Andy some time ago already created the new API but didn't go through and update
the old occurences. I did that in this PR and then deprecated the old API. The
tree is clean, so I could just remove it, but I decided to be nicer to
downstream people by deprecating it first.
This strategy is used to dispatch accesses to 'distributed' computed
property to distributed thunk accessor instead of a regular getter
when access happen outside actor isolation context.
Relying on the optionality depth of the 'new self' value to flatten
an extra level of optionality or handle a failure is not sufficient,
because we may be delegating to an `Optional` initializer.
Instead, flattening should occur if the result type of the enclosing
initializer is less optional than 'new self', and failure handling —
if the enclosing initializer is failable and its result type is as
optional as the potentially flattened 'new self' value.
TypeConverter doesn't know by itself what SILModule it's currently lowering on
behalf of, so the existing code forming the TypeExpansionContext for opaque types
incorrectly set the isWholeModule flag to always false. This created a miscompile
when a public API contained a closure that captured a value involving private types
from another file in the same module because of mismatched type expansion contexts
inside and outside the closure. Fixes rdar://93821679
Their definition is fully visible to clients to be copied into them, and there isn't necessarily
a symbol for the property descriptor in the defining module, so it isn't necessary or desirable to
try to use a property descriptor with them. Trying to reference the descriptor leads to missing
symbol errors at load time when trying to use keypaths with older versions of the defining dylib,
which goes against the purpose of `@_alwaysEmitIntoClient` meaning "no ABI liabilities for the
defining module". Fixes rdar://94049160.
Closure literals are sometimes type-checked as one type then immediately converted to another
type in the AST. One particular case of this is when a closure body never throws, but the closure
is used as an argument to a function that takes a parameter that `throws`. Emitting this naively,
by emitting the closure as its original type, then converting to throws, can be expensive for
async closures, since that takes a reabstraction thunk. Even for non-async functions, we still want
to get the benefit of reabstraction optimization for the closure literal through the conversion too.
So if the function conversion just add `throws`, emit the closure as throwing, and pass down the
context abstraction pattern when emitting the closure as well.
Stop pretending that an optional requirement is immutable via the `StorageImplInfo` request.
This approach has lead astray the conformance checker and may have had a negative impact
on other code paths, and it doesn't work for imported declarations because they bypass the
request. Instead, use a forwarding `AbstractStorageDecl::isSettableInSwift` method
that special-cases optional requirements.
The main point of this change is to make sure that a shared function always has a body: both, in the optimizer pipeline and in the swiftmodule file.
This is important because the compiler always needs to emit code for a shared function. Shared functions cannot be referenced from outside the module.
In several corner cases we missed to maintain this invariant which resulted in unresolved-symbol linker errors.
As side-effect of this change we can drop the shared_external SIL linkage and the IsSerializable flag, which simplifies the serialization and linkage concept.
This ensures that opened archetypes always inherit any outer generic parameters from the context in which they reside. This matters because class bounds may bind generic parameters from these outer contexts, and without the outer context you can wind up with ill-formed generic environments like
<τ_0_0, where τ_0_0 : C<T>, τ_0_0 : P>
Where T is otherwise unbound because there is no entry for it among the generic parameters of the environment's associated generic signature.
Opened archetypes can be created in the constraint system, and the
existential type it wraps can contain type variables. This can happen
when the existential type is inferred through a typealias inside a
generic type, and a member reference whose base is the opened existential
gets bound before binding the generic arguments of the parent type.
However, simplifying opened archetypes to replace type variables is
not yet supported, which leads to type variables escaping the constraint
system. We can support cases where the underlying existential type doesn't
depend on the type variables by canonicalizing it when opening the
existential. Cases where the underlying type requires resolved generic
arguments are still unsupported for now.
There are three major changes here:
1. The addition of "SILFunctionTypeRepresentation::CXXMethod".
2. C++ methods are imported with their members *last*. Then the arguments are switched when emitting the IR for an application of the function.
3. Clang decls are now marked as foreign witnesses.
These are all steps towards being able to have C++ protocol conformance.
Pack expressions take a series of argument values and bundle them together as a pack - much like how a tuple expression bundles argument expressions into a tuple.
Pack reification represents the operation that converts packs to tuples/scalar types in the AST. This is important since we want pack types in return positions to resolve to tuples contextually.
- Frontend: Implicitly import `_StringProcessing` when frontend flag `-enable-experimental-string-processing` is set.
- Type checker: Set a regex literal expression's type as `_StringProcessing.Regex<(Substring, DynamicCaptures)>`. `(Substring, DynamicCaptures)` is a temporary `Match` type that will help get us to an end-to-end working system. This will be replaced by actual type inference based a regex's pattern in a follow-up patch (soon).
