Adds a new flag "-experimental-skip-all-function-bodies" that skips
typechecking and SIL generation for all function bodies (where
possible).
`didSet` functions are still typechecked and have SIL generated as their
body is checked for the `oldValue` parameter, but are not serialized.
Parsing will generally be skipped as well, but this isn't necessarily
the case since other flags (eg. "-verify-syntax-tree") may force delayed
parsing off.
Extend effects checking to ensure that each reference to a variable
bound by an 'async let' is covered by an "await" expression and occurs
in a suitable context.
getFragileFunctionKind() would report that all initializers in
non-resilient public types were inlinable, including static
properties.
This was later patched by VarDecl::isInitExposedToClients(),
which was checked in diagnoseInlinableDeclRefAccess().
However, the latter function only looked at the innermost
DeclContexts, not all parent contexts, so it would incorrectly
diagnose code with a nested DeclContext inside of a static
property initializer.
Fix this by changing getFragileFunctionKind() to call
isInitExposedToClients() and simplifying
diagnoseInlinableDeclRefAccess().
This commit also introduces a new isLayoutExposedToClients()
method, which is similar to isInitExposedToClients(), except
it also returns 'true' if the property does not have an
initializer (and in fact the latter is implemented in terms
of the former).
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
Extend the actor isolation checking rules to account for global
actors. For example, a function annotated with a given global actor
can invoke synchronous methods from the same global actor, but not
from a different global actor or a particular actor instance.
Similarly, a method of an (instance) actor that is annotated with a
global actor attribute is not part of the (instance) actor and,
therefore, cannot operate on its actor-isolated state.
Global actor types can be used as attributes on various kinds of
declarations to indicate that those declarations are part of the
isolated state of that global actor. Allow such annotation and perform
basic correctness checks.
The globalActor attribute indicates that a particular type describes a
global actor. Global actors allow the notion of actor state isolation
to be spread across various declarations throughout a program, rather
than being centered around a single actor class. There are useful
primarily for existing notions such as "main thread" or subsystems
accessed through global/singleton state.
Actor classes never have non-actor superclasses, so we can ensure that
all actor classes have a common vtable prefix for the
`enqueue(partialTask:)` operation. This allows us to treat all actor
classes uniformly, without having to go through the Actor witness
table every time.
Introduce a new Actor protocol, which is a class-bound protocol with only
one requirement:
func enqueue(partialTask: PartialAsyncTask)
All actor classes implicitly conform to this protocol, and will synthesize
a (currently empty) definition of `enqueue(partialTask:)` unless a suitable
one is provided explicitly.
This method had a messy contract:
- Setting the diags parameter to nullptr inhibited caching
- The initExpr out parameter could only used if no result
had yet been cached
Let's instead use the request evaluator here.
Infer @asyncHandler on a protocol methods that follow the delegate
convention of reporting that something happened via a "did" method, so
long as they also meet the constraints for an @asyncHandler method in
Swift. This enables inference of @asyncHandler for witnesses of these
methods.
We'll need this to get the right 'selfDC' when name lookup
finds a 'self' declaration in a capture list, eg
class C {
func bar() {}
func foo() {
_ = { [self] in bar() }
}
}