Add value witnesses for destroyArray, initializeArrayWithCopy, and initializeArrayWithTake{FrontToBack,BackToFront}, and fill out the runtime value witness table implementations. Stub out the IRGen ones for now.
Swift SVN r16772
This was part of the original weak design that
there was never any particular reason to rush the
implementation for. It's convenient to do this now
so that we can use it to implement Unmanaged<T> for
importing CF types.
Swift SVN r16693
This will represent the return convention of imported __attribute__((objc_returns_inner_pointer)) methods. Leave it unimplemented for now until we can autorelease things sanely.
Swift SVN r16628
The cost of hacks to swift_conformsToProtocol is starting to outweigh any benefit to being principled here. We'll get a linker error now if multiple modules declare a conformance for the same type to the same protocol, but that's arguably a good thing for 1.0 anyway, since we aren't set up to get that right in other ways.
Swift SVN r16554
Language features like erasing concrete metatype
values are also left for the future. Still, baby steps.
The singleton ordinary metatype for existential types
is still potentially useful; we allow it to be written
as P.Protocol.
I've been somewhat cavalier in making code accept
AnyMetatypeType instead of a more specific type, and
it's likely that a number of these places can and
should be more restrictive.
When T is an existential type, parse T.Type as an
ExistentialMetatypeType instead of a MetatypeType.
An existential metatype is the formal type
\exists t:P . (t.Type)
whereas the ordinary metatype is the formal type
(\exists t:P . t).Type
which is singleton. Our inability to express that
difference was leading to an ever-increasing cascade
of hacks where information is shadily passed behind
the scenes in order to make various operations with
static members of protocols work correctly.
This patch takes the first step towards fixing that
by splitting out existential metatypes and giving
them a pointer representation. Eventually, we will
need them to be able to carry protocol witness tables
Swift SVN r15716
recursive positions.
Also change the representation of certain <global>s in the
demangling tree by sinking <directness> down as a child of
the affected node.
Swift SVN r14537
A short-term fix to <rdar://problem/16079822> that keeps generic overloads from creating symbol collisions without requiring a larger migration of the debugger or other tools.
Swift SVN r14353
This is more in line with all other modules currently on our system.
If/when we get our final name for the language, we're at least now set
up to rename the library without /too/ much trouble. (This is mostly just
a lot of searching for "import swift", "swift.", "'swift'", and '"swift"'.
The compiler itself is pretty much just using STDLIB_NAME consistently now,
per r13758.)
<rdar://problem/15972383>
Swift SVN r14001
We allow overloads on foo(() -> T) and foo(@auto_closure () -> T) in Sema, so they need distinct manglings. Fixes <rdar://problem/16045566>.
Swift SVN r13856
Implement the demangling for generic signatures and their requirements, dependent parameters, and member types, now that we actually use these manglings when naming reabstraction thunks.
Swift SVN r13764
This is mostly useful for the standard library, whose name is going to
change to "Swift" soon. (See <rdar://problem/15972383>.) But it's good DRY.
Swift SVN r13758
This time, be sure to reset the demangler state after demangling the
specialization header, because it is a prefix of the demangled symbol
name.
Swift SVN r13378
- Int and UInt are now struct types backed by Builtin.Word. Previously they
were typealiases for Int64; Int and Int64 are now distinct types.
- Mangled names 'i' and 'u' are now Int and UInt. Int64 is mangled longhand.
- Word is a typealias for Int. It is expected to go away in the future.
- Builtin.Word is unchanged.
- CLong and CUnsignedLong are typealiases for Int and UInt.
- FixedPoint.swift is now FixedPoint32.swift and FixedPoint64.swift.
Reunifying these requires better builtins, especially for checked
conversions (rdar://15472770).
- Updated many tests, mostly because Int is no longer spelled Int64 in sil.
- One check was removed from test decl/operator/operators.swift
because it changed behavior when Int became a non-typealias
type (rdar://15934688).
Swift SVN r13109
type, so we emit them. Add mangler (and demangler) support for these.
Enhance our testcase to check to make sure that stores within these
specifiers are direct, they don't cause recursive infinite loops.
John, I picked w/W for the mangling letters, let me know if this is ok.
Swift SVN r13050
When we're using Objective-C's memory allocation, emit .cxx_construct
methods whenever we have instance variables with in-class
initializers. Presently, these methods are just empty stubs.
Swift SVN r12211
The Objective-C runtime executes the .cxx_destruct method after the
last -dealloc has executed when destroying an object, allowing the
instance variables to remain live even after the subclass's
destructor/-dealloc has executed, which is important for memory
safety. This fixes the majority of <rdar://problem/15136592>.
Note that IRGenModule::getAddrOfIVarDestroyer() contains an egregious
hack to find the ivar destructor SIL function via a linear
search. We need a better way to find SIL functions that we know exist,
because LinkEntity does not suffice.
Swift SVN r12206
Revert "add a hackaround for rdar://15753317. I don't unerstand the code enough to tell if this is the right fix."
This reverts commit 416983b0734dde6979c98971948068c7a157e336.
Swift SVN r11942