Import WebAssembly modules compiled from Zig files.
- Install the Zig compiler: the binary can be downloaded from downloads page, or built from source by following the GitHub Wiki instructions, or using the zig-bootstrap scripts. As an alternative, the
@ziglang/cli
npm package can be added as a dependency, useful in a CI environment for instance.
Install with npm i -D vite-plugin-zig
(or pnpm i -D
or yarn i -D
), then add the plugin to your vite.config.js
:
// vite.config.js
import zig from 'vite-plugin-zig';
/** @type {import('vite').UserConfig} */
export default {
plugins: [zig()],
build: { target: 'esnext' },
};
Write your Zig code and export
any symbol to be used in JS code:
// src/main.zig
export fn add(a: i32, b: i32) i32 {
return a + b;
}
If available, top-level await can be used so that importing the module feels similar to importing a regular JS module:
// example.js
import { instantiate } from './src/main.zig';
// pass any custom importObject here, functions should be declared
// as extern in the Zig file
const importObject = {
// ...
};
// instantiate the compiled WebAssembly module, can also be moved
// to a Worker for instantiation in another thread
const { exports, instance } = await instantiate(importObject);
// call exported functions from the exports object
console.log(exports.add(5, 37)); // 42
As a shorthand to avoid having to manually call await instantiate()
, the ?instantiate
query parameter can be specified in the module import to both compile and instantiate the module at import time, allowing access to instance
and exports
:
import { exports, instance, module } from './src/main.zig?instantiate';
// call exported functions from the exports object
console.log(exports.add(5, 37)); // 42
If your Vite config does not allow for top-level await (by setting build: { target: 'esnext' }
, e.g. if the framework you're using enforces a specific target value), an alternative API is provided which instead exposes Promises (compiled
and instantiated
respectively depending on whether ?instantiate
is used) which resolve when the compilation or instantiation of the module are complete:
// example.js
import { compiled, instantiate, module } from './src/main.zig';
(async () => {
// `await compiled` can be used to populate the `module` import
// manually before instantiation if necessary
// pass any custom importObject here, functions should be declared
// as extern in the Zig file
const importObject = {
// ...
};
// instantiate the compiled WebAssembly module, can also be moved
// to a Worker for instantiation in another thread
const { exports, instance } = await instantiate(importObject);
// call exported functions from the exports object
console.log(exports.add(5, 37)); // 42
})();
// example.js
import {
exports,
instance,
instantiated,
module,
} from './src/main.zig?instantiate';
(async () => {
// manually await to populate the imports
await instantiated;
// call exported functions from the exports object
console.log(exports.add(5, 37)); // 42
})();
To integrate with SSR frameworks such as SvelteKit, use a dynamic import:
<script>
import { onMount } from 'svelte';
onMount(async () => {
const wasm = await import('$lib/main.zig?instantiate');
await wasm.instantiated;
console.log(wasm.exports.add(5, 37)); // 42
});
</script>
- It would be great to have something similar to Rust's
wasm-bindgen
to generate JS glue code and type definitions