The comment in LowerHopToActor explains the design here.
We want SILGen to emit hops to actors, ignoring executors,
because it's easier to fully optimize in a world where deriving
an executor is a non-trivial operation. But we also want something
prior to IRGen to lower the executor derivation because there are
useful static optimizations we can do, such as doing the derivation
exactly once on a dominance path and strength-reducing the derivation
(e.g. exploiting static knowledge that an actor is a default actor).
There are probably phase-ordering problems with doing this so late,
but hopefully they're restricted to situations like actors that
share an executor. We'll want to optimize that eventually, but
in the meantime, this unblocks the executor work.
Tasks shouldn't normally hog the actor context indefinitely after making a call that's bound to
that actor, since that prevents the actor from potentially taking on other jobs it needs to
be able to address. Set up SILGen so that it saves the current executor (using a new runtime
entry point) and hops back to it after every actor call, not only ones where the caller context
is also actor-bound.
The added executor hopping here also exposed a bug in the runtime implementation while processing
DefaultActor jobs, where if an actor job returned to the processing loop having already yielded
the thread back to a generic executor, we would still attempt to make the actor give up the thread
again, corrupting its state.
rdar://71905765
While it is very convenient to default the ExtInfo state when creating
new function types, it also make the intent unclear to those looking to
extend ExtInfo state. For example, did a given call site intend to have
the default ExtInfo state or does it just happen to work? This matters a
lot because function types are regularly unpacked and rebuilt and it's
really easy to accidentally drop ExtInfo state.
By changing the ExtInfo state to an optional, we can track when it is
actually needed.
Refactor SILGen's ApplyOptions into an OptionSet, add a
DoesNotAwait flag to go with DoesNotThrow, and sink it
all down into SILInstruction.h.
Then, replace the isNonThrowing() flag in ApplyInst and
BeginApplyInst with getApplyOptions(), and plumb it
through to TryApplyInst as well.
Set the flag when SILGen emits a sync call to a reasync
function.
When set, this disables the SIL verifier check against
calling async functions from sync functions.
Finally, this allows us to add end-to-end tests for
rdar://problem/71098795.
The strategy for implementing them is integrated with the
PathComponent infrastructure in SILGen in order to correctly
support mixtures of chained accesses and forced optionals, etc.
The actor isolation information is only piped into LValues from
the expressions that might be marked implicitly-async.
With "unsafe" global actor isolation, we only enforce actor isolation
when interacting with other explicitly-isolated code. This allows some
code to be annotated with, e.g., `@MainActor(unsafe)` so that users
who opt into concurrency get proper diagnostics, but existing code
does not change.
We checked isMutating() on the accessor, and if it was false, called
isNonMutatingSelfIndirect(), which would assert that the accessor
satisfies isNonMutating().
However, isNonMutating() is not the opposite of isMutating(); rather,
one of isMutating(), isNonMutating() or isConsuming() is true.
Change the assertion to reflect this case.
Fixes rdar://problem/74095841.
* Initial draft of async sequences
* Adjust AsyncSequence associated type requirements
* Add a draft implementation of AsyncSequence and associated functionality
* Correct merge damage and rename from GeneratorProtocol to AsyncIteratorProtocol
* Add AsyncSequence types to the cmake lists
* Add cancellation support
* [DRAFT] Implementation of protocol conformance rethrowing
* Account for ASTVerifier passes to ensure throwing and by conformance rethrowing verifies appropriately
* Remove commented out code
* OtherConstructorDeclRefExpr can also be a source of a rethrowing kind function
* Re-order the checkApply logic to account for existing throwing calculations better
* Extract rethrowing calculation into smaller functions
* Allow for closures and protocol conformances to contribute to throwing
* Add unit tests for conformance based rethrowing
* Restrict rethrowing requirements to only protocols marked with @rethrows
* Correct logic for gating of `@rethrows` and adjust the determinates to be based upon throws and not rethrows spelling
* Attempt to unify the async sequence features together
* Reorder try await to latest syntax
* revert back to the inout diagnosis
* House mutations in local scope
* Revert "House mutations in local scope"
This reverts commit d91f1b25b59fff8e4be107c808895ff3f293b394.
