This directory houses the [Web Assembly (WASM)](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WebAssembly) parts of the sqlite3 build. It requires [emscripten][] and that the build environment be set up for emscripten. A mini-HOWTO for setting that up follows... First, install the Emscripten SDK, as documented [here](https://emscripten.org/docs/getting_started/downloads.html) and summarized below for Linux environments: ``` # Clone the emscripten repository: $ sudo apt install git $ git clone https://github.com/emscripten-core/emsdk.git $ cd emsdk # Download and install the latest SDK tools: $ ./emsdk install latest # Make the "latest" SDK "active" for the current user: $ ./emsdk activate latest ``` Those parts only need to be run once, but the SDK can be updated using: ``` $ git pull $ ./emsdk install latest $ ./emsdk activate latest ``` The following needs to be run for each shell instance which needs the `emcc` compiler: ``` # Activate PATH and other environment variables in the current terminal: $ source ./emsdk_env.sh $ which emcc /path/to/emsdk/upstream/emscripten/emcc ``` Optionally, add that to your login shell's resource file (`~/.bashrc` or equivalent). That `env` script needs to be sourced for building this application from the top of the sqlite3 build tree: ``` $ make fiddle ``` Or: ``` $ cd ext/wasm $ make ``` That will generate the a number of files required for a handful of test and demo applications which can be accessed via `index.html`. WASM content cannot, due to XMLHttpRequest security limitations, be loaded if the containing HTML file is opened directly in the browser (i.e. if it is opened using a `file://` URL), so it needs to be served via an HTTP server. For example, using [althttpd][]: ``` $ cd ext/wasm $ althttpd --enable-sab --max-age 1 --page index.html ``` That will open the system's browser and run the index page, from which all of the test and demo applications can be accessed. Note that when serving this app via [althttpd][], it must be a version from 2022-09-26 or newer so that it recognizes the `--enable-sab` flag, which causes althttpd to emit two HTTP response headers which are required to enable JavaScript's `SharedArrayBuffer` and `Atomics` APIs. Those APIs are required in order to enable the OPFS-related features in the apps which use them. # Testing on a remote machine that is accessed via SSH *NB: The following are developer notes, last validated on 2022-08-18* * Remote: Install git, emsdk, and althttpd * Use a [version of althttpd][althttpd] from September 26, 2022 or newer. * Remote: Install the SQLite source tree. CD to ext/wasm * Remote: "`make`" to build WASM * Remote: `althttpd --enable-sab --port 8080 --popup` * Local: `ssh -L 8180:localhost:8080 remote` * Local: Point your web-browser at http://localhost:8180/index.html In order to enable [SharedArrayBuffers](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/SharedArrayBuffer), the web-browser requires that the two extra Cross-Origin lines be present in HTTP reply headers and that the request must come from "localhost". Since the web-server is on a different machine from the web-broser, the localhost requirement means that the connection must be tunneled using SSH. [emscripten]: https://emscripten.org [althttpd]: https://sqlite.org/althttpd