This implements support for autoclosures, closures and local functions
nested within a pack iteration for loop.
The combination of explicit closure expressions and pack expansion
expressions still needs some work.
Fixes#66917.
Fixes#69947.
Fixes rdar://113505724.
Fixes rdar://122293832.
Fixes rdar://124329076.
Otherwise we set it on all targets/languages in a subdirectory (I forgot if it
propagates up). Regardless, this type of viral stuff is something we want to
move away from since it creates a code that is a "forall" piece of code rather
than a piece of code that only effects a single target.
I also conditionalized the actual definitions being added on the compiled file's
language being C,CXX,OBJC,OBJCXX since as we add Swift sources to the host side
of the compiler, we will not want these flags to propagate to Swift sources.
This prevents ManagedValue APIs on SILGenBuilder from by mistake accesing
non-conformance tracking APIs on SILBuilder.
NOTE: Eventually, we should make SILGenBuilder compose with SILGenSILBuilder and
then rename SILGenBuilder to ManagedValueBuilder. I did not do that in this PR
since it becomes very disruptive since there is still a lot of code in SILGen
that uses SILValue APIs and I have not found a concise way to write such
code. But this patch at least defines away this error which has bitten us
before.
This is a follow up to the discussion on #22740 to switch the host
libraries to use the `target_link_libraries` rather than the
`LINK_LIBRARIES` special handling. This allows the dependency to be
properly tracked by CMake and allows us to use the more modern syntax.
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.
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.
Most of this patch is just removing special cases for materializeForSet
or other fairly mechanical replacements. Unfortunately, the rest is
still a fairly big change, and not one that can be easily split apart
because of the quite reasonable reliance on metaprogramming throughout
the compiler. And, of course, there are a bunch of test updates that
have to be sync'ed with the actual change to code-generation.
This is SR-7134.
Previously SwitchEnumBuilder was in SILGenBuilder.{h,cpp} and
SwitchEnumCaseFullExpr was in its own file. This really made no sense since:
1. The two classes are inherently related to each other so really should be
together in the source base.
2. SwitchEnumBuilder uses a SILGenBuilder, but is really a separate independent
concept/entity, so there really is no reason to keep it in SILGenBuilder.cpp.
Just a quick fix to eliminate something that was bugging me.
NFC.
This patch moves the ownership of profiling state from SILGenProfiling
to SILFunction, where it always belonged. Similarly, it moves ownership
of the profile reader from SILGenModule to SILModule.
The refactor sets us up to fix a few outstanding code coverage bugs and
does away with sad hacks like ProfilerRAII. It also allows us to locally
guarantee that a profile counter increment actually corresponds to the
SILFunction at hand.
That local guarantee causes a bugfix to accidentally fall out of this
refactor: we now set up the profiling state for delayed functions
correctly. Previously, we would set up a ProfilerRAII for the delayed
function, but its counter increment would never be emitted :(. This fix
constitutes the only functional change in this patch -- the rest is NFC.
As a follow-up, I plan on removing some dead code in the profiling
logic and fixing a few naming inconsistencies. I've left that for later
to keep this patch simple.
This patch moves the ownership of profiling state from SILGenProfiling
to SILFunction, where it always belonged. Similarly, it moves ownership
of the profile reader from SILGenModule to SILModule.
The refactor sets us up to fix a few outstanding code coverage bugs and
does away with sad hacks like ProfilerRAII. It also allows us to locally
guarantee that a profile counter increment actually corresponds to the
SILFunction at hand.
That local guarantee causes a bugfix to accidentally fall out of this
refactor: we now set up the profiling state for delayed functions
correctly. Previously, we would set up a ProfilerRAII for the delayed
function, but its counter increment would never be emitted :(. This fix
constitutes the only functional change in this patch -- the rest is NFC.
As a follow-up, I plan on removing some dead code in the profiling
logic and fixing a few naming inconsistencies. I've left that for later
to keep this patch simple.
ResultPlan and related constructs have already been written in a type erased
fashion. This commit takes advantage of this by moving the details of the code
to ResultPlan.{cpp,h}.
This slims down SILGenApply.cpp in a NFC way and ensures that other code in
SILGenApply can not depend on the details of ResultPlan. Also it is my hope that
this can become the beginning of the merging of the ResultPlan from SILGenApply
and from SILGenPoly. We should only have 1 way in SILGen to build applies and
create apply results.
rdar://29791263
This is a closure based API for creating switches that obey ownership
convensions. The way you use it with objects is as follows:
SwitchEnumBuilder S(...);
S.addCase(Decl, Block, [](ManagedValue Arg) -> void {
...
});
S.addCase(Decl, Block, [](ManagedValue Arg) -> void {
...
});
S.addDefaultCase(Block, [](ManagedValue Arg) -> void {
...
});
std::move(S).emit();
What is important is that it sets up the switch_enum destination blocks with the
proper cleanups for code emitted into the destination block and also provides
the default error with the passed in value with the appropriate cleanups.
It does not handle exits from the switch_enum on purpose since diamond
switch_enum APIs form a subset of APIs. It also expects the closure to create
terminators if appropriate.
