In a mixed Objective-C / Swift module, we have a Clang module overlay that’s a Source file, not a serialized AST as is currently assumed. That assumption caused a crash when retrieving the symbol graph as part of a cursor info request to SourceKit, which was invoked on a method defined in the Objective-C part of the module.
To fix the crash, recursively use the same logic that already exists to serialize a module to also serialize the clang overlay module since that function alreayd correctly handles the distinction between source files and serialized ASTs.
Resolves rdar://76951147
Don’t record a `memberOf` relationship if we couldn’t look up the target, e.g. because the member is declared in an extension whose extended type doesn’t exist.
Resolves rdar://74063899
in some situations, enum element decls are being skipped when rendering
declaration fragments. this trips an assertion in the declaration
fragment renderer that ensures that it always renders something. by
always rendering enum elements, we can sidestep this issue.
Including the symbol itself means if clients want the same info we provide
about the parent contexts for the symbol under the cursor they won’t need to
parse it out from the symbol graph json.
Resolves rdar://problem/75121535
When the SymbolGraph json is requested via (key.retrieve_symbol_graph: 1) this adds
a new field in the response that lists all the parent contexts of the symbol under
the cursor with their symbol graph kind and name, and their USR:
key.parent_contexts: [
{
key.kind: "swift.struct",
key.name: "Parent",
key.usr: "s:27cursor_symbol_graph_parents6ParentV"
},
...
]
}
Resolves rdar://problem/73904365
Adds a new 'key.retrieve_symbol_graph' option to the request. When set to 1 it
includes the JSON for a SymbolGraph containing a single node for the symbol at
the requested position.
This also extends the SymbolGraph library with a new entry point to get a graph
for a single symbol, and to additionally support type substitution to match the
existing CursorInfo behavior (e.g. so that when invoked on `first` in
`Array<Int>().first`, the type is given as `Int?` rather than `Element?`).
Resolves rdar://problem/70551509
In #31686 changes were introduced to ensure that capacity was stored in
the ManagedBuffer allocation, and @lorentey sugested that as a stopgap
measure for addressing the lack of platform malloc introspection on
OpenBSD, we use Swift availability attributes instead on the relevant
parts of ManagedBuffer and friends.
Since platform availability symbols must be specifically set up to be
used, this commit does so in advance of the above change.
LLVM, as of 77e0e9e17daf0865620abcd41f692ab0642367c4, now builds with
-Wsuggest-override. Let's clean up the swift sources rather than disable
the warning locally.