KeyPath's getter/setter/hash/equals functions have their own calling
convention, which receives generic arguments and embedded indices from a
given KeyPath argument buffer.
The convention was previously implemented by:
1. Accepting an argument buffer as an UnsafeRawPointer and casting it to
indices tuple pointer in SIL.
2. Bind generic arguments info from the given argument buffer while emitting
prologue in IRGen by creating a new forwarding thunk.
This 2-phase lowering approach was not ideal, as it blocked KeyPath
projection optimization [^1], and also required having a target arch
specific signature lowering logic in SIL-level [^2].
This patch centralizes the KeyPath accessor calling convention logic to
IRGen, by introducing `@convention(keypath_accessor_XXX)` convention in
SIL and lowering it in IRGen. This change unblocks the KeyPath projection
optimization while capturing subscript indices, and also makes it easier
to support WebAssembly target.
[^1]: https://github.com/apple/swift/pull/28799
[^2]: https://forums.swift.org/t/wasm-support/16087/21
several more places to use getOrCreateHelperFunction.
This means that several of these places are now emitting
shared functions rather than private ones, which I've
verified is okay. There are some other places where
privacy is still unfortunately necessary.
I've also fixed the name of the store-extra-inhabitants
helper function to say "store" instead of "get", which
is longstanding (but harmless because it's private).
Fixes rdar://66707994.
The logic here used to consist of a couple of ad-hoc checks,
followed by a general assumption that if something had already
been emitted, it could be referenced directly, whereas everything
else had to go through a GOT entry.
This is way too conservative. Instead, let's try to correctly
calculate what translation unit an entity is going to end up in.
In a previous commit, I banned in the verifier any SILValue from producing
ValueOwnershipKind::Any in preparation for this.
This change arises out of discussions in between John, Andy, and I around
ValueOwnershipKind::Trivial. The specific realization was that this ownership
kind was an unnecessary conflation of the a type system idea (triviality) with
an ownership idea (@any, an ownership kind that is compatible with any other
ownership kind at value merge points and can only create). This caused the
ownership model to have to contort to handle the non-payloaded or trivial cases
of non-trivial enums. This is unnecessary if we just eliminate the any case and
in the verifier separately verify that trivial => @any (notice that we do not
verify that @any => trivial).
NOTE: This is technically an NFC intended change since I am just replacing
Trivial with Any. That is why if you look at the tests you will see that I
actually did not need to update anything except removing some @trivial ownership
since @any ownership is represented without writing @any in the parsed sil.
rdar://46294760
Use relative references instead of pointers so that the pattern can be true-const. Instead of trying
to instantiate a constant key path literal in-place, point to a cache variable that we can store
a pointer to the shared instance into when instantiated. Now that the pattern format has diverged
significantly from the instance format, simplify and refactor the instantiation code using a walker
for the pattern format instead of trying to reuse the code for working with instantiated instances.
rdar://problem/42674576
If we know a key path component can be accessed as a stored property, then we should also know whether it's a `let` or not, so it should be safe to encode this in the key path pattern. Stage this change in by changing the number of bits used to store in-line offsets, fixing up the parts of the key path implementation that assumed that it took up the entire payload bitfield.
This is how we originally controlled whether or not we printed out ownership
annotations when we printed SIL. Since then, I have changed (a few months ago I
believe) the ownership model eliminator to know how to eliminate these
annotations from the SIL itself. So this hack can be removed.
As an additional benefit, this will let me rename -enable-sil-ownership to
-enable-sil-ownership-verifier. This will I hope eliminate confusion around this
option in the short term while I am preparing to work on semantic sil again.
rdar://42509812
Ensure that we use the correct python to run the python based tools.
This also allows these tools to run on Windows which will not
necessarily associate the python script with an interpreter (python).
I am going to leave in the infrastructure around this just in case. But there is
no reason to keep this in the tests themselves. I can always just revert this
and I don't think merge conflicts are likely due to previous work I did around
the tooling for this.
This converts the instances of the pattern for which we have a proper
substitution in lit. This will make it easier to replace it
appropriately with Windows equivalents.
The key path pattern needs to include a reference to the external descriptor, along with hooks for lowering its type arguments and indices, if any. The runtime will need to instantiate and interpolate the external component when the key path object is instantiated.
While we're here, let's also reserve some more component header bytes for future expansion, since this is an ABI we're going to be living with for a while.
We need to use the ivar offset variables in this case, since the Swift field offset vector doesn't pick up the adjusted offsets from the ObjC runtime. Fixes SR-5036 | rdar://problem/32488871.
A property imported from Objective-C, or marked in Swift with the `dynamic` keyword, doesn't have a vtable slot, so can't be identified that way. Use the ObjC selector as the unique identifier to ascribe equality to such components. Fixes rdar://problem/31768669. (While we're here, throw some more execution tests and a changelog note in.)