasmtime. (this means that if you cache
405     /// blobs across versions of wasmtime you can be safely guaranteed that
406     /// future versions of wasmtime will reject old cache entries).
407     pub unsafe fn deserialize(engine: &Engine, bytes: impl AsRef<[u8]>) -> Result<Module> {
408         let code = engine.load_code_bytes(bytes.as_ref(), ObjectKind::Module)?;
409         Module::from_parts(engine, code, None)
410     }
411 
412     /// In-place deserialization of an in-memory compiled module previously
413     /// created with [`Module::serialize`] or [`Engine::precompile_module`].
414     ///
415     /// See [`Self::deserialize`] for additional information; this method
416     /// works identically except that it will not create a copy of the provided
417     /// memory but will use it directly.
418     ///
419     /// # Unsafety
420     ///
421     /// All of the safety notes from [`Self::deserialize`] apply here as well
422     /// with the additional constraint that the code memory provide by `memory`
423     /// lives for as long as the module and is nevery externally modified for
424     /// the lifetime of the deserialized module.
425     pub unsafe fn deserialize_raw(engine: &Engine, memory: NonNull<[u8]>) -> Result<Module> {
426         // SAFETY: the contract required by `load_code_raw` is the same as this
427         // function.
428         let code = unsafe { engine.load_code_raw(memory, ObjectKind::Module)? };
429         Module::from_parts(engine, code, None)
430     }
431 
432     /// Same as [`deserialize`], except that the contents of `path` are read to
433     /// deserialize into a [`Module`].
434     ///
435     /// This method is provided because it can be faster than [`deserialize`]
436     /// since the data doesn't need to be copied around, but rather the module
437     /// can be used directly from an mmap'd view of the file provided.
438     ///
439     /// [`deserialize`]: Module::deserialize
440     ///
441     /// # Unsafety
442     ///
443     /// All of the reasons that [`deserialize`] is `unsafe` applies to this
444     /// function as well. Arbitrary data loaded from a file may trick Wasmtime
445     /// into arbitrary code execution since the contents of the file are not
446     /// validated to be a valid precompiled module.
447     ///
448     /// Additionally though this function is also `unsafe` because the file
449     /// referenced must remain unchanged and a valid precompiled module for the
450     /// entire lifetime of the [`Module`] returned. Any changes to the file on
451     /// disk may change future instantiations of the module to be incorrect.
452     /// This is because the file is mapped into memory and lazily loaded pages
453     /// reflect the current state of the file, not necessarily the original
454     /// state of the file.
455     #[cfg(feature = "std")]
456     pub unsafe fn deserialize_file(engine: &Engine, path: impl AsRef<Path>) -> Result<Module> {
457         let file = open_file_for_mmap(path.as_ref())?;
458         // SAFETY: the contract of `deserialize_open_file` is the samea s this
459         // function.
460         unsafe {
461             Self::deserialize_open_file(engine, file)
462                 .with_context(|| format!("failed deserialization for: {}", path.as_ref().display()))
463         }
464     }
465 
466     /// Same as [`deserialize_file`], except that it takes an open `File`
467     /// instead of a path.
468     ///
469     /// This method is provided because it can be used instead of
470     /// [`deserialize_file`] in situations where `wasmtime` is running with
471     /// limited file system permissions. In that case a process
472     /// with file system access can pass already opened files to `wasmtime`.
473     ///
474     /// [`deserialize_file`]: Module::deserialize_file
475     ///
476     /// Note that the corresponding will be mapped as private writeable
477     /// (copy-on-write) and executable. For `windows` this means the file needs
478     /// to be opened with at least `FILE_GENERIC_READ | FILE_GENERIC_EXECUTE`
479     /// [`access_mode`].
480     ///
481     /// [`access_mode`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/os/windows/fs/trait.OpenOptionsExt.html#tymethod.access_mode
482     ///
483     /// # Unsafety
484     ///
485     /// All of the reasons that [`deserialize_file`] is `unsafe` applies to this
486     /// function as well.
487     #[cfg(feature = "std")]
488     pub unsafe fn deserialize_open_file(engine: &Engine, file: File) -> Result<Module> {
489         let code = engine.load_code_file(file, ObjectKind::Module)?;
490         Module::from_parts(engine, code, None)
491     }
492 
493     /// Entrypoint for creating a `Module` for all above functions, both
494     /// of the AOT and jit-compiled categories.
495     ///
496     /// In all cases the compilation artifact, `code_memory`, is provided here.
