Installing wasmtime
Here we'll show you how to install the wasmtime
command line tool. Note that this is distinct from embedding the Wasmtime project into another, for that you'll want to consult the embedding documentation.
The easiest way to install the wasmtime
CLI tool is through our installation script. Linux and macOS users can execute the following:
This will download a precompiled version of wasmtime
, place it in $HOME/.wasmtime
, and update your shell configuration to place the right directory in PATH
.
Windows users will want to visit our releases page and can download the MSI installer (wasmtime-dev-x86_64-windows.msi
for example) and use that to install.
You can confirm your installation works by executing:
And now you're off to the races! Be sure to check out the various CLI options as well.
Download Precompiled Binaries
If you'd prefer to not use an installation script, or you're perhaps orchestrating something in CI, you can also download one of our precompiled binaries of wasmtime
. We have two channels of releases right now for precompiled binaries:
Each tagged release will have a full set of release artifacts on the GitHub releases page.
The
dev
release is also continuously updated with the latest build of themain
branch. If you want the latest-and-greatest and don't mind a bit of instability, this is the release for you.
When downloading binaries you'll likely want one of the following archives (for the dev
release)
Linux users -
wasmtime-dev-x86_64-linux.tar.xz
macOS users -
wasmtime-dev-aarch64-macos.tar.xz
Windows users -
wasmtime-dev-x86_64-windows.zip
Each of these archives has a wasmtime
binary placed inside which can be executed normally as the CLI would.
Install via Cargo
If you have Rust and Cargo available in your system, you can build and install an official wasmtime
release from its crates.io source:
This compiles and installs wasmtime
into your Cargo bin directory (typically $HOME/.cargo/bin
). Make sure that directory is in your PATH
before running wasmtime
. For example, add the following line to ~/.bashrc
or ~/.zshrc
:
You can also use binstall
to automatically find and install the correct wasmtime
binary for your system, matching a candidate from GitHub Releases:
Compiling from Source
If you'd prefer to compile the wasmtime
CLI from source, you'll want to consult the contributing documentation for building. Be sure to use a --release
build if you're curious to do benchmarking!