This change removes the -emit-cxx-header option, and adds a new -emit-clang-header-path option instead. It's aliased to -emit-objc-header-path for now, but in the future, -emit-objc-header-path will alias to it. After this change Swift can start emitting a single header file that can be expose declarations to C, Objective-C, or C++. For now C++ interface is generated (for all public decls) only when -enable-cxx-interop flag is passed, but that behavior will change once attribute is supported.
This cleans up 90 instances of this warning and reduces the build spew
when building on Linux. This helps identify actual issues when
building which can get lost in the stream of warning messages. It also
helps restore the ability to build the compiler with gcc.
This additional supplement output should capture semantic info the compiler has
captured while building a Swift module. Similar to the source info file, the content of
the semantic info file should only be consumed by local tooling written in Swift.
The Swift driver is passing the optimization record file path via the supplementals output, instead of the flag, on certain circumstances.
Enhance the frontend to check supplemental outputs otherwise the record file will not get emitted when using the new swift driver.
We have implemented a libSwiftDriver-based tool to generate prebuilt module cache for
entire SDKs. Anchored on the same infrastructure, we could also generate ABI baselines
for entire SDKs.
These new options mirror -o and -output-filelist and are used instead
of those options to supply the output file path(s) to record in the
index store. This is intended to allow sharing index data across
builds in separate directories that are otherwise equivalent as far
as the index data is concered (e.g. an ASAN build and a non-ASAN build)
by supplying the same -index-unit-output-path for both.
Resolves rdar://problem/74816412
This option allows the compiler to retry opening an input file if the previous
opening returns an error of bad file descriptor. Swift-driver will set this
argument in certain circumstances to walk-around such error.
rdar://73157185
When symbols are moved to this module, this module declares them as HIDE
for the OS versions prior to when the move happened. On the other hand, the
original module should declare ADD them for these OS versions. An executable
can choose the right library to link against depending on the deployment target.
This is a walk-around that linker directives cannot specify other install
name per symbol, we should eventually remove this.
Frontend outputs source-as-compiled, and source-ranges file with function body ranges and ranges that were unparsed in secondaries.
Driver computes diffs for each source file. If diffs are in function bodies, only recompiles that one file. Else if diffs are in what another file did not parse, then the other file need not be rebuilt.
Leave the old flag in as an alias to the new flag, for transition
purposes. Also go ahead and remove the long-deprecated and unused
`emit-interface-path`.
Part of rdar://49359734
Currently, the check for whether to serialize parseable interface
arguments doesn't handle the case where a supplementary output file map
is used, preferring only to check if the frontend is passed
`-emit*interface`. Instead, check if the frontend inputs and outputs
contains a parseable interface, and use that to determine if we need to
save args.
This also puts `-module-link-name` in the parseable interface arg list.
Commit to a command line option spelling so that build systems can
start testing it. I deliberately picked one of the longer names we
were considering because we can always decide to add a shorter alias,
but can't decide a shorter name was too generic.
Like the other supplementary output flags,
-emit-parseable-module-interface-path will emit a .swiftinterface file
to a particular path, while -emit-parseable-module-interface will put
it next to the main output (the one specified with -o).
rdar://problem/43776945
We already have something called "module interfaces" -- it's the
generated interface view that you can see in Xcode, the interface
that's meant for developers using a library. Of course, that's also a
textual format. To reduce confusion, rename the new module stability
feature to "parseable [module] interfaces".
...instead of sometimes hardcoding them and sometimes using Strings.h.
The exceptions are the libraries that sit below Frontend; these can
continue using strings.
...but don't hook it up to anything yet.
This is the very very start of the module stability / textual
interfaces feature described at
https://forums.swift.org/t/plan-for-module-stability/14551/
For now I've just made it a frontend option (not a driver option),
which is good enough for testing.
This means moving the output path into SupplementaryOutputPaths, and
using the same sort of diagnostic dispatching that serialized
diagnostics use. This is part of what's needed to run the migrator
in batch mode.