This prevents the linker from trying to emit relative relocations to locally-defined public symbols into dynamic libraries, which gives ld.so heartache.
This reverts commit 062d14b422.
Revert "Fix a swift argument initialization bug - swift argument should be initialized"
This reverts commit 273b149583.
This breaks DebugAssert as well as REPL builds. Revert to appease the bots while i
look further.
after argc and argv are initialized. rdar://24250684
I reordered the CHECK statements in some tests to make them pass.
I tested this on Darwin and Linux.
And include some supplementary mangling changes:
- Give the first generic param (depth=0, index=0) a single character mangling. Even after removing the self type from method declaration types, 'Self' still shows up very frequently in protocol requirement signatures.
- Fix the mangling of generic parameter counts to elide the count when there's only one parameter at the starting depth of the mangling.
Together these carve another 154KB out of a debug standard library. There's some awkwardness in demangled strings that I'll clean up in subsequent commits; since decl types now only mangle the number of generic params at their own depth, it's context-dependent what depths those represent, which we get wrong now. Currying markers are also wrong, but since free function currying is going away, we can mangle the partial application thunks in different ways.
Swift SVN r32896
This is more resilient, since we want to be able to add more information behind the address point of type objects. The start of the metadata object is now an internal "full metadata" symbol.
Note that we can't do this for known opaque metadata from the C++ runtime, since clang doesn't have a good way to emit offset symbol aliases, so for non-nominal metadata objects we still emit an adjustment inline. We also aren't able to generate references to aliases within the same module due to an MC bug with alias refs on i386 and armv7 (rdar://problem/22450593).
Swift SVN r31523
This is more resilient, since we want to be able to add more information behind the address point of type objects, and also makes IR a lot less cluttered. The start of the metadata object is now an internal "full metadata" symbol.
Note that we can't do this for known opaque metadata from the C++ runtime, since clang doesn't have a good way to emit offset symbol aliases, so for non-nominal metadata objects we still emit an adjustment inline.
Swift SVN r31515
The absolute symbol reference isn't needed on OS X >=10.9 or any iOS/watchOS, which are the only Darwin platforms Swift targets. Fixes rdar://problem/22339638.
Swift SVN r31367
SILFunctionType of the method instead of its formal type.
Gives more accurate information to the @encoding, makes
foreign error conventions work implicitly, and allows
IRGen's Swift-to-Clang to avoid duplicating arbitrary
amounts of the bridging logic from SILGen.
Some finagling was required in order to avoid calling
getConstantFunctionType from within other kinds of
lowering, which might have re-entered a generic context.
Also required fixing a bug with the type lowering of
optional DynamicSelfTypes where we would end up with
a substituted type in the lowered type.
Also, for some reason, our @encoding for -dealloc
methods was pretending that there was a formal parameter.
There didn't seem to be any justification for this,
and it's not like Clang does that. Fixed.
This commit reapplies r29266 with a conservative build fix
that disables ObjC property descriptors for @objc properties
that lack a getter. That should only be possible in SIL
files, because @objc should force accessors to be synthesized.
Arguably, Sema shouldn't be marking things implicitly @objc
in SIL files, but I'll leave that decision open for now.
Swift SVN r29272
SILFunctionType of the method instead of its formal type.
Gives more accurate information to the @encoding, makes
foreign error conventions work implicitly, and allows
IRGen's Swift-to-Clang to avoid duplicating arbitrary
amounts of the bridging logic from SILGen.
Some finagling was required in order to avoid calling
getConstantFunctionType from within other kinds of
lowering, which might have re-entered a generic context.
Also required fixing a bug with the type lowering of
optional DynamicSelfTypes where we would end up with
a substituted type in the lowered type.
Also, for some reason, our @encoding for -dealloc
methods was pretending that there was a formal parameter.
There didn't seem to be any justification for this,
and it's not like Clang does that. Fixed.
Swift SVN r29266
Most tests were using %swift or similar substitutions, which did not
include the target triple and SDK. The driver was defaulting to the
host OS. Thus, we could not run the tests when the standard library was
not built for OS X.
Swift SVN r24504
Refuse to load a module if it was compiled for a different architecture or
OS, or if its minimum deployment target is newer than the current target.
Additionally, provide the target triple as part of pre-loading validation
for clients who care (like LLDB).
