Complete support is behind a flag, because it can result in a non-convergent
rewrite system if the opaque result type has a recursive conformance of its
own (eg, `some View` for SwiftUI's View protocol).
Without the flag, it's good enough for simple examples; you just can't have
a requirement that mentions a nested type of a type parameter equated to
the concrete type.
Fixes rdar://problem/88135291, https://bugs.swift.org/browse/SR-15983.
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.
See the comment at the top of ConcreteContraction.cpp for a detailed explanation.
This can be turned off with the -disable-requirement-machine-concrete-contraction
pass, mostly meant for testing. A few tests now run with this pass both enabled
and disabled, to exercise code paths which are otherwise trivially avoided by
concrete contraction.
Fixes rdar://problem/88135912.
ABI descriptors should always be emitted as sidecars for library-evolution-enabled modules.
However, generating these files requires traversing the entire module (like indexing), which may
hit additional deserialization issues. To unblock builds, this patch introduces a flag to skip
the traversing logic so that we emit an empty ABI descriptor file. The empty file serves as
a placeholder so that build system doesn't need to know the details.
When calling a generic function with an argument of existential type,
implicitly "open" the existential type into a concrete archetype, which
can then be bound to the generic type. This extends the implicit
opening that is performed when accessing a member of an existential
type from the "self" parameter to all parameters. For example:
func unsafeFirst<C: Collection>(_ c: C) -> C.Element { c.first! }
func g(c: any Collection) {
unsafeFirst(c) // currently an error
// with this change, succeeds and produces an 'Any'
}
This avoids many common sources of errors of the form
protocol 'P' as a type cannot conform to the protocol itself
which come from calling generic functions with an existential, and
allows another way "out" if one has an existention and needs to treat
it generically.
This feature is behind a frontend flag
`-enable-experimental-opened-existential-types`.
Add a new frontend option (called `-trap-function <name>`, similar to Clang’s existing `-ftrap-function`) that specifies a function to call instead of trapping.
When the option is used, the compiler will emit a call to the specified function every time it would have otherwise emitted a trap instruction. The function must have no parameters and it must never return.
rdar://89125883
- Rename StepLimit to MaxRuleCount, DepthLimit to MaxRuleLength
- Rename command line flags to -requirement-machine-max-rule-{count,length}=
- Check limits outside of PropertyMap::buildPropertyMap()
- Simplify the logic in RequirementMachine::computeCompletion()
A scoped-down version of #39307. Implement extension of bound generic types. The important bit here is in TypeCheckGeneric where we now use the underlying type of a typealias and its associated nominal type decl when we're generating substitutions for the extended type.
Put this behind a new experimental flag
-enable-experimental-bound-generic-extensions
Resolves SR-4875
Resolves rdar://17434633
Replace the existing `-enable-experimental-clang-importer-diagnostics`
flag with an opt-out version entitled `-disable-experimentalc-clang-importer-diagnostics`.
Enable the beviour previously hidden behind the old flag by default.
This PR adds a new flag -file-compilation-dir, which does the same thing as -ffile-compilation-dir in Clang.
swiftc -g -ffile-compilation-dir=. path/to/foo.swift gives us identical debug info paths regardless of what location we compiled the file from. It's useful to debug correctly using object files built on different machines in different locations.
There's also a long-existed TODO comment.
Resolves SR-5694