* [Diagnostics] Experimental diagnostic printing updates
This new style directly annotates small snippets of code with
error messages, highlights and fix-its. It also uses color more
effectively to highlight important segments.
* [Diagnostics] Stage educational notes and experimental formatting behind separate frontend flags
educational notes -> -enable-educational-notes
formatting -> -enable-experimental-diagnostic-formatting
* [Diagnostics] Refactor expensive line lookups in diag formatting
* [Diagnostics] Refactor some PrintingDiagnosticConsumer code into a flush method
* [Diag-Experimental-Formatting] Custom formatting for Xcode editor placeholders
* [Diag-Experimental-Formatting] Better and more consistent textual description of fix its
* [Diags-Experimental-Formatting] Handle lines with tab characters correctly when rendering highlights and messages
Tabs are converted to 2 spaces for display purposes.
* [Diag-Experimental-Formatting] Refactor byte-to-column mapping for efficiency
* [Diag-Experimental-Formatting] Fix line number indent calculation
* [Diag-Experimental-Formatting] Include indicators of insertions and deletions in the highlight line
Inserts are underlined by green '+' chars, deletions by red '-' chars.
* [Diag-Experimental-Formatting] Change color of indicator arrow for non-ASCII anchored messages
* [Diag-experimental-formatting] Make tests less sensitive to line numbering
* [Diag-Experimental-Formatting] Update tests to allow windows path separators
* [Diag-Experimental-Formatting] Bug fixes for the integrated REPL
Move the global PersistentParserState from
the CompilerInstance to the source file that code
completion is operating on, only hooking up the
state when it's needed. This will help make it
easier to requestify source file parsing.
We were previously doing this for the REPL, but
not for swift-ide-test. Move the assignment into
the frontend to make sure its always applied, and
inline `createREPLFile` while we're here.
Instead of interleaving typechecking and parsing
for SIL files, first parse the file for Swift
decls by skipping over any intermixed SIL decls.
Then we can perform type checking, and finally SIL
parsing where we now skip over Swift decls.
This is an intermediate step to requestifying the
parsing of a source file for its Swift decls.
Use the FindLibEdit.cmake module from LLDB to properly control where
the libedit libraries are searched for and linked from as well as where
the headers come from. This uses the standard mechanisms which allows
users to control where libedit is pulled from (which is important for
cross-compilation).
This second version is more aggressive about pruning the libedit
handling. The Ubuntu 14.04 version of libedit does not have
`histedit.h`, and the intent is to rely on that to determine if we have
unicode support or not.
This allows us use an OptionSet parameter for
the request (as currently we can't directly use it
as a parameter due to not having an == definition
for it). It also allows us to regain default
arguments for the source loc and flag parameters.
Lazy parsing for the members of nominal types and extensions depends
only on information already present in
`IterableDeclContext`. Eliminate the use of PersistentParserState as
an intermediary and have the member-parsing request construct a new
`Parser` instance itself to handle parsing. Make this possible even
for ill-formed nominal types/extensions to simplify the code path.
Eliminate `LazyMemberParser` and all of its uses, because it was only
present for lazy member parsing, which no longer needs it.
Note that in all cases it was either nullptr or ctx.getLazyResolver().
While passing in nullptr might appear at first glance to mean something
("don't type check anything"), in practice we would check for a nullptr
value and pull out ctx.getLazyResolver() instead. Furthermore, with
the lazy resolver going away (at least for resolveDeclSignature() calls),
it won't make sense to do that anymore anyway.
...in preparation for me adding a third kind of import, making the
existing "All" kind a problem. NFC, except that I did rewrite the
ClangModuleUnit implementation of getImportedModules to be simpler!
Previously, the Lexer kept a single flag whether we’re lexing Swift or SIL. Instead, keep track if we’re parsing Swift, SIL, or a Swiftinterface file. .swiftinterface files allow $-prefixed identifiers anywhere.
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
No functionality change. Unfortunately we still need the flag in
SILModule itself because of the ability to create an empty SILModule
and parse SIL into it incrementally, which can happen before there's
a FileUnit to use as the associated DeclContext instead of a
CompilerInstance's main module.
...like LLDB does, instead of parsing into a single SourceFile.
This does break some functionality:
- no more :dump_ast
- no redeclaration checking, but no shadowing either---redeclarations
just become ambiguous
- pretty much requires EnableAccessControl to be off, since we don't
walk decls to promote them to 'public'
...but it allows us to remove a bit of longstanding support for
type-checking / SILGen-ing / IRGen-ing only part of a SourceFile that
was only used by the integrated REPL.
...which, need I remind everyone, is still /deprecated/...but sometimes
convenient. So most of it still works.
The other JIT modes all still build an entire local context into one LLVM module, so it's safe to form relative references, and necessary for reflection to work with private and local contexts. Only the integrated REPL needs this prohibition. Fixes rdar://problem/40607819.