Use `inheritsAvailabilityFromPlatform()` to determine whether to suppress
diagnostics about back deployed functions being unavailable. Previously, if the
platform of the `@backDeployed` attribute and the platform of the `@available`
attribute did not match exactly the diagnostic was always suppressed, which was
too permissive.
The old TypeAttributes reprsentation wasn't too bad for a small number of
simple attributes. Unfortunately, the number of attributes has grown over
the years by quite a bit, which makes TypeAttributes fairly bulky even at
just a single SourceLoc per attribute. The bigger problem is that we want
to carry more information than that on some of these attributes, which is
all super ad hoc and awkward. And given that we want to do some things
for each attribute we see, like diagnosing unapplied attributes, the linear
data structure does require a fair amount of extra work.
I switched around the checking logic quite a bit in order to try to fit in
with the new representation better. The most significant change here is the
change to how we handle implicit noescape, where now we're passing the
escaping attribute's presence down in the context instead of resetting the
context anytime we see any attributes at all. This should be cleaner overall.
The source range changes around some of the @escaping checking is really a
sort of bugfix --- the existing code was really jumping from the @ sign
all the way past the autoclosure keyword in a way that I'm not sure always
works and is definitely a little unintentional-feeling.
I tried to make the parser logic more consistent around recognizing these
parameter specifiers; it seems better now, at least.
Not quite NFC because apparently the representation bleeds into what's
accepted in some situations where we're supposed to be warning about
conflicts and then making an arbitrary choice. But what we're doing
is nonsense, so we definitely need to break behavior here.
This is setting up for isolated(any) and isolated(caller). I tried
to keep that out of the patch as much as possible, though.
values.
Teach ActorIsolation that a `nil` isolated argument is statically nonisolated,
and a reference to GlobalActor.shared statically has global actor isolation.
This change also models arbitrary actor instance isolation using VarDecls
when possible, which allows comparing two ActorIsolation values that may
represent different actor instances. Previously, ActorIsolation was
modeled only by storing the nominal actor type and the parameter index,
so the actor isolation value for two different actors was considered
to be equal. Now, the nominal actor type is only used for isolated `self`
in cases where there is no implicit self parameter decl, such as for
stored properties.
a VarDecl or Expr.
This generalization exposed a bug where distributed actor isolation checking
was skipped in some cases, including for the isolated call in `whenLocal`.
The `whenLocal` implementation violated distributed actor isolation because
despite the `__isLocal` dynamic check, the `self` value passed to the `body`
function argument is still not statically local. To workaround this, I
applied the `_local` modifier explicitly to `self` before the call, which
also necessitated allowing `_local` to be written explicitly in the Distributed
library.
First, "can have an absence of Copyable" is a rather confusing notion,
so the query is flipped to "can be Copyable". Next, it's more robust to
ask if a conformance exists for the TypeDecl to answer that question,
rather than trying to replicate what happens within that conformance
lookup.
Also renames `TypeDecl::isEscapable` to match.
access level for optimization: `public`. It requires an extra check for
the actual access level that was declared when determining serialization
since the behavior should be different.
This PR sets its effective access level to `package` as originally defined,
updates call sites to make appropriate acces level comparisons, and removes
`package` specific checks.
If the defining module is built resiliently, treat the package decl as resilient,
just as we do for public decls.
Access methods to `package` should be the same as for non-frozen `public`, i.e. indirect.
Added tests for SIL/IR wrt serialization and indirect access with/out resilience enabled.
Resolves rdar://118947451
`@GlobalActor(unsafe)` and `@preconcurrency @GlobalActor` mean the same
thing, but there were two different representations in the actor isolation
checker. Standardize on the preconcurrency representation.
It's not clear that its worth keeping this as a
base class for SerializedAbstractClosure and
SerializedTopLevelCodeDecl, most clients are
interested in the concrete kinds, not only whether
the context is serialized.
Most clients only want to set one of the two
parameters, split it into `setPattern` and
`setInitContext` (the latter of which now
handles calling `setBinding`).
Switch from promising a DeclContext to a
PatternBindingInitializer.
This has a couple of benefits:
- It eliminates a few places where we were force
`cast`'ing to PatternBindingInitializer.
- It improves the clarity of what's being stored,
it's not whatever the parent context of the
initializer is, it's specifically the
PatternBindingInitializer context if it exists.
Due to the duality between the expression and declaration forms of
freestanding macros, we could end up assigning two different discriminators
to what is effectively the same freestanding macro expansion. Across
different source files, this could lead to inconsistent discriminators in
different translation units. Unify the storage of the discriminator to
avoid this issue.
Fixes rdar://116259748
Instead of injecting Copyable & Escapable protocols into every
ExistentialLayout, only add those protocols if the existing protocols
don't already imply them. This simplifies things like `any Error`
protocol, so it still only lists one protocol in its existential layout.
But existentials like `any NoCopyP` still end up with a Copyable in its
layout.