At Wasmer we have been porting a lot of C and C++ projects to WebAssembly and WASI, as we believe WebAssembly will emerge as the standard way to use third-party code from any programming language securely and easily.

WebAssembly System Interfaces (WASI) is an exciting new specification that allows running POSIX-like applications anywhere, safely and securely with WebAssembly.

We realized that compiling already existing C/C++ projects to WASI was much more challenging than we expected. This is because of two main reasons:

It’s not trivial to install and use the WASI SDK It’s quite hard to port existing projects to WASI as it requires a tighter integration with all configuration and make tools

Inspired by these challenges we have been working non-stop on improving the tooling so it’s easier for anyone to use and adopt WebAssembly and WASI!

Today we are very happy to announce wasienv ! 🎉

We aim for wasienv to be the version manager and ergonomic driver that empowers developers and companies for targeting WebAssembly WASI easily. Similar to what rbenv and pipenv are for Ruby and Python.

🤩 Getting Started with Wasienv

You can install wasienv onto your system with this command:

Note: wasienv currently only works in macOS and Linux, support for Windows coming soon. It also requires pip to be installed in your system.

You can also install wasienv from source like this:

pip install wasienv --upgrade

wasienv install-sdk unstable

Once installed, the following commands will be available in your shell:

wasicc / wasic++ : The Clang compiler

/ : The Clang compiler wasiconfigure : A tool to wrap ./configure commands with wasienv

: A tool to wrap commands with wasienv wasimake : A tool to wrap cmake and make commands

: A tool to wrap and commands wasild : the WebAssembly linker

Now that we know the commands that we have now available, let’s get into the weeds. Let’s start creating an example.c file!

Now, we should be ready to compile it to WebAssembly and WASI with wasicc :

$ wasicc example.c -o example

We also made a Wasienv Docker Image to make it super easy to target WASI in any environment. Check more here!

This command, will automatically create two files:

example : an executable file that runs the Wasm file using a standalone server-side WASI runtime

: an executable file that runs the Wasm file using a standalone server-side WASI runtime example.wasm : the WebAssembly file

Now, you can run the example file in your shell!

$ ./example Peter # The previous command is equivalent to: $ wasmer run example.wasm -- Peter

Now, you can use the generated example.wasm as you please:

📦 Publish a new package to WAPM — Bonus: the command will be automatically available in the WebAssembly shell!

a new package to WAPM — Bonus: the command will be automatically available in the WebAssembly shell! 🛳 Ship a universal binary that will work on any platform

that will work on any platform 🚀 Execute your WASI Module in a browser (or inside your Node app!) with the NPM package @wasmer/wasi !

We have created some documentation to showcase how you can use wasienv in your CMake or Autoconf project!

How wasienv compares to Emscripten?

Emscripten is an incredibly useful tool. It was the precursor to asm.js and WebAssembly, and pioneered bringing already-existing C/C++ projects to the Browsers.

As such, they focused on fast iteration, small “runtime glue” code size, and a tight coupling between runtime and compiled .wasm code.

However, for executing WebAssembly server-side there’s another set of tradeoffs to take into account:

A stable ABI so the WebAssembly runtime can work with it on the long term

so the WebAssembly runtime can work with it on the long term A sandbox on top of the exposed ABI calls

We realized that Emscripten introduced the perfect ergonomics for porting C/C++ projects to the Browser. We wanted to bring the same ergonomics to server-side WebAssembly WASI modules for the WebAssembly Community.

Thanks!

We are excited to see what the WebAssembly Community will build with this.

💬 Feel free to reach out and share your projects!