I've renamed the method to `TypeDecl::isNoncopyable`, because the query
doesn't make sense for many other kinds of `ValueDecl`'s beyond the
`TypeDecl`'s. In fact, it looks like no one was relying on that anyway.
Thus, we now have a distinction where in Sema, you ask whether
a `Type` or `TypeDecl` is "Noncopyable". But within SIL, we still
preserve the notion of "move-only" since there is additionally the
move-only type wrapper for types that otherwise support copying.
When comparing a requirement that uses typed throws and uses an
associated type for the thrown error type against a potential witness,
infer the associated type from the thrown error of the
witness---whether explicitly specified, untyped throws (`any Error`),
or non-throwing (`Never`).
properties to require actor isolation.
Member initializer expressions are only used in a constructor with
matching actor isolation. If the isolation prohibits the member
initializer from being evaluated synchronously (or propagating required
isolation through closure bodies), then the default value cannot be used
and the member must be explicitly initialized in the constructor.
Member initializer expressions are also used as default arguments for the
memberwise initializer, and the same rules for default argument isolation
apply.
This looks like it was never properly implemented, since when we generate the
memberwise initializer for the struct in SILGen, it incorrectly tries to apply
the entire initializer expression to each variable binding in the pattern,
rather than destructuring the result and pattern-matching it to the variables.
Since it never worked it doesn't look like anyone is using this, so let's
put up an error saying it's unsupported until we can implement it properly.
Add `StructLetDestructuring` as an experimental feature flag so that tests around
the feature for things like module interface printing can still work.
Lower the thrown error type into the SIL function type. This requires
very little code because the thrown error type was already modeled as
a SILResultInfo, which carries type information. Note that this
lowering does not yet account for error types that need to passed
indirectly, but we will need to do so for (e.g.) using resilient error
types.
Teach a few places in SIL generation not to assume that thrown types
are always the existential error type, which primarily comes down to
ensuring that rethrow epilogues have the thrown type of the
corresponding function or closure.
Teach throw emission to implicitly box concrete thrown errors in the
error existential when needed to satisfy the throw destination. This
is a temporary solution that helps translate typed throws into untyped
throws, but it should be replaced by a better modeling within the AST
of the points at which thrown errors are converted.
I was originally hoping to reuse mark_must_check for multiple types of checkers.
In practice, this is not what happened... so giving it a name specifically to do
with non copyable types makes more sense and makes the code clearer.
Just a pure rename.
Moving the query implementation up to the AST library from SIL will allow
conveniences to be written on specific AST element classes. For instance, this
will allow `EnumDecl` to expose a convenience that enumerates element decls
that are available during lowering.
Also, improve naming and documentation for these queries.
This is a futile attempt to discourage future use of getType() by
giving it a "scary" name.
We want people to use getInterfaceType() like with the other decl kinds.
We can't really treat them as always-initialized because that makes move checking
think that there's a value to destroy even on initialization, causing deinits to
run on uninitialized memory. Remove my previous hack, and use a `zeroInitializer`
to initialize the value state when emitting `init`, which is where we really need
the bootstrapping-into-initialized behavior. rdar://113057256
Initializations for all of the fields accessed by init accessor
should be emitted before init accessor property even if they are
declared after it in the source order.
Resolves: rdar://112984795
This attribute can be attached to a noncopyable struct to specify that its
storage is raw, meaning the type definition is (with some limitations)
able to do as it pleases with the storage. This provides a basis for
implementing types for things like atomics, locks, and data structures
that use inline storage to store conditionally-initialized values.
The example in `test/Prototypes/UnfairLock.swift` demonstrates the use
of a raw layout type to wrap Darwin's `os_unfair_lock` APIs, allowing
a lock value to be stored inside of classes or other types without
needing a separate allocation, and using the borrow model to enforce
safe access to lock-guarded storage.
The `bare` attribute indicates that the object header is not used throughout the lifetime of the object.
This means, no reference counting operations are performed on the object and its metadata is not used.
The header of bare objects doesn't need to be initialized.
Per the clarification during the review thread, all properties with
init accessors (including those that do not initialize any underlying
storage) are part of the memberwise initializer.
Reformatting everything now that we have `llvm` namespaces. I've
separated this from the main commit to help manage merge-conflicts and
for making it a bit easier to read the mega-patch.
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.
Skip stored properties that are initialized via init accessors and
emit parameters/initializations in field order which allows us to
cover more use-cases.
