Take the existing CompatibilityOverride mechanism and generalize it so it can be used in both the runtime and Concurrency libraries. The mechanism is preprocessor-heavy, so this requires some tricks. Use the SWIFT_TARGET_LIBRARY_NAME define to distinguish the libraries, and use a different .def file and mach-o section name accordingly.
We want the global/main executor functions to be a little more flexible. Instead of using the override mechanism, we expose function pointers that can be set by the compatibility library, or by any other code that wants to use a custom implementation.
rdar://73726764
Most of the async runtime functions have been changed to not
expect the task and executor to be passed in. When knowing the
task and executor is necessary, there are runtime functions
available to recover them.
The biggest change I had to make to a runtime function signature
was to swift_task_switch, which has been altered to expect to be
passed the context and resumption function instead of requiring
the caller to park the task. This has the pleasant consequence
of allowing the implementation to very quickly turn around when
it recognizes that the current executor is satisfactory. It does
mean that on arm64e we have to sign the continuation function
pointer as an argument and then potentially resign it when
assigning into the task's resume slot.
rdar://70546948