The demangler can be initialized with a preallocated memory on the stack. Only in case of an overflow, the bump pointer allocator mallocs new memory.
Also, support that a new instance of a demangler can "borrow" the free memory from an existing demangler. This is useful because in the runtime the demangler is invoked recursively. With this feature, all the nested demanglers can share a single stack allocated space.
This is done by disallowing nodes with children to also have index or text payloads.
In some cases those payloads were not needed anyway, because the information can be derived later.
In other cases the fix was to insert an additional child node with the index/text payload.
Also, implement single or double children as "inline" children, which avoids needing a separate node vector for children.
All this reduces the needed size for node trees by over 2x.
If we nest a type inside a local context inside a generic type,
we have to look through the local context(s) to find the outer
generic type when stripping off generic arguments.
We don't support nominal types inside generic local context
right now, but this can happen with type aliases.
Debug info uses a special mangling where type aliases can be
represented without being desugared; attempt to reconstruct
the TypeAliasType in this case.
The generated mangled names were wrong and couldn't be demangled.
For example the runtime generated class name for PrivateGeneric was wrong:
class OuterClass {
private class PrivateGeneric<T, U> { }
}
rdar://problem/47529629
When an anonymous context descriptor provides a mangled name, use that
mangled name to provide the private declaration name for its child context.
This allows us to resolve private type names correctly when the corresponding
anonymous context has its mangled name.
Fixes rdar://problem/38231646.
The type checker calls these types Builtin.FPIEEE<size>; the demangler
should too.
This is just cosmetic at the moment, but it was causing problems when
I added support for builtin types to the TypeDecoder.
New(er) grammar:
// same module as conforming type, or non-unique
protocol-conformance-ref ::= protocol 'HP'
// same module as protocol
protocol-conformance-ref ::= protocol 'Hp'
// retroactive
protocol-conformance-ref ::= protocol module
We don't make use of this distinction anywhere yet, but we could in
the future.
Fix to 510b64fcd5. The mangling operator "HP" has to distinguish
between "protocol" and "protocol module", not between the presence
or absence of protocol-conformance-ref. New grammar:
protocol-conformance-ref ::= protocol
protocol-conformance-ref ::= protocol module 'HP'
rdar://problem/46735592, again
Due to some unfortunate refactoring, protocol-conformance-ref is a
nonterminal in the mangling grammar that doesn't have its own
operator:
```
protocol-conformance-ref ::= protocol module?
```
Both "module" and "protocol" can be an "identifier", which introduces
a mangling collision. Address the mangling collision by using the
operator "HP".
Fixes rdar://problem/46735592.
Start emitting associated conformance requirement descriptors for
inherited protocols, so we have a symbol to reference from resilient
witness tables and mangled names in the future.
Use a general ‘type’ production for the conforming type of an associated
witness table accessor mangling, so that we can mangle base protocol
witness table accessors. These entities are always internal symbols, so the
mangling itself doesn’t affect the ABI.
The remangler for the Objective-C runtime was dropping generic arguments
of extension contents, leading to collisions with @objc class names.
Include the generic arguments of extensions.
Fixes rdar://problem/45956357.
When a (file)private entity occurs inside a generic context, we still need
information about the genericity of the enclosing context to demangle
to metadata. Emit complete context descriptors for parents of anonymous
contexts.
Fixes rdar://problem/46109026.
This reverts commit 121f5b64be.
Sorry to revert this again. This commit makes some pretty big changes. After
messing with the merge-conflict created by this internally, I did not feel
comfortable landing this now. I talked with Saleem and he agreed with me that
this was the right thing to do.
A dynamically replaceable function calls through a global variable that
holds the function pointer.
struct ChainEntry {
void *(funPtr)();
struct ChainEntry *next;
}
ChainEntry dynamicallyReplaceableVar;
void dynamicallyReplaceableFunction() {
dynamicallyReplaceableVar.funPtr()
}
dynamic replacements will be chainable so the global variable also
functions as the root entry in the chain of replacements.
A dynamic replacement functions can call the previous implementation by
going through its chain entry.
ChainEntry chainEntryOf_dynamic_replacement_for_foo;
void dynamic_replacement_for_foo() {
// call the previous (original) implementation.
chainEntryOf_dynamic_replacement_for_foo.funPtr();
}
Change the retroactive conformance mangling to use the new
any-protocol-conformance mangling, which maintains more information about
concrete conformances. Specifically, it maintains conformance information
for conditional requirements. It also uses the protocol-conformance-ref
production that will eventually allow symbolic references to protocol
conformance descriptors.
While here, extend the “is retroactive” check during mangling to look for
retroactive conformances in the conditional requirements of a conformance.
The immediate conformance might not be retroactive, but its specialization
might depend on a retroactive conformance. Mangle these as “retroactive”, so
we can correctly reconstruct the exact type.
Introduce complete mangling for references to protocol conformances:
* Mangle requirements of conditional conformances when present.
* Mangle conformance access paths for generic environment-dependent
conformances.
* Abstract protocol conformance references so we can introduce
symbolic references for them.
The key thing here is that all of the underlying code is exactly the same. I
purposely did not debride anything. This is to ensure that I am not touching too
much and increasing the probability of weird errors from occurring. Thus the
exact same code should be executed... just the routing changed.
We were strangely excluding protocols from being symbolically referenced
in the any-generic-type production, which meant that we could not resolve
(e.g.) associated type references to private protocols at runtime. Allow
protocol symbolic references in this position, and cope with it in the
demangler.
Fixes the rest of rdar://problem/44977236.
Extending the mangling of symbolic references to also include indirect
symbolic references. This allows mangled names to refer to context
descriptors (both type and protocol) not in the current source file.
For now, only permit indirect symbolic references within the current module,
because remote mirrors (among other things) is unable to handle relocations.
Co-authored-by: Joe Groff <jgroff@apple.com>
The mangling of associated type paths was only adding the names of
associated types, and not their enclosing protocols. This led to mangling
collisions that could lead to corrupted metadata. In the standard
library, for example, the generic requirements for the
Unicode _ParsingIterator in the standard library ended up encoding an
access to Sequence.Element rather than IteratorProtocol.Element due
to the mangling conflict.
Part of SR-7553 / rdar://problem/39769906.