This now specifies a category name that’s used in TBDGen, IRGen, and PrintAsClang. There are also now category name conflict diagnostics; these subsume some @implementation diagnostics.
(It turns out there was already a check for @objc(CustomName) to make sure it wasn’t a selector!)
This is phase-1 of switching from llvm::Optional to std::optional in the
next rebranch. llvm::Optional was removed from upstream LLVM, so we need
to migrate off rather soon. On Darwin, std::optional, and llvm::Optional
have the same layout, so we don't need to be as concerned about ABI
beyond the name mangling. `llvm::Optional` is only returned from one
function in
```
getStandardTypeSubst(StringRef TypeName,
bool allowConcurrencyManglings);
```
It's the return value, so it should not impact the mangling of the
function, and the layout is the same as `std::optional`, so it should be
mostly okay. This function doesn't appear to have users, and the ABI was
already broken 2 years ago for concurrency and no one seemed to notice
so this should be "okay".
I'm doing the migration incrementally so that folks working on main can
cherry-pick back to the release/5.9 branch. Once 5.9 is done and locked
away, then we can go through and finish the replacement. Since `None`
and `Optional` show up in contexts where they are not `llvm::None` and
`llvm::Optional`, I'm preparing the work now by going through and
removing the namespace unwrapping and making the `llvm` namespace
explicit. This should make it fairly mechanical to go through and
replace llvm::Optional with std::optional, and llvm::None with
std::nullopt. It's also a change that can be brought onto the
release/5.9 with minimal impact. This should be an NFC change.
This source location will be used to determine whether to add a name lookup
option to exclude macro expansions when the name lookup request is constructed.
Currently, the source location argument is unused.
Direct lookup relied in primary file checking to have filled in the
protocol type stored in the ImplementsAttr. This was already wrong
with multi-file test cases in non-WMO mode, and crashed in the
ASTPrinter if printing a declaration in a non-primary file.
I don't have a standalone test case that is independent of my
upcoming ASTPrinter changes, but this is a nice cleanup regardless.
Keep track of which types/extensions have members that could be produced by
a macro expansion, including the names of those members. Use this to
avoid walking into extensions or type definitions to expand macros
when they don't have any related macros.
Macros introduced a significant wrinkle into Swift's name lookup mechanism.
Specifically, when resolving names (and, really, anything else) within the
arguments to a macro expansion, name lookup must not try to expand any
macros, because doing so trivially creates a cyclic dependency amongst the
macro expansions that will be detected by the request-evaluator.
Our lookup requests don't always have enough information to answer the
question "is this part of an argument to a macro?", so we do a much simpler,
more efficient, and not-entirely-sound hack based on the request-evaluator.
Specifically, if we are in the process of resolving a macro (which is
determined by checking for the presence of a `ResolveMacroRequest` in the
request-evaluator stack), then we adjust the options used for the name
lookup request we are forming to exclude macro expansions. The evaluation
of that request will then avoid expanding any macros, and not produce any
results that involve entries in already-expanded macros. By adjusting the
request itself, we still distinguish between requests that can and cannot
look into macro expansions, so it doesn't break caching for those immediate
requests.
Over time, we should seek to replace this heuristic with a location-based
check, where we use ASTScope to determine whether we are inside a macro
argument. This existing check might still be useful because it's going to
be faster than a location-based query, but the location-based query can be
fully correct.
This addresses a class of cyclic dependencies that we've been seeing
with macros, and aligns the lookup behavior for module-level lookups
with that specified in the macros proposals. It is not fully complete
because lookup until nominal types does not yet support excluding
results from macro expansions.
Macro attribute lookup is now implemented in ResolveMacroRequest, which happens
later because it needs overload resolution to resolve a custom attribute to a
macro decl.
Move off `Type` based requests and onto `Decl`
based requests, utilizing name lookup's
`extractDirectlyReferencedNominalTypes` utility.
This allows us to better cache the results, and
avoids the need to guard against type variable
inputs when deciding whether or not to cache.
This doesn't really fit the request evaluator model since the
result of evaluating the request is the new insertion point,
but we don't have a way to get the insertion point of an
already-expanded scope.
