This removes the -use-native-super-method flag and turns on dynamic
dispatch for native method invocations on super by default.
rdar://problem/22749732
Having a separate address and container value returned from alloc_stack is not really needed in SIL.
Even if they differ we have both addresses available during IRGen, because a dealloc_stack is always dominated by the corresponding alloc_stack in the same function.
Although this commit quite large, most changes are trivial. The largest non-trivial change is in IRGenSIL.
This commit is a NFC regarding the generated code. Even the generated SIL is the same (except removed #0, #1 and @local_storage).
Debug variable info may be attached to debug_value, debug_value_addr,
alloc_box, and alloc_stack instructions.
In order to write textual SIL -> SIL testcases that exercise the handling
of debug information by SIL passes, we need to make a couple of additions
to the textual SIL language. In memory, the debug information attached to
SIL instructions references information from the AST. If we want to create
debug info from parsing a textual .sil file, these bits need to be made
explicit.
Performance Notes: This is memory neutral for compilations from Swift
source code, because the variable name is still stored in the AST. For
compilations from textual source the variable name is stored in tail-
allocated memory following the SIL instruction that introduces the
variable.
<rdar://problem/22707128>
Modeling nonescaping captures as @inout parameters is wrong, because captures are allowed to share state, unlike 'inout' parameters, which are allowed to assume to some degree that there are no aliases during the parameter's scope. To model this, introduce a new @inout_aliasable parameter convention to indicate an indirect parameter that can be written to, not only by the current function, but by well-typed, well-synchronized aliasing accesses too. (This is unrelated to our discussions of adding a "type-unsafe-aliasable" annotation to pointer_to_address to allow for safe pointer punning.)
Now that boxes are typed and projectable, the address no longer has to be passed separately.
For now, this breaks capture promotion, DI, and debug info, which analyze uses of the address param. Will be addressed in upcoming commits:
Swift :: DebugInfo/byref-capture.swift
Swift :: DebugInfo/closure-args.swift
Swift :: DebugInfo/closure-args2.swift
Swift :: DebugInfo/inout.swift
Swift :: DebugInfo/linetable.swift
Swift :: SILPasses/capture_promotion.swift
Swift :: SILPasses/definite_init_diagnostics.swift
This commit adds a DebugVariable field that is shared by
- AllocBoxInst
- AllocStackInst
- DebugValueInst
- DebugValueAddrInst
Currently DebugVariable only holds the Swift argument number.
This allows us to retire several expensive heuristics in IRGen that
attempted to identify which local variables actually where arguments
and recover their relative order.
Memory footprint notes:
This commit adds a 4-byte field to 4 SILInstructin subclasses.
This was offset by 8ab1e2dd50
which removed 20 bytes from *every* SILInstruction.
Caveats:
This commit surfaces a known bug in FunctionSigantureOpts, tracked in
rdar://problem/23727705 — debug info for exploded function arguments
cannot be expressed until this is fixed.
This reapplies ed2b16dc5a with a bugfix for
generic function arrguments and an additional testcase.
<rdar://problem/21185379&22705926>
This commit adds a DebugVariable field that is shared by
- AllocBoxInst
- AllocStackInst
- DebugValueInst
- DebugValueAddrInst
Currently DebugVariable only holds the Swift argument number.
This allows us to retire several expensive heuristics in IRGen that
attempted to identify which local variables actually where arguments
and recover their relative order.
Memory footprint notes:
This commit adds a 4-byte field to 4 SILInstructin subclasses.
This was offset by 8ab1e2dd50
which removed 20 bytes from *every* SILInstruction.
Caveats:
This commit surfaces a known bug in FunctionSigantureOpts, tracked in
rdar://problem/23727705 — debug info for exploded function arguments
cannot be expressed until this is fixed.
<rdar://problem/21185379&22705926>
This reflects the fact that the attribute's only for compiler-internal use, and isn't really equivalent to C's asm attribute, since it doesn't change the calling convention to be C-compatible.
All refutable patterns and function parameters marked with 'var'
is now an error.
- Using explicit 'let' keyword on function parameters causes a warning.
- Don't suggest making function parameters mutable
- Remove uses in the standard library
- Update tests
rdar://problem/23378003
SILPrinter was printing uses for all SIL values, except for SIL basic blocks arguments. Fill the gap and print uses for BB arguments as well. This makes reading and analyzing SIL easier.
Basic blocks may have multiple arguments, therefore print uses of each BB argument on separate lines - one line per BB argument.
The comment containing information about uses of a BB argument is printed on the line just above the basic block name, following the approach used for function_ref and other kinds of instructions, which have additional information printed on the line above the actual instruction.
The output now looks like:
// %0 // user: %3
// %1 // user: %9
bb0(%0 : $Int32, %1 : $UnsafeMutablePointer<UnsafeMutablePointer<Int8>>):
rdar://23336589
And include some supplementary mangling changes:
- Give the first generic param (depth=0, index=0) a single character mangling. Even after removing the self type from method declaration types, 'Self' still shows up very frequently in protocol requirement signatures.
