This commit adds a new type DynamicLookupInfo that provides information
about how a dynamic member lookup found a particular Decl. This is
needed to correctly handle KeyPath dynamic member lookups, but for now
just plumb it through everywhere.
Serialize the relationship between a property that has an attached delegate
and its backing variable, so deserialization can reestablish that link.
Fixes rdar://problem/50447022.
Fix a trio of issues involving mangling for opaque result types:
* Symbolic references to opaque type descriptors are not substitutions
* Mangle protocol extension contexts correctly
* Mangle generic arguments for opaque result types of generic functions
The (de-)serialization of generic parameter lists for opaque type
declarations is important for the last bullet, to ensure that the
mangling of generic arguments of opaque result types works across
module boundaries.
Fixes the rest of rdar://problem/50038754.
form SerializedModuleLoader into its own ModuleLoader class. (NFC-ish)
This gives better control over the order in which the various module
load mechanisms are applied.
When printing a swiftinterface, represent opaque result types using an attribute that refers to
the mangled name of the defining decl for the opaque type. To turn this back into a reference
to the right decl's implicit OpaqueTypeDecl, use type reconstruction. Since type reconstruction
doesn't normally concern itself with non-type decls, set up a lookup table in SourceFiles and
ModuleFiles to let us handle the mapping from mangled name to opaque type decl in type
reconstruction.
(Since we're invoking type reconstruction during type checking, when the module hasn't yet been
fully validated, we need to plumb a LazyResolver into the ASTBuilder in an unsightly way. Maybe
there's a better way to do this... Longer term, at least, this surface design gives space for
doing things more the right way--a more request-ified decl validator ought to be able to naturally
lazily service this request without the LazyResolver reference, and if type reconstruction in
the future learns how to reconstruct non-type decls, then the lookup tables can go away.)
To represent the abstracted interface of an opaque type, we need a generic signature that refines
the outer context generic signature with an additional generic parameter representing the underlying
type and its exposed constraints. Opaque types also need to be keyed by their originating decl, so
that we can treat values of the same opaque type as the same. When we check a FuncDecl with an
opaque type specified as its return type, create an OpaqueTypeDecl and associate it with the
originating decl. (A representation for *types* derived from the opaque decl will come next.)
Escapingness is a property of the type of a value, not a property of a function
parameter. Having it as a separate parameter flag just meant one more piece of
state that could get out of sync and cause weird problems.
Instead, always look at the noescape bit in a function type as the canonical
source of truth.
This does mean that '@escaping' is now printed in a few diagnostics where it was
not printed before; we can investigate these as separate issues, but it is
correct to print it there because the function types in question are, in fact,
escaping.
Fixes <https://bugs.swift.org/browse/SR-10256>, <rdar://problem/49522774>.
When a Swift module built with debug info imports a library without
debug info from a textual interface, the textual interface is
necessary to reconstruct types defined in the library's interface. By
recording the Swift interface files in DWARF dsymutil can collect them
and LLDB can find them.
rdar://problem/49751363
Previously, the ParseableInterfaceModuleLoader relied on the assumption
that, if it returned `errc::not_supported`, it would fall through the
search paths and then move on to the SerializedModuleLoader. This did
not anticipate the possibility of a valid .swiftinterface coming later
in the search paths, which can cause issues for the standard library
which is in the resource-dir and should always be loaded from there.
Instead, make the module loading explicitly short-circuit when seeing
`errc::not_supported`, and document it.
Also add some more logging throughout `discoverLoadableModule` so we can
more easily catch issues like this in the future.
Fixes rdar://49479386
This patch modifies ParseableInterfaceBuilder::CollectDepsForSerialization to
avoid serializing dependencies from the runtime resource path into the
swiftmodules generated from .swiftinterface files. This means the module cache
should now be relocatable across machines.
It also modifies ParseableInterfaceModuleLoader to never add any dependencies
from the module cache and prebuilt cache to the dependency tracker (in addition
to the existing behaviour of not serializing them in the generated
swiftmodules). As a result, CollectDepsForSerialization no longer checks if the
dependencies it is given come from the cache as they are provided by the
dependency tracker. It now asserts that's the case instead.
* Moves the IsStatic flag from VarDecl to AbstractStorageDecl.
* Adds a StaticSubscriptKind to SubscriptDecl.
* Updates serialization for these changes.
* Updates SubscriptDecl constructor call sites for these changes.
When we build incrementally, we produce "partial swiftmodules" for
each input source file, then merge them together into the final
compiled module that, among other things, gets used for debugging.
Without this, we'd drop @_implementationOnly imports and any types
from the modules that were imported during the module-merging step
and then be unable to debug those types
This is an attribute that gets put on an import in library FooKit to
keep it from being a requirement to import FooKit. It's not checked at
all, meaning that in this form it is up to the author of FooKit to
make sure nothing in its API or ABI depends on the implementation-only
dependency. There's also no debugging support here (debugging FooKit
/should/ import the implementation-only dependency if it's present).
The goal is to get to a point where it /can/ be checked, i.e. FooKit
developers are prevented from writing code that would rely on FooKit's
implementation-only dependency being present when compiling clients of
FooKit. But right now it's not.
rdar://problem/48985979
...in preparation for me adding a third kind of import, making the
existing "All" kind a problem. NFC, except that I did rewrite the
ClangModuleUnit implementation of getImportedModules to be simpler!
In addition to being wasteful, this is a correctness issue -- the
compiler should only ever have one view of this file, and it should not
read a potentially different file after validating dependencies.
rdar://48654608
It's a pretty obscure feature (and one we wish we didn't need), but
sometimes API is initially exposed through one module in order to
build another one, and we want the canonical presented name to be
something else. Push this concept into Swift's AST properly so that
other parts of the compiler stop having to know that this is a
Clang-specific special case.
No functionality change in this commit; will be used in the next
commit.
We already detected when a typealias /changed/ incompatibly; being
unable to deserialize it at all is just a very dramatic version of
that, right?
https://bugs.swift.org/browse/SR-9811
Introduce stored property default argument kind
Fix indent
Assign nil to optionals with no initializers
Don't emit generator for stored property default arg
Fix problem with rebase
Indentation
Serialize stored property default arg text
Fix some tests
Add missing constructor in test
Print stored property's initializer expression
cleanups
preserve switch
complete_constructor
formatting
fix conflict