Summary:
Currently there are two features between CodeGen v2 (TypeGraph) and TreeBuilder
v2. These are TypedDataSegment and TreeBuilderTypeChecking. Each of these
features currently has a full set of tests run in the CI and each have specific
exclusions.
Collapse these features into TreeBuilder v2. This allows for significantly
simplified testing as any OIL tests run under TreeBuilder v2 and any OID tests
run under TreeBuilder v1.
The reasoning behind this is I no longer intend to partially roll out this
feature. Full TreeBuilder v2 applies different conditions to containers than
the intermediate states, and writing these only to have them never deployed is
a waste of time.
Test Plan:
- it builds
- CI
Summary:
Previously OID/OIL required exactly one configuration file. This change makes it so you can supply 0 or more configuration files. 0 is useful if you have pre-generated the cache or use some sort of remote generation system. 1 is useful for the common case, where you have a configuration file that describes your entire source and use just that. More are useful if you have supplemental bits of config you wish to apply/override - see the changes to the integration test framework where we do exactly this.
Test Plan:
This isn't super well tested. It works for the test cases which add features via the config or enable `codegen.ignore`.
- CI
Reviewed By: ajor
Differential Revision: D49758032
Pulled By: JakeHillion
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.
Previously we had an `R"(` string in `OITraceCode.cpp` which allowed us
to include the file as a string. Instead, keep `OITraceCode.cpp` a fully
formed C++ file and utilise the build system to turn it into a string.
This will be used for more header files that are needed both as valid
headers and as strings for JIT compilation in the Typed TreeBuilder
work.