Instead, let's change the callers of the now-removed
expandAndBeCurrentDetectingRecursion() to instead call
expandAndBeCurrent(), while checking first if the scope was
already expanded.
Also, set the expanded flag before calling expandSpecifically()
from inside expandAndBeCurrent(), to ensure that re-entrant
calls to expandAndBeCurrent() are flagged by the existing
assertion there.
Finally, replace a couple of existing counters, and the
now-gone request counter with a single ASTScopeExpansions
counter to track expansions.
This attribute allows to define a pre-specialized entry point of a
generic function in a library.
The following definition provides a pre-specialized entry point for
`genericFunc(_:)` for the parameter type `Int` that clients of the
library can call.
```
@_specialize(exported: true, where T == Int)
public func genericFunc<T>(_ t: T) { ... }
```
Pre-specializations of internal `@inlinable` functions are allowed.
```
@usableFromInline
internal struct GenericThing<T> {
@_specialize(exported: true, where T == Int)
@inlinable
internal func genericMethod(_ t: T) {
}
}
```
There is syntax to pre-specialize a method from a different module.
```
import ModuleDefiningGenericFunc
@_specialize(exported: true, target: genericFunc(_:), where T == Double)
func prespecialize_genericFunc(_ t: T) { fatalError("dont call") }
```
Specially marked extensions allow for pre-specialization of internal
methods accross module boundries (respecting `@inlinable` and
`@usableFromInline`).
```
import ModuleDefiningGenericThing
public struct Something {}
@_specializeExtension
extension GenericThing {
@_specialize(exported: true, target: genericMethod(_:), where T == Something)
func prespecialize_genericMethod(_ t: T) { fatalError("dont call") }
}
```
rdar://64993425
Rather than relying on clients to cope with the potential for circular
inheritance of superclass declarations, teach SuperclassDeclRequest to
establish whether circular inheritance has occurred and produce "null"
in such cases. This allows other clients to avoid having to think about
To benefit from this, have SuperclassTypeRequest evaluate
SuperclassDeclRequest first and, if null, produce a Type(). This
ensures that we don't get into an inconsistent situation where there
is a superclass type but no superclass declaration.
It wasn't one in the past because the referenced name tracker was written into by unqualified lookup, which would delegate to this request. Now that it's no longer doing that, we have to capture this edge here for private dependencies.
Split off the notion of "recording" dependencies from the notion of
"collecting" dependencies. This corrects an oversight in the previous
design where dependency replay and recording were actually not "free" in
WMO where we actually never track dependencies. This architecture also
lays the groundwork for the removal of the referenced name trackers.
The algorithm builds upon the infrastructure for dependency sources and
sinks laid down during the cut over to request-based dependency tracking
in #30723.
The idea of the naive algorithm is this:
For a chain of requests A -> B* -> C -> D* -> ... -> L where L is a lookup
request and all starred requests are cached, once L writes into the
dependency collector, the active stack is walked and at each cache-point
the results of dependency collection are associated with the request
itself (in this example, B* and D* have all the names L found associated
with them). Subsequent evaluations of these cached requests (B* and D*
et al) will then *replay* the previous lookup results from L into the
active referenced name tracker. One complication is, suppose the
evaluation of a cached request involves multiple downstream name
lookups. More concretely, suppose we have the following request trace:
A* -> B -> L
|
-> C -> L
|
-> D -> L
|
-> ...
Then A* must see the union of the results of each L. If this reminds
anyone of a union-find, that is no accident! A persistent union-find
a la Conchon and Filliatre is probably in order to help bring down peak
heap usage...
Re-implement operator and precedencegroup decl
lookup to use `namelookup::getAllImports` and
existing decl shadowing logic. This allows us to
find operator decls through `@_exported` imports,
prefer operator decls defined in the same module
over imported decls, and fixes a couple of other
subtle issues.
Because this new implementation is technically
source breaking, as we can find multiple results
where we used to only find one result, it's placed
behind the new Frontend flag
`-enable-new-operator-lookup` (with the aim of
enabling it by default when we get a new language
mode).
