Alexander Kuznetsov 58350b83a8 KtFe10CompilerFacility: analyze inline delegated property accessors
One of the compiler lowerings, namely `PropertyReferenceLowering`,
optimizes usages of property references in some cases,
and if a containing delegated property accessor is inline,
it might need this accessor's bytecode.

If an accessor function is defined in a different module,
IDE tries to acquire its bytecode via the index, however,
the index doesn't cover classfiles from compiler output,
and that leads to errors like KTIJ-26706 and IDEA-320283.

One of the ways to ensure that the bytecode exists is to include files
that contain inline accessors in the compilation process. For example,
if file f1.kt from the analysis result contains property `val p by D()`,
and `D.getValue` is an inline function defined in file f2.kt,
then f2.kt must be present in the analysis result.
If f2.kt contains another property `val q by E()`,
and `E.getValue` is an inline function defined in f3.kt,
then f3.kt must be present in the analysis result. And so on.

Fixes KTIJ-26706, IDEA-320283


Merge-request: KT-MR-11793
Merged-by: Alexander Kuznetsov <Aleksander.Kuznetsov@jetbrains.com>
2023-08-29 23:55:31 +00:00
2020-11-21 14:00:28 +01:00
2023-07-12 12:49:32 +00:00
2023-02-08 16:27:26 +00:00
2021-09-21 03:49:47 +03:00

official project TeamCity (simple build status) Maven Central GitHub license Revved up by Gradle Enterprise

Kotlin Programming Language

Welcome to Kotlin!
It is an open-source, statically typed programming language supported and developed by JetBrains and open-source contributors.

Some handy links:

Kotlin Multiplatform capabilities

Support for multiplatform programming is one of Kotlins key benefits. It reduces time spent writing and maintaining the same code for different platforms while retaining the flexibility and benefits of native programming.

Editing Kotlin

Build environment requirements

This repository is using Gradle toolchains feature to select and auto-provision required JDKs from AdoptOpenJdk project.

Unfortunately AdoptOpenJdk project does not provide required JDK 1.6 and 1.7 images, so you could either download them manually and provide path to installation via JDK_1_6 and JDK_1_7 environment variables or use following SDK managers:

Alternatively, it is still possible to only provide required JDKs via environment variables (see gradle.properties for supported variable names). To ensure Gradle uses only JDKs from environmental variables - disable Gradle toolchain auto-detection by passing -Porg.gradle.java.installations.auto-detect=false option (or put it into $GRADLE_USER_HOME/gradle.properties).

For local development, if you're not working on the standard library, it's OK to avoid installing JDK 1.6 and JDK 1.7. Add kotlin.build.isObsoleteJdkOverrideEnabled=true to the local.properties file, so build will only use JDK 1.8+. Note, that in this case, build will have Gradle remote build cache misses for some tasks.

Note: The JDK 6 for MacOS is not available on Oracle's site. You can install it by

$ brew tap homebrew/cask-versions
$ brew install --cask java6

On Windows you might need to add long paths setting to the repo:

git config core.longpaths true 

Building

The project is built with Gradle. Run Gradle to build the project and to run the tests using the following command on Unix/macOS:

./gradlew <tasks-and-options>

or the following command on Windows:

gradlew <tasks-and-options>

On the first project configuration gradle will download and setup the dependencies on

  • intellij-core is a part of command line compiler and contains only necessary APIs.
  • idea-full is a full blown IntelliJ IDEA Community Edition to be used in the plugin module.

These dependencies are quite large, so depending on the quality of your internet connection you might face timeouts getting them. In this case, you can increase timeout by specifying the following command line parameters on the first run:

./gradlew -Dhttp.socketTimeout=60000 -Dhttp.connectionTimeout=60000

Important gradle tasks

  • clean - clean build results
  • dist - assembles the compiler distribution into dist/kotlinc/ folder
  • install - build and install all public artifacts into local maven repository
  • coreLibsTest - build and run stdlib, reflect and kotlin-test tests
  • gradlePluginTest - build and run gradle plugin tests
  • compilerTest - build and run all compiler tests

To reproduce TeamCity build use -Pteamcity=true flag. Local builds don't run proguard and have jar compression disabled by default.

OPTIONAL: Some artifacts, mainly Maven plugin ones, are built separately with Maven. Refer to libraries/ReadMe.md for details.

To build Kotlin/Native, see kotlin-native/README.md.

Working with the project in IntelliJ IDEA

It is recommended to use the latest released version of Intellij IDEA (Community or Ultimate Edition). You can download IntelliJ IDEA here.

After cloning the project, import the project in IntelliJ by choosing the project directory in the Open project dialog.

For handy work with compiler tests it's recommended to use Kotlin Compiler Test Helper

Dependency verification

We have a dependencies verification feature enabled in the repository for all Gradle builds. Gradle will check hashes (md5 and sha256) of used dependencies and will fail builds with Dependency verification failed errors when local artifacts are absent or have different hashes listed in the verification-metadata.xml file.

It's expected that verification-metadata.xml should only be updated with the commits that modify the build. There are some tips how to perform such updates:

  • Delete components section of verification-metadata.xml to avoid stockpiling of old unused dependencies. You may use the following command:
#macOS
sed -i '' -e '/<components>/,/<\/components>/d' gradle/verification-metadata.xml
#Linux & Git for Windows
sed -i -e '/<components>/,/<\/components>/d' gradle/verification-metadata.xml
  • Re-generate dependencies with Gradle's --write-verification-metadata command (verify update relates to your changes)
./gradlew -i --write-verification-metadata sha256,md5 -Pkotlin.native.enabled=true resolveDependencies

resolveDependencies task resolves dependencies for all platforms including dependencies downloaded by plugins

  • If youre adding a dependency with OS mentioning in an artifact name (darwin, mac, osx, linux, windows), remember to add them to implicitDependencies configuration or update resolveDependencies task if needed. resolveDependencies should resolve all dependencies including dependencies for different platforms.

Using -dev and -SNAPSHOT versions

We publish -dev and -SNAPSHOT versions frequently.

For -dev versions you can use the list of available versions and include this maven repository:

maven("https://maven.pkg.jetbrains.space/kotlin/p/kotlin/bootstrap")

For -SNAPSHOT versions that are updated daily, you can use the list of available versions and include this maven repository:

maven("https://oss.sonatype.org/content/repositories/snapshots/")

License

Kotlin is distributed under the terms of the Apache License (Version 2.0). See license folder for details.

Contributing

Please be sure to review Kotlin's contributing guidelines to learn how to help the project.

S
Description
The Kotlin Programming Language.
Readme 2.1 GiB
Languages
Kotlin 79.9%
Java 10.4%
Swift 4.3%
C 2.8%
C++ 2.1%
Other 0.3%