SWI-Prolog WebAssembly build as an NPM package. Please see this page for ongoing progress and information: https://swi-prolog.discourse.group/t/swi-prolog-in-the-browser-using-wasm/5650
The easiest way to get started is by importing swipl-wasm into your npm project. It can be imported for both Node.js and browser builds as follows:
script.mjs
import SWIPL from "swipl-wasm";
async function main() {
const swipl = await SWIPL({ arguments: ["-q"] });
console.log(swipl.prolog.query("member(X, [a, b, c]).").once().X);
}
main();For those who have not done this before, you will first need to install Node.js and npm. After doing this, you can make a new project as follows:
# Make the project directory
mkdir my-swipl-project && cd ./my-swipl-project
# Initialise the project
npm init
# Install swipl-wasm
npm i swipl-wasmAfter this, place the above code in script.mjs in the root of your directory and run node script.mjs
to execute the script.
In browser:
<div id="solution"></div>
<script src="/dist/swipl/swipl-web.js"></script>
<script>
(async () => {
const swipl = await SWIPL({
arguments: ["-q"],
locateFile: (path) => {
return `/dist/swipl/${path}`;
},
});
const query = "member(X, [a, b, c]).";
const solutionElement = document.getElementById("solution");
const firstSolution = swipl.prolog.query(query).once().X;
solutionElement.textContent = firstSolution;
})();
</script>The function locateFile will help the browser find the necessary
files (swipl-web.wasm and swipl-web.data). In this case, the files
should be served along with swipl-web.js under the /dist/swipl
directory in the web server.
You can run this example by executing npm run test:serve-http and
visiting http://localhost:8080/examples/browser.html.
In Node.js:
const SWIPL = require("swipl-wasm");
const swipl = await SWIPL({ arguments: ["-q"] });
console.log(swipl.prolog.query("member(X, [a, b, c]).").once().X);You can run this example with node examples/run-on-node.js.
The swipl-wasm package also comes with a single-file bundle. This does not
require distributing the .data and .wasm files, which are now embedded into
the .js file instead.
<div id="solution"></div>
<script src="/dist/swipl/swipl-bundle.js"></script>
<script>
(async () => {
const swipl = await SWIPL({ arguments: ["-q"] });
const query = "member(X, [a, b, c]).";
const solutionElement = document.getElementById("solution");
const firstSolution = swipl.prolog.query(query).once().X;
solutionElement.textContent = firstSolution;
})();
</script>Often you will want to bundle a pre-built image of your Prolog file. The easiest way to do this is using the swipl-generate command to generate the image. For example, in ./examples/generation, the script npx swipl-generate ./max.pl ./dist/max.ts will generate a file ./dist/max.ts which contains the image of ./max.pl. This file can then be imported into your project and used as follows:
import SWIPL from './max';
async function main() {
const Module = await SWIPL();
const res = Module.prolog.query('max(1, 2, 3).');
console.log(res.next())
}
main();Note that this procedure generates a file which imports directly from swipl-wasm/dist/loadImageDefault, so make sure that swipl-wasm is a direct dependency in your project rather than a dev dependency.
To generate the image data without it being pre-loaded into SWIPL, use the --image-only flag.
This uses eval:
swipl.prolog
.query("js_run_script(Script)", {
Script: `console.log('hello')`,
})
.once();Webpack is a JavaScript and resources bundler for large-scale frontend projects.
There is an example Webpack project in examples/webpack. It uses
Asset Modules to "load"
necessary .data and .wasm files. The location of these files is then
fed to locateFile (see above).
The package swipl-wasm is linked into the example. In an actual project,
you would declare swipl-wasm as a normal dependency.
To start the example:
cd examples/webpack
npm install
npm run build
npm run server
Then visit http://127.0.0.1:8080. You should see the message "Hello world from Prolog".
For convenience, we provide deployed bundled versions of SWI-Prolog on GitHub Pages which can be directly used in an HTML document.
There is a bundled version for each release, which can be found at the URL:
https://SWI-Prolog.github.io/npm-swipl-wasm/vMajor/vMinor/vPatch/index.js
For instance, v3.3.0 has the URL https://SWI-Prolog.github.io/npm-swipl-wasm/3/3/0/index.js. We also have shortcuts for:
- the latest version https://SWI-Prolog.github.io/npm-swipl-wasm/latest/index.js,
- the latest of each major version https://SWI-Prolog.github.io/npm-swipl-wasm/vMajor/latest/index.js, and
- the latest of each minor version https://SWI-Prolog.github.io/npm-swipl-wasm/vMajor/vMinor/latest/index.js
Available versions can be browsed at https://github.com/SWI-Prolog/npm-swipl-wasm/tree/pages.
With this approach, the following script will work:
<div id="solution"></div>
<script src="https://SWI-Prolog.github.io/npm-swipl-wasm/3/3/0/index.js"></script>
<script>
(async () => {
const swipl = await SWIPL({ arguments: ["-q"] });
const query = "member(X, [a, b, c]).";
const solutionElement = document.getElementById("solution");
const firstSolution = swipl.prolog.query(query).once().X;
solutionElement.textContent = firstSolution;
})();
</script>Dynamic imports are also available with the dynamic-import.js import name and can be used as follows:
<div id="solution"></div>
<script>
(async () => {
const { SWIPL } = await import("https://SWI-Prolog.github.io/npm-swipl-wasm/3/3/0/dynamic-import.js");
const swipl = await SWIPL({ arguments: ["-q"] });
const query = "member(X, [a, b, c]).";
const solutionElement = document.getElementById("solution");
const firstSolution = swipl.prolog.query(query).once().X;
solutionElement.textContent = firstSolution;
})();
</script>The package can be built using npm. Please use npm to add new dependencies and update the package-lock.json file. The SWI-Prolog WebAssembly version is currently built inside Docker with Emscripten.
To develop with this package, clone the repository and run:
# Install dependencies
npm ci
# Build the WebAssembly
npm run build
# Run tests
npm t
Note: You need Docker and Node 16 or higher to be installed to build the package.
The package uses its own versioning scheme using semver. It is detached from the versioning of SWI-Prolog itself.
To get the underlying SWI-Prolog version:
const swipl = await SWIPL({ arguments: ["-q"] });
const version = swipl.prolog
.query("current_prolog_flag(version, Version)")
.once().Version;The version is returned as integer 10000 × Major + 100 × Minor + Patch.
This package uses the same license as SWI-Prolog (BSD-2-Clause): https://github.com/SWI-Prolog/swipl-devel/blob/master/LICENSE