Support the capture-thrift-isset feature with TreeBuilder-v2. Fairly minor
changes here except the type of the Enum in a template parameter now matters.
We follow the previous behaviour of capturing a value for each field in a
struct that has an `isset_bitset`. This value is a VarInt captured before the
C++ contents of the member. It has 3 values: 0 (not set), 1 (set), and 2
(unavailable). These are handled by the processor and represented in the output
as `false`, `true`, and `std::nullopt_t` respectively.
Changes:
- Add a simple Thrift isset processor before any fields that have Thrift isset.
- Store the fully qualified names of enum types in DrgnParser - it already
worked out this information anyway for naming the values and this is
consistent with classes.
- Forward all enum template parameters under their input name under the
assumption that they will all be policy type things like `IssetBitsetOption`.
This could turn out to be wrong.
Test plan:
- CI (doesn't test thrift changes but covers other regressions)
- Updated Thrift enum tests for new format.
- `FILTER='OilIntegration.*' make test` - Thrift tests failed before, succeed
after.
C++ has a concept of Primitive which holds in the type graph. However we don't
currently expose this information to the end user. Expose this from the OIL
iterator to allow future features like primitive rollups.
This affects containers like maps which have a fake `[]` element with no type.
They use this to group together the key/value in a map and to account for any
per element storage overhead. Currently the decision is to make the fake `[]`
element a primitive if all of its children are primitives. This allows for more
effective primitive rollups if that is implemented. This implementation detail
may be changed in future.
Test Plan:
- CI
- Updated simple tests.
Add the option to calculate total size (inclusive size) by wrapping the
existing iterator. This change provides a new iterator, `SizedIterator`, which
wraps an existing iterator and adds a new field `size` to the output element.
This is achieved with a two pass algorithm on the existing iterator:
1. Gather metadata for each element. This includes the total size up until that
element and the range of elements that should be included in the size.
2. Return the result from the underlying iterator with the additional
field.
This algorithm is `O(N)` time on the number of elements in the iterator and
`O(N)` time, storing 16 bytes per element. This isn't super expensive but is a
lot more than the current algorithm which requires close to constant space.
Because of this I've implemented it as a wrapper on the iterator rather than on
by default, though it is now on in every one of our integration test cases.
Test plan:
- Added to the integration tests for full coverage.
Summary:
Previously on large types OIL would have problems with corrupting the `std::stack<exporter::inst::Inst>` that is passed to the processors. This change hides the implementation of the stack from the processors by wrapping the call to emplace in a `std::function` written by the non-generated code, which solves the test case I've seen for this crashing. It also allows us to easily change the stack implementation in future - I plan to change it to a `std::stack<T, std::vector<T>>` in a follow up.
Reviewed By: tyroguru
Differential Revision: D49273116