### Description
This change fixes the DLL delay load problem for the WebGPU EP and
DirectML EP. See detailed explanation below.
### Problem
When onnxruntime.dll uses delay loading for its dependencies, the
dependencies are loaded using `LoadLibraryEx()`, which search the
directory of process (.exe) instead of this library (onnxruntime.dll).
This is a problem for usages of Node.js binding and python binding,
because Windows will try to find the dependencies in the directory of
node.exe or python.exe, which is not the directory of onnxruntime.dll.
There was previous attempt to fix this by loading DirectML.dll in the
initialization of onnxruntime nodejs binding, which works for DML EP but
is not a good solution because it does not really "delay" the load.
For WebGPU, the situation became worse because webgpu_dawn.dll depends
on dxil.dll and dxcompiler.dll, which are explicitly dynamically loaded
in the code using `LoadLibraryA()`. This has the same problem of the DLL
search.
### Solutions
For onnxruntime.dll loading its direct dependencies, it can be resolved
by set the [`__pfnDliNotifyHook2`
hook](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/cpp/build/reference/understanding-the-helper-function?view=msvc-170#structure-and-constant-definitions)
to load from an absolute path that constructed from the onnxruntime.dll
folder and the DLL name.
For webgpu_dawn.dll loading dxil.dll and dxcompiler.dll, since they are
explicitly loaded in the code, the hook does not work. Instead, it can
be resolved by ~~using WIN32 API `SetDllDirectory()` to add the
onnxruntime.dll folder to the search path.~~ preloading the 2 DLLs from
the onnxruntime.dll folder .
### Description
This change fixes the build break for Node.js binding on latest
AppleClang:
```
...tensor_helper.cc:65:5 error: integer value -1 is outside of the valid range of values [0,15] for the enumeration type 'napi_typedarray_type' [-Wenum-constexpr-conversion]
```
Use the underlying type of enum `napi_typedarray_type` for
`DATA_TYPE_TYPEDARRAY_MAP` to solve this issue.
Because the underlying type is implementation defined (it's `int` for
MSVC and `unsigned int` for Clang), we use `std::underlying_type_t` to
get the correct type.
### Description
This change enhances the Node.js binding with the following features:
- support WebGPU EP
- lazy initialization of `OrtEnv`
- being able to initialize ORT with default log level setting from
`ort.env.logLevel`.
- session options:
- `enableProfiling` and `profileFilePrefix`: support profiling.
- `externalData`: explicit external data (optional in Node.js binding)
- `optimizedModelFilePath`: allow dumping optimized model for diagnosis
purpose
- `preferredOutputLocation`: support IO binding.
======================================================
`Tensor.download()` is not implemented in this PR.
Build pipeline update is not included in this PR.
### Description
See
454996d496
for manual changes (excluded auto-generated formatting changes)
### Why
Because the toolsets for old clang-format is out-of-date. This reduces
the development efficiency.
- The NPM package `clang-format` is already in maintenance mode. not
updated since 2 years ago.
- The VSCode extension for clang-format is not maintained for a while,
and a recent Node.js security update made it not working at all in
Windows.
No one in community seems interested in fixing those.
Choose Prettier as it is the most popular TS/JS formatter.
### How to merge
It's easy to break the build:
- Be careful of any new commits on main not included in this PR.
- Be careful that after this PR is merged, other PRs that already passed
CI can merge.
So, make sure there is no new commits before merging this one, and
invalidate js PRs that already passed CI, force them to merge to latest.
### Description
Add support for using Onnx Runtime with Node
### Motivation and Context
Onnx Runtime supports the QNN HTP, but does not support it for Node.js.
This adds baseline support for the Onnx Runtime to be used with Node.
Note it does not update the node packages that are distributed
officially. This simply patches the onnxruntime.dll to allow 'qnn' to be
used as an execution provider.
Testing was done using the existing onnxruntime-node package. The
`onnxruntime.dll` and `onnxruntime_binding.node` were swapped into
`node_modules\onnxruntime-node\bin\napi-v3\win32\arm64` with the newly
built version, then the various QNN dlls and .so files were placed next
to the onnxruntime.dll. Testing was performed on a variety of models and
applications, but the easiest test is to modify the [node quickstart
example](https://github.com/microsoft/onnxruntime-inference-examples/tree/main/js/quick-start_onnxruntime-node).
Two major modifications of this PR:
1. Refactor OrtTensorRTProviderOptions initialization and make it easy
to add new field.
2. Make Python API capable of using TensorRT plugins by adding new
Python binding api `register_tensorrt_plugins_as_custom_ops`. (It needs
to register ep's custom op domain before model load. For C++ API, it's
slightly different, when calling
SessionOptionsAppendExecutionProvider_TensorRT_XX, it appends cutom op
domain to session option. Later ORT can register custom op domain from
session option before model loading)
### Description
Release OrtEnv before main function returns. Before this change, OrtEnv
is deleted when C/C++ runtime destructs all global variables in ONNX
Runtime's core framework.
