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@ioai/wasm-zstd

v1.1.2

Published

Vite-friendly WebAssembly bindings for facebook/zstd

Readme

@ioai/wasm-zstd

Vite-friendly WebAssembly bindings for facebook/zstd.

API

@ioai/wasm-zstd exports:

export interface InitOptions {
  wasmUrl?: string | URL;
  wasmBinary?: ArrayBuffer | ArrayBufferView;
  locateFile?: (path: string, prefix: string) => string;
  module?: Record<string, unknown>;
}

export function init(options: InitOptions): Promise<void>;
export function compressBound(size: number): number;
export function compress(buffer: Uint8Array | ArrayBuffer | ArrayBufferView, compressionLevel?: number): Uint8Array;
export function decompress(buffer: Uint8Array | ArrayBuffer | ArrayBufferView, size: number): Uint8Array;

init() requires either wasmUrl or wasmBinary. The package does not rely on Emscripten's default import.meta.url wasm resolution, which breaks in Vite inline worker bundles.

Usage with Vite

Import the wasm binary as an explicit URL and initialize the module once before calling compress or decompress.

import { compress, decompress, init } from "@ioai/wasm-zstd";
import wasmUrl from "@ioai/wasm-zstd/wasm-zstd.wasm?url";

await init({ wasmUrl });

const compressed = compress(new TextEncoder().encode("hello zstd"), 3);
const decompressed = decompress(compressed, "hello zstd".length);

This pattern works in browser main-thread code, dedicated Web Workers, and Vite production builds because Vite owns the .wasm asset URL.

Usage in inline workers (?worker&inline)

Vite inline workers are loaded from blob: URLs, so neither sibling .wasm files nor sibling JS chunks can be resolved relative to the worker. To keep inline workers self-contained, the Emscripten glue is imported statically (not via a runtime import("./wasm-zstd.js")), so bundlers inline it into the worker chunk. You only need to supply the wasm bytes — fetch them on the main thread and pass them into the worker:

// main thread
import wasmUrl from "@ioai/wasm-zstd/wasm-zstd.wasm?url";

const wasmBinary = await fetch(wasmUrl).then((response) => response.arrayBuffer());
const worker = new Worker(new URL("./worker.ts", import.meta.url), { type: "module" });
worker.postMessage({ wasmBinary }, [wasmBinary]);
// worker.ts
import { init } from "@ioai/wasm-zstd";

await init({ wasmBinary });

Usage with custom loaders

If you already have the wasm bytes, pass them with wasmBinary:

import { init } from "@ioai/wasm-zstd";

await init({ wasmBinary });

Developing locally

  1. Run npm install.
  2. Run npm run build to invoke emcc inside Docker and compile src/wasm-zstd.c plus the vendored zstd sources.
  3. Run npm test.

The generated package files are written to dist/. Emscripten glue is post-processed to remove import.meta.url wasm fallbacks that are incompatible with Vite worker bundling.

License

@ioai/wasm-zstd is licensed under the MIT License.