* Backport paritytech/substrate#7381 * Bring back genesis storage build in aura/timestamp To not change spec version, see https://github.com/paritytech/substrate/pull/7686#discussion_r540032743 * Backport paritytech/substrate#7238 * Backport paritytech/substrate#7395 * Bump impl_version * Fix UI tests and bump trybuild dep See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/73996 Backports: https://github.com/paritytech/substrate/pull/7764 https://github.com/paritytech/substrate/pull/7656 * Partially backport paritytech/substrate#7838 * Release frame-support with a dep compilation fix * Bump patch level for remaining crates This is done because at the time of writing cargo-unleash does not fully support partial workspace publishing and mixes both local and crates.io versions of the packages, leading to errors in the release check workflow. * Backport paritytech/substrate#7854 ...to fix compilation error when using futures-* v0.3.9. * Adding Changelog entry for patch release Co-authored-by: Bastian Köcher <git@kchr.de> Co-authored-by: Benjamin Kampmann <ben@parity.io>
Substrate runtime interface
This crate provides types, traits and macros around runtime interfaces. A runtime interface is a fixed interface between a Substrate runtime and a Substrate node. For a native runtime the interface maps to a direct function call of the implementation. For a wasm runtime the interface maps to an external function call. These external functions are exported by the wasm executor and they map to the same implementation as the native calls.
Using a type in a runtime interface
Any type that should be used in a runtime interface as argument or return value needs to
implement [RIType]. The associated type FFIType
is the type that is used in the FFI function to represent the actual type. For example [T] is
represented by an u64. The slice pointer and the length will be mapped to an u64 value.
For more information see this table.
The FFI function definition is used when calling from the wasm runtime into the node.
Traits are used to convert from a type to the corresponding
RIType::FFIType.
Depending on where and how a type should be used in a function signature, a combination of the
following traits need to be implemented:
- Pass as function argument: [
wasm::IntoFFIValue] and [host::FromFFIValue] - As function return value: [
wasm::FromFFIValue] and [host::IntoFFIValue] - Pass as mutable function argument: [
host::IntoPreallocatedFFIValue]
The traits are implemented for most of the common types like [T], Vec<T>, arrays and
primitive types.
For custom types, we provide the PassBy trait and strategies that define
how a type is passed between the wasm runtime and the node. Each strategy also provides a derive
macro to simplify the implementation.
Performance
To not waste any more performance when calling into the node, not all types are SCALE encoded
when being passed as arguments between the wasm runtime and the node. For most types that
are raw bytes like Vec<u8>, [u8] or [u8; N] we pass them directly, without SCALE encoding
them in front of. The implementation of [RIType] each type provides more information on how
the data is passed.
Declaring a runtime interface
Declaring a runtime interface is similar to declaring a trait in Rust:
#[sp_runtime_interface::runtime_interface]
trait RuntimeInterface {
fn some_function(value: &[u8]) -> bool {
value.iter().all(|v| *v > 125)
}
}
For more information on declaring a runtime interface, see
#[runtime_interface].
FFI type and conversion
The following table documents how values of types are passed between the wasm and the host side and how they are converted into the corresponding type.
| Type | FFI type | Conversion |
|---|---|---|
u8 |
u8 |
Identity |
u16 |
u16 |
Identity |
u32 |
u32 |
Identity |
u64 |
u64 |
Identity |
i128 |
u32 |
v.as_ptr() (pointer to a 16 byte array) |
i8 |
i8 |
Identity |
i16 |
i16 |
Identity |
i32 |
i32 |
Identity |
i64 |
i64 |
Identity |
u128 |
u32 |
v.as_ptr() (pointer to a 16 byte array) |
bool |
u8 |
if v { 1 } else { 0 } |
&str |
u64 |
v.len() 32bit << 32 | v.as_ptr() 32bit |
&[u8] |
u64 |
v.len() 32bit << 32 | v.as_ptr() 32bit |
Vec<u8> |
u64 |
v.len() 32bit << 32 | v.as_ptr() 32bit |
Vec<T> where T: Encode |
u64 |
let e = v.encode();e.len() 32bit << 32 | e.as_ptr() 32bit |
&[T] where T: Encode |
u64 |
let e = v.encode();e.len() 32bit << 32 | e.as_ptr() 32bit |
[u8; N] |
u32 |
v.as_ptr() |
*const T |
u32 |
Identity |
Option<T> |
u64 |
let e = v.encode();e.len() 32bit << 32 | e.as_ptr() 32bit |
T where T: PassBy<PassBy=Inner> |
Depends on inner | Depends on inner |
T where T: PassBy<PassBy=Codec> |
u64 |
v.len() 32bit << 32 | v.as_ptr() 32bit |
Identity means that the value is converted directly into the corresponding FFI type.
License: Apache-2.0