This name makes it clear that the function has not yet been deleted and also
contrasts with the past tense used in the API notifyAddedOrModifiedFunction to
show that said function has already added/modified the function.
The name notifyAddFunction is actively harmful since the pass manager uses this
entrypoint to notify analyses of added *OR* modified functions. It is up to the
caller analysis to distinguish in between these cases.
I am not vouching for the design, just trying to make names match the
current behavior.
Generally in the SIL/SILOptimizer libraries we have been putting kinds in the
swift namespace, not a nested scope in a type in swift (see ValueKind as an
example of this).
There are now separate functions for function addition and deletion instead of InvalidationKind::Function.
Also, there is a new function for witness/vtable invalidations.
rdar://problem/29311657
Not sure why but this was another "toxic utility method".
Most of the usages fell into one of three categories:
- The base value was always non-null, so we could just call
getCanonicalType() instead, making intent more explicit
- The result was being compared for equality, so we could
skip canonicalization and call isEqual() instead, removing
some boilerplate
- Utterly insane code that made no sense
There were only a couple of legitimate uses, and even there
open-coding the conditional null check made the code clearer.
Also while I'm at it, make the SIL open archetypes tracker
more typesafe by passing around ArchetypeType * instead of
Type and CanType.
(Headers first)
It has been generally agreed that we need to do this reorg, and now
seems like the perfect time. Some major pass reorganization is in the
works.
This does not have to be the final word on the matter. The consensus
among those working on the code is that it's much better than what we
had and a better starting point for future bike shedding.
Note that the previous organization was designed to allow separate
analysis and optimization libraries. It turns out this is an
artificial distinction and not an important goal.