* Eradicate IndexDistance associated type, replacing with Int everywhere
* Consistently use Int for ExistentialCollection’s IndexDistance type.
* Fix test for IndexDistance removal
* Remove a handful of no-longer-needed explicit types
* Add compatibility shims for non-Int index distances
* Test compatibility shim
* Move IndexDistance typealias into the Collection protocol
Array, Set, Dictionary, and Optional all provide unconditional conformances
to Encodable & Decodable that dynamically check whether their type arguments
are Encodable/Decodable. Now that we have conditional conformances, make
these unconditional conformances properly conditional, removing all of
the Swift 4-era type-erasure hacks.
Fixes rdar://problem/34989162.
* Refactor Indices and Slice to use conditional conformance
* Replace ReversedRandomAccessCollection with a conditional extension
* Refactor some types into struct+extensions
* Revise Slice documentation
* Fix test cases for adoption of conditional conformances.
* [RangeReplaceableCollection] Eliminate unnecessary slicing subscript operator.
* Add -enable-experimental-conditional-conformances to test.
* Gruesome workaround for crasher in MutableSlice tests
* [SR-4005] Allow heterogenous comparisons in elementsEqual
When a user is supplying a predicate to compare the type equivalence
isn’t required
* elementsEqualWithPredicate tests
Compares a string of a number with an integer value by using the
elementsEqualPredicate closure
* Update test expectations to use new sequence element types
* Update hardcoded test to reference sequence
Conditional conformances aren't quite ready yet for Swift 4.1, so
introduce the flag `-enable-experimental-conditional-conformances` to
enable conditional conformaces, and an error when one declares a
conditional conformance without specifying the flag.
Add this flag when building the standard library (which will vend
conditional conformances) and to all of the tests that need it.
Fixes rdar://problem/35728337.
Restructure the ELF handling to be completely agnostic to the OS.
Rather than usng the loader to query the section information, use the
linker to construct linker tables and synthetic markers for the
beginning and of the table. Save off the values of these pointers and
pass them along through the constructor to the runtime for registration.
This removes the need for the begin/end objects. Remove the special
construction of the begin/end objects through the special assembly
constructs, preferring to do this in C with a bit of inline assembly to
ensure that the section is always allocated.
Remove the special handling for the various targets, the empty object
file can be linked on all the targets.
The new object file has no requirements on the ordering. It needs to
simply be injected into the link.
Name the replacement file `swiftrt.o` mirroring `crt.o` from libc. Merge
the constructor and the definition into a single object file.
This approach is generally more portable, overall simpler to implement,
and more robust.
Thanks to Orlando Bassotto for help analyzing some of the odd behaviours
when switching over.