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Crates for emscripten targets in rust

This project contains 2 crates with functions (and types too) to help rust development for emscripten targets.

The crates

  • emscripten-functions-sys - Raw bindgen-generated rust bindings to emscripten’s system functions.
  • emscripten-functions - Various emscripten system functions that make programming in rust for emscripten targets easier.

Why emscripten for rust

If you want to write web apps in rust, the wasm32-unknown-unknown target is the top choice, with a quite mature ecosystem of functions that interact with the web ecosystem. That being said, if your project has parts or libraries written in C or C++, then the wasm32-unknown-unknown target doesn't work anymore. Also, you might be interested in using asm.js instead of WASM.

Thankfully, there is an alternative: wasm32-unknown-emscripten (and asmjs-unknown-emscripten too). Emscripten provides a ready-to-use libc for web apps, and a few other popular C libraries, like SDL. Using the 2 crates, interacting with the web environment of emscripten becomes easier.

Some tips

Functions that can be triggered dynamically

  • Make a function with #[no_mangle] pub extern "C" fn function_name ... (they can accept and return integers, floats, C-style strings, booleans, pointers or arrays of byte-sized numbers),
  • add -sEXPORTED_RUNTIME_METHODS=ccall,cwrap and -sEXPORTED_FUNCTIONS=_function_name,... (add a preceding underscore to your functions' names and separate them with commas) as link arguments,

... and you can call your functions using the ccall/cwrap emscripten javascript functions.

Example

The rust part:

use std::ffi::{CStr, CString};
use std::mem::ManuallyDrop;
use std::os::raw::c_char;

#[no_mangle]
pub extern "C" fn concat_str_int_float(s: *const c_char, i: i32, f: f64) -> *const c_char {
    // s (char pointer) => string (rust &str)
    let string = if s.is_null() {
        ""
    } else {
        (unsafe { CStr::from_ptr(s) }).to_str().unwrap()
    };

    let result = format!("{}_{}_{:.2}", string, i, f);

    // result (rust String) => return value (char pointer)
    // The return value will be `free`d by the caller
    let result_cstring = ManuallyDrop::new(CString::new(result.as_bytes()).unwrap());
    return result_cstring.as_ptr();
}

The javascript part (to be put in a <script> after <script src="your_project_name.js"></script>):

// As we need to `free` the pointer returned by our function, we need its raw address, so we'll consider the return type to be `number`.
let concat_str_int_float = Module.cwrap("concat_str_int_float", "number", ["string", "number", "number"])
// The function's signature decides if a `number` is an integer or a float.

let button = document.querySelector("button");
button.onclick = () => {
  let result_ptr = concat_str_int_float(document.title, performance.now(), performance.now())
  // `UTF8ToString` is an emscripten JS function which returns a proper JS garbage collected string.
  document.title = UTF8ToString(result_ptr)
  // We need to `free` our pointer so we don't cause memory leaks
  Module._free(result_ptr)
}

Run javascript from rust

Using the emscripten_functions::emscripten::run_script family of functions you can run the javascript you need in your web app.

Example

// The `.escape_unicode()` method makes it safe to pass untrusted user input.
run_script(
    format!(
        r##"
            document.querySelector("#this-is-secure").innerHTML = "{}"
        "##, 
        "untrusted user input".escape_unicode()
    )
);

Main loop control

If you need to run a loop function over and over, emscripten has its own main loop managing system. Using the emscripten_functions::emscripten::set_main_loop and emscripten_functions::emscripten::set_main_loop_with_arg functions you can run your rust functions as main loops, with full control over the main loop running parameters.

Example

struct GameData {
    level: u32,
    score: u32
}
let mut game_data = GameData {
    level: 1,
    score: 0
}

set_main_loop_with_arg(|data| {
    if data.score < data.level {
        data.score += 1;
    } else {
        data.score = 0;
        data.level += 1;
    }

    // Here you call your display to screen functions.
    // For demonstration purposes I chose `println!`.
    println!("Score {}, level {}", data.score, data.level);
}, game_data, 0, true);

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