The operator lookup cache already lived in SourceFile, but we need to be
able to look up operators on a per-SourceFile basis. Different files can
have different imports. The interface previously distinguished between
"no operator found" and "error", but none of the call sites were making
use of this distinction, and indeed some were misusing the return value
(Optional<SomeOperatorDecl *>). Now the lookup functions just return
operator decl pointers, which may be null.
Swift SVN r9668
Value witness markers note the location within a generic function
type's list of requirements where the value witness table will be
placed when calling a generic function with that type. It allows one
to get the same effect from walking the requirements of a generic
function that one would get from walking all levels of a
GenericParamList, with all archetypes of each generic parameter list,
along with all of the protocols to which each archetype conforms,
which SILGen and IRGen both do.
AST verification ensures that the property above holds; we're not
making use of it just yet.
Swift SVN r9509
of having a ton of ad-hoc bools in it. This allows us to consolidate a ton of
boilerplate, eliminating 250 lines of code:
17 files changed, 435 insertions(+), 662 deletions(-)
2) This eliminates the special case for weak and unowned attributes, which previously
didn't show up in Attr.def.
3) While we're at it, keep track of proper source locations for each attribute, and
use these to emit diagnostics pointing at the attribute in question instead of at
a funcdecl or the @ sign.
4) Fix axle attributes, which had vertex and fragment swapped.
Swift SVN r9263
Pull the implicit 'Self' associated type out of the protocol and into
an implicitly-declared generic parameter list for the protocol. This
makes all of the methods of a protocol polymorphic, e.g., given
protocol P {
typealias Assoc
func getAssoc() -> Assoc
}
the type of P.getAssoc is:
<Self : P> (self : @inout P) -> () -> Self.Assoc
This directly expresses the notion that protocol methods are
polymorphic, even though 'Self' is always implicitly bound. It can be
used to simplify IRgen and some parts of the type checker, as well as
laying more of the groundwork for default definitions within
protocols as well as sundry other improvements to the generics
system.
There are a number of moving parts that needed to be updated in tandem
for this. In no particular order:
- Protocols always get an implicit generic parameter list, with a
single generic parameter 'Self' that conforms to the protocol itself.
- The 'Self' archetype type now knows which protocol it is
associated with (since we can no longer point it at the Self
associated type declaration).
- Protocol methods now get interface types (i.e., canonicalizable
dependent function types).
- The "all archetypes" list for a polymorphic function type does not
include the Self archetype nor its nested types, because they are
handled implicitly. This avoids the need to rework IRGen's handling
of archetypes for now.
- When (de-)serializing a XREF for a function type that has an
interface type, use the canonicalized interface type, which can be
meaningfully compared during deserialization (unlike the
PolymorphicFunctionType we'd otherwise be dealing with).
- Added a SIL-specific type attribute @sil_self, which extracts the
'Self' archetype of a protocol, because we can no longer refer to
the associated type "P.Self".
Swift SVN r9066
Put generic nominal type declarations through the same dependent-type
validation as generic functions, then capture their generic parameters
and requirements in their generic signature. This allows us to
re-instate the requirements in their dependent forms, before the
archetypes ruin them completely.
Swift SVN r8958
Introduces a new kind of function type, GenericFunctionType, that
represents a polymorphic function type with all of its generic
parameters and requirements stored in a more readily canonicalizable
form. It is meant to eventually replace PolymorphicFunctionType, but
for now we build it up in parallel so we can switch over to it
pieacemeal.
Note: this representation is built and then thrown away. We'll start
recording it soon.
Swift SVN r8881
When type checking, allow the caller to customize the resolution of generic
type parameter types based on the context, for example, by choosing to
substitute in an archetype (or not) and allowing one to resolve a dependent
member reference via a specific archetype.
No actual functionality change here.
Swift SVN r8797
These are the terms sent out in the proposal last week and described in
StoredAndComputedVariables.rst.
variable
anything declared with 'var'
member variable
a variable inside a nominal type (may be an instance variable or not)
property
another term for "member variable"
computed variable
a variable with a custom getter or setter
stored variable
a variable with backing storage; any non-computed variable
These terms pre-exist in SIL and IRGen, so I only attempted to solidify
their definitions. Other than the use of "field" for "tuple element",
none of these should be exposed to users.
field
a tuple element, or
the underlying storage for a stored variable in a struct or class
physical
describes an entity whose value can be accessed directly
logical
describes an entity whose value must be accessed through some accessor
Swift SVN r8698
Add a SILLinkage mode "Deserialized" to make sure IRGen will emit
hidden symbols for deserialized SILFunction.
Inside SIL linker, set Linkage to external if we only have a declaration for
a callee function.
Both sil block and decl block in a module can emit an array of substitutions.
To share the serialization between SILSerializer and Serializer, we modify
the interface to pass in the abbreviation codes to write functions and to
pass in a cursor to read functions.
We now correctly handle the serialization of Substitutions in SpecializeInst.
For a deserialized SILFunction, we now temporarily set its SILLocation and
DebugScope to an empty FileLocation. Once mandatory inliner sets the SILLocation
to the location of ApplyInst, a null SILLocation and a null DebugScope
may work for a deserialized SILFunction.