However the new logic will always be used if the
result is unambiguous. This means that e.g
`@_exported` operators will be instantly available
as long as there's only one candidate. If multiple
candidates are found, we fall back to the old
logic.
Resolves SR-12132.
Resolves rdar://59198796.
Make sure a dependency gets registered when a
direct lookup is fired off. This is necessary in
order to ensure that operator redeclaration
checking records the right dependencies (and any
future logic that might want to perform direct
operator lookups).
In doing so, this commit also removes the
compatibility logic for the old referenced name
tracker that would skip recording dependencies in
certain cases. This should be safe as the new
logic will record strictly more dependencies than
the old logic.
Define a new type DependencyCollector that abstracts over the
incremental dependency gathering logic. This will insulate the
request-based name tracking code from future work on private,
intransitive dependencies.
Convert most of the name lookup requests and a few other ancillary typechecking requests into dependency sinks.
Some requests are also combined sinks and sources in order to emulate the current scheme, which performs scope changes based on lookup flags. This is generally undesirable, since it means those requests cannot immediately be generalized to a purely context-based scheme because they depend on some client-provided entropy source. In particular, the few callers that are providing the "known private" name lookup flag need to be converted to perform lookups in the appropriate private context.
Clients that are passing "no known dependency" are currently considered universally incorrect and are outside the scope of the compatibility guarantees. This means that request-based dependency tracking registers strictly more edges than manual dependency tracking. It also means that once we fixup the clients that are passing "known private", we can completely remove these name lookup flags.
Finally, some tests had to change to accomodate the new scheme. Currently, we go out of our way to register a dependency edge for extensions that declare protocol conformances. However, we were also asserting in at least one test that extensions without protocol conformances weren't registering dependency edges. This is blatantly incorrect and has been undone now that the request-based scheme is automatically registering this edge.
Switch the direct operator lookup logic over to
querying the SourceLookupCache, then switch the
main operator lookup logic over to calling the
direct lookup logic rather than querying the
operator maps on the SourceFile.
This then allows us to remove the SourceFile
operator maps, in addition to the logic from
NameBinding that populated them. This requires
redeclaration checking to be implemented
separately.
Finally, to compensate for the caching that the old
operator maps were providing for imported results,
turn the operator lookup requests into cached
requests.
A request is intended to be a pure function of its inputs. That function could, in theory, fail. In practice, there were basically no requests taking advantage of this ability - the few that were using it to explicitly detect cycles can just return reasonable defaults instead of forwarding the error on up the stack.
This is because cycles are checked by *the Evaluator*, and are unwound by the Evaluator.
Therefore, restore the idea that the evaluate functions are themselves pure, but keep the idea that *evaluation* of those requests may fail. This model enables the best of both worlds: we not only keep the evaluator flexible enough to handle future use cases like cancellation and diagnostic invalidation, but also request-based dependencies using the values computed at the evaluation points. These aforementioned use cases would use the llvm::Expected interface and the regular evaluation-point interface respectively.
Factor out the lookup side of TypeChecker::conformsToProtocol so we have
a dependency registration point available for evaluator-based
dependencies that doesn't have re-entrancy problems.
Introduce DirectOperatorLookupRequest &
DirectPrecedenceGroupLookupRequest that lookup
operator and precedence groups within a given
file or module without looking through imports.
These will eventually be used as the basis for the
new operator lookup implementation, but for now
just use them when querying lookup results from
serialized module files.
Turn macro metaprogramming into template metaprogramming by defining a new kind of request that runs operator lookups.
This is the final piece of the puzzle for requestification of the current referenced name tracker system.
Soft revert a09382c. It should now be safe to add this flag back as an optimization to specifically disable lazy member loading instead of all extension loading.
Push the flag back everywhere it was needed, but also push it into lookup for associated type members which will never appear in extensions.
We’re going to start serializing this for public types that have non-public-or-@usableFromInline initializers, so turn it into a request that we can query and cache it in the existing bit.
This allows us use an OptionSet parameter for
the request (as currently we can't directly use it
as a parameter due to not having an == definition
for it). It also allows us to regain default
arguments for the source loc and flag parameters.