Don't use strcmp to compare the candidate key with the search key, as the search key may not be NUL terminated. Use strncmp and a length check on the candidate key.
This library uses GenericMetadataBuilder with a ReaderWriter that can read data and resolve pointers from MachO files, and emit a JSON representation of a dylib containing the built metadata.
We use LLVM's binary file readers to parse the MachO files and resolve fixups so we can follow pointers. This code is somewhat MachO specific, but could be generalized to other formats that LLVM supports.
rdar://116592577
For calloc, the variable denoting the of elements comes first,
then the variable denoting the size of each element. However, both
arguments are swapped when calling this function in many places in this codebase.
We should have some tests for the heap functions. Note that these
wouldn't have caught the problem that we fixed in the previous
commit, because the conditions under which they run presently mean
that the problematic code wouldn't have been active. They will
*eventually* test that code, however.
rdar://119137861
For compiling codes required for macro support, we now need swiftc
compiler in the build machine.
Unlike Darwin OSes, where swiftCore runtime is guaranteed to be present
in /usr/lib, Linux doesn't have ABI stability and the stdlib of the
build machine is not at the specific location. So the built compiler
cannot relies on the shared object in the toolchain.
As of CMake 3.25, there are now global variables `LINUX=1`, `ANDROID=1`,
etc. These conflict with expressions that used these names as unquoted
strings in positions where CMake accepts 'variable|string', for example:
- `if(sdk STREQUAL LINUX)` would fail, because `LINUX` is now defined and
expands to 1, where it would previously coerce to a string.
- `if(${sdk} STREQUAL "LINUX")` would fail if `sdk=LINUX`, because the
left-hand side expands twice.
In this patch, I looked for a number of patterns to fix up, sometimes a
little defensively:
- Quoted right-hand side of `STREQUAL` where I was confident it was
intended to be a string literal.
- Removed manual variable expansion on left-hand side of `STREQUAL`,
`MATCHES` and `IN_LIST` where I was confident it was unintended.
Fixes#65028.
Ensure that context descriptor pointers are signed in the runtime by putting the ptrauth_struct attribute on the types.
We use the new __builtin_ptrauth_struct_key/disc to conditionally apply ptrauth_struct to TrailingObjects based on the signing of the base type, so that pointers to TrailingObjects get signed when used with a context descriptor pointer.
We add new runtime entrypoints that take signed pointers where appropriate, and have the compiler emit calls to the new entrypoints when targeting a sufficiently new OS.
rdar://111480914
This patch adds an SPI to run the first partial function of a MainActor
asynchronous function on the MainActor synchronously. This is
effectively like the asynchronous program entrypoint behavior. The first
partial function is run synchronously. Following continuations are
enqueued for execution like any other asynchronous function.
This patch tests that the hook actually works. Not going to lie, the
test is pretty disgusting. The function we're testing is a noreturn
function, which introduces some interesting challenges when we need to
return to finish the test.
I need to somehow exit the function without killing the process, but
also without returning. If I just use a loop properly, the test will
hang for the age of the universe. If I don't and return from the hook,
the test will abort or crash. I tried removing the abort after the hook
in the hook override macro to see if we could sneak past the compiler,
and no, that explodes on the return pointer.
So, here's the workaround. C++11 threads don't seem to have a way to
kill themselves, but you can use `pthread_exit` or `pthread_kill` to
either kill yourself or kill another thread. So the override function
sets the `Ran` to true, and then exits (which is noreturn, so we haven't
broken that contract), killing itself and allowing us to join without
returning from the inferior. The main thread immediately waits for the
original thread to die. Since it blocks, we avoid the possible race on
setting the state of `Ran` in the override hook and where it gets
checked in the test. If that becomes an issue, we could probably just
wrap the `Ran` bool in an atomic and call it a day.
Anyway, it's well past my bedtime and I'm playing with threads. This can
only end in a creative disaster. :D
The async main drain queue function is noreturn, but was emitting a
warning due to the override compatibility returning the result of the
overridden function in the wrapper override function. To work around
this, I've added the `OVERRIDE_TASK_NORETURN` macro, which provides an
override point for noreturn functions in the concurrency library that
doesn't return the result from the wrapped function, avoiding the
warning. In the event that the function is not set, the macro is set to
the normal `OVERRIDE` with the return type set to `void`.
rdar://105837040
* WIP: Store layout string in type metadata
* WIP: More cases working
* WIP: Layout strings almost working
* Add layout string pointer to struct metadata
* Fetch bytecode layout strings from metadata in runtime
* More efficient bytecode layout
* Add support for interpreted generics in layout strings
* Layout string instantiation, take and more
* Remove duplicate information from layout strings
* Include size of previous object in next objects offset to reduce number of increments at runtime
* Add support for existentials
* Build type layout strings with StructBuilder to support target sizes and metadata pointers
* Add support for resilient types
* Properly cache layout strings in compiler
* Generic resilient types working
* Non-generic resilient types working
* Instantiate resilient type in layout when possible
* Fix a few issues around alignment and signing
* Disable generics, fix static alignment
* Fix MultiPayloadEnum size when no extra tag is necessary
* Fixes after rebase
* Cleanup
* Fix most tests
* Fix objcImplementattion and non-Darwin builds
* Fix BytecodeLayouts on non-Darwin
* Fix Linux build
* Fix sizes in linux tests
* Sign layout string pointers
* Use nullptr instead of debug value
Upgrade the old mangling from a list of argument types to a
list of requiremnets. For now, only same-type requirements
may actually be mangled since those are all that are available
to the surface language.
Reconstruction of existential types now consists of demangling (a list of)
base protocol(s), decoding the constraints, and converting the same-type
constraints back into a list of arguments.
rdar://96088707
The threading unit tests currently just check the operation of Mutex.
This used to be part of the runtime tests, but now it's a separate
library we can test it separately.
rdar://90776105
Moved all the threading code to one place. Added explicit support for
Darwin, Linux, Pthreads, C11 threads and Win32 threads, including new
implementations of Once for Linux, Pthreads, C11 and Win32.
rdar://90776105
SWIFT_STDLIB_SINGLE_THREADED_RUNTIME is too much of a blunt instrument here.
It covers both the Concurrency runtime and the rest of the runtime, but we'd
like to be able to have e.g. a single-threaded Concurrency runtime while
the rest of the runtime is still thread safe (for instance).
So: rename it to SWIFT_STDLIB_SINGLE_THREADED_CONCURRENCY and make it just
control the Concurrency runtime, then add a SWIFT_STDLIB_THREADING_PACKAGE
setting at the CMake/build-script level, which defines
SWIFT_STDLIB_THREADING_xxx where xxx depends on the chosen threading package.
This is especially useful on systems where there may be a choice of threading
package that you could use.
rdar://90776105
The threading unit tests currently just check the operation of Mutex.
This used to be part of the runtime tests, but now it's a separate
library we can test it separately.
rdar://90776105
Moved all the threading code to one place. Added explicit support for
Darwin, Linux, Pthreads, C11 threads and Win32 threads, including new
implementations of Once for Linux, Pthreads, C11 and Win32.
rdar://90776105