There were a handful of different places trying to enable the
feature-flag when the stdlib has been built with the feature enabled.
This change cleans that up and unifies it in one spot for all sub-tools
like sil-opt and sil-func-extractor to pick-up.
Adding `move_value [lexical]` and `begin_borrow [lexical]` should happen
all the time at this point. Remove the ability to omit these
instructions and update the corresponding tests.
The `-experimental-lazy-typecheck` and `-experimental-skip-non-exportable-decls`
flags are not safe to use when emitting a non-resilient module because the
clients of non-resilient modules expect to have access to all the members of a
type in order to e.g. compute the size the type. The
`-experimental-skip-non-exportable-decls` flag skips serialization of
non-public members and would therefore cause mis-compilation. The
`-experimental-lazy-typecheck` is theoretically safe for non-resilient modules
but more requestification work is needed before it can be used successfully.
Resolves rdar://122272758
Add a `-min-runtime-version` option that can be used to avoid problems
when building on Linux and Windows where because the runtime isn't
part of the OS, availability doesn't solve the problem of trying to
build the compiler against an older runtime.
Also add functions to IRGen to make it easy to test feature
availability using both the runtime version and the existing Darwin
availability support.
rdar://121522431
Until stdlib can be built with noncopyable generics, stdlib types
can appear as ~Escapable and ~Copyable, leading to invalid inference.
Use a flag to test implicit lifetime dependence
A swiftmodule can only be correctly ingested by a compiler
that has a matching state of using or not-using
NoncopyableGenerics.
The reason for this is fundamental: the absence of a Copyable
conformance in the swiftmodule indicates that a type is
noncopyable. Thus, if a compiler with NoncopyableGenerics
reads a swiftmodule that was not compiled with that feature,
it will think every type in that module is noncopyable.
Similarly, if a compiler with NoncopyableGenerics produces a
swiftmodule, there will be Copyable requirements on each
generic parameter that the compiler without the feature will
become confused about.
The solution here is to trigger a module mismatch, so that
the compiler re-generates the swiftmodule file using the
swiftinterface, which has been kept compatible with the compiler
regardless of whether the feature is enabled.
Match up the additional flags in SwiftSources.cmake and
CompilerInvocation.cpp with respect to NoncopyableGenerics.
I think only CompilerInvocation is truly needed, though.
This patch introduces `--enable-experimental-noncopyable-generics` for
the build script. It replaces
`--swift-stdlib-experimental-noncopyable-generics`
The old build option only enables the feature when building the
stdlib, but if we've built the stdlib with NoncopyableGenerics, the
compiler should be hardwired to have that feature enabled, too.
This patch also introduces the `noncopyable_generics` lit parameter, so
that tests assuming the system was built with the feature can live
in-tree and be tested, if they specify `REQUIRES: noncopyable_generics`.
Obsolete the `-enable-swift3-objc-inference` option and related options by
removing support for inferring `@objc` attributes using Swift 3 rules.
Automated migration from Swift 3 has not been supported by the compiler for
many years.
The compiler has not supported migrating Swift 3 code to Swift 4 for a long
time. The `-enable-swift3-objc-inference` option and related options were
originally designed to aid that transition and should be deprecated at this
point.
Resolves rdar://120490061
Merge `$<Feature>` and `hasFeature` implementations.
- `$<Feature>` did not support upcoming language features.
- `hasFeature` did not support promoted language features and also
didn't take into account `Options` in `Features.def`.
Remove `Options` entirely, it was always one of three cases:
- `true`
- `langOpts.hasFeature`
- `hasSwiftSwiftParser`
Since `LangOptions::hasFeature` should always be used anyway, it's no
longer necessary. `hasSwiftSwiftParser` can be special cased when adding
the default promoted language features (by removing those features).
Resolves rdar://117917456.
Now that the diagnostics are automatically errors in Swift 6, we don't need an
`-enable-conformance-availability-errors` flag to control whether unavailable
conformances are diagnosed as errors. Nobody was using the flag so it should be
safe to remove.
Part of rdar://88210812
Diagnose rather than exit when using experimental features that cannot
be enabled in production. Also diagnose if using a compiler without
`SwiftCompilerSources` when enabling embedded.
This is especially important for long-running services like sourcekitd,
which shouldn't exit just because an invalid argument was passed.
Resolves rdar://119724074.
Redirecting file system can canonicalize the file path before forwarding
the path to IncludeTreeFileSystem, which is a simplied FS that can only
intepret the paths that has been seen by dep-scanner. Since all files
that need redirecting already added to underlying FS via DepScan, there
is no need for such layer when compiling using clang-include-tree.
rdar://119727344
Currently, `-direct-clang-cc1-module-build` and `-only-use-extra-clang-opts`
have to be passed together for clang importer creation to succeed.
Missing either will result in error. Simplified the swift-frontend flags
by removing `-only-use-extra-clang-opts` and let
`-direct-clang-cc1-module-build` to do both.
This patch adds a new flag sanitize-stable-abi to support linking
against the Sanitizers stable ABI added recently in compiler-rt. The
patch also passes extra options for the ASan pass when using this flag
to outline instrumentation code and remove version check.
rdar://112915278
This reverts commit 3cc2831608.
The compiler's revision check has been relaxed since the feature was introduced
and so it's nos better to reduce the number of special code paths for LLDB in
the compiler to facilitate reasoning about it.
rdar://117824367
This option causes the -experimental-lazy-typecheck and
-experimental-skip-non-exportable-decls options to be inferred from the
presense of -experimental-skip-non-inlinable-function-bodies. This new option
is meant to be a temporary testing aid that allows lazy typechecking to be
tested on projects without full build system support for passing the other
flags to the right jobs.
Resolves rdar://118938251
Generalize the existing `-playground-high-performance` flag into a set of options that control various aspects of the "playground transformation" in Sema.
This commit adds the first two of those controllable parts of the transform, matching what the existing flag already controls (scope entry/exit and function arguments), but in an extensible way. The intent is for this to be a scalable way to control a larger set of upcoming options.
So instead of a single flag, we represent the playground transform options as a set of well-defined choices, with a new `-playground-option` flag to individually enable or disable those options (when prefixed with "No", the corresponding option is instead disabled). Enabling an already-enabled option or disabling an already-disabled option is a no-op.
For compatibility, the existing `-playground-high-performance` flag causes "expensive" transforms to be disabled, as before. We can also leave it as a useful shorthand to include or exclude new options even in the future, based on their cost. There is a comment on the old function indicating that new code should use the more general form, but it remains for clients like LLDB until they can switch over.
The machinery for implementing the playground options is similar to how `Features.def` works, with a new `PlaygroundOptions.def` that defines the supported playground transform options. Each playground definition specifies the name and description, as well as whether the option is enabled by default, and whether it's also enabled in the "high performance" case.
Adding a new option in the future only requires adding it to `PlaygroundOptions.def`, deciding whether it should be on or off by default, deciding whether it should also be on or off in `-playground-high-performance` mode, and checking for its presence from the appropriate places in `PlaygroundTransform.cpp`.
Note that this is intended to control the types of user-visible results that the invoker of the compiler wants, from an externally detectable standpoint. Other flags, such as whether or not to use the extended form of the callbacks, remain as experimental features, since those deal with the mechanics and not the desired observed behavior.
rdar://109911673