Motivated by need for protocol-based dynamic dispatch, which hasn't been possible in Embedded Swift due to a full ban on existentials. This lifts that restriction but only for class-bound existentials: Class-bound existentials are already (even in desktop Swift) much more lightweight than full existentials, as they don't need type metadata, their containers are typically 2 words only (reference + wtable pointer), don't incur copies (only retains+releases).
Included in this PR:
[x] Non-generic class-bound existentials, executable tests for those.
[x] Extension methods on protocols and using those from a class-bound existential.
[x] RuntimeEffects now differentiate between Existential and ExistentialClassBound.
[x] PerformanceDiagnostics don't flag ExistentialClassBound in Embedded Swift.
[x] WTables are generated in IRGen when needed.
Left for follow-up PRs:
[ ] Generic classes support
This is phase-1 of switching from llvm::Optional to std::optional in the
next rebranch. llvm::Optional was removed from upstream LLVM, so we need
to migrate off rather soon. On Darwin, std::optional, and llvm::Optional
have the same layout, so we don't need to be as concerned about ABI
beyond the name mangling. `llvm::Optional` is only returned from one
function in
```
getStandardTypeSubst(StringRef TypeName,
bool allowConcurrencyManglings);
```
It's the return value, so it should not impact the mangling of the
function, and the layout is the same as `std::optional`, so it should be
mostly okay. This function doesn't appear to have users, and the ABI was
already broken 2 years ago for concurrency and no one seemed to notice
so this should be "okay".
I'm doing the migration incrementally so that folks working on main can
cherry-pick back to the release/5.9 branch. Once 5.9 is done and locked
away, then we can go through and finish the replacement. Since `None`
and `Optional` show up in contexts where they are not `llvm::None` and
`llvm::Optional`, I'm preparing the work now by going through and
removing the namespace unwrapping and making the `llvm` namespace
explicit. This should make it fairly mechanical to go through and
replace llvm::Optional with std::optional, and llvm::None with
std::nullopt. It's also a change that can be brought onto the
release/5.9 with minimal impact. This should be an NFC change.
Adds frontend option -enable-stack-protector to enable emission of a
stack protector.
Disabled by default.
When enabled enables LLVM's strong stack protection mode.
rdar://93677524
With the option -Xllvm -basic-dynamic-replacement the runtime functions are not called (so it works with an old swift library).
But calling the original of a replaced function is not supported in this case.
Note that this is only correct unless the variable uses inline
storage. This makes the majority of resilient types in Foundation work
as global variables. The correct solution would be for LLDB to poke
at the runtime to figure out whether the storage is inline or not, but
until then this is the next best thing.
rdar://problem/39722386
Fixes a regression in the source compatibility suite which I had a
lot of trouble extracting into a separate test case.
Most of this patch is just moving the outlining code into a separate
file and organizing it into a helper class instead of copy/pasting
so much code. The main functional change is implicit in the difference
between collecting formal metadata and collecting it for layout, which
then is exploited in bindMetadataParameters.
As a secondary change, stop collecting metadata for class-bounded
archetypes; we don't actually need it to do value operations.
To make this stick, I've disallowed direct use of that overload of
CreateCall. I've left the Constant overloads available, but eventually
we might want to consider fixing those, too, just to get all of this
code out of the business of manually remembering to pass around
attributes and calling conventions.
The test changes reflect the fact that we weren't really setting
attributes consistently at all, in this case on value witnesses.