Global let-variables are immutable, except in functions which initialize them.
This brings back handling of global let-variables in alias analysis, which was removed in the previous commit.
Although a let-field can never be mutated, a release or consume of the class must be considered as writing to such a field.
This change removes the special handling of let-fields in two places, where they don't belong.
Class fields are handled by ImmutableScope anyway.
Handling of global let-variable is temporarily removed by this commit.
Fixes a miscompile.
rdar://142996449
This encourages AccessPathWalker clients to handle enclosing mark_deps. In
some cases, it is necessary. The accessBaseWithScopes API now provides both
nested begin_access and mark_dependence.
Checking if an access base is derived from a begin-borrow was too optimistic.
We have to bail for instructions which are not handled by the walker utilities.
Fixes a verifier crash.
rdar://139788357
Add `Value.constantAccessPath`. It is like `accessPath`, but ensures that the projectionPath only contains "constant" elements.
This means: if the access contains an `index_addr` projection with a non-constant index, the `projectionPath` does _not_ contain the `index_addr`.
Instead, the `base` is an `AccessBase.index` which refers to the `index_addr`.
The main changes are:
*) Rewrite everything in swift. So far, parts of memory-behavior analysis were already implemented in swift. Now everything is done in swift and lives in `AliasAnalysis.swift`. This is a big code simplification.
*) Support many more instructions in the memory-behavior analysis - especially OSSA instructions, like `begin_borrow`, `end_borrow`, `store_borrow`, `load_borrow`. The computation of end_borrow effects is now much more precise. Also, partial_apply is now handled more precisely.
*) Simplify and reduce type-based alias analysis (TBAA). The complexity of the old TBAA comes from old days where the language and SIL didn't have strict aliasing and exclusivity rules (e.g. for inout arguments). Now TBAA is only needed for code using unsafe pointers. The new TBAA handles this - and not more. Note that TBAA for classes is already done in `AccessBase.isDistinct`.
*) Handle aliasing in `begin_access [modify]` scopes. We already supported truly immutable scopes like `begin_access [read]` or `ref_element_addr [immutable]`. For `begin_access [modify]` we know that there are no other reads or writes to the access-address within the scope.
*) Don't cache memory-behavior results. It turned out that the hit-miss rate was pretty bad (~ 1:7). The overhead of the cache lookup took as long as recomputing the memory behavior.
Mostly restore the behavior of getMemoryEffectsFn on builtins other than
`once` and `onceWithContext` to before
8a8a895239 but keeping the improvement to
return `Instruction.memoryEffects` in the face of escaping.
Layers:
- FunctionConvention: AST FunctionType: results, parameters
- ArgumentConventions: SIL function arguments
- ApplyOperandConventions: applied operands
The meaning of an integer index is determined by the collection
type. All the mapping between the various indices (results,
parameters, SIL argument, applied arguments) is restricted to the
collection type that owns that mapping. Remove the concept of a
"caller argument index".
Introduce two modes of bridging:
* inline mode: this is basically how it worked so far. Using full C++ interop which allows bridging functions to be inlined.
* pure mode: bridging functions are not inlined but compiled in a cpp file. This allows to reduce the C++ interop requirements to a minimum. No std/llvm/swift headers are imported.
This change requires a major refactoring of bridging sources. The implementation of bridging functions go to two separate files: SILBridgingImpl.h and OptimizerBridgingImpl.h.
Depending on the mode, those files are either included in the corresponding header files (inline mode), or included in the c++ file (pure mode).
The mode can be selected with the BRIDGING_MODE cmake variable. By default it is set to the inline mode (= existing behavior). The pure mode is only selected in certain configurations to work around C++ interop issues:
* In debug builds, to workaround a problem with LLDB's `po` command (rdar://115770255).
* On windows to workaround a build problem.
We already use a complexity limit for other functions in AliasAnalysis.
This is a workaround for quadratic complexity in ARCSequenceOpts.
Fixes a compile time problem
rdar://114352817
* Check if the address in question is even visible from outside the function
* Return the memory effects of the called function
Also, add a new API `Instruction.memoryEffects`, which is internally used by `mayReadFromMemory` et al.
The `isEscaping` function is called a lot from ARCSequenceOpt and ReleaseHoisting.
To avoid quadratic complexity for large functions, limit the amount of work what the EscapeUtils are allowed to to.
This keeps the complexity linear.
The arbitrary limit is good enough for almost all functions.
It lets the EscapeUtils do several hundred up/down walks which is much more than needed in most cases.
Fixes a compiler hang
https://github.com/apple/swift/issues/63846
rdar://105795976
* split the `PassContext` into multiple protocols and structs: `Context`, `MutatingContext`, `FunctionPassContext` and `SimplifyContext`
* change how instruction passes work: implement the `simplify` function in conformance to `SILCombineSimplifyable`
* add a mechanism to add a callback for inserted instructions
`EscapeInfo` now conforms to the generic protocols defined in `WalkUtils`.
This simplifies the implementation a bit, since trivial instructions are handled
by `WalkUtils` and `EscapeInfo` only has to handle a subset of instructions
inherent to escape information.
Passes using `EscapeInfo` are updated accordingly to become visitors that
customize the `EscapeInfo` walk.