This simplifies some boilerplate, and in particular, some SIL verifier
logic; and fixes a couple bugs related to always loadable reference
storage types.
Using an anonymous union in KeyPathPatternComponent instead of the weird void * in SetterAndIdKind
Added TupleElement kind to KeyPathComponentKindEncoding
Written basic SIL keypath serialization tests
Deleted or edited some old Swift-level tuple key path tests
I also ported the constant_propagation.sil tests over for ownership and updated
a few parts of the cast optimizer so that those tests pass with and without
ownership. I purposely only updated the parts of the cast optimizer that crashed
with ownership in the relevant test so that I can add new sil code coverage for
those uncovered code paths.
It does not take ownership of its non-trivial arguments, is a trivial
function type and therefore must not be destroyed. The compiler must
make sure to extend the lifetime of non-trivial arguments beyond the
last use of the closure.
%objc = copy_value %0 : $AnObject
%closure = partial_apply [stack] [callee_guaranteed] %16(%obj) : $@convention(thin) (@guaranteed AnObject) -> ()
%closure2 = mark_dependence %closure : $@noescape @callee_guaranteed () -> () on %obj : $AnObject
%user = function_ref @useClosure : $@convention(thin) (@noescape @callee_guaranteed () -> ()) -> ()
apply %user(%closure2) : $@convention(thin) (@noescape @callee_guaranteed () -> ()) -> ()
dealloc_stack %closure : $() ->()
destroy_value %obj : $AnObject // noescape closure does not take ownership
SR-904
rdar://35590578
This undoes some of Joe's work in 8665342 to add a guarantee: if an
@objc convenience initializer only calls other @objc initializers that
eventually call a designated initializer, it won't result in an extra
allocation. While Objective-C /allows/ returning a different object
from an initializer than the allocation you were given, doing so
doesn't play well with some very hairy implementation details of
compiled nib files (or NSCoding archives with cyclic references in
general).
This guarantee only applies to
(1) calling `self.init`
(2) where the delegated-to initializer is @objc
because convenience initializers must do dynamic dispatch when they
delegate, and Swift only stores allocating entry points for
initializers in a class's vtable. To dynamically find an initializing
entry point, ObjC dispatch must be used instead.
(It's worth noting that this patch does NOT check that the calling
initializer is a convenience initializer when deciding whether to use
ObjC dispatch for `self.init`. If we ever add peer delegation to
designated initializers, which is totally a valid feature, that should
use static dispatch and therefore should not go through objc_msgSend.)
This change doesn't /always/ result in fewer allocations; if the
delegated-to initializer ends up returning a different object after
all, the original allocation was wasted. Objective-C has the same
problem (one of the reasons why factory methods exist for things like
NSNumber and NSArray).
We do still get most of the benefits of Joe's original change. In
particular, vtables only ever contain allocating initializer entry
points, never the initializing ones, and never /both/ (which was a
thing that could happen with 'required' before).
rdar://problem/46823518
In a previous commit, I banned in the verifier any SILValue from producing
ValueOwnershipKind::Any in preparation for this.
This change arises out of discussions in between John, Andy, and I around
ValueOwnershipKind::Trivial. The specific realization was that this ownership
kind was an unnecessary conflation of the a type system idea (triviality) with
an ownership idea (@any, an ownership kind that is compatible with any other
ownership kind at value merge points and can only create). This caused the
ownership model to have to contort to handle the non-payloaded or trivial cases
of non-trivial enums. This is unnecessary if we just eliminate the any case and
in the verifier separately verify that trivial => @any (notice that we do not
verify that @any => trivial).
NOTE: This is technically an NFC intended change since I am just replacing
Trivial with Any. That is why if you look at the tests you will see that I
actually did not need to update anything except removing some @trivial ownership
since @any ownership is represented without writing @any in the parsed sil.
rdar://46294760
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
Previously we would always calculate these instructions ownership dynamically
when asked and rely on the ownership verifier to catch if we made any
mistakes. Instead with this commit we move to a more static model where the
ownership that these instructions can take are frozen on construction. This is a
more static model that simplifies the ownership model.
