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expressions"
This reverts commit 84f381cc180b3176d6a58da4085ee8470f246922.
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Support `this` expressions (explicit and implicit)
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There were some cases where we would try to emit an `ErrorType` to the output HLSL, which obviously isn't allowed. This change tries to avoid emitting error types, and instead use the original expression when it is available.
I tried adding a test case for the change, but I can't convince Slang to output matching line numbers for the error message; it seems like more work is needed on that front.
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- When peforming ordinary lookup, if the container declaration for a scope is an aggregate type or `extension` decl, then use a "breadcrumb" to make sure that we use a `this` expression as the base of any resulting declaration reference
- Add a test case for implicit `this` usage
- Update constrained generic test case to use implicit `this` for member reference, as was originally intended
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This is the first step towards supporting traditional object-oriented method definitions; the second step will be to allow `this` expressions to be implicit.
- Add a test case using explicit `this`, and expected output
- Update parsing logic for expressions so that it handled identifiers similarly to the declaration and statement logic: first try to parse using a syntax declaration looked up in the curent scope, and otherwise fall back to the ordinary `VarExpr` case.
* As long as I'm making that change: switch `true` and `false` to be parsed via the callback mechanism rather than be special-cased.
* This change will also help out if we ever wanted to add `super`/`base` expressions, `new`, `sizeof`/`alignof` or any other expression keywords.
- Add a `ThisExpr` node and register a parser callback for it.
- Add semantic checks for `ThisExpr`: basically just look upwards through scopes until we find either an aggregate type declaration or an `extension` declaration, and then use that as the type of the expression.
- TODO: eventually we need to guard against a `this` expression inside of a `static` member.
- The IR generation logic already handled creation of `this` parameters in function signatures; the missing piece was to register the appropriate parameter in the context, so that we can use it as the lowering of a `this` expression.
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This change includes a lot of infrastructure work, but the main point is to allow code like the following:
```
// define an interface
interface Helper { float help(); }
// define a generic function that uses the interface
float test<T : Helper>( T t ) { return t.help(); }
// define a type that implements the interface
struct A : Helper { float help() { return 1.0 } }
// define an ordinary function that calls the
// generic function with a concrete type:
float doIt()
{
A a;
return test<A>(a);
}
```
Getting this to generate valid code involves a lot of steps. This change includes the initial version of all of these steps, but leaves a lot of gaps where more complete implementation is required.
The changes include:
- Member lookup on types has been centralized, and now handles the case where the type we are looking for a member in is a generic parameter (e.g., given `t.help()` we can now look up `help` in `Helper` by knowing that `t` is a `T` and `T` conforms to `Helper`).
- There is an obvious cleanup still to be done here where the same exact logic should be used to look up available "constructor" declarations inside a type when the type is used like a function.
- Add a notion of subtype constraint "wittnesses" to the type system. When a generic is declared as taking `<T : Helper>` it really takes two generic parameters: the type `T` and a proof that `T` conforms to `Helper`. The actual arguments to a generic will then include both the type argument and a suitable witness argument (both type-level values).
- As it stands right now, a witness wraps a `DeclRef` to the declaration that represents the appropriate subtype relationship. So if we have `struct A : Helper`, that `: Helper` part turns into an `InheritanceDecl` member, and a reference to that member can serve as a witness to the fact that `A` conforms to `Helper`.
- Make explicit generic application `G<A,B>` synthesize the additional arguments that represent conformances required by the generic.
- This does *not* yet deal with the case where a generic is implicitly specialized as part of an ordinary call `G(a,b)`
- A bug fix to not auto-specialize generics during lookup. The problem here was related to an attempted fix of an earlier issue.
During checking of a method nested in a generic type, we were running into problems where `DeclRefType::create()` was getting called on an un-specialized reference to `vector`, and this was leading to a crash when the code looked for the arguments for the generic. This was worked around by having name lookup automatically specialize any generics it runs into while going through lookup contexts.
That choice creates the problem that in a generic method like this:
```
void test<T>(T val) { ... }
```
any reference to `val` inside the body of `test` will end up getting specialized so that it is effectively `test<T>::val`, when that isn't really needed.
