Note that the demangling for 'a' accessors changes from
'addressor' to 'mutableAddressor'. This is correct for
the existing use-case of global variables, which permit
modification through the result.
Swift SVN r22254
They may be backreferenced by contexts nested inside the generic context, namely closures. Fixes the remainder of rdar://problem/18306777.
Swift SVN r22041
We currently mangle private declarations exactly like public declarations,
which means that private entities with the same name and same type will
have the same symbol even if defined in separate files.
This commit introduces a new mangling production, private-decl-name, which
includes a discriminator string to identify the file a decl came from.
Actually producing a unique string has not yet been implemented, nor
serialization, nor lookup using such a discriminator.
Part of rdar://problem/17632175.
Swift SVN r21598
If a method is defined within an extension of a class or struct that is
defined in a different module, we mangle the module where the extension is
defined.
If we define function f in module A, and redefine it again in an extension in
module B, we use different mangling to prevent linking in the wrong
SILFunction.
rdar://18057875
Swift SVN r21488
initializeBufferWithTakeOfBuffer value witness.
Attempt to use initializeBufferWithTakeOfBuffer in
some appropriate places.
There are some changes enabled by this which are
coming in a follow-up patch.
Swift SVN r20741
functions, and make those functions memoize the result.
This memoization can be both threadsafe and extremely
fast because of the memory ordering rules of the platforms
we're targeting: x86 is very permissive, and ARM has a
very convenient address-dependence rule which happens to
exactly match the semantics we need.
Swift SVN r20381
Not strictly required, but we are going to make the demangler self-contained
C++11 code for the benefit of users out of the compiler tree.
Swift SVN r20247
eliminating the @'s from them when used on func's. This is progress towards
<rdar://problem/17527000> change operator declarations from "operator prefix" to "prefix operator" & make operator a keyword
This also consolidates rejection of custom operator definitions into one
place and makes it consistent, and adds postfix "?" to the list of rejected
operators.
This also changes the demangler to demangle weak/inout/postfix and related things
without the @.
Swift SVN r19929
- Change the parser to accept "objc" without an @ sign as a contextual
keyword, including the dance to handle the general parenthesized case.
- Update all comments to refer to "objc" instead of "@objc".
- Update all diagnostics accordingly.
- Update all tests that fail due to the diagnostics change.
- Switch the stdlib to use the new syntax.
This does not switch all tests to use the new syntax, nor does it warn about
the old syntax yet. That will be forthcoming. Also, this needs a bit of
refactoring, which will be coming up.
Swift SVN r19555
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