Enable qualified declaration names in `@derivative` attribute, just like
`@transpose` attribute.
`DerivativeAttr` now stores a base type `TypeRepr *`, which is non-null for
parsed attributes that reference a qualified original declaration.
Add `TypeResolutionFlags::AllowModule` flag to enable module lookup via
`TypeChecker::lookupMember` given a `ModuleType`.
Add tests for type-qualified and module-qualified declaration names.
Resolves TF-1058.
Upstream `@derivative` attribute serialization/deserialization.
Test all original declaration kinds and various `wrt:` parameter clauses.
Resolves TF-837.
State the previously unstated nested type requirement that CodingKeys adds to the witness requirements of a given type. The goal is to make this member cheap to synthesize, and independent of the expensive protocol conformance checks required to append it to the member list.
Further, this makes a clean conceptual separation between what I'm calling "nested type requirements" and actual type and value requirements.
With luck, we'll never have to use this attribute anywhere else.
Complete the refactoring by splitting the semantic callers for the original decl of a dynamically replaced declaration.
There's also a change to the way this attribute is validated and placed. The old model visited the attribute on any functions and variable declarations it encountered in the primary. Once there, it would strip the attribute off of variables and attach the corresponding attribute to each parsed accessor, then perform some additional ObjC-related validation.
The new approach instead leaves the attribute alone. The request exists specifically to perform the lookups and type matching required to find replaced decls, and the attribute visitor no longer needs to worry about revisiting decls it has just grafted attributes onto. This also means that a bunch of parts of IRGen and SILGen that needed to fan out to the accessors to ask for the @_dynamicReplacement attribute to undo the work the type checker had done can just look at the storage itself. Further, syntactic requests for the attribute will now consistently succeed, where before they would fail dependending on whether or not the type checker had run - which was generally not an issue by the time we hit SIL.
To support lazy resolution of the cross-referenced function in a serialized @_dynamicReplacement(for: ...) attribute, add a utility to the LazyMemberLoader and plumb it through. This is a more general utility than the current resolver, which relies on the type checker to strip the attribute off of VarDecls and fan it back out onto accessors, which means serialization has only ever seen AbstractFunctionDecls.
We need this attribute to teach compiler to use a different name from the current
module name when generating runtime symbol names for a declaration. This is to serve
the workflow of refactoring a symbol from one library to another without breaking the existing
ABI.
This patch focuses on parsing and serializing the attribute, so @_originallyDefinedIn
will show up in AST, swiftinterface files and swiftmodule files.
rdar://55268186
Add an alternative to getTopLevelDecls and getDeclChecked to limit which
decls are deserialized by first looking at their attributes. If the
attributes are accepted by a function passed as argument the decl is
fully deserialized, otherwise it is ignored.
The filter is included in the signature of existing functions in the
Serilalization services, but I’ve added new methods for it in FileUnit
and its subclasses to leave existing implementations untouched.
* Fix Swift following bitstream reader API update
Upstream change in rL364464 broke downstream Swift.
(cherry picked from commit 50de105bf1)
Conflicts:
lib/Serialization/Deserialization.cpp
lib/Serialization/ModuleFile.cpp
tools/driver/modulewrap_main.cpp
Witness matching is a source of a lot of ad-hoc cycles, and mixes the
logic that performs resolution, caching, validation, and cycle detection into one
place. To make matters worse, some checkers kick off other checks in
order to cache work for further declarations, and access an internal
cache on their subject conformance for many requirements at once, or
sometimes just one requirement.
None of this fits into the request evaluator's central view of the
caching. This is further evidenced by the fact that if you attempt to
move the caching step into the evaluator, it overcaches the same
witness and trips asserts.
As a start, define requests for the resolution steps, and flush some
hacks around forcing witness resolution. The caching logic is mostly
untouched (the requests don't actually cache anything), but some cycle
breaking is now handled in the evaluator itself. Once witness matching
has been refactored to cache with the evaluator, all of these hacks can
go away.
My urge to destroy the LazyResolver outweighs the compromises here.
This non-user-facing attribute is used to denote pointer parameters
which do not accept pointers produced from temporary pointer conversions
such as array-to-pointer, string-to-pointer, and in some cases
inout-to-pointer.
By convention, most structs and classes in the Swift compiler include a `dump()` method which prints debugging information. This method is meant to be called only from the debugger, but this means they’re often unused and may be eliminated from optimized binaries. On the other hand, some parts of the compiler call `dump()` methods directly despite them being intended as a pure debugging aid. clang supports attributes which can be used to avoid these problems, but they’re used very inconsistently across the compiler.
This commit adds `SWIFT_DEBUG_DUMP` and `SWIFT_DEBUG_DUMPER(<name>(<params>))` macros to declare `dump()` methods with the appropriate set of attributes and adopts this macro throughout the frontend. It does not pervasively adopt this macro in SILGen, SILOptimizer, or IRGen; these components use `dump()` methods in a different way where they’re frequently called from debugging code. Nor does it adopt it in runtime components like swiftRuntime and swiftReflection, because I’m a bit worried about size.
Despite the large number of files and lines affected, this change is NFC.
* [Sema] Factor out shouldAttemptInitializerSynthesis
This makes sure we don't attempt to synthesize
a memberwise or default initializer for an invalid
decl, or one in a module interface.
* [Sema] Requesify inheritsSuperclassInitializers
This commit introduces a request for computing
whether a class inherits both designated and
convenience initializers from its superclass.
The shared logic of finding initializers which the
subclass hasn't overriden has been factored out
into `collectNonOveriddenSuperclassInits`.