497     /// The `info_and_types` argument is `None` when a module is being
498     /// deserialized from a precompiled artifact or it's `Some` if it was just
499     /// compiled and the values are already available.
500     pub(crate) fn from_parts(
501         engine: &Engine,
502         code_memory: Arc<CodeMemory>,
503         info_and_types: Option<(CompiledModuleInfo, CompiledFunctionsTable, ModuleTypes)>,
504     ) -> Result<Self> {
505         // Acquire this module's metadata and type information, deserializing
506         // it from the provided artifact if it wasn't otherwise provided
507         // already.
508         let (mut info, index, mut types) = match info_and_types {
509             Some((info, index, types)) => (info, index, types),
510             None => postcard::from_bytes(code_memory.wasmtime_info())?,
511         };
512 
513         // Register function type signatures into the engine for the lifetime
514         // of the `Module` that will be returned. This notably also builds up
515         // maps for trampolines to be used for this module when inserted into
516         // stores.
517         //
518         // Note that the unsafety here should be ok since the `trampolines`
519         // field should only point to valid trampoline function pointers
520         // within the text section.
521         let signatures = engine
522             .register_and_canonicalize_types(&mut types, core::iter::once(&mut info.module))?;
523 
524         // Package up all our data into an `EngineCode` and delegate to the final
525         // step of module compilation.
526         let code = Arc::new(EngineCode::new(code_memory, signatures, types.into()));
527         let index = Arc::new(index);
528         Module::from_parts_raw(engine, code, info, index, true)
529     }
530 
531     pub(crate) fn from_parts_raw(
532         engine: &Engine,
533         code: Arc<EngineCode>,
534         info: CompiledModuleInfo,
535         index: Arc<CompiledFunctionsTable>,
536         serializable: bool,
537     ) -> Result<Self> {
538         let checksum = info.checksum;
539         let module = CompiledModule::from_artifacts(code.clone(), info, index, engine.profiler())?;
540 
541         // Validate the module can be used with the current instance allocator.
542         let offsets = VMOffsets::new(HostPtr, module.module());
543         engine
544             .allocator()
545             .validate_module(module.module(), &offsets)?;
546 
547         let _ = serializable;
548 
549         Ok(Self {
550             inner: Arc::new(ModuleInner {
551                 engine: engine.clone(),
552                 code,
553                 memory_images: OnceLock::new(),
554                 module,
555                 #[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
556                 serializable,
557                 offsets,
558                 checksum,
559             }),
560         })
561     }
562 
563     /// Validates `binary` input data as a WebAssembly binary given the
564     /// configuration in `engine`.
565     ///
566     /// This function will perform a speedy validation of the `binary` input
567     /// WebAssembly module (which is in [binary form][binary], the text format
568     /// is not accepted by this function) and return either `Ok` or `Err`
569     /// depending on the results of validation. The `engine` argument indicates
570     /// configuration for WebAssembly features, for example, which are used to
571     /// indicate what should be valid and what shouldn't be.
572     ///
573     /// Validation automatically happens as part of [`Module::new`].
574     ///
575     /// # Errors
576     ///
577     /// If validation fails for any reason (type check error, usage of a feature
578     /// that wasn't enabled, etc) then an error with a description of the
579     /// validation issue will be returned.
580     ///
581     /// [binary]: https://webassembly.github.io/spec/core/binary/index.html
582     pub fn validate(engine: &Engine, binary: &[u8]) -> Result<()> {
583         let mut validator = Validator::new_with_features(engine.features());
584 
585         let mut functions = Vec::new();
586         for payload in Parser::new(0).parse_all(binary) {
587             let payload = payload?;
588             if let ValidPayload::Func(a, b) = validator.payload(&payload)? {
589                 functions.push((a, b));
590             }
591             if let wasmparser::Payload::Version { encoding, .. } = &payload {
592                 if let wasmparser::Encoding::Component = encoding {
593                     bail!("component passed to module validation");
594                 }
595             }
596         }
597 
598         engine.run_maybe_parallel(functions, |(validator, body)| {
599             // FIXME: it would be best here to use a rayon-specific parallel
600             // iterator that maintains state-per-thread to share the function
601             // validator allocations (`Default::default` here) across multiple
602             // functions.
603             validator.into_validator(Default::default()).validate(&body)
604         })?;
605         Ok(())
606     }
607 
608     /// Serializes this module to a vector of bytes.