Update testing cases to reflect that we are now inlining transparent functions
from modules, or to disable SILDeserializer for now (I am not sure how to update
those testing cases).
Swift SVN r8582
Iff an enum declares a raw type, its cases may declare raw values or else have them assigned to them implicitly by autoincrementing from zero, like in C. If the raw type is float-, string-, or char-literal-convertible, there is no autoincrement, and the raw values must all be explicit. The raw type is rejected if any cases have payloads.
We don't yet diagnose duplicate raw values. That'll come next. We also don't yet serialize or deserialize the raw values. We don't strictly need to do this, since the RawRepresentable protocol conformance will be exported from the module as API, but Jordan pointed out that, for fragile raw values, this would be good for documents/jump-to-definition purposes, so we have a plan for only serializing the literals without having to deal with fully general expression serialization.
Swift SVN r8545
Introduce an EnumCaseDecl for source fidelity to track the 'case' location and ordering of EnumElementDecls. Parse a comma-separated list of EnumElementDecls after a 'case' token.
Swift SVN r8509
When a class definition contains no constructors, and all of the
instance variables are either default initializable or have initial
values in the class, and the superclass (if any) has a constructor
callable with the argument (), implicitly define a default
constructor.
Fixes <rdar://problem/14828518>.
Swift SVN r8487
Implement the new rules for mapping between selector names and
constructors. The selector for a given constructor is formed by
looking at the names of the constructor parameters:
* For the first parameter, prepend "init" to the parameter name and
uppercase the first letter of the parameter name. Append ':' if
there are > 1 parameters or the parameter has non-empty-tuple type.
* For the remaining parameters, the name of each parameter followed
by ':'.
When a parameter doesn't exist, assume that the parameter name is the
empty string.
And, because I failed to commit it separately, support selector-style
declarations of constructor parameters so that we can actually write
constructors nicely, e.g.:
// selector is initWithFoo:bar:
constructor withFoo(foo : Foo) bar(bar : Bar) { ... }
Swift SVN r8361
AnyFunctionRef is a universal function reference that can wrap all AST nodes
that represent functions and exposes a common interface to them. Use it in two
places in SIL where CapturingExpr was used previously.
AnyFunctionRef allows further simplifications in other places, but these will
be done separately.
Swift SVN r8239
For PolymorphicFunctionType used in a SILFunction, we don't have a
corresponding Decl to share the parameter list with. In that case,
we set the owning Decl ID to 0 and add a trailing param lists.
We add a helper function to find the TypeAliasDecl for a Builtin type.
If the lookup is expensive, we can cache the lookup.
Deserializing SILBasicBlock and SILInstruction is not implemented yet.
SIL serializer and deserializer are implicitly tested when a module
contains transparant SILFunctions.
Swift SVN r8230
We often won't need the complete substitutions, so only compute them
when needed. This also means that we don't need to serialize them into
module files.
Swift SVN r8194
Now that we're actually serializing this explicitly (because it's needed
in the constructor), we can use it to check whether we actually serialized
the right number of patterns. This also paves the way for a minor
optimization: not serializing two sets of parameters when not dealing with
a selector-style declaration.
Swift SVN r8098
Fixes two bugs in Clang importer and deserialization code that were found by
the verifier:
(1) FuncExprs were created with a null FuncDecl
(2) BoundGenericType that was created by Clang importer for UnsafePtr<> and
other magic types did not have substitutions.
Swift SVN r8073
ConstructorDecl::getBody() and DestructorDecl::getBody() return 'BraceStmt *'.
After changing the AST representation for functions, FuncDecl::getBody() will
return 'BraceStmt *' and FuncDecl::getFuncExpr() will be gone.
Swift SVN r8050
Each nested archetype X.Y corresponds to an associated type named 'Y'
within one of the protocols to which X conforms. Record the associated
type within the archetype itself. When performing type substitutions,
use that associated type to extract the corresponding type witness
rather than looking for the type itself. This is technically more
correct (since we used the type witness for type checking), and a step
toward pulling type substitutions into the AST.
Swift SVN r7624
We previously relied on the type checker to fill in the implementation
types (swift.Slice<T> and swift.Optional<T>, respectively), which
limited our ability to perform type transformations in the AST. Now,
the AST knows how to form these implementation types on demand.
Swift SVN r7587
This breaks the type-canonicalization link between a generic parameter
type and the archetype to which it maps. Generic type parameter types
are now separate entities (that can eventually be canonicalized) from
archetypes (rather than just being sugar).
Most of the front end still traffics in archetypes. As a step away
from this, allow us to type-check the generic parameter list's types
prior to wiring the generic type parameter declarations to archetypes,
using the new "dependent" member type to describe assocaited
types. The archetype builder understands dependent member types and
uses them to map down to associated types when building archetypes.
Once we have assigned archetypes, we revert the dependent identifier
types within the generic parameter list to an un-type-checked state
and do the type checking again in the presence of archetypes, so that
nothing beyond the generic-parameter-list checking code has to deal
with dependent types. We'll creep support out to other dependent types
elsewhere over time.
Swift SVN r7462