Commit Graph

34 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Xi Ge
435d13496e AST: making export: true in @_specialized attribute a no-operation
The client code doesn't actually call into these specialized functions even
though they have public linkage. This could lead to TBD verification failure
shown in rdar://44777994.

This patch also warns users' codebase when `export: true` is specified.
2020-04-10 16:52:22 -07:00
fischertony
e78a42b06f [SR-8239][Parse] Fix same-type constraint commutativity 2018-09-11 05:18:44 +03:00
Doug Gregor
d1ea1813c9 [Type checker] Reimplement validation of @_specialize attribute.
Reimplement the validation of the @_specialize attribute to make use of
RequirementRequest::visitInherited() rather than performing ad hoc
validation.
2018-08-23 23:41:09 -07:00
Doug Gregor
c94d1cd31a [Type checker] The term "layout constraint" is confusing; don't use it.
Within the compiler, we use the term "layout constraint" for any
constraint that affects the layout of a type parameter that has that
constraint. However, the only user-visible constraint is "AnyObject",
and calling that a layout constraint is confusing. Drop the term
"layout" from diagnostics.

Fixes rdar://problem/35295372.
2017-11-02 12:03:09 -07:00
Doug Gregor
770912e87d Fix test case 2017-10-10 23:06:52 -07:00
Slava Pestov
1e3d88e919 Update a test 2017-09-05 22:13:18 -07:00
Slava Pestov
eb46696baa AST: Fix bogus diagnostic with bad conformance requirements in generic signature
Fixes <rdar://problem/33604221>.
2017-07-31 14:19:19 -07:00
Alex Hoppen
f35f29d9cf [Diag] Change function diagnostics to take a DeclName parameter
This provides richer error messages that include the function's
parameters
2017-07-01 13:37:08 +02:00
Doug Gregor
c47aea7150 [GSB] Cope with typealiases within protocol hierarchies.
When we see two type(aliase)s with the same name in a protocol
hierarchy, make them equal with an implied same-type requirement. This
detects inconstencies in typealiases across different protocols, and
eliminates the need for ad hoc consistency checking. This is a step
toward simplifying away the need for direct-diagnosis operations
involving concrete type mismatches.

While here, warn when we see an associated type with the same as a
typealias from an inherited protocol; in this case, the associated
type is basically useless, because it's going to be equivalent to the
typealias.
2017-06-23 17:25:45 -07:00
Doug Gregor
c522bb5239 [GSB] Separate out "unresolved" and "direct" type requirement handling.
As we've done with layout requirements, introduce a new entry point
(addTypeRequirement) that handles unresolved type requirements of the
form `T: U`, resolves the types, and then can

1. Diagnose any immediate problems with the types,
2. Delay the type requirement if one of the types cannot be resolved,
or
3. Break it into one or more "direct" requirements.

This allows us to clean up and centralize a bunch of checking that was
scattered/duplicated across the GSB and type checker.
2017-04-07 16:53:11 -07:00
Roman Levenstein
2f91ee197d Add a syntax to express the new _Class and _Native class layout constraints
The syntax is "T: _Class" and "T: _NativeClass".
2017-03-24 16:32:23 -07:00
Roman Levenstein
e3bc23cc09 Merge pull request #8253 from swiftix/wip-gsb-layout-constrains-fixes
[GSB] Improve handling of layout constraints
2017-03-22 17:36:05 -07:00
Roman Levenstein
e1403c6dc2 [GSB] Improve handling of layout constraints
This PR addresses TODOs from #8241.

- It supports merging for layout constraints, e.g., if both a _Trivial constraint and a _Trivial(64) constraint appear on a type parameter, we keep only _Trivial(64) as a more specific layout constraint. We do a similar thing for ref-counted/native-ref-counted. The overall idea is to keep the more specific of two compatible layout constraints.
- The presence of a superclass constraint implies a layout constraint, e.g., a superclass constraint implies _Class or _NativeClass
2017-03-22 16:39:02 -07:00
Doug Gregor
ddc2775530 [GSB] Diagnose redundant same-type constraints.
Diagnose redundant same-type constraints using most of the same
machinery for diagnosing other redundant constraints. However,
same-type constraints are particularly interesting because
redundancies can be spelled in a number of different ways. Address
this using the connected components of the subgraph involving only
derived requirements (which is already used for the minimized generic
signature). Then, separate all of the non-derived requirements into
the intracomponent requirements and intercomponent requirements:

* All of the intracomponent requirements are redundant by definition,
  because the components are defined by derived constraints.

