It replaces `DeclAttr::getUnavailable()` and `AvailableAttr::isUnavailable()`
as the designated way to query for the attribute that makes a decl unavailable.
Such destroys mark the lifetime end of their operands along their
availability boundary. They are currently inserted in this test case
by the ClosureLifetimeFixup pass, but in the fullness of time they will
be present for every value which is not explicitly destroyed (that's
what complete OSSA lifetimes is mostly about).
Currently, such destroys are diagnosed by DiagnoseUnreachable. Fix the
diagnostic pass not to diagnose these valid instructions.
rdar://137960229
Although I don't plan to bring over new assertions wholesale
into the current qualification branch, it's entirely possible
that various minor changes in main will use the new assertions;
having this basic support in the release branch will simplify that.
(This is why I'm adding the includes as a separate pass from
rewriting the individual assertions)
For years, optimizer engineers have been hitting a common bug caused by passes
assuming all SILValues have a parent function only to be surprised by SILUndef.
Generally we see SILUndef not that often so we see this come up later in
testing. This patch eliminates that problem by making SILUndef uniqued at the
function level instead of the module level. This ensures that it makes sense for
SILUndef to have a parent function, eliminating this possibility since we can
define an API to get its parent function.
rdar://123484595
Cache a bit on `EnumDecl` indicating whether there are any elements that are
unavailable during lowering and then use that bit to decided whether to attempt
optimization for `switch_enum`/`switch_enum_addr` instructions.
Unavailable enum elements cannot be instantiated at runtime without invoking
UB. Therefore the optimizer can consider a basic block unreachable if its only
predecessor is a block that terminates in a switch instruction matching an
unavailable enum element. Furthermore, removing the switch instruction cases
that refer to unavailable enum elements is _mandatory_ when
`-unavailable-decl-optimization=complete` is specified because otherwise
lowered IR for these instructions could refer to enum tag accessors that will
not be lowered, resulting in a failure during linking.
Resolves rdar://113872720.
User code should not be diagnosed as "unreachable" by the SIL optimizer when
the no-return function that made the code unreachable is a compiler inserted
call to `_diagnoseUnavailableCodeReached()`.
Part of rdar://107388493
This patch replaces the stateful generation of SILScope information in
SILGenFunction with data derived from the ASTScope hierarchy, which should be
100% in sync with the scopes needed for local variables. The goal is to
eliminate the surprising effects that the stack of cleanup operations can have
on the current state of SILBuilder leading to a fully deterministic (in the
sense of: predictible by a human) association of SILDebugScopes with
SILInstructions. The patch also eliminates the need to many workarounds. There
are still some accomodations for several Sema transformation passes such as
ResultBuilders, which don't correctly update the source locations when moving
around nodes. If these were implemented as macros, this problem would disappear.
This necessary rewrite of the macro scope handling included in this patch also
adds proper support nested macro expansions.
This fixes
rdar://88274783
and either fixes or at least partially addresses the following:
rdar://89252827
rdar://105186946
rdar://105757810
rdar://105997826
rdar://105102288
This change aims at reducing the need for SIL passes to check into the AST
storage of SILLocations. The end goal is to eventually merge this with the
autogenerated flag, but at the moment the emergent semantics of both properties
are not identical.
The pass is attempting to diagnose any user-written code that appears
after the result of no-return function call. It has to skip any
instructions that happen after the no-return call but are associated
with it, such as `alloc_stack` to pass result of such call indirectly.
This helps to avoid extraneous diagnostics for synthesized code i.e.
a result builder with `buildExpression`:
```
static func buildExpression<T>(_ e: T) -> T { e }
```
The following example would produce extraneous warning:
```
switch <value> {
case ...
default: fatalError()
}
```
because it is translated into:
```
switch <value> {
case ...
default: {
var $__builderDefault = buildExpression(fatalError())
$__builderSwitch = buildEither(second: $__builderDefault)
}
}
```
In such cases all instructions that follow `fatalError()` call
are synthesized except to `alloc_stack $Never` which is passed
to `buildExpression`, that instruction is anchored on the
`fatalError()` itself which is where the diagnostic would point,
which is incorrect.
Resolves: rdar://104775183
... with a fix for a non-assert build crash: I used the wrong ilist type for SlabList. This does not explain the crash, though. What I think happened here is that llvm miscompiled and put the llvm_unreachable from the Slab's deleteNode function unconditionally into the SILModule destructor.
Now by using simple_ilist, there is no need for a deleteNode at all.
I have a need to have SwitchEnum{,Addr}Inst have different base classes
(TermInst, OwnershipForwardingTermInst). To do this I need to add a template to
SwitchEnumInstBase so I can switch that BaseTy. Sadly since we are using
SwitchEnumInstBase as an ADT type as well as an actual base type for
Instructions, this is impossible to do without introducing a template in a ton
of places.
Rather than doing that, I changed the code that was using SwitchEnumInstBase as
an ADT to instead use a proper ADT SwitchEnumBranch. I am happy to change the
name as possible see fit (maybe SwitchEnumTerm?).
The main change is that we do not eliminate end_borrows when propagating
guaranteed phis. This is because phis now forward guaranteed ownership like
owned ownership and since we only eliminate these arguments if all incomign
values to the argument is the same (providing dominance).
