Partially address the incorrect handling for the `#dsohandle` on
Windows.
We were previously emitting a local definition for this external
constant, and worse yet, not marking the definition for COMDAT. It is
unclear what definition would win ultimately (implementation defined),
as we had a definition as well as the linker synthesized value. We can
change the SIL linkage for this type to `DefaultForDeclaration` which
will give it `available_externally` and default visibility and storage
which is closer to what we desire. However, because we do not track the
LLVM variables and apply heuristics for lowering the
`SILGlobalVariable`, we would attribute it with imported DLL Storage.
This would then cause us to fail at link time (amusingly enough link.exe
will report a LNK1000). Special case the variable and track that we are
targeting a windows environment in the `UniversalLinkageInfo` so that we
do not special case this on other platforms.
This also has the nice side effect of allowing us to remove the special
case in the TBD handling.
Fixes: #64741
For each decl that needs a `#_hasSymbol()` query function, emit the corresponding helper function body during IRGen. Use `IRSymbolVisitor` to collect linkable symbols associated with the decl and return true from the helper function if the address of every associated symbol is non-null.
Resolves rdar://101884587
In preparation for moving to llvm's opaque pointer representation
replace getPointerElementType and CreateCall/CreateLoad/Store uses that
dependent on the address operand's pointer element type.
This means an `Address` carries the element type and we use
`FunctionPointer` in more places or read the function type off the
`llvm::Function`.
Include the parent `ModuleDecl` when serializing a `SILFunction` so that it is available on deserialized functions even though the full `DeclContext` is not present. With the parent module always available we can reliably compute whether the `SILFunction` comes from a module that was imported `@_weakLinked`.
Serialize the `DeclContext` member of `SILFunction` so that it can be used to look up the module that a function belongs to in order to compute weak import status.
Resolves rdar://98521248
Previously, only the associated requirement was considered when deciding whether to weakly link an associated conformance descriptor. This lead to unexpected strong linkage for some symbols, interfering with back deployment when integrating with some frameworks.
Resolves rdar://96974850
If opaque result type has availability conditions and is associated with
an `@_alwaysInlineIntoClient` declaration, its metadata descriptor has to
be emitted into a client module because the body of the inlined function
depends on it for the runtime information about the underlying type.
Resolves: rdar://82791712
When determining the linkage of protocol witness table lazy access
functions and their cache variables, look through opaque types to find
the underlying decls.
rdar://96194366
So far, static arrays had to be put into a writable section, because the isa pointer and the (immortal) ref count field were initialized dynamically at the first use of such an array.
But with a new runtime library, which exports the symbols for the (immortal) ref count field and the isa pointer, it's possible to put the whole array into a read-only section. I.e. make it a constant global.
rdar://94185998
This reverts the revert commit df353ff3c0.
Also, I added a frontend option to disable this optimization: `-disable-readonly-static-objects`
So far, static arrays had to be put into a writable section, because the isa pointer and the (immortal) ref count field were initialized dynamically at the first use of such an array.
But with a new runtime library, which exports the symbols for the (immortal) ref count field and the isa pointer, it's possible to put the whole array into a read-only section. I.e. make it a constant global.
rdar://94185998
I wrote out this whole analysis of why different existential types
might have the same logical content, and then I turned around and
immediately uniqued existential shapes purely by logical content
rather than the (generalized) formal type. Oh well. At least it's
not too late to make ABI changes like this.
We now store a reference to a mangling of the generalized formal
type directly in the shape. This type alone is sufficient to unique
the shape:
- By the nature of the generalization algorithm, every type parameter
in the generalization signature should be mentioned in the
generalized formal type in a deterministic order.
- By the nature of the generalization algorithm, every other
requirement in the generalization signature should be implied
by the positions in which generalization type parameters appear
(e.g. because the formal type is C<T> & P, where C constrains
its type parameter for well-formedness).
- The requirement signature and type expression are extracted from
the existential type.
As a result, we no longer rely on computing a unique hash at
compile time.
Storing this separately from the requirement signature potentially
allows runtimes with general shape support to work with future
extensions to existential types even if they cannot demangle the
generalized formal type.
Storing the generalized formal type also allows us to easily and
reliably extract the formal type of the existential. Otherwise,
it's quite a heroic endeavor to match requirements back up with
primary associated types. Doing so would also only allows us to
extract *some* matching formal type, not necessarily the *right*
formal type. So there's some good synergy here.
This pipes the `-static` flag when building a static library into IRGen.
This should have no impact on non-Windows targets as the usage of the
information simply removes the `dllexport` attribute on the generated
interfaces. This ensures that a library built with `-static` will not
re-export its interfaces from the consumer. This is important to ensure
that the consumer does not vend the API surface when it statically links
a library. In conjunction with the removal of the force load symbol,
this allows the generation of static libraries which may be linked
against on Windows. However, a subsequent change is needed to ensure
that the consumer does not mark the symbol as being imported from a
foreign module (i.e. `dllimport`).
