This patch modifies ParseableInterfaceBuilder::CollectDepsForSerialization to
avoid serializing dependencies from the runtime resource path into the
swiftmodules generated from .swiftinterface files. This means the module cache
should now be relocatable across machines.
It also modifies ParseableInterfaceModuleLoader to never add any dependencies
from the module cache and prebuilt cache to the dependency tracker (in addition
to the existing behaviour of not serializing them in the generated
swiftmodules). As a result, CollectDepsForSerialization no longer checks if the
dependencies it is given come from the cache as they are provided by the
dependency tracker. It now asserts that's the case instead.
* Moves the IsStatic flag from VarDecl to AbstractStorageDecl.
* Adds a StaticSubscriptKind to SubscriptDecl.
* Updates serialization for these changes.
* Updates SubscriptDecl constructor call sites for these changes.
When we build incrementally, we produce "partial swiftmodules" for
each input source file, then merge them together into the final
compiled module that, among other things, gets used for debugging.
Without this, we'd drop @_implementationOnly imports and any types
from the modules that were imported during the module-merging step
and then be unable to debug those types
This is an attribute that gets put on an import in library FooKit to
keep it from being a requirement to import FooKit. It's not checked at
all, meaning that in this form it is up to the author of FooKit to
make sure nothing in its API or ABI depends on the implementation-only
dependency. There's also no debugging support here (debugging FooKit
/should/ import the implementation-only dependency if it's present).
The goal is to get to a point where it /can/ be checked, i.e. FooKit
developers are prevented from writing code that would rely on FooKit's
implementation-only dependency being present when compiling clients of
FooKit. But right now it's not.
rdar://problem/48985979
In addition to being wasteful, this is a correctness issue -- the
compiler should only ever have one view of this file, and it should not
read a potentially different file after validating dependencies.
rdar://48654608
Introduce stored property default argument kind
Fix indent
Assign nil to optionals with no initializers
Don't emit generator for stored property default arg
Fix problem with rebase
Indentation
Serialize stored property default arg text
Fix some tests
Add missing constructor in test
Print stored property's initializer expression
cleanups
preserve switch
complete_constructor
formatting
fix conflict
The ownership kind is Any for trivial types, or Owned otherwise, but
whether a type is trivial or not will soon depend on the resilience
expansion.
This means that a SILModule now uniques two SILUndefs per type instead
of one, and serialization uses two distinct sentinel IDs for this
purpose as well.
For now, the resilience expansion is not actually used here, so this
change is NFC, other than changing the module format.
Add a bit to the module to determine whether the dependency’s stored bit pattern is a hash or an mtime.
Prebuilt modules store a hash of their dependencies because we can’t be sure their dependencies will have the same modtime as when they were built.
This is like '@inlinable', except that the symbol does not have a public
entry point in the generated binary at all; it is deserialized and a copy
is always emitted into the client binary, with shared linkage.
Just like '@inlinable', if you apply this to an internal declaration it
becomes '@usableFromInline' automatically.
This uses the same mechanism as default arguments ever since Swift 4, so
it should work reasonably well, but there are rough edges with diagnostics
and such. Don't use this if you are not the standard library.
Fixes <rdar://problem/33767512>, <https://bugs.swift.org/browse/SR-5646>.
Previously, we included the PCH hash components in the cache key. While they didn’t do any harm, they didn’t contribute any unique information about the module in question.
Additionally, passing the effective language version in means that each dependency that uses a different -swift-version would re-compile all of its dependencies. This is unfortunate, as that means the standard library is recompiled potentially several times.
Hashing the contents of the interface files is overkill. In practice, size and last modification time are enough to determine if a file has changed on disk, and therefore should be rebuilt.
It does not take ownership of its non-trivial arguments, is a trivial
function type and therefore must not be destroyed. The compiler must
make sure to extend the lifetime of non-trivial arguments beyond the
last use of the closure.
%objc = copy_value %0 : $AnObject
%closure = partial_apply [stack] [callee_guaranteed] %16(%obj) : $@convention(thin) (@guaranteed AnObject) -> ()
%closure2 = mark_dependence %closure : $@noescape @callee_guaranteed () -> () on %obj : $AnObject
%user = function_ref @useClosure : $@convention(thin) (@noescape @callee_guaranteed () -> ()) -> ()
apply %user(%closure2) : $@convention(thin) (@noescape @callee_guaranteed () -> ()) -> ()
dealloc_stack %closure : $() ->()
destroy_value %obj : $AnObject // noescape closure does not take ownership
SR-904
rdar://35590578
The previous 'openModuleFiles' interface in SerializedModuleLoaderBase
still assumed that swiftmodule files and swiftdoc files would be found
next to each other, but that's not true anymore with
swiftinterfaces-built-to-modules. Give up on this assumption (and on
the minor optimization of passing down a scratch buffer) and split out
the interface into the customization point
'findModuleFilesInDirectory' and the implementation 'openModuleFiles'.
