PrintAsClang is supposed to emit declarations in the same order regardless of the compiler’s internal state, but we have repeatedly found that our current criteria are inadequate, resulting in non-functionality-affecting changes to generated header content. Add a diagnostic that’s emitted when this happens soliciting a bug report.
Since there *should* be no cases where the compiler fails to order declarations, this diagnostic is never actually emitted. Instead, we test this change by enabling `-verify` on nearly all PrintAsClang tests to make sure they are unaffected.
This did demonstrate a missing criterion that only mattered in C++ mode: extensions that varied only in their generic signature were not sorted stably. Add a sort criterion for this.
This macro applies always_inline in addition to inline. It also applies artificial, which lets debugger know that this is an artificial function. The used attribute is added in debug builds to ensure that the symbol is emitted in the binary so that LLDB can invoke it.
Each emitted declaration is annotated with the external_source_symbol with its own USR, to allow Clang's indexer to recognize this declaration as a Swift declaration with a specific USR
This change removes the -emit-cxx-header option, and adds a new -emit-clang-header-path option instead. It's aliased to -emit-objc-header-path for now, but in the future, -emit-objc-header-path will alias to it. After this change Swift can start emitting a single header file that can be expose declarations to C, Objective-C, or C++. For now C++ interface is generated (for all public decls) only when -enable-cxx-interop flag is passed, but that behavior will change once attribute is supported.