Moved the _gCRAnnotations declarations to their own object module,
which will help to avoid duplicate symbol problems (at least with .a
files).
Also tweaked things to make it so that the demangler and runtime
versions of the message setting code will interoperate (and so that
they'll interoperate better with other implementations that might
creep in from somewhere, like the one in LLVMSupport).
rdar://91095592
The demangling library can't use the error handling from the main runtime
because it isn't always linked with it. However, it's useful to have
some error handling, and in particular to be able to get data into the
crash logs.
This is complicated because of the way the demangling library gets used,
the upshot of which is that I've had to add a second object library just
for libswiftCore's use, so that the demangler will use the runtime's
error handling functions when present, and fall back on its own when
they aren't.
rdar://89139049
Since libDemangling is included in the Swift standard library,
ODR violations can occur on platforms that allow statically
linking stdlib if Swift code is linked with other compiler
libraries that also transitively pull in libDemangling, and if
the stdlib version and compiler version do not match exactly
(even down to commit drift between releases). This lets the
runtime conditionally segregate its copies of the libDemangling
symbols from those in the compiler using an inline namespace
without affecting usage throughout source.
If we nest a type inside a local context inside a generic type,
we have to look through the local context(s) to find the outer
generic type when stripping off generic arguments.
We don't support nominal types inside generic local context
right now, but this can happen with type aliases.
This reverts commit 121f5b64be.
Sorry to revert this again. This commit makes some pretty big changes. After
messing with the merge-conflict created by this internally, I did not feel
comfortable landing this now. I talked with Saleem and he agreed with me that
this was the right thing to do.
The key thing here is that all of the underlying code is exactly the same. I
purposely did not debride anything. This is to ensure that I am not touching too
much and increasing the probability of weird errors from occurring. Thus the
exact same code should be executed... just the routing changed.
Since this library uses ADT headers, it will pull in a dependency for
LLVMSupport (Error.cpp has the necessary variable declaration for ABI breaking
checks). Disable the ABI breaking check validation as we only use the library
for header-only dependencies. Avoiding this dependency shaves nearly 900 KiB
from the resultant binary.
Various TypeDecoder clients will depend on having the "bare" nominal
type declaration demangled node for looking up nominal type descriptors,
so move the generic argument-stripping code into TypeDecoder.
Previously it was part of swiftBasic.
The demangler library does not depend on llvm (except some header-only utilities like StringRef). Putting it into its own library makes sure that no llvm stuff will be linked into clients which use the demangler library.
This change also contains other refactoring, like moving demangler code into different files. This makes it easier to remove the old demangler from the runtime library when we switch to the new symbol mangling.
Also in this commit: remove some unused API functions from the demangler Context.
fixes rdar://problem/30503344