The order for writing records of the stdlib currently depends on
`StringMap` iteration (in a slightly roundabout manner). Sort these
alphabetically instead.
Calling getImportedModules requires to list the desired kind of imports.
With the new kind of imports this has become cumbersome. Let's simplify
it by offering common sets of imports. Advanced call sites can still
list the desired imports explicitly.
Rather than using `ModuleDecl::isSystemModule()` to determine whether a
module is not a user module, instead check whether the module was
defined adjacent to the compiler or if it's part of the SDK.
If no SDK path was given, then `isSystemModule` is still used as a
fallback.
Resolves rdar://89253201.
If a module was first read using the adjacent swiftmodule and then
reloaded using the swiftinterface, we would do an up to date check on
the adjacent module but write out the unit using the swiftinterface.
This would cause the same modules to be indexed repeatedly for the first
invocation using a new SDK. On the next run we would instead raad the
swiftmodule from the cache and thus the out of date check would match
up.
The impact of this varies depending on the size of the module graph in
the initial compilation and the number of jobs started at the same time.
Each SDK dependency is re-indexed *and* reloaded, which is a drain on
both CPU and memory. Thus, if many jobs are initially started and
they're all going down this path, it can cause the system to run out of
memory very quickly.
Resolves rdar://103119964.
Indexing a module from the swiftinterface puts the swiftinterface
version in the cache. Subsequent builds don't see the adjacent
swiftmodule file. This can break test clients that need the adjacent
swiftmodule information. To avoid this scenario, ensure that we only
index system modules in the SDK, not local versions.
rdar://102207620
`getValue` -> `value`
`getValueOr` -> `value_or`
`hasValue` -> `has_value`
`map` -> `transform`
The old API will be deprecated in the rebranch.
To avoid merge conflicts, use the new API already in the main branch.
rdar://102362022
Swiftc port of https://github.com/apple/llvm-project/pull/4207.
This introduces a new flag, `-file-prefix-map` which can be used
instead of the existing `-debug-prefix-map` and `-coverage-prefix-map`
flags, and also remaps paths in index information currently.
To help consolidate our various types describing imports, this commit moves the following types and methods to Import.h:
* ImplicitImports
* ImplicitStdlibKind
* ImplicitImportInfo
* ModuleDecl::ImportedModule
* ModuleDecl::OrderImportedModules (as ImportedModule::Order)
* ModuleDecl::removeDuplicateImports() (as ImportedModule::removeDuplicates())
* SourceFile::ImportFlags
* SourceFile::ImportOptions
* SourceFile::ImportedModuleDesc
This commit is large and intentionally kept mechanical—nothing interesting to see here.
This makes it easier to specify OptionSet arguments.
Also modify appropriate uses of ModuleDecl::ImportFilter to take
advantage of the new constructor.
`SynthesizedFileUnit` is a container for synthesized declarations. Currently, it
only supports module-level declarations.
It is used by the SIL differentiation transform, which generates implicit struct
and enum declarations.
The fake module names we create when indexing a Swift module divided into
'groups' (e.g. the stdlib) don't have to be valid Swift module names, but we
were manipulating them to be so. E.g. the stdlib "Lazy Views" group, became
"Lazy_Views". This name is displayed in some editors verbatim, and is also
used as input to some sourcekitd APIs (e.g. editor.open.interface) that only
work if the original group name is passed, rather than the processed one.
This patch stops mapping invalid module name characters like ' ' and '-' to '_'
so the original group name remains.
Resolves rdar://problem/57270811
Several tests related to indexing system modules were taking a considerable
amount of time (100+ seconds in the worst case) indexing the standard library.
This adds a frontend option to skip it and updates those tests to pass it.
Two more pair of string conversion fixes. With this, I was able to build
swift master-next on Ubuntu 16.04 (didn't try anything downstream of
swift, and not sure if the tests pass).
When a “separately imported overlay” is added to a SourceFile, two things happen:
1. The direct import of the underlying module is removed from getImports*() by default. It is only visible if the caller passes ImportFilterKind:: ShadowedBySeparateOverlay. This means that non-module-scoped lookups will search _OverlayModule before searching its re-export UnderlyingModule, allowing it to shadow underlying declarations.
2. When you ask for lookupInModule() to look in the underlying module in that source file, it looks in the overlays instead. This means that UnderlyingModule.foo() can find declarations in _OverlayModule.
Like the last commit, SourceFile is used a lot by Parse and Sema, but
less so by the ClangImporter and (de)Serialization. Split it out to
cut down on recompilation times when something changes.
This commit does /not/ split the implementation of SourceFile out of
Module.cpp, which is where most of it lives. That might also be a
reasonable change, but the reason I was reluctant to is because a
number of SourceFile members correspond to the entry points in
ModuleDecl. Someone else can pick this up later if they decide it's a
good idea.
No functionality change.
Now that we've moved to C++14, we no longer need the llvm::make_unique
implementation from STLExtras.h. This patch is a mechanical replacement
of (hopefully) all the llvm::make_unique instances in the swift repo.
This has been an unnecessary code path for a long time now and should be removed particularly because it triggers wasteful `stat` calls.
rdar://51523161
This is an attribute that gets put on an import in library FooKit to
keep it from being a requirement to import FooKit. It's not checked at
all, meaning that in this form it is up to the author of FooKit to
make sure nothing in its API or ABI depends on the implementation-only
dependency. There's also no debugging support here (debugging FooKit
/should/ import the implementation-only dependency if it's present).
The goal is to get to a point where it /can/ be checked, i.e. FooKit
developers are prevented from writing code that would rely on FooKit's
implementation-only dependency being present when compiling clients of
FooKit. But right now it's not.
rdar://problem/48985979
...in preparation for me adding a third kind of import, making the
existing "All" kind a problem. NFC, except that I did rewrite the
ClangModuleUnit implementation of getImportedModules to be simpler!
When debugging Objective-C or C++ code on Darwin, the debug info
collected by dsymutil in the .dSYM bundle is entirely
self-contained. It is possible to debug a program, set breakpoints and
print variables even without having the complete original source code
or a matching SDK available. With Swift, this is currently not the
case. Even though .dSYM bundles contain the binary .swiftmodule for
all Swift modules, any Clang modules that the Swift modules depend on,
still need to be imported from source to even get basic LLDB
functionality to work. If ClangImporter fails to import a Clang
module, effectively the entire Swift module depending on it gets
poisoned.
This patch is addressing this issue by introducing a ModuleLoader that
can ask queries about Clang Decls to LLDB, since LLDB knows how to
reconstruct Clang decls from DWARF and clang -gmodules producxes full
debug info for Clang modules that is embedded into the .dSYM budle.
This initial version does not contain any advanced functionality at
all, it merely produces an empty ModuleDecl. Intertestingly, even this
is a considerable improvement over the status quo. LLDB can now print
Swift-only variables in modules with failing Clang depenecies, and
becuase of fallback mechanisms that were implemented earlier, it can
even display the contents of pure Objective-C objects that are
imported into Swift. C structs obviously don't work yet.
rdar://problem/36032653