Swift currently checks if an imported module has a deployment target
compatible with what’s currently being compiled. For a resilient
module, though, you really want to know the /oldest/ deployment target
the library supports, not the one it was most recently compiled with,
and we don’t currently save that information. Disable this check for
now when the module is resilient.
(Why not do this on the serialization side? Because the deployment
target you compile with is still relevant when trying to match the
compilation environment as closely as possible, which LLDB tries to
do. It's also just useful information for debugging the compiler.)
rdar://problem/42903218
...instead of std::vector, which (1) will always make separate
allocations, and (2) has features and overhead we don't need
I don't expect this to actually affect performance too much, but it
seems more correct for what Serialization needs anyway.
- getAsDeclOrDeclExtensionContext -> getAsDecl
This is basically the same as a dyn_cast, so it should use a 'getAs'
name like TypeBase does.
- getAsNominalTypeOrNominalTypeExtensionContext -> getSelfNominalTypeDecl
- getAsClassOrClassExtensionContext -> getSelfClassDecl
- getAsEnumOrEnumExtensionContext -> getSelfEnumDecl
- getAsStructOrStructExtensionContext -> getSelfStructDecl
- getAsProtocolOrProtocolExtensionContext -> getSelfProtocolDecl
- getAsTypeOrTypeExtensionContext -> getSelfTypeDecl (private)
These do /not/ return some form of 'this'; instead, they get the
extended types when 'this' is an extension. They started off life with
'is' names, which makes sense, but changed to this at some point. The
names I went with match up with getSelfInterfaceType and
getSelfTypeInContext, even though strictly speaking they're closer to
what getDeclaredInterfaceType does. But it didn't seem right to claim
that an extension "declares" the ClassDecl here.
- getAsProtocolExtensionContext -> getExtendedProtocolDecl
Like the above, this didn't return the ExtensionDecl; it returned its
extended type.
This entire commit is a mechanical change: find-and-replace, followed
by manual reformatted but no code changes.
We previously shied away from this in order to not /accidentally/
depend on it, but it becomes interesting again with textual
interfaces, which can certainly be read by humans. The cross-file
order is the order of input files, which is at least controllable by
users.
Switch a number of callers of the Type-based lookupQualified() over to
the newer (and preferred) declaration-based lookupQualified(). These are
the easy ones; NFC.
llvm::Expected/llvm::Error require that the error is not just checked
but explicitly handled. Since we're currently recovering as if nothing
happened, we need to use llvm::consumeError to throw the error info
away.
rdar://problem/40738521
This can only happen in one case today: a module imports a bridging
header, but the header on disk has disappeared, and now we need to
fall back to the (often inadequate) version that's stored inside the
swiftmodule file. Even if the module fails to load, the bridging
header has already been imported, and so anything else that happens
might still emit diagnostics and need that text to be alive, which
means we need to keep the buffer alive too.
This reverts commit bb16ee049d,
reversing changes made to a8d831f5f5.
It's not sufficient to solve the problem, and the choices were to do
something more complicated, or just take a simple brute force
approach. We're going with the latter.
This can't arise from a clean build, but it can happen if you have
products lingering in a search path and then either rebuild one of
the modules in the cycle, or change the search paths.
The way this is implemented is for each module to track whether its
imports have all been resolved. If, when loading a module, one of its
dependencies hasn't resolved all of its imports yet, then we know
there's a cycle.
This doesn't produce the best diagnostics, but it's hard to get into
this state in the first place, so that's probably okay.
https://bugs.swift.org/browse/SR-7483
ModuleDecl::forAllVisibleModules() now has a includeLinkOnlyModules
parameter. This is intended to be used when computing the set of
libraries to autolink.
Allow substitution maps to be serialized directly (via an ID), writing out
the replacement types and conformances as appropriate. This is a more
efficient form of serialization than the current SubstitutionList approach,
because it maintains uniqueness of substitution maps within a module file,
and is a step toward eliminating SubstitutionList entirely.
The obsolete llvm::HashString() was equivalent to
llvm::djbHash(seed=0) and was removed from llvm. This patch replaces
all occurences of llvm::HashString() with llvm::djbHash(seed=0), no
functional change.
The default seed of llvm::djbHash() is supposed to yield a higher
quality result that using seed=0, but changing it looks like it
affects the ordering of SIL serialization.
We can't make the same assumptions about .sib files.
Ideally, we should serialize the module's stage and set WasDeserializedCanonical
based on that state. However, we probably still want the IsSIB flag for
assertions.
When loading the named members for a given name, we want to load all
of the members with that base name... not only the ones that match the
full name, because the lookup table is indexed by base name and
filtering too early drops candidates.
Fixes rdar://problem/36085994.
Rather than inlining generic signatures in a half dozen places throughout
the serialization format, serialize (uniqued) generic signatures with their
own GenericSignatureID. Update various layouts (generic function types,
SIL function types, generic environments, extension cross-references) to
use GenericSignatureID.
Shaves ~187k off the size of Swift.swiftmodule.