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The key path pattern needs to include a reference to the external descriptor, along with hooks for lowering its type arguments and indices, if any. The runtime will need to instantiate and interpolate the external component when the key path object is instantiated. While we're here, let's also reserve some more component header bytes for future expansion, since this is an ABI we're going to be living with for a while.
307 lines
13 KiB
Markdown
307 lines
13 KiB
Markdown
# Key Path Memory Layout
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**Key path objects** are laid out at runtime as a heap object with a
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variable-sized payload containing a sequence of encoded components describing
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how the key path traverses a value. When the compiler sees a key path literal,
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it generates a **key path pattern** that can be efficiently interpreted by
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the runtime to instantiate a key path object when needed. This document
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describes the layout of both. The key path pattern layout is designed in such a
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way that it can be transformed in-place into a key path object with a one-time
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initialization in the common case where the entire path is fully specialized
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and crosses no resilience boundaries.
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## ABI Concerns For Key Paths
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For completeness, this document describes the layout of both key path objects
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and patterns; note however that the instantiated runtime layout of key path
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objects is an implementation detail of the Swift runtime, and *only key path
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patterns* are strictly ABI, since they are emitted by the compiler. The
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runtime has the freedom to change the runtime layout of key path objects, but
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will have to maintain the ability to instantiate from key path patterns emitted
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by previous ABI-stable versions of the Swift compiler.
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## Key Path Objects
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### Buffer Header
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Key path objects begin with the standard Swift heap object header, followed by a
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key path object header. Relative to the end of the heap object header:
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Offset | Description
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------- | ----------------------------------------------
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`0` | Pointer to KVC compatibility C string, or null
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`1*sizeof(Int)` | Key path buffer header (32 bits)
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If the key path is Cocoa KVC-compatible, the first word will be a pointer to
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the equivalent KVC string as a null-terminated UTF-8 C string. It will be null
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otherwise. The **key path buffer header** in the second word contains the
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following bit fields:
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Bits (LSB zero) | Description
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--------------- | -----------
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0...23 | **Buffer size** in bytes
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24...29 | Reserved. Must be zero in Swift 4...5 runtime
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30 | 1 = Has **reference prefix**, 0 = No reference prefix
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31 | 1 = Is **trivial**, 0 = Has destructor
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The *buffer size* indicates the total size in bytes of the components following
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the key path buffer header. A `ReferenceWritableKeyPath` may have a *reference
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prefix* of read-only components that can be projected before initiating
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mutation; bit 30 is set if one is present. A key path may capture values that
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require cleanup when the key path object is deallocated, but a key path that
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does not capture any values with cleanups will have the *trivial* bit 31 set to
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fast-path deallocation.
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Components are always pointer-aligned, so the first component always starts at
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offset `2*sizeof(Int)`. On 64-bit platforms, this leaves four bytes of padding.
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### Components
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After the buffer header, one or more **key path components** appear in memory
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in sequence. Each component begins with a 32-bit **key path component header**
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describing the following component.
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Bits (LSB zero) | Description
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--------------- | -----------
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0...23 | **Payload** (meaning is dependent on component kind)
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24...30 | **Component kind**
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31 | 1 = **End of reference prefix**, 0 = Not end of reference prefix
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If the key path has a *reference prefix*, then exactly one component must have
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the *end of reference prefix* bit set in its component header. This indicates
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that the component after the end of the reference prefix will initiate mutation.
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The following *component kinds* are recognized:
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Value in bits 24...30 | Description
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--------------------- | -----------
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0 | Struct/tuple/self stored property
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1 | Computed
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2 | Class stored property
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3 | Optional chaining/forcing/wrapping
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- A **struct stored property** component, when given
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a value of the base type in memory, can project the component value in-place
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at a fixed offset within the base value. This applies for struct stored
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properties, tuple fields, and the `.self` identity component (which trivially
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projects at offset zero). The
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*payload* contains the offset in bytes of the projected field in the
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aggregate, or the special value `0xFF_FFFF`, which indicates that the
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offset is too large to pack into the payload and is stored in the next 32 bits
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after the header.
