This is just to round things out — this internal function was sticking out from the public interfaces. No stdlib code needs this generalization yet, but I see no reason to delay it.
We cannot currently express its proper lifetime semantics: its result’s lifetime should depend on the intersection of the lifetime of the left argument and the lifetime of the result of the right argument.
`@lifetime(optional, defaultValue.result)` is what we want, but the `.result` part is not currently expressible. (Tying the dependency on the closure argument itself may be a viable option, but we aren’t confident enough to ship it like that yet.)
Annotate all of the `Unsafe*` types and `unsafe` functions in the standard
library (including concurrency, synchronization, etc.) as `@unsafe`. Add a
few tests to ensure that we detect uses of these types in clients that
have disabled unsafe code.
The stdlib is always built with NoncopyableGenerics enabled, so `#if
$NoncopyableGenerics` guards in non-inlinable code are superfluous.
Additionally, the stdlib's interface no longer needs to support compilers
without the feature, so the guards in inlinable code can also be removed.
If the extension adds conformance to an invertible protocol, it's
confusing for people to also infer conditional requirements on the
generic parameters for those invertible protocols. This came up in the
review of SE-427.
There were two categories of problem for older compilers that consume the
stdlib `.swiftinterface`:
- The `case .some(borrowing x)` syntax isn't accepted; use `_borrowing`
- Various functions that addopted `~Copyable` generic constraints conflict with
the `@usableFromInline` ABI stubs that were left in to preserve compatibility
when the functions are printed with `~Copyable` constraints stripped. The stubs
need to have different names to get out of the way.
Resolves rdar://127132742
The new ~Copyable generalizations have changed the function signature enough that alternative definitions of `map`/`flatMap` in existing code that used to be considered to shadow the originals no longer do so. This leads to use sites becoming ambiguous — a source break.
While we consider approaches to resolve this on the compiler side, let’s try slapping a `@_disfavoredOverload` on these and see if that helps.
If an expression refers to noncopyable storage, then default to performing
a borrowing switch, where `let` bindings in patterns borrow out of the
matched value. If an expression refers to a temporary value or explicitly
uses the `consume` keyword, then perform a consuming switch, where
`let` bindings take ownership of corresponding parts of the matched value.
Allow `_borrowing` to still be used to explicitly bind a pattern variable
as a borrow, with no-implicit-copy semantics for copyable values.
- Enable BorrowingSwitch feature within the stdlib
- ExpressibleByNilLiteral: Add retroactive support for noncopyable conforming types
- Optional: draft an API surface for noncopyable payloads
[stdlib] Oops, the ExpressibleByNilLiteral conformance kept its implicit copyability
It's harmless to have the protocol defined in the swiftinterface for
older compilers and removing the gating permits the gating to be omitted
from conformances
This isn't a "complete" port of the standard library for embedded Swift, but
something that should serve as a starting point for further iterations on the
stdlib.
- General CMake logic for building a library as ".swiftmodule only" (ONLY_SWIFTMODULE).
- CMake logic in stdlib/public/core/CMakeLists.txt to start building the embedded stdlib for a handful of hardcoded target triples.
- Lots of annotations throughout the standard library to make types, functions, protocols unavailable in embedded Swift (@_unavailableInEmbedded).
- Mainly this is about stdlib functionality that relies on existentials, type erasure, metatypes, reflection, string interpolations.
- We rely on function body removal of unavailable functions to eliminate the actual problematic SIL code (existentials).
- Many .swift files are not included in the compilation of embedded stdlib at all, to simplify the scope of the annotations.
- EmbeddedStubs.swift is used to stub out (as unavailable and fatalError'd) the missing functionality.