The WAMR-IDE is an Integrated Development Environment to develop WebAssembly application with coding, compiling and source debugging support. It contains 3 components: VSCode extension
, wasm-toolchain docker image
and wasm-debug-server docker image
.
-
VSCode extension
is anvscode
extension, with which user can build and manage projects, developwasm application
, includingbuilding
,running
anddebugging
. -
WASM-toolchain
is a docker image which provides building environment for wasm. -
WASM source debug server
is a docker image which provides running and source debugging environment for wasm application.
Now, the most straightforward way to install the WAMR IDE extension is by searching for WAMR-IDE in the VS Code extension marketplace and installing it directly. So, if you simply want to use WAMR debugging features in VS Code, this is the ideal (and effortless) way. And you are ready to use WAMR IDE.
It is only recommended to download versions after 1.3.2 from the marketplace.
Also, we have same version tagged docker images, lldb binaries and VS Code installation file(.vsix file) packed for each GitHub release. You can following the tutorial in this section.
Alternatively, if you want to build lldb, docker images, or .vsix file locally so that you can try the effect of your modification, you could refer to the tutorial in this section.
- make sure the version of vscode you installed is at least 1.59.0
1. [Windows: Docker Desktop](https://docs.docker.com/desktop/windows/install/)
2. [Ubuntu: Docker Engine](https://docs.docker.com/engine/install/ubuntu)
```xml
OS requirements:
To install Docker Engine, you need the 64-bit version of one of these Ubuntu versions:
- Ubuntu Impish 21.10
- Ubuntu Hirsute 21.04
- Ubuntu Focal 20.04(LTS)
- Ubuntu Bionic 18.04(LTS)
```
From now on, for each GitHub release, we have the same version tagged docker image saved as a tar file, which you can find and download in the GitHub release.
You could download the tar archive files for docker images from the release, and then load them using the following commands:
# download the zip or tar.gz from release depending on your platform
# decompress and get the tar file
# on Linux/MacOS, you could use tar
tar xf wasm-toolchain-{version number}.tar.gz
tar xf wasm-debug-server-{version number}.tar.gz
# or you could use unzip
unzip wasm-toolchain-{version number}.zip
unzip wasm-debug-server-{version number}.zip
# load wasm-toolchain
docker load --input wasm-toolchain.tar
# load wasm-debug-server
docker load --input wasm-debug-server.tar
# on Windows, you could use any unzip software you like
# then loading docker images using powershell or git bash
# load wasm-toolchain
docker load --input ./wasm-toolchain.tar
# load wasm-debug-server
docker load --input ./wasm-debug-server.tar
From now on, for each GitHub release, we have the same version tagged zip/tar.gz file. For example, in release version 1.1.2, you can easily download and decompress wamr-ide-1.1.2.tar.gz
wamr-ide-1.1.2.zip
, which contains wamr-ide.vsix
VS Code extension installation file. As you can imagine, in the future, when new releases are available, you can freely choose whichever version(for example, 1.2.0, 1.3.0, etc.) you prefer. It should work as long as you download the same version tagged docker image and .vsix file.
select wamr-ide.vsix
which you have decompressed from .tar.gz
or .zip
file.
You could also build the VS Code extension locally, the following instruction provides a thorough tutorial. It's worth noting that in the local build tutorial we use hard-coded tag version 1.0 other than the semantic version of WAMR.
Note: Please ensure that the scripts under resource
directories have execution permission. While on git they have x bits, you might have dropped them eg. by copying them from Windows. Similarly, do not drop execution permission when copying lldb
binaries under resource/debug/bin
.
We have 2 docker images which should be built or loaded on your host, wasm-toolchain
and wasm-debug-server
. To build these 2 images, please enter the WASM-Debug-Server/Docker
& WASM-Toolchain/Docker
, then execute the build_docker_image
script respectively.
Windows (powershell):
cd .\WASM-Toolchain\Docker
.\build_docker_image.bat
cd .\WASM-Debug-Server\Docker
.\build_docker_image.bat
Linux:
cd ./WASM-Toolchain/Docker
./build_docker_image.sh
cd ./WASM-Debug-Server/Docker
./build_docker_image.sh
Sometimes building the Docker images may fail due to bad network conditions. If the wasm-toolchain
and wasm-debug-server
images do not exist after building, please build them manually. Fix the proxy setting if needed and execute the following command to build docker images.
Note: please correctly replace example proxy address with your own before you run manually.
$ cd .\docker_images\wasm-debug-server
$ docker build --no-cache --build-arg http_proxy=http://proxy.example.com:1234
--build-arg https_proxy=http://proxy.example.com:1234 -t wasm-debug-server:1.0 .
$ cd .\docker_images\wasm-toolchain
$ docker build --no-cache --build-arg http_proxy=http://proxy.example.com:1234
--build-arg https_proxy=http://proxy.example.com:1234 -t wasm-toolchain:1.0 .