- Fix the mangling of generic parameter counts to elide the count when there's only one parameter at the starting depth of the mangling.
Together these carve another 154KB out of a debug standard library. There's some awkwardness in demangled strings that I'll clean up in subsequent commits; since decl types now only mangle the number of generic params at their own depth, it's context-dependent what depths those represent, which we get wrong now. Currying markers are also wrong, but since free function currying is going away, we can mangle the partial application thunks in different ways.
Swift SVN r32896
'Ss' appears in manglings tens of thousands of times in the standard library and is also incredibly frequent in other modules. This alone is enough to shrink the standard library by 59KB.
Swift SVN r32409
The CaptureInfo computed by Sema now records if the body of the
function uses any generic parameters from the outer context.
SIL type lowering only adds a generic signature if this is the
case, instead of unconditionally.
This might yield a marginal performance improvement in some cases,
but more interestingly will allow @convention(c) conversions from
generic context.
Swift SVN r32161
Instead of immediately creating closures for local function declarations and treating them directly as capturable values, break function captures down and transitively capture the storage necessary to invoke the captured functions. Change the way SILGen emits calls to closures and local functions so that it treats the capture list as the first curry level of an invocation, so that full applications of closure literals or nested functions don't require a partial apply at all. This allows references among local functions with captures to work within the existing confines of partial_apply, and also has the nice benefit that circular references would work without creating reference cycles (though Sema unfortunately rejects them; something we arguably ought to fix.)
This fixes rdar://problem/11266246 and improves codegen of local functions. Full applications of functions, or immediate applications of closure literals like { }(), now never need to allocate a closure.
Swift SVN r28112
In addition to being better for performance in these cases, this disables the "self."
requirement in these blocks. {}() constructs are often used to work around statements
that are not exprs in Swift, so they are reasonably important.
Fixing this takes a couple of pieces working together:
- Add a new 'extraFunctionAttrs' map to the ConstraintSystem for solution
invariant function attributes that are inferred (like @noescape).
- Teach constraint simplification of function applications to propagate
@noescape between unified function types.
- Teach CSGen of ApplyExprs to mark the callee functiontype as noescape
when it is obviously a ClosureExpr.
This is a very limited fix in some ways: you could argue that ApplyExpr should
*always* mark its callee as noescape. However, doing so would just introduce a
ton of function conversions to remove it again, so we don't do that.
Swift SVN r27723
The only caveat is that:
1. We do not properly recognize when we have a let binding and we
perform a guaranteed dynamic call. In such a case, we add an extra
retain, release pair around the call. In order to get that case I will
need to refactor some code in Callee. I want to make this change, but
not at the expense of getting the rest of this work in.
2. Some of the protocol witness thunks generated have unnecessary
retains or releases in a similar manner.
But this is a good first step.
I am going to send a large follow up email with all of the relevant results, so
I can let the bots chew on this a little bit.
rdar://19933044
Swift SVN r27241
We no longer need or use it since we can always refer to the same bit on
the applied function when deciding whether to inline during mandatory
inlining.
Resolves rdar://problem/19478366.
Swift SVN r26534
This should clear the way for removing isTransparent on apply entirely.
Previously we marked any apply of an autoclosure transparent, but now
that the mandatory inliner inlines anything marked transparent, we don't
need that.
Resolves rdar://problem/20286251.
Swift SVN r26525
We "convert" unowned to unowned without decaying to the semantic strong type when an unowned reference is captured by a nested closure. If we remove the assert, the codegen looks correct, and external projects walk this code path oblivious to the assertion.
Swift SVN r25248
"self." is required whenever it causes a potentially escaping closure to
capture 'self'. This happens not just in plain ClosureExprs, but in local
functions as well. In addition, even no-escape ClosureExprs can require
self to be captured in a /parent/ closure, which may be potentially-escaping.
Swift SVN r25173
This lets us disambiguate the symbols for static and instance properties, and enables us to eventually leave the useless "self" type mangling out of method symbols. Fixes rdar://19012022 and dupes thereof, including crasher #1341.
Swift SVN r25111
The previous commit enabled this; now it's just about removing the
restriction in the parser and tightening up code completion.
Using 'super' in a closure where 'self' is captured weak or unowned still
doesn't work; the reference to 'self' within the closure is treated as
strong regardless of how it's declared. Fixing this requires a cascade of
effort, so instead I just cloned rdar://problem/19755221.
rdar://problem/14883824
Swift SVN r25065
@noescape may be interesting to passes in the future, but it currently has no effect except to cause symbol collisions in reabstraction thunks and other places. Since it has no effect, just remove it from SIL for now.
Swift SVN r24925
Most tests were using %swift or similar substitutions, which did not
include the target triple and SDK. The driver was defaulting to the
host OS. Thus, we could not run the tests when the standard library was
not built for OS X.