609     ///
610     /// This function is similar to the [`Engine::precompile_module`] method
611     /// where it produces an artifact of Wasmtime which is suitable to later
612     /// pass into [`Module::deserialize`]. If a module is never instantiated
613     /// then it's recommended to use [`Engine::precompile_module`] instead of
614     /// this method, but if a module is both instantiated and serialized then
615     /// this method can be useful to get the serialized version without
616     /// compiling twice.
617     #[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
618     pub fn serialize(&self) -> Result<Vec<u8>> {
619         // The current representation of compiled modules within a compiled
620         // component means that it cannot be serialized. The mmap returned here
621         // is the mmap for the entire component and while it contains all
622         // necessary data to deserialize this particular module it's all
623         // embedded within component-specific information.
624         //
625         // It's not the hardest thing in the world to support this but it's
626         // expected that there's not much of a use case at this time. In theory
627         // all that needs to be done is to edit the `.wasmtime.info` section
628         // to contains this module's metadata instead of the metadata for the
629         // whole component. The metadata itself is fairly trivially
630         // recreateable here it's more that there's no easy one-off API for
631         // editing the sections of an ELF object to use here.
632         //
633         // Overall for now this simply always returns an error in this
634         // situation. If you're reading this and feel that the situation should
635         // be different please feel free to open an issue.
636         if !self.inner.serializable {
637             bail!("cannot serialize a module exported from a component");
638         }
639         Ok(self.engine_code().image().to_vec())
640     }
641 
642     pub(crate) fn compiled_module(&self) -> &CompiledModule {
643         &self.inner.module
644     }
645 
646     pub(crate) fn engine_code(&self) -> &Arc<EngineCode> {
647         &self.inner.code
648     }
649 
650     pub(crate) fn env_module(&self) -> &Arc<wasmtime_environ::Module> {
651         self.compiled_module().module()
652     }
653 
654     pub(crate) fn types(&self) -> &ModuleTypes {
655         self.inner.code.module_types()
656     }
657 
658     #[cfg(any(feature = "component-model", feature = "gc-drc"))]
659     pub(crate) fn signatures(&self) -> &crate::type_registry::TypeCollection {
660         self.inner.code.signatures()
661     }
662 
663     /// Returns identifier/name that this [`Module`] has. This name
664     /// is used in traps/backtrace details.
665     ///
666     /// Note that most LLVM/clang/Rust-produced modules do not have a name
667     /// associated with them, but other wasm tooling can be used to inject or
668     /// add a name.
669     ///
670     /// # Examples
671     ///
672     /// ```
673     /// # use wasmtime::*;
674     /// # fn main() -> Result<()> {
675     /// # let engine = Engine::default();
676     /// let module = Module::new(&engine, "(module $foo)")?;
677     /// assert_eq!(module.name(), Some("foo"));
678     ///
679     /// let module = Module::new(&engine, "(module)")?;
680     /// assert_eq!(module.name(), None);
681     ///
682     /// # Ok(())
683     /// # }
684     /// ```
685     pub fn name(&self) -> Option<&str> {
686         let module = self.compiled_module().module();
687         let name = module.name?;
688         Some(&module.strings[name])
689     }
690 
691     /// Returns the original Wasm bytecode for this module, if it is
692     /// available.
693     ///
694     /// Bytecode is only retained when the [`Engine`] was configured with
695     /// `guest-debug` support enabled (see [`Config::guest_debug`]). Returns
696     /// `None` when the module was compiled without that option.
697     ///
698     /// [`Config::guest_debug`]: crate::Config::guest_debug
699     pub fn debug_bytecode(&self) -> Option<&[u8]> {
700         self.compiled_module().bytecode()
701     }
702 
703     /// Returns the list of imports that this [`Module`] has and must be
704     /// satisfied.
705     ///
706     /// This function returns the list of imports that the wasm module has, but
707     /// only the types of each import. The type of each import is used to
708     /// typecheck the [`Instance::new`](crate::Instance::new) method's `imports`
709     /// argument. The arguments to that function must match up 1-to-1 with the
710     /// entries in the array returned here.
711     ///
712     /// The imports returned reflect the order of the imports in the wasm module
713     /// itself, and note that no form of deduplication happens.
