This extracts the compatibility logic from AddPadding, which allows for it to be
simplified and will make it easier to extend and eventually remove in the
future. No functional changes.
This lets us remove fields from types when they are no longer needed,
speeding up later passes.
A secondary benefit of pruning unused types means that we sometimes
remove types for which we can't generate correct C++ code. This can
allow us to CodeGen for complex types which reference these broken types
without actually requiring them (e.g. as template parameters).
Add a new feature flag "prune-type-graph" to control this pass. It makes
sense to prune most of the time, but for testing CodeGen functionality
on a wider range of types, it will be useful to have the option to not
prune.
Also reshuffle CodeGen's passes to fix an alignment bug with removed
members.
Change RemoveMembers to actually remove members instead of replacing
them with padding. AddPadding must be run afterwards to fill in the
gaps.
TypeGraphParser parses a textual type graph, as emitted by Printer.
It also doubles as a way of ensuring that Printer displays all
information about a type graph, to aid with debugging.
Convert Flattener unit tests over to this new framework as a first step.
Use fully qualified names to determine if a class is really the child of
our type. It may be that it is the child of another type with an
identical name in another namespace.