//===- ObjCRuntime.h - Objective-C Runtime Configuration --------*- C++ -*-===// // // Part of the LLVM Project, under the Apache License v2.0 with LLVM Exceptions. // See https://llvm.org/LICENSE.txt for license information. // SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 WITH LLVM-exception // //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===// // /// \file /// Defines types useful for describing an Objective-C runtime. // //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===// #ifndef LLVM_CLANG_BASIC_OBJCRUNTIME_H #define LLVM_CLANG_BASIC_OBJCRUNTIME_H #include "clang/Basic/LLVM.h" #include "llvm/ADT/StringRef.h" #include "llvm/ADT/Triple.h" #include "llvm/Support/ErrorHandling.h" #include "llvm/Support/VersionTuple.h" #include namespace clang { /// The basic abstraction for the target Objective-C runtime. class ObjCRuntime { public: /// The basic Objective-C runtimes that we know about. enum Kind { /// 'macosx' is the Apple-provided NeXT-derived runtime on Mac OS /// X platforms that use the non-fragile ABI; the version is a /// release of that OS. MacOSX, /// 'macosx-fragile' is the Apple-provided NeXT-derived runtime on /// Mac OS X platforms that use the fragile ABI; the version is a /// release of that OS. FragileMacOSX, /// 'ios' is the Apple-provided NeXT-derived runtime on iOS or the iOS /// simulator; it is always non-fragile. The version is a release /// version of iOS. iOS, /// 'watchos' is a variant of iOS for Apple's watchOS. The version /// is a release version of watchOS. WatchOS, /// 'gcc' is the Objective-C runtime shipped with GCC, implementing a /// fragile Objective-C ABI GCC, /// 'gnustep' is the modern non-fragile GNUstep runtime. GNUstep, /// 'objfw' is the Objective-C runtime included in ObjFW ObjFW }; private: Kind TheKind = MacOSX; VersionTuple Version; public: /// A bogus initialization of the runtime. ObjCRuntime() = default; ObjCRuntime(Kind kind, const VersionTuple &version) : TheKind(kind), Version(version) {} void set(Kind kind, VersionTuple version) { TheKind = kind; Version = version; } Kind getKind() const { return TheKind; } const VersionTuple &getVersion() const { return Version; } /// Does this runtime follow the set of implied behaviors for a /// "non-fragile" ABI? bool isNonFragile() const { switch (getKind()) { case FragileMacOSX: return false; case GCC: return false; case MacOSX: return true; case GNUstep: return true; case ObjFW: return true; case iOS: return true; case WatchOS: return true; } llvm_unreachable("bad kind"); } /// The inverse of isNonFragile(): does this runtime follow the set of /// implied behaviors for a "fragile" ABI? bool isFragile() const { return !isNonFragile(); } /// The default dispatch mechanism to use for the specified architecture bool isLegacyDispatchDefaultForArch(llvm::Triple::ArchType Arch) { // The GNUstep runtime uses a newer dispatch method by default from // version 1.6 onwards if (getKind() == GNUstep && getVersion() >= VersionTuple(1, 6)) { if (Arch == llvm::Triple::arm || Arch == llvm::Triple::x86 || Arch == llvm::Triple::x86_64) return false; } else if ((getKind() == MacOSX) && isNonFragile() && (getVersion() >= VersionTuple(10, 0)) && (getVersion() < VersionTuple(10, 6))) return Arch != llvm::Triple::x86_64; // Except for deployment target of 10.5 or less, // Mac runtimes use legacy dispatch everywhere now. return true; } /// Is this runtime basically of the GNU family of runtimes? bool isGNUFamily() const { switch (getKind()) { case FragileMacOSX: case MacOSX: case iOS: case WatchOS: return false; case GCC: case GNUstep: case ObjFW: return true; } llvm_unreachable("bad kind"); } /// Is this runtime basically of the NeXT family of runtimes? bool isNeXTFamily() const { // For now, this is just the inverse of isGNUFamily(), but that's // not inherently true. return !isGNUFamily(); } /// Does this runtime allow ARC at all? bool allowsARC() const { switch (getKind()) { case FragileMacOSX: // No stub library for the fragile runtime. return getVersion() >= VersionTuple(10, 7); case MacOSX: return true; case iOS: return true; case WatchOS: return true; case GCC: return false; case GNUstep: return true; case ObjFW: return true; } llvm_unreachable("bad