714     ///
715     /// # Examples
716     ///
717     /// Modules with no imports return an empty list here:
718     ///
719     /// ```
720     /// # use wasmtime::*;
721     /// # fn main() -> Result<()> {
722     /// # let engine = Engine::default();
723     /// let module = Module::new(&engine, "(module)")?;
724     /// assert_eq!(module.imports().len(), 0);
725     /// # Ok(())
726     /// # }
727     /// ```
728     ///
729     /// and modules with imports will have a non-empty list:
730     ///
731     /// ```
732     /// # use wasmtime::*;
733     /// # fn main() -> Result<()> {
734     /// # let engine = Engine::default();
735     /// let wat = r#"
736     ///     (module
737     ///         (import "host" "foo" (func))
738     ///     )
739     /// "#;
740     /// let module = Module::new(&engine, wat)?;
741     /// assert_eq!(module.imports().len(), 1);
742     /// let import = module.imports().next().unwrap();
743     /// assert_eq!(import.module(), "host");
744     /// assert_eq!(import.name(), "foo");
745     /// match import.ty() {
746     ///     ExternType::Func(_) => { /* ... */ }
747     ///     _ => panic!("unexpected import type!"),
748     /// }
749     /// # Ok(())
750     /// # }
751     /// ```
752     pub fn imports<'module>(
753         &'module self,
754     ) -> impl ExactSizeIterator<Item = ImportType<'module>> + 'module {
755         let module = self.compiled_module().module();
756         let types = self.types();
757         let engine = self.engine();
758         module
759             .imports()
760             .map(move |(imp_mod, imp_field, ty)| {
761                 debug_assert!(ty.is_canonicalized_for_runtime_usage());
762                 ImportType::new(imp_mod, imp_field, ty, types, engine)
763             })
764             .collect::<Vec<_>>()
765             .into_iter()
766     }
767 
768     /// Returns the list of exports that this [`Module`] has and will be
769     /// available after instantiation.
770     ///
771     /// This function will return the type of each item that will be returned
772     /// from [`Instance::exports`](crate::Instance::exports). Each entry in this
773     /// list corresponds 1-to-1 with that list, and the entries here will
774     /// indicate the name of the export along with the type of the export.
775     ///
776     /// # Examples
777     ///
778     /// Modules might not have any exports:
779     ///
780     /// ```
781     /// # use wasmtime::*;
782     /// # fn main() -> Result<()> {
783     /// # let engine = Engine::default();
784     /// let module = Module::new(&engine, "(module)")?;
785     /// assert!(module.exports().next().is_none());
786     /// # Ok(())
787     /// # }
788     /// ```
789     ///
790     /// When the exports are not empty, you can inspect each export:
791     ///
792     /// ```
793     /// # use wasmtime::*;
794     /// # fn main() -> Result<()> {
795     /// # let engine = Engine::default();
796     /// let wat = r#"
797     ///     (module
798     ///         (func (export "foo"))
799     ///         (memory (export "memory") 1)
800     ///     )
801     /// "#;
802     /// let module = Module::new(&engine, wat)?;
803     /// assert_eq!(module.exports().len(), 2);
804     ///
805     /// let mut exports = module.exports();
806     /// let foo = exports.next().unwrap();
807     /// assert_eq!(foo.name(), "foo");
808     /// match foo.ty() {
809     ///     ExternType::Func(_) => { /* ... */ }
810     ///     _ => panic!("unexpected export type!"),
811     /// }
812     ///
813     /// let memory = exports.next().unwrap();
814     /// assert_eq!(memory.name(), "memory");
815     /// match memory.ty() {
816     ///     ExternType::Memory(_) => { /* ... */ }
817     ///     _ => panic!("unexpected export type!"),
818     /// }
819     /// # Ok(())
820     /// # }
821     /// ```
822     pub fn exports<'module>(
823         &'module self,
824     ) -> impl ExactSizeIterator<Item = ExportType<'module>> + 'module {
825         let module = self.compiled_module().module();
826         let types = self.types();
827         let engine = self.engine();
828         module.exports.iter().map(move |(name, entity_index)| {
829             ExportType::new(
830                 &module.strings[name],
831                 module.type_of(*entity_index),
832                 types,
833                 engine,
834             )
835         })
836     }
837 
838     /// Looks up an export in this [`Module`] by name.
839     ///
840     /// This function will return the type of an export with the given name.
