* Make Range conditionally a Collection
* Convert ClosedRange to conditionally a collection
* De-gyb Range/ClosedRange, refactoring some methods.
* Remove use of Countable{Closed}Range from stdlib
* Remove Countable use from Foundation
* Fix test errors and warnings resulting from Range/CountableRange collapse
* fix prespecialize test for new mangling
* Update CoreAudio use of CountableRange
* Update SwiftSyntax use of CountableRange
* Restore ClosedRange.Index: Hashable conformance
* Move fixed typechecker slowness test for array-of-ranges from slow to fast, yay
* Apply Doug's patch to loosen test to just check for error
Using && here causes us to go down a SILGen path that guarantees that self will
be evaluated over the entire && expression instead of just the LHS. This cause
the uniqueness check to always return false at -Onone. At -O, the optimizer is
smart enough to remove this issue.
rdar://33358110
Piggybacks some resilience diagnostics onto the availability
checking code.
Public and versioned functions with inlineable bodies can only
reference other public and internal entities, since the SIL code
for the function body is serialized and stored as part of the
module.
This includes @_transparent functions, @_inlineable functions,
accessors for @_inlineable storage, @inline(__always) functions,
and in Swift 4 mode, default argument expressions.
The new checks are a source-breaking change, however we don't
guarantee source compatibility for underscored attributes.
The new ABI and tests for the default argument model will come in
subsequent commits.
A recent change made accessibility checking stricter. This had some
fallout on the half-baked @_versioned attribute, where we could no
longer define @_versioned members on a non-@_versioned type.
This was wrong anyway (and will be diagnosed when we add proper
diagnostics for @_versioned), because type metadata for the
internal type did not get the right linkage, but it used to work
as long as you didn't try to get the type metadata at runtime.
This patch adds @_versioned attributes to the right types now that
this broken behavior is gone.
As a result, _Variant{Set,Dictionary}Storage became resilient
(non-@_versioned internal types are not resilient), which broke
too many tests that assumed you can exhaustively switch over all
the cases. Since eager-bridging is going to eliminate this enum
anyway (or so I've heard), make it @_fixed_layout for now.
Update for SE-0107: UnsafeRawPointer
This adds a "mutating" initialize to UnsafePointer to make
Immutable -> Mutable conversions explicit.
These are quick fixes to stdlib, overlays, and test cases that are necessary
in order to remove arbitrary UnsafePointer conversions.
Many cases can be expressed better up by reworking the surrounding
code, but we first need a working starting point.
* Migrate from `UnsafePointer<Void>` to `UnsafeRawPointer`.
As proposed in SE-0107: UnsafeRawPointer.
`void*` imports as `UnsafeMutableRawPointer`.
`const void*` imports as `UnsafeRawPointer`.
Occurrences of `UnsafePointer<Void>` are replaced with UnsafeRawPointer.
* Migrate overlays from UnsafePointer<Void> to UnsafeRawPointer.
This requires explicit memory binding in several places,
particularly in NSData and CoreAudio.
* Fix a bunch of test cases for Void->Raw migration.
* qsort takes IUO values
* Bridge `Unsafe[Mutable]RawPointer as `void [const] *`.
* Parse #dsohandle as UnsafeMutableRawPointer
* Update a bunch of test cases for Void->Raw migration.
* Trivial fix for the SceneKit test case.
* Add an UnsafeRawPointer self initializer.
This is unfortunately necessary for assignment between types imported from C.
* Tiny simplification of the initializer.
* Migrate from `UnsafePointer<Void>` to `UnsafeRawPointer`.
As proposed in SE-0107: UnsafeRawPointer.
`void*` imports as `UnsafeMutableRawPointer`.
`const void*` imports as `UnsafeRawPointer`.
Occurrences of `UnsafePointer<Void>` are replaced with UnsafeRawPointer.
* Migrate overlays from UnsafePointer<Void> to UnsafeRawPointer.
This requires explicit memory binding in several places,
particularly in NSData and CoreAudio.
* Fix a bunch of test cases for Void->Raw migration.
* qsort takes IUO values
* Bridge `Unsafe[Mutable]RawPointer as `void [const] *`.
* Parse #dsohandle as UnsafeMutableRawPointer
* Update a bunch of test cases for Void->Raw migration.
* Trivial fix for the SceneKit test case.
* Add an UnsafeRawPointer self initializer.
This is unfortunately necessary for assignment between types imported from C.
* Tiny simplification of the initializer.
All generic bridgeable types can bridge for all their instantiations now. Removing this ferrets out some now-unnecessary traps that check for unbridgeable parameter types.
This revises and expands on documentation for the new collection methods
for working with indices and the revised Swift 3 set APIs. In addition,
it includes documentation for the new range types.
The defaults we were generating for Collection and
BidirectionalCollection didn't make any sense, because if you could do
that strideable arithmetic then you essentially had random access.
Instead we constrain the defaults to apply to RandomAccessCollection
where the Indices are a CountableRange.
The RangeProtocol was a very weak and fragile abstraction because it
didn't specify the interpretation of the endpoints. To write a
non-trivial algorithm, one usually needed to consult that information.
The standard library code only actually worked correctly with half-open
and closed ranges (and didn't handle fully open ranges, for example).
The other two protocols, HalfOpenRangeProtocol and ClosedRangeProtocol,
were only used for code sharing, and present an ABI burden. We can use
gyb instead.
Implements SE-0055: https://github.com/apple/swift-evolution/blob/master/proposals/0055-optional-unsafe-pointers.md
- Add NULL as an extra inhabitant of Builtin.RawPointer (currently
hardcoded to 0 rather than being target-dependent).
- Import non-object pointers as Optional/IUO when nullable/null_unspecified
(like everything else).
- Change the type checker's *-to-pointer conversions to handle a layer of
optional.
- Use 'AutoreleasingUnsafeMutablePointer<NSError?>?' as the type of error
parameters exported to Objective-C.
- Drop NilLiteralConvertible conformance for all pointer types.
- Update the standard library and then all the tests.
I've decided to leave this commit only updating existing tests; any new
tests will come in the following commits. (That may mean some additional
implementation work to follow.)
The other major piece that's missing here is migration. I'm hoping we get
a lot of that with Swift 1.1's work for optional object references, but
I still need to investigate.
This is a staging attribute that will eventually mean "fixed-contents"
for structs and "closed" for enums, as described in
docs/LibraryEvolution.rst.
This is pretty much the minimal set of types that must be fixed-layout,
because SILGen makes assumptions about their lowering.
If desired, some SILGen refactoring can allow some of these to be
resilient. For example, bridging value types could be made to work
with resilient types.