Support for @noescape SILFunctionTypes.
These are the underlying SIL changes necessary to implement the new
closure capture ABI.
Note: This includes a change to function name mangling that
primarily affects reabstraction thunks.
The new ABI will allow stack allocation of non-escaping closures as a
simple optimization.
The new ABI, and the stack allocation optimization, also require
closure context to be @guaranteed. That will be implemented as the
next step.
Many SIL passes pattern match partial_apply sequences. These all
needed to be fixed to handle the convert_function that SILGen now
emits. The conversion is now needed whenever a function declaration,
which has an escaping type, is passed into a @NoEscape argument.
In addition to supporting new SIL patterns, some optimizations like
inlining and SIL combine are now stronger which could perturb some
benchmark results.
These underlying SIL changes should be merged now to avoid conflicting
with other work. Minor benchmark discrepancies can be investigated as part of
the stack-allocation work.
* Add a noescape attribute to SILFunctionType.
And set this attribute correctly when lowering formal function types to SILFunctionTypes based on @escaping.
This will allow stack allocation of closures, and unblock a related ABI change.
* Flip the polarity on @noescape on SILFunctionType and clarify that
we don't default it.
* Emit withoutActuallyEscaping using a convert_function instruction.
It might be better to use a specialized instruction here, but I'll leave that up to Andy.
Andy: And I'll leave that to Arnold who is implementing SIL support for guaranteed ownership of thick function types.
* Fix SILGen and SIL Parsing.
* Fix the LoadableByAddress pass.
* Fix ClosureSpecializer.
* Fix performance inliner constant propagation.
* Fix the PartialApplyCombiner.
* Adjust SILFunctionType for thunks.
* Add mangling for @noescape/@escaping.
* Fix test cases for @noescape attribute, mangling, convert_function, etc.
* Fix exclusivity test cases.
* Fix AccessEnforcement.
* Fix SILCombine of convert_function -> apply.
* Fix ObjC bridging thunks.
* Various MandatoryInlining fixes.
* Fix SILCombine optimizeApplyOfConvertFunction.
* Fix more test cases after merging (again).
* Fix ClosureSpecializer. Hande convert_function cloning.
Be conservative when combining convert_function. Most of our code doesn't know
how to deal with function type mismatches yet.
* Fix MandatoryInlining.
Be conservative with function conversion. The inliner does not yet know how to
cast arguments or convert between throwing forms.
* Fix PartialApplyCombiner.
Except GenericEnvironment.h, because you can't meaningfully use a
GenericEnvironment without its signature. Lots less depends on
GenericSignature.h now. NFC
Now that the GenericSignatureBuilder is no longer sensitive to the input
module, stop uniquing the canonical GSBs based on that module. The main
win here is when deserializing a generic environment: we would end up
creating a canonical GSB in the module we deserialized and another
canonical GSB in the module in which it is used.
Implement a module-agnostic conformance lookup operation within the GSB
itself, so it does not need to be supplied by the code constructing the
generic signature builder. This makes the generic signature builder
(closer to) being module-agnostic.
This replaces the '[volatile]' flag. Now, class_method and
super_method are only used for vtable dispatch.
The witness_method instruction is still overloaded for use
with both ObjC protocol requirements and Swift protocol
requirements; the next step is to make it only mean the
latter, also using objc_method for ObjC protocol calls.
Pre-specializations need some special handling when it comes to the Serialized attribute. Their bodies should not be SIL serialized. Instead, only their declarations should be serialized.
And since their bodies are not serialized and cannot be imported by the client code, it is OK if pre-specializations reference non-fragile functions inside their bodies. Due to the same reason, it is fine if pre-specializations are referenced from fragile functions, even though these pre-specializations are not fragile in a usual sense.
Once we compute a generic signature from a generic signature builder,
all queries involving that generic signature will go through a separate
(canonicalized) builder, and the original builder can no longer be used.
The canonicalization process then creates a new, effectively identical
generic signature builder. How silly.
Once we’ve computed the signature of a generic signature builder, “register”
it with the ASTContext, allowing us to move the existing generic signature
builder into place as the canonical generic signature builder. The builder
requires minimal patching but is otherwise fully usable.
