wazero: the zero dependency WebAssembly runtime for Go developers

WebAssembly is a way to safely run code compiled in other languages. Runtimes
execute WebAssembly Modules (Wasm), which are most often binaries with a .wasm
extension.
wazero is a WebAssembly Core Specification 1.0 and 2.0 compliant
runtime written in Go. It has zero dependencies, and doesn't rely on CGO.
This means you can run applications in other languages and still keep cross
compilation.
Import wazero and extend your Go application with code written in any language!
Example
The best way to learn wazero is by trying one of our examples. The
most basic example extends a Go application with an addition
function defined in WebAssembly.
Runtime
There are two runtime configurations supported in wazero: Compiler is default:
By default, ex wazero.NewRuntime(ctx), the Compiler is used if supported. You
can also force the interpreter like so:
r := wazero.NewRuntimeWithConfig(ctx, wazero.NewRuntimeConfigInterpreter())
Interpreter
Interpreter is a naive interpreter-based implementation of Wasm virtual
machine. Its implementation doesn't have any platform (GOARCH, GOOS) specific
code, therefore interpreter can be used for any compilation target available
for Go (such as riscv64).
Compiler
Compiler compiles WebAssembly modules into machine code ahead of time (AOT),
during Runtime.CompileModule. This means your WebAssembly functions execute
natively at runtime. Compiler is faster than Interpreter, often by order of
magnitude (10x) or more. This is done without host-specific dependencies.
Conformance
Both runtimes pass WebAssembly Core 1.0 and 2.0 specification tests
on supported platforms:
| Interpreter | wazero.NewRuntimeConfigInterpreter() | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| Compiler | wazero.NewRuntimeConfigCompiler() | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ |
Support Policy
The below support policy focuses on compatibility concerns of those embedding
wazero into their Go applications.
wazero
wazero's 1.0 release happened in March 2023, and is in use by many
projects and production sites.
We offer an API stability promise with semantic versioning. In other words, we
promise to not break any exported function signature without incrementing the
major version. This does not mean no innovation: New features and behaviors
happen with a minor version increment, e.g. 1.0.11 to 1.2.0. We also fix bugs
or change internal details with a patch version, e.g. 1.0.0 to 1.0.1.
You can get the latest version of wazero like this.
go get github.com/tetratelabs/wazero@latest
Please give us a star if you end up using wazero!
Go
wazero has no dependencies except Go and x/sys, so the only source of
conflict in your project's use of wazero is the Go version.
wazero follows the same version policy as Go's Release Policy: two
versions. wazero will ensure these versions work and bugs are valid if there's
an issue with a current Go version.
Platform
wazero has two runtime modes: Interpreter and Compiler. The only supported operating
systems are ones we test, but that doesn't necessarily mean other operating
system versions won't work.
We currently test Linux (Ubuntu and scratch), MacOS and Windows as packaged by
GitHub Actions, as well as nested VMs running on Linux for FreeBSD, NetBSD,
OpenBSD, DragonFly BSD, illumos and Solaris.
We also test cross compilation for many GOOS and GOARCH combinations.
- Interpreter
- Linux is tested on amd64 and arm64 (native) as well as riscv64 via emulation.
- Windows, FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, DragonFly BSD, illumos and Solaris are
tested only on amd64.
- macOS is tested only on arm64.
- Compiler
- Linux is tested on amd64 and arm64.
- Windows, FreeBSD, NetBSD, DragonFly BSD, illumos and Solaris are
tested only on amd64.
- macOS is tested only on arm64.
wazero has no dependencies and doesn't require CGO. This means it can also be
embedded in an application that doesn't use an operating system. This is a main
differentiator between wazero and alternatives.
We verify zero dependencies by running tests in Docker's scratch image.
This approach ensures compatibility with any parent image.
macOS code-signing entitlements
If you're developing for macOS and need to code-sign your application,
please read issue #2393.
wazero is a registered trademark of Tetrate.io, Inc. in the United States and/or other countries