Replaces generic `expression is 'async' but is not marked with 'await`
diagnostic with a tailed one for cases where there is an access to an
actor-isolated value outside of its actor without `await` keyword.
This makes the diagnostics for async and sync contexts consistent
and actually identifies a problem instead of simply pointing out
the solution.
Resolves: rdar://151720646
This matches send non sendable but importantly also makes it clear that we are
talking about something that doesn't conform to the Sendable protocol which is
capitalized.
rdar://151802975
When migrating, provide warnings that add 'nonisolated' to nonisolated
conformances that don't already have it and would end up being inferred
to be isolated under the upcoming feature.
Adopters of the new Span and MutableSpan types should not encounter information
about an experimental feature when they attempt to use these types in
unsupported ways, such as simply returning them from a function.
Fixes rdar://151788740 (Diagnostic message: suppress printing "requires
'-enable-experimental-feature LifetimeDependence'")
Syntactically verify that initializer expressions of '@const' variables and argument expressions to '@const' parameters consist strictly of syntactically-verifiable set of basic values and operations
By default (currently) the closure passed to a parameter with `@_inheritActorContext`
would only inherit isolation from `nonisolated`, global actor isolated or actor
context when "self" is captured by the closure. `always` changes this behavior to
always inherit actor isolation from context regardless of whether it's captured
or not.
This adds an `appendInterpolation` overload to
`DefaultStringInterpolation` that includes a parameter for providing a
default string when the value to interpolate is `nil`. This allows this
kind of usage:
```swift
let age: Int? = nil
print("Your age is \(age, default: "timeless")")
// Prints "Your age is timeless"
```
The change includes an additional fixit when optional values are
interpolated, with a suggestion to use this `default:` parameter.
Just like `@preconcurrency` for concurrency, this attribute is going
to allow exhaustiveness error downgrades for enums that were retroactively
marked as `@extensible`.
per SE-0431, function conversions from an @isolated(any) function to a synchronous,
non-@isolated(any) function type should not be allowed. this adds a warning during
type checking to enforce this, which will be an error in a future major
language mode.
These should not be escalated to errors when other strict memory safety
warnings are, because they aren't safety issues. They could go into a
separate group along with the corresponding try and await diagnostics.
Similar to what we do for 'throws' checking, perform argument-specific
checking for unsafe call arguments. This provides more detailed failures:
```
example.swift:18:3: warning: expression uses unsafe constructs but is not
marked with 'unsafe' [#StrictMemorySafety]
16 | x.f(a: 0, b: 17, c: nil)
17 |
18 | x.f(a: 0, b: 17, c: &i)
| | `- note: argument 'c' in call to instance
method 'f' has unsafe type 'UnsafePointer<Int>?'
| `- warning: expression uses unsafe constructs but is not marked
with 'unsafe' [#StrictMemorySafety]
19 | unsafeF()
20 | }
```
It also means that we won't complain for `nil` or `Optional.none`
arguments passed to unsafe types, which eliminates some false
positives, and won't complain about unsafe result types when there is
a call---because we'd still get complaints later about the
actually-unsafe bit, which is using those results.
Fixes rdar://149629670.
When `MemberImportVisibility` is enabled and a declaration from a cross import
overlay is diagnosed because it has not been imported, suggest imports of the
declaring and bystanding modules instead of the cross import overlay module
(which is an implementation detail).
Resolves rdar://149307959.
It has indirect effects on the accessors, so it shouldn’t matter, but we can defensively redirect the query to the API counterpart anyway.
This was the last `InferredInABIAttr` attribute, so we can now remove all of the infrastructure involved in supporting attribute inference.
CustomAttr backs four different features, each of which requires a different behavior in `@abi`:
• Global actors: Permitted (and permitted to vary) since they can affect mangling
• Result builders: Forbidden inside an `@abi` since they have no ABI impact
• Property wrappers: Forbidden both inside an `@abi` and on a decl with an `@abi` since it’s not clear how we would apply `@abi` to the auxiliary decls
• Attached macros: Forbidden inside an `@abi` since an ABI-only decl has no body, accessors, members, peers, extensions, or (currently) conformances
Implement these behaviors (outside of `ABIDeclChecker` since they can’t be described there).
Macro-related tests are not included in this commit; they require matching swift-syntax changes which are being negotiated.
The IsolatedConformances feature moves to a normal, supported feature.
Remove all of the experimental-feature flags on test cases and such.
The InferIsolatedConformances feature moves to an upcoming feature for
Swift 7. This should become an adoptable feature, adding "nonisolated"
where needed.
It has been decided to split the attribute into `@concurrent` and
`nonisolated(nonsending`. Adjusting diagnostics to accept the attribute
makes the transition easier.
This implements basic checks on the validity of the @cdecl attribute and
ensures the parameters and result types are representable in C. Many
more diagnostics will need to be updated to verify full representability
in C.
Currently, the macro plugin options are included as cache key and the
absolute path of the plugin executable and library will affect cache
hit, even the plugin itself is identical.
Using the new option `-resolved-plugin-validation` flag, the macro
plugin paths are remapped just like the other paths during dependency
scanning. `swift-frontend` will unmap to its original path during the
compilation, make sure the content hasn't changed, and load the plugin.
It also hands few other corner cases for macro plugins:
* Make sure the plugin options in the swift module is prefix mapped.
* Make sure the remarks of the macro loading is not cached, as the
mesasge includes the absolute path of the plugin, and is not
cacheable.
rdar://148465899
Changes the diagnostics emitted when an `@objc @implementation` extension is missing some of the members required by the extension:
• We now emit one error on the extension, plus a note for each missing member.
• Where possible, we also emit a note with a fix-it adding stubs.
For example:
```
9 | @objc @implementation extension ObjCClass {
| |- error: extension for main class interface does not provide all required implementations
| |- note: missing instance method 'method(fromHeader3:)'
| |- note: missing instance method 'method(fromHeader4:)'
| |- note: missing property 'propertyFromHeader7'
| |- note: missing property 'propertyFromHeader8'
| |- note: missing property 'propertyFromHeader9'
| |- note: missing instance method 'extensionMethod(fromHeader2:)'
| `- note: add stubs for missing '@implementation' requirements
```
With a fix-it on the last note to insert the following after the open brace:
```
@objc(methodFromHeader3:)
open func method(fromHeader3 param: Int32) {
<#code#>
}
@objc(methodFromHeader4:)
open func method(fromHeader4 param: Int32) {
<#code#>
}
@objc(propertyFromHeader7)
open var propertyFromHeader7: Int32 {
get {
<#code#>
}
set {
<#code#>
}
}
@objc(propertyFromHeader8)
open var propertyFromHeader8: Int32 {
get {
<#code#>
}
set {
<#code#>
}
}
@objc(propertyFromHeader9)
open var propertyFromHeader9: Int32 {
get {
<#code#>
}
set {
<#code#>
}
}
@objc(extensionMethodFromHeader2:)
open func extensionMethod(fromHeader2 param: Int32) {
<#code#>
}
```
Fixes rdar://130038221.