Commit Graph

72 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Doug Gregor
2a7de1b559 Store the conforming type within an abstract ProtocolConformanceRef
An "abstract" ProtocolConformanceRef is a conformance of a type
parameter or archetype to a given protocol. Previously, we would only
store the protocol requirement itself---but not track the actual
conforming type, requiring clients of ProtocolConformanceRef to keep
track of this information separately.

Record the conforming type as part of an abstract ProtocolConformanceRef,
so that clients will be able to recover it later. This is handled by a uniqued
AbstractConformance structure, so that ProtocolConformanceRef itself stays one
pointer.

There remain a small number of places where we create an abstract
ProtocolConformanceRef with a null type. We'll want to chip away at
those and establish some stronger invariants on the abstract conformance
in the future.
2025-03-23 20:53:48 -07:00
Pavel Yaskevich
3cc24f7c19 [Serialization] Serialize a flag that indicates whether ExtensibleEnum feature is supported by a module
When `ExtensibleEnums` flag is set, it's going to be reflected in
the module file produced by the compiler to make sure that consumers
know that non-`@frozen` enumerations can gain new cases in the
future and switching cannot be exhaustive.
2025-02-25 00:05:21 -08:00
Steven Wu
9d59044bb1 [BrdigingHeader] Auto bridging header chaining
Add ability to automatically chaining the bridging headers discovered from all
dependencies module when doing swift caching build. This will eliminate all
implicit bridging header imports from the build and make the bridging header
importing behavior much more reliable, while keep the compatibility at maximum.

For example, if the current module A depends on module B and C, and both B and
C are binary modules that uses bridging header, when building module A,
dependency scanner will construct a new header that chains three bridging
headers together with the option to build a PCH from it. This will make all
importing errors more obvious while improving the performance.
2025-02-05 09:41:04 -08:00
Doug Gregor
d593442cc4 Add module trace information for strict memory safety
Extend the module trace format with a field indicating whether a given
module, or any module it depends on, was compiled with strict memory
safety enabled. This separate output from the compiler can be used as
part of an audit to determine what parts of Swift programs are built
with strict memory safety checking enabled.
2024-12-24 12:27:35 -08:00
Richard Howell
a007833cc0 Add IsSDKRelative field to ModuleInterfaceLayout
When serializing the module interface path of an interface that
is part of the SDK, we serialize relative to the SDK path. During
deserialization we need to know if a path was serialized relative
to the SDK or not. The existing logic assumes any relative path
has been serialized relative to the SDK, which makes it impossible
to compile modules from relative swiftinterface paths that are not
part of the SDK.

Update the swiftmodule file to include an attribute to show if the
path was serialized relative to the SDK or not, which is used
during deserialization to correctly reconstruct the interface path.
2024-12-04 08:14:59 -08:00
Pavel Yaskevich
4a9d20d877 Merge pull request #77684 from xedin/switch-swiftinterface-version-to-use-Version
[Frontend] Switch `-interface-compiler-version` to `Version`
2024-11-19 08:56:58 -08:00
Pavel Yaskevich
7c8000b3a5 [Frontend] Switch -interface-compiler-version to Version
`SWIFT_COMPILER_VERSION` has more than 4 components and it's
easier to use `Version` API over `VersionTuple` as well.
2024-11-18 15:11:36 -08:00
Artem Chikin
77fde76150 Ignore in-package transitive dependencies when building from non-package textual interface
This change ensures that when loading some module dependency 'Bar' which has a package-only dependency on 'Foo', only the following clients attempt to resolve/load 'Foo':
- Source compilation with package-name equal to that of 'Bar'.
- Textual interface compilation of a *'package'* interface with package-name equal to that of 'Bar'.

Ensuring that the following kinds of clients do not attempt to resolve/load 'Foo':
- Source compilation with package-name different to that of 'Bar'
- Textual interface compilation of a public or private interface, regardless of package name.