841     ///
842     /// # Examples
843     ///
844     /// There may be no export with that name:
845     ///
846     /// ```
847     /// # use wasmtime::*;
848     /// # fn main() -> Result<()> {
849     /// # let engine = Engine::default();
850     /// let module = Module::new(&engine, "(module)")?;
851     /// assert!(module.get_export("foo").is_none());
852     /// # Ok(())
853     /// # }
854     /// ```
855     ///
856     /// When there is an export with that name, it is returned:
857     ///
858     /// ```
859     /// # use wasmtime::*;
860     /// # fn main() -> Result<()> {
861     /// # let engine = Engine::default();
862     /// let wat = r#"
863     ///     (module
864     ///         (func (export "foo"))
865     ///         (memory (export "memory") 1)
866     ///     )
867     /// "#;
868     /// let module = Module::new(&engine, wat)?;
869     /// let foo = module.get_export("foo");
870     /// assert!(foo.is_some());
871     ///
872     /// let foo = foo.unwrap();
873     /// match foo {
874     ///     ExternType::Func(_) => { /* ... */ }
875     ///     _ => panic!("unexpected export type!"),
876     /// }
877     ///
878     /// # Ok(())
879     /// # }
880     /// ```
881     pub fn get_export(&self, name: &str) -> Option<ExternType> {
882         let module = self.compiled_module().module();
883         let name = module.strings.get_atom(name)?;
884         let entity_index = module.exports.get(&name)?;
885         Some(ExternType::from_wasmtime(
886             self.engine(),
887             self.types(),
888             &module.type_of(*entity_index),
889         ))
890     }
891 
892     /// Looks up an export in this [`Module`] by name to get its index.
893     ///
894     /// This function will return the index of an export with the given name. This can be useful
895     /// to avoid the cost of looking up the export by name multiple times. Instead the
896     /// [`ModuleExport`] can be stored and used to look up the export on the
897     /// [`Instance`](crate::Instance) later.
898     pub fn get_export_index(&self, name: &str) -> Option<ModuleExport> {
899         let compiled_module = self.compiled_module();
900         let module = compiled_module.module();
901         let name = module.strings.get_atom(name)?;
902         let entity = *module.exports.get(&name)?;
903         Some(ModuleExport {
904             module: self.id(),
905             entity,
906         })
907     }
908 
909     /// Returns the [`Engine`] that this [`Module`] was compiled by.
910     pub fn engine(&self) -> &Engine {
911         &self.inner.engine
912     }
913 
914     #[allow(
915         unused,
916         reason = "used only for verification with wasmtime `rr` feature \
917         and requires a lot of unnecessary gating across crates"
918     )]
919     pub(crate) fn checksum(&self) -> &WasmChecksum {
920         &self.inner.checksum
921     }
922 
923     /// Returns a summary of the resources required to instantiate this
924     /// [`Module`].
925     ///
926     /// Potential uses of the returned information:
927     ///
928     /// * Determining whether your pooling allocator configuration supports
929     ///   instantiating this module.
930     ///
931     /// * Deciding how many of which `Module` you want to instantiate within a
932     ///   fixed amount of resources, e.g. determining whether to create 5
933     ///   instances of module X or 10 instances of module Y.
934     ///
935     /// # Example
936     ///
937     /// ```
938     /// # fn main() -> wasmtime::Result<()> {
939     /// use wasmtime::{Config, Engine, Module};
940     ///
941     /// let mut config = Config::new();
942     /// config.wasm_multi_memory(true);
943     /// let engine = Engine::new(&config)?;
944     ///
945     /// let module = Module::new(&engine, r#"
946     ///     (module
947     ///         ;; Import a memory. Doesn't count towards required resources.
948     ///         (import "a" "b" (memory 10))
949     ///         ;; Define two local memories. These count towards the required
950     ///         ;; resources.
951     ///         (memory 1)
952     ///         (memory 6)
953     ///     )
954     /// "#)?;
955     ///
956     /// let resources = module.resources_required();
957     ///
958     /// // Instantiating the module will require allocating two memories, and
959     /// // the maximum initial memory size is six Wasm pages.
960     /// assert_eq!(resources.num_memories, 2);
961     /// assert_eq!(resources.max_initial_memory_size, Some(6));
962     ///
963     /// // The module doesn't need any tables.
964     /// assert_eq!(resources.num_tables, 0);
965     /// assert_eq!(resources.max_initial_table_size, None);
966     /// # Ok(()) }
967     /// ```
968     pub fn resources_required(&self) -> ResourcesRequired {
969         let em = self.env_module();
970         let num_memories = u32::try_from(em.num_defined_memories()).unwrap();
971         let max_initial_memory_size = em
972             .memories
973             .values()
974             .skip(em.num_imported_memories)
975             .map(|memory| memory.limits.min)
976             .max();
977         let num_tables = u32::try_from(em.num_defined_tables()).unwrap();
978         let max_initial_table_size = em
979             .tables
980             .values()
981             .skip(em.num_imported_tables)
982             .map(|table| table.limits.min)
983             .max();
984         ResourcesRequired {
985             num_memories,
986             max_initial_memory_size,
987             num_tables,
988             max_initial_table_size,
989         }
990     }
991 
992     /// Returns the range of bytes in memory where this module's compilation
993     /// image resides.
