1. Array type parsing for postfix array types Int[]. We now handle this
in the parser, but remove the AST representation of this old form. We
also stop making vague promises about the future by saying that "fixed
size arrays aren't supported... yet". Removal of this fixes a compiler
crasher too.
2. Remove the special case support for migrating @autoclosure from types
to parameters, which was Swift 1.0/1.1 syntax. The world has moved or
we don't care anymore.
3. Remove upgrade support for # arguments (nee "backtick" arguments), which
was a Swift 1.x'ism abolished in an effort to simplify method naming
rules.
NFC on valid code.
This commit changes the Swift mangler from a utility that writes tokens into a
stream into a name-builder that has two phases: "building a name", and "ready".
This clear separation is needed for the implementation of the compression layer.
Users of the mangler can continue to build the name using the mangleXXX methods,
but to access the results the users of the mangler need to call the finalize()
method. This method can write the result into a stream, like before, or return
an std::string.
This times each phase of compilation, so you can see where time is being
spent. This doesn't cover all of compilation, but does get all the major
work being done.
Note that these times are non-overlapping, and should stay that way.
If we add more timers, they should go in a different timer group, so we
don't end up double-counting.
Based on a patch by @cwillmor---thanks, Chris!
Example output, from an -Onone build using a debug compiler:
===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===
Swift compilation
===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===
Total Execution Time: 8.7215 seconds (8.7779 wall clock)
---User Time--- --System Time-- --User+System-- ---Wall Time--- --- Name ---
2.6670 ( 30.8%) 0.0180 ( 25.3%) 2.6850 ( 30.8%) 2.7064 ( 30.8%) Type checking / Semantic analysis
1.9381 ( 22.4%) 0.0034 ( 4.8%) 1.9415 ( 22.3%) 1.9422 ( 22.1%) AST verification
1.0746 ( 12.4%) 0.0089 ( 12.5%) 1.0834 ( 12.4%) 1.0837 ( 12.3%) SILGen
0.8468 ( 9.8%) 0.0171 ( 24.0%) 0.8638 ( 9.9%) 0.8885 ( 10.1%) IRGen
0.6595 ( 7.6%) 0.0142 ( 20.0%) 0.6737 ( 7.7%) 0.6739 ( 7.7%) LLVM output
0.6449 ( 7.5%) 0.0019 ( 2.6%) 0.6468 ( 7.4%) 0.6469 ( 7.4%) SIL verification (pre-optimization)
0.3505 ( 4.1%) 0.0023 ( 3.2%) 0.3528 ( 4.0%) 0.3530 ( 4.0%) SIL optimization
0.2632 ( 3.0%) 0.0005 ( 0.7%) 0.2637 ( 3.0%) 0.2639 ( 3.0%) SIL verification (post-optimization)
0.0718 ( 0.8%) 0.0021 ( 3.0%) 0.0739 ( 0.8%) 0.0804 ( 0.9%) Parsing
0.0618 ( 0.7%) 0.0010 ( 1.4%) 0.0628 ( 0.7%) 0.0628 ( 0.7%) LLVM optimization
0.0484 ( 0.6%) 0.0011 ( 1.5%) 0.0495 ( 0.6%) 0.0495 ( 0.6%) Serialization (swiftmodule)
0.0240 ( 0.3%) 0.0006 ( 0.9%) 0.0246 ( 0.3%) 0.0267 ( 0.3%) Serialization (swiftdoc)
0.0000 ( 0.0%) 0.0000 ( 0.0%) 0.0000 ( 0.0%) 0.0000 ( 0.0%) Name binding
8.6505 (100.0%) 0.0710 (100.0%) 8.7215 (100.0%) 8.7779 (100.0%) Total
(Headers first)
It has been generally agreed that we need to do this reorg, and now
seems like the perfect time. Some major pass reorganization is in the
works.
This does not have to be the final word on the matter. The consensus
among those working on the code is that it's much better than what we
had and a better starting point for future bike shedding.
Note that the previous organization was designed to allow separate
analysis and optimization libraries. It turns out this is an
artificial distinction and not an important goal.
No intended functionality change, although this may make it easier to
get the REPL up and running on Linux. This is still useful for compiler
hackers even if it's not an end-user feature.
Swift SVN r31502
...and always serialize -working-directory for Clang. (But allow it to be
overridden by a later -Xcc -working-directory.)
Not having this has caused plenty of headaches for the debugger, which is the
primary client of this information. We can still get into bad situations with
search paths that don't exist at all (say, when a built framework is transferred
to another computer), but at least we won't fall over in multi-project workspaces.
This isn't an actual command-line option for a few reasons:
- SourceKit is still using frontend options directly, and they'll need something
like this to fix rdar://problem/21912068.
