This is a NFC change, since verification still will be behind the flag. But this
will allow me to move copy_value, destroy_value in front of the
EnableSILOwnership flag and verify via SILGen that we are always using those
instructions.
rdar://28851920
Noticed this while preparing copy_value, destroy_value. The problem was that we
were not parsing the SIL Debug Location at the end of
mark_uninitialized_behavior.
Over the past day or so I have been thinking about how we are going to need to
manage verification of semantic ARC semantics in the pass pipeline. Specifically
the Eliminator pass really needs to be a function pass to ensure that we can
transparently put it at any stage of the optimization pipeline. This means that
just having a flag on the SILVerifier that states whether or not ownership is
enabled is not sufficient for our purposes. Instead, while staging in the SIL
ownership model, we need a bit on all SILFunctions to state whether the function
has been run through the ownership model eliminator so that the verifier can
ensure that we are in a world with "SIL ownership" or in a world without "SIL
ownership", never in a world with only some "SIL ownership" instructions. We
embed this distinction in SIL by creating the concept of a function with
"qualified ownership" and a function with "unqualified ownership".
Define a function with "qualified ownership" as a function that contains no
instructions with "unqualified ownership" (i.e. unqualified load) and a function
with "unqualified ownership" as a function containing such no "ownership
qualified" instructions (i.e. load [copy]) and at least 1 unqualified ownership
instruction.
This commit embeds this distinction into SILFunction in a manner that is
transparently ignored when compiling with SIL ownership disabled. This is done
by representing qualified or unqualified ownership via an optional Boolean on
SILFunction. If the Boolean is None, then SILOwnership is not enabled and the
verifier/passes can work as appropriate. If the Boolean is not None, then it
states whether or not the function has been run through the Ownership Model
Eliminator and thus what invariants the verifier should enforce.
How does this concept flow through the compilation pipeline for functions in a
given module? When SIL Ownership is enabled, all SILFunctions that are produced
in a given module start with "qualified ownership" allowing them to contain SIL
ownership instructions. After the Ownership Model eliminator has run, the
Ownership Model sets the "unqualified" ownership flag on the SILFunction stating
that no more ownership qualified instructions are allowed to be seen in the
given function.
But what about functions that are parsed or are deserialized from another
module? Luckily, given the manner in which we have categories our functions, we
can categorize functions directly without needing to add anything to the parser
or to the deserializer. This is done by enforcing that it is illegal to have a
function with qualified ownership and unqualified ownership instructions and
asserting that functions without either are considered qualified.
rdar://28685236
As I was preparing a semantic arc commit that worked in this area, I realized I
needed ResultVal to be a SILInstruction, not a ValueBase. As I prepared to
perform a dyn_cast, I realized that ResulVal is always a SILInstruction
anyways... so why not just use the right type in the first place... Thus this
commit.
*sigh*
rdar://28685236
This is a cleanup for SILParsing/Printing. I verified that everything was
spelled correctly by taking the current parsing switch moving that into a file,
regenerating it using the .def file and then diffed them. The diff was the same.
rdar://28685236
This lets us get to the goal of +0 guaranteed closure contexts. NFC yet, just add the under-the-hood ability for partial_apply instructions producing callee-guaranteed closures to be parsed, printed, and serialized.
It's the same thing as for alloc_ref: the optional [tail_elems ...] attribute specify the tail elements to allocate.
For details see docs/SIL.rst
This feature is needed so that we can allocate a MangedBuffer with alloc_ref_dynamic.
The ManagedBuffer.create() function uses the dynamic self type to create the buffer instance.
The previous patch regressed matters in a way that was only caught by
the parse_stdlib tests in check-swift-all.
Basically in SIL parsing we have to always pass a valid generic
environment down to performTypeLocChecking(); the
PartialGenericTypeToArchetypeResolver hack no longer works for SIL
mode.
Doing this properly also allows some code in the SIL parser to be
cleaned up and consolidated in the process.
There's a bit of a hack to deal with generic typealiases, but
overall this makes things more logical.
This is the last big refactoring before we can allow constrained
extensions to make generic parameters concrete. All that remains
is a small set of changes to SIL type lowering, and retooling
some diagnostics in Sema.
The SIL parser will always be looking for declarations in a specific
nominal type or module. This is not a semantic "qualified lookup", so
don't use that entry point. Eliminates a hack from the SIL parser;
also, this is the only place where we were turning off
NL_VisitSupertypes, which I'd like to kill.
