Introduced during the bring-up of the generics system in July, 2012,
Substitution (and SubstitutionList) has been completely superseded by
SubstitutionMap. R.I.P.
Modeling builtins as first-class function values doesn't really make sense because there's no real function value to emit, and modeling them this way complicates passes that work with builtins because they have to invent function types for builtin invocations. It's much more straightforward to have a single instruction that references the builtin by ID, along with the type information for the necessary values, type parameters, and results, so add a new "builtin" instruction that directly represents a builtin invocation. NFC yet.
Swift SVN r22690
If a type has to be passed or returned resiliently, it
will necessarily be passed indirectly, which is already
represented in SILFunctionType. There is no need to
represent this as a separate channel of information.
NFC. Also fixes a problem where the signature cache
for ExtraData::Block was writing past the end of an
array (but into the storage for an adjacent array
which was fortunately never used).
ExtraData should also disappear as a concept, but we're
still relying on that for existential protocol witnesses.
Swift SVN r21548
Add a new SourceKind for PolymorphicConvention, 'WitnessSelf', which always introduces a final 'Self' metadata argument to the signature and uses it to fulfill all of the generic parameters of the Self type, regardless of the SIL-level polymorphic signature of the function.
Swift SVN r11467
When an existential's contained type is used as a generic parameter, unwrap the existential container and save its metadata and witnesses to be used as polymorphic arguments.
Our AST representation can't quite express the distinction between a type parameter being satisfied by the existential type itself from being satisfied by the existential's contained yet. I use a goofy heuristic where I assume a protocol type bound to a type variable with no requirements is satisfied by the protocol type itself; this covers all of the existing <T> (Slice<T>, T) cases that come up in the library, while enabling the <T:Foo> (T) cases. This hopefully addresses <rdar://problem/14470097> well enough to unblock library work until we get a solid AST representation of this difference.
Swift SVN r6352
Sever the last load-bearing link between SILFunction and SILConstant by naming SILFunctions with their mangled symbol names. Move the core of the mangler up to SIL, and teach SILGen how to use it to mangle a SILConstant.
Swift SVN r4964
protocol witnesses over to the new API. There's some badness
that we're papering over here involving generic types, but
this is a necessary first step.
Swift SVN r3003
the metadata objects for classes. This is currently only
done for methods defined in the main class body, and it's
(naturally) totally fragile, and it's screwed up in a
couple known ways w.r.t. generic classes: there's no
thunking when the overrider differs by abstraction from
the overridden method, and methods on classes currently
expect to get all the type arguments passed directly
and thus will disagree in signature from members of
non-generic classes. Also, of course, we're not using
any of this in the call infrastructure. But it's progress.
Swift SVN r2901
by abstraction from the concrete return type.
This basically gets generic calls working totally as long
as there's no remapping required.
Swift SVN r2402