SILType and SILDeclRef do not actually need anything from SIL/*.h. Also,
a few dependencies can be pushed out of the headers into cpp files to
speed up incremental rebuilds.
This reverts commit f0cdd76f18, reversing
changes made to 703fe0f1a1.
Revert "IRGen: Refactor getObjCEncodingForMethod and getObjectEncodingFromClangNode into one"
This reverts commit 0082682b0d.
Revert "Merge pull request #30438 from aschwaighofer/irgen_prefer_clang_type_encoding"
This reverts commit eeb7fa52b2, reversing
changes made to 77af77fa8a.
Revert "Merge pull request #30433 from aschwaighofer/irgen_no_duplicate_objc_method_descriptor_entries"
This reverts commit 77af77fa8a, reversing
changes made to 841eeb05b0.
This reverts the changes for
rdar://60461850, rdar://60474785, rdar://60778637
There is still at least an issue that we address with PR#30654.
Revert until we have confidence that this is the right fix set.
Before this patch we used to get duplicate entries because we would
define implicit function delcarations, e.g for
(func_decl "perform(_:)" interface type='<Self where Self : NSObjectProtocol> (Self) -> (Selector?) -> Unmanaged<AnyObject>?' access=public @objc
(parameter "self")
(parameter_list
(parameter "aSelector" type='Selector?' interface type='Selector?')))
we will define:
(func_decl implicit "performSelector(_:)" access=public @objc
(parameter "self")
(parameter_list
(parameter "aSelector" type='Selector?' interface type='Selector?')))
rdar://60461850
These are only used in two places in the Apple Objective-C runtime:
- A protocol's "extended method types" list
- Block type descriptors
We were using them when dynamically registering a protocol with the
Objective-C runtime, but that's just expecting "normal" types; the
"extended method types" list is never present in such a protocol.
Introduced during the bring-up of the generics system in July, 2012,
Substitution (and SubstitutionList) has been completely superseded by
SubstitutionMap. R.I.P.
The goals here are four-fold:
- provide cleaner internal abstractions
- avoid IR bloat from extra bitcasts
- avoid recomputing function-type lowering information
- allow more information to be propagated from the function
access site (e.g. class_method) to the call site
Use this framework immediately for class and protocol methods.
This is NFC in intent, but I had to restructure the code to emit more
of the lists "inline", which means I inevitably altered some IRGen
emission patterns in ways that are visible to tests:
- GenClass emits property/ivar/whatever descriptors in a somewhat
different order.
- An ext method type list is now emitted as just an array, not a struct
containing only that array.
- Protocol descriptors are no longer emitted as packed structs.
I was sorely tempted to stop using packed structs for all the metadata
emission, but didn't really want to update that many tests in one go.
SubstitutionList is going to be a more compact representation of
a SubstitutionMap, suitable for inline allocation inside another
object.
For now, it's just a typedef for ArrayRef<Substitution>.
The Objective-C partial application forwarder that one gets when
using, e.g., "super.foo" as a function value was doing a normal
objc_msgSend. Fix the miscompile by threading all of the information
about the Objective-C message send through the forwarder.
Fixes rdar://problem/28140758.
Now we can discern the types of values in heap boxes at runtime!
Closure reference captures are a common way of creating reference
cycles, so this provides some basic infrastructure for detecting those
someday.
A closure capture descriptor has the following:
- The number of captures.
- The number of sources of metadata reachable from the closure.
This is important for substituting generics at runtime since we
can't know precisely what will get captured until we observe a
closure.
- The number of types in the NecessaryBindings structure.
This is a holding tank in a closure for sources of metadata that
can't be gotten from the captured values themselves.
- The metadata source map, a list of pairs, for each
source of metadata for every generic argument needed to perform
substitution at runtime.
Key: The typeref for the generic parameter visible from the closure
in the Swift source.
Value: The metadata source, which describes how to crawl the heap from
the closure to get to the metadata for that generic argument.
- A list of typerefs for the captured values themselves.
Follow-up: IRGen tests for various capture scenarios, which will include
MetadataSource encoding tests.
rdar://problem/24989531
Similarly to how we've always handled parameter types, we
now recursively expand tuples in result types and separately
determine a result convention for each result.
