| name | swift-concurrency |
| description | Diagnose Swift Concurrency issues, refactor callback-based code to async/await, and guide Swift 6 migration when working with tasks, actors, @MainActor, Sendable, data races, thread safety, or concurrency-related compiler and linter warnings. |
Swift Concurrency
Fast Path
Before proposing a fix:
- Analyze
Package.swift or .pbxproj to determine Swift language mode, strict concurrency level, default isolation, and upcoming features. Do this always, not only for migration work.
- Capture the exact diagnostic and offending symbol.
- Determine the isolation boundary:
@MainActor, custom actor, actor instance isolation, or nonisolated.
- Confirm whether the code is UI-bound or intended to run off the main actor. When spawning unstructured tasks, inspect the synchronous prefix (everything before the first
await): start on @MainActor only when that prefix truly needs main-actor access; otherwise use Task { @concurrent in ... } and hop back with MainActor.run only after the suspension. A trivial non-main line (for example, print) followed by main-actor work in the same prefix is not a reason to use @concurrent. For delayed retries, timers, and backoff tasks, separate the waiting from the UI mutation. The sleep often belongs off the main actor even when the final state update belongs on it.
Project settings that change concurrency behavior:
| Setting | SwiftPM (Package.swift) | Xcode (.pbxproj) |
|---|
| Language mode | swiftLanguageVersions or -swift-version (// swift-tools-version: is not a reliable proxy) | Swift Language Version |
| Strict concurrency | .enableExperimentalFeature("StrictConcurrency=targeted") | SWIFT_STRICT_CONCURRENCY |
| Default isolation | .defaultIsolation(MainActor.self) | SWIFT_DEFAULT_ACTOR_ISOLATION |
| Upcoming features | .enableUpcomingFeature("NonisolatedNonsendingByDefault") | SWIFT_UPCOMING_FEATURE_* |
If any of these are unknown, ask the developer to confirm them before giving migration-sensitive guidance. Do not guess.
Guardrails:
- Do not recommend
@MainActor as a blanket fix. Justify why the code is truly UI-bound.
- Prefer structured concurrency over unstructured tasks. Use
Task.detached only with a clear reason.
- If recommending
@preconcurrency, @unchecked Sendable, or nonisolated(unsafe), require a documented safety invariant and a follow-up removal plan.
- Optimize for the smallest safe change. Do not refactor unrelated architecture during migration.
- Course references are for deeper learning only. Use them sparingly and only when they clearly help answer the developer's question.
Quick Fix Mode
Use Quick Fix Mode when all of these are true:
- The issue is localized to one file or one type.
- The isolation boundary is clear.
- The fix can be explained in 1-2 behavior-preserving steps.
Skip Quick Fix Mode when any of these are true:
- Build settings or default isolation are unknown.
- The issue crosses module boundaries or changes public API behavior.
- The likely fix depends on unsafe escape hatches.
Common Diagnostics
| Diagnostic | First check | Smallest safe fix | Escalate to |
|---|
Main actor-isolated ... cannot be used from a nonisolated context | Is this truly UI-bound? | Isolate the caller to @MainActor or use await MainActor.run { ... } only when main-actor ownership is correct. | references/actors.md, references/threading.md |
Actor-isolated type does not conform to protocol | Must the requirement run on the actor? | Prefer isolated conformance (e.g., extension Foo: @MainActor SomeProtocol); use nonisolated only for truly nonisolated requirements. | references/actors.md |
Sending value of non-Sendable type ... risks causing data races | What isolation boundary is being crossed? | Keep access inside one actor, or convert the transferred value to an immutable/value type. | references/sendable.md, references/threading.md |
SwiftLint async_without_await | Is async actually required by protocol, override, or @concurrent? | Remove async, or use a narrow suppression with rationale. Never add fake awaits. | references/linting.md |
wait(...) is unavailable from asynchronous contexts | Is this legacy XCTest async waiting? | Replace with await fulfillment(of:) or Swift Testing equivalents. | references/testing.md |
| Core Data concurrency warnings | Are NSManagedObject instances crossing contexts or actors? | Pass NSManagedObjectID or map to a Sendable value type. | references/core-data.md |
Thread.current unavailable from asynchronous contexts | Are you debugging by thread instead of isolation? | Reason in terms of isolation and use Instruments/debugger instead. | references/threading.md |
| SwiftLint concurrency-related warnings | Which specific lint rule triggered? | Use references/linting.md for rule intent and preferred fixes; avoid dummy awaits. | references/linting.md |
When Quick Fixes Fail
- Gather project settings if not already confirmed.
- Re-evaluate which isolation boundaries the type crosses.
- Route to the matching reference file for a deeper fix.
- If the fix may change behavior, document the invariant and add verification steps.
Smallest Safe Fixes
Prefer changes that preserve behavior while satisfying data-race safety:
- UI-bound state: isolate the type or member to
@MainActor.
