Translating more llvm::Optional::transform calls to swift::transform.
`llvm::Optional` had a transform function that ran a lambda on the
element stored in the optional if it existed. After migrating to
std::optional under the hood, that function went away. Replacing it with
calls to swift::optional in STLExtras.h.
llvm::SmallSetVector changed semantics
(https://reviews.llvm.org/D152497) resulting in build failures in Swift.
The old semantics allowed usage of types that did not have an
`operator==` because `SmallDenseSet` uses `DenseSetInfo<T>::isEqual` to
determine equality. The new implementation switched to using
`std::find`, which internally uses `operator==`. This type is used
pretty frequently with `swift::Type`, which intentionally deletes
`operator==` as it is not the canonical type and therefore cannot be
compared in normal circumstances.
This patch adds a new type-alias to the Swift namespace that provides
the old semantic behavior for `SmallSetVector`. I've also gone through
and replaced usages of `llvm::SmallSetVector` with the
`Swift::SmallSetVector` in places where we're storing a type that
doesn't implement or explicitly deletes `operator==`. The changes to
`llvm::SmallSetVector` should improve compile-time performance, so I
left the `llvm::SmallSetVector` where possible.
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.
* Add experimental feature `PlaygroundExtendedCallbacks` which passes more information in `-playground` callbacks
Adds the experimental feature `PlaygroundExtendedCallbacks` which (when `-playground` is also passed) causes the playground transform to use alternate forms of the result-value, scope-entry, and scope-exit callbacks that include the module name and file path of the source file.
The previous callbacks included integers for the module number and file number, but this was cumbersome to use because it required the caller to create source symbols with magical names formed from the module name and file path that the playground transform knew how to look up.
The extended callbacks in the experimental feature instead pass these strings as string literals. This is an experimental feature because of the need to measure the performance impact, and because of the need to provide an option to control which set of callbacks to use so that existing clients of the playground transform can opt into it when ready. It's also likely that we'll want to pass more information in the extended callbacks, such as an indication of the kind of result is being logged (e.g. a loop iteration variable vs a return statement vs a variable assignment). So this should be considered the first of a series of experimental improvements that will then be pitched as an actual, non-experimental v2.0 of the playground transform callback API. Because of the nature of how the playground transform is used, it's much easier to iterate on the functionality in the form of an experimental feature rather than using only desktop debug builds of the Swift compiler.
Changes:
- define a new experimental feature called `PlaygroundExtendedCallbacks`
- modify the playground transform step in sema to pass the module name and file name literals when the experimental feature is set
- add a unit test for the extended callbacks
There is no change in behaviour when `PlaygroundExtendedCallbacks` is not enabled.
rdar://109911742
Co-authored-by: Brent Shank <bshank@apple.com>
LLVM deprecated, renamed, and removed a bunch of APIs. This patch
contains a lot of the changes needed to deal with that.
The SetVector type changed the template parameters.
APInt updated multiple names, countPopulation became popcount,
getAllOnesValue became getAllOnes, getNullValue became getZero, etc...
Clang type nullability check stopped taking a clang AST context.
The LLVM IRGen Function type stopped exposing basic block list directly,
but gained enough API surface that the translation isn't too bad.
(GenControl.cpp, LLVMMergeFunctions.cpp)
llvm::Optional had a transform function. That was being used in a couple
of places, so I've added a new implementation under STLExtras that
transforms valid optionals, otherwise it returns nullopt.
LLVM removed findFirstSet and findLastSet functions from MathExtras and
doesn't have a direct replacement. We only have once instance of these
functions used in the compiler, so I've replaced them inline with the
appropriate bit operations.
This patch migrates the compiler off of the deprecated LLVM APIs where I
can.
- APInt::getAllOnesValue -> APInt::getAllOnes
- APInt::getNullValue -> APInt::getZero
- APInt::isNullValue -> APInt::isZero
- APInt::getMinSignedBits -> APInt::getSignificantBits
- clang::Module::submodule_{begin,end} -> clang::Module::submodules
Upcoming and experimental features are supported via command-line flags
and also in the SwiftPM manifest. Introduce it as an experimental
feature so that it can be enabled via SwiftPM without having to resort
to unsafe flags.
The `StrictConcurrency` experimental feature can also provide a
strictness level in the same manner as `-strict-concurrency`, e.g.,
`StrictConcurrency=targeted`. If the level is not provided, it'll be
`complete`.
Note that we do not introduce this as an "upcoming" feature, because
upcoming features should be in their final "Swift 6" form before
becoming available. We are still tuning the checking for concurrency.
The reason why I am doing this is that this was not part of the original
evolution proposal (it was called an extension) and after some discussion it was
realized that partial consumption would benefit from discussion on the forums.
rdar://111353459
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.
One can still in resilient frameworks have noncopyable frozen types.
This means that one cannot make a noncopyable:
1. Full resilient public type.
2. @usableFromInline type.
NOTE: One can still use a frozen noncopyable type as a usableFromInline class
field. I validated in the attached tests that we get the correct code
generation.
I also eliminated a small bug in TypeCheckDeclPrimary where we weren't using a
requestified attr check and instead were checking directly.
rdar://111125845
Its storage vector is intended to be of some type like
`std::vector<std::pair<Key, Optional<Value>>>`, i.e., some collection of
pairs whose `second` is an `Optional<Value>`. So when constructing a
default instance of that pair, just construct an Optional in the None
case.
`lib/swift/host` contains modules/libraries that are built by the host
compiler. Their `.swiftmodule` will never be able to be read, ignore
them entirely.
Teach swift dependency scanner to use CAS to capture the full dependencies for a build and construct build commands with immutable inputs from CAS.
This allows swift compilation caching using CAS.