getVarInfo() now always returns a variable with a location and scope.
To opt out of this change, getVarInfo(false) returns an incomplete variable.
This can be used to work around bugs, but should only really be used for
printing.
The complete var info will also contain the type, except for debug_values,
as its type depends on another instruction, which may be inconsistent if
called mid-pass.
All locations in debug variables are now also stripped of flags, to avoid
issues when comparing or hashing debug variables.
When a store is salvaged, its debug_value will have two locations:
the location of the store, attached to the debug_value instruction,
and the location of the variable, attached to the SILDebugVariable.
The getDecl function was using the location of the store, instead
of the location of the variable, and so was returning nullptr.
Originally added in LLVM in 088d272e83259a5d8e577a3d2e62012c42a9f9db
behind a flag, but then the flag was removed in
92eaf036bf22ecc276146cd073208e6a867af8d4.
drop_deinit forwards ownership while effectively stripping the deinitializer. It is similar to a type cast.
Fixes rdar://125590074 ([NonescapableTypes] Nonescapable types
cannot have deinits)
* Allow normal function results of @yield_once coroutines
* Address review comments
* Workaround LLVM coroutine codegen problem: it assumes that unwind path never returns.
This is not true to Swift coroutines as unwind path should end with error result.
Renamed "getUsesMoveableValueDebugInfo" to "usesMoveableValueDebugInfo".
Clarifies the predicate from "does the receiver have the
usesMoveableValueDebugInfo field set?" to "does the receiver use moveable
value debug info?".
We've been building up this exponential explosion of task-creation
builtins because it's not currently possible to overload builtins.
As long as all of the operands are scalar, though, it's pretty easy
to peephole optional injections in IRGen, which means we can at
least just use a single builtin in SIL and then break it apart in
IRGen to decide which options to set.
I also eliminated the metadata argument, which can easily be recreated
from the substitutions. I also added proper verification for the builtin,
which required (1) getting `@Sendable` right more consistently and (2)
updating a bunch of tests checking for things that are not actually
valid, like passing a function that returns an Int directly.
It's not thread safe and can cause false alarms in case multiple modules exist in different threads. E.g. when building swiftmodules from interfaces.
The leaking check is not important anymore because the builder APIs enforce that instructions are not leaking.
I.e. it's not possible to create an instruction without inserting it into a basic block. Also, it's not possible to remove an instruction from a block without deleting it.
rdar://122169263
We want to preserve the borrow scope during switch dispatch so that move-only
checking doesn't try to analyze destructures or consumes out of it. SILGen
should mark anywhere that's a potential possibility with its own marker so that
it gets borrow checked independently.
The main piece that's still missing here is support for closures;
they actually mostly work, but they infer the wrong isolation for
actor-isolated closures (it's not expressed in the type, so obviously
they're non-isolated), so it's not really functional. We also have
a significant problem where reabstraction thunks collide incorrectly
because we don't mangle (or represent!) formal isolation into
SILFunctionType; that's another follow-up. Otherwise, I think SILGen
is working.
Relax some existing pattern matches and add some unhandled instructions to the
walkers so that borrowing switches over address-only enums are properly analyzed
for incorrect consumption. Add a `[strict]` flag to `mark_unresolved_move_only_value`
to indicate a borrow access that should remain a borrow access even if the subject
is later stack-promoted from a box.