The most important code-generation change here is that
indirect results are now returned separately from each
other and from any direct results. It is generally far
better, when receiving an indirect result, to receive it
as an independent result; the caller is much more likely
to be able to directly receive the result in the address
they want to initialize, rather than having to receive it
in temporary memory and then copy parts of it into the
target.
The most important conceptual change here that clients and
producers of SIL must be aware of is the new distinction
between a SILFunctionType's *parameters* and its *argument
list*. The former is just the formal parameters, derived
purely from the parameter types of the original function;
indirect results are no longer in this list. The latter
includes the indirect result arguments; as always, all
the indirect results strictly precede the parameters.
Apply instructions and entry block arguments follow the
argument list, not the parameter list.
A relatively minor change is that there can now be multiple
direct results, each with its own result convention.
This is a minor change because I've chosen to leave
return instructions as taking a single operand and
apply instructions as producing a single result; when
the type describes multiple results, they are implicitly
bound up in a tuple. It might make sense to split these
up and allow e.g. return instructions to take a list
of operands; however, it's not clear what to do on the
caller side, and this would be a major change that can
be separated out from this already over-large patch.
Unsurprisingly, the most invasive changes here are in
SILGen; this requires substantial reworking of both call
emission and reabstraction. It also proved important
to switch several SILGen operations over to work with
RValue instead of ManagedValue, since otherwise they
would be forced to spuriously "implode" buffers.
SILFunctionType of the method instead of its formal type.
Gives more accurate information to the @encoding, makes
foreign error conventions work implicitly, and allows
IRGen's Swift-to-Clang to avoid duplicating arbitrary
amounts of the bridging logic from SILGen.
Some finagling was required in order to avoid calling
getConstantFunctionType from within other kinds of
lowering, which might have re-entered a generic context.
Also required fixing a bug with the type lowering of
optional DynamicSelfTypes where we would end up with
a substituted type in the lowered type.
Also, for some reason, our @encoding for -dealloc
methods was pretending that there was a formal parameter.
There didn't seem to be any justification for this,
and it's not like Clang does that. Fixed.
This commit reapplies r29266 with a conservative build fix
that disables ObjC property descriptors for @objc properties
that lack a getter. That should only be possible in SIL
files, because @objc should force accessors to be synthesized.
Arguably, Sema shouldn't be marking things implicitly @objc
in SIL files, but I'll leave that decision open for now.
Swift SVN r29272
SILFunctionType of the method instead of its formal type.
Gives more accurate information to the @encoding, makes
foreign error conventions work implicitly, and allows
IRGen's Swift-to-Clang to avoid duplicating arbitrary
amounts of the bridging logic from SILGen.
Some finagling was required in order to avoid calling
getConstantFunctionType from within other kinds of
lowering, which might have re-entered a generic context.
Also required fixing a bug with the type lowering of
optional DynamicSelfTypes where we would end up with
a substituted type in the lowered type.
Also, for some reason, our @encoding for -dealloc
methods was pretending that there was a formal parameter.
There didn't seem to be any justification for this,
and it's not like Clang does that. Fixed.
Swift SVN r29266
Just injecting a new protocol descriptor into an already-running ObjC runtime isn't a good idea, since the runtime might have already canonized the protocol somewhere else, and it won't recognize that classes conform to protocols it doesn't know about.
Swift SVN r23313
llvm::Optional lives in "llvm/ADT/Optional.h". Like Clang, we can get
Optional in the 'swift' namespace by including "swift/Basic/LLVM.h".
We're now fully switched over to llvm::Optional!
Swift SVN r22477
If a type has to be passed or returned resiliently, it
will necessarily be passed indirectly, which is already
represented in SILFunctionType. There is no need to
represent this as a separate channel of information.
NFC. Also fixes a problem where the signature cache
for ExtraData::Block was writing past the end of an
array (but into the storage for an adjacent array
which was fortunately never used).
ExtraData should also disappear as a concept, but we're
still relying on that for existential protocol witnesses.
Swift SVN r21548
Implement the init_block_storage_header SIL instruction by teaching IRGen how to produce block descriptors, including copy/dispose helpers and block signatures.
Swift SVN r16478
These bits are orthogonal to each other, so combine them into one, and diagnose attempts to produce a type that's both. Spot-fix a bunch of places this revealed by inspection that we would have crashed in SILGen or IRGen if blocks were be handled.
Swift SVN r16088
When we're using Objective-C's memory allocation, emit .cxx_construct
methods whenever we have instance variables with in-class
initializers. Presently, these methods are just empty stubs.
