Use the `%target-swift-5.1-abi-triple` substitution to compile the tests for
deployment to the minimum OS versions required for use of _Concurrency APIs,
instead of disabling availability checking.
rdar://105837040
* WIP: Store layout string in type metadata
* WIP: More cases working
* WIP: Layout strings almost working
* Add layout string pointer to struct metadata
* Fetch bytecode layout strings from metadata in runtime
* More efficient bytecode layout
* Add support for interpreted generics in layout strings
* Layout string instantiation, take and more
* Remove duplicate information from layout strings
* Include size of previous object in next objects offset to reduce number of increments at runtime
* Add support for existentials
* Build type layout strings with StructBuilder to support target sizes and metadata pointers
* Add support for resilient types
* Properly cache layout strings in compiler
* Generic resilient types working
* Non-generic resilient types working
* Instantiate resilient type in layout when possible
* Fix a few issues around alignment and signing
* Disable generics, fix static alignment
* Fix MultiPayloadEnum size when no extra tag is necessary
* Fixes after rebase
* Cleanup
* Fix most tests
* Fix objcImplementattion and non-Darwin builds
* Fix BytecodeLayouts on non-Darwin
* Fix Linux build
* Fix sizes in linux tests
* Sign layout string pointers
* Use nullptr instead of debug value
The backs out of some early decisions we made about actor layout
that we don't need. Custom actors will use a different approach.
This should suffice for the remainder of rdar://70146827.
This patch updates the `actor class` spelling to `actor` in almost all
of the tests. There are places where I verify that we sanely handle
`actor` as an attribute though. These include:
- test/decl/class/actor/basic.swift
- test/decl/protocol/special/Actor.swift
- test/SourceKit/CursorInfo/cursor_info_concurrency.swift
- test/attr/attr_objc_async.swift
- test/ModuleInterface/actor_protocol.swift
Since these types have an implicit stored property, this requires
adding an abstraction over fields to IRGen, at least throughout
the class code. In some ways I think this significantly improves
the code, especially in how we approach missing members.
Fixes rdar://72202671.
It would be more abstractly correct if this got DI support so
that we destroy the member if the constructor terminates
abnormally, but we can get to that later.
of adding a property.
This better matches what the actual implementation expects,
and it avoids some possibilities of weird mismatches. However,
it also requires special-case initialization, destruction, and
dynamic-layout support, none of which I've added yet.
In order to get NSObject default actor subclasses to use Swift
refcounting (and thus avoid the need for the default actor runtime
to generally use ObjC refcounting), I've had to introduce a
SwiftNativeNSObject which we substitute as the superclass when
inheriting directly from NSObject. This is something we could
do in all NSObject subclasses; for now, I'm just doing it in
actors, although it's all actors and not just default actors.
We are not yet taking advantage of our special knowledge of this
class anywhere except the reference-counting code.
I went around in circles exploring a number of alternatives for
doing this; at one point I basically had a completely parallel
"ForImplementation" superclass query. That proved to be a lot
of added complexity and created more problems than it solved.
We also don't *really* get any benefit from this subclassing
because there still wouldn't be a consistent superclass for all
actors. So instead it's very ad-hoc.