| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Sifted through extraneous methods trying to find consistency,
consolidating and deprecating as I went. The original motivation
for all this was the restoration of LOCAL_SUFFIX to originalName,
because:
It looks like in an attempt to make originalName print
consistently with decodedName, I went a little too far and
stripped invisible trailing spaces from originalName. This
meant outer fields would have an originalName of '$outer'
instead of '$outer ', which in turn could have caused them to
be mis-recognized as outer accessors, because the logic of
outerSource hinges upon "originalName == nme.OUTER".
I don't know if this affected anything - I noticed it by
inspection, improbably enough.
Deprecated originalName - original, compared to what? - in
favor of unexpandedName, which has a more obvious complement.
Introduced string_== for the many spots where people have
given up and are comparing string representations of names.
A light dusting of types is still better than nothing.
Editoral note: LOCAL_SUFFIX is the worst. Significant trailing
whitespace! It's a time bomb.
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Investigating the useful output of devWarning (-Xdev people,
it's good for you) led back to this comment:
"normalize to get rid of type aliases"
You may know that this is not all the normalizing does.
Normalizing also turns TypeRefs with unapplied arguments
(type constructors) into PolyTypes. That means that when
typedParentType would call typedTypeConstructor it would
find its parent had morphed into a PolyType. Not that it
noticed; it would blithely continue and unwittingly discard
the type arguments by way of appliedType (which smoothly
logged the incident, thank you appliedType.)
The simplification of typedTypeConstructor:
There was a whole complicated special treatment of AnyRef
here which appears to have become unnecessary. Removed special
treatment and lit a candle for regularity.
Updated lots of tests regarding newly not-so-special AnyRef.
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`Symbol.getFlag`, 'Symbol.hasFlag`, `Symbol.hasAllFlags`, `Symbol.annotations`
and `Symbol.privateWithin` now trigger automatic initialization of symbols
if they are used in a runtime reflection universe and some other conditions
are met (see `Symbol.needsInitialize` for details).
As the performance testing in https://github.com/scala/scala/pull/1380 shows,
this commit introduces a ~2% performance regression of compilation speed.
Unfortunately all known solutions to the bug at hand (A, B & C - all of those)
introduce perf regressions (see the pull request linked above for details).
However we're under severe time pressure, so there's no more time to explore.
Therefore I suggest this is reasonable to accept this performance hit,
because we've just gained 6% from removing scala.reflect.base,
and even before that we were well within our performance goal for 2.10.0-final.
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This brings all the files into line with the .gitattributes
settings, which should henceforth be automatically maintained
by git.
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1) Free symbols no longer carry signatures in their constructors.
Previously to reify a free symbol (i.e. to generate a ValDef that creates it)
one had to reify sym.info first. However reification of sym.info might lead to
unexpected side effects, including stack overflows, if reification of sym.info
recursively required reifying sym itself.
Now it's not a problem. First we reify a "header" of a free symbol
by emitting something like:
val free$Foo1 = build.newFreeTerm("Foo", Foo.this, NoFlags)`
Afterwards, when doing code generation for the reification symbol table, we
populate free symbols by inserting calls to `build.setTypeSignature($sym.info)`
This techniques transforms recursion into memoized iteration, because even if
reifying sym.info indirectly requires reification of sym itself, we remember
that we already reified sym and simply return things like Ident(free$Foo1).
2) Unfortunately I haven't been able to get rid of recursion completely.
Since some symbols (e.g. local classes) aren't pickled, we need to recreate
them during reification (this is necessary e.g. to reify RefinedTypes).
Reifier uses a special function, named `reifySymDef`, for that purpose.
Here's an example of how it works:
val symdef$_1 = build.newNestedSymbol(free$U1, newTypeName("_"),
NoPosition, DEFERRED | PARAM, false);
`reifySymDef` expands into a call to `newNestedSymbol`, which requires an owner
This essentially turns `reifySymDef` into a recursion of `reifySymDef` calls,
so that the entire owner chain get reified.
This is an implementation strategy that was employed in the first revision
of the reifier written by Martin, and personally I have no clue whether it's
really necessary to reify the parents. I leave this as a future work.
3) When working with free symbols, it's necessary to attach free symbols
to their reification. This is required in obscure nested reification scenarios,
when a symbol that was free for an inner reifee is no longer free for an outer
reifee. In that case we need to remove that free symbol from the symbol table
of the inner reification.
Back then we didn't have tree attachments, so I had to introduce a phantom
"value" parameter for `newFreeType` to keep track of the original symbols for
free types. Now when we have attachments, this is no longer necessary and
allowed me to clean up the code.
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use Universe.showRaw instead:
scala> import scala.reflect.runtime.{universe => ru}
import scala.reflect.runtime.{universe=>ru}
scala> ru.showRaw(typeOf[Int])
res0: String = TypeRef(ThisType(scala), scala.Int, List())
scala> ru.showRaw(typeOf[Int].typeSymbol, printKinds = true)
res1: String = scala.Int#CLS
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* all usages of ClassManifest and Manifest are replaced with tags
* all manifest tests are replaced with tag tests
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