`span` is not available in all versions of libstd++, so make it a
conditional header. Also adds other missing c++20 headers.
Fixing this triggered an assert when importing a constant initialized
`wchar_t` variable, so that is also fixed. The reason is that `wchar_t`
is mapped to `Unicode.Scalar`, which cannot be directly initialized by
integer literals in Swift, triggering an assert when looking up the
protocol conformance for `_ExpressibleByBuiltinIntegerLiteral`.
rdar://162074714
Mostly this just means adding `Musl` as a module dependency of various
things and making sure that we build things for `swift_static` even
if `SWIFT_BUILD_STATIC_STDLIB` isn't enabled.
There's also a slight difference in the declaration of `memcmp()`;
musl's declaration is more like the one we have on Darwin.
rdar://123508245
As of CMake 3.25, there are now global variables `LINUX=1`, `ANDROID=1`,
etc. These conflict with expressions that used these names as unquoted
strings in positions where CMake accepts 'variable|string', for example:
- `if(sdk STREQUAL LINUX)` would fail, because `LINUX` is now defined and
expands to 1, where it would previously coerce to a string.
- `if(${sdk} STREQUAL "LINUX")` would fail if `sdk=LINUX`, because the
left-hand side expands twice.
In this patch, I looked for a number of patterns to fix up, sometimes a
little defensively:
- Quoted right-hand side of `STREQUAL` where I was confident it was
intended to be a string literal.
- Removed manual variable expansion on left-hand side of `STREQUAL`,
`MATCHES` and `IN_LIST` where I was confident it was unintended.
Fixes#65028.
This moves `libstdcxx.modulemap` and `libstdcxx.h` from `*.xctoolchain/usr/lib/swift/macosx/arm64e` to `*.xctoolchain/usr/lib/swift/macosx` to simplify distribution.
rdar://110788977