The storage kind has been replaced with three separate "impl kinds",
one for each of the basic access kinds (read, write, and read/write).
This makes it far easier to mix-and-match implementations of different
accessors, as well as subtleties like implementing both a setter
and an independent read/write operation.
AccessStrategy has become a bit more explicit about how exactly the
access should be implemented. For example, the accessor-based kinds
now carry the exact accessor intended to be used. Also, I've shifted
responsibilities slightly between AccessStrategy and AccessSemantics
so that AccessSemantics::Ordinary can be used except in the sorts of
semantic-bypasses that accessor synthesis wants. This requires
knowing the correct DC of the access when computing the access strategy;
the upshot is that SILGenFunction now needs a DC.
Accessor synthesis has been reworked so that only the declarations are
built immediately; body synthesis can be safely delayed out of the main
decl-checking path. This caused a large number of ramifications,
especially for lazy properties, and greatly inflated the size of this
patch. That is... really regrettable. The impetus for changing this
was necessity: I needed to rework accessor synthesis to end its reliance
on distinctions like Stored vs. StoredWithTrivialAccessors, and those
fixes were exposing serious re-entrancy problems, and fixing that... well.
Breaking the fixes apart at this point would be a serious endeavor.
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