IterableDeclContext::checkDeserializeMemberErrorInPackage recursively checks if
decls and their member decls are deserialized correctly into another module.
This PR adds a check to make sure the inspected decls are from another module,
and provides an opt-in flag to fail fast on deserialization failure if found.
rdar://143830240
Add ability to automatically chaining the bridging headers discovered from all
dependencies module when doing swift caching build. This will eliminate all
implicit bridging header imports from the build and make the bridging header
importing behavior much more reliable, while keep the compatibility at maximum.
For example, if the current module A depends on module B and C, and both B and
C are binary modules that uses bridging header, when building module A,
dependency scanner will construct a new header that chains three bridging
headers together with the option to build a PCH from it. This will make all
importing errors more obvious while improving the performance.
Batch dependency scanning was added as a mechanism to support multiple compilation contexts within a single module dependency graph.
The Swift compiler and the Explicitly-built modules model has long since abandoned this approach and this code has long been stale. It is time to remove it and its associated C API.
Instead of requested action. In implicit builds, implicit interface build sub-invocations inherit their parent invocation's requested action, which the code was failing to detect that we were building an interface, not source, and erroneously resulted in enabling in-package module dependency resolution.
Resolves rdar://143505814
We're not planning on removing the splitter because it is a big win
in some cases, but we want to run it less often since it can also
be a source of overhead. This flag allows us to compare performance
to understand the tradeoffs better.
Parsing for `-enable-upcoming-feature` and `-enable-experimental-feature` is
lenient by default because some projects need to be compatible with multiple
language versions and compiler toolchains simultaneously, and strict
diagnostics would be a nuisance. On the other hand, though, it would be useful
to get feedback from the compiler when you attempt to enable a feature that
doesn't exist. This change splits the difference by introducing new diagnostics
for potential feature enablement misconfigurations but leaves those diagnostics
ignored by default. Projects that wish to use them can specify `-Wwarning
StrictLanguageFeatures`.
Diagnostics may be emitted while parsing command line arguments. This implies
that the options which affect how diagnostics are emitted and presented need to
be parsed first.
decl being accessed is correct. When this assumption fails due to a deserialization error
of its members, the use site accesses the layout with a wrong field offset, resulting in
UB or a crash. The deserialization error is currently not caught at compile time due to
LangOpts.EnableDeserializationRecovery being enabled by default to allow for recovery of some
of the deserialization errors at a later time. In case of member deserialization, however,
it's not necessarily recovered later on.
This PR tracks whether member deserialization had an error by recursively loading members and
checking for deserialization error, and fails and emits a diagnostic. It provides a way to
prevent resilience bypassing when the deserialized decl's layout is incorrect.
Resolves rdar://132411524
Add a -nostdlibimport (analagous to clang's -nostdlibinc) to remove the SDK paths from the import search paths, but leave the toolchain paths.
rdar://139322299
When Swift passes search paths to clang, it does so directly into the HeaderSearch. That means that those paths get ordered inconsistently compared to the equivalent clang flag, and causes inconsistencies when building clang modules with clang and with Swift. Instead of touching the HeaderSearch directly, pass Swift search paths as driver flags, just do them after the -Xcc ones.
Swift doesn't have a way to pass a search path to clang as -isystem, only as -I which usually isn't the right flag. Add an -Isystem Swift flag so that those paths can be passed to clang as -isystem.
rdar://93951328
This teaches Swift to rebuild the CxxStdlib overlay module from its interface when using a C++ standard library that is not the platform default, specifically libc++ on Linux.
rdar://138838506
Also introduce two new frontend flags:
The -solver-scope-threshold flag sets the maximum number of scopes, which was
previously hardcoded to 1 million.
The -solver-trail-threshold flag sets the maximum number of trail steps,
which defaults to 64 million.
This change ensures that when loading some module dependency 'Bar' which has a package-only dependency on 'Foo', only the following clients attempt to resolve/load 'Foo':
- Source compilation with package-name equal to that of 'Bar'.
- Textual interface compilation of a *'package'* interface with package-name equal to that of 'Bar'.
Ensuring that the following kinds of clients do not attempt to resolve/load 'Foo':
- Source compilation with package-name different to that of 'Bar'
- Textual interface compilation of a public or private interface, regardless of package name.
This fixes the behavior where previously compilation of a Swift textual interface dependency 'X' from its public or private interface, with an interface-specified package-name, from a client without a matching package-name, resulted in a lookup of package-only dependencies of modules loaded into 'X'. This behavior is invalid if we are not building from the package textual interface, becuase the module dependency graph is defined by the package name of the source client, not individual module dependency package name. i.e. In-package module dependencies are resolved/loaded only if the parent source compile matches the package name.
Resolves rdar://139979180
To allow feature build settings to be composed more flexibly, allow an
`-enable-upcoming-feature` flag to be overridden by a
`-disable-upcoming-feature` flag. Whichever comes last on the command line
takes effect. Provide the same functionality for `-enable-experimental-feature`
as well.
Resolves rdar://126283879.
It is unsound to expose `package` declarations in textual interfaces without a
package identity for them to belong to so we should not offer this flag.
Resolves rdar://139361524.
C++ swift::Parser is going to be replaced with SwiftParser+ASTGen.
Direct dependencies to it should be removed. Before that, remove
unnecessary '#include "swift/Parse/Parser.h"' to clarify what actually
depends on 'swift::Parser'.
Split 'swift::parseDeclName()' et al. into the dedicated files.