Swift SVN r24504
Changing the design of this to maintain more local context
information and changing the lookup API.
This reverts commit 4f2ff1819064dc61c20e31c7c308ae6b3e6615d0.
Swift SVN r24432
rdar://problem/18295292
Locally scoped type declarations were previously not serialized into the
module, which meant that the debugger couldn't reason about the
structure of instances of those types.
Introduce a new mangling for local types:
[file basename MD5][counter][identifier]
This allows the demangle node's data to be used directly for lookup
without having to backtrack in the debugger.
Local decls are now serialized into a LOCAL_TYPE_DECLS table in the
module, which acts as the backing hash table for looking up
[file basename MD5][counter][identifier] -> DeclID mappings.
New tests:
* swift-ide-test mode for testing the demangle/lookup/mangle lifecycle
of a module that contains local decls
* mangling
* module merging with local decls
Swift SVN r24426
wrapping up rdar://16323038. Pieces still remaining are a Clang attribute+
importer support for it, plus adoption in the stdlib (tracked by other radars).
Swift SVN r24223
- Introduce a new 'noescape' CaptureKind and have getDeclCaptureKind()
use it for by-address captures in noescape closures.
- Lower NoEscape captures to a simple inout pointer instead of to a
pointer + refcount.
This includes a test of the SILGen produced code itself along with an
integration test that shows that this enables inout deshadowing to remove
shadows that would otherwise have to be preserved due to closures capturing
them.
This can be more aggressive for address-only let constants, but that will
wait for a follow-up patch.
Swift SVN r24135
... now that we have an exquisitely shaved yak.
This provides a simple and uniform model for "let" constants: they are always either
immediately initialized in their declaration, or they are initialized dynamically
exactly once before any use.
This is a simple generalization of our current model for initializers, but enables
the use of let constants in more cases in local context, e.g. patterns like this:
let x : SomeThing
if condition {
x = foo()
} else {
x = bar()
}
use(x)
Previously this would have to be declared a "var" for no good reason: the value is
only ever initialized, never actually mutated.
The implementation of this is reasonably straight-forward now that the infrastructure
is in place: Sema treats 'let' constants as "settable" if they lack an initializer
(either in the declaration or in a non-PBD binding). This exposes them as an lvalue
at the AST level. SILGen then lowers these things to an alloc_stack, and DI enforces
the "initialization only" requirement that it already enforces for uninitialized 'let'
properties in structs/classes.
Swift SVN r23916
them in a more consistent and principled way. Two changes here: MUI is generated
when a vardecl is emitted, not as a separate "MarkPatternUninitialized" pass. Second,
when generating a MUI for self parameters with a temporary alloc_stack (due to the
possibility of superclass remapping of self) emit the MUI on the allocation itself,
not on the incoming argument. This is a lot more consistent (dissolving a bunch of
hacks in DI).
In terms of behavior changes, this only changes the raw sil generated by SILGen and
consumed by DI, so there is no user-visible change. This simply unblocks future work.
Swift SVN r23823
Many individual LValue evaluations still reflect
broken semantics: for example, the index expression
in a subscript l-value is delayed until the l-value
is actually projected. But this is a necessary
step in the right direction.
Swift SVN r23532
Now the SILLinkage for functions and global variables is according to the swift visibility (private, internal or public).
In addition, the fact whether a function or global variable is considered as fragile, is kept in a separate flag at SIL level.
Previously the linkage was used for this (e.g. no inlining of less visible functions to more visible functions). But it had no effect,
because everything was public anyway.
For now this isFragile-flag is set for public transparent functions and for everything if a module is compiled with -sil-serialize-all,
i.e. for the stdlib.
For details see <rdar://problem/18201785> Set SILLinkage correctly and better handling of fragile functions.
The benefits of this change are:
*) Enable to eliminate unused private and internal functions
*) It should be possible now to use private in the stdlib
*) The symbol linkage is as one would expect (previously almost all symbols were public).
More details:
Specializations from fragile functions (e.g. from the stdlib) now get linkonce_odr,default
linkage instead of linkonce_odr,hidden, i.e. they have public visibility.
The reason is: if such a function is called from another fragile function (in the same module),
then it has to be visible from a third module, in case the fragile caller is inlined but not
the specialized function.
I had to update lots of test files, because many CHECK-LABEL lines include the linkage, which has changed.
The -sil-serialize-all option is now handled at SILGen and not at the Serializer.
This means that test files in sil format which are compiled with -sil-serialize-all
must have the [fragile] attribute set for all functions and globals.
The -disable-access-control option doesn't help anymore if the accessed module is not compiled
with -sil-serialize-all, because the linker will complain about unresolved symbols.
A final note: I tried to consider all the implications of this change, but it's not a low-risk change.
If you have any comments, please let me know.
Swift SVN r22215