This attribute makes it so that a parameter of the annotated type, as well as
any type structurally containing that type as a field, becomes passed as
if `@_addressable` if the return value of the function has a dependency on
the parameter. This allows nonescapable values to take interior pointers into
such types.
the async self-isolated actor initializer case.
Fixes rdar://138394497, a bug where we didn't set up isolation correctly for
an async parameter-isolated initializer, but also probably a non-trivial number
of other latent differences between initializers and normal functions.
When the CoroutineAccessors feature is enabled, `begin_apply`
instructions produce an additional result representing the allocation
done by the callee. Fix a couple of cases where this additional result
was not being handled.
This requires two major changes.
The first is that we need to teach SILGen that the isolation of an initializer
is essentially dynamic (as far as SILGen is concerned) --- that it needs to emit
code in order to get the isolation reference. To make this work, I needed to
refactor how we store the expected executor of a function so that it's not
always a constant value; instead, we'll need to emit code that DI will lower
properly. Fortunately, I can largely build on top of the work that Doug previously
did to support #isolation in these functions. The SIL we emit here around delegating
initializer calls is not ideal --- the breadcrumb hop ends up jumping to the
generic executor, and then DI actually emits the hop to the actor. This is a little
silly, but it's hard to eliminate without special-casing the self-rebinding, which
honestly we should consider rather than the weirdly global handling of that in
SILGen today. The optimizer should eliminate this hop pretty reliably, at least.
The second is that we need to teach DI to handle the pattern of code we get in
delegating initializers, where the builtin actually has to be passed the self var
rather than a class reference. This is because we don't *have* a class reference
that's consistently correct in these cases. This ended up being a fairly
straightforward generalization.
I also taught the hop_to_executor optimizer to skip over the initialization of
the default-actor header; there are a lot of simple cases where we still do emit
the prologue generic-executor hop, but at least the most trivial case is handled.
To do this better, we'd need to teach this bit of the optimizer that the properties
of self can be stored to in an initializer prior to the object having escaped, and
we don't have that information easily at hand, I think.
Fixes rdar://87485045.
For synchronous isolated closures passed to unsafe APIs
(the ones that have not been fully concurrency checked)
emit an expected executor check in prolog that would make
sure that they are always used in the expected context.
Resolves: rdar://133415157
The reason why I am fixing this is that otherwise, we get a warning when one
creates an actor isolated closure and pass it into a task, e.x.:
```swift
@MainActor func test() {
// We would get a warning on the closure below saying that we are sending
// a closure that is MainActor isolated.
Task {
...
}
}
```
Although I don't plan to bring over new assertions wholesale
into the current qualification branch, it's entirely possible
that various minor changes in main will use the new assertions;
having this basic support in the release branch will simplify that.
(This is why I'm adding the includes as a separate pass from
rewriting the individual assertions)
Stored `let` properties of a struct, class, or actor permit
'inout' modification within the constructor body after they have been
initialized. Tentatively remove this rule, only allowing such `let`
properties to be initialized (assigned to) and not treated as `inout`.
Fixes rdar://127258363.
We've been building up this exponential explosion of task-creation
builtins because it's not currently possible to overload builtins.
As long as all of the operands are scalar, though, it's pretty easy
to peephole optional injections in IRGen, which means we can at
least just use a single builtin in SIL and then break it apart in
IRGen to decide which options to set.
I also eliminated the metadata argument, which can easily be recreated
from the substitutions. I also added proper verification for the builtin,
which required (1) getting `@Sendable` right more consistently and (2)
updating a bunch of tests checking for things that are not actually
valid, like passing a function that returns an Int directly.
First, and I really should've checked this, but global actors do not
require `shared` to return `Self`; adjust the logic to propagate the
right formal type to the erasure logic.
Second, handle attempts to erase the isolation of something isolated to
a distributed actor using the magic Actor conformance that Doug added.
This only works when the actor is local, but it shouldn't be difficult to
enforce that we only attempt to erase isolation what that's true --- we
need to prevent partial application of distributed actors, and we need to
disallow explicit isolated captures of distributed actors when we're not
currently isolated to it. Otherwise, it's not possible to get an
@isolated(any) function value with an isolation that isn't the current
function's isolation, which means it always has to be local.
Fixed rdar://123734019
We do this by pushing the conversion down to the emission of the
closure expression, then teaching closure emission to apply the isolation
to the closure. Ideally, we combine the isolation along with the rest of
the conversion peephole, but if necessary, we make sure we emit the
isolation.
a closure expression, then don't actually do it. The long term plan is
to actually do this, which should just be a matter of taking some of the
code out of reabstraction thunk emission and using it in prolog/epilog/return
emission. In the short term, the goal is just to get the conversion
information down to the closure emitter so that we can see that we're
erasing into an `@isolated(any)` type and then actually erase the
closure's isolation properly instead of relying on type-based erasure,
which can't handle parameter/capture isolation correctly.
The main piece that's still missing here is support for closures;
they actually mostly work, but they infer the wrong isolation for
actor-isolated closures (it's not expressed in the type, so obviously
they're non-isolated), so it's not really functional. We also have
a significant problem where reabstraction thunks collide incorrectly
because we don't mangle (or represent!) formal isolation into
SILFunctionType; that's another follow-up. Otherwise, I think SILGen
is working.
This generates significantly better code directly out of SILGen, at
the cost of having to reimplement a little bit of the argument-emission
logic to handle default arguments. But it also neatly sidesteps the
problems we have with splitting tuple RValues when the tuple contains
a pack expansion, which will require some significant surgery to RValue
to fix. That, in turn, fixes rdar://121489308.
The thunk is a reabstraction thunk with a custom prolog that
has a runtime precondition check that makes sure that concurrent
environment where the thunk is run matches that of a global
actor associated with the thunked type.
Allow the use of typed throws for the main functions of `@main` types,
and thread the thrown error through to a new entry point in the library,
`_errorInMainTyped`, which is generic in the thrown error type.
Fixes rdar://121603043.
For `@preconcurrency` conformance witness thunks replace hop to
executor with a precondition to make sure that the thunk is always
called in the expected context.
Introduce SILGen support for reabstractions thunks that change the
error, between indirect and direct errors as well as conversions
amongst error types (e.g., from concrete to `any Error`).