Now that we don't store requirements in the GenericParamList, there's
no reason to use trailing records to list out the
GenericTypeParamDecls.
No functionality change.
A module compiled with `-enable-private-imports` allows other modules to
import private declarations if the importing source file uses an
``@_private(from: "SourceFile.swift") import statement.
rdar://29318654
Dynamic replacements are currently written in extensions as
extension ExtendedType {
@_dynamicReplacement(for: replacedFun())
func replacement() { }
}
The runtime implementation allows an implementation in the future where
dynamic replacements are gather in a scope and can be dynamically
enabled and disabled.
For example:
dynamic_extension_scope CollectionOfReplacements {
extension ExtentedType {
func replacedFun() {}
}
extension ExtentedType2 {
func replacedFun() {}
}
}
CollectionOfReplacements.enable()
CollectionOfReplacements.disable()
Otherwise, we can't represent a cross-reference to generic parameters
in a parent type /when used in an extension/.
https://bugs.swift.org/browse/SR-9084
The functionality change in this commit is that the control block in a
swiftdoc file is validated rather than just being ignored. Tests in
following commit.
Add parsing, type checking, serialization, and deserialization support
for specifying multiple types as "designated" for operator lookup for
a given operator declaration.
The constraint solver still considers only the first type when
deciding the order to attempt the elements of a disjunction, so this
doesn't really change behavior yet.
Rather than limiting this to protocols, allow any nominal type.
Rename -enable-operator-designated-protocols to
-enable-operator-designated-types to reflect the change.
Augment the ASTPrinter to print the name and text of initializer expressions if
a property has an initializer and the type is @_fixed_layout and resides in a resilient module, and serialize the text for partial modules.
With this change, all .swiftinterface files in the project (except for SwiftLang) compile to swiftmodules on macOS.
rdar://43774580
rdar://43812188
Generic environments and archetypes can be expensive to deserialize
if they involve a generic signature not seen before.
Also, canonicalize the witness substitutions to eliminate type
aliases, and map them to interface types, which again are cheaper
to deserialize.
SILWitnessTable::Entry already contains a superset of what was supported
by SILDefaultWitnessTable::Entry, the latter of which only had “no entry”
and “method” states. Make SILDefaultWitnessTable::Entry an alias for
SILWitnessTable::Entry, and unify all of the parsing/printing/
(de)serialization logic.
* Introduce stored inlinable function bodies
* Remove serialization changes
* [InterfaceGen] Print inlinable function bodies
* Clean up a little bit and add test
* Undo changes to InlinableText
* Add serialization and deserialization for inlinable body text
* Allow parser to parse accessor bodies in interfaces
* Fix some tests
* Fix remaining tests
* Add tests for usableFromInline decls
* Add comments
* Clean up function body printing throughout
* Add tests for subscripts
* Remove comment about subscript inlinable text
* Address some comments
* Handle lack of @objc on Linux
This silences the instances of the warning from Visual Studio about not all
codepaths returning a value. This makes the output more readable and less
likely to lose useful warnings. NFC.
The string-keyed tables don't actually need Identifier keys on the
serialization side -- no reason to persist these in the ASTContext's
string table either.
They're not actually stored separately in the module file, nor
deserialized separately, but this way we're not sticking a bunch of
strings in the /ASTContext's/ string table, which would persist after
serialization. (The ASTContext's string table is also implemented
using a BumpPtrAllocator-backed StringMap, so the performance
characteristics of this should be about the same.)
The recovery logic was erronously kicking in, because it was comparing
the substituted underlying type with the declaration's underlying type.
For a generic typealias, these never equal, so instead, serialize the
unsubstituted type, and substitute it in deserialization.
Package up the logic that generates a full Clang module name, so that
(a) we don't have to deal with clang::Module in quite as many places
in the /Swift/ compiler, and (b) we can avoid the cost of a temporary
string in a few places.
The main places where this is /not/ adopted is where we don't just
want to know the parent module name, but actually the module itself.
This is mostly indexing-related queries, which use the very similar
ModuleEntity class also defined in Module.h. I didn't quite see an
obvious way to unify these, but that might be where we want to go.
