When a function declaration has a body, its source range ends at the
closing curly brace, so it includes the `throws(E)`. However, a
protocol requirement doesn't have a body, and due to an oversight,
getSourceRange() was never updated to include the extra tokens
that appear after `throws` when the function declares a thrown
error type. As a result, unqualified lookup would fail to find a
generic parameter type, if that happened to be the thrown type.
Fixes rdar://problem/143950572.
Using availability domains, reimplement the algorithm that determines whether a
declaration is unavailable at runtime. The new algorithm takes ABI compatible
platforms into account, ensuring that declarations that are available on iOS do
not get treated as unreachable at runtime when compiling for visionOS.
Resolves rdar://116742214.
One to get the active domain for the compilation target and another to get the
ABI compatibility domain for a given domain. The ABI compatibility domain will
be needed for queries that compute whether an unavailable declaration is still
reachable at runtime.
NFC.
Call `swift::getAvailabilityConstraintsForDecl()` to gather the constraints
that should be added to an AvailabilityContext when constraining it to the
availability of a given declaration.
This new query is designed to become the canonical source of information
regarding whether a declaration is available to use in a given
`AvailabilityContext`. It should be adopted as the foundational building block
for all other queries that answer more specific questions about the
availability of a specific delcaration.
The implementation of this query has been copied from a variety of sources
which should eventually be deleted once the new query has been fully adopted.
NFC.
executing unknown code
This means we have to claw back some performance by recognizing harmless
releases.
Such as releases on types we known don't call a deinit with unknown
side-effects.
rdar://143497196
rdar://143141695
Implicit initializers are given a source location within the type they belong to. This works poorly for @objc @implementation classes, because the class they belong to is imported and so those SourceLocs are in a different source buffer from the extension they’re inside, breaking an invariant enforced by index-while-building features.
Fix these SourceLocs to come from the implementation context, so they’ll come from the extension for an objcImpl class and the type itself otherwise.
ASTDumper was never updated to print extra conformance information,
like suppression, preconcurrency, etc. In default mode, we print it
as a comma-delimited list of source-like strings. In JSON mode, we
print objects containing flags.
IterableDeclContext::checkDeserializeMemberErrorInPackage recursively checks if
decls and their member decls are deserialized correctly into another module.
This PR adds a check to make sure the inspected decls are from another module,
and provides an opt-in flag to fail fast on deserialization failure if found.
rdar://143830240
Add ability to automatically chaining the bridging headers discovered from all
dependencies module when doing swift caching build. This will eliminate all
implicit bridging header imports from the build and make the bridging header
importing behavior much more reliable, while keep the compatibility at maximum.
For example, if the current module A depends on module B and C, and both B and
C are binary modules that uses bridging header, when building module A,
dependency scanner will construct a new header that chains three bridging
headers together with the option to build a PCH from it. This will make all
importing errors more obvious while improving the performance.
* Move `AvailabilitySpec` handling logic to AST, so they can be shared
between libParse and ASTGen
* Requestify '-define-availability' arguments parsing and parse them
with 'SwiftParser' according to the 'ParserASTGen' feature flag
* Implement 'AvailableAttr' generation in ASTGen
When calling a distributed function for an actor that might not be local,
the call can throw due to the distributed actor system producing an
error. The function might, independently, also throw. When the
function uses typed throws, we incorrectly treated the call is if it
would always throw the error type specified by the function. This
leads to incorrectly accepting invalid code, and compiler crashes in
SILGen.
The change here is to always mark calls to distributed functions
outside the actor as "implicitly throwing", which makes sure that we
treat the call sites as throwing 'any Error'. The actual handling of
the typed throw (from the local function) and the untyped throw (from
the distributed actor system) occurs in thunk generation in SILGen,
and was already handled correctly.
Fixes rdar://144093249, and undoes the ban introduced by rdar://136467528