The new instructions are: ref_tail_addr, tail_addr and a new attribute [ tail_elems ] for alloc_ref.
For details see docs/SIL.rst
As these new instructions are not generated so far, this is a NFC.
The new instructions are: ref_tail_addr, tail_addr and a new attribute [ tail_elems ] for alloc_ref.
For details see docs/SIL.rst
As these new instructions are not generated so far, this is a NFC.
This patch is rather large, since it was hard to make this change
incrementally, but most of the changes are mechanical.
Now that we have a lighter-weight data structure in the AST for mapping
interface types to archetypes and vice versa, use that in SIL instead of
a GenericParamList.
This means that when serializing a SILFunction body, we no longer need to
serialize references to archetypes from other modules.
Several methods used for forming substitutions can now be moved from
GenericParamList to GenericEnvironment.
Also, GenericParamList::cloneWithOuterParameters() and
GenericParamList::getEmpty() can now go away, since they were only used
when SILGen-ing witness thunks.
Finally, when printing generic parameters with identical names, the
SIL printer used to number them from highest depth to lowest, by
walking generic parameter lists starting with the innermost one.
Now, ambiguous generic parameters are numbered from lowest depth
to highest, by walking the generic signature, which means test
output in one of the SILGen tests has changed.
When DynamicSelfType occurs outside of a class body (for example,
inside of a SIL function), it is not enough to simply utter 'Self',
because then we lose the underlying type.
Instead, print it out as '@dynamic_self Foo', where 'Foo' is the
underlying class type or archetype, and add parser support for
the same.
Fixes <rdar://problem/27735857>.
Previously, if a generic type had a stored property with
a generic type and an initializer expression, we would
emit the expression directly in the body of each designated
initializer.
This is a problem if the designated initializer is defined
within an extension (even in the same source file), because
extensions have a different set of generic parameters and
archetypes.
Also, we've had bugs in the past where emitting an
expression multiple times didn't work properly. While these
might currently all be fixed, this is a tricky case to test
and it would be best to avoid it.
Fix both problems by emitting the initializer expression
inside its own function at the SIL level, and call the
initializer function from each designated initializer.
I'm using the existing 'variable initializer' mangling for this;
it doesn't seem to be used for anything else right now.
Currently, the default memberwise initializer does not use
this, because the machinery for emitting it is somewhat
duplicated and separate from the initializer expressions in
user-defined constructors. I'll clean this up in an upcoming
patch.
Fixes <https://bugs.swift.org/browse/SR-488>.
My earlier patch started serializing SIL basic blocks using the RPOT order. While it works, changing the existing order of BBs during the serialization may be very surprising for users. After all, serialization is not supposed to transform the code.
Therefore, this patch follows a different approach. It uses the existing order of BBs during the serialization. When it deserializes/parses SIL and detects a use of an opened archetype before its definition, it basically introduced a forward definition of this opened archetype. Later on, when the actual definition of the opened archetype is found, it replaces the forward definition. There is a correctness check at the end of a SIL function deserialization, which verifies that there are no forward definitions of opened archetypes left unresolved.
Adds a "[clang <value_decl>]" attribute to a SIL function declaration for clang imported functions.
SIL serialization already handled this attribute, but not the SIL parser.
Fixes rdar://problem/27378249, SR-2089
Strict aliasing only applies to memory operations that use strict
addresses. The optimizer needs to be aware of this flag. Uses of raw
addresses should not have their address substituted with a strict
address.
Also add Builtin.LoadRaw which will be used by raw pointer loads.
Till now there was no way in SIL to explicitly express a dependency of an instruction on any opened archetypes used by it. This was a cause of many errors and correctness issues. In many cases the code was moved around without taking into account these dependencies, which resulted in breaking the invariant that any uses of an opened archetype should be dominated by the definition of this archetype.
This patch does the following:
- Map opened archetypes to the instructions defining them, i.e. to open_existential instructions.
- Introduce a helper class SILOpenedArchetypesTracker for creating and maintaining such mappings.
- Introduce a helper class SILOpenedArchetypesState for providing a read-only API for looking up available opened archetypes.
- Each SIL instruction which uses an opened archetype as a type gets an additional opened archetype operand representing a dependency of the instruction on this archetype. These opened archetypes operands are an in-memory representation. They are not serialized. Instead, they are re-constructed when reading binary or textual SIL files.