994     ///
995     /// The compilation image for a module contains executable code, data, debug
996     /// information, etc. This is roughly the same as the `Module::serialize`
997     /// but not the exact same.
998     ///
999     /// The range of memory reported here is exposed to allow low-level
1000     /// manipulation of the memory in platform-specific manners such as using
1001     /// `mlock` to force the contents to be paged in immediately or keep them
1002     /// paged in after they're loaded.
1003     ///
1004     /// It is not safe to modify the memory in this range, nor is it safe to
1005     /// modify the protections of memory in this range.
1006     ///
1007     /// Note that depending on the engine configuration, this image
1008     /// range may not actually be the code that is directly executed.
1009     pub fn image_range(&self) -> Range<*const u8> {
1010         self.engine_code().image().as_ptr_range()
1011     }
1012 
1013     /// Force initialization of copy-on-write images to happen here-and-now
1014     /// instead of when they're requested during first instantiation.
1015     ///
1016     /// When [copy-on-write memory
1017     /// initialization](crate::Config::memory_init_cow) is enabled then Wasmtime
1018     /// will lazily create the initialization image for a module. This method
1019     /// can be used to explicitly dictate when this initialization happens.
1020     ///
1021     /// Note that this largely only matters on Linux when memfd is used.
1022     /// Otherwise the copy-on-write image typically comes from disk and in that
1023     /// situation the creation of the image is trivial as the image is always
1024     /// sourced from disk. On Linux, though, when memfd is used a memfd is
1025     /// created and the initialization image is written to it.
1026     ///
1027     /// Also note that this method is not required to be called, it's available
1028     /// as a performance optimization if required but is otherwise handled
1029     /// automatically.
1030     pub fn initialize_copy_on_write_image(&self) -> Result<()> {
1031         self.memory_images()?;
1032         Ok(())
1033     }
1034 
1035     /// Get the map from `.text` section offsets to Wasm binary offsets for this
1036     /// module.
1037     ///
1038     /// Each entry is a (`.text` section offset, Wasm binary offset) pair.
1039     ///
1040     /// Entries are yielded in order of `.text` section offset.
1041     ///
1042     /// Some entries are missing a Wasm binary offset. This is for code that is
1043     /// not associated with any single location in the Wasm binary, or for when
1044     /// source information was optimized away.
1045     ///
1046     /// Not every module has an address map, since address map generation can be
1047     /// turned off on `Config`.
1048     ///
1049     /// There is not an entry for every `.text` section offset. Every offset
1050     /// after an entry's offset, but before the next entry's offset, is
1051     /// considered to map to the same Wasm binary offset as the original
1052     /// entry. For example, the address map will not contain the following
1053     /// sequence of entries:
1054     ///
1055     /// ```ignore
1056     /// [
1057     ///     // ...
1058     ///     (10, Some(42)),
1059     ///     (11, Some(42)),
1060     ///     (12, Some(42)),
1061     ///     (13, Some(43)),
1062     ///     // ...
1063     /// ]
1064     /// ```
1065     ///
1066     /// Instead, it will drop the entries for offsets `11` and `12` since they
1067     /// are the same as the entry for offset `10`:
1068     ///
1069     /// ```ignore
1070     /// [
1071     ///     // ...
1072     ///     (10, Some(42)),
1073     ///     (13, Some(43)),
1074     ///     // ...
1075     /// ]
1076     /// ```
1077     pub fn address_map<'a>(&'a self) -> Option<impl Iterator<Item = (usize, Option<u32>)> + 'a> {
1078         Some(
1079             wasmtime_environ::iterate_address_map(self.engine_code().address_map_data())?
1080                 .map(|(offset, file_pos)| (offset as usize, file_pos.file_offset())),
1081         )
1082     }
1083 
1084     /// Get this module's code object's `.text` section, containing its compiled
1085     /// executable code.
1086     pub fn text(&self) -> &[u8] {
1087         self.engine_code().text()
1088     }
1089 
1090     /// Get information about functions in this module's `.text` section: their
1091     /// index, name, and offset+length.
