* 'ASTGenVisitor' has a reference to a legacy C++ Parser configured for
ASTGen.
* If 'ASTGenVisitor' encounters a AST node that hasn't been migrated,
call parse(Decl|Stmt|Expr|Type) to parse the position using the legacy
parser.
* The legacy parser calls ASTGen's
'swift_ASTGen_build(Decl|Stmt|Expr|Type)' for each ASTNode "parsing"
(unless the call is not directly from the ASTGen.)
rdar://117151886
'ParseDeclOptions' can be trivially calculated solely from the current
decl context. To reduce the number of the contextual parameters,
calculate it inside the function.
This attribute instructs the compiler that this function declaration
should be "import"ed from host environment. It's equivalent of Clang's
`__attribute__((import_module("module"), import_name("field")))`
Parse typed throw specifiers as `throws(X)` in every place where there
are effects specified, and record the resulting thrown error type in
the AST except the type system. This includes:
* `FunctionTypeRepr`, for the parsed representation of types
* `AbstractFunctionDecl`, for various function-like declarations
* `ClosureExpr`, for closures
* `ArrowExpr`, for parsing of types within expression context
This also introduces some serialization logic for the thrown error
type of function-like declarations, along with an API to extract the
thrown interface type from one of those declarations, although right
now it will either be `Error` or empty.
These allow multi-statement `if`/`switch` expression
branches that can produce a value at the end by
saying `then <expr>`. This is gated behind
`-enable-experimental-feature ThenStatements`
pending evolution discussion.
Address a few related issues that affect local types and opaque result types within macros:
* Don't add local types or opaque types encountered while parsing the
arguments of a freestanding macro to the global list. When we do add
them, make sure we're adding them to the outermost source file so
they'll get seen later. This avoids trying to generate code for these
types, because they aren't supposed to be part of the program. Note
that a similar problem remains for arguments to attached macros, which
will need to be addressed with a more significant refactoring.
* When determining whether opaque types should be substituted within a
resilience domain, check the outermost source files rather than the exact
source file, otherwise we will end up with a mismatch in
argument-passing conventions.
* When delaying the type checking of functions that occur as part of a
macro expansion, make sure we record them in the outermost Swift source
file. Otherwise, we won't come back to them.
There is a common theme here of using AST state on the source file in
a manner that isn't ideal, and starts to break down with macros. In
these cases, we're relying on side effects from earlier phases
(parsing and type checking) to inform later phases, rather than
properly expressing the dependencies through requests.
Fixes rdar://110674997&110713264.
Reformatting everything now that we have `llvm` namespaces. I've
separated this from the main commit to help manage merge-conflicts and
for making it a bit easier to read the mega-patch.
This is phase-1 of switching from llvm::Optional to std::optional in the
next rebranch. llvm::Optional was removed from upstream LLVM, so we need
to migrate off rather soon. On Darwin, std::optional, and llvm::Optional
have the same layout, so we don't need to be as concerned about ABI
beyond the name mangling. `llvm::Optional` is only returned from one
function in
```
getStandardTypeSubst(StringRef TypeName,
bool allowConcurrencyManglings);
```
It's the return value, so it should not impact the mangling of the
function, and the layout is the same as `std::optional`, so it should be
mostly okay. This function doesn't appear to have users, and the ABI was
already broken 2 years ago for concurrency and no one seemed to notice
so this should be "okay".
I'm doing the migration incrementally so that folks working on main can
cherry-pick back to the release/5.9 branch. Once 5.9 is done and locked
away, then we can go through and finish the replacement. Since `None`
and `Optional` show up in contexts where they are not `llvm::None` and
`llvm::Optional`, I'm preparing the work now by going through and
removing the namespace unwrapping and making the `llvm` namespace
explicit. This should make it fairly mechanical to go through and
replace llvm::Optional with std::optional, and llvm::None with
std::nullopt. It's also a change that can be brought onto the
release/5.9 with minimal impact. This should be an NFC change.
Instead of "spinning" the C++ lexer, consuming tokens uptil we get past
the point where ASTGen told us the end of the syntax node was, just
reset the lexer to exactly that position. This is more efficient, but
also fixes problems where we would end up skipping past a `>` that had
been split.