I also eliminated a few asserts that are enforced in other places that caused
problems when parsing since we may not have a Function while Parsing (it was
generally asserts if a type was trivial).
This means that:
1. SILGenPattern always borrows the object before it emits a case.
2. Any cast with this cast has a +0 result.
NOTE: That one can not use this with address types (so we assert if you
pass this checked_cast_addr_br).
NOTE: Once we have opaque values, checked_cast_br of a guaranteed value will
lower to a copy + checked_cast_addr_br (assuming the operation is a consuming
cast). To make sure this does not become a problem in terms of performance, we
will need a pass that can transform SILGenPattern +0 cases to +1 cases. This is
something that we have talked about in the past and I think it is reasonable to
implement.
This is an incremental commit towards fixing SILGenPattern for ownership.
rdar://29791263
* [SILOptimizer] Don't diagnose infinite recursion if a branch terminates the program
This patch augments the infinite recursion checker to not warn if a
branch terminates, but still warns if a branch calls into something with
@_semantics("programtermination_point"). This way, calling fatalError
doesn't disqualify you for the diagnostic, but calling exit does.
This also removes the warning workaround in the standard library, and
annotates the internal _assertionFailure functions as
programtermination_points, so they get this treatment too.
* Fix formatting in SILInstructions.cpp
* Re-add missing test
This patch augments the infinite recursion checker to not warn if a
branch terminates, but still warns if a branch calls into something with
`@_semantics("arc.programtermination_point")`. This way, calling `fatalError`
doesn't disqualify you for the diagnostic, but calling `exit` does.
This also removes the warning workaround in the standard library, and
annotates the internal _assertionFailure functions as
`programtermination_point`s, so they get this treatment too.
There’s a few places where size_t is used for a field/parameter when constructing an array for types. Unfortunately, the Bitfields that were backing the inputs to these at some point after 4.1 grew past 32 bits and are now backed by a uint64_t. Even though the slice of the bitfield is small enough for 32-bit, clang sees these slices as 64-bit and complains if there isn’t a cast involved.
I believe that these were in SILInstruction for historic reasons. This is a
separate API on top of SILInstruction so it makes sense to pull it out into its
own header.
This convenience API enables one to iterate over the array of arguments of each
successor of the terminator.
To implement this I needed to implement SILBasicBlock::getPHIArguments(), so I
also implemented SILBasicBlock::getFunctionArguments().
rdar://44667493
I hit this problem while splitting classifying operand ownership from the
ownership verifier itself. There is no reason to allow for this implicit
conversion. Just makes updating code more error prone.
rdar://44667493
Currently there is a bug in the closure specializer that was caused by
BeginApply not being handled correctly. Rather than just fixing that and leaving
the badness, I am instead in this commit introducing enums for apply sites so we
can avoid this problem in the future by using exhaustive switches to guide
developers adding new types of apply sites in the future.
rdar://44612356
This silences the instances of the warning from Visual Studio about not all
codepaths returning a value. This makes the output more readable and less
likely to lose useful warnings. NFC.
I changed all of the places that used end_borrow_argument to use end_borrow.
NOTE: I discovered in the process of this patch that we are not verifying
guaranteed block arguments completely. I disabled the tests here that show this
bad behavior and am going to re-enable them with more tests in a separate PR.
This has not been a problem since SILGen does not emit any such arguments as
guaranteed today. But once I do the SILGenPattern work this will change.
rdar://33440767
This does not eliminate the entrypoints on SILBuilder yet. I want to do this in
two parts so that it is functionally easier to disentangle changing the APIs
above SILBuilder and changing the underlying instruction itself.
rdar://33440767
This fixes a logic error in the existing code that cause these
function arguments to appear twice, once as local variable and once as
formal parameter.
rdar://problem/37410759
The current inlining strategy doesn't support inlining coroutines
when there are multiple end_apply or abort_apply instructions in
the caller, so refuse to inline such cases. Also, handle the case
where there are no yield instructions in the callee, which can
happen if e.g. the callee calls a no-return function.
I also simplified the code somewhat by removing the vestiges of the
code that tried to unify control flow with switches.
As an unrelated fix, suppress function signature optimization for
coroutines for now.