Commit Graph

2 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Artem Chikin
5749ef3c14 Hard-code the 'Darwin' module as having been built without C++ interop
Textual interfaces for 'Darwin' built with recent compilers specify that it is built witout C++ interop enabled. However, to ensure compatibility with versions of the 'Darwin' module built with older compilers, we hard-code this fact. This is required to break the module cycle that occurs when building the 'Darwin' module with C++ interop enabled, where the underlying 'Darwin' clang module depends on C++ standard library for which the compiler brings in the 'CxxStdlib' Swift overlay, which depends on 'Darwin'.
2025-06-02 14:17:53 -07:00
Artem Chikin
20b38687c5 [Implicit Module Builds] Do not query CxxStdlib Swift overlay for textual modules which were not built with c++interop
When the compiler is building a module without a defined formal C++ interop mode (e.g. building a textual interface which specifies it was built without C++ interop enabled), avoid looking up the C++ standard library Swift overlay for it. This is required for the case of the Darwin module, for example, which includes headers which map to C++ stdlib headers when the compiler is operating in C++ interop mode, but the C++ standard library Swift overlay module itself depends on 'Darwin', which results in a cycle. To resolve such situations, we can rely on the fact that Swift textual interfaces of modules which were not built with C++ interop must be able to build without importing the C++ standard library Swift overlay, so we avoid specifying it as a dependency for such modules. The primary source module, as well as Swift textual module dependencies which were built with C++ interop will continue getting a direct depedency of the 'CxxStdlib' Swift module.

This was previously fixed in the dependency scanner for explicitly-built modules in https://github.com/swiftlang/swift/pull/81415.
2025-06-02 12:51:53 -07:00