2.2.4 If you encounter the problem failed to solve with frontend dockerfile.v0: failed to create LLB definition
, please config your docker desktop
- Make sure that the
wasm-toolchain:1.0
andwasm-debug-server:1.0
docker images are both successfully built before usingWAMR IDE
, otherwiseBuild
,Run
andDebug
will not work.
wamride-1.0.0.vsix
can be packaged by npm vsce
.
npm install -g vsce
cd VSCode-Extension
rm -rf node_modules
npm install
vsce package
By default, when you build .vsix locally, the debugging feature is off. Suppose you want to enable the source debugging feature. In that case, you could download lldb
binaries from our GitHub release (for example, wamr-lldb-1.1.2-x86_64-ubuntu-20.04.tar.gz
), decompress and put every subdirectory and file to the installed directory of your VS Code extension.
For example, let's say you are on an Ubuntu 20.04 machine. You first download and decompress wamr-lldb-1.1.2-x86_64-ubuntu-20.04.tar.gz
, and you will get a wamr-lldb
folder (or inst
folder in our earlier release). Then, you can simply copy the files and directory inside that folder to the relative path resource/debug/linux/
under your VS Code extension installation directory.
Example commands on an Ubuntu 20.04 machine:
# decompress .tar.gz file and get the folder
$ ls wamr-lldb
bin lib package.json syntaxes
# copy everything to the vscode extension installation path(in this case, it's /home/{usrname}/.vscode-server/extensions/wamr.wamride-1.0.0/)
$ cp inst/* /home/{usrname}/.vscode-server/extensions/wamr.wamride-1.0.0/resource/debug/linux/
If you want to use your own patched lldb
, you could follow this instruction to build lldb
. And follow this instruction
to copy the binaries to replace the existing ones.
You can also debug the extension directly follow this instruction without packing the extension.
select wamride-1.0.0.vsix
which you have packed on your host.
WAMR-IDE
extension contains 2 components as following picture showing. WAMR IDE
for workspace and project management and Current Project
for project's execution
When you click New project
button, the extension will pop up a message box at the bottom right of the screen as following:
You can click Set up now
and select the target folder to create project workspace, or you click Maybe later
to close the message box.
Note that your selected workspace folder should be empty or the folder you have set up as workspace.
After setting up workspace, extension will prompt successful message:
Workspace has been set up successfully!
Then click New project
button again, a new page will show as following.
Enter the Project name
and select the Template
, then click Create
button. A new project will be generated and opened in your current VS Code window
or in a new VS Code window
.
Opening in current windows or a new one depends on whether your
vscode's explorer
is empty or not. If empty, open in current window, or open in the new vscode window.
A new initialized project is as following picture shows.
.wamr
is the project configuration folder which contains 3 files, CMakeLists.txt
, project.cmake
, and compilation_config.json
. CMakeLists.txt
is used to build wasm target
and the project.cmake
is included in CMakeLists.txt
. compilation_config.json
includes the user's customized configuration such as folders which should be added in the include path.
Click Open project
button, quick-pick-box
will show as following. All projects under your current workspace will be shown and can be selected.
Click Change workspace
button, a dialog will show as following. You can select 1 folder in file system as workspace, and the new workspace path will override previous workspace, and all new created projects will be generated in the new workspace.
Extension supports adding header file folder to `include path` and excluding source file from build.
-
Add to include path
- Move the cursor to the
folder
and right click, thenmenus
will be shown as following. ClickToggle state of path including
.
- Move the cursor to the
-
Exclude source file from build
- Move the cursor to the
source file
and right click, thenmenus
will be shown as following. ClickToggle state of excluding
.
- Move the cursor to the
After setting up include path
and exclude files
, the corresponding folder and files will be decorated with color and icon as following picture shows
At the same time, all added include path
and exclude files
will be saved in .wamr/compilation_config.json
as json array.
Toggle state of path including
just shows when selectingfolder
and hides with other resources.
Toggle state of excluding
just shows when selecting[.c | .cpp | .cxx] source files
and hides with other resources.
Click Configuration
button, a new page will be shown as following. You can config building target with Include paths
, Initial & Max linear memory
, stack size
, exported_symbols
and include paths
, exclude files
.
Short Explanation of the Fields Above:
- Output file name: The compiled wasm file name of your program.
- Initial linear memory size, Max linear memory size, Stack size: The wasi-sdk clang compile options.
- Exported symbols: The symbols your wasm program wants to export. Multiple symbols are separated by commas without spaces.
- Host managed heap size: The running configuration for the host managed heap size of iwasm. In most cases, the default size would be fine, but in some scenarios, let's say you want to allocate more memory using
malloc
, you should increase it here accordingly.
Note that due to the current implementation limitation, after changing the
Output file name
orHost managed heap size
, you need to close and reopen VSCode (to reactivate the extension) so that the running config will be correctly updated.
Then click Modify
button to confirm, if configurations are modified successfully and following message will pop. Click OK
, the page will be auto closed.
And all configuration will be saved in .wamr/compilation_config.json
.
When you have completed coding and ready to build target, click build
button and the wasm-toolchain
will auto start a container and execute the building process.
After successful building execution, build
folder will be generated in explorer
, in which ${output_file_name}.wasm
is exist.
Note that to start
docker service
firstly.
Click Run
button and wasm-debug-server
docker image will auto start a container and execute the running process.
Click Debug
button will trigger start ip wamr-debug-server
docker image, and boot up lldb debug server
inside of iwasm. Then start a debugging session with configuration to connect. Tap F11
or click step into
to start debugging.
Docker containers will be auto stopped and removed after the execution.