How KSP models Kotlin code

The API definition can be found here. The diagram below is an overview of how Kotlin is modeled in KSP:

class diagram

Type and resolution

In KSP, references to types are designed to be resolved by processors explicitly (with a few exceptions) because most of the cost of the underlying API implementation is in resolution. When a type is referenced, such as KSFunctionDeclaration.returnType or KSAnnotation.annotationType, it is always a KSTypeReference, which is a KSReferenceElement with annotations and modifiers.

interface KSFunctionDeclaration : ... { val returnType: KSTypeReference? ... } interface KSTypeReference : KSAnnotated, KSModifierListOwner { val type: KSReferenceElement } 

A KSTypeReference can be resolved to a KSType, which refers to a type in Kotlin's type system.

A KSTypeReference has a KSReferenceElement, which models Kotlin‘s program structure: namely, how the reference is written. It corresponds to the type element in Kotlin's grammar.

A KSReferenceElement can be a KSClassifierReference or KSCallableReference, which contains a lot of useful information without the need for resolution. For example, KSClassifierReference has referencedName, while KSCallableReference has receiverType, functionArguments, and returnType.

If the original declaration referenced by a KSTypeReference is needed, it can usually be found by resolving to KSType and accessing through KSType.declaration. Moving from where a type is mentioned to where its class is defined looks like this:

KSTypeReference -> .resolve() -> KSType -> .declaration -> KSDeclaration 

Type resolution is costly and is therefore made explicit. Some of the information obtained from resolution is already available in KSReferenceElement. For example, KSClassifierReference.referencedName can filter out a lot of elements that are not interesting. You should resolve type only if you need specific information from KSDeclaration or KSType.

Note that a KSTypeReference pointing to a function type has most of its information in its element. Although it can be resolved to the family of Function0, Function1, and so on, these resolutions don‘t bring any more information than KSCallableReference. One use case for resolving function type references is dealing with the identity of the function's prototype.

Last modified: 16 September 2021

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