This commit adds the `-prefix-serialized-debugging-options` flag,
which is used to apply the debug prefix map to serialized debugging
options embedded in the swiftmodule files.
In a back deployment scenario, this will provide a place where one could provide
function implementations that are not available in the relevant stdlib.
This is just setting up for future work and isn't doing anything interesting
beyond wiring it up/making sure that it is wired up correctly with tests.
Rework Sendable checking to be completely based on "missing"
conformances, so that we can individually diagnose missing Sendable
conformances based on both the module in which the conformance check
happened as well as where the type was declared. The basic rules here
are to only diagnose if either the module where the non-Sendable type
was declared or the module where it was checked was compiled with a
mode that consistently diagnoses `Sendable`, either by virtue of
being Swift 6 or because `-warn-concurrency` was provided on the
command line. And have that diagnostic be an error in Swift 6 or
warning in Swift 5.x.
There is much tuning to be done here.
Hopefully I won't regret this later. This is needed to ensure that clients
of _Differentiation.swiftinterface don't fall over while building a module
from the interface.
In a back deployment scenario, this will provide a place where one could provide
function implementations that are not available in the relevant stdlib.
This is just setting up for future work and isn't doing anything interesting
beyond wiring it up/making sure that it is wired up correctly with tests.
SourceKit invokes the legacy driver. Providing this flag in the IDE
means the command lines SourceKit forms to run semantic requests in the
editor are all invalid.
Teach the legacy driver to eat this flag.
rdar://80811565
This commit adds support for the -lto_library flag, allowing users to specify a custom LTO library on Darwin. This also fixes an issue where the default LTO library is used even if Driver is run from inside an alternate toolchain.
Before this change, we always use the Swift target triple to instantiate the internal
Clang instance. When loading a Swift module from the textual interface, we may pick up
a lower target triple to use to build the Swift module because the target is hard-coded
in the textual interface file. This implies we may end up building multiple versions of the
same Clang module, one for each target triple of the loading Swift module.
This change adds a new frontend flag -clang-target to allow clients to specify a
consistent clang target to use across the Swift module boundaries. This value won't change
because it's not part of .swiftinterface files.
swift-driver should pass down -clang-target for each frontend invocation, and its value should be
identical to -target.
Related to: rdar://72480261
Titled as "// swift-module-flags-ignorable:", this new field contains new
frontend arguments that can be safely ignored by the older version of the compiler.
For compilers that don't know the field at all, all arguments in it are ignored.
rdar://78233352
This allows library authors to pass down a project version number so that library users can conditionally
import that library based on the available version in the search paths.
Needed for rdar://73992299
Introduce flags `-enable-actor-data-race-checks` and
`-disable-actor-data-race-checks` to enable/disable emission of code
that checks that we are on the correct actor. Default to `false` for
now but make it easy to enable in the future.
Introduce a new compiler flag `-module-abi-name <name>` that uses the
given name as the ABI name for the module (rather than the module's
name in source code). The ABI name impacts name mangling and metadata.
To help support incremental adoption of the concurrency model, a number
of concurrency-related diagnostics are enabled only in "new" code that
takes advantage of concurrency features---async, @concurrent functions,
actors, etc. This warning flag opts into additional warnings that better
approximate the eventual concurrency model, and which will become
errors a future Swift version, allowing one to both experiment with
the full concurrency model and also properly prepare for it.
In the legacy driver, these flags will merely be propagated to the
frontends to indicate that they should disable serialization of
incremental information in swift module files.
In the new driver, these flags control whether the Swift driver performs
an incremental build that is aware of metadata embedded in the module.
Kudos to David for coming up with our new marketing name: Incremental
Imports.
rdar://74363450
These new options mirror -o and -output-filelist and are used instead
of those options to supply the output file path(s) to record in the
index store. This is intended to allow sharing index data across
builds in separate directories that are otherwise equivalent as far
as the index data is concered (e.g. an ASAN build and a non-ASAN build)
by supplying the same -index-unit-output-path for both.
Resolves rdar://problem/74816412
Add a new swift-frontend driver option that extract APIs in the swift
module and print in JSON format. This is to allow tooling to understand
and process swift APIs without the need to be a swift compiler or
understand swift module/AST.