Technically, these operations belong in the ObjectiveC module, where NSObject
is defined. Keep them there. However, we need to build the mock ObjectiveC
overlay with `-disable-objc-attr-requires-foundation-module` now.
Previously (a03c40cb2c) we assumed all Swift enums were non-frozen in
ObjC, a weird choice in retrospect. Now that we actually distinguish
frozen and non-frozen enums in Swift, we can use the
'enum_extensibility' attribute to mark them as open or closed in ObjC.
Note that this only matters for Swift libraries compiled with
-enable-resilience, i.e. those that might get a new implementation at
runtime. Everyone else is now declaring a "closed" enum, matching the
behavior in Swift.
(and enums)
Previously this part of the compiler assumed that any imported
struct or enum would have the same name as it does in C, which is
no longer true.
Part of rdar://problem/26372925