A previous commit used a rustdoc tool lint, but that support wasn't added
until 1.52.0 (2021-05-06).
Note that this represents the minimum _required_ version to build TAMER; you
can use a later version.
This checks explicitly for unresolved objects while sorting and provides an
explicit error for them. For example, this will catch externs that have no
concrete resolution.
This previously fell all the way through to the unreachable! block. The old
POC implementation was catching unresolved objects, albeit with a debug
error.
This will be used for the next commit, but this change has been isolated
both because it distracts from the implementation change in the next commit,
and because it cleans up the code by removing the need for a type parameter
on `AsgError`.
Note that the sort test cases now use `unwrap` instead of having
`{,Sortable}AsgError` support one or the other---this is because that does
not currently happen in practice, and there is not supposed to be a
hierarchy; they are siblings (though perhaps their name may imply otherwise).
The only reason this function was a method of `BaseAsg` was because of
`self.graph`, which is accessible within the scope of this
module. `check_cycles` is logically associated with `SortableAsg`, and so
should exist alongside it (though it can't exist as an associated function
of that trait).
We want to be able to build a representation of the dependency graph so
we can easily inspect it.
We do not want to make GraphML by default. It is better to use a tool.
We use "petgraph-graphml".
This was originally omitted because there wasn't a use case for it. Now
that we're adding context to errors, however, an owned value is highly
desirable.
This adds almost no measurable overhead to the internment system in
benchmarks (largely within the margin of error).
This is a union (sum type) of three other errors types, plus errors specific
to this builder.
This commit does a good job demonstrating the boilerplate, as well as a need
for additional context (in the case of `IdentKindError`), that we'll want to
work on abstracting away.
The `Debug` bound is inconvenient and requires propagation to any types that
use it. Further, it's really awkward having `Display` depend on `Debug`; if
we want to render a useful display here, we can write one.
To be clear: IndexType implements Debug.
For now, this is pretty-printed by another part of the code, which we don't
want to implement in `Display` because it requires looking things up from
the graph.
This flips the API from using XmloWriter as the context to using Asg and
consuming anything that can produce XmloResults. This not only makes more
sense, but avoids having to create a trait for XmloReader, and simplifies
the trait bounds we have to concern ourselves with.
This just tidies things up a little bit before I get into some further
refactoring. I wrote the original code when I was just learning Rust not
too long ago, so it's interesting to see how my understanding has changed
over that relatively short period of time.
This abstracts away the canonicalizer and solves the problem whereby
canonicalization was not being performed prior to recording whether a path
has been visited. This ensures that multiple relative paths to the same
file will be properly recognized as visited.
This will be entirely replaced in an upcoming commit. See that for
details. I don't feel like dealing with the conflicts for rearranging and
squashing these commits.
This also includes an implementation to visit paths only once. Note that it
does not yet canonicalize the path before visiting, so relative paths to the
same file can slip through, and relative paths to _different_ files could be
erroneously considered to have been visited.
This will be fixed in an upcoming commit.
This serves as a constructor for the time being, decoupling from POC. We
may do something better once we have a better idea of how the various
abstractions around this will evolve.
Add a stub executable that will eventually become a full-featured TAME
compiler. The first implementation will only copy the source file to an
intermediary file that will be compiled by the XSLT compiler.
This is an awkward system that I'd like to remove at some point. It adds
complexity. For the meantime, overrides have been arbitrarily restricted to
a single override (no override-override). But it's needed being until we
rework maps and can handle the illusion of overrides using the template
system.
Benchmark performance for this method is still substantially slower. And
oddly, this nearly doubled the speed of the other two calls (granted, at
that speed, it doesn't matter).
All of these refactoring commits to arrive at this one final change: the
ability to store the source location for externs so that we can report on
what package is expecting an identifier to be defined.
Phew. Goodnight.
This undoes work I did earlier today...but now we'll be able to support a
Source on an extern.
There is duplicate code between `BaseAsg::declare{,_extern}` that will be
resolved in an upcoming commit. Upcoming commits will also simplify
terminology and clean up methods on ObjectState.
There is some duplication here with `declare` that will be cleared up in a
following commit. Reintroducing this method is necessary so that Source can
be used to represent the source location of the extern itself; it's
currently None to indicate an extern in `declare`.
This is the first step in a more incremental refactoring that previous
commits to undo the optional Source in `ObjectState::ident`. This provides
an explicit transition to an extern, with the intent of requiring an initial
missing state. This will simplify logic on the ASG.
Note that the Source provided to this new method is not yet used. That too
will come in a following commit and will represent the source of the defined
extern rather than the concrete identifier.
This properly verifies extern types, and cleans up Asg's API a little so
that externs aren't handled much differently than other declarations.
With that said, after making src optional, I realized that we will indeed
want source information for externs themselves so we can direct the user to
what package is expecting that symbol (as the old linker does). So this
approach will not work, and I'll have to undo some of those changes.