kind"); } /// Does this runtime natively provide the ARC entrypoints? /// /// ARC cannot be directly supported on a platform that does not provide /// these entrypoints, although it may be supportable via a stub /// library. bool hasNativeARC() const { switch (getKind()) { case FragileMacOSX: return getVersion() >= VersionTuple(10, 7); case MacOSX: return getVersion() >= VersionTuple(10, 7); case iOS: return getVersion() >= VersionTuple(5); case WatchOS: return true; case GCC: return false; case GNUstep: return getVersion() >= VersionTuple(1, 6); case ObjFW: return true; } llvm_unreachable("bad kind"); } /// Does this runtime provide ARC entrypoints that are likely to be faster /// than an ordinary message send of the appropriate selector? /// /// The ARC entrypoints are guaranteed to be equivalent to just sending the /// corresponding message. If the entrypoint is implemented naively as just a /// message send, using it is a trade-off: it sacrifices a few cycles of /// overhead to save a small amount of code. However, it's possible for /// runtimes to detect and special-case classes that use "standard" /// retain/release behavior; if that's dynamically a large proportion of all /// retained objects, using the entrypoint will also be faster than using a /// message send. /// /// When this method returns true, Clang will turn non-super message sends of /// certain selectors into calls to the correspond entrypoint: /// retain => objc_retain /// release => objc_release /// autorelease => objc_autorelease bool shouldUseARCFunctionsForRetainRelease() const { switch (getKind()) { case FragileMacOSX: return false; case MacOSX: return getVersion() >= VersionTuple(10, 10); case iOS: return getVersion() >= VersionTuple(8); case WatchOS: return true; case GCC: return false; case GNUstep: return false; case ObjFW: return false; } llvm_unreachable("bad kind"); } /// Does this runtime provide entrypoints that are likely to be faster /// than an ordinary message send of the "alloc" selector? /// /// The "alloc" entrypoint is guaranteed to be equivalent to just sending the /// corresponding message. If the entrypoint is implemented naively as just a /// message send, using it is a trade-off: it sacrifices a few cycles of /// overhead to save a small amount of code. However, it's possible for /// runtimes to detect and special-case classes that use "standard" /// alloc behavior; if that's dynamically a large proportion of all /// objects, using the entrypoint will also be faster than using a message /// send. /// /// When this method returns true, Clang will turn non-super message sends of /// certain selectors into calls to the corresponding entrypoint: /// alloc => objc_alloc /// allocWithZone:nil => objc_allocWithZone bool shouldUseRuntimeFunctionsForAlloc() const { switch (getKind()) { case FragileMacOSX: return false; case MacOSX: return getVersion() >= VersionTuple(10, 10); case iOS: return getVersion() >= VersionTuple(8); case WatchOS: return true; case GCC: return false; case GNUstep: return false; case ObjFW: return false; } llvm_unreachable("bad kind"); } /// Does this runtime provide the objc_alloc_init entrypoint? This can apply /// the same optimization as objc_alloc, but also sends an -init message, /// reducing code size on the caller. bool shouldUseRuntimeFunctionForCombinedAllocInit() const { switch (getKind()) { case MacOSX: return getVersion() >= VersionTuple(10, 14, 4); case iOS: return getVersion() >= VersionTuple(12, 2); case WatchOS: return getVersion() >= VersionTuple(5, 2); default: return false; } } /// Does this runtime supports optimized setter entrypoints? bool hasOptimizedSetter() const { switch (getKind()) { case MacOSX: return getVersion() >= VersionTuple(10, 8); case iOS: return (getVersion() >= VersionTuple(6)); case WatchOS: return true; case GNUstep: return getVersion() >= VersionTuple(1, 7); default: return false; } } /// Does this runtime allow the use of __weak? bool allowsWeak() const { return hasNativeWeak(); } /// Does this runtime natively provide ARC-compliant 'weak' /// entrypoints? bool hasNativeWeak() const { // Right now, this is always equivalent to whether the runtime // natively supports ARC