These changes caused a number of issues:
1. No debug info is emitted when a release-debug info compiler is built.
2. OS X deployment target specification is broken.
3. Swift options were broken without any attempt any recreating that
functionality. The specific option in question is --force-optimized-typechecker.
Such refactorings should be done in a fashion that does not break existing
users and use cases.
This reverts commit e6ce2ff388.
This reverts commit e8645f3750.
This reverts commit 89b038ea7e.
This reverts commit 497cac64d9.
This reverts commit 953ad094da.
This reverts commit e096d1c033.
rdar://30549345
Once we move to a copy-on-write implementation of existential value buffers we
can no longer consume or destroy values of an opened existential unless the
buffer is uniquely owned.
Therefore we need to track the allowed operation on opened values.
Add qualifiers "mutable_access" and "immutable_access" to open_existential_addr
instructions to indicate the allowed access to the opened value.
Once we move to a copy-on-write implementation, an "open_existential_addr
mutable_access" instruction will ensure unique ownership of the value buffer.
This patch splits add_swift_library into two functions one which handles
the simple case of adding a library that is part of the compiler being
built and the second handling the more complicated case of "target"
libraries, which may need to build for one or more targets.
The new add_swift_library is built using llvm_add_library, which re-uses
LLVM's CMake modules. In adapting to use LLVM's modules some of
add_swift_library's named parameters have been removed and
LINK_LIBRARIES has changed to LINK_LIBS, and LLVM_LINK_COMPONENTS
changed to LINK_COMPONENTS.
This patch also cleans up libswiftBasic's handling of UUID library and
headers, and how it interfaces with gyb sources.
add_swift_library also no longer has the FILE_DEPENDS parameter, which
doesn't matter because llvm_add_library's DEPENDS parameter has the same
behavior.
As per John, WritebackScope was always an unfortunate name. Generally these
scopes are meant for formal evaluations of inout parameters. The cases that I am
interested in generalizing them to be used for are borrows of the base of a
class that will then be used as an lvalue.
This also eliminates the out of line vector of lvalue writebacks.
rdar://29791263
This is actually a NFC change since we forward the cleanup in most cases and the
forwarding behavior is tested already by SILGen. But what this /does/ do is
prevent us from creating a ManagedValue that is "owned" but does not have a
cleanup.
rdar://29791263
These are no longer necessary now that we have combineSubstitutionMaps(),
and will not make sense once we switch to a more compact representation
for SubstitutionMap.
This method maps interface types to archetypes, which in general
requires a module for performing conformance lookups, if mapping
a member type of a generic parameter which has been made concrete.
However, in practice the types we are mapping here are all canonical
with respect to the generic signature, because they came from
GenericSignature::getAllDependentTypes(), so we actually don't need
to do conformance lookups.
This allows some code to be simplified.
SubstitutionList is going to be a more compact representation of
a SubstitutionMap, suitable for inline allocation inside another
object.
For now, it's just a typedef for ArrayRef<Substitution>.
A new SubstitutionMap::getProtocolSubstitutions() method handles
the case where we construct a trivial SubstitutionMap to replace
the protocol Self type with a concrete type.
When substituting one opened existential archetype for another,
use the form of Type::subst() that takes two callbacks instead of
building a SubstitutionMap. SubstitutionMaps are intended to be
used with keys that either come from a GenericSignature or a
GenericEnvironment, so using them to replace opened archetypes
doesn't fit the conceptual model we're going for.
There was only one place where we lowered AST types with a non-zero
uncurry level, in SILGenApply.cpp. Add a new overload of the
getSILFunctionType() method that takes an uncurry level. All the
other methods no longer have to thread it through.
In all cases the DeclCtx field was supposed to be initialized from the
SILLocation of the function, so we can save one pointer per
SILFunction.
There is one test case change where a different (more precise)
diagnostic is being generated after this change.