This fixes the behavior where previously compilation of a Swift textual interface dependency 'X' from its public or private interface, with an interface-specified package-name, from a client without a matching package-name, resulted in a lookup of package-only dependencies of modules loaded into 'X'. This behavior is invalid if we are not building from the package textual interface, becuase the module dependency graph is defined by the package name of the source client, not individual module dependency package name. i.e. In-package module dependencies are resolved/loaded only if the parent source compile matches the package name.

Resolves rdar://139979180
2024-11-18 13:29:30 -08:00
Pavel Yaskevich
84a62fc170 [Frontend/Serialization] Narrow -swift-compiler-version to -interface-compiler-version
It might be unexpected to future users that `-swift-compiler-version`
would produce a version aligned to .swiftinterface instead of one used
to build the .swiftmodule file. To avoid this possible confusion, let's
scope down the version to `-interface-compiler-version` flag and
`SWIFT_INTERFACE_COMPILER_VERSION` option in the module.
2024-10-28 13:45:27 -07:00
Pavel Yaskevich
ab4d8f61eb [Serialization] Add -swift-compiler-version option to swiftmodules 2024-10-25 09:53:40 -07:00
Steven Wu
e0541b0357 [Macro][Dependencies] Properly model macro dependencies in the scanner
Add function to handle all macro dependencies kinds in the scanner,
including taking care of the macro definitions in the module interface
for its client to use. The change involves:
  * Encode the macro definition inside the binary module
  * Resolve macro modules in the dependencies scanners, including those
    declared inside the dependency modules.
  * Propagate the macro defined from the direct dependencies to track
    all the potentially available modules inside a module compilation.
2024-09-19 16:41:53 -07:00
Alexis Laferrière
37521ad21d Serialization: Read and write support for public module name 2024-09-04 16:20:12 -07:00
Egor Zhdan
bfe72b4be9 Merge pull request #75589 from swiftlang/egorzhdan/linux-libcxx-interop
[cxx-interop] Allow compiling with libc++ on Linux
2024-08-09 13:42:29 +01:00
Egor Zhdan
059f0f97d1 [cxx-interop] Allow compiling with libc++ on Linux
This makes sure that Swift respects `-Xcc -stdlib=libc++` flags.

Clang already has existing logic to discover the system-wide libc++ installation on Linux. We rely on that logic here.

Importing a Swift module that was built with a different C++ stdlib is not supported and emits an error.

The Cxx module can be imported when compiling with any C++ stdlib. The synthesized conformances, e.g. to CxxRandomAccessCollection also work. However, CxxStdlib currently cannot be imported when compiling with libc++, since on Linux it refers to symbols from libstdc++ which have different mangled names in libc++.

rdar://118357548 / https://github.com/swiftlang/swift/issues/69825
2024-08-08 16:24:58 +01:00
Xi Ge
370bcec229 Merge pull request #75704 from swiftlang/version-number-hack
DependencyScanner: report user module version in dependency scanning results for binary Swift modules
2024-08-06 15:42:39 -07:00
Xi Ge
b4d64bde55 DependencyScanner: report user module version in dependency scanning results for binary Swift modules 2024-08-06 11:43:53 -07:00
Adrian Prantl
f0902a9163 Expose an ImportNonPublicDependencies LangOpt for LLDB (NFC).
This patch allows controlling the automatic import of private dependencies
separately from the DebuggerSupport option, which currently also triggers this
behavior. With explicit modules + precise compiler invocations LLDB is moving
towards no longer needing this behavior.

rdar://133088201
(cherry picked from commit a1ba7159e3)
2024-08-05 12:53:43 -07:00
Ellie Shin
18681c43fb Drop experimental prefixes from PackageCMO flags.
Deprecate experimental- flags with prompts to use the proper flags.

rdar://131498517
2024-07-10 16:19:16 -07:00
Artem Chikin
2464f87f8f [Dependency Scanning] Resolve cross-import overlays relative to defining interface for prebuilt binary Swift dependencies
When the dependency scanner picks a pre-built binary module candidate for a given dependency, it needs to be able to attempt to resolve its cross-import overlays relative to the textual interface that the binary module was built from. For example, if a collection of binary modules are located in, and resolved as dependencies from, a pre-built module directory, the scanner must lookup their corresponding cross-import overlays relative to the defining interface as read out from the binary module's MODULE_INTERFACE_PATH. https://github.com/swiftlang/swift/pull/70817 ensures that binary modules serialize the path to their defining textual interface.