- We might want to be more formal about passing this to Clang.
- I don't actually like the existence of such an option for users.
We can revisit this later if the scales tip. Fixing the debugging issue is the
priority.
rdar://problem/21857902
Swift SVN r30500
Compute the hash of all interface tokens when parsing; write the
interface hash to the swiftdeps file, or if the -dump-interface-hash
option is passed to the frontend. This hash will be used in incremental
mode to determine whether a file's interface has changed, and therefore
whether dependent files need to be rebuilt in response to the change.
Committed on ChrisW's behalf while he gets his setup unborked.
rdar://problem/15352929
Swift SVN r30477
There's now a difference between "this file provides a particular type" and
"this file provides members on a particular type". Adding a conformance in
an extension is still considered "providing a type" because it can affect
things besides just lookups.
This modifies the swiftdeps file output (including the members used by a file),
but the driver hasn't been updated to take advantage of this yet.
Swift SVN r30285
Right now we just have one notion of providing or using a type (as opposed to a
name). It doesn't matter if you're doing lookups, or checking conformance, or
inheriting from a superclass or protocol -- they're all in the same bucket. I'd
like to split these out so that extending a commonly-used type (like, say, Array)
doesn't cause every file in your target to depend on your extension.
This commit doesn't do anything but start tracking which member names are looked
up. For the other things you can do with a type, it's using a dummy empty name.
Swift SVN r30284
- (depends|provides)-top-level for top-level names.
- (depends|provides)-nominal for access into nominal types.
- (depends|provides)-dynamic-lookup for @objc members available on AnyObject.
- depends-external for cross-module file-based dependencies.
No functionality change.
Swift SVN r30283
My 'declIsPrivate' predicate was too conservative: it saw a PatternBindingDecl,
didn't know what it was, and decided that meant it might not be private. Now it's
actually checking the decl kind and doing something reasonable for non-ValueDecls.
Swift SVN r30282
That's how everything behaved anyway. Might as well make it explicit and
stop special-casing it.
I've left in compatibility for modules built with older compilers so that
people using the OS toolchains aren't immediately unable to debug their apps.
As soon as we change the module format in a more significant way, I can take
this out.
Groundwork for rdar://problem/21254367; see next commit.
Swift SVN r29437
Adding a bang can be unsafe and may lead to silently adding crashes in user's code.
Err on the side of caution and let the compiler error stand so the user can review the code.
Swift SVN r28467
Modules occupy a weird space in the AST now: they can be treated like
types (Swift.Int), which is captured by ModuleType. They can be
treated like values for disambiguation (Swift.print), which is
captured by ModuleExpr. And we jump through hoops in various places to
store "either a module or a decl".
Start cleaning this up by transforming Module into ModuleDecl, a
TypeDecl that's implicitly created to describe a module. Subsequent
changes will start folding away the special cases (ModuleExpr ->
DeclRefExpr, name lookup results stop having a separate Module case,
etc.).
Note that the Module -> ModuleDecl typedef is there to limit the
changes needed. Much of this patch is actually dealing with the fact
that Module used to have Ctx and Name public members that now need to
be accessed via getASTContext() and getName(), respectively.
Swift SVN r28284
Mixed-source targets generally include the generated <Product>-Swift.h
header in many Objective-C (.m) source files. Any change to a Swift file
results in the header being touched, which means all the .m files get
recompiled.
This change makes Swift write the generated header to a temporary file
first, then use the previous commit's moveFileIfDifferent to put it in
its final destination.
rdar://problem/20553459
Swift SVN r28042
... with disabled test 1_stdlib/Bit.swift for ios.
Most likely the problem of 1_stdlib/Bit.swift (only on armv7) is just uncovered by this change.
Unfortunately I have no possibility to debug the problem on a device. Therefore I filed rdar://problem/20521110
Swift SVN r27274
This avoids that an unoptimized imported function is linked instead the optimized version from the stdlib.
rdar://problem/20485253
It gives considerable performance improvmenets for some benchmarks with -Onone. E.g.
PopFrontUnsafePointer: +281%
ArrayOfPOD: +92%
StrComplexWalk: +91%
ArrayOfGenericPOD: +61%
Several others are within the range of +10% to +30%.
For the implementation I added runSILPassesForOnone() in Passes.cpp.
Here we can add other optimizations for -Onone in the future.
Swift SVN r27206
Currently a no-op, but effective access for entities within the current
module will soon need to take testability into account. This declaration:
internal func foo() {}
has a formal access of 'internal', but an effective access of 'public' if
we're in a testable mode.
Part of rdar://problem/17732115 (testability)
Swift SVN r26472