In this code:
private protocol MyProto: Hashable {}
public struct MyStruct: MyProto {}
Being Hashable is part of MyStruct's public API, even though it's not
written explicitly. If we're not going to require people to write it
explicitly, we need to make sure it gets printed.
rdar://problem/44662501
`#assert` is a new static assertion statement that will let us write
tests for the new constant evaluation infrastructure that we are working
on. `#assert` works by lowering to a `Builtin.poundAssert` SIL
instruction. The constant evaluation infrastructure will look for these
SIL instructions, const-evaluate their conditions, and emit errors if
the conditions are non-constant or false.
This commit implements parsing, typechecking and SILGen for `#assert`.
Add parsing, type checking, serialization, and deserialization support
for specifying multiple types as "designated" for operator lookup for
a given operator declaration.
The constraint solver still considers only the first type when
deciding the order to attempt the elements of a disjunction, so this
doesn't really change behavior yet.
We only need to have the identifier during type checking of operator
declarations, so we do not need to restore it from the
PrecedenceGroupDecl during deserialization. We can just use the
deserialized name from the PrecedenceGroupDecl directly if needed.
This does result in one change in behavior. When printing modules, we
previously didn't print 'DefaultPrecedence' for items that had no
precedence specified, but now we will as seen in the test update for
IDE/print_ast_tc_decls.swift.
Rather than limiting this to protocols, allow any nominal type.
Rename -enable-operator-designated-protocols to
-enable-operator-designated-types to reflect the change.
Augment the ASTPrinter to print the name and text of initializer expressions if
a property has an initializer and the type is @_fixed_layout and resides in a resilient module, and serialize the text for partial modules.
With this change, all .swiftinterface files in the project (except for SwiftLang) compile to swiftmodules on macOS.
rdar://43774580
rdar://43812188
We already have something called "module interfaces" -- it's the
generated interface view that you can see in Xcode, the interface
that's meant for developers using a library. Of course, that's also a
textual format. To reduce confusion, rename the new module stability
feature to "parseable [module] interfaces".
We want to catch these bugs sooner rather than later, like the one
Harlan fixed in eb75ad8. Trapping deterministically is the best way to
do so, and it's better than generating nonsense.
Because they weren't 'public' we were treating them as layout-only
properties and printing `var _`, but they get referenced in inlinable
functions. We need the actual name!
* [InterfaceGen] Only print 'mutating' and 'nonmutating' on accessors
* Add SILGen test for usage of dynamic accessors in and out of interfaces
* Add -enable-objc-interop to dynamic_accessors test
* [InterfaceGen] Print abstract accessors in protocols
This patch slightly cleans up printing accessors and ensures we print
accessors abstractly in protocol context for textual interfaces.
It also removes some assuptions around the FunctionBody callback and
makes them more explicit.
* Print getter and setter for didSet decls
* Test _read and _modify
* Fix logic for skipping willSet/didSet
* Update 'final' test for new getter printing behavior
* Introduce stored inlinable function bodies
* Remove serialization changes
* [InterfaceGen] Print inlinable function bodies
* Clean up a little bit and add test
* Undo changes to InlinableText
* Add serialization and deserialization for inlinable body text
* Allow parser to parse accessor bodies in interfaces
* Fix some tests
* Fix remaining tests
* Add tests for usableFromInline decls
* Add comments
* Clean up function body printing throughout
* Add tests for subscripts
* Remove comment about subscript inlinable text
* Address some comments
* Handle lack of @objc on Linux
* [Interface] Print private/internal properties
All properties which contribute to the storage of a type should be
printed, and their names should be hidden from interfaces. Print them
with '_' as their name, and teach the parser to recognize these special
patterns when parsing interface files.
Partially resolves rdar://43810647
* Address review comments
* Disable accessor generation for nameless vars
* Test to ensure interface files preserve type layout
* Ignore attribute differences on Linux
The support is gated by a frontend option,
-enable-operator-designated-protocols.
This means that in an operator declaration we can declare a protocol
which has one or more requirements specifying this operator. The
operators from that designated protocol will be the first ones we try
when type checking an expression. If we successfully typecheck using
the operators specified in that protocol, we do not attempt any other
overloads of the same operator.
This makes it possible to dramatically speed up successful
typechecking.
* [InterfaceGen] Remove #ifs from default args
This patch removes all #if configs form the bodies of default arguments,
which can contain multiline closures, while preserving the bodies of the
clauses that are active.
