The ownership kind is Any for trivial types, or Owned otherwise, but
whether a type is trivial or not will soon depend on the resilience
expansion.
This means that a SILModule now uniques two SILUndefs per type instead
of one, and serialization uses two distinct sentinel IDs for this
purpose as well.
For now, the resilience expansion is not actually used here, so this
change is NFC, other than changing the module format.
In a previous commit, I banned in the verifier any SILValue from producing
ValueOwnershipKind::Any in preparation for this.
This change arises out of discussions in between John, Andy, and I around
ValueOwnershipKind::Trivial. The specific realization was that this ownership
kind was an unnecessary conflation of the a type system idea (triviality) with
an ownership idea (@any, an ownership kind that is compatible with any other
ownership kind at value merge points and can only create). This caused the
ownership model to have to contort to handle the non-payloaded or trivial cases
of non-trivial enums. This is unnecessary if we just eliminate the any case and
in the verifier separately verify that trivial => @any (notice that we do not
verify that @any => trivial).
NOTE: This is technically an NFC intended change since I am just replacing
Trivial with Any. That is why if you look at the tests you will see that I
actually did not need to update anything except removing some @trivial ownership
since @any ownership is represented without writing @any in the parsed sil.
rdar://46294760
This matches the name of OperandOwnership.cpp which performs an anologous
function. I also was able to eliminate an unneeded header. The key thing here
is that the only reason that we had ValueOwnershipKindClassifier.h was because
we needed some defs from it in SILValue.cpp for SILValue::getOwnershipKind()
... which is great except for the fact that ValueOwnershipKindClassifier is
basically the implementation of SILValue::getOwnershipKind().
So what this patch does is moves the implementation of
SILValue::getOwnershipKind() from SILValue.cpp -> ValueOwnership.cpp and then
puts the visitor into an anonymous namespace in that file.
I also added a little comment in SILValue.h that says that
SILValue::getOwnershipKind() is implemented in ValueOwnership.cpp, not
SILValue.cpp.
NOTE: This is not the final form of how operand ownership restraints will be
represented. This patch is instead an incremental change that extracts out this
functionality from the ownership verifier as a pure refactor.
rdar://44667493
introduce a common superclass, SILNode.
This is in preparation for allowing instructions to have multiple
results. It is also a somewhat more elegant representation for
instructions that have zero results. Instructions that are known
to have exactly one result inherit from a class, SingleValueInstruction,
that subclasses both ValueBase and SILInstruction. Some care must be
taken when working with SILNode pointers and testing for equality;
please see the comment on SILNode for more information.
A number of SIL passes needed to be updated in order to handle this
new distinction between SIL values and SIL instructions.
Note that the SIL parser is now stricter about not trying to assign
a result value from an instruction (like 'return' or 'strong_retain')
that does not produce any.
This involved a bit of cleanup in both ownership classification and
verification. Trivial argument types now have trivial ownership. Also, the
verifier allows
- enums with non-trivial ownership to be passed to trivial arguments as long as
it can verify that all payloads are trivial.
- enums with trivial ownership to be passed as owned arguments. Preventing this
didn't make sense.
Introduce a new runtime entry point,
`swift_objc_swift3ImplicitObjCEntrypoint`, which is called from any
Objective-C method that was generated due to `@objc` inference rules
that were removed by SE-0160. Aside from being a central place where
users can set a breakpoint to catch when this occurs, this operation
provides logging capabilities that can be enabled by setting the
environment variable SWIFT_DEBUG_IMPLICIT_OBJC_ENTRYPOINT:
SWIFT_DEBUG_IMPLICIT_OBJC_ENTRYPOINT=0 (default): do not log
SWIFT_DEBUG_IMPLICIT_OBJC_ENTRYPOINT=1: log failed messages
SWIFT_DEBUG_IMPLICIT_OBJC_ENTRYPOINT=2: log failed messages with
backtrace
SWIFT_DEBUG_IMPLICIT_OBJC_ENTRYPOINT=3: log failed messages with
backtrace and abort the process.
The log messages look something like:
***Swift runtime: entrypoint -[t.MyClass foo] generated by
implicit @objc inference is deprecated and will be removed in
Swift 4
Previously often times when casting a value, we would just pass along the
cleanup of the uncasted value. With semantic SIL this is no longer correct since
the cleanup now needs to be on the cast result.
This caused problems for certain usages of Builtin.castToNativeObject(...) by
the stdlib. Specifically, the stdlib was using this on AnyObject values that
were not necessarily native. Since we were recreating the cleanup on the native
value, a swift native release was being used =><=.