Part of rdar://problem/17670778
Swift SVN r24469
Doing so is safe even though we have mock SDK. The include paths for
modules with the same name in the real and mock SDKs are different, and
the module files will be distinct (because they will have a different
hash).
This reduces test runtime on OS X by 30% and brings it under a minute on
a 16-core machine.
This also uncovered some problems with some tests -- even when run for
iOS configurations, some tests would still run with macosx triple. I
fixed the tests where I noticed this issue.
rdar://problem/19125022
Swift SVN r23683
We lazily realize classes when we access their metadata now, so there's no need to force the ObjC runtime to do this greedily anymore, except for classes that the runtime statically references. For those cases, add an @objc_non_lazy_realization class attribute that will put that class reference in the nlclslist section.
Swift SVN r23105
-enable-source-import doesn't play nice with debug info, and we want to be
able to run all tests with -g added. The last few tests that require
-enable-source-import could be built with --no-debug-info, or however we
end up spelling that.
rdar://problem/18140021 (most of it)
Swift SVN r22742
This is needed for tests which define internal functions which should not be eliminated.
So far this was not needed because of a hack which prevented whole-module-optimizations for tests.
Swift SVN r22658
Now the SILLinkage for functions and global variables is according to the swift visibility (private, internal or public).
In addition, the fact whether a function or global variable is considered as fragile, is kept in a separate flag at SIL level.
Previously the linkage was used for this (e.g. no inlining of less visible functions to more visible functions). But it had no effect,
because everything was public anyway.
For now this isFragile-flag is set for public transparent functions and for everything if a module is compiled with -sil-serialize-all,
i.e. for the stdlib.
For details see <rdar://problem/18201785> Set SILLinkage correctly and better handling of fragile functions.
The benefits of this change are:
*) Enable to eliminate unused private and internal functions
*) It should be possible now to use private in the stdlib
*) The symbol linkage is as one would expect (previously almost all symbols were public).
More details:
Specializations from fragile functions (e.g. from the stdlib) now get linkonce_odr,default
linkage instead of linkonce_odr,hidden, i.e. they have public visibility.
The reason is: if such a function is called from another fragile function (in the same module),
then it has to be visible from a third module, in case the fragile caller is inlined but not
the specialized function.
I had to update lots of test files, because many CHECK-LABEL lines include the linkage, which has changed.
The -sil-serialize-all option is now handled at SILGen and not at the Serializer.
This means that test files in sil format which are compiled with -sil-serialize-all
must have the [fragile] attribute set for all functions and globals.
The -disable-access-control option doesn't help anymore if the accessed module is not compiled
with -sil-serialize-all, because the linker will complain about unresolved symbols.
A final note: I tried to consider all the implications of this change, but it's not a low-risk change.
If you have any comments, please let me know.
Swift SVN r22215
This was preventing generic subclasses of NSObject unnecessarily
rdar://problem/17417625, and there is no reason to compute the
encoding for each one: it will always be @?.
Swift SVN r21777
Some tools expect the encoding string to always be there (like KVO).
By using an empty string, this becomes valid while still not exposing
details of the ivar's layout. We can decide later if that would be a
good thing to do.
<rdar://problem/17203246>
Swift SVN r19851
Instead of hacking together inaccurate metadata only for object-typed properties, make an effort to produce accurate metadata for all types of properties, and accurately capture the "copy", "dynamic", and "weak" semantics of some properties. This is necessary for Core Data to accurately synthesize property accessors for non-object properties; currently it will generate bogus object accessors over properties with non-object type. <rdar://problem/17373368>
This isn't fully accurate, since Clang hides property type encoding behind a 'getObjCEncodingForPropertyDecl' that only accepts an ObjCPropertyDecl. With some refactoring, it should be possible to expose this.
Swift SVN r19567
- Change the parser to accept "objc" without an @ sign as a contextual
keyword, including the dance to handle the general parenthesized case.
- Update all comments to refer to "objc" instead of "@objc".
- Update all diagnostics accordingly.
- Update all tests that fail due to the diagnostics change.
- Switch the stdlib to use the new syntax.
This does not switch all tests to use the new syntax, nor does it warn about
the old syntax yet. That will be forthcoming. Also, this needs a bit of
refactoring, which will be coming up.
Swift SVN r19555