- Shared mutable state: move it behind an
actor, or use @MainActor only if the state is UI-owned.
- Background work: when work must hop off caller isolation, use an
async API marked @concurrent; when work can safely inherit caller isolation, use nonisolated without @concurrent. When spawning a Task, match entry isolation to its synchronous prefix. If nothing before the first await needs the main actor, use Task { @concurrent in ... } and hop back via await MainActor.run { ... } for the UI update. If the prefix mixes a trivial non-main statement with main-actor work, keep the inherited @MainActor start—splitting the cheap line off-main is not worth an extra hop.
- Sendability issues: prefer immutable values and explicit boundaries over
@unchecked Sendable.
Concurrency Tool Selection
| Need | Tool | Key Guidance |
|---|
| Single async operation | async/await | Default choice for sequential async work |
| Fixed parallel operations | async let | Known count at compile time; auto-cancelled on throw |
| Dynamic parallel operations | withTaskGroup | Unknown count; structured — cancels children on scope exit |
| Sync → async bridge | Task { } | Inherits actor context; use Task.detached only with documented reason |
| Shared mutable state | actor | Prefer over locks/queues; keep isolated sections small |
| UI-bound state | @MainActor | Only for truly UI-related code; justify isolation |
Common Scenarios
Network request with UI update
Task { @concurrent in
let data = try await fetchData()
await MainActor.run { self.updateUI(with: data) }
}
Processing array items in parallel
await withTaskGroup(of: ProcessedItem.self) { group in
for item in items {
group.addTask { await process(item) }
}
for await result in group {
results.append(result)
}
}
Task entry isolation
Match a Task's entry isolation to its synchronous prefix (everything from { to the first await).
- If anything in that prefix needs
@MainActor, keep the inherited @MainActor start.
- If nothing in that prefix needs
@MainActor, prefer Task { @concurrent in ... } and hop back only for UI-owned mutation.
Task {
await hopToOtherIsolationDomain()
}
Task {
print("Also not main-thread-bound")
await hopToOtherIsolationDomain()
}
Task { @concurrent in
await hopToOtherIsolationDomain()
await MainActor.run { updateUI() }
}
Task {
print("debug")
self.isLoading = true
await fetchData()
}
Swift 6 Migration Quick Guide
Key changes in Swift 6:
- Strict concurrency checking enabled by default
- Complete data-race safety at compile time
- Sendable requirements enforced on boundaries
- Isolation checking for all async boundaries
Migration Validation Loop
Apply this cycle for each migration change:
- Build — Run
swift build or Xcode build to surface new diagnostics
- Fix — Address one category of error at a time (e.g., all Sendable issues first)
- Rebuild — Confirm the fix compiles cleanly before moving on
- Test — Run the test suite to catch regressions (
swift test or Cmd+U)
- Only proceed to the next file/module when all diagnostics are resolved
If a fix introduces new warnings, resolve them before continuing. Never batch multiple unrelated fixes — keep commits small and reviewable.
For detailed migration steps, see references/migration.md.
Reference Router
Open the smallest reference that matches the question:
- Foundations
references/async-await-basics.md — async/await syntax, execution order, async let, URLSession patterns
references/tasks.md — Task lifecycle, cancellation, priorities, task groups, structured vs unstructured
references/actors.md — Actor isolation, @MainActor, global actors, reentrancy, custom executors, Mutex
references/sendable.md — Sendable conformance, value/reference types, @unchecked, region isolation
references/threading.md — Execution model, suspension points, Swift 6.2 isolation behavior
- Streams
references/async-sequences.md — AsyncSequence, AsyncStream, when to use vs regular async methods
references/async-algorithms.md — Debounce, throttle, merge, combineLatest, channels, timers
- Applied topics
references/testing.md — Swift Testing first, XCTest fallback, leak checks
references/performance.md — Profiling with Instruments, reducing suspension points, execution strategies
references/memory-management.md — Retain cycles in tasks, memory safety patterns
references/core-data.md — NSManagedObject sendability, custom executors, isolation conflicts
- Migration and tooling
references/migration.md — Swift 6 migration strategy, closure-to-async conversion, @preconcurrency, FRP migration
references/linting.md — Concurrency-focused lint rules and SwiftLint async_without_await
- Glossary
references/glossary.md — Quick definitions of core concurrency terms
Verification Checklist
When changing concurrency code:
- Re-check build settings before interpreting diagnostics.
- Build and clear one category of errors before moving on. Do not batch unrelated fixes into the same change.
- Run tests, especially actor-, lifetime-, and cancellation-sensitive tests.
- Use Instruments for performance claims instead of guessing.
- Verify deallocation and cancellation behavior for long-lived tasks.
- Check
Task.isCancelled in long-running operations.
- Never use semaphores or ad hoc locking in async contexts when actor isolation or
Mutex would express ownership more safely.
Note: This skill is based on the comprehensive Swift Concurrency Course by Antoine van der Lee.