This patch adds SIL-level debug info support for variables whose
static type is rewritten by an optimizer transformation. When a
function is (generic-)specialized or inlined, the static types of
inlined variables my change as they are remapped into the generic
environment of the inlined call site. With this patch all inlined
SILDebugScopes that point to functions with a generic signature are
recursively rewritten to point to clones of the original function with
new unique mangled names. The new mangled names consist of the old
mangled names plus the new substituions, similar (or exactly,
respectively) to how generic specialization is handled.
On libSwiftCore.dylib (x86_64), this yields a 17% increase in unique
source vars and a ~24% increase in variables with a debug location.
rdar://problem/28859432
rdar://problem/34526036
The central thrust of this patch is to get these metadata initializations
off of `swift_once` and onto the metadata-request system where we can
properly detect and resolve dependencies. We do this by first introducing
runtime support for resolving metadata requests for "in-place"
initializations (committed previously) and then teaching IRGen to actually
generate code to use them (this patch).
A non-trivial amount of this patch is just renaming and refactoring some of
existing infrastructure that was being used for in-place initializations to
try to avoid unnecessary confusion.
The remaining cases that are still using `swift_once` resolution of
metadata initialization are:
- non-generic classes that can't statically fill their superclass or
have resilient internal layout
- foreign type metadata
Classes require more work because I'd like to switch at least the
resilient-superclass case over to using a pattern much more like what
we do with generic class instantiation. That is, I'd like in-place
initialization to be reserved for classes that actually don't need
relocation.
Foreign metadata should also be updated to the request/dependency scheme
before we declare ABI stability. I'm not sure why foreign metadata
would ever require a type to be resolved, but let's assume it's possible.
Fixes part of SR-7876.
Rather than storing a mangled name in a Swift protocol descriptor,
which encodes information that is redundant with the context of the
protocol, store an unmangled name as in nominal type descriptors. Update
the various places where this name is used to extract the demangle
tree from the context descriptors.
Reimplement protocol descriptors for Swift protocols as a kind of
context descriptor, dropping the Objective-C protocol compatibility
layout. The new protocol descriptors have several advantages over the
current implementation:
* They drop all of the unused fields required for layout-compatibility
with Objective-C protocols.
* They encode the full requirement signature of the protocol. This
maintains more information about the protocol itself, including
(e.g.) correctly encoding superclass requirements.
* They fit within the general scheme of context descriptors, rather than
being their own thing, which allows us to share more code with
nominal type descriptors.
* They only use relative pointers, so they’re smaller and can be placed
in read-only memory
Implements rdar://problem/38815359.
For now, the accessors have been underscored as `_read` and `_modify`.
I'll prepare an evolution proposal for this feature which should allow
us to remove the underscores or, y'know, rename them to `purple` and
`lettuce`.
`_read` accessors do not make any effort yet to avoid copying the
value being yielded. I'll work on it in follow-up patches.
Opaque accesses to properties and subscripts defined with `_modify`
accessors will use an inefficient `materializeForSet` pattern that
materializes the value to a temporary instead of accessing it in-place.
That will be fixed by migrating to `modify` over `materializeForSet`,
which is next up after the `read` optimizations.
SIL ownership verification doesn't pass yet for the test cases here
because of a general fault in SILGen where borrows can outlive their
borrowed value due to being cleaned up on the general cleanup stack
when the borrowed value is cleaned up on the formal-access stack.
Michael, Andy, and I discussed various ways to fix this, but it seems
clear to me that it's not in any way specific to coroutine accesses.
rdar://35399664
This patch adds SIL-level debug info support for variables whose
static type is rewritten by an optimizer transformation. When a
function is (generic-)specialized or inlined, the static types of
inlined variables my change as they are remapped into the generic
environment of the inlined call site. With this patch all inlined
SILDebugScopes that point to functions with a generic signature are
recursively rewritten to point to clones of the original function with
new unique mangled names. The new mangled names consist of the old
mangled names plus the new substituions, similar (or exactly,
respectively) to how generic specialization is handled.
On libSwiftCore.dylib (x86_64), this yields a 17% increase in unique
source vars and a ~24% increase in variables with a debug location.
rdar://problem/28859432
rdar://problem/34526036
Protocol name mangling didn’t always go through a path that allowed the use
of standard substitutions. Enable standard substitutions for protocol name
manglings where they make sense.
Removes ~277k from the standard library binary size.
Since the mangling scheme and set of standard library types is effectively
fixed now, introduce known mangling substitutions for a number of new
standard library types, filling out the S[A-Za-z] space.
Reduces standard library binary size by ~195k.
The allocation phase is guaranteed to succeed and just puts enough
of the structure together to make things work.
The completion phase does any component metadata lookups that are
necessary (for the superclass, fields, etc.) and performs layout;
it can fail and require restart.
Next up is to support this in the runtime; then we can start the
process of making metadata accessors actually allow incomplete
metadata to be fetched.
This is yet another waypoint on the path towards the final
generic-metadata design. The immediate goal is to make the
pattern a private implementation detail and to give the runtime
more visibility into the allocation and caching of generic types.
The key path pattern needs to include a reference to the external descriptor, along with hooks for lowering its type arguments and indices, if any. The runtime will need to instantiate and interpolate the external component when the key path object is instantiated.
While we're here, let's also reserve some more component header bytes for future expansion, since this is an ABI we're going to be living with for a while.
A "retroactive" protocol conformance is a conformance that is provided
by a module that is neither the module that defines the protocol nor
the module that defines the conforming type. It is possible for such
conformances to conflict at runtime, if defined in different modules
that were not both visible to the compiler at the same time.
When mangling a bound generic type, also mangle retroactive protocol
conformances that were needed to satisfy the generic requirements of
the generic type. This prevents name collisions between (e.g.) types
formed using retroactive conformances from different modules. The
impact on the size of the mangling is expected to be relatively small,
because most conformances are not retroactive.
Fixes the ABI part of rdar://problem/14375889.
This new format more efficiently represents existing information, while
more accurately encoding important information about nested generic
contexts with same-type and layout constraints that need to be evaluated
at runtime. It's also designed with an eye to forward- and
backward-compatible expansion for ABI stability with future Swift
versions.
(and 'La'...'Lj')
Use this for the synthesized structs for error enums, as described in
the previous commit, instead of reusing the "private discriminator"
feature. I left some space in the APIs for "related entity kinds" that
are longer than a single character, but I don't actually expect to use
it any time soon. It's mostly just easier to deal with StringRef than
with a bare char.
Note that this doesn't perfectly round-trip to the old mangling; I had
it treat these nodes as private discriminators with a prefixed "$"
instead. We don't depend on that for anything, though.
Extend protocol descriptors with a field for the superclass bound of the
protocol itself. This carves out space in the ABI for
class C { }
protocol P : C { ... }
although the feature is not yet implemented.
Since it's not very common to use such ABI endpoints, let's remove
them and use the most general one `swift_getFunctionTypeMetadata`
instead when function parameters have flags attached to them.
Resolves: rdar://problem/36278686
Now that we use nominal type descriptors for everything that we can within
protocol conformance records, eliminate the unused
"NonuniqueDirectType" case and all of the code that supports it. Leave
this value explicitly reserved for the future.
Eliminate the separate flags field in protocol conformance records, now that
all of the information is stored in spare bits elsewhere. Reserve this
32-bit value for future use to describe conditional requirements.