The new instruction is needed for opaque values mode to allow values to
be extracted from tuples containing packs which will appear for example
as function arguments.
The new instruction wraps a value in a `@sil_weak` box and produces an
owned value. It is only legal in opaque values mode and is transformed
by `AddressLowering` to `store_weak`.
The new instruction unwraps an `@sil_weak` box and produces an owned
value. It is only legal in opaque values mode and is transformed by
`AddressLowering` to `load_weak`.
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.
This instruction is similar to AssignByWrapperInst, but instead of having
a destination operand, the initialization is fully factored into the init
function operand. Like AssignByWrapper, AssignOrInit has partial application
operands of both the initializer and the setter, and DI will lower the
instruction to a call based on whether the assignment is initialization or
a setter call.
Just the $*T -> $*@moveOnly T variant for addresses. Unlike the object version
this acts like a cast rather than something that provides semantics from the
frontend to the optimizer.
The reason why I am using a different instruction for addresses and objects here
is that the object checker doesnt have to deal with things like initialization.
The new alloc_pack_metadata and dealloc_pack_metadata are inserted as
part of IRGen lowering. The former indicates that the next instruction
might result in on-stack pack metadata being emitted. The latter
indicates that this is the position at which metadata emitted on behalf
of its operand should be cleaned up.
This patch replaces the stateful generation of SILScope information in
SILGenFunction with data derived from the ASTScope hierarchy, which should be
100% in sync with the scopes needed for local variables. The goal is to
eliminate the surprising effects that the stack of cleanup operations can have
on the current state of SILBuilder leading to a fully deterministic (in the
sense of: predictible by a human) association of SILDebugScopes with
SILInstructions. The patch also eliminates the need to many workarounds. There
are still some accomodations for several Sema transformation passes such as
ResultBuilders, which don't correctly update the source locations when moving
around nodes. If these were implemented as macros, this problem would disappear.
This necessary rewrite of the macro scope handling included in this patch also
adds proper support nested macro expansions.
This fixes
rdar://88274783
and either fixes or at least partially addresses the following:
rdar://89252827
rdar://105186946
rdar://105757810
rdar://105997826
rdar://105102288
This instruction can be inserted by Onone optimizations as a replacement for deleted instructions to
ensure that it's possible to single step on its location.
This allows dynamically indexing into tuples. IRGen not yet
implemented.
I think I'm going to need a type_refine_addr instruction in
order to handle substitutions into the operand type that
eliminate the outer layer of tuple-ness. Gonna handle that
in a follow-up commit.
Having added these, I'm not entirely sure we couldn't just use
alloc_stack and dealloc_stack. Well, if we find ourselves adding
a lot of redundancy with those instructions (e.g. around DI), we
can always go back and rip these out.
Previously, `begin_borrow [lexical]` were created during SILGen for
@owned arguments. Such borrows could be deleted if trivially dead,
which was the original reason why @owned arguments were considered
lexical and could not have their destroys hoisted.
Those borrows were however important during inlining because they would
maintain the lifetime of the owned argument. Unless of course the
borrow scope was trivially dead. In which case the owned argument's
lifetime would not be maintained. And if the caller's value was
non-lexical, destroys of the value could be hoisted over deinit
barriers.
Here, during inlining, `move_value [lexical]`s are introduced during
inlining whever the caller's value is non-lexical. This maintains the
lifetime of the owned argument even after inlining.
If a guaranted function argument is lexical, its lifetime must be
mainted during inlining. If the caller's value is already lexical,
no work is required to do the inlining.
When inlining a begin_apply, if one of the values is yielded by
guaranteed convention, if the yielded value is itself owned, borrow it
during inlining.
Doing so is necessary because users of the yielded value are expecting a
value with guaranteed ownership. For example, it's valid to
store_borrow such a value but not an owned value.
`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
This is a dedicated instruction for incrementing a
profiler counter, which lowers to the
`llvm.instrprof.increment` intrinsic. This
replaces the builtin instruction that was
previously used, and ensures that its arguments
are statically known. This ensures that SIL
optimization passes do not invalidate the
instruction, fixing some code coverage cases in
`-O`.
rdar://39146527
By using the keyword instead of the function, we actually get a much simpler
implementation since we avoid all of the machinery of SILGenApply. Given that we
are going down that path, I am removing the old builtin implementation since it
is dead code.
The reason why I am removing this now is that in a subsequent commit, I want to
move all of the ownership checking passes to run /before/ mandatory inlining. I
originally placed the passes after mandatory inlining since the function version
of the move keyword was transparent and needing to be inlined before we could
process it. Since we use the keyword now, that is no longer an issue.