A "accessible" function that can be looked up based on a string key,
and then called through a fully-abstracted entry point whose arguments
can be constructed in code.
This was a relict from the -sil-serialize-all days. This linkage doesn't make any sense because a private function cannot be referenced from another module (or file, in case of non-wmo compilation).
Previously, a LinkEntity for an AST async function pointer was built by
passing an AbstractFunctionDecl. Later, decl was used to construct a
SILDeclRef.
That arrangement meant that clients could not construct such a
LinkEntity whose SILDeclRef::Kind could not be inferred from the dynamic
type of the decl from which the SILDeclRef was constructed. In
particular, clients could not construct a LinkEntity for the initializer
corresponding to a ConstructorDecl.
Here, the arrangment is changed so that the LinkEntity for an AST async
function pointer is built by passing a SILDeclRef.
When adding an AsyncFunctionPointer to the TBD, a LinkEntity of kind
AsyncFunctionPointerAST is constructed containing the decl. That decl
is then wrapped in a SILDeclRef which is then mangled.
Previously, the kind of the SILDeclRef was erroneously forced to be
Func. The result was a failure to mangle the TBD symbol for async
constructors correctly.
Here, that argument is omitted so that the kind can be determined
appropriately by SILDeclRef's constructor.
rdar://80485869
We were not making references to async function pointers "weak" when
the function itself was weak, because we were always calculating
linkage as-if we were defining the async function pointer.
Fixes the rest of rdar://79674106.
Gather 'round to hear tell of the saga of autolinking in incremental
mode.
In the beginning, there was Swift code, and there was Objective-C code.
To make one import bind two languages, a twinned Swift module named the same as an
Objective-C module could be imported as an overlay. But all was not
well, for an overlay could be created which had no Swift content, yet
required Swift symbols. And there was much wailing and gnashing of teeth
as loaders everywhere disregarded loading these content-less Swift
libraries.
So, a solution was found - a magical symbol _swift_FORCE_LOAD_$_<MODULE>
that forced the loaders to heed the dependency on a Swift library
regardless of its content. It was a constant with common linkage, and it
was good. But, along came COFF which needed to support autolinking but
had no support for such matters. It did, however, have support for
COMDAT sections into which we placed the symbol. Immediately, a darkness
fell across the land as the windows linker loudly proclaimed it had
discovered a contradiction: "_swift_FORCE_LOAD_$_<MODULE> cannot be
a constant!", it said, gratingly, "for this value requires rebasing."
Undeterred, we switched to a function instead, and the windows linker
happily added a level of indirection to its symbol resolution procedure
and all was right with the world.
But this definition was not all right. In order to support multiple
translation units emitting it, and to prevent the linker from dead
stripping it, Weak ODR linkage was used. Weak ODR linkage has the nasty
side effect of pessimizing load times since the dynamic linker must
assume that loading a later library could produce a more definitive
definition for the symbol.
A compromise was drawn up: To keep load times low, external linkage was
used. To keep the linker from complaining about multiple strong
definitions for the same symbol, the first translation unit in the
module was nominated to recieve the magic symbol. But one final problem
remained:
Incremental builds allow for files to be added or removed during the
build procedure. The placement of the symbol was therefore dependent
entirely upon the order of files passed at the command line. This was no
good, so a decree was set forth that using -autolink-force-load and
-incremental together was a criminal offense.
So we must compromise once more: Return to a symbol with common linkage,
but only on Mach-O targets. Preserve the existing COMDAT-friendly
approach everywhere else.
This concludes our tale.
rdar://77803299
Up to now, there had been no need to define a LinkEntity for a partial
apply forwarder. Now that async partial apply forwarders will each have
their own async function pointer, an entity is needed to pass to the
code that generates the async function pointers.
No demangling or remangling changes are required because that code has
existed for as long as partial apply forwarders to support demangling
their symbols.
- Add `DispatchThunkDerivative` and `MethodDescriptorDerivative` as link entities. The derivative functions of initializers, subscripts, properties, and methods are **all methods**, so we don't need other link entities for this purpose.
- Mangle dispatch thunks and method descriptors. Make `AutoDiffFunction` a context node since it can be nested.
Resolves SR-13866 (rdar://71318828) and SR-13125 (rdar://65240599).
This adds new kinds of link entities corresponding to the three
dispatch thunk link entity kinds:
- DispatchThunkAsyncFunctionPointer
- DispatchThunkInitializerAsyncFunctionPointer
- DispatchThunkAllocatorAsyncFunctionPointer
Previously, the suffix "AD" was used to mangle AsyncFunctionPointers.
That was incorrect because it was already used in the mangling scheme.
Here, that error is fixed by using 'u' under the thunk or specialization
operator 'T' to mangle AsyncFunctionPointers. Additionally, printing
and demangling support is added.
rdar://problem/72336407