This action is currently just an alias of the `-resolve-imports` action.
However, it's named to more clearly reflect the purpose which is to do the
minimal typechecking needed in order to emit the requested outputs. This mode
is intended to improve performance when emitting `.swiftinterface` and `.tbd`
files.
When `-warn-on-potentially-unavailable-enum-case` was introduced, the build
system was required to invoke `swift-frontend` at artificially low deployment
targets when emitting `.swiftinterface` files for legacy architectures. Because
the deployment target was low, some availability diagnostics needed to be
de-fanged in order to allow module interface emission to succeed. Today, the
build system is able to use the correct deployment target when emitting module
interfaces and the `-warn-on-potentially-unavailable-enum-case` is superfluous,
so deprecate it.
Resolves rdar://114092047
Experimental mode for generating module interfaces without running
primary file type-checking. The idea is that the ASTPrinter triggers
requests to only do the minimum amount of type checking work
possible while printing the interface for a module's public
declarations.
These requests may emit diagnostics, but the ASTPrinter should in
theory already be robust against invalid code.
Instead of the code querying the compiler's built-in Clang instance, refactor the
dependency scanner to explicitly keep track of module output path. It is still
set according to '-module-cache-path' as it has been prior to this change, but
now the scanner can use a different module cache for scanning PCMs, as specified
with '-clang-scanner-module-cache-path', without affecting module output path.
Resolves rdar://113222853
Clang dependency scanning produces scanner PCMs which we may want to live in a
different filesystem location than the main build module cache.
Resolves rdar://113222853
In C++20, types that declare or delete their default/copy/move constructors are no longer aggregates, so the aggregate uses of these types will not compile under C++20. Adding them fixes this, without affecting older language modes.
This would otherwise result in false positives, since if the old parser
skipping a body with errors would cause a verification failure.
Don't perform round trip validation either, since we'll presumbly still
hit parsing the full file when not skipping bodies - there's no point
running it twice.
Resolves rdar://111032175.
-typecheck-module-from-interface doesn't emit textual output as
configured in frontend option. The real output is diagnostics but that
is not tracked by output computer which is using the option.
Teach `swift-frontend` that it doesn't actually emit any real output and
tell serialization not to emit swiftmodule.
Allow `-typecheck-module-from-interface` using explicit module instead
of building implicit module.
This setups swift-frontend to accept explicit module build arguments and
loading explicit module during verifying. SwiftDriver needs to setup
correct arguments including the output path for swift module to fully
enable explicit module interface check.
* [Stdlib] Add some prespecializations to the stdlib
This adds prespecializations for commonly used types to the stdlib
* Add false positives to ABI checker ignore list
* Update multithread_module.swift
* Update multithread_module.swift
* Update multithread_module.swift
Upcoming and experimental features are supported via command-line flags
and also in the SwiftPM manifest. Introduce it as an experimental
feature so that it can be enabled via SwiftPM without having to resort
to unsafe flags.
The `StrictConcurrency` experimental feature can also provide a
strictness level in the same manner as `-strict-concurrency`, e.g.,
`StrictConcurrency=targeted`. If the level is not provided, it'll be
`complete`.
Note that we do not introduce this as an "upcoming" feature, because
upcoming features should be in their final "Swift 6" form before
becoming available. We are still tuning the checking for concurrency.
Reformatting everything now that we have `llvm` namespaces. I've
separated this from the main commit to help manage merge-conflicts and
for making it a bit easier to read the mega-patch.
This is phase-1 of switching from llvm::Optional to std::optional in the
next rebranch. llvm::Optional was removed from upstream LLVM, so we need
to migrate off rather soon. On Darwin, std::optional, and llvm::Optional
have the same layout, so we don't need to be as concerned about ABI
beyond the name mangling. `llvm::Optional` is only returned from one
function in
```
getStandardTypeSubst(StringRef TypeName,
bool allowConcurrencyManglings);
```
It's the return value, so it should not impact the mangling of the
function, and the layout is the same as `std::optional`, so it should be
mostly okay. This function doesn't appear to have users, and the ABI was
already broken 2 years ago for concurrency and no one seemed to notice
so this should be "okay".
I'm doing the migration incrementally so that folks working on main can
cherry-pick back to the release/5.9 branch. Once 5.9 is done and locked
away, then we can go through and finish the replacement. Since `None`
and `Optional` show up in contexts where they are not `llvm::None` and
`llvm::Optional`, I'm preparing the work now by going through and
removing the namespace unwrapping and making the `llvm` namespace
explicit. This should make it fairly mechanical to go through and
replace llvm::Optional with std::optional, and llvm::None with
std::nullopt. It's also a change that can be brought onto the
release/5.9 with minimal impact. This should be an NFC change.
Rename `-enable-cas` to `-compile-cache-job` to align with clang option
names and promote that to a new driver only flag.
Few other additions to driver flag for caching behaviors:
* `-compile-cache-remarks`: now cache hit/miss remarks are guarded behind
this flag
* `-compile-cache-skip`: skip replaying from the cache. Useful as a
debugging tool to do the compilation using CAS inputs even the output
is a hit from the cache.
When serializing module dependencies, avoid look up the file if it is
not needed for serailization.
This also adds a proper diagnostics if the lookup failed so user can
understand which file is missing.
- Renames ExperimentalPlatformCCallingConvention to
PlatformCCallingConvention.
- Removes non-arm calling convention support as this feature is working
around a clang bug for some arm triples which we hope to see resolved.
- Removes misleading MetaVarName from platform-c-calling-convention
argument.
- Replaces other uses of LLVM::CallingConv::C with
IGM.getOptions().PlatformCCallingConvention().
Adds a new swift-frontend flag to allow users to choose which calling
convention is used to make c function calls. This hidden flag is called
`-experimental-platform-c-calling-convention`.
This behavior is needed to workaround rdar://109431863 (Swift-frontend
produces trapping llvm ir for non-trapping sil). The root cause of this
issue is that IRGen always emits c function calls with llvm's default C
calling convention. However clang may select a different (incompatible)
calling convention for the function, eventually resulting--via
InstCombine and SimplifyCFG--in a trap instead of the function call.
This failure mode is most readily seen with the triple
`armv7em-apple-none-macho` when attempting to call functions taking
struct arguments. Example unoptimized ir below:
```llvm-ir
call void @bar([4 x i32] %17, i32 2), !dbg !109
...
define internal arm_aapcs_vfpcc void @bar(
[4 x i32] %bar.coerce, i32 noundef %x)
```
In the future it would be better to use the clang importer or some other
tool to determine the calling convention for each function instead of
setting the calling convention frontend invocation wide.
Note: I don't know for sure whether or not clang should be explicitly
annotating these functions with a calling convention instead of
aliasing C to mean ARM_AAPCS_VFP for this particular combination of
`-target`, `-mfloat-abi`, and `-mcpu`.