This code is generalized and should "just work" for inlinable function
bodies, which will come in a later patch.
* Address review comments
* Fix and test CharSourceRange.overlaps
* Fix CharSourceRange::print to respect half-open ranges
Most of this patch is just removing special cases for materializeForSet
or other fairly mechanical replacements. Unfortunately, the rest is
still a fairly big change, and not one that can be easily split apart
because of the quite reasonable reliance on metaprogramming throughout
the compiler. And, of course, there are a bunch of test updates that
have to be sync'ed with the actual change to code-generation.
This is SR-7134.
We need @_transparent to control mandatory inlining; @_fixed_layout to
control, well, layout; and @_effects to help optimization. We still
don't need the ImplicitlyUnwrappedOptional attribute, and we don't
need access control attributes (because we handle that uniformly).
This also fixes up the printing of the '_effects' attribute to include
its underscore, so that it matches the source spelling.
We were redundantly printing constraints that were implied by the base
type (the type being extended). Rather than special-casing constraints
on a protocol's 'Self' type, omit any requirements that are already
satisfied by the extended type instead.
https://bugs.swift.org/browse/SR-7413
We wanted to omit the 'Self: TheProtocolBeingExtension' part of the
generic signature, but the logic that was there accidentally omitted
/all/ constraints on Self.
- getAsDeclOrDeclExtensionContext -> getAsDecl
This is basically the same as a dyn_cast, so it should use a 'getAs'
name like TypeBase does.
- getAsNominalTypeOrNominalTypeExtensionContext -> getSelfNominalTypeDecl
- getAsClassOrClassExtensionContext -> getSelfClassDecl
- getAsEnumOrEnumExtensionContext -> getSelfEnumDecl
- getAsStructOrStructExtensionContext -> getSelfStructDecl
- getAsProtocolOrProtocolExtensionContext -> getSelfProtocolDecl
- getAsTypeOrTypeExtensionContext -> getSelfTypeDecl (private)
These do /not/ return some form of 'this'; instead, they get the
extended types when 'this' is an extension. They started off life with
'is' names, which makes sense, but changed to this at some point. The
names I went with match up with getSelfInterfaceType and
getSelfTypeInContext, even though strictly speaking they're closer to
what getDeclaredInterfaceType does. But it didn't seem right to claim
that an extension "declares" the ClassDecl here.
- getAsProtocolExtensionContext -> getExtendedProtocolDecl
Like the above, this didn't return the ExtensionDecl; it returned its
extended type.
This entire commit is a mechanical change: find-and-replace, followed
by manual reformatted but no code changes.
These are synthesized to satisfy associated type requirements, but
they're not needed in source, and they look like self-referential
definitions (`typealias X = X`).
This allows us to dump it in the generated interface, though it's
still not syntax-highlighted. This is necessary for textual module
interfaces, but it's also just a longstanding request for Xcode's
"Generated Interface" / "Jump to Definition" feature.
rdar://problem/18675831
Introduce ExtensionDecl::getExtendedNominal() to provide the nominal
type declaration that the extension declaration extends. Move most
of the existing callers of the callers to getExtendedType() over to
getExtendedNominal(), because they don’t need the full type information.
ExtensionDecl::getExtendedNominal() is itself not very interesting yet,
because it depends on getExtendedType().
For now, the accessors have been underscored as `_read` and `_modify`.
I'll prepare an evolution proposal for this feature which should allow
us to remove the underscores or, y'know, rename them to `purple` and
`lettuce`.
`_read` accessors do not make any effort yet to avoid copying the
value being yielded. I'll work on it in follow-up patches.
Opaque accesses to properties and subscripts defined with `_modify`
accessors will use an inefficient `materializeForSet` pattern that
materializes the value to a temporary instead of accessing it in-place.
That will be fixed by migrating to `modify` over `materializeForSet`,
which is next up after the `read` optimizations.
SIL ownership verification doesn't pass yet for the test cases here
because of a general fault in SILGen where borrows can outlive their
borrowed value due to being cleaned up on the general cleanup stack
when the borrowed value is cleaned up on the formal-access stack.
Michael, Andy, and I discussed various ways to fix this, but it seems
clear to me that it's not in any way specific to coroutine accesses.
rdar://35399664
Now, an AbstractFunctionDecl always stores a single parameter list.
Furthermore, ConstructorDecl and DestructorDecl always store a
ParamDecl for 'self'.
FuncDecl only has a 'self' if it is a member of a nominal type or
extension, so we tail-allocate the storage for it.