Commit Graph

8 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Allan Shortlidge
a6eb7e494b AST: Fix weak linking for potentially unavailable accessors in extensions.
In https://github.com/swiftlang/swift/pull/78454 queries for the platform
availability of decl were consolidated into
`Decl::getAvailableAttrForPlatformIntroduction()`. In addition to checking the
attributes directly attached to the decl, this method also checks whether the
decl is a member directly contained inside of an extension and checks for
attributes attached to the extension as well. Previously, this logic was only
used for availability checking diagnostics, where special casing extension
members was a requirement. As a result of the consolidation, though, the logic
is now also shared by the query that determines whether to weakly link symbols
associated with a decl. That determination already had its own way of handling
members of extensions but it seemed like consolidating the logic would stil be
a net improvement that would reduce overall complexity.

Unfortunately, the existing approach to getting the availability of the
enclosing extension had a subtle bug for both AccessorDecl and OpaqueTypeDecl.
If an AvailableAttr was not directly attached to the immediate decl, then
`Decl::getAvailableAttrForPlatformIntroduction()` would check if the enclosing
decl context was an extension and look at its attributes as well. For
AccessorDecl and OpaqueTypeDecl, checking the enclosing decl context would
accidentally skip over the VarDecl and AbstractFunctionDecl that are formally
the parents of those decls for the purposes of attribute inheritance. As a
result, the availability of the enclosing property or function could be ignored
if the enclosing extension had explicit availability attributes.

The fix is to use `AvailabilityInference::parentDeclForInferredAvailability()`
instead of `getDeclContext()` when looking for the immediately enclosing
extension.

Resolves rdar://143139472.
2025-01-24 17:43:42 -08:00
Allan Shortlidge
ebbf7b4264 IRGen: Split hoisting tests out of weak_import_native.swift into a new test case.
Once the `CHECK-DAG` directives in `weak_import_native` were being recognized correctly, the `CHECK:` lines later in the test were interfering with `CHECK-DAG` matches because some of them straddled the existing `CHECK:` lines.
2022-08-04 15:19:01 -07:00
Slava Pestov
8bdc54ebb3 IRGen: More precise CHECK lines for test/IRGen/weak_import_native.swift 2019-06-01 00:08:05 -04:00
Arnold Schwaighofer
0c01906218 Address review feedback 2018-12-12 08:22:09 -08:00
Slava Pestov
cc3730f410 AST: A conformance is weak-linked if its protocol, conforming type or extension is @_weakLinked
Fixes <rdar://problem/46316197>.
2018-12-03 20:36:03 -05:00
Slava Pestov
473a2cb38c AST: Members of @_weakLinked types are implicitly @_weakLinked 2018-12-03 20:36:03 -05:00
Slava Pestov
57979d1f7c IRGen: Use @_weakLinked to test backward deployment of resilient protocols
Get the attribute working for more link entity kinds, which addresses
all the FIXME:s in the original test case.

Now the protocol resilience tests can be updated to use @_weakLinked
for all newly-added protocol requirements and default implementations.

This allows the tests to pass in the backward deployment test scenario
as well.

Eventually this will be based on availability instead of a special
attribute.

This completes <rdar://problem/29888071>.
2018-10-31 19:55:01 -04:00
Jordan Rose
bb339778b4 Add @_weakLinked and a corresponding SIL attribute
This is mostly intended to be used for testing at this point; in the
long run, we want to be using availability information to decide
whether to weak-link something or not. You'll notice a bunch of FIXMEs
in the test case that we may not need now, but will probably need to
handle in the future.

Groundwork for doing backward-deployment execution tests.
2018-02-20 17:55:31 -08:00