Resolves rdar://130778577
2024-07-03 10:05:54 -07:00
artemcm
d70863501e [Dependency Scanning] Collect and report each module dependency's Link Libraries 2024-06-05 10:59:41 -07:00
Alexis Laferrière
074df70248 Serialization: Write the target SDK in the binary swiftmodule 2024-05-16 11:52:36 -07:00
Ellie Shin
fbb3382e21 During Package CMO, SIL cloning happens during which
SILOptions::EnableSerializePackage info is lost.

SILVerifier needs this info to determine whether resilience
can be bypassed for decls serialized in a resiliently
built module when Package CMO optimization enabled.

This PR adds SerializePackageEnabled bit to Module format
and uses that in SILVerifier.

Resolves rdar://126157356
2024-04-17 22:37:48 -07:00
Kavon Farvardin
149c052ec5 use new noncopyable types infrastructure
The infrastructure underpinning the new feature NoncopyableGenerics is
mature enough to be used.
2024-03-14 23:10:44 -07:00
Ellie Shin
30669fca65 Currently when checking if resilience check can be bypassed within a package,
we only check if the loaded module is built from a package interface. This is
not enough as a binary module could just contain exportable decls if built with
experimental-skip-non-exportable-decls, essentially resulting in content equivalent
to interface content. This might be made a default behavior so this PR requires
a module to opt in to allow non-resilient access by a participating client in the
same package.

Since it affects module format, SWIFTMODULE_VERSION_MINOR is updated.

rdar://123651270
2024-03-01 15:13:58 -08:00
Ben Barham
f292ec9784 Use the new template deduction guides rather than makeArrayRef
LLVM has removed `make*ArrayRef`, migrate all references to their
constructor equivalent.
2024-02-23 20:04:51 -08:00
Kavon Farvardin
483b569bc8 [NCGenerics] trigger module mismatch
A swiftmodule can only be correctly ingested by a compiler
that has a matching state of using or not-using
NoncopyableGenerics.

The reason for this is fundamental: the absence of a Copyable
conformance in the swiftmodule indicates that a type is
noncopyable. Thus, if a compiler with NoncopyableGenerics
reads a swiftmodule that was not compiled with that feature,
it will think every type in that module is noncopyable.

Similarly, if a compiler with NoncopyableGenerics produces a
swiftmodule, there will be Copyable requirements on each
generic parameter that the compiler without the feature will
become confused about.

The solution here is to trigger a module mismatch, so that
the compiler re-generates the swiftmodule file using the
swiftinterface, which has been kept compatible with the compiler
regardless of whether the feature is enabled.
2024-01-23 22:42:37 -08:00
swift-ci
d86c449532 Merge remote-tracking branch 'origin/main' into rebranch 2023-09-25 09:36:22 -07:00
Artem Chikin
6e3f896962 [Dependency Scanning] Refactor primary scan operations into 'ModuleDependencyScanner' class
From being a scattered collection of 'static' methods in ScanDependencies.cpp
and member methods of ASTContext. This makes 'ScanDependencies.cpp' much easier
to read, and abstracts the actual scanning logic away to a place with common
state which will make it easier to reason about in the future.
2023-09-22 14:09:45 -07:00
swift-ci
5bb21c1303 Merge remote-tracking branch 'origin/main' into rebranch 2023-09-07 01:14:42 -07:00
Kuba Mracek
25eb997a28 [embedded] Add basics of module serialization, importing and validation in embedded Swift.
- Add a flag to the serialized module (IsEmbeddedSwiftModule)
- Check on import that the mode matches (don't allow importing non-embedded module in embedded mode and vice versa)
- Drop TBD support, it's not expected to work in embedded Swift for now
- Drop auto-linking backdeploy libraries, it's not expected to backdeploy embedded Swift for now
- Drop prespecializations, not expected to work in embedded Swift for now
- Use CMO to serialize everything when emitting an embedded Swift module
- Change SILLinker to deserialize/import everything when importing an embedded Swift module
- Add an IR test for importing modules
- Add a deserialization validation test
2023-09-06 20:06:36 -07:00
Evan Wilde
fd156f2717 More APInt API updates
Updating more APInt and bit-manipulation API changes.
2023-07-25 12:28:27 -07:00
Alex Lorenz
ba8d4d7801 [cxx-interop] compilations that do not enable C++ interoperability should not be able to import modules that do enable C++ interoperability by default
A supplemental hidden frontend option allows advanced users to opt-out of this requirement.

