This changes the minimized signature in a very narrow edge case.
If you have
class C : P {}
and also
protocol P : C {}
protocol P where Self : C {}
then <T where T : P, T : C> now becomes <T : P> both with spellings;
before, the first one gave <T : P> and the second <T : C>.
- Don't pass 'verify' since it's now the default
- Update tests where diagnostics changed in a correct way to pass 'on' instead
- Delete compiler_scale/explicit_requirements_perf.swift since it's not testing anything with the requirement machine
Consider this example:
protocol P : C {}
class C : P {}
<T where T : P>
The GenericSignatureBuilder thinks the minimized signature is
<T where T : P>. The RequirementMachine would minimize it down to
<T where T : C>. The latter is more correct, since the conformance
here is concrete and no witness table needs to be passed in at
runtime, however for strict binary compatibility we need to produce
the same signature as the GenericSignatureBuilder.
Accomplish this by changing the minimal conformances algorithm to
detect "circular concrete conformance rules", which take the form
[P].[concrete: C : Q]
Where Q : P. These rules are given special handling. Ordinarily a
protocol conformance rule is eliminated before a concrete conformance
rule; however concrete conformances derived from circular
conformances are considered to be redundant from the get-go,
preventing protocol conformances that can be written in terms of
such concrete conformances from themselves becoming redundant.
Fixes rdar://problem/89633532.