The code previously assumed that arguments of class constrained existential type were always passed
directly, causing crashes when they weren't. Fixes rdar://problem/54322849.
Handle calling conventions and cleanups in all the places (hopefully).
- when ExistentialSpecializer copies the specialized concrete arg into the
original existential value
- when ExistentialSpecializer generates a think
- when SILCombine substitutes concrete values in place of the opened
existential.
One particularly nasty problem is the existential boxes need to be
destroyed. It is not ok to simply destroy their value. The "leaks"
tool does not catch this problem.
Ownership SIL will make this all much more robust.
Fixes <rdar://problem/50595630> Multiple leaks detected - Swift Perf
Minor drive-by fix. Use best practice when generating debug locations.
Use the scope and location from the insertion point. But since we
can't attach a return location to a normal instruction, use a compiler
generated placeholder.
Mostly functionally neutral:
- may fix latent bugs.
- may reduce useless basic blocks after inlining.
This rewrite encapsulates the cloner's internal state, providing a
clean API for the CRTP subclasses. The subclasses are rewritten to use
the exposed API and extension points. This makes it much easier to
understand, work with, and extend SIL cloners, which are central to
many optimization passes. Basic SIL invariants are now clearly
expressed and enforced. There is no longer a intricate dance between
multiple levels of subclasses operating on underlying low-level data
structures. All of the logic needed to keep the original SIL in a
consistent state is contained within the SILCloner itself. Subclasses
only need to be responsible for their own modifications.
The immediate motiviation is to make CFG updates self-contained so
that SIL remains in a valid state. This will allow the removal of
critical edge splitting hacks and will allow general SIL utilities to
take advantage of the fact that we don't allow critical edges.
This rewrite establishes a simple principal that should be followed
everywhere: aside from the primitive mutation APIs on SIL data types,
each SIL utility is responsibile for leaving SIL in a valid state and
the logic for doing so should exist in one central location.
This includes, for example:
- Generating a valid CFG, splitting edges if needed.
- Returning a valid instruction iterator if any instructions are removed.
- Updating dominance.
- Updating SSA (block arguments).
(Dominance info and SSA properties are fundamental to SIL verification).
LoopInfo is also somewhat fundamental to SIL, and should generally be
updated, but it isn't required.
This also fixes some latent bugs related to iterator invalidation in
recursivelyDeleteTriviallyDeadInstructions and SILInliner. Note that
the SILModule deletion callback should be avoided. It can be useful as
a simple cache invalidation mechanism, but it is otherwise bug prone,
too limited to be very useful, and basically bad design. Utilities
that mutate should return a valid instruction iterator and provide
their own deletion callbacks.