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- A **class stored property** component, when given a reference to a class
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instance, can project the component value inside the class instance at
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a fixed offset. The *payload*
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*payload* contains the offset in bytes of the projected field from the
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address point of the object, or the special value `0xFF_FFFF`, which
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indicates that the offset is too large to pack into the payload and is stored
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in the next 32 bits after the header.
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- An **optional** component performs an operation involving `Optional` values.
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The `payload` contains one of the following values:
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Value in payload | Description
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---------------- | -----------
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0 | **Optional chaining**
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1 | **Optional wrapping**
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2 | **Optional force-unwrapping**
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A *chaining* component behaves like the postfix `?` operator, immediately
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ending the key path application and returning nil when the base value is nil,
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or unwrapping the base value and continuing projection on the non-optional
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payload when non-nil. If an optional chain ends in a non-optional value,
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an implicit *wrapping* component is inserted to wrap it up in an
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optional value. A *force-unwrapping* operator behaves like the postfix
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`!` operator, trapping if the base value is nil, or unwrapping the value
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inside the optional if not.
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- A **computed** component uses the conservative access pattern of `get`/`set`
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/`materializeForSet` to project from the base value. This is used as a
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general fallback component for any key path component without a more
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specialized representation, including not only computed properties but
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also subscripts, stored properties that require reabstraction, properties
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with behaviors or custom key path components (when we get those), and weak or
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unowned properties. The payload contains additional bitfields describing the
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component:
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Bits (LSB zero) | Description
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--------------- | -----------
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24 | 1 = **Has captured arguments**, 0 = no captures
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25...26 | **Identifier kind**
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27 | 1 = **Settable**, 0 = **Get-Only**
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28 | 1 = **Mutating** (implies settable), 0 = Nonmutating
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The component can *capture* context which is stored after the component in
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the key path object, such as generic arguments from its original context,
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subscript index arguments, and so on. Bit 24 is set if there are any such
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captures. Bits 25 and 26 discriminate the *identifier* which is used to
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determine equality of key paths referring to the same components. If
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bit 27 is set, then the key path is **settable** and can be written through,
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and bit 28 indicates whether the set operation **is mutating** to the base
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value, that is, whether setting through the component changes the base value
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like a value-semantics property or modifies state indirectly like a class
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property or `UnsafePointer.pointee`.
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After the header, the component contains the following word-aligned fields:
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Offset from header | Description
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------------------ | -----------
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`1*sizeof(Int)` | The **identifier** of the component.
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`2*sizeof(Int)` | The **getter function** for the component.
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`3*sizeof(Int)` | (if settable) The **setter function** for the component
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The combination of the identifier kind bits and the identifier word are
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compared by the `==` operation on two key paths to determine whether they
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are equivalent. Neither the kind bits nor the identifier word
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have any stable semantic meaning other than as unique identifiers.
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In practice, the compiler picks a stable unique artifact of the
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underlying declaration, such as the naturally-abstracted getter entry point
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for a computed property, the offset of a reabstracted stored property, or
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an Objective-C selector for an imported ObjC property, to identify the
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component. The identifier kind bits are used to discriminate
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possibly-overlapping domains.
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The getter function is a pointer to a Swift function with the signature
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`@convention(thin) (@in Base, UnsafeRawPointer) -> @out Value`. When
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the component is applied, the getter is invoked with a copy of the base
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value and is passed a pointer to the captured arguments of the
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component. If the component has no captures, the second argument is
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undefined.
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The setter function is also a pointer to a Swift function. This field is
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only present if the *settable* bit of the header is set. If the
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component is nonmutating, then the function has signature
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`@convention(thin) (@in Base, @in Value, UnsafeRawPointer) -> ()`,
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or if it is mutating, then the function has signature
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`@convention(thin) (@inout Base, @in Value, UnsafeRawPointer) -> ()`.