* For the intercomponent requirements, form a spanning tree among the
  various components and diagnose as redundant any edges that do not
  extend the spanning tree.
2017-03-21 23:02:04 -07:00
Doug Gregor
5aa51e9532 [GSB] Keep track of all layout constraints.
As we've done with all of the other kinds of constraints, keep track
of all of the layout constraints on the equivalence class. Use the
normal mechanism to diagnose conflicts between different layout
constraints, warn about duplicate layout constraints, etc.
2017-03-21 06:59:40 -07:00
Doug Gregor
6142329a1e [Type checker] Finalize the GenericSignatureBuilder for @_specialize.
To diagnose issues with the where clause in an @_specialize attribute,
the GenericSignatureBuilder needs to be finalized first.
2017-02-28 20:50:21 -08:00
Doug Gregor
d697c2fdcb [GenericSig Builder] Diagnose redundant same-typeo-t-concrete constraints.
Diagnose when a same-type constraint (to a concrete type) is made
redundant by another same-type constraint. Slightly improve the
diagnostic that handles collisions between two same-type constraints.
2017-02-24 10:44:30 -08:00
Doug Gregor
b412961003 [AST] Maintain type sugar in TypeMatcher. 2017-02-09 15:03:34 -08:00
Doug Gregor
8756772485 [Archetype builder] Allow one to directly express constraints X<T> == X<U>.
All of the implementation work to make this possible was completed in
prior commits, so loosen the restriction from "one side must be a type
parameter" or "one side must contain a type parameter".
2017-02-09 14:13:11 -08:00
Doug Gregor
e93ae1d9a8 [Archetype builder] Perform structural matching of same-type constraints.
Rather than using "isEqual" to match same-type constraints among
concrete types, use a full type matched to recursively decompose the
structure. This allows us to support same-type constraints that end up
being of the form X<T> == X<U>, where T and U are type parameters of
some sort.

Fixes rdar://problem/29333056.
2017-02-09 14:13:10 -08:00
Doug Gregor
0c76a9d828 [Archetype builder] Clean up PotentialArchetype a bit.
Clean up the representation of PotentialArchetype in a few small ways:

* Eliminate the GenericTypeParamType* at the root, and instead just
  store a GenericParamKey. That makes the potential archetypes
  independent of a particular set of generic parameters.

* Give potential archetypes a link back to their owning
  ArchetypeBuilder, so we can get contextual information (etc.) when
  needed. We can remove the "builder" arguments as a separate step.

Also, collapse getName()/getDebugName()/getFullName() into
getNestedName() and getDebugName(). Generic parameters don't have
"names" per se, so they should only show up in debug dumps.

In support of the former, clean up some of the diagnostics emitted by
the archetype builder that were using 'Identifier' or 'StringRef'
where they should have been using a 'Type' (i.e., the type behind the
dependent archetype).
2017-02-07 11:15:11 -08:00
Roman Levenstein
88d6e5c43b Make diagnostics for @_specialize look similar to other attributes 2017-01-18 16:43:42 -08:00
Roman Levenstein
de07095e01 Update and enhance tests to use the new @_specialize syntax and features 2017-01-18 16:43:42 -08:00
David Farler
b7d17b25ba Rename -parse flag to -typecheck
A parse-only option is needed for parse performance tracking and the
current option also includes semantic analysis.
2016-11-28 10:50:55 -08:00
Rintaro Ishizaki
1b51bc1d6b [Sema] Check existence of GenericSignature before getting GenericParamList from it
Fixes 2 compiler crasher.
2016-11-14 22:01:53 +09:00
Slava Pestov
a1eef126ba AST: Don't print "aka <<desugared type>>" for generic function types
This was causing us to emit diagnostics talking about τ_m_n, which is
not helpful.

Now that generic function types print sanely, print them in a few
places where we were previously printing PolymorphicFunctionTypes.
2016-09-15 21:47:57 -07:00
Argyrios Kyrtzidis
69918a966d [ASTPrinter] Fix printing of nested typealias types and make it consistent with printing of nominal types.
This fixes several issues:
- By default parent types of alias types are not printed which results in
	- Erroneous fixits, for example when casting to 'Notification.Name' from a string, which ends up adding erroneous cast
	  as "Name(rawValue: ...)"
	- Hard to understand types in code-completion results and diagnostics
- When printing with 'fully-qualified' option typealias types are printed erroneously like this "<PARENT>.Type.<TYPEALIAS>"

The change make typealias printing same as nominal types and addresses the above.
2016-08-11 12:15:15 -07:00
Dmitri Gribenko
d175b3b66d Migrate FileCheck to %FileCheck in tests 2016-08-10 23:52:02 -07:00
David Farler
7bfaeb57f1 [SE-0081] Warn on deprecated where clause inside angle brackets
and provide a fix-it to move it to the new location as referenced
in SE-0081.

