This will allow us to run two different completion kinds and deliver results from both of them.
Also: Compute a unified type context for global lookup. Previously, we always used the expected type context of the last lookup. But really, we should be considering all possible types from all constraint system solutions when computing code completion results from the cache.
This brings up the ability to compute cursor info results using the completion-like type checking paradigm, which an reuse ASTContexts and doesn’t need to type check the entire file.
For now, the new implementation only supports cursor info on `ValueDecl`s (not on references) because they were easiest to implement. More cursor info kinds are coming soon.
At the moment, we only run the new implementation in a verification mode: It is only invoked in assert toolchains and when run, we check that the results are equivalent to the old implementation. Once more cursor info kinds are implemented and if the SourceKit stress tester doesn’t find any verification issues, we can enable the new implementation, falling back to the old implementation if the new one didn’t produce any results.
IDE/Refactoring had dependencies to libswiftIndex, but libswiftIndex
also depends on libswiftIDE (SourceEntityWalker, etc.)
To break libswiftIndex <-> libswiftIDE dependency cycle, move
"refactoring" related files to a new library 'libswiftRefactoring'
rdar://101692282
These libraries formed a strongly connected component in the CMake build graph. The weakest link I could find was from IDE to FrontendTool and Frontend, which was necessitated by the `CompileInstance` class (https://github.com/apple/swift/pull/40645). I moved a few files out of IDE into a new IDETools library to break the cycle.
This hooks up call argument position completion to the typeCheckForCodeCompletion API to generate completions from all the solutions the constraint solver produces (even those requiring fixes), rather than relying on a single solution being applied to the AST (if any).
Co-authored-by: Nathan Hawes <nathan.john.hawes@gmail.com>
[CodeCompletion] Make ExpectedTypeContext a class with explicit getters/setters
This simplifies debugging because you can break when the possible types are set and you can also search for references to `setPossibleType` to figure out where the expected types are being set.
* Implement 'getDiagnosticSeverity()' and 'getDiagnosticMessage()' on
'CodeCompletionResult'
* Differentiate 'RedundantImportIndirect' from 'RedundantImport'
* Make non-Sendable check respects '-warn-concurrency'
rdar://76129658
* 'CodeCompletionContext' now has 'requiresSourceFileInfo()' flag
* When 'true', 'SourceFiles' is populated.
* 'SourceFiles' is a list of pairs of a known module source
file path and its up-to-date-ness
* Clients (i.e. 'CodeCompletionConsumer') can retrieve it from
'CodeCompletionContext' in 'handleResults'
* Each completion item now has 'SourceFilePath' property
* C-APIs to get those informations
Otherwise we set it on all targets/languages in a subdirectory (I forgot if it
propagates up). Regardless, this type of viral stuff is something we want to
move away from since it creates a code that is a "forall" piece of code rather
than a piece of code that only effects a single target.
I also conditionalized the actual definitions being added on the compiled file's
language being C,CXX,OBJC,OBJCXX since as we add Swift sources to the host side
of the compiler, we will not want these flags to propagate to Swift sources.
- Introduce ide::CompletionInstance to manage CompilerInstance
- `CompletionInstance` vends the cached CompilerInstance when:
-- The compiler arguments (i.e. CompilerInvocation) has has not changed
-- The primary file is the same
-- The completion happens inside function bodies in both previous and
current completion
-- The interface hash of the primary file has not changed
- Otherwise, it vends a fresh CompilerInstance and cache it for the next
completion
rdar://problem/20787086
This refactors DWARFImporter to become a part of ClangImporter, since
it needs access to many of its implementation details anyway. The
DWARFImporterDelegate is just another mechanism for deserializing
Clang ASTs and once we have a Clang AST, the processing is effectively
the same.
This is a follow up to the discussion on #22740 to switch the host
libraries to use the `target_link_libraries` rather than the
`LINK_LIBRARIES` special handling. This allows the dependency to be
properly tracked by CMake and allows us to use the more modern syntax.
`source.request.conformingmethods` is a new SourceKit request which
receives a source position and a list of protocol namses, returns a list
of methods whose return type conforms to the requested protocols.
rdar://problem/44699573
TypeContextInfo is for new SourceKit request which receives source
location, and returns context type and members which can be referenced
by "implicit member expression" syntax.
Implement that as a code completion callbacks.
When debugging Objective-C or C++ code on Darwin, the debug info
collected by dsymutil in the .dSYM bundle is entirely
self-contained. It is possible to debug a program, set breakpoints and
print variables even without having the complete original source code
or a matching SDK available. With Swift, this is currently not the
case. Even though .dSYM bundles contain the binary .swiftmodule for
all Swift modules, any Clang modules that the Swift modules depend on,
still need to be imported from source to even get basic LLDB
functionality to work. If ClangImporter fails to import a Clang
module, effectively the entire Swift module depending on it gets
poisoned.
This patch is addressing this issue by introducing a ModuleLoader that
can ask queries about Clang Decls to LLDB, since LLDB knows how to
reconstruct Clang decls from DWARF and clang -gmodules producxes full
debug info for Clang modules that is embedded into the .dSYM budle.
This initial version does not contain any advanced functionality at
all, it merely produces an empty ModuleDecl. Intertestingly, even this
is a considerable improvement over the status quo. LLDB can now print
Swift-only variables in modules with failing Clang depenecies, and
becuase of fallback mechanisms that were implemented earlier, it can
even display the contents of pure Objective-C objects that are
imported into Swift. C structs obviously don't work yet.
rdar://problem/36032653
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.