Allow SILDeclRef to refer to the main program
entry-point, which will either be for a main
SourceFile, or a synthetic main such as an `@main`
decl. Adjust the various SILDeclRef related
functions to handle this new case, and change the
emission to go through `emitFunctionDefinition`.
This change will allow the entry-point for an `@main`
decl (and eventually a main SourceFile) to be
emitted on-demand from its symbol name.
- `Mangle::ASTMangler::mangleAutoDiffDerivativeFunction()` and `Mangle::ASTMangler::mangleAutoDiffLinearMap()` accept original function declarations and return a mangled name for a derivative function or linear map. This is called during SILGen and TBDGen.
- `Mangle::DifferentiationMangler` handles differentiation function mangling in the differentiation transform. This part is necessary because we need to perform demangling on the original function and remangle it as part of a differentiation function mangling tree in order to get the correct substitutions in the mangled derivative generic signature.
A mangled differentiation function name includes:
- The original function.
- The differentiation function kind.
- The parameter indices for differentiation.
- The result indices for differentiation.
- The derivative generic signature.
Bridging an async Swift method back to an ObjC completion-handler-based API requires
that the ObjC thunk spawn a task on which to execute the Swift async API and pass
its results back on to the completion handler.
We don't introduce a new mangling here.
To distinguish the names of the original asyncHandler function and it's generated "body-function", we just mangle the body-function with an async attribute, i.e. as if it was declared as async.
This change is mostly to pass information to the ASTMangler to mangle a not async function as "async".
This attribute allows to define a pre-specialized entry point of a
generic function in a library.
The following definition provides a pre-specialized entry point for
`genericFunc(_:)` for the parameter type `Int` that clients of the
library can call.
```
@_specialize(exported: true, where T == Int)
public func genericFunc<T>(_ t: T) { ... }
```
Pre-specializations of internal `@inlinable` functions are allowed.
```
@usableFromInline
internal struct GenericThing<T> {
@_specialize(exported: true, where T == Int)
@inlinable
internal func genericMethod(_ t: T) {
}
}
```
There is syntax to pre-specialize a method from a different module.
```
import ModuleDefiningGenericFunc
@_specialize(exported: true, target: genericFunc(_:), where T == Double)
func prespecialize_genericFunc(_ t: T) { fatalError("dont call") }
```
Specially marked extensions allow for pre-specialization of internal
methods accross module boundries (respecting `@inlinable` and
`@usableFromInline`).
```
import ModuleDefiningGenericThing
public struct Something {}
@_specializeExtension
extension GenericThing {
@_specialize(exported: true, target: genericMethod(_:), where T == Something)
func prespecialize_genericMethod(_ t: T) { fatalError("dont call") }
}
```
rdar://64993425
checks to check for type context instead of local context.
This generalization will help us implement property wrappers on
global variables, which should use the same approach of not adding
synthesized accessors to the AST and instead lazily visit them in
SILGen.
Expand to other cases where we emit a
native-to-foreign thunk, but didn't previously
return true. Because this now includes @objc
entry-points for methods, adjust the linking logic
so it can maintain more restrictive linkages for
things like private decls.
```
class Generic<T> {
@objc dynamic func method() {}
}
extension Generic {
@_dynamicReplacement(for:method())
func replacement() {}
}
```
The standard mechanism of using Objective-C categories for dynamically
replacing @objc methods in generic classes does not work.
Instead we mark the native entry point as replaceable.
Because this affects all @objc methods in generic classes (whether there
is a replacement or not) by making the native entry point
`[dynamically_replaceable]` (regardless of optimization mode) we guard this by
the -enable-implicit-dynamic flag because we are late in the release cycle.
* Replace isNativeDynamic and isObjcDynamic by calls to shouldUse*Dispatch and
shouldUse*Replacement
This disambiguates between which dispatch method we should use at call
sites and how these methods should implement dynamic function
replacement.
* Don't emit the method entry for @_dynamicReplacement(for:) of generic class
methods
There is not way to call this entry point since we can't generate an
objective-c category for generic classes.
rdar://63679357
Specifically, I split it into 3 initial categories: IR, Utils, Verifier. I just
did this quickly, we can always split it more later if we want.
I followed the model that we use in SILOptimizer: ./lib/SIL/CMakeLists.txt vends
a macro (sil_register_sources) to the sub-folders that register the sources of
the subdirectory with a global state variable that ./lib/SIL/CMakeLists.txt
defines. Then after including those subdirs, the parent cmake declares the SIL
library. So the output is the same, but we have the flexibility of having
subdirectories to categorize source files.