Thanks to Slava Pestov for the idea!
Funnel all places where we create a generic signature builder to compute
the generic signature through a single entry point in the GSB
(`computeGenericSignature()`), and make `finalize` and `getGenericSignature`
private so no new uses crop up.
Tighten up the signature of `computeGenericSignature()` so it only works on
GSB rvalues, and ensure that all clients consider the GSB dead after that
point by clearing out the internal representation of the GSB.
Funnel all places where we create a generic signature builder to compute
the generic signature through a single entry point in the GSB
(`computeGenericSignature()`), and make `finalize` and `getGenericSignature`
private so no new uses crop up.
Tighten up the signature of `computeGenericSignature()` so it only works on
GSB rvalues, and ensure that all clients consider the GSB dead after that
point by clearing out the internal representation of the GSB.
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.
Once we compute a generic signature from a generic signature builder,
all queries involving that generic signature will go through a separate
(canonicalized) builder, and the original builder can no longer be used.
The canonicalization process then creates a new, effectively identical
generic signature builder. How silly.
Once we’ve computed the signature of a generic signature builder, “register”
it with the ASTContext, allowing us to move the existing generic signature
builder into place as the canonical generic signature builder. The builder
requires minimal patching but is otherwise fully usable.
Thanks to Slava Pestov for the idea!
Funnel all places where we create a generic signature builder to compute
the generic signature through a single entry point in the GSB
(`computeGenericSignature()`), and make `finalize` and `getGenericSignature`
private so no new uses crop up.
Tighten up the signature of `computeGenericSignature()` so it only works on
GSB rvalues, and ensure that all clients consider the GSB dead after that
point by clearing out the internal representation of the GSB.
This patch implements collection and dumping of statistics about SILModules, SILFunctions and memory consumption during the execution of SIL optimization pipelines.
The following statistics can be collected:
* For SILFunctions: the number of SIL basic blocks, the number of SIL instructions, the number of SIL instructions of a specific kind, duration of a pass
* For SILModules: the number of SIL basic blocks, the number of SIL instructions, the number of SIL instructions of a specific kind, the number of SILFunctions, the amount of memory used by the compiler, duration of a pass
By default, any collection of statistics is disabled to avoid affecting compile times.
One can enable the collection of statistics and dumping of these statistics for the whole SILModule and/or for SILFunctions.
To reduce the amount of produced data, one can set thresholds in such a way that changes in the statistics are only reported if the delta between the old and the new values are at least X%. The deltas are computed as using the following formula:
Delta = (NewValue - OldValue) / OldValue
Thresholds provide a simple way to perform a simple filtering of the collected statistics during the compilation. But if there is a need for a more complex analysis of collected data (e.g. aggregation by a pipeline stage or by the type of a transformation), it is often better to dump as much data as possible into a file using e.g. -sil-stats-dump-all -sil-stats-modules -sil-stats-functions and then e.g. use the helper scripts to store the collected data into a database and then perform complex queries on it. Many kinds of analysis can be then formulated pretty easily as SQL queries.
The main loop of mandatory inlining is spending a lot of time managing complex
iterator invalidation issues. This is the first in a series of commits that move
the main inlining loop to only delete the callee and to do all cleanups after we
have finished inlining.
This specific optimization (the quick retain/release peephole), I am not going
to do in MandatoryInlining, we already have guaranteed arc opts afterwards that
will be able to hit such a peephole so no perf should be lost.
*NOTE* The reason why I had to touch some of the code motion tests is that the
routine I am using to ensure that strong_retain/release_value is emitted as
appropriate is also used by codemotion. Code motion tests had cargo culted some
code from previous tests that retained Builtin.Int32. I changed the routines
though so that when a retain/release is inserted, if it is trivial, nothing is
inserted. No routine was relying on the actual usage of the inserted
retain/releases, so everything will be safe. This addition to the relevant code
caused me to need to change the tests in code motion to use actual non-trivial
values. The same code paths are being tested in terms of blocking code
motion/etc.
rdar://31521023