Commit Graph

15 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Michael Gottesman
6058b1d9bd [silgen] Change SILGen to emit ignored_user for emitIgnoredExpr and black hole initialization. 2025-01-22 21:12:36 -08:00
Erik Eckstein
7cceaff5f3 SIL: don't print operand types in textual SIL
Type annotations for instruction operands are omitted, e.g.

```
  %3 = struct $S(%1, %2)
```

Operand types are redundant anyway and were only used for sanity checking in the SIL parser.

But: operand types _are_ printed if the definition of the operand value was not printed yet.
This happens:

* if the block with the definition appears after the block where the operand's instruction is located

* if a block or instruction is printed in isolation, e.g. in a debugger

The old behavior can be restored with `-Xllvm -sil-print-types`.
This option is added to many existing test files which check for operand types in their check-lines.
2024-11-21 18:49:52 +01:00
Holly Borla
8713d78704 [PrintOptions] Print explicit 'any' in SIL. 2022-08-18 01:15:12 -04:00
Slava Pestov
d222ac5f6e Sema: New syntax for @opened archetypes in textual SIL
The old syntax was

    @opened("UUID") constraintType

Where constraintType was the right hand side of a conformance requirement.

This would always create an archetype where the interface type was `Self`,
so it couldn't cope with member types of opened existential types.

Member types of opened existential types is now a thing with SE-0309, so
this lack of support prevented writing SIL test cases using this feature.

The new syntax is

    @opened("UUID", constraintType) interfaceType

The interfaceType is a type parameter rooted in an implicit `Self`
generic parameter, which is understood to be the underlying type of the
existential.

Fixes rdar://problem/93771238.
2022-08-07 19:03:46 -04:00
Erik Eckstein
6a020f8f15 Stabilize and simplify SIL linkage and serialization
The main point of this change is to make sure that a shared function always has a body: both, in the optimizer pipeline and in the swiftmodule file.
This is important because the compiler always needs to emit code for a shared function. Shared functions cannot be referenced from outside the module.
In several corner cases we missed to maintain this invariant which resulted in unresolved-symbol linker errors.

As side-effect of this change we can drop the shared_external SIL linkage and the IsSerializable flag, which simplifies the serialization and linkage concept.
2022-03-09 15:28:05 +01:00
Slava Pestov
9ec80df97e SIL: Remove curried SILDeclRefs 2020-03-19 02:20:21 -04:00
Joe Groff
dcd432a1bc Turn on substituted SILFunctionTypes by default 2020-02-24 12:14:21 -08:00
Slava Pestov
c5718d5b18 SILGen: Fix crash with function conversions involving class-constrained protocols
If a protocol has a superclass constraint, the existential type can be
upcast to the class type given by the constraint. This wasn't implemented
in the function conversion code path, leading to a crash.

Fixes <https://bugs.swift.org/browse/SR-12018> / <rdar://problem/58861162>.
2020-02-06 19:48:03 -05:00
Michael Gottesman
f854547c55 [ownership] Enable ownership verification by default.
I also removed the -verify-sil-ownership flag in favor of a disable flag
-disable-sil-ownership-verifier. I used this on only two tests that still need
work to get them to pass with ownership, but whose problems are well understood,
small corner cases. I am going to fix them in follow on commits. I detail them
below:

1. SILOptimizer/definite_init_inout_super_init.swift. This is a test case where
DI is supposed to error. The only problem is that we crash before we error since
the code emitting by SILGen to trigger this error does not pass ownership
invariants. I have spoken with JoeG about this and he suggested that I fix this
earlier in the compiler. Since we do not run the ownership verifier without
asserts enabled, this should not affect compiler users. Given that it has
triggered DI errors previously I think it is safe to disable ownership here.

2. PrintAsObjC/extensions.swift. In this case, the signature generated by type
lowering for one of the thunks here uses an unsafe +0 return value instead of
doing an autorelease return. The ownership checker rightly flags this leak. This
is going to require either an AST level change or a change to TypeLowering. I
think it is safe to turn this off since it is such a corner case that it was
found by a test that has nothing to do with it.

rdar://43398898
2019-03-25 00:11:52 -07:00
Michael Gottesman
0dfaa19f9f [ownership] Rename enable-sil-ownership => verify-sil-ownership.
I have been meaning to do this change for a minute, but kept on putting it off.
This describes what is actually happening and is a better name for the option.
2019-03-18 01:31:44 -07:00
Michael Gottesman
3ebd8df493 [gardening] Remove unnecessary -enable-sil-ownership from tests that now just get it from their pattern.
This just eliminates -enable-sil-ownership from all target-swift-frontend and
target-swift-emit-silgen RUN lines. Both of those now include
enable-sil-ownership in their expansion.
2019-03-12 20:39:18 -07:00
Michael Gottesman
40a09c9c21 Fixup tests for -assume-parsing-unqualified-ownership-sil => [ossa] transition. 2018-12-18 00:49:32 -08:00
Slava Pestov
97cc601ac9 Sema: A protocol with a class constraint is a subtype of any protocols the class conforms to
The logic was slightly wrong before.

Fixes <rdar://problem/45647080>.
2018-11-06 18:14:50 -05:00
Michael Gottesman
489910e483 [silgen] Only borrow args for coroutines rather than general applies and do not conditionalize based off of the ownership flag being set.
This is the last part of SILGen conditionalized on EnableSILOwnership being
set. It also (as you can tell from the diff) eliminates a bunch of code from the
tests.

rdar://29791263
2018-10-24 13:54:58 -07:00
Slava Pestov
64f12ff936 Sema: Allow protocols with 'Self' constraints again
These two declarations are now equivalent:

  protocol P : SomeClass { ... }
  protocol P where Self : SomeClass { ... }

There's a long, complicated story here:

- Swift 4.2 rejected classes in the inheritance clause of a
  protocol, but it accepted the 'where' clause form, even
  though it didn't always work and would sometimes crash

- Recently we got the inheritance clause form working, and
  added a diagnostic to ban the 'where' clause form, because
  we thought it would simplify name lookup to not have to
  consider the 'where' clause

- However, we already had to support looking at the 'where'
  clause from name lookup anyway, because you could write

  extension P where Self : SomeClass { ... }

- It turns out that despite the crashes, protocols with
  'Self' constraints were already common enough that it was
  worth supporting the existing behavior, instead of banning
  it

Fixes <rdar://problem/43028442>.
2018-10-12 03:06:52 -07:00