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.
To help maintain source-compatibility, the presence of an `await` in
top-level code to kick the top-level code over to being a concurrent
context.
This, of course, means that in the test cases that exist today, they
will go back to behaving identically to how they did before I added all
of this because they don't have any awaits in the top-level. I'll be
adding new tests to verify the differences in behavior between swift 5,
swift 6, with and without async top level enabled in the next commit.
This checks that we generate the correct SIL for async top-level code.
@main sets things up and sets up the task containing `@async_Main`,
which is the actual top-level code. It also verifies that we are
correctly constructing the call to `exit` at the end of `@async_Main`,
ensuring that the program actually terminates.
In a previous commit, I banned in the verifier any SILValue from producing
ValueOwnershipKind::Any in preparation for this.
This change arises out of discussions in between John, Andy, and I around
ValueOwnershipKind::Trivial. The specific realization was that this ownership
kind was an unnecessary conflation of the a type system idea (triviality) with
an ownership idea (@any, an ownership kind that is compatible with any other
ownership kind at value merge points and can only create). This caused the
ownership model to have to contort to handle the non-payloaded or trivial cases
of non-trivial enums. This is unnecessary if we just eliminate the any case and
in the verifier separately verify that trivial => @any (notice that we do not
verify that @any => trivial).
NOTE: This is technically an NFC intended change since I am just replacing
Trivial with Any. That is why if you look at the tests you will see that I
actually did not need to update anything except removing some @trivial ownership
since @any ownership is represented without writing @any in the parsed sil.
rdar://46294760
The SILGen testsuite consists of valid Swift code covering most language
features. We use these tests to verify that no unknown nodes are in the
file's libSyntax tree. That way we will (hopefully) catch any future
changes or additions to the language which are not implemented in
libSyntax.
This commit does a few things:
1. It uses SwitchEnumBuilder so we are not re-inventing any wheels.
2. Instead of hacking around not putting in a destroy for .None on the fail
pass, just *do the right thing* and recognize that we have a binary case enum
and in such a case, just emit code for the other case rather than use a default
case (meaning no cleanup on .none).
rdar://31145255
Keep in mind that these are approximations that will not impact correctness
since in all cases I ensured that the SIL will be the same after the
OwnershipModelEliminator has run. The cases that I was unsure of I commented
with SEMANTIC ARC TODO. Once we have the verifier any confusion that may have
occurred here will be dealt with.
rdar://28685236
Implements SE-0055: https://github.com/apple/swift-evolution/blob/master/proposals/0055-optional-unsafe-pointers.md
- Add NULL as an extra inhabitant of Builtin.RawPointer (currently
hardcoded to 0 rather than being target-dependent).
- Import non-object pointers as Optional/IUO when nullable/null_unspecified
(like everything else).
- Change the type checker's *-to-pointer conversions to handle a layer of
optional.
- Use 'AutoreleasingUnsafeMutablePointer<NSError?>?' as the type of error
parameters exported to Objective-C.
- Drop NilLiteralConvertible conformance for all pointer types.
- Update the standard library and then all the tests.
I've decided to leave this commit only updating existing tests; any new
tests will come in the following commits. (That may mean some additional
implementation work to follow.)
The other major piece that's missing here is migration. I'm hoping we get
a lot of that with Swift 1.1's work for optional object references, but
I still need to investigate.
For long names this is easier to read and in most cases the omitted information can be seen in the actual SIL code.
With the option -Xllvm -sil-full-demangle the old behavior can be restored.
It is still not clear to me when we access global variables from other
modules directly, versus using accessors; it seems to be controlled
by the -sil-serialize-all flag, rather than any language feature.
Until/if we add a @_fixed_layout equivalent for globals, I can't really
test direct access of globals from other modules; when we figure out
the story here I'll be able to add more tests and also tighten up
some isResilient() checks in the global code, but what's in there now
seems to work.
Having a separate address and container value returned from alloc_stack is not really needed in SIL.
Even if they differ we have both addresses available during IRGen, because a dealloc_stack is always dominated by the corresponding alloc_stack in the same function.
Although this commit quite large, most changes are trivial. The largest non-trivial change is in IRGenSIL.
This commit is a NFC regarding the generated code. Even the generated SIL is the same (except removed #0, #1 and @local_storage).
And include some supplementary mangling changes:
- Give the first generic param (depth=0, index=0) a single character mangling. Even after removing the self type from method declaration types, 'Self' still shows up very frequently in protocol requirement signatures.
- Fix the mangling of generic parameter counts to elide the count when there's only one parameter at the starting depth of the mangling.
Together these carve another 154KB out of a debug standard library. There's some awkwardness in demangled strings that I'll clean up in subsequent commits; since decl types now only mangle the number of generic params at their own depth, it's context-dependent what depths those represent, which we get wrong now. Currying markers are also wrong, but since free function currying is going away, we can mangle the partial application thunks in different ways.
Swift SVN r32896
Make the following patterns illegal:
if var x = ... {
...
}
guard var x = ... else {
...
}
while var x = ... {
...
}
And provide a replacement fixit 'var' -> 'let'.
rdar://problem/23172698
Swift SVN r32855
This gets the cleanups right, which is important for the 'locals' that
come from top-level guard statements as well as top-level defer statements.
The former could lead to accessing destroyed memory.
rdar://problem/22064894
Swift SVN r30811
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
Eliminate the intermediate top_level_code function. Now that SIL is expressive enough to express a "main" function, there's no reason for it, and this eliminates a bunch of mystery code in IRGen to thunk from main to top_level_code by reaching for hardcoded symbol names. Demystify the special code for setting up C_ARGC and C_ARGV by having SILGen look for a transparent "_didEnterMain" hook in the stdlib and emit a call to it.
Swift SVN r22525
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
Update SILGen to create SILGlobalVariable and SILGlobalAddrInst instead of
GlobalAddrInst. When we see a definition for a global variable, we create
the corrsponding SILGlobalVariable definition.
When creating SILGlobalVariable from a global VarDecl, we mangle the global
VarDecl in the same way as we mangle it at IRGen. The SILLinkage is also
set in the same way as we set it at IRGen.
At IRGen, we use the associated VarDecl for SILGlobalVariable if it exists,
to have better debugging information.
We set the initializer for SILGlobalVariable definition only.
We also handle SILGlobalAddrInst in various SILPasses, in the similar way
as we handle GlobalAddrInst.
rdar://15493694
Swift SVN r21887
to give it a trivial amount of CSE. This isn't important generally (global_addr turns into
a trivial constant in LLVM IR) but unblocks some other SILGen stuff I'm working on.
This doesn't affect lazy global addressors.
Swift SVN r20259