Add support for freestanding declaration macros.
- Parse `@declaration` attribute.
- Type check and expand `MacroExpansionDecl`.
Known issues:
- Generic macros are not yet handled.
- Expansion does not work when the parent decl context is `BraceStmt`. Need to parse freestanding declaration macro expansions in `BraceStmt` as `MacroExpansionDecl`, and add expanded decls to name lookup.
Always parse macro expansions, regardless of language mode, and
eliminate the fallback path for very, very, very old object literals
like `#Color`. Instead, check for the feature flag for macro
declaration and at macro expansion time, since this is a semantic
restriction.
While here, refactor things so the vast majority of the macro-handling
logic still applies even if the Swift Swift parser is disabled. Only
attempts to expand the macro will fail. This allows us to enable the
macro-diagnostics test everywhere.
The "local context" was only used to prevent parsing of closures in a
non-local context, and also string interpolations because they are
similar-ish to closures. However, this isn't something a parser should
decide, so remove this special-case semantic check from the parser and
eliminate the notion of "local context" entirely.
The parser no longer sets local discriminators, and this function is
currently only responsible for adding local type declarations to the
source file. Rename it and remove most of the former callers so it
does just that.
Local discriminators for named entities are currently being set by the
parser, so entities not created by the parser (e.g., that come from
synthesized code) don't get local discriminators. Moreover, there is
no checking to ensure that every named local entity gets a local
discriminator, so some entities would incorrectly get a local
discriminator of 0.
Assign local discriminators as part of setting closure discriminators,
in response to a request asking for the local discriminator, so the
parser does not need to track this information, and all local
declarations---including synthesized ones---get local discriminators.
And add checking to make sure that every entity that needs a local
discriminator gets assigned one.
There are a few interesting cases in here:
* There was a potential mangling collision with local property
wrappers because their generated variables weren't getting local
discriminators
* $interpolation variables introduced for string interpolation weren't
getting local discriminators, they were just wrong.
* "Local rename" when dealing with captures like `[x]` was dependent on
the new delcaration of `x` *not* getting a local discriminator. There
are funny cases involving nesting where it would do the wrong thing.
Rather than set closure discriminators in both the parser (for explicit
closures) and then later as part of contextualizing closures (for
autoclosures), do so via a request that sets all of the discriminators
for a given context.
The lexer will be responsible for knowing whether we have a code completion token, everything else will also work for other IDE inspection features.
The changes start to really make sense once I rename CodeCompletion -> IDEInspection in a lot of places.
This will be necessary to make cursor info completion like to inspect the just parsed source file because the callback from parsing the code completion token won’t be called.
In the Swift grammar, the top-level of a source file is a mix of three
different kinds of "items": declarations, statements, and expressions.
However, the existing parser forces all of these into declarations at
parse time, wrapping statements and expressions in TopLevelCodeDecls,
so the primary API for getting the top-level entities in source files
is based on getting declarations.
Start generalizing the representation by storing ASTNode instances at
the top level, rather than declaration pointers, updating many (but
not all!) uses of this API. The walk over declarations is a (cached)
filter to pick out all of the declarations. Existing parsed files are
unaffected (the parser still creates top-level code declarations), but
the new "macro expansion" source file kind skips creating top-level
code declarations so we get the pure parse tree. Additionally, some
generalized clients (like ASTScope lookup) will now look at the list
of items, so they'll be able to walk into statements and expressions
without the intervening TopLevelCodeDecl.
Over time, I'd like to phase out `getTopLevelDecls()` entirely,
relying on the new `getTopLevelItems()` for parsed content. We can
introduce TopLevelCodeDecls more lazily for semantic walks.
Introduce `MacroExpansionExpr` and `MacroExpansionDecl` and plumb it through. Parse them in roughly the same way we parse `ObjectLiteralExpr`.
The syntax is gated under `-enable-experimental-feature Macros`.
Refactors `parseSingleAttrOption()` to create a helper that can parse a single arbitrary `Identifier`. This simplifies the handling of `SwiftNativeObjCRuntimeBaseAttr`, `ObjCRuntimeNameAttr`, and `ProjectedValuePropertyAttr`.
* [SILOptimizer] Add prespecialization for arbitray reference types
* Fix benchmark Package.swift
* Move SimpleArray to utils
* Fix multiple indirect result case
* Remove leftover code from previous attempt
* Fix test after rebase
* Move code to compute type replacements to SpecializedFunction
* Fix ownership when OSSA is enabled
* Fixes after rebase
* Changes after rebasing
* Add feature flag for layout pre-specialization
* Fix pre_specialize-macos.swift
* Add compiler flag to benchmark build
* Fix benchmark SwiftPM flags
Specifically, we get an additional table like thing called sil_moveonlydeinit. It looks as follows:
sil_moveonlydeinit TYPE {
@FUNC_NAME
}
It always has a single entry.
Basic should not be allowed to link Parse, yet it was doing so
to allow Version to provide a constructor that would conveniently
parse a StringRef. This entrypoint also emitted diagnostics, so it
pulled in libAST.
Sink the version parser entrypoint down into Parse where it belongs
and point all the clients to the right place.
Introduce the compiler directive `#_hasSymbol` which will be used to detect whether weakly linked symbols are present at runtime. It is intended for use in combination with `@_weakLinked import` or `-weak-link-at-target`.
```
if #_hasSymbol(foo(_:)) {
foo(42)
}
```
Parsing only; SILGen is coming in a later commit.
Resolves rdar://99342017
Introduce support for parsing declaration attributes that occur within
example:
#if hasAttribute(frozen)
@frozen
#endif
public struct X { ... }
will apply to "frozen" attribute to the struct `X`, but only when the
compiler supports the "frozen" attribute.
Correctly determining whether a particular `#if` block contains
attributes to be associated with the following declaration vs.
starting a new declaration requires arbitrary lookahead. The parser
will ensure that at least one of the branches of the `#if` contains an
attribute, and that none of the branches contains something that does
not fit the attribute grammar, before committing to parsing the `#if`
clause as part of the declaration attributes. This lookahead does
occur at the top level (e.g., in the parsing of top-level declarations
and code), but should only need to scan past the first `#if` line to
the following token in the common case.
Unlike other `#if` when used to wrap statements or declarations, we
make no attempt to record the `#if` not taken anywhere in the AST.
This reflects a change in attitude in the design of the AST, because
we have found that trying to represent this information there (e.g.,
via `IfConfigDecl`) complicates clients while providing little value.
This information is best kept in the syntax tree, only.
While skipping, if we encounter a token that looks
like it could be the start of a `/.../` regex
literal, fall back to parsing the function or type
body normally, as such a token could become a
regex literal. As such, it could treat `{` and
`}` as literal, or otherwise have contents that
would be lexically invalid Swift.
To avoid falling back in too many cases, we apply
the existing regex literal heuristics. Cases that
pass the heuristic fall back to regular parsing.
Cases that fail the heuristic are further checked
to make sure they wouldn't contain an unbalanced
`{` or `}`, but otherwise are allowed to be
skipped. This allows us to continue skipping for
most occurrences of infix and prefix `/`.
This is meant as a lower risk workaround to fix the
the issue, we ought to go back to handling regex
literals in the lexer.
Resolves rdar://95354010
C++ interop is now enabled in SwiftCompilerSources, so we can remove some of the C bridging layer and use C++ classes directly from Swift.
rdar://83361087