Type annotations for instruction operands are omitted, e.g.
```
%3 = struct $S(%1, %2)
```
Operand types are redundant anyway and were only used for sanity checking in the SIL parser.
But: operand types _are_ printed if the definition of the operand value was not printed yet.
This happens:
* if the block with the definition appears after the block where the operand's instruction is located
* if a block or instruction is printed in isolation, e.g. in a debugger
The old behavior can be restored with `-Xllvm -sil-print-types`.
This option is added to many existing test files which check for operand types in their check-lines.
While the comment is correct to state that this won't enable any
new optimizations with -Onone, it does enable IRGen's lazy
function emission, which is important for 'reasync' functions,
which we don't want to emit at all even at -Onone.
This fixes debug stdlib builds with the new reasync versions
of the &&, || and ?? operators.
The goal here is for the SILGen of these builtins to receive an owned
value so that it will perform an owned->owned conversion and therefore
produce a +1 result, as generally expected. Without this, SILGen will
perform a borrowed->borrowed conversion, and the copy of the result (if
it even happens) may happen after the argument's borrow scope has ended.
I am going to leave in the infrastructure around this just in case. But there is
no reason to keep this in the tests themselves. I can always just revert this
and I don't think merge conflicts are likely due to previous work I did around
the tooling for this.
* rename "Name" to "Description" in the pass definition, because it's not really the pass name, but the description of a pass
* remove the getName() from Transforms (which actually returned the description of a pass)
* in debug printing, print the pass ID and not the pass description. It makes it easier to correlate the debug output to the actual pass implementation.
* remove the iteration numbering in the pass manager, because we only run a single iteration anyway.
At some point, pass definitions were heavily macro-ized. Pass
descriptive names were added in two places. This is not only redundant
but a source of confusion. You could waste a lot of time grepping for
the wrong string. I removed all the getName() overrides which, at
around 90 passes, was a fairly significant amount of code bloat.
Any pass that we want to be able to invoke by name from a tool
(sil-opt) or pipeline plan *should* have unique type name, enum value,
commend-line string, and name string. I removed a comment about the
various inliner passes that contradicted that.
Side note: We should be consistent with the policy that a pass is
identified by its type. We have a couple passes, LICM and CSE, which
currently violate that convention.
Also, add a third [serializable] state for functions whose bodies we
*can* serialize, but only do so if they're referenced from another
serialized function.
This will be used for bodies synthesized for imported definitions,
such as init(rawValue:), etc, and various thunks, but for now this
change is NFC.
Strict aliasing only applies to memory operations that use strict
addresses. The optimizer needs to be aware of this flag. Uses of raw
addresses should not have their address substituted with a strict
address.
Also add Builtin.LoadRaw which will be used by raw pointer loads.
... with disabled test 1_stdlib/Bit.swift for ios.
Most likely the problem of 1_stdlib/Bit.swift (only on armv7) is just uncovered by this change.
Unfortunately I have no possibility to debug the problem on a device. Therefore I filed rdar://problem/20521110
Swift SVN r27274
This avoids that an unoptimized imported function is linked instead the optimized version from the stdlib.
rdar://problem/20485253
It gives considerable performance improvmenets for some benchmarks with -Onone. E.g.
PopFrontUnsafePointer: +281%
ArrayOfPOD: +92%
StrComplexWalk: +91%
ArrayOfGenericPOD: +61%
Several others are within the range of +10% to +30%.
For the implementation I added runSILPassesForOnone() in Passes.cpp.
Here we can add other optimizations for -Onone in the future.
Swift SVN r27206
Most tests were using %swift or similar substitutions, which did not
include the target triple and SDK. The driver was defaulting to the
host OS. Thus, we could not run the tests when the standard library was
not built for OS X.
Swift SVN r24504
Now the SILLinkage for functions and global variables is according to the swift visibility (private, internal or public).
In addition, the fact whether a function or global variable is considered as fragile, is kept in a separate flag at SIL level.
Previously the linkage was used for this (e.g. no inlining of less visible functions to more visible functions). But it had no effect,
because everything was public anyway.
For now this isFragile-flag is set for public transparent functions and for everything if a module is compiled with -sil-serialize-all,
i.e. for the stdlib.
For details see <rdar://problem/18201785> Set SILLinkage correctly and better handling of fragile functions.
The benefits of this change are:
*) Enable to eliminate unused private and internal functions
*) It should be possible now to use private in the stdlib
*) The symbol linkage is as one would expect (previously almost all symbols were public).
More details:
Specializations from fragile functions (e.g. from the stdlib) now get linkonce_odr,default
linkage instead of linkonce_odr,hidden, i.e. they have public visibility.
The reason is: if such a function is called from another fragile function (in the same module),
then it has to be visible from a third module, in case the fragile caller is inlined but not
the specialized function.
I had to update lots of test files, because many CHECK-LABEL lines include the linkage, which has changed.
The -sil-serialize-all option is now handled at SILGen and not at the Serializer.
This means that test files in sil format which are compiled with -sil-serialize-all
must have the [fragile] attribute set for all functions and globals.
The -disable-access-control option doesn't help anymore if the accessed module is not compiled
with -sil-serialize-all, because the linker will complain about unresolved symbols.
A final note: I tried to consider all the implications of this change, but it's not a low-risk change.
If you have any comments, please let me know.
Swift SVN r22215
Add serialization/deserialization of the following SILInstructions:
BuiltinFunctionRefInst, IndexRawPointerInst, ModuleInst,
Conversion instructions:
RefToObjectPointerInst, UpcastInst, CoerceInst, AddressToPointerInst,
PointerToAddressInst, ObjectPointerToRefInst, RefToRawPointerInst,
RawPointerToRefInst, RefToUnownedInst, UnownedToRefInst
DestroyAddrInst, LoadInst, StrongReleaseInst, StrongRetainInst,
TupleElementAddrInst, TupleExtractInst
Make getModule in ModuleFile public to be used by SILDeserializer, also
make addModuleRef in Serializer public to be used by SILSerializer.
Update testing case to cover the above SILInstructions.
Swift SVN r8372