* Adjust for inout diagnostics and fall back to original mutation strategy
* Convert async flag to source locations and add initial try support to for await in syntax
* Fix case typo of MinMax.swift
* Adjust rethrowing tests to account for changes associated with @rethrows
* Allow parsing and diagnostics associated with try applied to for await in syntax
* Correct the code-completion for @rethrows
* Additional corrections for the code-completion for @rethrows this time for the last in the list
* Handle throwing cases of iteration of async sequences
* restore building XCTest
* First wave of feedback fixes
* Rework constraints checking for async sequence for-try-await-in checking
* Allow testing of for-await-in parsing and silgen testing and add unit tests for both
* Remove async sequence operators for now
* Back out cancellation of AsyncIteratorProtocols
* Restructure protocol conformance throws checking and cache results
* remove some stray whitespaces
* Correct some merge damage
* Ensure the throwing determinate for applying for-await-in always has a valid value and adjust the for-await-in silgen test to reflect the cancel changes
* Squelch the python linter for line length
implicitly-async calls are calls to synchronous
actor-isolated functions. Synchronous functions
cannot perform hop_to_executor, so implicitly
async calls have the convention that the caller
is responsible for switching to the right
executor prior to entering the actor-isolated
callee.
It follows naturally that the caller must then
switch back to the appropriate executor after
the implicitly-async call completed.
Now, if the caller is not isolated to a
_specific_ actor, then we are (currently)
_not_ emitting a hop to go back to the
caller's executor, because that caller's
executor is unspecified (and currently not
accessable in SIL). This behavior may change
in the future; tracked in rdar://71905765
Implement SIL generation for "async let" constructs, which involves:
1. Creating a child task future at the point of declaration of the "async let",
which runs the initializer in an async closure.
2. Entering a cleanup to destroy the child task.
3. Entering a cleanup to cancel the child task.
4. Waiting for the child task when any of the variables is reference.
5. Decomposing the result of the child task to write the results into the
appropriate variables.
Implements rdar://71123479.
This makes it easier to understand conceptually why a ValueOwnershipKind with
Any ownership is invalid and also allowed me to explicitly document the lattice
that relates ownership constraints/value ownership kinds.
Immediately before invoking the ObjC API, get the current continuation, capture it into a block to
pass as the completion handler, and then await the continuation, whose resume/error successors
serve as the semantic return/throw result of the call. This should complete the caller-side part
of SILGen; the completion handler block implementation is however still only a stub.
Allow SILGen to not crash when invoking foreign async methods by emitting
`undef` for the completion callback going into the call, and for the
results that would be channeled back through awaiting the continuation.
This patch includes a large number of changes to make sure that:
1. When ExtInfo values are created, we store a ClangTypeInfo if applicable.
2. We reduce dependence on storing SIL representations in ASTExtInfo values.
3. Reduce places where we sloppily create ASTExtInfo values which should
store a Clang type but don't. In certain places, this is unavoidable;
see [NOTE: ExtInfo-Clang-type-invariant].
Ideally, we would check that the appropriate SILExtInfo does always store
a ClangTypeInfo. However, the presence of the HasClangFunctionTypes option
means that we would need to condition that assertion based on a dynamic check.
Plumbing the setting down to SILExtInfoBuilder's checkInvariants would be too
much work. So we weaken the check for now; we should strengthen it once we
"turn on" HasClangFunctionTypes and remove the dynamic feature switch.
At all call-sites, the extInfo passed as the third argument is computed directly
from the second argument, so we compute it directly in getBridgedFunctionType.
