Refactor part of emitGlobalAccessor to emitOnceCall so it can be used
by both emitGlobalGetter and emitGlobalAccessor.
This is the second patch to use global getter for "let" globals.
rdar://16614767
Swift SVN r23107
without a valid SILDebugScope. An assertion in IRGenSIL prevents future
optimizations from regressing in this regard.
Introducing SILBuilderWithScope and SILBuilderwithPostprocess to ease the
transition.
This patch is large, but mostly mechanical.
<rdar://problem/18494573> Swift: Debugger is not stopping at the set breakpoint
Swift SVN r22978
Most of the parts were already here. We mishandled a few edge cases in RValueEmitter because of MemberRefExpr/ApplyExpr confusion at the Sema level, and we artifically asserted that we didn't support this. Removing the assertion and wiring up the existing thunking infrastructure made this just fall out. Fixes rdar://problem/18763738.
Swift SVN r22944
When we've already established that the optional has a value, using unchecked_take_enum_data_addr to directly extract the enum payload is sufficient and avoids a redundant call and check at -Onone. Keep using the _getOptionalValue stdlib function for checked optional wrapping operations such as "x!", so that the stdlib can remain in control of trap handling policy.
The test/SIL/Serialization failures on the bot seem to be happening sporadically independent of this patch, and I can't reproduce failures in any configuration I've tried.
Swift SVN r22537
When we've already established that the optional has a value, using unchecked_take_enum_data_addr to directly extract the enum payload is sufficient and avoids a redundant call and check at -Onone. Keep using the _getOptionalValue stdlib function for checked optional wrapping operations such as "x!", so that the stdlib can remain in control of trap handling policy.
Swift SVN r22533
semantically valid way.
Previously, this decision algorithm was repeated in a
bunch of different places, and it was usually expressed
in terms of whether the decl declared any accessor
functions. There are, however, multiple reasons why a
decl might provide accessor functions that don't require
it to be accessed through them; for example, we
generate trivial accessors for a stored property that
satisfies a protocol requirement, but non-protocol
uses of the property do not need to use them.
As part of this, and in preparation for allowing
get/mutableAddressor combinations, I've gone ahead and
made l-value emission use-sensitive. This happens to
also optimize loads from observing properties backed
by storage.
rdar://18465527
Swift SVN r22298
There are a lot of different ways to interpret the
"kind" of an access. This enum specifically dictates
the semantic rules for an access: direct-to-storage
and direct-to-accessor accesses may be semantically
different from ordinary accesses, e.g. if there are
observers or overrides.
Swift SVN r22290
This avoids a pointless copy every time an array literal is written, and will let us retire the horrible "alloc_array" instruction and globs of broken IRGen code. Implements rdar://problem/16386862, and probably fixes a bunch of bugs related to alloc_array brokenness.
Swift SVN r22289
Addressors now appear to pass a simple smoke-test; in
order to allow some parallel developement, I'll be
committing actual SILGen tests for this later and
separately.
Swift SVN r22243
The metatype is associated with the formal AST type of the value, not whatever lowered SIL type we happen to have lying around. Adjust the SIL verifier to check that value_metatype instructions produce a metatype for which the instance is a potential lowering rather than by exact type match. This lets us take the metatype of metatypes (and incidentally, of functions, and of tuples thereof), fixing rdar://problem/17242770.
Swift SVN r22202
accessors on non-dynamic storage.
This allows us to take advantage of dynamic knowledge
that a property is implemented as stored in order to
gain direct access to it instead of copying into a
temporary. When a class or protocol-member property
is expensive to copy, and particularly when it's of
copy-on-write type, such direct accesses can massively
improve the performance of a program.
We are currently only able to apply this when the
property is implemented purely as stored. A willSet
observer inherently blocks the optimization, but we
should be able to make it work even for properties
with didSet observers. This could be done by returning
an arbitrary callback from materializeForSet instead
of returning a flag indicating whether to call the
setter.
rdar://17416120
Swift SVN r22122
A couple of issues here:
- We didn't apply the base metatype when emitting calls to the getter for static properties, causing a crash when references to the accessor are emitted (such as when modeling a protocol requirement)
- We didn't propagate isDirectPropertyAccess through emitRValueDecl, causing the getter to recursively call itself when it was emitted successfully.
Together these fix rdar://problem/17986478.
Swift SVN r21695
A couple reasons for this:
- How 'self' gets cleaned up is dependent on where the failure occurs. If we propagate failure from a class initializer, the failed 'super.init' or 'self.init' has already cleaned up the object, so we only need to deallocate the box. In cases where we fail explicit, we release 'self', which works out because we're only supporting failure with a fully-initialized object for now.
- This lets us set the location info for the cleanup to the AST node that instigated failure, giving better QoI for DI failures (such as failing with a partially-initialized object).