In this commit I solve this problem by:
1. Adding an assert in Builtin.castToNativeObject(...) that ensures that any value
passed to Builtin.castToNativeObject() is known conservatively to use swift
native reference counting.
2. I changed all uses where we do not have a precondition of a native ref
counting type to use Builtin.castToUnknownObject(...).
3. I added a new Builtin called Builtin.unsafeCastToNativeObject(...) that does
not have the compile time check. I used this to rewrite callsites in the stdlib
where we know via preconditions that an AnyObject will dynamically always be
native.
rdar://29791263
...and IRGen it into a call to __tsan_write1 in compiler-rt. This is
preparatory work for a later patch that will add an experimental
option to treat Swift inout accesses as TSan writes.
This is the lifetime ending variant of fix_lifetime. It is a lie to the
ownership verifier that a value is being consumed along a path. Its intention is
to be used to allow for the static verification of ownership in deallocating
deinits which for compatibility with objective-c have weird ownership behavior.
See the commit merged with this commit for more information.
This allows for an unchecked_enum_data to be either a consumed instruction or a
borrowed instruction. The reason why this makes sense in contrast to other value
projection operations like struct_extract and tuple_extract is that an enum
payload is essentially a tuple. This means that we are extracting the entire
value when we perform a struct_extract. So forwarding is viable from a semantic
perspective since if we destroy the payload, there is nothing left to destroy.
This contrasts with struct_extract and tuple_extract where we may have other
parts of the struct/tuple to destroy.
rdar://29791263
This caused a crasher when running the ownership verifier. I don't have a test
case right now, since it happened several weeks ago.
The bug can not happen again since I eliminated the nullptr default argument.
rdar://29791263
I thought this was modeling a value returned at +0. But in reality, the
instruction is created a guaranteed region by performing the following
instruction sequence:
%1 = copy_value %0 : $GuaranteedValue
(%2, %3) = Builtin "unsafeGuaranteed" (%1)
... *STUFF* ...
Builtin "endUnsafeGuaranteed" (%2) : $Token
destroy_value %3 : $GuaranteedValue
rdar://29791263
[NFC] Add -enable-sil-opaque-values frontend option.
This will be used to change the SIL-level calling convention for opaque values,
such as generics and resilient structs, to pass-by-value. Under this flag,
opaque values have SSA lifetimes, managed by copy_value and destroy_value.
This will make it easier to optimize copies and verify ownership.
* [SILGen] type lowering support for opaque values.
Add OpaqueValueTypeLowering.
Under EnableSILOpaqueValues, lower address-only types as opaque values.
* [SIL] Fix ValueOwnershipKind to support opaque SIL values.
* Test case: SILGen opaque value support for Parameter/ResultConvention.
* [SILGen] opaque value support for function arguments.
* Future Test case: SILGen opaque value specialDest arguments.
* Future Test case: SILGen opaque values: emitOpenExistential.
* Test case: SIL parsing support for EnableSILOpaqueValues.
* SILGen opaque values: prepareArchetypeCallee.
* [SIL Verify] allow copy_value for EnableSILOpaqueValues.
* Test cast: SIL serializer support for opaque values.
* Add a static_assert for ParameterConvention layout.
* Test case: Mandatory SILOpt support for EnableSILOpaqueValues.
* Test case: SILOpt support for EnableSILOpaqueValues.
* SILGen opaque values: TypeLowering emitCopyValue.
* SILBuilder createLoad. Allow loading opaque values.
* SIL Verifier. Allow loading and storing opaque values.
* SILGen emitSemanticStore support for opaque values.
* Test case for SILGen emitSemanticStore.
* Test case for SIL mandatory support for inout assignment.
* Fix SILGen opaque values test case after rebasing.
Separate formal lowered types from SIL types.
The SIL type of an argument will depend on the SIL module's conventions.
The module conventions are determined by the SIL stage and LangOpts.
Almost NFC, but specialized manglings are broken incidentally as a result of
fixes to the way passes handle book-keeping of aruments. The mangler is fixed in
the subsequent commit.
Otherwise, NFC is intended, but quite possible do to rewriting the logic in many
places.
This also avoids undefined behavior when we try to look up the
ParameterConvention of a type dependent operand. Since type dependent operands
do not have a convention, this causes us to hit an assertion.
rdar://29791263
This is only enabled when semantic sil is enabled /and/ we are not parsing
unqualified SIL.
*NOTE* To properly write tests for this, I had to rework how we verified
Branch/CondBranch insts to be actually correct (instead of pseudo-correct). I
have to put this functionality together in order to write tests.
rdar://29791263