The latter now takes two full paths: one for the swiftmodule, one for
the swiftdoc.
GenericParamList::OuterParameters would mirror the nesting structure
of generic DeclContexts. This resulted in redundant code and caused
unnecessary complications for extensions and protocols, whose
GenericParamLists are constructed after parse time.
Instead, lets only use OuterParameters to link together the multiple
parameter lists of a single extension, or parameter lists in SIL
functions.
<rdar://problem/46548531> Extend @available to support PackageDescription
This introduces a new private availability kind "_PackageDescription" to
allow availability testing by an arbitary version that can be passed
using a new command-line flag "-swiftpm-manifest-version". The semantics
are exactly same as Swift version specific availability. In longer term,
it maybe possible to remove this enhancement once there is
a language-level availability support for 3rd party libraries.
Motivation:
Swift packages are configured using a Package.swift manifest file. The
manifest file uses a library called PackageDescription, which contains
various settings that can be configured for a package. The new additions
in the PackageDescription APIs are gated behind a "tools version" that
every manifest must declare. This means, packages don't automatically
get access to the new APIs. They need to update their declared tools
version in order to use the new API. This is basically similar to the
minimum deployment target version we have for our OSes.
This gating is important for allowing packages to maintain backwards
compatibility. SwiftPM currently checks for API usages at runtime in
order to implement this gating. This works reasonably well but can lead
to a poor experience with features like code-completion and module
interface generation in IDEs and editors (that use sourcekit-lsp) as
SwiftPM has no control over these features.
- Use the name for the cached module, so that we don't end up with a
zillion "x86_64-XXXXXXXX.swiftmodule" files in the cache when we're
working with architecture-specific swiftmodules.
- Diagnose if the expected name is different from the name specified
in the swiftinterface.
- Emit all diagnostics at the location of the import, instead of
without any location at all.
In a previous commit, I banned in the verifier any SILValue from producing
ValueOwnershipKind::Any in preparation for this.
This change arises out of discussions in between John, Andy, and I around
ValueOwnershipKind::Trivial. The specific realization was that this ownership
kind was an unnecessary conflation of the a type system idea (triviality) with
an ownership idea (@any, an ownership kind that is compatible with any other
ownership kind at value merge points and can only create). This caused the
ownership model to have to contort to handle the non-payloaded or trivial cases
of non-trivial enums. This is unnecessary if we just eliminate the any case and
in the verifier separately verify that trivial => @any (notice that we do not
verify that @any => trivial).
NOTE: This is technically an NFC intended change since I am just replacing
Trivial with Any. That is why if you look at the tests you will see that I
actually did not need to update anything except removing some @trivial ownership
since @any ownership is represented without writing @any in the parsed sil.
rdar://46294760
We've been running doxygen with the autobrief option for a couple of
years now. This makes the \brief markers into our comments
redundant. Since they are a visual distraction and we don't want to
encourage more \brief markers in new code either, this patch removes
them all.
Patch produced by
for i in $(git grep -l '\\brief'); do perl -pi -e 's/\\brief //g' $i & done
Now that we don't store requirements in the GenericParamList, there's
no reason to use trailing records to list out the
GenericTypeParamDecls.
No functionality change.
A module compiled with `-enable-private-imports` allows other modules to
import private declarations if the importing source file uses an
``@_private(from: "SourceFile.swift") import statement.
rdar://29318654
Dynamic replacements are currently written in extensions as
extension ExtendedType {
@_dynamicReplacement(for: replacedFun())
func replacement() { }
}
The runtime implementation allows an implementation in the future where
dynamic replacements are gather in a scope and can be dynamically
enabled and disabled.
For example:
dynamic_extension_scope CollectionOfReplacements {
extension ExtentedType {
func replacedFun() {}
}
extension ExtentedType2 {
func replacedFun() {}
}
}
CollectionOfReplacements.enable()
CollectionOfReplacements.disable()