Swift SVN r21505
computed property" errors when SILGen could determine that there was
an inout writeback alias, and have the code instead perform CSE of the
writebacks directly.
This means that we produce more efficient code, that a lot of things
now "just work" the way users would expect, and that the still erroneous
cases now get diagnosed with the "inout arguments are not allowed to
alias each other" error, which people have a hope of understanding.
There is still more to do here in terms of detecting identical cases,
but that was true of the previous diagnostic as well.
Swift SVN r20658
Factor out the code for emitting the "bind" branching logic, and share it to implement an LValueComponent for optional binds, which makes optional assignments work.
Swift SVN r20614
Add a set of _preconditionOptionalHasValue intrinsics that merely test that an optional has a case. Emit an lvalue ForceValueExpr as a physical lvalue, first asserting the precondition then projecting out the Some payload.
Swift SVN r20188
The witness table entry needs to dispatch through the ObjC entry point if the witness is dynamic. Slot this into the existing code path by consing up a small transparent thunk to exercise the existing code paths for adjusting calling convention from ObjC to Swift.
Swift SVN r19864
We need to be able to ask whether a method requires dynamic dispatch in other places in SILGen. NFC yet, but a step on the way to fixing <rdar://problem/17577579>.
Swift SVN r19636
Specialization now recurses on only that prefix of the
current matrix which shares a specialization form
(essentially, a pattern kind) with the head row. This is
inferior to the previous algorithm in a number of ways: we
may require more switches to perform a single dispatch, and
we may introduce more redundant variables in the leaves.
However, it also means that we will have fully specialized a
row along exactly one path in the decision tree, which makes
it much easier to work with dispatches that introduce new
cleanups.
This change also changes switch-dispatch to use the new
dynamic-cast instructions.
Incidentally fixes rdar://16401831.
Swift SVN r19336
declare whether it's owned by the emission code that's
working with it.
This is convenient when working extensively with values
that are being propagated into multiple, often-disjoint
paths, like switches.
Swift SVN r19333
the scope of the previous instruction.
<rdar://problem/17021591> Gap in lexical block coincides with the first line-table entry for a line => no variables at that line
Swift SVN r19318
unconditional_dynamic_cast_addr instruction.
Also, fix some major semantic problems with the
existing specialization of unconditional dynamic
casts by handling optional types and being much
more conservative about deciding that a cast is
infeasible.
This commit regresses specialization slightly by
failing to turn indirect dynamic casts into scalar
ones when possible; we can fix that easily enough
in a follow-up.
Swift SVN r19044
Tweak the AST representation and type-checking of default arguments to preserve a full ConcreteDeclRef with substitutions to the owner of the default arguments. In SILGen, emit default argument generators with the same genericity as the original function.
Swift SVN r18760
literals, don't actually use the source information of the *function
definition* to generate these functions. Doing so leaks information about
source code into the binary, and these default argument generators are never
called anyway.
rdar://17054642
Swift SVN r18654
The CALayer brittleness in <rdar://problem/17014037> is worse than we thought—we can't r/r *at all* before super.init. Go through some contortions to ensure that, when doing direct stored property access in an initializer, we always base off of a +0 value. I tried fixing this in a more general and principled way using SGFContext::AllowPlusZero, but that introduced miscompiles we don't have the luxury of tracking down right now, so hack a more targeted fix that only affects class initializers.
Swift SVN r18635
CALayer and potentially other framework classes implement their own refcounting
schemes that assume [self retainCount] == 1 at initialization time, a guarantee
SILGen didn't attempt to meet until now. Set a flag in SILGenFunction while
doing initializer delegations to indicate that a 'self' reference can consume
the current 'self' binding, and reinitialize rather than reassign 'self' with
the result of the delegation if it was successfully consumed. Fixes
<rdar://problem/17014037>.
Swift SVN r18608
If a source file contains the main class for its module, then implicitly emit a top_level_code that invokes UIApplicationMain with the name of the marked class.
Swift SVN r18088
There were a bunch of things broken here--it's amazing this ever appeared to work.
- Retain 'self' before partial_applying it to the method, so we don't overrelease it.
- Correctly lower the ownership conventions of the dynamic method against the SILDeclRef, so we don't overrelease arguments or over-over-release self, and we handle ObjC methods with weird conventions correctly.
- Thunk when there are bridging type differences between the partially-applied ObjC method and a Swift method, so we don't crash if the method takes NSStrings or other bridged types.
Add verifier checks that the result of 'dynamic_method' and BB arg of 'dynamic_method_br' actually match the method they're dispatching.
Swift SVN r17198
LabeledStmt that they target: have sema fill this in, and make silgen respect it.
NFC, because this was specifically written to behave the same as before (e.g. no
break out of switches).
Swift SVN r16610