TODO:
- [ ] test writing of .nif files
- [x] implement loading of fields in PType/PSym that might not have been
loaded
- [ ] implement interface logic
- [ ] implement pragma "replays"
- [ ] implement special logic for `converter`
- [ ] implement special logic for `method`
- [ ] test the logic holds up for `export`
- [ ] implement logic to free the memory of PSym/PType if memory
pressure is high
- [ ] implement logic to close memory mapped files if too many are open.
---------
Co-authored-by: demotomohiro <gpuppur@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: ringabout <43030857+ringabout@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Jacek Sieka <arnetheduck@gmail.com>
fixes#25208
```nim
type Conf = object
val: int
const defaultConf = Conf(val: 123)
static:
var conf: Conf
conf = defaultConf
```
```nim
# opcLdConst is now always valid. We produce the necessary copy in the
# assignments now:
```
A `opcLdConst` is generated for `defaultConf` in `conf = defaultConf`.
According to the comment above, we need to handle the copy for
assignments of `opcLdConst`
fixes#25066
Probably it is not worth implementing comparing pointers at compile
time. For a starter, we can improve the error message instead of letting
it crash
fixes#25007
```nim
proc setLengthSeqUninit(s: PGenericSeq, typ: PNimType, newLen: int, isTrivial: bool): PGenericSeq {.
compilerRtl.} =
```
In this added function, only the line `zeroMem(dataPointer(result,
elemAlign, elemSize, newLen), (result.len-%newLen) *% elemSize)` is
removed from `proc setLengthSeqV2` when enlarging a sequence.
JS and VM versions simply use `setLen`.
To protect against crashes when this stops being experimental, in most
places handled the exact same as normal symchoices (not encountered in
typed ast)
closes#24780
This proc `genStmt` is only called to run the VM in `vm.evalStmt`,
otherwise it's not used in vmgen. Now it acts the same as `proc
gen(PCtx, PNode)`, used by `discard` statements, which just calls
`freeTemp` on the dest if it was set rather than erroring.
fixes#8758, fixes#10828, fixes#12172, fixes#21610, fixes#23803,
fixes#24633, fixes#24634, succeeds #24085
We simply track the symbol ID of every traversed `var`/`let` definition
in `vmgen`, then these symbols are always considered evaluable in the
current `vmgen` context. The set of symbols is reset before every
generation, but both tests worked properly without doing this including
the nested `const`, so maybe it's already done in some way I'm not
seeing.
refs #23625, refs #24289
Encountered in #24360 but could not reproduce minimally: overloading on
static parameters can work with the normal compile commands but crash
`nim check`. Static overloading relies on `tryConstExpr` which recovers
from things like `globalError` and fails softly, in this case this can
happen when a variable etc. is not available to evaluate in the VM. But
with `nim check`, the compiler does not throw an exception in this case,
and instead tries to keep generating the entire expression in the VM,
which can cause crashes.
To fix this, when the compiler has no error outputs even on `nim check`,
we raise a global error so that the VM code generation stops early. This
fixes both `tryConstExpr` and speeds up `nim check`, because no error
outputs means we don't need cascading errors.
closes https://github.com/nim-lang/RFCs/issues/554
Adds a symmetric difference operation to the language bitset type. This
maps to a simple `xor` operation on the backend and thus is likely
faster than the current alternatives, namely `(a - b) + (b - a)` or `a +
b - a * b`. The compiler VM implementation of bitsets already
implemented this via `symdiffSets` but it was never used.
The standalone binary operation is added to `setutils`, named
`symmetricDifference` in line with [hash
sets](https://nim-lang.org/docs/sets.html#symmetricDifference%2CHashSet%5BA%5D%2CHashSet%5BA%5D).
An operator version `-+-` and an in-place version like `toggle` as
described in the RFC are also added, implemented as trivial sugar.
fixes#24288, refs #23625
Since #23625 "cannot evaluate" errors during VM code generation are
"soft" errors with `nim check`, i.e. the code generation isn't halted
(except for the current proc which `return`s which can cause wrong
codegen) and the expression is still attempted to be evaluated. Now,
these errors signal to the VM that the current generated VM code cannot
be evaluated, and so instead of evaluating, an error node is returned.
This keeps the benefit of the "soft" errors without potentially crashing
the compiler on improperly generated VM code. Although maybe the
compiler might not be able to handle the generated error node in some
cases.
This fixes the chame example in #24288 but this is not tested in CI.
Presumably it or the compiler was doing something like `compiles()` on
code that can't run in the VM.
I would accept nicer ways of tracking non-evaluability than
`c.cannotEval = true` but I tried to keep it as harmless as possible.
fixes#24097
For `nkConv` addresses where the conversion is between 2 types that are
equal between backends, treat assignments the same as assignments to the
argument of the conversion. In the VM this seems to be in `genAsgn` and
`genAsgnPatch`, as evidenced by the special logic for `nkDerefExpr` etc.
This doesn't handle ranges after #24037 because `sameBackendType` is
used and not `sameBackendTypeIgnoreRange`. This is so this is
backportable without #24037 and another PR can be opened that implements
it for ranges and adds tests as well. We can also merge
`sameBackendTypeIgnoreRange` with `sameBackendType` since it doesn't
seem like anything that uses it would be affected (only cycle checks and
the VM), but then we still have to add tests.
fixes#21353
```nim
result = newNodeIT(nkTupleConstr, info, t)
result.add(newNodeIT(nkNilLit, info, t))
result.add(newNodeIT(nkNilLit, info, t))
```
The old implementation uses `t` which is the type of the closure
function as its type. It is not correct and generates ((nil, nil), (nil,
nil)) for `default(closures)`. This PR creates `(tyPointer, tyPointer)`
for fake closure types just like what cctypes do.
Follow up of #23927 which solves the build error.
This is still only a partial fix as it doesn't take into account
unordered enums. I'll make a separate issue for those.
---------
Co-authored-by: ringabout <43030857+ringabout@users.noreply.github.com>
`reset`, `wasMoved` and `move` doesn't support primitive types, which
generate `null` for these types. It is now produce `x = default(...)` in
the backend. Ideally it should be done by ast2ir in the future
Theoretical Benefits / Plans:
- Typed assembler-like language.
- Allows for a CPS transformation.
- Can replace the existing C backend by a new C backend.
- Can replace the VM.
- Can do more effective "not nil" checking and static array bounds
checking.
- Can be used instead of the DFA.
- Easily translatable to LLVM.
- Reasonably easy to produce native code from.
- Tiny memory consumption. No pointers, no cry.
**In very early stages of development.**
Todo:
- [x] Map Nim types to IR types.
- [ ] Map Nim AST to IR instructions:
- [x] Map bitsets to bitops.
- [ ] Implement string cases.
- [ ] Implement range and index checks.
- [x] Implement `default(T)` builtin.
- [x] Implement multi string concat.
- [ ] Write some analysis passes.
- [ ] Write a backend.
- [x] Integrate into the compilation pipeline.
Since they are integer types, by mean of allowing cast integer to enums
in VM, we can suppress some enum warnings in the stdlib in the unified
form, namely using a cast expression.
Attempts to move the generic instantiation to the module that uses it.
This should decrease re-compilation times as the source module where the
generic lives doesnt need to be recompiled
---------
Co-authored-by: ringabout <43030857+ringabout@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Andreas Rumpf <rumpf_a@web.de>