Add a LIBRARY_LEVEL record to the .swiftmodule options block so the
declared -library-level value survives across compilations. Without
this, imported modules have to always fell back to a path heuristic
that could only distinguish API vs SPI and never returned IPI.
rdar://174255626
Check for Embedded/normal Swift mismatches as part of module
validation, rather than after loading. Do this check as part of
canImport, so that canImport will evaluate false when there is a mismatch.
This will produce a warning in this case, because it's often a mistake
to have a module visible that isn't actually usable. However, don't
break the build over it.
Fixes#86419 / rdar://167851189
Compute and propagate the library level (api/spi/ipi) of each module
dependency through the dependency scanner so that the compiler can
correctly enforce private module import diagnostics in CAS mode, where
path-based SPI detection fails because CAS abstracts file paths to
content IDs.
Swift modules:
- Detect library level from the module interface path using
libraryLevelFromPath() during scanning, for both textual (.swiftinterface)
and binary (.swiftmodule) Swift modules.
Clang modules:
- Expose ModuleMapIsPrivate from clang::Module in ModuleDeps via the
dependency scanning infrastructure.
- Set library level for clang modules in bridgeClangModuleDependency()
using ModuleMapIsPrivate (catches module.private.modulemap in any
SDK location) and libraryLevelFromPath() on the module map file
(catches modules under PrivateFrameworks directories).
The library level is:
- Stored in ModuleDependencyInfo and serialized in the module dependency
cache (format version bumped to v8).
- Exposed through the swiftscan C API via a new
swiftscan_module_info_get_library_level() function (API minor version
bumped to 3).
- Emitted in the dependency scanner JSON output as "libraryLevel" for
all module kinds (Swift textual, Swift binary, Clang, and main module).
- Parsed from the explicit module map JSON by ExplicitModuleMapParser
for both Swift (ExplicitSwiftModuleInputInfo) and Clang
(ExplicitClangModuleInputInfo) modules.
- Looked up in ModuleLibraryLevelRequest via
ASTContext::getExplicitModuleLibraryLevel(name, isClang), which
consults the appropriate map (Swift or Clang) based on module kind.
rdar://172693314
Assisted-By: Claude
Do not search for cross import when building swiftinterfaces. This is
uncessary because:
* The cross import modules are explicitly listed in the interface file
thus there is no need to walk the file system to discover more
cross imports.
* All cross imports are discovered by scanner already and the
dependencies are passed to the interface building job. There is no
need to search file system to find the module to consume.
This reduces the work needed when building interface and fix a bug that
the file system walk when caching is enabled can cause build failures on
windows platform.
During explicit module build, teach dependency scanner to emit the
module trace file instead of each following compile job command. This
reduces the duplicated info, and allows supporting fully cached build
that only loads module from CAS thus cannot produce the path to the
original module file on disk.
rdar://170007480
We have adopters who are relying on directly importing the underlying Clang module in the presence of incompatible Swift modules.
Resolves rdar://162549210
Refactor 'maybeDiagnoseTargetMismatch' to separately collect mismatching target variant modules in 'identifyArchitectureVariants' and rename it to 'handlePossibleTargetMismatch'.
Prior uses of 'maybeDiagnoseTargetMismatch' will continue diagnosing errors/warnings on only discovering incompatible swift binary module target variants.
A new overload of 'handlePossibleTargetMismatch', in 'SwiftModuleScanner', instead collects it as a discovered incompatible candidate, for diagnosis downstream.
This change refactors the module loaders to explicitly take a parameter indicating whether or not the loader is handling a 'canImport' query, in order to avoid emitting an error when finding a dependency Swift binary module with only imcompatible architecture variants present.
Resolves rdar://161175498
In addition to skipping it on textual Swift module dependencies which were built without C++ interop enabled, also skip it over similarly on binary Swift dependencies
Previously this flag was only used to pass explicit dependencies to compilation tasks. This change adds support for the dependency scanner to also consider these inputs when resolving dependencies.
Resolves https://github.com/swiftlang/swift-driver/issues/1951
When querying a Swift module, the scanner now also keeps track of all discovered candidate binary modules which are not compatible with current compilation.
- If a Swift dependency is successfully resolved to a compatible binary module or a textual interface, a warning is emitted for every incompatible binary Swift module discovered along the way.
- If a Swift dependency is not resolved, but incompatible module candidates were found, an error is emitted - while it is likely that the scan would fail downstream, it is also possible that an underlying Clang module dependency (with the same name) is successfuly resolved and the Swift lookup failure is ignored, which is still going to lead to failures most of the time if the client code assumes the presence of the Swift overlay module in this scenario.
This change refactors common error reporting by the scanner into a 'ModuleDependencyIssueReporter' class, which also keeps track of all diagnosed failed lookups to avoid repeating diagnostics.
Move per-query state out of ScanningService. There is still a check to
make sure the CASOptions are matching between queries because of the
requirement on clang scanner. Otherwise, the scanning service should
contain no per-query information anymore.
