This change is required to fix stdlib compilation with enabled
linking via signature. All primitive iterators are considered to be
builtins and are created during compile time as deserialized
declarations (at least in K1). But if we meet the definition of some
primitive iterator in code, for example, during stdlib compilation,
we will end up with two different descriptors (deserialized and lazy)
that describe the same entity. Because of that we have conflicts in
symbol table:
* For descriptors, we will end up with multiple IR declarations
that describe the same class, but with different descriptors. With
some magic compilation still works.
* For signatures, we will end up with only one IR declaration in the
table, but it will have wrong deserialized (instead of lazy)
descriptor.
In the end, this change allows us to initialize iterators in advance
with correct descriptor.
#KT-56230
Most of these tests check the specific structure of lambdas when they
are generated as classes, and they start to fail once invokedynamic
lambdas are enabled by default.
so that the enclosing method of objects defined inside lambdas is the
one they are declared in.
Note that this does not fix *all* enclosingInfo tests because JVM_IR
currently follows the KT-28064 proposal, i.e. does not regenerate
objects defined inside lambdas under any circumstances. For example,
this causes test boxInline/enclosingInfo/inlineChain2.kt to fail because
the enclosing method of objects is _2Kt.box instead of (non-existent in
source code) `_2Kt$box$inlined$call$1.invoke` or whatever. What's more
important is that OUTERCLASS no longer points to a non-existent
`box$lambda-N` and therefore `.enclosingMethod` no longer throws.
This patch mutes the following test categories:
* Tests with java dependencies (System class,
java stdlib, jvm-oriented annotations etc).
* Coroutines tests.
* Reflection tests.
* Tests with an inheritance from the standard
collections.