Introduce an algorithm to canonicalize and minimize same-type
constraints. The algorithm itself computes the equivalence classes
that would exist if all explicitly-provided same-type constraints are
ignored, and then forms a minimal, canonical set of explicit same-type
constraints to reform the actual equivalence class known to the type
checker. This should eliminate a number of problems we've seen with
inconsistently-chosen same-type constraints affecting
canonicalization.
When enumerating requirements, always use the archetype anchors to
express requirements. Unlike "representatives", which are simply there
to maintain the union-find data structure used to track equivalence
classes of potential archetypes, archetype anchors are the
ABI-stable canonical types within a fully-formed generic signature.
The test case churn comes from two places. First, while
representatives are *often* the same as the archetype anchors, they
aren't *always* the same. Where they differ, we'll see a change in
both the printed generic signature and, therefore, it's
mangling.
Additionally, requirement inference now takes much greater
care to make sure that the first types in the requirement follow
archetype anchor ordering, so actual conformance requirements occur in
the requirement list at the archetype anchor---not at the first type
that is equivalent to the anchor---which permits the simplification in
IRGen's emission of polymorphic arguments.
PR #5857 started rejecting generic requirements that adding
constraints directly to 'Self', which means the requirements would be
unsatisfiable by some models. At the time that commit was merged, we
had thought the compiler crashed on all instances of this problem.
It turns out that, with assertions disabled, these protocols would be
accepted and could be used, so downgrade the error to a 'deprecated'
warning in Swift 3 compatibility mode.