If some property is initializable by one than one init accessor
let's not sythesize a memberwise initializer in that case because
it's ambiguous what is the best init accessor to use.
If init accessor initialize the same properties, let's emit them
in sequence and emit `destroy_addr` in-between to make sure that
there is no double initialization.
When an accessor macro adds a non-observing accessor to a property, it
subsumes the initializer. We had previously modeled this as removing
the initializer, but doing so means that the initializer could not be
used for type inference and was lost in the AST.
Explicitly mark the initializer as "subsumed" here, and be more
careful when querying the initializer to distinguish between "the
initializer that was written" and "the initializer that will execute"
in more places. This distinction already existed at the
pattern-binding level, but not at the variable-declaration level.
This is the proper fix for the circular reference issue described in
rdar://108565923 (test case in the prior commit).
I ran into this while fixing the parent commit when attempting to add the
interpreter test in this commit into the aforementioned parent commit.
rdar://107974302
This patch replaces the stateful generation of SILScope information in
SILGenFunction with data derived from the ASTScope hierarchy, which should be
100% in sync with the scopes needed for local variables. The goal is to
eliminate the surprising effects that the stack of cleanup operations can have
on the current state of SILBuilder leading to a fully deterministic (in the
sense of: predictible by a human) association of SILDebugScopes with
SILInstructions. The patch also eliminates the need to many workarounds. There
are still some accomodations for several Sema transformation passes such as
ResultBuilders, which don't correctly update the source locations when moving
around nodes. If these were implemented as macros, this problem would disappear.
This necessary rewrite of the macro scope handling included in this patch also
adds proper support nested macro expansions.
This fixes
rdar://88274783
and either fixes or at least partially addresses the following:
rdar://89252827
rdar://105186946
rdar://105757810
rdar://105997826
rdar://105102288
Code can only locally interact with a mutable memory location within a
formal access, and is only responsible for maintaining its invariants
during that access, so the move-only address checker does not need to,
and should not, observe operations that occur outside of the access
marked with the `mark_must_check` instruction. And for immutable
memory locations, although there are no explicit formal accesses, that's
because every access must be read-only, so although individual
accesses are not delimited, they are all compatible as far as
move-only checking is concerned. So we can back out the changes to SILGen
to re-project a memory location from its origin on every access, a
change which breaks invariants assumed by other SIL passes.
This adds an assertion that we're using all of the parameters, so
pass prolog emission the number of lowered parameters to ignore.
That's easy for the callers to provide, since they do actually
still need to add function arguments for those parameters.
* [Executors][Distributed] custom executors for distributed actor
* harden ordering guarantees of synthesised fields
* the issue was that a non-default actor must implement the is remote check differently
* NonDefaultDistributedActor to complete support and remote flag handling
* invoke nonDefaultDistributedActorInitialize when necessary in SILGen
* refactor inline assertion into method
* cleanup
* [Executors][Distributed] Update module version for NonDefaultDistributedActor
* Minor docs cleanup
* we solved those fixme's
* add mangling test for non-def-dist-actor
More missing infrastructure. In this case, it's really *existing*
missing infrastructure, though; we should have been imploding tuples
this way all along, given that we're doing it in the first place.
I don't like that we're doing all these extra tuple copies. I'm not
sure yet if they're just coming out of SILGen and eliminated immediately
after in practice; maybe so. Still, it should be obvious that they're
unnecessary.
This is the first slice of bringing up escaping closure support. The support is
based around introducing a new type of SILGen VarLoc: a VarLoc with a box and
without a value. Because the VarLoc only has a box, we have to in SILGen always
eagerly reproject out the address from the box. The reason why I am doing this
is that it makes it easy for the move checker to distinguish in between
different accesses to the box that we want to check separately. As such every
time that we open the box, we insert a mark_must_check
[assignable_but_not_consumable] on that project. If allocbox_to_stack manages to
determine that the box can be stack allocated, we eliminate all of the
mark_must_check and place a new mark_must_check [consumable_and_assignable] on
the alloc_stack. The end result is that we get the old model that we had before
and also can support escaping closures.
This fits the name of the check better. The reason I am doing this renaming is
b/c I am going to add a nonconsumable but assignable check for
global_addr/ref_element_addr/captures with var semantics.
A class that uses @objcImplementation but does not explicitly declare any designated initializers previously did not override the superclass initializers, so its stored properties would not be initialized. Opt these classes into that logic and adjust it to add the initializers to the @objcImplementation extension instead of the ClassDecl itself.
Fixes rdar://105008242.