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.
The special convention currently means three things:
1. There is no async FP symbol for the function. Calls should go directly
to the function symbol, and an async context of fixed static size should be
allocated. This is mandatory for calling runtime-provided async functions.
2. The callee context should be allocated but not initialized. The main
context pointer passed should be the caller's context, and the continuation
function pointer and callee context should be passed as separate arguments.
The function will resume the continuation function pointer with the caller's
context. This is a micro-optimization appropriate for functions that are
expected to frequently return immediately; other functions shouldn't bother.
3. Generic arguments should be suppressed. This is a microoptimization for
certain specific runtime functions where we happen to know that the runtime
already stores the appropriate information internally. Other functions
probably don't want this.
Obviously, these different treatments should be split into different
predicates so that functions can opt in to different subsets of them.
I've also set the code up so that runtime functions can more easily
request a specific static async context size. Previously, it was a
confusingly embedded assumption that the static context size was always
exactly two pointers more than the header.
The functions in llvm-project `AttributeList` have been
renamed/refactored to help remove uses of `AttributeList::*Index`.
Update to use these new functions where possible. There's one use of
`AttrIndex` remaining as `replaceAttributeTypeAtIndex` still takes the
index and there is no `param` equivalent. We could add one locally, but
presumably that will be added eventually.
Rather than using group task options constructed from the Swift parts
of the _Concurrency library and passed through `createAsyncTask`'s
options, introduce a separate builtin that always takes a group. Move
the responsibility for creating the options structure into IRGen, so
we don't need to expose the TaskGroupTaskOptionRecord type in Swift.
Introduce a builtin `createAsyncTask` that maps to `swift_task_create`,
and use that for the non-group task creation operations based on the
task-creation flags. `swift_task_create` and the thin function version
`swift_task_create_f` go through the dynamically-replaceable
`swift_task_create_common`, where all of the task creation logic is
present.
While here, move copying of task locals and the initial scheduling of
the task into `swift_task_create_common`, enabling by separate flags.
introduce new options parameter to all task spawning
[Concurrency] ABI for asynclet start to accept options
[Concurrency] fix unittest usages of changed task creation ABI
[Concurrency] introduce constants for parameter indexes in ownership
[Concurrency] fix test/SILOptimizer/closure_lifetime_fixup_concurrency.swift
Changes the task, taskGroup, asyncLet wait funtion call ABIs.
To reduce code size pass the context parameters and resumption function
as arguments to the wait function.
This means that the suspend point does not need to store parent context
and resumption to the suspend point's context.
```
void swift_task_future_wait_throwing(
OpaqueValue * result,
SWIFT_ASYNC_CONTEXT AsyncContext *callerContext,
AsyncTask *task,
ThrowingTaskFutureWaitContinuationFunction *resume,
AsyncContext *callContext);
```
The runtime passes the caller context to the resume entry point saving
the load of the parent context in the resumption function.
This patch adds a `Metadata *` field to `GroupImpl`. The await entry
pointer no longer pass the metadata pointer and there is a path through
the runtime where the task future is no longer available.
Throwing functions pass the error result in `swiftself` to the resume
partial function.
Therefore, `() async -> ()` to `() async throws -> ()` is not ABI compatible.
TODO: go through remaining failing IRGen async tests and replace the
illegal convert_functions.
Most of the async runtime functions have been changed to not
expect the task and executor to be passed in. When knowing the
task and executor is necessary, there are runtime functions
available to recover them.
The biggest change I had to make to a runtime function signature
was to swift_task_switch, which has been altered to expect to be
passed the context and resumption function instead of requiring
the caller to park the task. This has the pleasant consequence
of allowing the implementation to very quickly turn around when
it recognizes that the current executor is satisfactory. It does
mean that on arm64e we have to sign the continuation function
pointer as an argument and then potentially resign it when
assigning into the task's resume slot.
rdar://70546948
First, just call an async -> T function instead of forcing the caller
to piece together which case we're in and perform its own copy. This
ensures that the task is actually kept alive properly.
Second, now that we no longer implicitly depend on the waiting tasks
being run synchronously, go ahead and schedule them to run on the
global executor.
This solves some problems which were blocking the work on TLS-ifying
the task/executor state.
This is conditional on UseAsyncLowering and in the future should also be
conditional on `clangTargetInfo.isSwiftAsyncCCSupported()` once that
support is merged.
Update tests to work either with swiftcc or swifttailcc.
Previously, the error stored in the async context was of type SwiftError
*. In order to enable the context to be callee released, make it
indirect and change its type to SwiftError **.
rdar://71378532
This adds new kinds of link entities corresponding to the three
dispatch thunk link entity kinds:
- DispatchThunkAsyncFunctionPointer
- DispatchThunkInitializerAsyncFunctionPointer
- DispatchThunkAllocatorAsyncFunctionPointer
In derivatives of loops, no longer allocate boxes for indirect case payloads. Instead, use a custom pullback context in the runtime which contains a bump-pointer allocator.
