The wasm-bindgen
Command Line Interface
The wasm-bindgen
command line tool has a number of options available to it to
tweak the JavaScript that is generated. The most up-to-date set of flags can
always be listed via wasm-bindgen --help
.
Installation
cargo install -f wasm-bindgen-cli
Usage
wasm-bindgen [options] ./target/wasm32-unknown-unknown/release/crate.wasm
Options
--out-dir DIR
The target directory to emit the JavaScript bindings, TypeScript definitions,
processed .wasm
binary, etc...
--target
This flag indicates what flavor of output what wasm-bindgen
should generate.
For example it could generate code to be loaded in a bundler like Webpack, a
native web page, or Node.js. For a full list of options to pass this flag, see
the section on deployment
--no-modules-global VAR
When --target no-modules
is used this flag can indicate what the name of the
global to assign generated bindings to.
For more information about this see the section on deployment
--typescript
Output a TypeScript declaration file for the generated JavaScript bindings. This is on by default.
--no-typescript
By default, a *.d.ts
TypeScript declaration file is generated for the
generated JavaScript bindings, but this flag will disable that.
--omit-imports
When the module
attribute is used with the wasm-bindgen
macro, the code
generator will emit corresponding import
or require
statements in the header
section of the generated javascript. This flag causes those import statements to
be omitted. This is necessary for some use cases, such as generating javascript
which is intended to be used with Electron (with node integration disabled),
where the imports are instead handled through a separate preload script.
--debug
Generates a bit more JS and wasm in "debug mode" to help catch programmer errors, but this output isn't intended to be shipped to production.
--no-demangle
When post-processing the .wasm
binary, do not demangle Rust symbols in the
"names" custom section.
--keep-lld-exports
When post-processing the .wasm
binary, do not remove exports that are
synthesized by Rust's linker, LLD.
--keep-debug
When post-processing the .wasm
binary, do not strip DWARF debug info custom
sections.
--browser
When generating bundler-compatible code (see the section on deployment) this indicates that the bundled code is always intended to go into a browser so a few checks for Node.js can be elided.
--weak-refs
Enables usage of the TC39 Weak References
proposal, ensuring that all Rust
memory is eventually deallocated regardless of whether you're calling free
or
not. This is off-by-default while we're waiting for support to percolate into
all major browsers. For more information see the documentation about weak
references.
--reference-types
Enables usage of the WebAssembly References Types
proposal proposal, meaning that
the WebAssembly binary will use externref
when importing and exporting
functions that work with JsValue
. For more information see the documentation
about reference types.
--omit-default-module-path
Don't add WebAssembly fallback imports in generated JavaScript.