Once the project is created, the following package references need to be added to bring in the experimental Wasi.Sdk and the corresponding ASP.NET Core server implementation that Steve built: As we will discover later, the latest official preview 7.0.100-preview.2 will not be enough, but for now we can use it to bootstrap the project - in this case a regular bare-bones ASP.NET Core web application > dotnet new web The prerequisite to get going is to have a. Steve’s repo provides the easy to follow steps to get going on Windows and Linux, in this post I will walk through some additional hoops that one may need to jump on arm64 Macs. NET 7 and ASP.NET Core applications into standalone WASI compliant apps, and running them from WASI hosts. The great mad scientist of web things at Microsoft, Steve Sanderson, recently published the first version of an experiemental WASI SDK for. It is highly experimental, but at the same time a tremendously interesting project, and one that has the potential of contributing to a massive paradigm-shift in the industry, making WebAssembly truly ubiquitous. WASI stands for WebAssembly System Interface, and allows to run WebAssembly code independently of the browsers, as it provides access to operating system features such as file system access or networking.
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