This patch adds support for a builtin function assert_configuration that is
replaced by constant progpagation by an appropriate value dependent on a compile
time setting. This replacement can also be disabled when serializing sil for a
library.
Using this mechanism we implement assertions that can be disabled (or whose
behavior changes) depending on compile time build settings (Debug, Release,
DisableReplacement).
In the standard library we can now write one assert function that uses this
builtin function to provide different compile time selectable runtime behavior.
Example
Assert.swift:
@transparent
func assert<T : LogicValue>(
condition: @auto_closure () -> T, message: StaticString = StaticString(),
// Do not supply these parameters explicitly; they will be filled in
// by the compiler and aren't even present when asserts are disabled
file: StaticString = __FILE__, line: UWord = __LINE__
) {
// Only in debug mode.
if _isDebug() {
assert(condition().getLogicValue(), message, file, line)
}
}
AssertCommon.swift:
@transparent
func _isDebug() -> Bool {
return Int32(Builtin.assert_configuration()) == 0;
}
rdar://16458612
Swift SVN r16472
We can just get it from the instance type, if the instance type has been fully initialized, which is the case except during parsing of type decls when the decls' own types are being formed.
Swift SVN r15598
This builtin returns true for types that might be ObjC class types. We want to use this builtin to optimize away NSArray handling for non-object Array types, so it needs to persist in SIL long enough for specialization to do its thing, but we never actually want to pay a runtime cost for this check, so always lower it to a constant value at IRGen time. Handle this by having canBeObjCClass return a tri-state "yes/maybe/no" result. In SILGen, we only fold away obviously "yes" or "no" cases, and in IRGen, we fold away "maybe" cases as "yes".
The optimizer will need to learn about this builtin too, but that part isn't done yet.
Swift SVN r13980
GenericSignatures with no params or requirements are a bug, so verify that they don't happen by making GenericSignature::get return null and GenericFunctionType assert that it has a nonnull signature. Hack Sema not to try to produce nongeneric GenericFunctionTypes when a function in a local type in a generic function context is type-checked; there's a deeper modeling issue that needs to be fixed here, but that's beyond the scope of 1.0. Now that GenericSignature always has at least one subtype, its factories no longer need an independent ASTContext argument.
Swift SVN r13837
Change GenericFunctionType to reference a GenericSignature instead of containing its generic parameters and requirements in-line, and clean up some interface type APIs that awkwardly returned ArrayRef pairs to instead return GenericSignatures instead.
Swift SVN r13807
Most of the complexity here is teaching SILGen how to handle closed-over direct
accesses to observing properties, since all of the getter/setter/willSet/didSet
members of the property are actually full closures when in a function body.
We generate correct but really terrible code here, since the setter captures the
willset/didset members themselves. I'm not worrying about the performance of
this construct though, functionality is what matters.
Swift SVN r13778
now that they are implicitly updated. This exposes two things:
1) we're unncessarily serializing selfdecls in ctors and dtors.
2) The index pattern of a SubscriptDecl has no sensible DeclContext that
owns variables in it.
I'll deal with the first tomorrow, I'm not sure what to do with
the second one.
Swift SVN r13703
In the long term we want more detailed configurability of runtime checks, but for our short-term performance work we just want a blanket on/off switch. Add a StripRuntimeChecks SIL pass that, as a start, converts invocations of checked overflow builtins to the equivalent unchecked builtins and kills cond_fails. Expose it through the compiler with a -disable-all-runtime-checks switch.
NB: I haven't tested building the stdlib or running the tests with the switch thrown yet.
Swift SVN r12379
with qualifiers on it, we have two distinct types:
- LValueType(T) aka @lvalue T, which is used for mutable values on the LHS of an
assignment in the typechecker.
- InOutType(T) aka @inout T, which is used for @inout arguments, and the implicit
@inout self argument of mutable methods on value types. This type is also used
at the SIL level for address types.
While I detangled a number of cases that were checking for LValueType (without checking
qualifiers) and only meant @inout or @lvalue, there is more to be done here. Notably,
getRValueType() still strips @inout, which is totally and unbearably wrong.
Swift SVN r11727
(various) FunctionType::get's, ArrayType::get,
ArraySliceType::get, OptionalType::get, and a few
other places.
There is more to be done here, but this is all I plan to do
for now.
