Move most of the logic of determining which compiler configuration to
use (such as GOOS/GOARCH, build tags, whether to include debug symbols,
panic strategy, etc.) into the compileopts package. This makes it a
single source of truth for anything related to compiler configuration.
It has a few advantages:
* The compile configuration is independent of the compiler package.
This makes it possible to move optimization passes out of the
compiler, as they don't rely on compiler.Config anymore.
* There is only one place to look if an incorrect compile option is
used.
* The compileopts provides some resistance against unintentionally
picking the wrong option, such as with c.selectGC() vs c.GC() in the
compiler.
* It is now a lot easier to change compile options, as most options
are getters now.
This commit allows starting a new goroutine directly from a func value,
not just when the static callee is known.
This is necessary to support the whole time package, not just the
commonly used subset that was compiled with the SimpleDCE pass enabled.
This commit fixes the following issue:
https://github.com/tinygo-org/tinygo/issues/309
Also, it prepares for some other reflect-related changes that should
make it easier to add support for named types (etc.) in the future.
This commit adds getValue which gets a const, global, or result of a
local SSA expression and replaces (almost) all uses of parseExpr with
getValue. The only remaining use is in parseInstr, which makes sure an
instruction is only evaluated once.
This commit replaces "unknown type" errors in getLLVMType with panics.
The main reason this is done is that it simplifies the code *a lot*.
Many `if err != nil` lines were there just because of type information.
Additionally, simply panicking is probably a better approach as the only
way this error can be produced is either with big new language features
or a serious compiler bug. Panicking is probably a better way to handle
this error anyway.
This has several advantages, among them:
- Many passes (heap-to-stack, dead arg elimination, inlining) do not
work with function pointer calls. Making them normal function calls
improves their effectiveness.
- Goroutine lowering to LLVM coroutines does not currently support
function pointers. By eliminating function pointers, coroutine
lowering gets support for them for free.
This is especially useful for WebAssembly.
Because of the second point, this work is currently only enabled for the
WebAssembly target.