Rather than storing a mangled name in a Swift protocol descriptor,
which encodes information that is redundant with the context of the
protocol, store an unmangled name as in nominal type descriptors. Update
the various places where this name is used to extract the demangle
tree from the context descriptors.
Reimplement protocol descriptors for Swift protocols as a kind of
context descriptor, dropping the Objective-C protocol compatibility
layout. The new protocol descriptors have several advantages over the
current implementation:
* They drop all of the unused fields required for layout-compatibility
with Objective-C protocols.
* They encode the full requirement signature of the protocol. This
maintains more information about the protocol itself, including
(e.g.) correctly encoding superclass requirements.
* They fit within the general scheme of context descriptors, rather than
being their own thing, which allows us to share more code with
nominal type descriptors.
* They only use relative pointers, so they’re smaller and can be placed
in read-only memory
Implements rdar://problem/38815359.
When reading the protocol metadata from existential type metadata,
check the “isObjC” bit and handle the reading of the Objective-C
protocol name (using TargetObjCProtocolPrefix) separately from the reading the name of a Swift protocol (using TargetProtocolDescriptor).
More preparation for separating the layout of these two entities.
Use ProtocolDescriptorRefs within the runtime representation of
existential type metadata (TargetExistentialTypeMetadata) instead of
bare protocol descriptor pointers. Start rolling out the use of
ProtocolDescriptorRef in a few places in the runtime that touch this
code. Note that we’re not yet establishing any strong invariants on
the TargetProtocolDescriptorRef instances.
While here, replace TargetExistentialTypeMetadata’s hand-rolled pointer
arithmetic with swift::ABI::TrailingObjects and centralize knowledge of
its layout better.
Clang-importer-synthesized declarations get an extra tag character included in their mangling, which was not being preserved in type context descriptors. This caused runtime lookup for these synthesized types to fail. Fix this by adding the tag information to type context descriptors and teaching the runtime to match it up when fetching metadata by mangled name. Fixes rdar://problem/40878715.
We want to be able to potentially introduce new metadata kinds in future Swift compilers, so a runtime ought to be able to degrade gracefully in the face of metadata kinds it doesn't know about. Remove attempts to exhaustively switch over metadata kinds and instead treat unknown metadata kinds as opaque.
* Change the RemoteMirror API to have extensible data layout callback
* Use DLQ_Get prefix on DataLayoutQueryType enum values
* Simplify MemoryReaderImpl and synthesize minimalDataLayoutQueryFunction
Now that every foreign type has a type context descriptor, we can use that for a uniquing key instead of a dedicated mangled string, saving some code size especially in code that makes heavy use of imported types. rdar://problem/37537241
Change the "metadata base offset" variable into a "class metadata bounds"
variable that contains the base offset and the +/- bounds on the class.
Link this variable from the class descriptor when the class has a resilient
superclass; otherwise, store the +/- bounds there. Use this variable to
compute the immediate-members offset for various runtime queries. Teach the
runtime to fill it in lazily and remove the code to compute it from the
generated code for instantiation. Identify generic arguments with the start
of the immediate class metadata members / end of the {struct,enum} metadata
header and remove the generic-arguments offset from generic type descriptors.
Minimize the generic class metadata template by removing the
class header and base-class members. Add back the set of
information that's really required for instantiation.
Teach swift_allocateGenericClass how to allocate classes without
superclass metadata. Reorder generic initialization to establish
a stronger phase-ordering between allocation (the part that doesn't
really care about the generic arguments) and initialization (the
part that really does care about the generic arguments and therefore
might need to be delayed to handle metadata cycles).
A similar thing needs to happen for resilient class relocation.
This is yet another waypoint on the path towards the final
generic-metadata design. The immediate goal is to make the
pattern a private implementation detail and to give the runtime
more visibility into the allocation and caching of generic types.
This makes resolving mangled names to nominal types in the same module more efficient, and for eventual secrecy improvements, also allows types in the same module to be referenced from mangled typerefs without encoding any source-level name information about them.
hasVtable is not initialized on all paths, so when we read it,
we end up reading a random value. On debug builds, this value
almost always happen to be zero, so we do the right thing. This
isn't necessarily true when the optimizations kick in.
lldb uses metadata reder to resolve types and as result of this
undefined behaviour sometimes gets wrong results back, causing
a bunch of tests to fail in release builds.
This new format more efficiently represents existing information, while
more accurately encoding important information about nested generic
contexts with same-type and layout constraints that need to be evaluated
at runtime. It's also designed with an eye to forward- and
backward-compatible expansion for ABI stability with future Swift
versions.
Various TypeDecoder clients will depend on having the "bare" nominal
type declaration demangled node for looking up nominal type descriptors,
so move the generic argument-stripping code into TypeDecoder.
TypeDecoder's interface with its builders already treated protocols as
a type (due to their being mangled as "protocol composition containing
one type"), and intermixed protocols with superclasses when forming
compositions. This makes for some awkwardness when working with
protocol descriptors, which are very much a distinct entity from a
type.
Separate out the notion of a "protocol declaration" (now represented
by the builder-provided BuiltProtocolDecl type) from "a protocol
composition containing a single type", similarly to the way we handle
nominal type declarations. Teach remote mirrors and remote AST to
handle the new contract.
The mangled name of protocol descriptors was the “protocol composition”
type consisting of a single protocol, which is a little odd. Instead,
use a bare protocol reference (e.g., “6Module5ProtoP”) with the “$S”
prefer to be more in line with nominal type descriptor names while still
making it clear that this is a Swift (not an Objective-C) protocol.
The remote reflection library has a fantastic utility class, TypeDecoder,
to take a mangled type and form an abstract type from it. Move this facility
into the Demangling library so other clients can use it.
If the nominal type descriptor's resilient superclass flag
is set, the generic parameter offset, vtable start offset
and field offset start offset are all relative to the
start of the class's immedaite members, and not the start
of the class metadata.
Support this by loading the size of the superclass and
adding it to these offsets if the flag is set.
We can reduce the uniquing header from 3–4 pointer-sized words down to 1–2 32-bit words + one pointer:
- The initialization function (when present) and name are always emitted into the same binary image, so we can use relative references to shrink these down to 32-bit fields.
- We don't ever simultaneously need the initialization flags and the initialized uniqued pointer. (Keeping the "initialization function" flag bit theoretically lets us turn a "consume" load into a "relaxed" load, but that makes no practical difference on most contemporary architectures.) 12 flag bits Ought To Be Enough For Anyone and lets us reliably tell a valid pointer from a flag set, so overlap the initialization flags with the eventual invasive cache value.
The invasive cache is left inline, since we've decided we're not going to make the rest of type metadata records ever be true-const, so they'll already be sitting on a dirty page. A dynamic linker that was sufficiently Swift-optimized to precalculate the other load-time-initialized entries in metadata could likely precompute the invasive cache value as well.
rdar://problem/22527141
Switch most general endpoint to be `flags, parameters, parameterFlags, result`,
instead of opaque `void **`, more specialized ones to use follow argument scheme:
`flags, param0, [flags0], ..., paramN, [flagsN], result` and store parameter/flags
information separately in `FunctionCacheEntry::{Key, Data}` as well.
Currently only single 'inout' flag has been encoded into function
metadata, these changes extend function metadata to support up to
32 flags per parameter.