Fixes https://github.com/apple/swift/issues/65833
Fixes https://github.com/apple/swift/issues/65832
2023-06-09 15:38:16 -07:00
Slava Pestov
1e26137379 Serialization: Serialize PackConformance 2023-04-19 16:41:51 -04:00
Alexis Laferrière
f7f69c6ae1 [Serialization] Load non-public transitive dependencies on @testable imports
A @testable import allows a client to call internal decls which may
refer to non-public dependencies. To support such a use case, load
non-public transitive dependencies of a module when it's imported
@testable from the main module.

This replaces the previous behavior where we loaded those dependencies
for any modules built for testing. This was risky as we would load more
module for any debug build, opening the door to a different behavior
between debug and release builds. In contrast, applying this logic to
@testable clients will only change the behavior of test targets.

rdar://107329303
2023-03-29 13:59:28 -07:00
Alexis Laferrière
599346885e [Serialization] Differentiate module loading behavior for non-public imports
Differentiate `internal` and `fileprivate` imports from
implementation-only imports at the module-wide level to offer a
different module loading strategy. The main difference is for non-public
imports from a module with testing enabled to be loaded by transitive
clients.

Ideally, we would only load transitive non-public dependencies on
testable imports of the middle module. The current module loading logic
doesn't allow for this behavior easily as a module may be first loaded
for a normal import and extra dependencies would have to be loaded on
later imports. We may want to refactor the module loading logic to allow
this if needed.

rdar://106514965
2023-03-21 16:46:53 -07:00
Alexis Laferrière
61c0827427 [Serialization] Refactor logic deciding transitive module loading logic
Refactor and centralize the logic about how implementation-only and
package-only dependencies should be loaded.
2023-03-20 13:53:10 -07:00
Alexis Laferrière
5be7e2d1d5 [Serialization] Load indirect package dependencies from the current package
When loading a swiftmodule A, read its package information to tell if
the current client should load A's dependencies imports by a package
import. Only clients belonging to the same package as A should load
those dependencies, clients outside of the package likely don't have
access to those dependencies.

This is specific to swiftmodules as swiftinterfaces never display a
package-only import. Clients are unaware of package dependencies when
building against a swiftinterface.

rdar://106164813
2023-03-03 11:43:21 -08:00
Ben Barham
6269643b4d [Index] Prevent re-indexing system modules repeatedly
If a module was first read using the adjacent swiftmodule and then
reloaded using the swiftinterface, we would do an up to date check on
the adjacent module but write out the unit using the swiftinterface.
This would cause the same modules to be indexed repeatedly for the first
invocation using a new SDK. On the next run we would instead raad the
swiftmodule from the cache and thus the out of date check would match
up.

The impact of this varies depending on the size of the module graph in
the initial compilation and the number of jobs started at the same time.
Each SDK dependency is re-indexed *and* reloaded, which is a drain on
both CPU and memory. Thus, if many jobs are initially started and
they're all going down this path, it can cause the system to run out of
memory very quickly.

Resolves rdar://103119964.
2023-02-09 11:49:13 -08:00
Alexis Laferrière
39fb1c5f55 [ModuleInterface] Intro export-as for Swift modules
Introduce a new flag `-export-as` to specify a name used to identify the
target module in swiftinterfaces. This provides an analoguous feature
for Swift module as Clang's `export_as` feature.