* Cleanup addImplicitInheritedConstructorsToClass
This commit removes some code that's no longer
needed. In addition, now that we've requestified
`inheritsSuperclassInitializers`, we can directly
diagnose on non-inherited required convenience
inits within the loop.
* Inherited init synthesis no longer deals with clang decls
Now that the computation of
`inheritsSuperclassInitializers` has been split off
into a request, we can avoid calling
`addImplicitInheritedConstructorsToClass` for clang
decls.
* Address review feedback
Continue to cache the InheritsSuperclassInits bit
on the AST.
Use ProtocolConformanceRef::forInvalid() in implementations only as a semantic signal. In one place, use the default constructor to drop the final use of Optional<ProtocolConformanceRef>.
ProtocolConformanceRef already has an invalid state. Drop all of the
uses of Optional<ProtocolConformanceRef> and just use
ProtocolConformanceRef::forInvalid() to represent it. Mechanically
translate all of the callers and callsites to use this new
representation.
https://forums.swift.org/t/improving-the-representation-of-polymorphic-interfaces-in-sil-with-substituted-function-types/29711
This prepares SIL to be able to more accurately preserve the calling convention of
polymorphic generic interfaces by letting the type system represent "substituted function types".
We add a couple of fields to SILFunctionType to support this:
- A substitution map, accessed by `getSubstitutions()`, which maps the generic signature
of the function to its concrete implementation. This will allow, for instance, a protocol
witness for a requirement of type `<Self: P> (Self, ...) -> ...` for a concrete conforming
type `Foo` to express its type as `<Self: P> (Self, ...) -> ... for <Foo>`, preserving the relation
to the protocol interface without relying on the pile of hacks that is the `witness_method`
protocol.
- A bool for whether the generic signature of the function is "implied" by the substitutions.
If true, the generic signature isn't really part of the calling convention of the function.
This will allow closure types to distinguish a closure being passed to a generic function, like
`<T, U> in (*T, *U) -> T for <Int, String>`, from the concrete type `(*Int, *String) -> Int`,
which will make it easier for us to differentiate the representation of those as types, for
instance by giving them different pointer authentication discriminators to harden arm64e
code.
This patch is currently NFC, it just introduces the new APIs and takes a first pass at updating
code to use them. Much more work will need to be done once we start exercising these new
fields.
This does bifurcate some existing APIs:
- SILFunctionType now has two accessors to get its generic signature.
`getSubstGenericSignature` gets the generic signature that is used to apply its
substitution map, if any. `getInvocationGenericSignature` gets the generic signature
used to invoke the function at apply sites. These differ if the generic signature is
implied.
- SILParameterInfo and SILResultInfo values carry the unsubstituted types of the parameters
and results of the function. They now have two APIs to get that type. `getInterfaceType`
returns the unsubstituted type of the generic interface, and
`getArgumentType`/`getReturnValueType` produce the substituted type that is used at
apply sites.
In some circumstances, a Swift declaration in module A will depend on
another declaration (usually from Objective-C) that can't be loaded,
for whatever reason. If the Swift declaration is *overriding* the
missing declaration, this can present a problem, because the way
methods are dispatched in Swift can depend on knowing the original
class that introduced the method. However, if the compiler can prove
that the override can still be safely invoked/used in all cases, it
doesn't need to worry about the overridden declaration being missing.
This is especially relevant for property accessors, because there's
currently no logic to recover from a property being successfully
deserialized and then finding out that an accessor couldn't be.
The decision of whether or not an override can be safely invoked
without knowledge of the base method is something to be cautious
about---a mistaken analysis would effectively be a miscompile. So up
until now, this was limited to one case: when a method is known to be
`@objc dynamic`, i.e. always dispatched through objc_msgSend. (Even
this may become questionable if we have first-class method references,
like we do for key paths.) This worked particularly well because the
compiler infers 'dynamic' for any overload of an imported Objective-C
method or accessor, in case it imports differently in a different
-swift-version and a client ends up subclassing it.
However...that inference does not apply if the class is final, because
then there are no subclasses to worry about.
This commit changes the test to be more careful: if the /missing/
declaration was `@objc dynamic`, we know that it can't affect ABI,
because either the override is properly `@objc dynamic` as well, or
the override has introduced its own calling ABI (in practice, a direct
call for final methods) that doesn't depend on the superclass. Again,
this isn't 100% correct in the presence of first-class methods, but it
does fix the issue in practice where a property accessor in a parent
class goes missing. And since Objective-C allows adding property
setters separately from the original property declaration, that's
something that can happen even under normal circumstances. Sadly.
This approach could probably be extended to constructors as well. I'm
a little more cautious about throwing vars and subscripts into the mix
because of the presence of key paths, which do allow identity-based
comparison of overrides and bases.
rdar://problem/56388950
Since getSpecifier() now kicks off a request instead of always
returning what was previously set, we can't pass a ParamSpecifier
to the ParamDecl constructor anymore. Instead, callers either
call setSpecifier() if the ParamDecl is synthesized, or they
rely on the request, which can compute the specifier in three
specific cases:
- Ordinary parsed parameters get their specifier from the TypeRepr.
- The 'self' parameter's specifier is based on the self access kind.
- Accessor parameters are either the 'newValue' parameter of a
setter, or a cloned subscript parameter.
For closure parameters with inferred types, we still end up
calling setSpecifier() twice, once to set the initial defalut
value and a second time when applying the solution in the
case that we inferred an 'inout' specifier. In practice this
should not be a big problem because expression type checking
walks the AST in a pre-determined order anyway.
When an EnumElementDecl is parsed, we create the parameter list before
creating the EnumElementDecl itself, so we have to re-parent those
ParamDecls just like we do for functions and subscripts.