- Add front-end logic to check that when a type claims to conform to an interface it actually must provide the methods required by the interface. The checking process goes ahead and builds a front-end "witness table" that maps declarations in the interface being conformed to over to their concrete implementations for the type.
- At the moment the checking is completely broken and bad: it assumes that *any* member with the right name is an appropriate declaration to satisfy a requirement. That obviously needs to be fixed.
- Add an explicit operation to the IR for lookup of methods: `lookup_interface_method(w, r)` where `w` is a reference to the "witness" value and `r` is an `IRDeclRef` for the member we want to look up.
- Add an explicit notion of witness tables to the IR. These end up being the IR representation of an `InheritanceDecl` in a type, and they are generated by enumerating the members that satisfy the interface requirements (which were handily already enumerated by the front-end checking). The witness table is an explicit IR value, and so it will be referenced/used at the site where conformance is being exploited (e.g., as part of a `specialize` call), so it should be safe to eliminate witness tables that are unused (since they represent conformances that aren't actually exploited). Similarly, the entries in a witness table are uses of the functions that implement interface methods, and so keep those live.
- In order to implement the above, I did a bit of a cleanup pass on the IR representation so that there is an `IRUser` base that `IRInst` inherits from, so that we can have users of values that aren't instructions.
- One annoying thing is that because of how types and generics are handled in the IR, we needed a way to have a type-level `Val` that wraps an IR-level value: e.g., to allow an IR-level witness table to be used as one of the arguments for specialization of a generic. The design I chose here is to have a "proxy" `Val` subclass (`IRProxyVal`) that wraps an `IRValue*`. These should only ever appear as part of types and `DeclRef`s that are used by the IR.
- One annoying bit here is that an IR value might then have a use that is not manifest in the set of IR instructions, and instead only appears as part of a type somewhere.
- I'm not 100% happy with this design, but it seems like we'd have to tackle similar issues if/when we eventually allow functions to have `constexpr` or `@Constant` parameters
- Make generic specialization also propagate witness table arguments through to their use sites (this is mostly just the existing substitution machinery, once we have `IRProxyVal`), and then include logic to specialize `lookup_interface_method` instructions when their first operand is a concrete witness table.
All of this work allows a single limited test using generics with constraints to pass, but more work is needed to make the solution robust.
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Finish up implementation of render-test
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vertex/fragment shader pair, but instead of comparing the resulting framebuffer, it expects the test shader to write results into a UAV, and compares the pixel shader UAV output to the reference output.
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Extending render-test to support various resource inputs
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When Slang sees a matrix multiplication `M * v` in GLSL code it should (obviously) output GLSL code that also does `M * v`, but there was a bug introduced where the type-checker manages to resolve the operation and recognize it as a matrix-vector multiply, and then the code-generation logic says "oh, I'm generating output for GLSL, and that is reversed from HLSL/Slang, so I'd better reverse these operands!" and outputs `v * M`... which isn't what we want.
I've fixed the problem in an expedient way, by having the front-end resolve the operation to what it believes is an intrinsic multiply operation, rather than a matrix-vector operation. If we ever support cross compilation *from* GLSL (unlikely), we've need to fix this up so that we have both real matrix-vector multiplies and "reversed" multiplies where the operands folow the GLSL convention).
I've added two tests here to confirm the fix. The one under `tests/bugs` catches the actual issue described above, and confirms the fix. The other one under `tests/cross-compile` is just to make sure that we *do* properly reverse the operands to a matrix-vector product when converting from Slang to GLSL.
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inputs for running test shaders with arbitrary parameter definitions.
This commit contains the parser of the resource input definition.
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* Fix up emission of shader parameter semantics when using IR
- Make sure to propagate entry point parameter layouts down to IR parameters when doing the initial cloning to form target-specific IR
- When layout information is present on an IR node, prefer to use that over the original high-level declaration for outputting semantics in final HLSL
- Fix up test runner to generate `.actual` files when running compute tests, in cases where the `render-test` application errors out (e.g., because of a Slang compilation error)
- Add a first test of generics functionality, to show that they generate valid code through the IR
- Right now this test is *not* using any "interesting" operations on the type parameter, so this is not a test that can confirm that interface constraints work
* fixup: skip compute tests when running on Linux
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Support running compute shaders in testing framework
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