During inlining, lexical-ness of arguments is preserved. In the case of
address arguments that come from alloc_stacks, the alloc_stacks are
marked lexical. The base of the storage which is passed to the address
is obtained via AccessStorageWithBase. In some circumstances, a base is
not found. Handled that case by changing a dyn_cast of the base to a
dyn_cast_or_null.
rdar://99087653
Instead of cloning existing instructions (and correctly remapping
their scopes) SILCloner just creates a fresh instruction for the
terminator and forgets to set the scope accordingly. This bug flew
under the radar because the SIL verifier for continiuous scopes
doesn't look at terminator instructions.
rdar://97617367
When inlining a function to which an alloc_stack is passed (via any
convention that's not all of mutating, exclusive, and inout), mark the
alloc_stack as lexical. Otherwise, destroy_addrs could be hoisted
through the inlined function in a way inconsistent with how they were
hoisted through the callee prior to inlining.
This is exactly like copy_addr except that it is not viewed from the verifiers
perspective as an "invalid" copy of a move only value. It is intended to be used
in two contexts:
1. When the move checker emits a diagnostic since it could not eliminate a copy,
we still need to produce valid SIL without copy_addr on move only types since we
will hit canonical SIL eventually even if we don't actually codegen the SIL. The
pass can just convert said copy_addr to explicit_copy_addr and everyone is
happy.
2. To implement the explicit copy function for address only types.
Andy some time ago already created the new API but didn't go through and update
the old occurences. I did that in this PR and then deprecated the old API. The
tree is clean, so I could just remove it, but I decided to be nicer to
downstream people by deprecating it first.
These instructions have the following attributes:
1. copyably_to_moveonlywrapper takes in a 'T' and maps it to a '@moveOnly
T'. This is semantically used when initializing a new moveOnly binding from a
copyable value. It semantically destroys its input @owned value and returns a
brand new independent @owned @moveOnly value. It also is used to convert a
trivial copyable value with type 'Trivial' into an owned non-trivial value of
type '@moveOnly Trivial'. If one thinks of '@moveOnly' as a monad, this is how
one injects a copyable value into the move only space.
2. moveonlywrapper_to_copyable takes in a '@moveOnly T' and produces a new 'T'
value. This is a 'forwarding' instruction where at parse time, we only allow for
one to choose it to be [owned] or [guaranteed].
* moveonlywrapper_to_copyable [owned] is used to signal the end of lifetime of
the '@moveOnly' wrapper. SILGen inserts these when ever a move only value has
its ownership passed to a situation where a copyable value is needed. Since it
is consuming, we know that the no implicit copy checker will ensure that if we
need a copy for it, the program will emit a diagnostic.
* moveonlywrapper_to_copyable [guaranteed] is used to pass a @moveOnly T value
as a copyable guaranteed parameter with type 'T' to a function. In the case of
using no-implicit-copy checking this is always fine since no-implicit-copy is a
local pattern. This would be an error when performing no escape
checking. Importantly, this instruction also is where in the case of an
@moveOnly trivial type, we convert from the non-trivial representation to the
trivial representation.
Some important notes:
1. In a forthcoming commit, I am going to rebase the no implicit copy checker on
top of these instructions. By using '@moveOnly' in the type system, we can
ensure that later in the SIL pipeline, we can have optimizations easily ignore
the code.
2. Be aware of is that due to SILGen only emitting '@moveOnly T' along immediate
accesses to the variable and always converts to a copyable representation when
calling other code, we can simply eliminate from the IR all moveonly-ness from
the IR using a lowering pass (that I am going to upstream). In the evil scheme
we are accomplishing here, we perform lowering of trivial values right after
ownership lowering and before diagnostics to simplify the pipeline.
On another note, I also fixed a few things in SILParsing around getASTType() vs
getRawASTType().
This is an instruction that I am going to use to drive some of the ownership
based dataflow optimizations that I am writing now. The instruction contains a
kind that allows one to know what type of checking is required and allows the
need to add a bunch of independent instructions for independent checkers. Each
checker is responsible for removing all of its own mark instructions. NOTE:
MarkMustCheckInst is only allowed in Raw SIL since once we are in Canonical SIL
we want to ensure that all such checking has already occurred.
Introduce a new instruction `dealloc_stack_ref ` and remove the `stack` flag from `dealloc_ref`.
The `dealloc_ref [stack]` was confusing, because all it does is to mark the deallocation of the stack space for a stack promoted object.