- SILGen: Lower a regex literal expression to a call to `_StringProcessing.Regex.init(_regexString:)`.
- String processing runtime: Add `Regex`, `DynamicCaptures` (matching actual APIs in apple/swift-experimental-string-processing), and `Regex(_regexString:)`.
Upcoming:
- Build `_MatchingEngine` and `_StringProcessing` modules with sources from apple/swift-experimental-string-processing.
- Replace `DynamicCaptures` with inferred capture types.
With `-enable-experimental-string-processing`,
start lexing `'` delimiters as regex literals (this
is just a placeholder delimiter for now). The
contents of which gets passed to the libswift
library, which can return an error string to be
emitted, or null for success.
The libswift side isn't yet hooked up to the Swift
regex parser, so for now just emit a dummy
diagnostic for regexes starting with quantifiers.
If successful, build an AST node which will be
emitted as an implicit call to an
`init(_regexString:)` initializer of an in-scope
`Regex` decl (which will eventually be a known
stdlib decl).
This cleans up 90 instances of this warning and reduces the build spew
when building on Linux. This helps identify actual issues when
building which can get lost in the stream of warning messages. It also
helps restore the ability to build the compiler with gcc.
This implementation adds the debug info emission to
SILGenFunction::emitTemporaryAllocation() which may not be the optimal place to
do this. It may be better to change SILGen to unconditionally emit an
alloc_stack instead of relying on a temporary alloca to be requested.
rdar://75499821
This was a hack needed to let CSApply re-write
IUO-returning applies, and is no longer needed now
that we can directly perform the unwrapping when
needed.
Previously the declaration and definition of EndBorrowCleanup were both
within SILGenExpr.cpp. That prevented the usage of cleanups which end
borrow scopes within other files. Here, the declaration is moved to
Cleanup.h. The necessary changes are made to SILGenExpr.cpp to keep the
definition of member functions in place.
Remove the canonicalVararg parameter and
CanParamArrayRef wrapper. Almost none of the
callers want canonicalVararg, and the one that
does calls `getCanonicalType` on the result
anyway.
Literal closures are only ever directly referenced in the context of the expression they're written in,
so it's wasteful to emit them at their fully-substituted calling convention and then reabstract them if
they're passed directly to a generic function. Avoid this by saving the abstraction pattern of the context
before emitting the closure, and then lowering its main entry point's calling convention at that
level of abstraction. Generalize some of the prolog/epilog code to handle converting arguments and returns
to the correct representation for a different abstraction level.
Use APIs for creating terminator results that handle forwarding
ownership consistently.
Add ManagedValue::forForwardedRValue(SILValue) to handle cleanups
consistently based on ownership forwarding.
Add SILGenBuilder::createForwardedTermResult(SILType type) for
creating termator results with the correct ownership and cleanups.
Add SILGenBuilder::createTermResult(SILType type, ValueOwnershipKind
ownership) that handles cleanup based on terminator result ownership.
Add SILGenBuilder::createOptionalSomeResult(SwitchEnumInst) so a lot
of code doesn't need to deal with unwrapping Optional types,
terminator results, and ownership rules.
Replace the existing "phi" APIs with a single
SILGenBuilder::createPhi(SILType, ValueOwnershipKind) that handles
cleanup based on phi ownership.
Phis and terminator results are fundamentally different and need to be handled differently everywhere. Remove the confusion where terminator results were generated with a "phi argument" API.
Literal closures are only ever directly referenced in the context of the expression they're written in,
so it's wasteful to emit them at their fully-substituted calling convention and then reabstract them if
they're passed directly to a generic function. Avoid this by saving the abstraction pattern of the context
before emitting the closure, and then lowering its main entry point's calling convention at that
level of abstraction. Generalize some of the prolog/epilog code to handle converting arguments and returns
to the correct representation for a different abstraction level.
Literal closures are only ever directly referenced in the context of the expression they're written in,
so it's wasteful to emit them at their fully-substituted calling convention and then reabstract them if
they're passed directly to a generic function. Avoid this by saving the abstraction pattern of the context
before emitting the closure, and then lowering its main entry point's calling convention at that
level of abstraction. Generalize some of the prolog/epilog code to handle converting arguments and returns
to the correct representation for a different abstraction level.
If the property referred to by the final component of a KeyPath is a
type that is considered uninhabited by the compiler (e.g. caseless enums),
we currently emit an unreachable code warning at the location of the KeyPath
expression. This warning is emitted by the NoReturnFolding pass of the SILOptimizer
when it checks the property getter function generated for the KeyPath. This
change fixes the issue by emitting keypath accessor functions with artificial
SILLocations so that the diagnostics pass will skip it as non-user-written code.
rdar://80415811