1092     ///
1093     /// Results are yielded in a ModuleFunction struct.
1094     pub fn functions<'a>(&'a self) -> impl ExactSizeIterator<Item = ModuleFunction> + 'a {
1095         let module = self.compiled_module();
1096         self.env_module().defined_func_indices().map(|idx| {
1097             let loc = module.func_loc(idx);
1098             let idx = module.module().func_index(idx);
1099             ModuleFunction {
1100                 index: idx,
1101                 name: module.func_name(idx).map(|n| n.to_string()),
1102                 offset: loc.start as usize,
1103                 len: loc.length as usize,
1104             }
1105         })
1106     }
1107 
1108     pub(crate) fn id(&self) -> CompiledModuleId {
1109         self.inner.module.unique_id()
1110     }
1111 
1112     pub(crate) fn offsets(&self) -> &VMOffsets<HostPtr> {
1113         &self.inner.offsets
1114     }
1115 
1116     /// Return the unique-within-Engine ID for this module.
1117     ///
1118     /// Allows distinguishing module identities when introspecting
1119     /// modules, e.g. via debug APIs.
1120     #[cfg(feature = "debug")]
1121     pub fn debug_index_in_engine(&self) -> u64 {
1122         self.id().as_u64()
1123     }
1124 
1125     /// Return the address, in memory, of the trampoline that allows Wasm to
1126     /// call a array function of the given signature.
1127     ///
1128     /// Note that unlike all other code-pointer-returning functions,
1129     /// this *can* be present on `Module` (without a `StoreCode`)
1130     /// because we can execute the `EngineCode` for trampolines that
1131     /// leave the store to call the host.
1132     pub(crate) fn wasm_to_array_trampoline(
1133         &self,
1134         signature: VMSharedTypeIndex,
1135     ) -> Option<NonNull<VMWasmCallFunction>> {
1136         log::trace!("Looking up trampoline for {signature:?}");
1137         let trampoline_shared_ty = self.inner.engine.signatures().trampoline_type(signature);
1138         let trampoline_module_ty = self
1139             .inner
1140             .code
1141             .signatures()
1142             .trampoline_type(trampoline_shared_ty)?;
1143         debug_assert!(
1144             self.inner
1145                 .engine
1146                 .signatures()
1147                 .borrow(
1148                     self.inner
1149                         .code
1150                         .signatures()
1151                         .shared_type(trampoline_module_ty)
1152                         .unwrap()
1153                 )
1154                 .unwrap()
1155                 .unwrap_func()
1156                 .is_trampoline_type()
1157         );
1158 
1159         let ptr = self
1160             .compiled_module()
1161             .wasm_to_array_trampoline(trampoline_module_ty)
1162             .expect("always have a trampoline for the trampoline type")
1163             .as_ptr()
1164             .cast::<VMWasmCallFunction>()
1165             .cast_mut();
1166         Some(NonNull::new(ptr).unwrap())
1167     }
1168 
1169     pub(crate) fn memory_images(&self) -> Result<Option<&ModuleMemoryImages>> {
1170         let images = self
1171             .inner
1172             .memory_images
1173             .get_or_try_init(|| memory_images(&self.inner))?
1174             .as_ref();
1175         Ok(images)
1176     }
1177 
1178     /// Obtain an exception-table parser on this module's exception metadata.
1179     #[cfg(feature = "gc")]
1180     pub(crate) fn exception_table<'a>(&'a self) -> ExceptionTable<'a> {
1181         ExceptionTable::parse(self.inner.code.exception_tables())
1182             .expect("Exception tables were validated on module load")
1183     }
1184 
1185     /// Obtain a frame-table parser on this module's frame state slot
1186     /// (debug instrumentation) metadata.
1187     #[cfg(feature = "debug")]
1188     pub(crate) fn frame_table<'a>(&'a self) -> Option<FrameTable<'a>> {
1189         let data = self.inner.code.frame_tables();
1190         if data.is_empty() {
1191             None
1192         } else {
1193             let orig_text = self.inner.code.text();
1194             Some(
1195                 FrameTable::parse(data, orig_text)
1196                     .expect("Frame tables were validated on module load"),
1197             )
1198         }
1199     }
1200 
1201     /// Is this `Module` the same as another?
