Either non-pointer or pointer, both cases are disallowed to be generic.
Need to be reverted and properly handled within the scope of #2376.
Signed-off-by: Anna Shaleva <shaleva.ann@nspcc.ru>
In this case emitted event parameters should match from invocation to
invocation. It's an error otherwise (and if the type is not Any).
Signed-off-by: Anna Shaleva <shaleva.ann@nspcc.ru>
There are two ways of doing this: first one is to emit all notifications
parameter data into rpcbindings configuration on compile time (event if
the parameter has a simple type), and the second one is to fetch parameter
type from the manifest on rpcbinding file generation if needed (we always
have manifest at this stage, thus it's not a problem to retrieve necessary
information). The latter case is chosen to reduce the bindings configuration
file size.
Signed-off-by: Anna Shaleva <shaleva.ann@nspcc.ru>
Notification and its parameters may have any UTF8-compatible name
which is inappropriate for bindings configuration and for the resulting
RPC bindings file. This commit stores the prettified version of
notification's name and parameters that are ready to be used in the
resulting RPC binding without any changes.
Signed-off-by: Anna Shaleva <shaleva.ann@nspcc.ru>
The user should specify it via parameter's `extendedtype` field and
via upper-level `namedtypes` field of the contract configuration YAML.
Also, as we have proper event structure source, make the `--guess-eventtype`
compilation option and make event types guess optional.
Signed-off-by: Anna Shaleva <shaleva.ann@nspcc.ru>
Everywhere including examples, external interop APIs, bindings generators
code and in other valuable places. A couple of `interface{}` usages are
intentionally left in the CHANGELOG.md, documentation and tests.
In case of ellipsis usage compiler defines argument type as ArrayT
(which is correct, because it's a natural representation of the last
argument, it represents the array of interface{}).
Here goes the problem:
```
=== RUN TestEventWarnings/variadic_event_args_via_ellipsis
compiler_test.go:251:
Error Trace: compiler_test.go:251
Error: Received unexpected error:
event 'Event' should have 'Integer' as type of 1 parameter, got: Array
Test: TestEventWarnings/variadic_event_args_via_ellipsis
```
Parsing the last argument in this case is a separate complicated problem
due to the fact that we need to grab types of elements of []interface{} inside the
fully qualified ast node which may looks like:
```
runtime.Notify("Event", (append([]interface{}{1, 2}, (([]interface{}{someVar, 4}))...))...)
```
Temporary solution is to exclude such notifications from analysis until we're
able to properly resolve element types of []interface{}.
It's possible that declared manifest event has parameter of AnyT for
those cases when parameter type differs from method to method. If so,
then we don't need to enforce type check after compilation.
So that (*codegen).Visit is able to omit code generation for these
unused global vars. The most tricky part is to detect unused global
variables, it is done in several steps:
1. Collect the set of named used/unused global vars.
2. Collect the set of globally declared expressions that contain
function calls.
3. Pick up global vars from the set made at step 2.
4. Traverse used functions and puck up those global vars that are used
from these functions.
5. Rename all globals that are presented in the set made at step 1
but are not presented in the set made on step 3 or step 4.
Move all auxiliary function declaration after Main, so that INITSLOT
instructions counter works properly. `vmAndCompileInterop` loads program
and moves nextIP to the Main function offset if there's no _init
function. If _init is there, then nextIP will be moved to the start of
_init. In TestInline we don't handle instructions properly (CALL/JMP
don't change nextIP), we just perform instruction traversal from the
start point via Next(), thus INITSLOT counter value depends on the
starting instruction, which depends on _init presence.
If variable is unnamed and does not contain function call then it's
treated as unused and code generation may be omitted for it
initialization/declaration.
In case if global var is unnamed (and, as a consequence, unused) and
contains a function call inside its value specification, we need to emit
code for this var to be able to call the function as it can have
side-effects. See the example:
```
package foo
import "github.com/nspcc-dev/neo-go/pkg/interop/runtime"
var A = f()
func Main() int {
return 3
}
func f() int {
runtime.Notify("Valuable notification", 1)
return 2
}
```