Even ones inside inline functions. This was a backwards compatibility
hack for Kotlin 1.4, where the inliner would crash if it attempted to
regenerate an anonymous object with no SMAP; that has been fixed in 1.5,
and ever since then trivial SMAPs could be inferred from line number
markers in methods.
There are three kinds of changes to tests in this commit:
* Some SMAPs are gone entirely - self-explanatory.
* Some SMAPs have narrower line ranges - that's because the old SMAP
had the range for the entire file, while the new one only maps up to
the last line number used in the class. There should be no
difference in behavior.
* Some "source file name" markers are removed in continuation objects
- continuations don't have any line numbers, so there's no debugging
information anyway. The actual source information is in the
containing class.
Specifically, this commit improves the stepping behavior of the IR
backend around functions with defaults.
- Improved line numbers in the default handler itself for better
stepping when inlined.
- Improved source information on default arguments
- Improved test coverage of stepping behavior in old and IR backends.
Improves the stepping behaviour around inline methods with default
arguments. In particular, we now accurately step through the
evaluation of default arguments, but do _not_ spuriously show the exit
from the $default handler.
If `mapLineNumber` was called in non-monotonic order, e.g. N then N+2
then N+1, the first two calls created a range that spans [N; N+2] but
the third call did not reuse it.