In practice it should be used when a lower level module `MyKitCore` is
desired to be shown publicly as a downstream module `MyKit`. This should
be used in conjunction with `@_exported import MyKitCore` from `MyKit`
that allows clients to refer to all services as being part of `MyKit`,
while the new `-export-as MyKit` from `MyKitCore` will ensure that the
clients swiftinterfaces also use the `MyKit` name for all services.

In the current implementation, the export-as name is used in the
module's clients and not in the declarer's swiftinterface (e.g.
`MyKitCore`'s swiftinterface still uses the `MyKitCore` module name).
This way the module swiftinterface can be verified. In the future, we
may want a similar behavior for other modules in between `MyKitCore` and
`MyKit` as verifying a swiftinterface referencing `MyKit` without it
being imported would fail.

rdar://103888618
2023-01-26 14:27:31 -08:00
Ellie Shin
72ee150982 Add -package-name flag
De/serialize package name in module binary
Resoles rdar://103531218, rdar://103531208
2022-12-19 14:33:44 -08:00
Adrian Prantl
a5e1786a99 Expose Swift search paths in validateSerializedAST
This is for the benefit of LLDB, which currently does an expensive import of all
modules to get to the same information.

rdar://40097459
2022-12-01 13:14:08 -08:00
Xi Ge
67bbab7e02 serialization: encode allowable client names in binary module format 2022-11-25 18:43:40 -08:00
Alexis Laferrière
2854c1b3cb [Serialization] Write in the swiftmodule if it's built from a swiftinterface
This information will allow us to distinguish swiftmodule built from
source vs swiftinterface.
2022-10-27 18:51:28 -07:00
Slava Pestov
b36f37cc72 Serialization: Preserve identity of opened generic environments
We used to create a new environment for each opened archetype, which is
incorrect when deserializing a nested type of another opened archetype.
2022-08-15 13:59:12 -04:00
Alexis Laferrière
c8059a09e9 [Serialization] Soft-reject swiftmodules built against a different SDK
Change the way swiftmodules built against a different SDK than their
clients are rejected. This makes them silently ignored when the module
can be rebuilt from their swiftinterface, instead of reporting a hard
error.

rdar://93257769
2022-05-16 13:22:35 -07:00
John McCall
713bb43a94 Rework the serialization schema for conformances and requirements.
We now schedule conformance emissions in basically the same way
we do for types and declarations, which means that we'll emit them
uniquely in the module file instead of redundantly at every use.
This should produce substantially smaller module files overall,
especially for modules that heavily use generics.  It also means
that we can remove all the unfortunate code to support using
different abbrev codes for them in different bitcode blocks.

Requirement lists are now emitted inline in the records that need
them instead of as trailing records.  I think this will improve
space usage, but mostly it assists in eliminating the problem
where abbrev codes are shared between blocks.
2022-02-28 17:32:00 -05:00
Xi Ge
6377c3a742 Revert "Revert "serialization: obfuscate the serialized search paths"" 2021-12-02 13:21:04 -08:00
Saleem Abdulrasool
11d5d6d4ca Revert "serialization: obfuscate the serialized search paths" 2021-12-02 08:18:23 -08:00
Xi Ge
0047d81f9a serialization: obfuscate the serialized search paths
We noticed some Swift clients rely on the serialized search paths in the module to
find dependencies and droping these paths altogether can lead to build failures like
rdar://85840921.

This change teaches the serialization to obfuscate the search paths and the deserialization
to recover them. This allows clients to keep accessing these paths without exposing
them when shipping the module to other users.
2021-12-01 11:47:41 -08:00
Kuba (Brecka) Mracek
c89eca6c34 Enforce consistent usage of -experimental-hermetic-seat-at-link flag (#39986)
We've recently added the -experimental-hermetic-seal-at-link compiler flag,
which turns on aggressive dead-stripping optimizations and assumes that library
code can be optimized against client code because all users of the library
code/types are present at link/LTO time. This means that any module that's
built with -experimental-hermetic-seal-at-link requires all clients of this
module to also use -experimental-hermetic-seal-at-link. This PR enforces that
by storing a bit in the serialized module, and checking the bit when importing
modules.
2021-11-30 10:44:58 -08:00