Commit Graph

11 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Erik Eckstein
7cceaff5f3 SIL: don't print operand types in textual SIL
Type annotations for instruction operands are omitted, e.g.

```
  %3 = struct $S(%1, %2)
```

Operand types are redundant anyway and were only used for sanity checking in the SIL parser.

But: operand types _are_ printed if the definition of the operand value was not printed yet.
This happens:

* if the block with the definition appears after the block where the operand's instruction is located

* if a block or instruction is printed in isolation, e.g. in a debugger

The old behavior can be restored with `-Xllvm -sil-print-types`.
This option is added to many existing test files which check for operand types in their check-lines.
2024-11-21 18:49:52 +01:00
Allan Shortlidge
75bad99f78 Tests: Remove -disable-availability-checking in Distributed tests.
Use the `%target-swift-5.X-abi-triple` substitutions to compile the tests for
deployment to the minimum OS versions required for the APIs used in the tests,
instead of disabling availability checking.
2024-10-20 09:07:13 -07:00
Michael Gottesman
d28eef2d62 [sending] Convert the TaskGroup APIs 2024-06-21 06:11:17 -07:00
Konrad `ktoso` Malawski
168bc7b454 [Concurrency] Fix how we obtain DA-as-A conformance for cross module
Resolves rdar://127206143
2024-05-28 13:37:21 +09:00
Holly Borla
0e7ad76416 [NFC] Fix a distributed actor test failure due to IRGen ptrauth differences. 2024-05-24 13:09:48 -07:00
Doug Gregor
14fc015d51 Ensure that we map the capture isolation into context
Failing to map the type of an isolation capture into context
caused assertions in type lowering. Fixes the build of the
swift-distributed-actors package.
2024-03-25 17:13:33 -07:00
Alexis Laferrière
4209844dfd Tests: disable Distributed/distributed_actor_to_actor.swift on arm64e 2024-03-13 10:22:03 -07:00
John McCall
dd90ae7416 Rename SIL's @isolated attribute to @sil_isolated.
We want to use @isolated in ordinary Swift, and while we could probably
make it coexist with this SIL use, doing so would be really inconvenient.
2024-02-03 01:51:36 -05:00
Michael Gottesman
bfc12c550c Fix another test 2024-01-23 16:24:53 -08:00
Doug Gregor
a25911ef8c Remove unnecessary Darwin-specific check 2024-01-22 21:13:19 -08:00
Doug Gregor
97ea19d191 Introduce a builtin and API for getting the local actor from a distributed one
When an actual instance of a distributed actor is on the local node, it is
has the capabilities of `Actor`. This isn't expressible directly in the type
system, because not all `DistributedActor`s are `Actor`s, nor is the
opposite true.

Instead, provide an API `DistributedActor.asLocalActor` that can only
be executed when the distributed actor is known to be local (because
this API is not itself `distributed`), and produces an existential
`any Actor` referencing that actor. The resulting existential value
carries with it a special witness table that adapts any type
conforming to the DistributedActor protocol into a type that conforms
to the Actor protocol. It is "as if" one had written something like this:

    extension DistributedActor: Actor { }

which, of course, is not permitted in the language. Nonetheless, we
lovingly craft such a witness table:

* The "type" being extended is represented as an extension context,
rather than as a type context. This hasn't been done before, all Swift
runtimes support it uniformly.

* A special witness is provided in the Distributed library to implement
the `Actor.unownedExecutor` operation. This witness back-deploys to the
Swift version were distributed actors were introduced (5.7). On Swift
5.9 runtimes (and newer), it will use
`DistributedActor.unownedExecutor` to support custom executors.

* The conformance of `Self: DistributedActor` is represented as a
conditional requirement, which gets satisfied by the witness table
that makes the type a `DistributedActor`. This makes the special
witness work.

* The witness table is *not* visible via any of the normal runtime
lookup tables, because doing so would allow any
`DistributedActor`-conforming type to conform to `Actor`, which would
break the safety model.

* The witness table is emitted on demand in any client that needs it.
In back-deployment configurations, there may be several witness tables
for the same concrete distributed actor conforming to `Actor`.
However, this duplication can only be observed under fairly extreme
circumstances (where one is opening the returned existential and
instantiating generic types with the distributed actor type as an
`Actor`, then performing dynamic type equivalence checks), and will
not be present with a new Swift runtime.

All of these tricks together mean that we need no runtime changes, and
`asLocalActor` back-deploys as far as distributed actors, allowing it's
use in `#isolation` and the async for...in loop.
2024-01-22 17:27:31 -08:00