- SILVerifier was extended to conduct more thorough checks related to the usage of opened archetypes.
Till now there was no way in SIL to explicitly express a dependency of an instruction on any opened archetypes used by it. This was a cause of many errors and correctness issues. In many cases the code was moved around without taking into account these dependencies, which resulted in breaking the invariant that any uses of an opened archetype should be dominated by the definition of this archetype.
This patch does the following:
- Map opened archetypes to the instructions defining them, i.e. to open_existential instructions.
- Introduce a helper class SILOpenedArchetypesTracker for creating and maintaining such mappings.
- Introduce a helper class SILOpenedArchetypesState for providing a read-only API for looking up available opened archetypes.
- Each SIL instruction which uses an opened archetype as a type gets an additional opened archetype operand representing a dependency of the instruction on this archetype. These opened archetypes operands are an in-memory representation. They are not serialized. Instead, they are re-constructed when reading binary or textual SIL files.
- SILVerifier was extended to conduct more thorough checks related to the usage of opened archetypes.
Till now there was no way in SIL to explicitly express a dependency of an instruction on any opened archetypes used by it. This was a cause of many errors and correctness issues. In many cases the code was moved around without taking into account these dependencies, which resulted in breaking the invariant that any uses of an opened archetype should be dominated by the definition of this archetype.
This patch does the following:
- Map opened archetypes to the instructions defining them, i.e. to open_existential instructions.
- Introduce a helper class SILOpenedArchetypesTracker for creating and maintaining such mappings.
- Introduce a helper class SILOpenedArchetypesState for providing a read-only API for looking up available opened archetypes.
- Each SIL instruction which uses an opened archetype as a type gets an additional opened archetype operand representing a dependency of the instruction on this archetype. These opened archetypes operands are an in-memory representation. They are not serialized. Instead, they are re-constructed when reading binary or textual SIL files.
- SILVerifier was extended to conduct more thorough checks related to the usage of opened archetypes.
Now that ObjC types can be generic, we need to satisfy the type system by plumbing pseudogeneric parameters through func-to-block invocation thunks. Fixes rdar://problem/26524763.
This made call sites confusing to read because it doesn't actually
check if the function already exists.
Also fix some minor formatting issues. This came up while I was working
on a fix for a bug that turned out to not be a bug.
This was mistakenly reverted in an attempt to fix buildbots.
Unfortunately it's now smashed into one commit.
---
Introduce @_specialize(<type list>) internal attribute.
This attribute can be attached to generic functions. The attribute's
arguments must be a list of concrete types to be substituted in the
function's generic signature. Any number of specializations may be
associated with a generic function.
This attribute provides a hint to the compiler. At -O, the compiler
will generate the specified specializations and emit calls to the
specialized code in the original generic function guarded by type
checks.
The current attribute is designed to be an internal tool for
performance experimentation. It does not affect the language or
API. This work may be extended in the future to add user-visible
attributes that do provide API guarantees and/or direct dispatch to
specialized code.
This attribute works on any generic function: a freestanding function
with generic type parameters, a nongeneric method declared in a
generic class, a generic method in a nongeneric class or a generic
method in a generic class. A function's generic signature is a
concatenation of the generic context and the function's own generic
type parameters.
e.g.
struct S<T> {
var x: T
@_specialize(Int, Float)
mutating func exchangeSecond<U>(u: U, _ t: T) -> (U, T) {
x = t
return (u, x)
}
}
// Substitutes: <T, U> with <Int, Float> producing:
// S<Int>::exchangeSecond<Float>(u: Float, t: Int) -> (Float, Int)
---
[SILOptimizer] Introduce an eager-specializer pass.
This pass finds generic functions with @_specialized attributes and
generates specialized code for the attribute's concrete types. It
inserts type checks and guarded dispatch at the beginning of the
generic function for each specialization. Since we don't currently
expose this attribute as API and don't specialize vtables and witness
tables yet, the only way to reach the specialized code is by calling
the generic function which performs the guarded dispatch.
In the future, we can build on this work in several ways:
- cross module dispatch directly to specialized code
- dynamic dispatch directly to specialized code
- automated specialization based on less specific hints
- partial specialization
- and so on...
I reorganized and refactored the optimizer's generic utilities to
support direct function specialization as opposed to apply
specialization.
Temporarily reverting @_specialize because stdlib unit tests are
failing on an internal branch during deserialization.
This reverts commit e2c43cfe14, reversing
changes made to 9078011f93.