Pass '-fbuild-session-timestamp' and '-fmodules-validate-once-per-build-sessio'
to ClangImporter so that module validation happens only once for the
SourceKit lifetime.
rdar://problem/59567281
The quoting of the sed commands was creating problems in my Windows
installation. I am unsure if the implementation of sed.exe is different
or the cmd.exe is different.
In order to avoid problems in different machines, replace the piped sed
commands into only one python script. This should be multiplatform and
should execute the same in any of them. It also remove a lot of the
extra quoting and escaping, and avoids 5 processes for only just one.
...rather than replacing particular macros with an 'annotate'
attribute and then looking for that. This isn't /really/ any
particular win except maybe ever-so-slightly faster module imports
(with one fewer attribute being added to each declaration in a
mixed-source header).
This doesn't remove the SWIFT_CLASS_EXTRA, SWIFT_PROTOCOL_EXTRA, or
SWIFT_ENUM_EXTRA macros from PrintAsObjC (note that
SWIFT_EXTENSION_EXTRA was never used). They're not exactly needed
anymore, but they're not doing any harm if someone else is using them.
Use the modern spelling for the nullability attributes in the test mock
headers. Currently, this was relying on the predefined macros from
clang to work. However, those are only available on Darwin targets.
This is needed to make the mock environments more portable.
This patch fixes an importer problem which occurred for macros defined
in terms of two other macros which might not have been imported before.
For example, the macro CPU_TYPE_X86_64 (defined as CPU_TYPE_X86 |
CPU_ARCH_ABI64) in Foundation wasn't imported although the importing
logic was implemented.
importMacro is now called for each of the constituents before checking
the constant value.
The test was supposed to use a CF type, but it wasn't updated
for the switch from a naming convention to an attribute. This
restores the original intent (and unfortunately slides all the
offsets).
The code goes into its own sub-tree under 'tools' but tests go under 'test',
so that running 'check-swift' will also run all the SourceKit tests.
SourceKit is disabled on non-darwin platforms.