Introduce a new experimental feature `ASTGenTypes` that uses ASTGen to
translate the Swift syntax tree (produced by the new Swift parser)
into C++ `TypeRepr` nodes instead of having the C++ parser create the
nodes.
The approach here is to intercept the C++ parser's `parseType`
operation to find the Swift syntax node at the given position (where
the lexer currently is) and have ASTGen translate that into the
corresponding C++ AST node. Then, we spin the lexer forward to the
token immediately following the end of the syntax node and continue
parsing.
* Unify macro expansion parsing logic between MacroExpansionExpr and
MacroExpansionDecl
* Diagnose whitespace between '#' and the macro name
* Diagnose keyword as a macro name
* Parse `#<identifier>` attribute list as a `MacroExpansionDecl`
regardless of the position
* Diagnose whitespaces between `#` and the macro name.
* Correctly attach attributes to `MacroExpansionDecl`
* Fix `OrigDeclAttributes` to handle modifiers (use `getLocation()`
instead of `AtLoc`.)
Type checking is a TODO
rdar://107386648
SE-390 concluded with choosing the keyword discard rather than forget for
the statement that disables the deinit of a noncopyable type. This commit
adds parsing support for `discard self` and adds a deprecation warning for
`_forget self`.
rdar://108859077
We parse `~Copyable` in an inheritance clause of enum and
struct decls as a synonym for the `@_moveOnly` attribute
being added to that decl. This completely side-steps the
additional infrastructure for generalized suppressed
conformances in favor of a minimal solution. One benefit of
this minimal solution is that it doesn't risk introducing
any back-compat issues with older compilers or stdlibs.
The trade-off is that we're more committed to supporting
`@_moveOnly` in compiled modules in the future. In fact,
this change does not deprecate `@_moveOnly` in any way.
resolves rdar://106775103
Cursor info only cares about the `doneParsing` callback and not about all the `complete` functions that are now defined in `CodeCompletionCallbacks`. To make the design clearer, split `IDEInspectionCallbacks`.
rdar://105120332
Currently, this is staged in as `_forget`,
as part of SE-390. It can only be used on
`self` for a move-only type within a consuming
method or accessor. There are other rules, see
Sema for the details.
A `forget self` really just consumes self and
performs memberwise destruction of its data.
Thus, the current expansion of this statement
just reuses what we inject into the end of a
deinit.
Parsing of `forget` is "contextual".
By contextual I mean that we do lookahead to
the next token and see if it's identifier-like.
If so, then we parse it as the `forget` statement.
Otherwise, we parse it as though "forget" is an
identifier as part of some expression.
This way, we won't introduce a source break for
people who wrote code that calls a forget
function.
This should make it seamless to change it from
`_forget` to `forget` in the future.
resolves rdar://105795731
And adjust contextual parameter modifier parsing in general to be more
properly contextual, so we don't have to reserve `__shared` or `__owned`,
or their successor spellings, as argument labels anymore.
Extend handling of incomplete multi-line string literals during input in
REPL to also cover raw multi-line strings.
Fixes#52840 and apple/llvm-project#4628
Introduce SingleValueStmtExpr, which allows the
embedding of a statement in an expression context.
This then allows us to parse and type-check `if`
and `switch` statements as expressions, gated
behind the `IfSwitchExpression` experimental
feature for now. In the future,
SingleValueStmtExpr could also be used for e.g
`do` expressions.
For now, only single expression branches are
supported for producing a value from an
`if`/`switch` expression, and each branch is
type-checked independently. A multi-statement
branch may only appear if it ends with a `throw`,
and it may not `break`, `continue`, or `return`.
The placement of `if`/`switch` expressions is also
currently limited by a syntactic use diagnostic.
Currently they're only allowed in bindings,
assignments, throws, and returns. But this could
be lifted in the future if desired.
Use the name mangling scheme we've devised for macro expansions to
back the implementation of the macro expansion context's
`getUniqueName` operation. This way, we guarantee that the names
provided by macro expansions don't conflict, as well as making them
demangleable so we can determine what introduced the names.