The parser is currently responsible for adding local type declarations
to a `SourceFile`, which IR generation later queries. However, IRGen
never sees the source files associated with macro expansion buffers,
so local types introduced there don't get recorded.
In time, this approach of using the parser to record semantic
information should be replaced with something more "pull" oriented.
For now, however, record local type declarations in the outermost
enclosing source file... so we see the ones produced by macro
expansions, too.
Fixes rdar://109370309.
'MacroExpansionDecl' and 'MacroExpansionExpr' have many common methods.
Introduce a common base class 'FreestandingMacroExpansion' that holds
'MacroExpansionInfo'.
Factor out common expansion logic to 'evaluateFreestandingMacro'
function that resembles 'evaluateAttachedMacro'.
Direct lookup relied in primary file checking to have filled in the
protocol type stored in the ImplementsAttr. This was already wrong
with multi-file test cases in non-WMO mode, and crashed in the
ASTPrinter if printing a declaration in a non-primary file.
I don't have a standalone test case that is independent of my
upcoming ASTPrinter changes, but this is a nice cleanup regardless.
API development sometimes requires a redesign while supporting early
adopters. Currently this is done by adding @_spi(name) to the API but
that requires adding the attribute in import statements as well, causing
manual overhead of adding and then removing when the redesign is done.
This PR introduces a special spi group name '_' and allows an implicit
spi import of a module containing API attributed with '@_spi(_)'
Resolves rdar://109797632
* Add @_used and @_section attributes for global variables and top-level functions
This adds:
- @_used attribute that flags as a global variable or a top-level function as
"do not dead-strip" via llvm.used, roughly the equivalent of
__attribute__((used)) in C/C++.
- @_section("...") attribute that places a global variable or a top-level
function into a section with that name, roughly the equivalent of
__attribute__((section("..."))) in C/C++.
There is a modeling difference between the swift-syntax tree and the
C++ type representation (TypeRepr) that is a little odd here, so we
end up parsing the ellipsis on the C++ side rather than looking "up"
the syntax tree to find it.
Introduce a new experimental feature `ASTGenTypes` that uses ASTGen to
translate the Swift syntax tree (produced by the new Swift parser)
into C++ `TypeRepr` nodes instead of having the C++ parser create the
nodes.
The approach here is to intercept the C++ parser's `parseType`
operation to find the Swift syntax node at the given position (where
the lexer currently is) and have ASTGen translate that into the
corresponding C++ AST node. Then, we spin the lexer forward to the
token immediately following the end of the syntax node and continue
parsing.
Avoid parsing the syntax tree up-front, and instead
only parse it when required, which happens when either:
1. ASTGen parsing is enabled (currently disabled
by default)
2. Round trip checking is enabled for a primary
file (enabled by default in a debug build,
except when dep scanning or doing an IDE
operation)
3. We need to evaluate a macro in that file
This change therefore means that we now no longer
need to parse the syntax tree for secondary files
by default unless we specifically need to evaluate
a macro in them (e.g if we need to lookup a member
on a decl with an attached macro). And the same
for primaries in release builds.
rdar://109283847
Some notes:
1. I implemented this as a contextual keyword that can only apply directly to
lvalues. This ensures that we can still call functions called copy, define
variables named copy, etc. I added tests for both the c++ and swift-syntax based
parsers to validate this. So there shouldn't be any source breaks.
2. I did a little bit of type checker work to ensure that we do not treat
copy_expr's result as an lvalue. Otherwise, one could call mutating functions on
it or assign to it, which we do not want since the result of copy_value is
3. As expected, by creating a specific expr, I was able to have much greater
control of the SILGen codegen and thus eliminate extraneous copies and other
weirdness than if we used a function and had to go through SILGenApply.
rdar://101862423
* Unify macro expansion parsing logic between MacroExpansionExpr and
MacroExpansionDecl
* Diagnose whitespace between '#' and the macro name
* Diagnose keyword as a macro name
* Parse `#<identifier>` attribute list as a `MacroExpansionDecl`
regardless of the position
* Diagnose whitespaces between `#` and the macro name.
* Correctly attach attributes to `MacroExpansionDecl`
* Fix `OrigDeclAttributes` to handle modifiers (use `getLocation()`
instead of `AtLoc`.)
Type checking is a TODO
rdar://107386648
SE-390 concluded with choosing the keyword discard rather than forget for
the statement that disables the deinit of a noncopyable type. This commit
adds parsing support for `discard self` and adds a deprecation warning for
`_forget self`.
rdar://108859077
We parse `~Copyable` in an inheritance clause of enum and
struct decls as a synonym for the `@_moveOnly` attribute
being added to that decl. This completely side-steps the
additional infrastructure for generalized suppressed
conformances in favor of a minimal solution. One benefit of
this minimal solution is that it doesn't risk introducing
any back-compat issues with older compilers or stdlibs.
The trade-off is that we're more committed to supporting
`@_moveOnly` in compiled modules in the future. In fact,
this change does not deprecate `@_moveOnly` in any way.
resolves rdar://106775103
When completing after `names:`, completion should offer the different ways you can specify the names, i.e. `arbitrary`, `named`, etc.
```
@freestanding(declaration, names: #^COMPLETE^#)
```
rdar://108535077
When performing code completion at the end of a file, the IDE inspection target would point to the null byte terminating the end of the string. That would cause us to consider this null byte as a code completion marker. When continuing to scan for the actual EOF, we would walk past the end of the buffer.
Simply don’t consider the last null byte as a candidate for the code completion marker to fix the problem.
Parse compound and special names in the macro role attributes
(`@freestanding` and `@attached`). This allows both compound names and
initializers, e.g., `init(coding:)`.
Fixes rdar://107967344.
But disable roundtrip/validation testing. So that macro expansions are
correctly performed in code completion, but avoid an assertion failure
caused by existence of null character in the source buffer.
rdar://107900870
This reverts commit e9dedf3c27.
The revert is required as foreign reference types are available for SwiftStdlib 5.8 and above, but the Swift compiler
sources back deploy to older stdlibs as well.