The callstack is like this:
```
* frame #0: 0x00007fffee39f5a6 libonnxruntime.so.1.16.0`onnxruntime::Environment::~Environment(this=0x00007fffee39fbf2) at environment.h:20:7
frame #1: 0x00007fffee39f614 libonnxruntime.so.1.16.0`std::default_delete<onnxruntime::Environment>::operator()(this=0x00007ffff4c30e50, __ptr=0x0000000005404b00) const at unique_ptr.h:85:2
frame #2: 0x00007fffee39edca libonnxruntime.so.1.16.0`std::unique_ptr<onnxruntime::Environment, std::default_delete<onnxruntime::Environment>>::~unique_ptr(this=0x5404b00) at unique_ptr.h:361:17
frame #3: 0x00007fffee39e2ab libonnxruntime.so.1.16.0`OrtEnv::~OrtEnv(this=0x00007ffff4c30e50) at ort_env.cc:43:1
frame #4: 0x00007fffee39fa96 libonnxruntime.so.1.16.0`std::default_delete<OrtEnv>::operator()(this=0x00007fffefff8f78, __ptr=0x00007ffff4c30e50) const at unique_ptr.h:85:2
frame #5: 0x00007fffee39f394 libonnxruntime.so.1.16.0`std::unique_ptr<OrtEnv, std::default_delete<OrtEnv>>::~unique_ptr(this=0x7ffff4c30e50) at unique_ptr.h:361:17
frame #6: 0x00007ffff78574b5 libc.so.6`__run_exit_handlers + 261
frame #7: 0x00007ffff7857630 libc.so.6`exit + 32
frame #8: 0x00007ffff783feb7 libc.so.6`__libc_start_call_main + 135
frame #9: 0x00007ffff783ff60 libc.so.6`__libc_start_main@@GLIBC_2.34 + 128
frame #10: 0x0000000000abbdee node`_start + 46
```
After this change, OrtEnv will be deleted before the main function
returns and nodejs is still alive.
### Description
Deprecate CustomOpApi and refactor dependencies for exception safety and
eliminate memory leaks.
Refactor API classes for clear ownership and semantics.
Introduce `InitProviderOrtApi()`
### Motivation and Context
Make public API better and safer.
Special note about `Ort::Unowned`. The class suffers from the following
problems:
1. It is not able to hold const pointers to the underlying C objects.
This forces users to `const_cast` and circumvent constness of the
returned object. The user is now able to call mutating interfaces on the
object which violates invariants and may be a thread-safety issue. It
also enables to take ownership of the pointer and destroy it
unintentionally (see examples below).
2. The objects that are unowned cannot be copied and that makes coding
inconvenient and at times unsafe.
3. It directly inherits from the type it `unowns`.
All of the above creates great conditions for inadvertent unowned object
mutations and destructions. Consider the following examples of object
slicing, one of them is from a real customer issue and the other one I
accidentally coded myself (and I am supposed to know how this works).
None of the below can be solved by aftermarket patches and can be hard
to diagnose.
#### Example 1 slicing of argument
```cpp
void SlicingOnArgument(Ort::Value& value) {
// This will take possession of the input and if the argument
// is Ort::Unowned<Ort::Value> it would again double free the ptr
// regardless if it was const or not since we cast it away.
Ort::Value output_values[] = {std::move(value)};
}
void main() {
const OrtValue* ptr = nullptr; // some value does not matter
Ort::Unowned<Ort::Value> unowned{const_cast<OrtValue*>(ptr)};
// onowned is destroyed when the call returns.
SlicingOnArgument(unowned);
}
```
#### Example 2 slicing of return value
```cpp
// The return will be sliced to Ort::Value that would own and relase (double free the ptr)
Ort::Value SlicingOnReturn() {
const OrtValue* ptr = nullptr; // some value does not matter
Ort::Unowned<Ort::Value> unowned{const_cast<OrtValue*>(ptr)};
return unowned;
}
```
* working on re-organizing js code for ortweb
* remove dup files
* move folder
* fix common references
* fix common es5
* add webpack to common
* split interfact/impl
* use cjs for node
* add npmignore for common
* update sourcemap config for common
* update node
* adjust folder/path in CI and build
* update folder
* nit: readme
* add bundle for dev
* correct nodejs paths
* enable ORT_API_MANUAL_INIT
* set name for umd library
* correct name for commonjs export
* add priority into registerBackend()
* fix npm ci pwd
* update eslintrc
* revise code
* revert package-lock lockfileVersion 2->1
* update prebuild
* resolve comments
* update document
* revise eslint config
* update eslint for typescript rules
* revert changes by mistake in backend.ts
* add env
* resolve comments