Specifically if we had:
```
%1 = enum $Enum, %0
switch_enum %1
```
We would propagate %0 without eliminating the enum in certain cases. Instead, we
insert unchecked_enum_data right before the branch to ensure that:
1. The types line up.
2. The enum is only consumed along the path through the switch_enum instead of
dealing with the lifetime of the enum along other paths.
The XXOptUtils.h convention is already established and parallels
the SIL/XXUtils convention.
New:
- InstOptUtils.h
- CFGOptUtils.h
- BasicBlockOptUtils.h
- ValueLifetime.h
Removed:
- Local.h
- Two conflicting CFG.h files
This reorganization is helpful before I introduce more
utilities for block cloning similar to SinkAddressProjections.
Move the control flow utilies out of Local.h, which was an
unreadable, unprincipled mess. Rename it to InstOptUtils.h, and
confine it to small APIs for working with individual instructions.
These are the optimizer's additions to /SIL/InstUtils.h.
Rename CFG.h to CFGOptUtils.h and remove the one in /Analysis. Now
there is only SIL/CFG.h, resolving the naming conflict within the
swift project (this has always been a problem for source tools). Limit
this header to low-level APIs for working with branches and CFG edges.
Add BasicBlockOptUtils.h for block level transforms (it makes me sad
that I can't use BBOptUtils.h, but SIL already has
BasicBlockUtils.h). These are larger APIs for cloning or removing
whole blocks.
This patch comes out of my reading some generic code using .none in transparent
functions to conditionally compile out code at -Onone. Sadly, before this the
dead code in question wouldn't be compiled out unless the protocol was
constrained to be a class protocol.
I added a test that validates that this conditional compilation property can be
relied on in -Onone code in both cases.
The ownership kind is Any for trivial types, or Owned otherwise, but
whether a type is trivial or not will soon depend on the resilience
expansion.
This means that a SILModule now uniques two SILUndefs per type instead
of one, and serialization uses two distinct sentinel IDs for this
purpose as well.
For now, the resilience expansion is not actually used here, so this
change is NFC, other than changing the module format.
A guaranteed function argument never is paired with an end_borrow, so when we
perform this sort of simplification, we need to eliminate the end_borrow of the
block argument.
We've been running doxygen with the autobrief option for a couple of
years now. This makes the \brief markers into our comments
redundant. Since they are a visual distraction and we don't want to
encourage more \brief markers in new code either, this patch removes
them all.
Patch produced by
for i in $(git grep -l '\\brief'); do perl -pi -e 's/\\brief //g' $i & done
We want as few module passes as possible.
Function passes allow the PassManager to do its job.
e.g. it can filter certain functions that should not be applied to the
current pipeline. This will result in less work in the pass itself and
fewer pass manager related bugs.
Function passes are easier to understand and debug in the context of the
pipeline. Things like PrettyStackTrace are handled automatically.
Bisecting functionality is builtin.
Function passes are more compatible in general with inter-procedural
analysis.
Function passes are more efficient.
A single module pass in the middle of the pipeline destroys the benefit
of the rest of the pipeline uses function passes.
introduce a common superclass, SILNode.
This is in preparation for allowing instructions to have multiple
results. It is also a somewhat more elegant representation for
instructions that have zero results. Instructions that are known
to have exactly one result inherit from a class, SingleValueInstruction,
that subclasses both ValueBase and SILInstruction. Some care must be
taken when working with SILNode pointers and testing for equality;
please see the comment on SILNode for more information.
A number of SIL passes needed to be updated in order to handle this
new distinction between SIL values and SIL instructions.
Note that the SIL parser is now stricter about not trying to assign
a result value from an instruction (like 'return' or 'strong_retain')
that does not produce any.
Replace `NameOfType foo = dyn_cast<NameOfType>(bar)` with DRY version `auto foo = dyn_cast<NameOfType>(bar)`.
The DRY auto version is by far the dominant form already used in the repo, so this PR merely brings the exceptional cases (redundant repetition form) in line with the dominant form (auto form).
See the [C++ Core Guidelines](https://github.com/isocpp/CppCoreGuidelines/blob/master/CppCoreGuidelines.md#es11-use-auto-to-avoid-redundant-repetition-of-type-names) for a general discussion on why to use `auto` to avoid redundant repetition of type names.
At some point, pass definitions were heavily macro-ized. Pass
descriptive names were added in two places. This is not only redundant
but a source of confusion. You could waste a lot of time grepping for
the wrong string. I removed all the getName() overrides which, at
around 90 passes, was a fairly significant amount of code bloat.
Any pass that we want to be able to invoke by name from a tool
(sil-opt) or pipeline plan *should* have unique type name, enum value,
commend-line string, and name string. I removed a comment about the
various inliner passes that contradicted that.
Side note: We should be consistent with the policy that a pass is
identified by its type. We have a couple passes, LICM and CSE, which
currently violate that convention.
There are now separate functions for function addition and deletion instead of InvalidationKind::Function.
Also, there is a new function for witness/vtable invalidations.
rdar://problem/29311657
A lot of files transitively include Expr.h, because it was
included from SILInstruction.h, SILLocation.h and SILDeclRef.h.
However in reality most of these files don't do anything
with Exprs, especially not anything in IRGen or the SILOptimizer.
Now we're down to 171 files in the frontend which depend on
Expr.h, which is still a lot but much better than before.