In the switch_enum_addr case you have to do a bit more work, but it is still a
nicer API than doing it by hand as we do today.
rdar://29791263
These changes caused a number of issues:
1. No debug info is emitted when a release-debug info compiler is built.
2. OS X deployment target specification is broken.
3. Swift options were broken without any attempt any recreating that
functionality. The specific option in question is --force-optimized-typechecker.
Such refactorings should be done in a fashion that does not break existing
users and use cases.
This reverts commit e6ce2ff388.
This reverts commit e8645f3750.
This reverts commit 89b038ea7e.
This reverts commit 497cac64d9.
This reverts commit 953ad094da.
This reverts commit e096d1c033.
rdar://30549345
This patch splits add_swift_library into two functions one which handles
the simple case of adding a library that is part of the compiler being
built and the second handling the more complicated case of "target"
libraries, which may need to build for one or more targets.
The new add_swift_library is built using llvm_add_library, which re-uses
LLVM's CMake modules. In adapting to use LLVM's modules some of
add_swift_library's named parameters have been removed and
LINK_LIBRARIES has changed to LINK_LIBS, and LLVM_LINK_COMPONENTS
changed to LINK_COMPONENTS.
This patch also cleans up libswiftBasic's handling of UUID library and
headers, and how it interfaces with gyb sources.
add_swift_library also no longer has the FILE_DEPENDS parameter, which
doesn't matter because llvm_add_library's DEPENDS parameter has the same
behavior.
As per John, WritebackScope was always an unfortunate name. Generally these
scopes are meant for formal evaluations of inout parameters. The cases that I am
interested in generalizing them to be used for are borrows of the base of a
class that will then be used as an lvalue.
This also eliminates the out of line vector of lvalue writebacks.
rdar://29791263
As a first step to allowing the build script to build *only*
static library versions of the stdlib, change `add_swift_library`
such that callers must pass in `SHARED`, `STATIC`, or `OBJECT_LIBRARY`.
Ideally, only these flags would be used to determine whether to
build shared, static, or object libraries, but that is not currently
the case -- `add_swift_library` also checks whether the library
`IS_STDLIB` before performing certain additional actions. This will be
cleaned up in a future commit.
In order to fix some other issues that came up with materializeForSet
and resilience, I had to bite the bullet and finish off John's code
for open-coding materializeForSet emission in SILGen. This patch
makes the subsequent changes easier to review.
This adds the -profile-generate flag, which enables LLVM's
instrumentation based profiling. It implements the instrumentation
for basic control flow, such as if statements, loops, and closures.
Swift SVN r25155
the call instead of during the formal evaluation of the argument.
This is the last major chunk of the semantic changes proposed
in the accessors document. It has two purposes, both related
to the fact that it shortens the duration of the formal access.
First, the change isolates later evaluations (as long as they
precede the call) from the formal access, preventing them from
spuriously seeing unspecified behavior. For example::
foo(&array[0], bar(array))
Here the value passed to bar is a proper copy of 'array',
and if bar() decides to stash it aside, any modifications
to 'array[0]' made by foo() will not spontaneously appear
in the copy. (In contrast, if something caused a copy of
'array' during foo()'s execution, that copy would violate
our formal access rules and would therefore be allowed to
have an arbitrary value at index 0.)
Second, when a mutating access uses a pinning addressor, the
change limits the amount of arbitrary code that falls between
the pin and unpin. For example::
array[0] += countNodes(subtree)
Previously, we would begin the access to array[0] before the
call to countNodes(). To eliminate the pin and unpin, the
optimizer would have needed to prove that countNodes didn't
access the same array. With this change, the call is evaluated
first, and the access instead begins immediately before the call
to +=. Since that operator is easily inlined, it becomes
straightforward to eliminate the pin/unpin.
A number of other changes got bundled up with this in ways that
are hard to tease apart. In particular:
- RValueSource is now ArgumentSource and can now store LValues.
- It is now illegal to use emitRValue to emit an l-value.
- Call argument emission is now smart enough to emit tuple
shuffles itself, applying abstraction patterns in reverse
through the shuffle. It also evaluates varargs elements
directly into the array.
- AllowPlusZero has been split in two. AllowImmediatePlusZero
is useful when you are going to immediately consume the value;
this is good enough to avoid copies/retains when reading a 'var'.
AllowGuaranteedPlusZero is useful when you need a stronger
guarantee, e.g. when arbitrary code might intervene between
evaluation and use; it's still good enough to avoid copies
from a 'let'. The upshot is that we're now a lot smarter
about generally avoiding retains on lets, but we've also
gotten properly paranoid about calling non-mutating methods
on vars.
(Note that you can't necessarily avoid a copy when passing
something in a var to an @in_guaranteed parameter! You
first have to prove that nothing can assign to the var during
the call. That should be easy as long as the var hasn't
escaped, but that does need to be proven first, so we can't
do it in SILGen.)
Swift SVN r24709
NFC for now, but I've also added the infrastructure to allow
"early emission", i.e. emission directly from the original
RValueSource, which can be useful either as an optimization
(e.g. for Builtin.initialize) or a requirement for particularly
hacky SIL intrinsics should we need them (and I'm thinking of
needing one).
Swift SVN r23953