No functionality change.
* [InterfaceGen] Remove #ifs from default args
This patch removes all #if configs form the bodies of default arguments,
which can contain multiline closures, while preserving the bodies of the
clauses that are active.
This code is generalized and should "just work" for inlinable function
bodies, which will come in a later patch.
* Address review comments
* Fix and test CharSourceRange.overlaps
* Fix CharSourceRange::print to respect half-open ranges
Most of this patch is just removing special cases for materializeForSet
or other fairly mechanical replacements. Unfortunately, the rest is
still a fairly big change, and not one that can be easily split apart
because of the quite reasonable reliance on metaprogramming throughout
the compiler. And, of course, there are a bunch of test updates that
have to be sync'ed with the actual change to code-generation.
This is SR-7134.
This isn't just an optimization; we weren't recording that the
attribute was invalid, and so it was getting /treated as valid/ when
the module was imported into a client later.
This would have caught the issue fixed by the previous commit.
- getAsDeclOrDeclExtensionContext -> getAsDecl
This is basically the same as a dyn_cast, so it should use a 'getAs'
name like TypeBase does.
- getAsNominalTypeOrNominalTypeExtensionContext -> getSelfNominalTypeDecl
- getAsClassOrClassExtensionContext -> getSelfClassDecl
- getAsEnumOrEnumExtensionContext -> getSelfEnumDecl
- getAsStructOrStructExtensionContext -> getSelfStructDecl
- getAsProtocolOrProtocolExtensionContext -> getSelfProtocolDecl
- getAsTypeOrTypeExtensionContext -> getSelfTypeDecl (private)
These do /not/ return some form of 'this'; instead, they get the
extended types when 'this' is an extension. They started off life with
'is' names, which makes sense, but changed to this at some point. The
names I went with match up with getSelfInterfaceType and
getSelfTypeInContext, even though strictly speaking they're closer to
what getDeclaredInterfaceType does. But it didn't seem right to claim
that an extension "declares" the ClassDecl here.
- getAsProtocolExtensionContext -> getExtendedProtocolDecl
Like the above, this didn't return the ExtensionDecl; it returned its
extended type.
This entire commit is a mechanical change: find-and-replace, followed
by manual reformatted but no code changes.
Instead of serializing the input type of a function type, which is a
TupleType or ParenType, serialize the individual parameters instead.
This means that we no longer need to serialize TupleTypes or
ParenTypes with custom flags, nor do we ever serialize standalone
InOutTypes, so all of that can be removed.
We can recover function, destructor, constructor, enum element
and subscript types from their parameter types and result type
(if present), by calling the AST's various computeType()
methods.
These methods don't do any more work than would be done if
we had deserialized the type and reconstructed it, so let's
just recompute it instead.
Note that we still serialize a ton of function types, due
to XREFs.
With my build configuration, this reduces the size of
Swift.swiftmodule by 237KiB (out of 20MiB).
Actually, the biggest win here seems to be not recording parameters,
which were taking up a ridiculous amount of space in the generated
swiftdoc. This change takes Swift.swiftdoc from 5MB to 3.5MB.
SILFunctions no longer have a GenericParamList, so all of these
circularity and ordering problems are gone.
We *do* deserialize the generic parameters before creating decls
that have them though, so serialize generic parameters as if
their DeclContext was the DeclContext of the owner decl.
This is what we do when we parse generic parameters too; in
both cases, the constructor for the owner decl gives the
generic parameters the right DeclContext.
This allows us to dump it in the generated interface, though it's
still not syntax-highlighted. This is necessary for textual module
interfaces, but it's also just a longstanding request for Xcode's
"Generated Interface" / "Jump to Definition" feature.
rdar://problem/18675831
Way back in 6afe77d597 Chris removed the 'Parameter' type that tracked
extra information about parameters, collapsing it into ParamDecl and
making ParameterList "an overblown array of ParamDecl*'s". Do the same
thing for Serialization: push the few fields tracked in
PARAMETERLIST_ELT records down into PARAM_DECL, and then simplify the
PARAMETERLIST record to directly reference its parameters.
No functionality change.