1202     ///
1203     /// Ordinarily, module identity does not matter: a Wasmtime user
1204     /// will create or obtain a module from some source and
1205     /// instantiate it, and any two `Module` objects created from the
1206     /// same source module are interchangeable. However, introspecting
1207     /// module identity may be useful when examining Wasm VM state,
1208     /// e.g. via debug APIs. It is guaranteed that `Module::same`
1209     /// returns true for `Module` objects that reference the same
1210     /// underlying module (e.g., one created via a `clone` of the
1211     /// other).
1212     #[inline]
1213     pub fn same(a: &Module, b: &Module) -> bool {
1214         Arc::ptr_eq(&a.inner, &b.inner)
1215     }
1216 }
1217 
1218 /// Describes a function for a given module.
1219 pub struct ModuleFunction {
1220     pub index: wasmtime_environ::FuncIndex,
1221     pub name: Option<String>,
1222     pub offset: usize,
1223     pub len: usize,
1224 }
1225 
1226 impl Drop for ModuleInner {
1227     fn drop(&mut self) {
1228         // When a `Module` is being dropped that means that it's no longer
1229         // present in any `Store` and it's additionally not longer held by any
1230         // embedder. Take this opportunity to purge any lingering instantiations
1231         // within a pooling instance allocator, if applicable.
1232         self.engine
1233             .allocator()
1234             .purge_module(self.module.unique_id());
1235     }
1236 }
1237 
1238 /// Describes the location of an export in a module.
1239 #[derive(Copy, Clone)]
1240 pub struct ModuleExport {
1241     /// The module that this export is defined in.
1242     pub(crate) module: CompiledModuleId,
1243     /// A raw index into the wasm module.
1244     pub(crate) entity: EntityIndex,
1245 }
1246 
1247 fn _assert_send_sync() {
1248     fn _assert<T: Send + Sync>() {}
1249     _assert::<Module>();
1250 }
1251 
1252 /// Helper method to construct a `ModuleMemoryImages` for an associated
1253 /// `CompiledModule`.
1254 fn memory_images(inner: &Arc<ModuleInner>) -> Result<Option<ModuleMemoryImages>> {
1255     // If initialization via copy-on-write is explicitly disabled in
1256     // configuration then this path is skipped entirely.
1257     if !inner.engine.tunables().memory_init_cow {
1258         return Ok(None);
1259     }
1260 
1261     // ... otherwise logic is delegated to the `ModuleMemoryImages::new`
1262     // constructor.
1263     ModuleMemoryImages::new(
1264         &inner.engine,
1265         inner.module.module(),
1266         inner.code.module_memory_image_source(),
1267     )
1268 }
1269 
1270 impl crate::vm::ModuleMemoryImageSource for CodeMemory {
1271     fn wasm_data(&self) -> &[u8] {
1272         <Self>::wasm_data(self)
1273     }
1274 
1275     fn mmap(&self) -> Option<&MmapVec> {
1276         Some(<Self>::mmap(self))
1277     }
1278 }
1279 
1280 #[cfg(test)]
1281 mod tests {
1282     use crate::{CodeBuilder, Engine, Module};
1283     use wasmtime_environ::MemoryInitialization;
1284 
1285     #[test]
1286     fn cow_on_by_default() {
1287         let engine = Engine::default();
1288         let module = Module::new(
1289             &engine,
1290             r#"
1291                 (module
1292                     (memory 1)
1293                     (data (i32.const 100) "abcd")
1294                 )
1295             "#,
1296         )
1297         .unwrap();
1298 
1299         let init = &module.env_module().memory_initialization;
1300         assert!(matches!(init, MemoryInitialization::Static { .. }));
1301     }
1302 
1303     #[test]
1304     #[cfg_attr(miri, ignore)]
1305     fn image_range_is_whole_image() {
1306         let wat = r#"
1307                 (module
1308                     (memory 1)
1309                     (data (i32.const 0) "1234")
1310                     (func (export "f") (param i32) (result i32)
1311                         local.get 0))
1312             "#;
1313         let engine = Engine::default();
1314         let mut builder = CodeBuilder::new(&engine);
1315         builder.wasm_binary_or_text(wat.as_bytes(), None).unwrap();
1316         let bytes = builder.compile_module_serialized().unwrap();
1317 
1318         let module = unsafe { Module::deserialize(&engine, &bytes).unwrap() };
1319         let image_range = module.image_range();
1320         let len = image_range.end.addr() - image_range.start.addr();
1321         // Length may be strictly greater if it becomes page-aligned.
1322         assert!(len >= bytes.len());
1323     }
1324 }
1325