Fix up a few stray places in the standard library that is still using
the old syntax.

Update any ./test files that aren't expecting the new warning/fix-it
in -verify mode.

While investigating what I thought was a new crash due to this new
diagnostic, I discovered two sources of quite a few compiler crashers
related to unterminated generic parameter lists, where the right
angle bracket source location was getting unconditionally set to
the current token, even though it wasn't actually a '>'.
2016-07-26 01:41:10 -07:00
Chris Lattner
6619e123d8 Fix the AST printer to properly parenthesize the parameter list of
GenericFunctionType and PolymorphicFunctionType.
2016-07-03 14:28:38 -07:00
Manav Gabhawala
7928140f79 [SE-0046] Implements consistent function parameter labels by discarding extraneous parameter names and adding _ where necessary 2016-04-06 20:21:58 -04:00
Andrew Trick
482b264afc Reapply "Merge pull request #1725 from atrick/specialize"
This was mistakenly reverted in an attempt to fix buildbots.
Unfortunately it's now smashed into one commit.

---
Introduce @_specialize(<type list>) internal attribute.

This attribute can be attached to generic functions. The attribute's
arguments must be a list of concrete types to be substituted in the
function's generic signature. Any number of specializations may be
associated with a generic function.

This attribute provides a hint to the compiler. At -O, the compiler
will generate the specified specializations and emit calls to the
specialized code in the original generic function guarded by type
checks.

The current attribute is designed to be an internal tool for
performance experimentation. It does not affect the language or
API. This work may be extended in the future to add user-visible
attributes that do provide API guarantees and/or direct dispatch to
specialized code.

This attribute works on any generic function: a freestanding function
with generic type parameters, a nongeneric method declared in a
generic class, a generic method in a nongeneric class or a generic
method in a generic class. A function's generic signature is a
concatenation of the generic context and the function's own generic
type parameters.

e.g.

struct S<T> {
var x: T
@_specialize(Int, Float)
mutating func exchangeSecond<U>(u: U, _ t: T) -> (U, T) {
x = t
return (u, x)
}
}
// Substitutes: <T, U> with <Int, Float> producing:
// S<Int>::exchangeSecond<Float>(u: Float, t: Int) -> (Float, Int)

---
[SILOptimizer] Introduce an eager-specializer pass.

This pass finds generic functions with @_specialized attributes and
generates specialized code for the attribute's concrete types. It
inserts type checks and guarded dispatch at the beginning of the
generic function for each specialization. Since we don't currently
expose this attribute as API and don't specialize vtables and witness
tables yet, the only way to reach the specialized code is by calling
the generic function which performs the guarded dispatch.

In the future, we can build on this work in several ways:
- cross module dispatch directly to specialized code
- dynamic dispatch directly to specialized code
- automated specialization based on less specific hints
- partial specialization
- and so on...

I reorganized and refactored the optimizer's generic utilities to
support direct function specialization as opposed to apply
specialization.
2016-03-21 12:43:05 -07:00
Andrew Trick
5bda28e1cb Revert "Merge pull request #1725 from atrick/specialize"
Temporarily reverting @_specialize because stdlib unit tests are
failing on an internal branch during deserialization.

This reverts commit e2c43cfe14, reversing
changes made to 9078011f93.
2016-03-18 22:31:29 -07:00
Andrew Trick
4c052274e6 Introduce @_specialize(<type list>) internal attribute.
This attribute can be attached to generic functions. The attribute's
arguments must be a list of concrete types to be substituted in the
function's generic signature. Any number of specializations may be
associated with a generic function.

This attribute provides a hint to the compiler. At -O, the compiler
will generate the specified specializations and emit calls to the
specialized code in the original generic function guarded by type
checks.

The current attribute is designed to be an internal tool for
performance experimentation. It does not affect the language or
API. This work may be extended in the future to add user-visible
attributes that do provide API guarantees and/or direct dispatch to
specialized code.

This attribute works on any generic function: a freestanding function
with generic type parameters, a nongeneric method declared in a
generic class, a generic method in a nongeneric class or a generic
method in a generic class. A function's generic signature is a
concatenation of the generic context and the function's own generic
type parameters.

e.g.

  struct S<T> {
    var x: T
    @_specialize(Int, Float)
    mutating func exchangeSecond<U>(u: U, _ t: T) -> (U, T) {
      x = t
      return (u, x)
    }
  }
  // Substitutes: <T, U> with <Int, Float> producing:
  // S<Int>::exchangeSecond<Float>(u: Float, t: Int) -> (Float, Int)
2016-03-17 18:27:10 -07:00