SWIFT_STDLIB_SINGLE_THREADED_RUNTIME is too much of a blunt instrument here.
It covers both the Concurrency runtime and the rest of the runtime, but we'd
like to be able to have e.g. a single-threaded Concurrency runtime while
the rest of the runtime is still thread safe (for instance).
So: rename it to SWIFT_STDLIB_SINGLE_THREADED_CONCURRENCY and make it just
control the Concurrency runtime, then add a SWIFT_STDLIB_THREADING_PACKAGE
setting at the CMake/build-script level, which defines
SWIFT_STDLIB_THREADING_xxx where xxx depends on the chosen threading package.
This is especially useful on systems where there may be a choice of threading
package that you could use.
rdar://90776105
SWIFT_STDLIB_SINGLE_THREADED_RUNTIME is too much of a blunt instrument here.
It covers both the Concurrency runtime and the rest of the runtime, but we'd
like to be able to have e.g. a single-threaded Concurrency runtime while
the rest of the runtime is still thread safe (for instance).
So: rename it to SWIFT_STDLIB_SINGLE_THREADED_CONCURRENCY and make it just
control the Concurrency runtime, then add a SWIFT_STDLIB_THREADING_PACKAGE
setting at the CMake/build-script level, which defines
SWIFT_STDLIB_THREADING_xxx where xxx depends on the chosen threading package.
This is especially useful on systems where there may be a choice of threading
package that you could use.
rdar://90776105
This change adds support for WASI in stdlib tests. Some tests that expect a crash to happen had to be disabled, since there's currently no way to observe such crash from a WASI host.
This replaces swiftMSVCRT with swiftCRT. The big difference here is
that the `visualc` module is no longer imported nor exported. The
`visualc` module remains in use for a singular test wrt availability,
but this should effectively remove the need for the `visualc` module.
The difference between the MSVCRT and ucrt module was not well
understood by most. MSVCRT provided ucrt AND visualc, combining pieces
of the old MSVCRT and the newer ucrt. The ucrt module is what you
really wanted most of the time, however, would need to use MSVCRT for
the convenience aliases for type-generic math and the deprecated math
constants.
Unfortunately, we cannot shadow the `ucrt` module and create a Swift SDK
overlay for ucrt as that seems to result in circular dependencies when
processing the `_Concurrency` module.
Although this makes using the C library easier for most people, it has a
more important subtle change: it cleaves the dependency on visualc.
This means that this enables use of Swift without Visual Studio for the
singular purpose of providing 3 header files. Additionally, it removes
the need for the installation of 2 of the 4 support files. This greatly
simplifies the deployment process on Windows.
Clean up a few general patterns that are now obviated by canImport
This aligns more generally with the cleanup that the Swift Package
Manager has already done in their automated XCTest-plumbing tool in
apple/swift-package-manager#1826.
These should hopefully all be uncontroversial, minimal changes to deal
with progressing the build to completion on OpenBSD or addressing minor
portability issues. This is not the full set of changes to get a
successful build; other portability issues will be addressed in future
commits.
Most of this is just adding the relevant clauses to the ifdefs, but of
note in this commit:
* StdlibUnittest.swift: the default conditional in _getOSVersion assumes
an Apple platform, therefore the explicit conditional and the relevant
enums need filling out. The default conditional should be #error, but
we'll fix this in a different commit.
* tgmath.swift.gyb: inexplicably, OpenBSD is missing just lgammal_r.
Tests are updated correspondingly.
* ThreadLocalStorage.h: we use the pthread implementation, so it
seems we should typedef __swift_thread_key_t as pthread_key_t.
However, that's also a tweak for another commit.
This allows the conversion of the Windows `BOOL` type to be converted to
`Bool` implicitly. The implicit bridging allows for a more ergonomic
use of the native Windows APIs in Swift.
Due to the ambiguity between the Objective C `BOOL` and the Windows
`BOOL`, we must manually map the `BOOL` type to the appropriate type.
This required lifting the mapping entry for `ObjCBool` from the mapped
types XMACRO definition into the inline definition in the importer.
Take the opportunity to simplify the mapping code.
Adjust the standard library usage of the `BOOL` type which is now
eclipsed by the new `WindowsBool` type, preferring to use `Bool`
whenever possible.
Thanks to Jordan Rose for the suggestion to do this and a couple of
hints along the way.
Turns out some people used this type despite it being prefixed with
`_stdlib_`, so we have to keep it, with an obsoletion message this time.
Second copy of the same type is kept available past Swift 5 in
SwiftPrivate for use in tests.
This is in preparation to make the code here more target agnostic for
porting to the Windows threading primitives. This is used pretty
extensively in the tests, so disabling tests would lose a chunk of
coverage.
SwiftPrivate/PRNG.swift:
- currently uses `theGlobalMT19937`;
- previously used `arc4random` (see #1939);
- is obsoleted by SE-0202: Random Unification.
Cygwin is considered a distinct target with a distinct ABI, environment
conditions, and data types. Though the goal of the project is
native Windows integration with UNIX-likes, that is not compatible with
the idea that the platform can be ignored as Win-like enough to have the
existing os(Windows) condition apply.
- CYGWIN symbol is used to distinguish Cygwin environment from other OS
and other environment in Windows.
- Added windows and windowsCygnus to OSVersion in StdlibUnittest
* replace unused closure parameters with '_' in stdlib source
* fold some _ closure arguments into line above
* fold more _ closure arguments into line above
Apple and the Swift community has settled on this style:
https://devforums.apple.com/message/1133616#1133616
> FWIW, we've recently decided to standardize on () -> Void
> (generally, () for parameters and Void for return types) across all of our
> documentation.
[test] Add a timeout to runRaceTest(). Use it to limit test AtomicInt.swift.
This cuts AtomicInt.swift's execution time from several hours to
about ten minutes on slow hardware and slow build configurations.
Adds an explicit @escaping throughout the standard library, validation
test suite, and tests. This will be necessary as soon as noescape is
the default for closure parameters.
This adds an Android target for the stdlib. It is also the first
example of cross-compiling outside of Darwin.
Mailing list discussions:
1. https://lists.swift.org/pipermail/swift-dev/Week-of-Mon-20151207/000171.html
2. https://lists.swift.org/pipermail/swift-dev/Week-of-Mon-20151214/000492.html
The Android variant of Swift may be built using the following `build-script`
invocation:
```
$ utils/build-script \
-R \ # Build in ReleaseAssert mode.
--android \ # Build for Android.
--android-ndk ~/android-ndk-r10e \ # Path to an Android NDK.
--android-ndk-version 21 \
--android-icu-uc ~/libicu-android/armeabi-v7a/libicuuc.so \
--android-icu-uc-include ~/libicu-android/armeabi-v7a/icu/source/common \
--android-icu-i18n ~/libicu-android/armeabi-v7a/libicui18n.so \
--android-icu-i18n-include ~/libicu-android/armeabi-v7a/icu/source/i18n/
```
Android builds have the following dependencies, as can be seen in
the build script invocation:
1. An Android NDK of version 21 or greater, available to download
here: http://developer.android.com/ndk/downloads/index.html.
2. A libicu compatible with android-armv7.