decision. return hasNativeARC(); } /// Does this runtime directly support the subscripting methods? /// /// This is really a property of the library, not the runtime. bool hasSubscripting() const { switch (getKind()) { case FragileMacOSX: return false; case MacOSX: return getVersion() >= VersionTuple(10, 11); case iOS: return getVersion() >= VersionTuple(9); case WatchOS: return true; // This is really a lie, because some implementations and versions // of the runtime do not support ARC. Probably -fgnu-runtime // should imply a "maximal" runtime or something? case GCC: return true; case GNUstep: return true; case ObjFW: return true; } llvm_unreachable("bad kind"); } /// Does this runtime allow sizeof or alignof on object types? bool allowsSizeofAlignof() const { return isFragile(); } /// Does this runtime allow pointer arithmetic on objects? /// /// This covers +, -, ++, --, and (if isSubscriptPointerArithmetic() /// yields true) []. bool allowsPointerArithmetic() const { switch (getKind()) { case FragileMacOSX: case GCC: return true; case MacOSX: case iOS: case WatchOS: case GNUstep: case ObjFW: return false; } llvm_unreachable("bad kind"); } /// Is subscripting pointer arithmetic? bool isSubscriptPointerArithmetic() const { return allowsPointerArithmetic(); } /// Does this runtime provide an objc_terminate function? /// /// This is used in handlers for exceptions during the unwind process; /// without it, abort() must be used in pure ObjC files. bool hasTerminate() const { switch (getKind()) { case FragileMacOSX: return getVersion() >= VersionTuple(10, 8); case MacOSX: return getVersion() >= VersionTuple(10, 8); case iOS: return getVersion() >= VersionTuple(5); case WatchOS: return true; case GCC: return false; case GNUstep: return false; case ObjFW: return false; } llvm_unreachable("bad kind"); } /// Does this runtime support weakly importing classes? bool hasWeakClassImport() const { switch (getKind()) { case MacOSX: return true; case iOS: return true; case WatchOS: return true; case FragileMacOSX: return false; case GCC: return true; case GNUstep: return true; case ObjFW: return true; } llvm_unreachable("bad kind"); } /// Does this runtime use zero-cost exceptions? bool hasUnwindExceptions() const { switch (getKind()) { case MacOSX: return true; case iOS: return true; case WatchOS: return true; case FragileMacOSX: return false; case GCC: return true; case GNUstep: return true; case ObjFW: return true; } llvm_unreachable("bad kind"); } bool hasAtomicCopyHelper() const { switch (getKind()) { case FragileMacOSX: case MacOSX: case iOS: case WatchOS: return true; case GNUstep: return getVersion() >= VersionTuple(1, 7); default: return false; } } /// Is objc_unsafeClaimAutoreleasedReturnValue available? bool hasARCUnsafeClaimAutoreleasedReturnValue() const { switch (getKind()) { case MacOSX: case FragileMacOSX: return getVersion() >= VersionTuple(10, 11); case iOS: return getVersion() >= VersionTuple(9); case WatchOS: return getVersion() >= VersionTuple(2); case GNUstep: return false; default: return false; } } /// Are the empty collection symbols available? bool hasEmptyCollections() const { switch (getKind()) { default: return false; case MacOSX: return getVersion() >= VersionTuple(10, 11); case iOS: return getVersion() >= VersionTuple(9); case WatchOS: return getVersion() >= VersionTuple(2); } } /// Returns true if this Objective-C runtime supports Objective-C class /// stubs. bool allowsClassStubs() const { switch (getKind()) { case FragileMacOSX: case GCC: case GNUstep: case ObjFW: return false; case MacOSX: case iOS: case WatchOS: return true; } llvm_unreachable("bad kind"); } /// Try to parse an Objective-C runtime specification from the given /// string. /// /// \return true on error. bool tryParse(StringRef input); std::string getAsString() const; friend bool operator==(const ObjCRuntime &left, const ObjCRuntime &right) { return left.getKind() == right.getKind() && left.getVersion() == right.getVersion(); } friend bool operator!=(const ObjCRuntime &left, const ObjCRuntime &right) { return !(left == right); } }; raw_ostream &operator<<(raw_ostream &out, const ObjCRuntime &value); } // namespace clang #endif // LLVM_CLANG_BASIC_OBJCRUNTIME_H