Summary:
We have a good type representation in the Type Graph of an incomplete type and
the underlying type that represents. However, this incomplete type still ends
up in the generated code as `void` which loses information. For example, a
container that can't contain void may fail to compile because it was
initialised with `void` but really its because the type it was supposed to be
initialised with (say, `Foo`) had incomplete debug information.
This change identifies that a type is incomplete in the output by generating it
as an incomplete type `struct Incomplete<struct Foo>`. This allows us to name
the type correctly in the TreeBuilder output and filter for incomplete types,
as well as getting appropriate compiler errors if it mustn't be incomplete.
Test Plan:
- CI
- Added a unit test to namegen.
- Enabled and added an extra pointers_incomplete test.
This change is tricky to test because it isn't really user visible. The types
still use their `inputName` which is unchanged in any successful output - this
change is used so the compiler fails with a more detailed error.
Types within containers were previously named TODO. This sorts it out so
they're named as their most resolved type. The current implementation
skips Typedef names.
Type Graph deduplicates and modifies names to better fit the generated
code, for example `int32_t[4]` becomes `OIArray<int32_t, 4>` and `struct
MyStruct` might become `struct MyStruct_0`.
Add an `inputName` which better represents the original input code which
can be used when building the tree.
These aren't used for anything yet, but should be useful for stable IDs
when printing nodes before and after passes and for faster cycle
detection than the current map of pointers.
We want to use the fully qualified name for scoped enums to keep the C++
compiler happy. When a parameter expects an enum value, we must supply
an enum value and not its underlying integer value.
Before:
isset_bitset<1, 0>
After:
isset_bitset<1, apache::thrift::detail::IssetBitsetOption::Unpacked>
When we were previously removing allocators, we were only able to work
with containers whose allocators appeared as their last template
parameter.
Now we can replace allocators in the middle of a parameter list.
This fixes tests for folly::sorted_vector_set.
This is necessary when replacing the allocator of a map type, for
example.
`std::map<int, int>` will need an allocator which allocates elements of
type `std::pair<const int, int>>`