Remove the reference to `DEVELOPER_DIR` and update the instructions to
actually be usable with a released snapshot (and official releases).
The development setup should mimic the actual layout further and is a
separate issue. This requires a new snapshot with
apple/swift-installer-scripts#128 included.
The three options are now:
* `explicit`: Enforce Sendable constraints where it has been explicitly adopted and perform actor-isolation checking wherever code has adopted concurrency. (This is the default)
* `targeted`: Enforce Sendable constraints and perform actor-isolation checking wherever code has adopted concurrency, including code that has explicitly adopted Sendable.
* `complete`: Enforce Sendable constraints and actor-isolation checking throughout the entire module.
Replace `-warn-concurrency` with a more granular option
`-swift-concurrency=`, where the developer can select one of three
different "modes":
* `off` disables `Sendable` checking for most cases. (This is the Swift
5.5 and Swift 5.6 behavior.)
* `limited` enables `Sendable` checking within code that has adopted
Swift concurrency. (This is currently the default behavior.)
* `on` enables `Sendable` and other concurrency checking throughout
the module. (This is equivalent to `-warn-concurrency` now).
There is currently no distinction between `off` and `limited`. That
will come soon.
Implements the flag part of rdar://91930849.
The `__future__` we relied on is now, where the 3 specific things are
all included [since Python 3.0](https://docs.python.org/3/library/__future__.html):
* absolute_import
* print_function
* unicode_literals
* division
These import statements are no-ops and are no longer necessary.
I think that preferring identical over convertible makes sense in e.g. C++ where we have implicit user-defined type conversions but since we don’t have them in Swift, I think the distinction doesn’t make too much sense, because if we have a `func foo(x: Int?)`, want don’t really want to prioritize variables of type `Int?` over `Int` Similarly if we have `func foo(x: View)`, we don’t want to prioritize a variable of type `View` over e.g. `Text`.
rdar://91349364
This currently doesn't check for inherited docs, ie. either the
imported declaration has docs or it doesn't. There's also a few odd
cases with mixed doc types and when each line is prefixed with '*', but
it's good enough for an initial implementation.
Moves UTF8 sanitisation out of ASTPrinter.h and into Unicode.h so that
it can be used here as well.
Resolves rdar://91388603.
This fixes a race-conditioned deadlock which could occur while cancelling SourceKit AST build request
We have one thread that claimed `CancellationRequestCallbackMtx` in `SwiftASTConsumer::requestCancellation` and wants to claim `ConsumersAndResultMtx` in `ASTBuildOperation::requestConsumerCancellation`
Another thread claimed `ConsumersAndResultMtx` in `ASTBuildOperation::schedule` and now wants to claim `CancellationRequestCallbackMtx` in `SwiftASTConsumer::removeCancellationRequestCallback`.
In both cases we could actually release one lock before claiming the other.
Fixes rdar://90870793
We add a new flag to disable the implicit import of `_StringProcessing`, similar to `-disable-implicit-concurrency-module-import`. We need this to build `_RegexParser` when `-enable-experimental-string-processing` is enabled by default, because `_StringProcessing` currently imports `_RegexParser` publicly (non-implementation-only).
We need to run SILGen for diagnostics (to actually get all diagnostics).
All non-completion requests share an AST and thus they too run SILGen.
Any lazy typechecking run in SILGen assumes that it succeeds.
Cancellation can cause typechecking to fail here though, since we simply
check the flag and error if it's set. This unfortunately has the ability
to cause any any number of crashes since various invariants in SILGen
are then broken.
Disable cancellation of in-flight non-completion requests for now until
we have a proper fix in place.
Resolves rdar://91251017.
Two paths missed setting up overlays:
- `CompletionInstance` when checking files from dependencies
- `SwiftASTManager` when reading in files that it would later replace
all inputs with
(1) would cause the AST context not to be re-used, even though nothing
had changed. (2) caused all non-completion functionality to fail for any
symbols within files only specified by the overlay.
Resolves rdar://85508213.
Support inspecting the swift-inspect process itself. `pidFromHint` skips the process it's in, so we manually check the requested name against `argv[0]` as a special case.
Add a `--fork-corpse` flag which uses `task_generate_corpse` on the target task before inspecting it. This allows the target to keep running while we inspect it, and also works around a bug when self-inspecting.
When possible, decode the DrainLock/ExecutionLock fields of tasks and actors in concurrency runtimes built with priority escalation, and show the corresponding thread info in swift-inspect output.
We weren't properly decoding actor flags previously, so fix that up as well and have Remote Mirror split them out into separate fields so clients don't have to. We were missing the Job Storage field from the definition of DefaultActorImpl in RuntimeInternals.h, fix that so we actually read the right data.
rdar://88598003
Have RemoteMirror internally decode these flags fields and return them as separate fields in the task/actor info. Handle the structures both with and without task escalation support.
Also show when a task is the current task on a thread in swift-inspect's task listing.
rdar://88598003