Swift 5.7 added stronger index validation for `String`, so some illegal cases that previously triggered inconsistently diagnosed out of bounds accesses now result in reliable runtime errors. Similarly, attempts at applying an index originally vended by a UTF-8 string on a UTF-16 string now result in a reliable runtime error.
As is usually the case, new traps to the stdlib exposes code that contains previously undiagnosed / unreliably diagnosed coding issues.
Allow invalid code in binaries built with earlier versions of the stdlib to continue running with the 5.7 library by disabling some of the new traps based on the version of Swift the binary was built with.
In the case of an index encoding mismatch, allow transcoding of string storage regardless of the direction of the mismatch. (Previously we only allowed transcoding a UTF-8 string to UTF-16.)
rdar://93379333
These trigger Objective-C exceptions in Foundation, but the fact these operations reliably trap when applied to foreign strings is part of the String contract in the stdlib, and we should have regression tests for them.
Certain traps can't be supported on WASI, such as expectations for crashes, `setjmp` use, dynamic linking, multi-threading etc. These tests are marked as `UNSUPPORTED` when targeting Wasm/WASI.
Fixes a general category (pun intended) of scalar-alignment bugs
surrounding exchanging non-scalar-aligned indices between views and
for slicing.
SE-0180 unifies the Index type of String and all its views and allows
non-scalar-aligned indices to be used across views. In order to
guarantee behavior, we often have to check and perform scalar
alignment. To speed up these checks, we allocate a bit denoting
known-to-be-aligned, so that the alignment check can skip the
load. The below shows what views need to check for alignment before
they can operate, and whether the indices they produce are aligned.
┌───────────────╥────────────────────┬──────────────────────────┐
│ View ║ Requires Alignment │ Produces Aligned Indices │
╞═══════════════╬════════════════════╪══════════════════════════╡
│ Native UTF8 ║ no │ no │
├───────────────╫────────────────────┼──────────────────────────┤
│ Native UTF16 ║ yes │ no │
╞═══════════════╬════════════════════╪══════════════════════════╡
│ Foreign UTF8 ║ yes │ no │
├───────────────╫────────────────────┼──────────────────────────┤
│ Foreign UTF16 ║ no │ no │
╞═══════════════╬════════════════════╪══════════════════════════╡
│ UnicodeScalar ║ yes │ yes │
├───────────────╫────────────────────┼──────────────────────────┤
│ Character ║ yes │ yes │
└───────────────╨────────────────────┴──────────────────────────┘
The "requires alignment" applies to any operation taking a
String.Index that's not defined entirely in terms of other operations
taking a String.Index. These include:
* index(after:)
* index(before:)
* subscript
* distance(from:to:) (since `to` is compared against directly)
* UTF16View._nativeGetOffset(for:)
String.Index has an encodedOffset-based initializer and computed
property that exists for serialization purposes. It was documented as
UTF-16 in the SE proposal introducing it, which was String's
underlying encoding at the time, but the dream of String even then was
to abstract away whatever encoding happend to be used.
Serialization needs an explicit encoding for serialized indices to
make sense: the offsets need to align with the view. With String
utilizing UTF-8 encoding for native contents in Swift 5, serialization
isn't necessarily the most efficient in UTF-16.
Furthermore, the majority of usage of encodedOffset in the wild is
buggy and operates under the assumption that a UTF-16 code unit was a
Swift Character, which isn't even valid if the String is known to be
all-ASCII (because CR-LF).
This change introduces a pair of semantics-preserving alternatives to
encodedOffset that explicitly call out the UTF-16 assumption. These
serve as a gentle off-ramp for current mis-uses of encodedOffset.
I failed to merge the upstream changes to swift-corelibs-foundation at the same
time as I merged that #9806, and it broke on linux. Going to get it right this
time.
This decreases total testing time by over a minute on my old Mac Pro.
It probably has much less effect on systems with fewer cores, but shouldn't
be any worse there.
Swift SVN r22745
algorithm
The implementation uses a specialized trie that has not been tuned to the table
data. I tried guessing parameter values that should work well, but did not do
any performance measurements.
There is no efficient way to initialize arrays with static data in Swift. The
required tables are being generated as C++ code in the runtime library.
rdar://16013860
Swift SVN r19340