Context archetypes and opened existential archetypes differ in a number of details, and this simplifies the overlapping storage of the kind-specific fields. This should be NFC; for now, this doesn't change the interface of ArchetypeType, but should allow some refinements of how the special handling of certain archetypes are handled.
When debugging Objective-C or C++ code on Darwin, the debug info
collected by dsymutil in the .dSYM bundle is entirely
self-contained. It is possible to debug a program, set breakpoints and
print variables even without having the complete original source code
or a matching SDK available. With Swift, this is currently not the
case. Even though .dSYM bundles contain the binary .swiftmodule for
all Swift modules, any Clang modules that the Swift modules depend on,
still need to be imported from source to even get basic LLDB
functionality to work. If ClangImporter fails to import a Clang
module, effectively the entire Swift module depending on it gets
poisoned.
This patch is addressing this issue by introducing a ModuleLoader that
can ask queries about Clang Decls to LLDB, since LLDB knows how to
reconstruct Clang decls from DWARF and clang -gmodules producxes full
debug info for Clang modules that is embedded into the .dSYM budle.
This initial version does not contain any advanced functionality at
all, it merely produces an empty ModuleDecl. Intertestingly, even this
is a considerable improvement over the status quo. LLDB can now print
Swift-only variables in modules with failing Clang depenecies, and
becuase of fallback mechanisms that were implemented earlier, it can
even display the contents of pure Objective-C objects that are
imported into Swift. C structs obviously don't work yet.
rdar://problem/36032653
We've been running doxygen with the autobrief option for a couple of
years now. This makes the \brief markers into our comments
redundant. Since they are a visual distraction and we don't want to
encourage more \brief markers in new code either, this patch removes
them all.
Patch produced by
for i in $(git grep -l '\\brief'); do perl -pi -e 's/\\brief //g' $i & done
It is possible for the SIL optimizers, IRGen, etc. to request information
from the AST that only the type checker can provide, but the type checker
is typically torn down after the “type checking” phase. This can lead to
various crashes late in the compilation cycle.
Keep the type checker instance around as long as the ASTContext is alive
or until someone asks for it to be destroyed.
Fixes SR-285 / rdar://problem/23677338.
Previously, the `__consuming` decl modifier failed to get propagated to the value ownership of the
method's `self` parameter, causing it to effectively be a no-op. Fix this, and address some of the
downstream issues this exposes:
- `coerceCallArguments` in the type checker failing to handle the single `__owned` parameter case
- Various places in SILGen and optimizer passes that made inappropriate assertions that `self`
was always passed guaranteed
Referencing associated conformance witnesses via the index of the
requirement in the requirement signature is inconvenient. Reference
them by CanType/ProtocolDecl* instead.
When forming the default witness table for a resilient protocol, look
for default associated conformances as well. These are identified by
associated conformance requirements whose root associated type has a
default type. For such requirements, we look for a conformance and
record it as a default associated conformance.
Emit a warning in cases where we don't find such a conformance,
because the associated type and conformance *may* have been added
with the intent of being resilient, and we can't know. This warning
might be a terrible idea, but it is only enabled under
-enable-resilience (which itself is hidden) and fires in one only
place in the standard library (which seems legitimate), so we'll try
it for now.
When an associated type witness has a default, record that as part of
the protocol and emit a default associated type metadata accessor into the
default witness table. This allows a defaulted associated type to be
added to a protocol resiliently.
This is another part of rdar://problem/44167982, but it’s still very
limiting because the new associated type cannot have any conformances.
When we're marking a declaration as @objc and recording it in the
class and source-file lookup tables (for @objc collision detection),
don't cause a cycle by querying `getObjCSelector()`. This is somewhat
of a hack: a better long-term approach would be to move the recording
much later, and request'ify the name computation. That'll be follow-up
work.
Most of this patch is just removing special cases for materializeForSet
or other fairly mechanical replacements. Unfortunately, the rest is
still a fairly big change, and not one that can be easily split apart
because of the quite reasonable reliance on metaprogramming throughout
the compiler. And, of course, there are a bunch of test updates that
have to be sync'ed with the actual change to code-generation.
This is SR-7134.
This allows an elegant design in which we can still allocate RawSyntax
nodes using a bump allocator but are able to automatically free that
buffer once the last RawSyntax node within that buffer is freed.
This also resolves a memory leak of RawSyntax nodes that was caused by
ParserUnit not freeing its underlying ASTContext.
This makes it easier to grep for and eventually remove the
remaining usages.
It also allows you to write FunctionType::get({}, ...) to call the
ArrayRef overload empty parameter list, instead of picking the Type
overload and calling it with an empty Type() value.
While I"m at it, in a few places instead of renaming just clean up
usages where it was completely mechanical to do so.