Prior to this fix, if we called a generic function with a substitutable opaque type as its formal substitution,
as in:
```
func opaque() -> some Any { return { } as ()->() }
func generic<T>(_ x: T) -> T { return x }
let x = generic(opaque())
```
then we would generate the formal type of the callee using the substitutions *after* opaque type expansion,
causing us to emit functions and metatypes at the wrong abstraction level and crash with SIL-level type mismatches.
Fixes rdar://problem/65683913.
Since the two ExtInfos share a common ClangTypeInfo, and C++ doesn't let us
forward declare nested classes, we need to hoist out AnyFunctionType::ExtInfo
and SILFunctionType::ExtInfo to the top-level.
We also add some convenience APIs on (AST|SIL)ExtInfo for frequently used
withXYZ methods. Note that all non-default construction still goes through the
builder's build() method.
We do not add any checks for invariants here; those will be added later.
In -swift-version 5 and earlier, #file will continue to be a synonym for #filePath; in a future -swift-version (“Swift 6 mode”), it will become a synonym for #fileID. #file in libraries will be interpreted according to the language mode the library was compiled in, not the language mode its client uses.
Implement this behavior, tied to a frontend flag instead of a language version. We do so by splitting the old `MagicIdentifierLiteralExprKind::File` into two separate cases, `FileIDSpelledAsFile` and `FilePathSpelledAsFile`, and propagating this distinction throughout the AST. This seems cleaner than looking up the setting for the module the declaration belongs to every time we see `File`.
This doesn’t handle module interfaces yet; we’ll take care of those in a separate commit.
Prevent SILGen to crash if the compiler is used with a stdlib which does not have the _finalizeUninitializedArray intrinsic function.
rdar://problem/64195028
```
class Generic<T> {
@objc dynamic func method() {}
}
extension Generic {
@_dynamicReplacement(for:method())
func replacement() {}
}
```
The standard mechanism of using Objective-C categories for dynamically
replacing @objc methods in generic classes does not work.
Instead we mark the native entry point as replaceable.
Because this affects all @objc methods in generic classes (whether there
is a replacement or not) by making the native entry point
`[dynamically_replaceable]` (regardless of optimization mode) we guard this by
the -enable-implicit-dynamic flag because we are late in the release cycle.
* Replace isNativeDynamic and isObjcDynamic by calls to shouldUse*Dispatch and
shouldUse*Replacement
This disambiguates between which dispatch method we should use at call
sites and how these methods should implement dynamic function
replacement.
* Don't emit the method entry for @_dynamicReplacement(for:) of generic class
methods
There is not way to call this entry point since we can't generate an
objective-c category for generic classes.
rdar://63679357
For COW support in SIL it's required to "finalize" array literals.
_finalizeUninitializedArray is a compiler known stdlib function which is called after all elements of an array literal are stored.
This runtime function marks the array literal as finished.
%uninitialized_result_tuple = apply %_allocateUninitializedArray(%count)
%mutable_array = tuple_extract %uninitialized_result_tuple, 0
%elem_base_address = tuple_extract %uninitialized_result_tuple, 1
...
store %elem_0 to %elem_addr_0
store %elem_1 to %elem_addr_1
...
%final_array = apply %_finalizeUninitializedArray(%mutable_array)
In this commit _finalizeUninitializedArray is still a no-op because the COW support is not used in the Array implementation yet.
This cleanup is meant to be used with a value that is temporarily taken from a
memory location for a lexical scope. At end of scope, the value is returned back
to the original memory location.
It is used to implement in SILGen "move only loadable values". Note, a "move
only loadable value" is not a "move only type". It is just an abstraction for
working with a single copy of a loadable value as if that single copy was a move
only value.
This is currently only being used in initializer emission since we treat self in
such a context as a "move only value" before we delegate to a
super/convenience/peer initializer since we have to allow for such initializers
to change the underlying class we have stored which in certain use cases require
self to be guaranteed as /never/ being retained. The move only value
representation makes this easy to do/enforce.
My hope is that by changing the name of this cleanup it is more obvious what it
is meant to do and can become (hopefully) generally useful.