with qualifiers on it, we have two distinct types:
- LValueType(T) aka @lvalue T, which is used for mutable values on the LHS of an
assignment in the typechecker.
- InOutType(T) aka @inout T, which is used for @inout arguments, and the implicit
@inout self argument of mutable methods on value types. This type is also used
at the SIL level for address types.
While I detangled a number of cases that were checking for LValueType (without checking
qualifiers) and only meant @inout or @lvalue, there is more to be done here. Notably,
getRValueType() still strips @inout, which is totally and unbearably wrong.
Swift SVN r11727
- Switch all the 'self' mutable arguments to take self as @inout, since
binding methods to uncurried functions expose them as such.
- Eliminate the subtype relationship between @inout and @inout(implicit),
which means that we eliminate all sorts of weird cases where they get
dropped (see the updated testcases).
- Eliminate the logic in adjustLValueForReference that walks through functions
converting @inout to @inout(implicit) in strange cases.
- Introduce a new set of type checker constraints and conversion kinds to properly
handle assignment operators: when rebound or curried, their input/result argument
is exposed as @inout and requires an explicit &. When applied directly (e.g.
as ++i), they get an implicit AddressOfExpr to bind the mutated lvalue as an
@inout argument.
Overall, the short term effect of this is to fix a few old bugs handling lvalues.
The long term effect is to drive a larger wedge between implicit and explicit
lvalues.
Swift SVN r11708
- In AST/Decl.cpp, simplify by always setting isMutating to true for
ctors/dtors, since mutability only means something to struct/enum
methods anyway.
- in DeclContext.cpp, continue to lvalue qualify the 'self' of protocol
methods, this is currently dead.
- in CSApply, fix logic for some value-type member processing stuff
to properly handle methods that have a self which is not lvalue
qualified. Not exercised yet.
Swift SVN r11650
property and subscript getters which have no explicit FuncDecl for
the getter. I'm not exactly sure where these come from, but they
look like something the clang importer is producing in some cases.
Swift SVN r11642
in various unfortunate cases, which is really wrong and causing unpleasantness
for the new mutability model. However, we can't fix this until the new
mutability model lands.
To get from here to there, add some assertions to RequalifyExpr expr's ctor
that are only enabled by the new model, to help me track down and purge these
infractions.
Swift SVN r11445
This removes an oddity in the AST whereby the 'self' declaration
within a value type constructor was not represented as @inout, despite
having @inout semantics in the language.
Swift SVN r11194
getInterfaceSelfType gets the interface type of a 'self' parameter outside of the context, like getSelfTypeInContext does for the in-context self type.
getDeclaredInterfaceType gives the declared interface type of a TypeDecl.
getGenericSignatureOfContext returns the dependent generic signature of a decl context.
Swift SVN r10973
This completes the FileUnit refactoring. A module consists of multiple
FileUnits, which provide decls from various file-like sources. I say
"file-like" because the Builtin module is implemented with a single
BuiltinUnit, and imported Clang modules are just a single FileUnit source
within a module.
Most modules, therefore, contain a single file unit; only the main module
will contain multiple source files (and eventually partial AST files).
The term "translation unit" has been scrubbed from the project. To refer
to the context of declarations outside of any other declarations, use
"top-level" or "module scope". To refer to a .swift file or its DeclContext,
use "source file". To refer to a single unit of compilation, use "module",
since the model is that an entire module will be compiled with a single
driver call. (It will still be possible to compile a single source file
through the direct-to-frontend interface, but only in the context of the
whole module.)
Swift SVN r10837
Part of the FileUnit restructuring. A Clang module (whether from a framework
or a simple collection of headers) is now imported as a TranslationUnit
containing a single ClangModuleUnit.
One wrinkle in all this is that Swift very much wants to do searches on a
per-module basis, but Clang can only do lookups across the entire
TranslationUnit. Unless and until we get a better way to deal with this,
we're stuck with an inefficiency here. Previously, we used to hack around
this by ignoring the "per-module" bit and only performing one lookup into
all Clang modules, but that's not actually correct with respect to visibility.
Now, we're just taking the filtering hit for looking up a particular name,
and caching the results when we look up everything (for code completion).
This isn't ideal, but it doesn't seem to be costing too much in performance,
at least not right now, and it means we can get visibility correct.
In the future, it might make sense to include a ClangModuleUnit alongside a
SerializedASTFile for adapter modules, rather than having two separate
modules with the same name. I haven't really thought through this yet, though.
Swift SVN r10834
Part of the FileUnit restructuring. A serialized module is now represented as
a TranslationUnit containing a single SerializedASTFile.
As part of this change, the FileUnit interface has been made virtual, rather
than switching on the Kind in every accessor. We think the operations
performed on files are sufficiently high-level that this shouldn't affect us.
A nice side effect of all this is that we now properly model the visibility
of modules imported into source files. Previously, we would always consider
the top-level imports of all files within a target, whether re-exported or
not.
We may still end up wanting to distinguish properties of a complete Swift
module file from a partial AST file, but we can do that within
SerializedModuleLoader.
Swift SVN r10832
The goal of this series of commits is to allow the main module to consist
of both source files and AST files, where the AST files represent files
that were already built and don't need to be rebuilt, or of Swift source
files and imported Clang headers that share a module (because they are in
the same target).
Currently modules are divided into different kinds, and that defines how
decls are looked up, how imports are managed, etc. In order to achieve the
goal above, that polymorphism should be pushed down to the individual units
within a module, so that instead of TranslationUnit, BuiltinModule,
SerializedModule, and ClangModule, we have SourceFile, BuiltinUnit,
SerializedFile, and ClangUnit. (Better names welcome.) At that point we can
hopefully collapse TranslationUnit into Module and make Module non-polymorphic.
This commit makes SourceFile the subclass of an abstract FileUnit, and
makes TranslationUnit hold an array of FileUnits instead of SourceFiles.
To demonstrate that this is actually working, the Builtin module has also
been converted to FileUnit: it is now a TranslationUnit containing a single
BuiltinUnit.
Swift SVN r10830
innermost DeclContext of the decl that uses the archetype instead of the
actual generic context of the archetype.
<rdar://problem/15453889> Qualified archetypes mangle wrong DeclCtx
Swift SVN r10470
And, properly treat imports as per-file: when looking up decls through the
TU module, don't pick up every other source file's imports.
This implements our resolution rules:
1. Check the current source file.
2. Check the current module.
3. Check imported modules.
Currently, "import Foo" is treated as a file-private import and
"@reexported import Foo" is treated as a public /and/ module-wide import.
This further suggests that access control is the right tool for re-export
control:
(private) import Foo // current file only
package import Foo // whole module
public import Foo // whole world
Swift SVN r9682
and remove DeclContext base class from FuncDecl, ConstructorDecl and
DestructorDecl
This decreases the number of DeclContexts to 7 and allows us to apply
alignas(8) to DeclContext.
Swift SVN r8186