Swift SVN r12211
The Objective-C runtime executes the .cxx_destruct method after the
last -dealloc has executed when destroying an object, allowing the
instance variables to remain live even after the subclass's
destructor/-dealloc has executed, which is important for memory
safety. This fixes the majority of <rdar://problem/15136592>.
Note that IRGenModule::getAddrOfIVarDestroyer() contains an egregious
hack to find the ivar destructor SIL function via a linear
search. We need a better way to find SIL functions that we know exist,
because LinkEntity does not suffice.
Swift SVN r12206
Introduce the SIL instruction peer_method, which references a method
in the given class or one of its superclasses (but not a subclass). It
IRGen's to objc_msgSendSuper[Stret] (vs. super_method IRGen'ing to
objc_msgSendSuper[Stret]2 for superclass lookup).
Use peer_method for initializer delegation to a foreign initializer
(i.e., an init-family method written in Objective-C) to close the
safety loophole introduced by initializer delegation in r11965. The
loophole still exists, but can only be triggered from Objective-C.
Teach definite initialization that peer_method really isn't a use of
self.
Swift SVN r11992
Now that all [objc] constructors have a suitable "init" selector, emit
an Objective-C thunk for the initializing constructor (not the
allocating constructor!) with that selector, and make sure it shows up
in the Objective-C metadata.
With this, we can write a Swift constructor "constructor()" to
override "-init"; see the change to ListMaker that exercises this.
Joe or John: I'd love a review of these.
Swift SVN r8373
To do this right, we need to emit the objc_msgSend on the 'self' argument inside the forwarding stub, so handle them in a different code path in IRGenSIL::visitPartialApplyInst.
Swift SVN r8112
"SILConstant" doesn't really describe its role in SIL anymore, which is to provide a reference to a Swift declaration in a SIL instruction, such as a method or nominal type field.
Swift SVN r6559
Remove uncurry level as a property of SILType/SILFunctionTypeInfo. During SIL type lowering, map a (Type, UncurryLevel) pair to a Swift CanType with the uncurried arguments as a Swift tuple. For example, T -> (U, V) -> W at uncurry level 1 becomes ((U, V), T) -> W--in reverse order to match the low-level calling convention. Update SILGen and IRGen all over the place for this representation change.
SILFunctionTypeInfo is still used in the SILType representation, but it's no longer load-bearing. Everything remaining in it can be derived from a Swift type.
This is an ABI break. Be sure to rebuild clean!
Swift SVN r5296
This cleans up some wishy-washy control flow that relied on the uncurryLevel of a type to distinguish ObjC methods from freestanding C functions. While we're here, clean up all the places we use ad-hoc comparison logic on the AbstractCC enum to use switches that properly cover the enum.
Swift SVN r5251
Use the SIL-generated ObjC thunk symbols instead of generating them in IRGen. Kill all the now-dead IRGen OwnershipConventions stuff. Teach IRGenSILFunction how to emit a C-calling-convention function, and getFunctionType how to map a C-calling-convention function type. Fix a bug in SILGen where ObjC thunks for methods and properties from extensions weren't getting emitted.
Swift SVN r5180
Sever the last load-bearing link between SILFunction and SILConstant by naming SILFunctions with their mangled symbol names. Move the core of the mangler up to SIL, and teach SILGen how to use it to mangle a SILConstant.
Swift SVN r4964
Port IRGen's calculation of consumed arguments and return value semantics to SILGen, and use it to handle the ownership semantics of calls. Refactor the handling of properties and other clients of emitApply so they can properly hand ownership semantics down to it.
This should let all the moribund cleanup management code in IRGen die. Unfortunately Scope appears to be tied into scoped calculated metadata caching so it's not quite ready to die.
Swift SVN r4834
Look at the uses of a SIL MetatypeInst to determine whether it is being used as a Swift metatype and/or ObjC class and emit the needed values. This avoids a costly trip wrapping and unwrapping ObjC Classes in a Swift metatype when they're just used to invoke class methods.
Swift SVN r4562
For ObjC class method calls, map a metatype value back to an objc Class before emitting the ObjC call. This is dumb because we already map the original Class to a Swift metatype when we map the metatype instruction, but it gets ObjC class method calls working. Now that SIL keeps use chains, we could be easily smarter about this.
Swift SVN r4558