npm install --save-dev golang-wasm-async-loader
This is a loader for webpack that is used for generating WebAssembly (aka WASM) bundles from Go.
The JavaScript bridge that is then generated for webpack will expose the WebAssembly functions as a Promise for interacting with.
Note: It works with Go 1.12
for now. Stay tuned for updates :)
module.exports = {
...
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.go/,
use: ['golang-wasm-async-loader']
}
]
},
node: {
fs: 'empty'
}
};
You import your Go code just like any other JavaScript module you might be working with. The webpack loader will export a default export that has the functions you registered in Go on it. Unfortunately it currently doesn't provide autocomplete of those function names as they are runtime defined.
import wasm from './main.go'
async function init() {
const result = await wasm.add(1, 2);
console.log(result);
const someValue = await wasm.someValue();
console.log(someValue);
}
Here's the main.go
file:
package main
import (
"strconv"
"syscall/js"
"github.com/aaronpowell/webpack-golang-wasm-async-loader/gobridge"
)
func add(i []js.Value) (interface{},error) {
ret := 0
for _, item := range i {
val, _ := strconv.Atoi(item.String())
ret += val
}
return ret, nil
}
func main() {
c := make(chan struct{}, 0)
gobridge.RegisterCallback("add", add)
gobridge.RegisterValue("someValue", "Hello World")
<-c
}
As part of this repository a Go package has been created to improve the interop between the Go WASM runtime and work with the async pattern the loader defines.
To do this a function is exported from the package called RegisterCallback
which takes two arguments:
- A
string
representing the name to register it as in JavaScript (and what you'll call it using) - The
func
to register as a callback- The
func
must has a signature of(args js.Value) (interface{}, error)
so you can raise an error if you need
- The
If you want to register a static value that's been created from Go to be available in JavaScript you can do that with RegisterValue
, which takes a name and a value. Values are converted to functions that return a Promise so they can be treated asynchronously like function invocations.
In JavaScript a global object is registered as __gobridge__
which the registrations happen against.
You'll find an example of this in action in the example
folder.
MIT
Aaron Powell