Swift SVN r11497
This completes the FileUnit refactoring. A module consists of multiple
FileUnits, which provide decls from various file-like sources. I say
"file-like" because the Builtin module is implemented with a single
BuiltinUnit, and imported Clang modules are just a single FileUnit source
within a module.
Most modules, therefore, contain a single file unit; only the main module
will contain multiple source files (and eventually partial AST files).
The term "translation unit" has been scrubbed from the project. To refer
to the context of declarations outside of any other declarations, use
"top-level" or "module scope". To refer to a .swift file or its DeclContext,
use "source file". To refer to a single unit of compilation, use "module",
since the model is that an entire module will be compiled with a single
driver call. (It will still be possible to compile a single source file
through the direct-to-frontend interface, but only in the context of the
whole module.)
Swift SVN r10837
The goal of this series of commits is to allow the main module to consist
of both source files and AST files, where the AST files represent files
that were already built and don't need to be rebuilt, or of Swift source
files and imported Clang headers that share a module (because they are in
the same target).
Currently modules are divided into different kinds, and that defines how
decls are looked up, how imports are managed, etc. In order to achieve the
goal above, that polymorphism should be pushed down to the individual units
within a module, so that instead of TranslationUnit, BuiltinModule,
SerializedModule, and ClangModule, we have SourceFile, BuiltinUnit,
SerializedFile, and ClangUnit. (Better names welcome.) At that point we can
hopefully collapse TranslationUnit into Module and make Module non-polymorphic.
This commit makes SourceFile the subclass of an abstract FileUnit, and
makes TranslationUnit hold an array of FileUnits instead of SourceFiles.
To demonstrate that this is actually working, the Builtin module has also
been converted to FileUnit: it is now a TranslationUnit containing a single
BuiltinUnit.
Swift SVN r10830
This lowers to a call to a to-be-written swift_once runtime function and will be used for lazy global initialization. Having this be a builtin seemed appropriate to me given that:
- references to it will be implicitly emitted by SILGen for global initializers.
- there are restrictions on its correct use that are currently impossible to express in the language outside of the stdlib.
Swift SVN r10508
Instead of hardcoding Builtin.Word to be an alias for Builtin.Int64, make it its own type of abstract pointer width.
- Change BuiltinIntegerType's width representation to accommodate abstract widths.
- In the AST and in SIL, store values of the types as the greatest supported size for the abstract width (64 bits for a pointer).
- Add some type safety to the ([sz]ext|trunc)(OrBitCast)? builtins that they're used appropriately given the upper and lower bounds of the abstract sizes they're working with.
- Now that Builtin.Word is a distinct type, give it its own mangling.
- In IRGen, lower pointer-sized BuiltinIntegerType appropriately for the target, and truncate lowered SIL values if necessary.
Fixes <rdar://problem/15367913>.
Swift SVN r10467
Apply the same prefix-chopping logic as for NS_ENUM to produce static property names to put inside the Swift type we create. For now, continue importing NS_OPTIONS as structs with a single integer field; in the short term it's easy to put a C-like interface over them this way.
Swift SVN r10434
Add new builtins(by generalizing, renaming, and extending the builtins used for compile time integer literal checking). These new builtins truncate integers and check for overflow/truncation errors at runtime. Use these for FixedPoint conversion constructors.
Fix a routine in stdlib's String implementation and a test that relied on bitwise behavior of the constructors (and triggered overflows).
TODO:
- Teach CCP about these to get static checking.
- Add special builtins for same size signed <-> unsigned conversions.
Swift SVN r10432
(This only fails under -DSWIFT_OPTIMIZED=NO; most likely due to an llvm bug.)
We've decided that it's best to specialize each arithmetic builtin that could overflow, instead of calling a separate generic "staticReport" builtin and passing it enough info to produce the message. The main advantage of this approach is that it would be possible for the compiler to customize the message and better link it to the builtin that overflows. For example, the constants that participated in the computation could be printed. In addition, less code will be generated and the compiler could, in the future, automatically emit the overflow diagnostics/trap at runtime.
This patch introduces new versions of op_with_overflow swift builtins. Which are lowered to llvm.op_with_overflow builtins in IRGen after the static diagnostics. If the last argument to the builtins evaluates to true, the overflow is unintentional. CCP uses the builtins to diagnose the overflow detectable at compile time. FixedPoint is changed to rely on these in implementation of primitive arithmetic operations.
Swift SVN r9328