When a function contains a differentiated loop, the closure context is a `Builtin.NativeObject`, which contains a `swift::AutoDiffLinearMapContext` and a tail-allocated top-level linear map struct (which represents the linear map struct that was previously directly partial-applied into the pullback). In branching trace enums, the payloads of previously indirect cases will be allocated by `swift::AutoDiffLinearMapContext::allocate` and stored as a `Builtin.RawPointer`.
Previously, the thick context was passed as a fourth parameter to
partial apply forwarders. Here, the thick context is instead moved into
the async context at the local context position. To support this, the
local context is made always available.
An AsyncFunctionPointer, defined in Task.h, is a struct consisting of
two i32s: (1) the relative address of the async function and (2) the
size of the async context to be allocated when calling that function.
Here, such structs are emitted for every async SILFunction that is
emitted.
`Builtin.createAsyncTask` takes flags, an optional parent task, and an
async/throwing function to execute, and passes it along to the
`swift_task_create_f` entry point to create a new (potentially child)
task, returning the new task and its initial context.
Implement a new builtin, `cancelAsyncTask()`, to cancel the given
asynchronous task. This lowers down to a call into the runtime
operation `swift_task_cancel()`.
Use this builtin to implement Task.Handle.cancel().
The commit with the following message wasn't previously formatted. That
oversight is fixed here.
[NFC] Construct AsyncContextLayout from module.
Previously, an IRGenFunction was being passed to the functions that
construct an AsyncContextLayout. That was not actually necessary and
prevented construction of the layout in contexts where no IRGenFunction
was present. Here that requirement is eased to requiring an IRGenModule
which is indeed required to construct an AsyncContextLayout.
Previously, an IRGenFunction was being passed to the functions that
construct an AsyncContextLayout. That was not actually necessary and
prevented construction of the layout in contexts where no IRGenFunction
was present. Here that requirement is eased to requiring an IRGenModule
which is indeed required to construct an AsyncContextLayout.
The following fields are now available when the function is a coroutine:
- TaskContinuationFunction * __ptrauth(...) yieldToCaller?
- TaskContinuationFunction * __ptrauth(...) resumeFromYield?
- TaskContinuationFunction * __ptrauth(...) abortFromYield?
- ExecutorRef calleeActorDuringYield?
- YieldTypes yieldValues...
These fields have yet to be filled in.
The following field are now available when the function is NOT a
coroutine (whereas previously they were always available):
- ResultTypes directResults...
Because all async functions have the same signature, namely
void(%swift.task*, %swift.executor*, %swift.context*)
it is always possible to provide access to the three argument values
(the current task, current executor, and current context) within an
IRGenFunction which is async. Here, that is provided in the form of
IRGenFunction::getAsyncExecutor,IRGenFunction::getAsyncContext, and
IRGenFunction::getAsyncTask.
The majority of support comes in the form of emitting partial
application forwarders for partial applications of async functions.
Such a partial application forwarder must take an async context which
has been partially populated at the apply site. It is responsible for
populating it "the rest of the way". To do so, like sync partial
application forwarders, it takes a second argument, its context, from
which it pulls the additional arguments which were capture at
partial_apply time.
The size of the async context that is passed to the forwarder, however,
can't be known at the apply site by simply looking at the signature of
the function to be applied (not even by looking at the size associated
with the function in the special async function pointer constant which
will soon be emitted). The reason is that there are an unknown (at the
apply site) number of additional arguments which will be filled by the
partial apply forwarder (and in the case of repeated partial
applications, further filled in incrementally at each level). To enable
this, there will always be a heap object for thick async functions.
These heap objects will always store the size of the async context to be
allocated as their first element. (Note that it may be possible to
apply the same optimization that was applied for thick sync functions
where a single refcounted object could be used as the context; doing so,
however, must be made to interact properly with the async context size
stored in the heap object.)
To continue to allow promoting thin async functions to thick async
functions without incurring a thunk, at the apply site, a null-check
will be performed on the context pointer. If it is null, then the async
context size will be determined based on the signature. (When async
function pointers become pointers to a constant with a size i32 and a
relative address to the underlying function, the size will be read from
that constant.) When it is not-null, the size will be pulled from the
first field of the context (which will in that case be cast to
<{%swift.refcounted, i32}>).
To facilitate sharing code and preserving the original structure of
emitPartialApplicationForwarder (which weighed in at roughly 700 lines
prior to this change), a new small class hierarchy, descending from
PartialApplicationForwarderEmission has been added, with subclasses for
the sync and async case. The shuffling of arguments into and out of the
final explosion that was being performed in the synchronous case has
been preserved there, though the arguments are added and removed through
a number of methods on the superclass with more descriptive names. That
was necessary to enable the async class to handle these different
flavors of parameters correctly.
To get some initial test coverage, the preexisting
IRGen/partial_apply.sil and IRGen/partial_apply_forwarder.sil tests have
been duplicated into the async folder. Those tests cases within these
files which happened to have been crashing have each been extracted into
its own runnable test that both verifies that the compiler does not
crash and also that the partial application forwarder behaves correctly.
The FileChecks in these tests are extremely minimal, providing only
enough information to be sure that arguments are in fact squeezed into
an async context.