Resolves: https://github.com/swiftlang/swift/issues/82490
- 'SwiftModuleScanner' will now be owned directly by the 'ModuleDependencyScanningWorker' and will contain all the necessary custom logic, instead of being instantiated by the module interface loader for each query
- Moves ownership over module output path and sdk module output path directly into the scanning worker, instead of the cache
This was used a long time ago for a design of a scanner which could rely on the client to specify that some modules *will be* present at a given location but are not yet during the scan. We have long ago determined that the scanner must have all modules available to it at the time of scan for soundness. This code has been stale for a couple of years and it is time to simplify things a bit by deleting it.
Adds an access control field for each imported module identified. When multiple imports of the same module are found, this keeps track of the most "open" access specifier.
After removing the CASFS implementation for clang modules, there is no
need to capture clang extra file that sets up the VFS for the clang
modules since all content imported by ClangImporter is dependency
scanned and available via include-tree. This saves more ClangImporter
instance when caching is enabled.
Update the test to check that clang content found via `-Xcc` VFS options
can currently work without capture the headermaps and vfs overlays.
With '-sdk-module-cache-path', Swift textual interfaces found in the SDK will be built into a separate SDK-specific module cache.
Clang modules are not yet affected by this change, pending addition of the required API.
For build systems that already generate these files, it makes sense to include the aliases so that the map file serves as a comprehensive index of how the module inputs are referenced.
https://github.com/swiftlang/swift/pull/79297 implemented current working directory pruning but left some unnecessary code
that computes Swift interface module output path prematurely. This PR removes the code that computes the output path too
early. The `ExplicitModuleDependencyResolver` now adds the path to the command line after it can correctly compute it.
Context: https://github.com/swiftlang/swift/pull/79297/files#r1955314542
This failure will most-likely result in the dependency query failure which will fail the scan. It will be helpful if the scanner emitted diagnostic for each such module it rejected to explain the reason why.
Resolves rdar://142906530
Rather than exposing an `addFile` member on
ModuleDecl, have the `create` members take a
lambda that populates the files for the module.
Once module construction has finished, the files
are immutable.
Use IncludeTreeFileList instead of full feature CASFS for swift
dependency filesystem. This allows smaller CAS based VFS that is smaller
and faster. This is enabled by the CAS enabled compilation does not
need to iterate file system.
rdar://136787368
ModuleDecl kept track of all of the source files in the module so that it
could find the source file containing a given location, which relied on
a sorted array all of these source files. SourceManager has its own
similar data structure for a similar query mapping the locations to
buffer IDs.
Replace ModuleDecl's dats structure with a use of the SourceManager's version
with the mapping from buffer IDs to source files.
When '.package.swiftinterface' loading ('-experimental-package-interface-load') is disabled and when '-scanner-module-validation' is disabled, the scanner defaults to locating the non-package textual interface and may specify its adjacent binary module as a valid candidate binary module to use. If said candidate is up-to-date and ends up getting used, and belongs to the same package as the loading Swift source, then the source compilation may attempt to load its package-only dependencies. Since the scanner only parsed the non-package textual interface, those dependencies are not located and specified as inputs to compilation. This change causes the scanner, in such cases, to also lookup package-only dependencies in adjacent binary Swift modules of textual Swift module dependencies, if such dependency belongs to the same package as the source target being scanned.
Resolves rdar://135215789
As-is, this default interferes with the incremental build machinery which conservatively assumes that binary module dependencies must cause dependents to be re-built.
The decision to exclude `-Xcc -D` options from swift module hash
actually doesn't help to solve the problem. It wouldn't reduce the
module variants (or the number of swiftmodule build commands) because
the command-line also encodes all the clang PCM dependencies that do get
affected by `-Xcc` flags.
To avoid the false sharing and the nondeterministic build products,
include most of the `-Xcc` flags, except include search path, into swift
module hash.
rdar://132046247
When the swiftmodule is built with different clang importer arguments,
they can have the same module hash, causing them to be wrongly re-used even
they contains different interfaces. Add ReducedExtraArgs to the module hash to
disambiguate them.
However, some Xcc arguments, most commonly `-D` options do not affect the
swiftmodule being generated. Do not pass `-Xcc -DARGS` to swift
interface compilation to reduce the amount of module variants in the
build.
rdar://131408266
Fix the problem that when the only module can be found is an
invalid/out-of-date swift binary module, canImport and import statement
can have different view for if the module can be imported or not.
Now canImport will evaluate to false if the only module can be found for
name is an invalid swiftmodule, with a warning with the path to the
module so users will not be surprised by such behavior.
rdar://128876895
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)
This change modifies the dependency scanner to keep track of source locations of each encountered 'import' statement, in order to be able to emit diagnostics with source locations if an import failed to resolve.
- Keep track of each 'import' statement's source buffer, line number, and column number when adding it. The dependency scanner utilizes separate compilation instances, and therefore separate Source Managers for scanning `import` statements of user sources and textual interfaces of Swift dependencies. Since import resolution may happen in the main scanner compilation instance while the `import` itself was found by an interface-scanning sub-instance, we cannot simply hold on to the import's `SourceLoc`.
- Add libSwiftScan API for diagnostics to carry above source locations to clients.
Cleanup testable module lookup implementation by explicitly lookup
binary module only when requested, rather than changing the scanner
module load mode.