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When a mutating application of the key path is completed, the setter is
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invoked with a copy of the base value (if nonmutating) or a reference to
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the base value (if mutating), along with a copy of the updated component
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value, and a pointer to the captured arguments of the component. If
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the component has no captures, the third argument is undefined.
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TODO: Make getter/nonmutating setter take base borrowed,
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yield borrowed result (materializeForGet); use materializeForSet
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If the component has captures, the capture area appears after the other
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fields, at offset `3*sizeof(Int)` for a get-only component or
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`4*sizeof(Int)` for a settable component. The area begins with a two-word
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header:
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Offset from start | Description
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----------------- | -----------
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`0` | Size of captures in bytes
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`1*sizeof(Int)` | Pointer to **argument witness table**
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followed by the captures themselves. The *argument witness table* contains
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pointers to functions needed for maintaining the captures:
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Offset | Description
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---------------- | -----------
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`0` | **Destroy**, or null if trivial
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`1*sizeof(Int)` | **Copy**
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`2*sizeof(Int)` | **Is Equal**
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`3*sizeof(Int)` | **Hash**
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The *destroy* function, if not null, has signature
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`@convention(thin) (UnsafeMutableRawPointer) -> ()` and is invoked to
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destroy the captures when the key path object is deallocated.
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The *copy* function has signature
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`@convention(thin) (_ src: UnsafeRawPointer,
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_ dest: UnsafeMutableRawPointer) -> ()`
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and is invoked when the captures need to be copied into a new key path
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object, for example when two key paths are appended.
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The *is equal* function has signature
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`@convention(thin) (UnsafeRawPointer, UnsafeRawPointer) -> Bool`
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and is invoked when the component is compared for equality with another
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computed component with the same identifier.
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The *hash* function has signature
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`@convention(thin) (UnsafeRawPointer, UnsafeRawPointer) -> Int`
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and is invoked when the key path containing the component is hashed.
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The implementation understands a return value of zero to mean that the
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captures should have no effect on the hash value of the key path.
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After every component except for the final component, a pointer-aligned
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pointer to the metadata for the type of the projected component is stored.
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(The type of the final component can be found from the `Value` generic
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argument of the `KeyPath<Root, Value>` type.)
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### Examples
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Given:
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```swift
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struct A {
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var padding: (128 x UInt8)
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var b: B
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}
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class B {
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var padding: (240 x UInt8)
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var c: C
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}
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struct C {
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var padding: (384 x UInt8)
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var d: D
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}
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```
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On a 64-bit platform, a key path object representing `\A.b.c.d` might look like
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this in memory:
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Word | Contents
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---- | --------
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0 | isa pointer to `ReferenceWritableKeyPath<A, D>`
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1 | reference counts
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`-` | `-`
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2 | buffer header 0xC000_0028 - trivial, reference prefix, buffer size 40
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`-` | `-`
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3 | component header 0x8000_0080 - struct component, offset 128, end of prefix
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4 | type metadata pointer for `B`
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`-` | `-`
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5 | component header 0x4000_0100 - class component, offset 256
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6 | type metadata pointer for `C`
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`-` | `-`
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7 | component header 0x0000_0180 - struct component, offset 384
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If we add:
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```
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struct D {
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var computed: E { get set }
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}
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struct E {
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subscript(b: B) -> F { get }
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}
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```
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then `\D.e[B()]` would look like:
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Word | Contents
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---- | --------
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0 | isa pointer to `WritableKeyPath<D, E>`
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1 | reference counts
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`-` | `-`
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2 | buffer header 0x0000_0058 - buffer size 88
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`-` | `-`
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3 | component header 0x3800_0000 - computed, settable, mutating
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4 | identifier pointer
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5 | getter
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6 | setter
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7 | type metadata pointer for `F`
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`-` | `-`
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8 | component header 0x2100_0000 - computed, has captures
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9 | identifier pointer
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10 | getter
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11 | argument size 8
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12 | pointer to argument witnesses for releasing/retaining/equating/hashing `B`
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13 | value of `B()`
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## Key Path Patterns
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(to be written)
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