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path: root/source/slang/slang-ir-lower-existential.cpp
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2024-10-29formatEllie Hermaszewska
* format * Minor test fixes * enable checking cpp format in ci
2024-03-26Support mutable existential parameters. (#3836)Yong He
* Support mutable existential parameters. * Update test.
2023-04-25Dictionary using lowerCamel (#2835)jsmall-nvidia
* #include an absolute path didn't work - because paths were taken to always be relative. * WIP lowerCamel Dictionary. * WIP more lowerCamel fixes for Dictionary. * Add/Remove/Clear * GetValue/Contains * Fix tabs in dictionary. Count -> getCount * Fix fields with caps. * Key -> key Value -> value Use m_ for members where appropriate. Use lowerCamel in linked list. * Some small fixes/improvements to Dictionary. * Kick CI.
2023-02-16Remove `SharedIRBuilder`. (#2657)Yong He
Co-authored-by: Yong He <yhe@nvidia.com>
2022-09-15Run simple compute kernel in gfx-smoke test. (#2400)Yong He
2022-08-22Make Optional<PointerType> lower to PointerType instead of a struct. (#2373)Yong He
2022-07-25Allow `class` to implement COM interface, [DLLExport] (#2338)Yong He
* Allow `class` to implement COM interface, [DLLExport] * Fix [COM] usage in tests and examples with UUIDs. Co-authored-by: Yong He <yhe@nvidia.com>
2022-06-01New language feature: basic error handling. (#2253)Yong He
* New language feature: basic error handling. * Fix. * Fix `tryCall` encoding according to code review. Co-authored-by: Yong He <yhe@nvidia.com>
2022-05-10Initial support for COM interface in host code. (#2230)Yong He
Co-authored-by: Yong He <yhe@nvidia.com> Co-authored-by: Theresa Foley <10618364+tangent-vector@users.noreply.github.com>
2021-12-17Cleanup refactoring work around the IR builder (#2061)Theresa Foley
* Cleanup refactoring work around the IR builder We have some long-term goals for the IR that require a more centralized and disciplined set of rules for how IR instructions get created/emitted. I had been working on trying to set things up so that all IR instruction creation goes through a single bottleneck point, but the non-trivial work in that branch was getting drowned out by the sheer volume of cleanup and refactoring changes. This change tries to pull together several of the more important cleanups. The big pieces are: * `IRBuilder` and `SharedIRBuilder` now protect their data members and rely on users to initialize them more directly via constructor of an `init()` method. This change affects a *bunch* of sites where `IRBuilder`s were created. I changed use sites to use the constructors whenever possible, and to use `init()` in cases where we had longer-lived builders that needed to be initialized multiple times. * The insertion location for the `IRBuilder` now uses an encapsulated type called `IRInsertLoc`. This new type can replace what used to be just two `IRInst*` fields in the builder, and also covers some new functionality (if we ever want to take advantage of it). Very little client code cares about this change, but it is still a nice cleanup in terms of making things more explicit. * The creation of an `IRModule` has been moded *out* of `IRBuilder`, because in practice we `IRBuilder` always wants to be associated with a pre-existing `IRModule` at creation time (via its `SharedIRBuilder`). There is now an `IRModule::create()` operation instead. This required changing the sequencing at many `IRModule` creation sites, since most had been contriving to make an `IRBuilder` first. There were also several cleanups because code had been carelessly using non-reference-counted pointers for `IRModule`s in ways that broke now that `IRModule::create()` always returns a `RefPtr`. * The core operations to actually allocate memory for IR instructions were moved into `IRModule` (since they interact with the memory pool that the module owns). These *were* called `createEmptyInst()` but have been renamed into `_allocateInst()`. In principle these seem like they should only be needed to be called by the `IRBuilder`, but in practice they are also needed by the IR deserialization logic. * A few core operations for emitting IR instructions that were associted with `IRBuilder` were moved to actually be methods on `IRBuilder`. First is `_findOrEmitConstant` which is the primary bottleneck for creating simple scalar constant values. Another is `_createInst` (formerly part of the templated `createInstImpl` along with `createInstWithSizeImpl`) which is the main bottleneck for allocation and initialization of any instruction other than a constant (well, the `IRModuleInst` is the other exception...). Finally, there is also `_maybeSetSourceLoc()`, which is obvious to scope inside the `IRBuilder` once it is protecting the source-location info. Notes: * The `minSizeInBytes` parameter to `_createInst()` might not actually be needed at all. At this point any `IRInst` subtypes that need data allocated for things other than their operands already get created manually via `_allocateInst` or `_findOrEmitConstant`, so I *think* we could remove that part. I will handle that in a subsequent cleanup if it turns out to be the case. * There is one IR pass (`slang-ir-string-hash.cpp`) that is using manual `_allocateInst()` instead of going through an `IRBuilder`. It could be easily cleaned up to not do so (and I will probably make that change down the line), but for now I wanted to avoid doing anything that wasn't close to pure refactoring if I could. * At this point in our design an `IRBuilder` is a very lightweight thing - it basically just owns the insertion location plus a source location to write into instructions. A lot of our code currently treats `IRBuilder`s like they are expensive and/or need to be re-used (which leads to them being used in more mutable/stateful ways). It is quite likely that as we clean up other aspects of the implementation of IR creation/emission we can make `IRBuilder` use feel more lightweight in ways that can streamline and simplify code. * The next step for this work is to identify the different paths that eventually lead to `_createInst()` being called, and unify them at a single bottleneck operation that can own the decisions around when to create an instruction vs. when to re-use an existing one (rather than those decisions being baked into the various `IRBuilder` subroutines that create instructions of the various subtypes). * fixup: gcc/clang C++ spec details
2021-09-01Bug fix for createDynamicObject (#1927)Yong He
Co-authored-by: Yong He <yhe@nvidia.com>
2021-08-25Add `createDynamicObject` stdlib function. (#1923)Yong He
This function takes a user provided `typeID` and arbitrary typed value, and turns them into an existential value whose `witnessTableID` is `typeID` and whose `anyValue` is the user provided value. This allows the users to pack the runtime type id info in arbitrary way.
2021-02-16Add an accessor for IRInst opcode (#1707)Tim Foley
* Add an accessor for IRInst opcode This main changing is renaming `IRInst::op` over to `IRInst::m_op` and then adds an accessor `IRInst::getOp()` to read it. The rest of the changes are just changing use sites to `getOp` (or to `m_op` in the limited cases where we write to it). This work is in anticipation of a future change that might need to store an extra bit in the same field as the opcode. It seemed better to do this massive refactoring as a separate PR. * fixup
2020-11-19Unify handling of static and dynamic dispatch for interfaces (#1612)Tim Foley
Overview ======== Prior to this change, we had two different code generation strategies for interface/existential types in Slang, that didn't always play nicely together: * The "legacy" static specialization approach could handle plugging in an arbitrary concrete type for an existential type parameter (including types with resources, etc.), but wouldn't work well with things like a `StructuredBuffer<>` of an interface type, and requires somewhat counter-intuitive layout rules to make work. * The new dynamic dispatch approach produces simpler, more easily understood layouts by assuming that values of interface type can fit into a fixed number of bytes. The tradeoff there is that it cannot handle types that include resources (only POD types). The goal of this change is to make it so that the two strategies can co-exist. In particular, in cases where a shader is amenable to both static specialization and dynamic dispatch, the type layouts should agree. In order to make the type layouts agree, we: * Declare that *all* values of existential type reserve storage according to the dynamic-dispatch rules (so 16 bytes for the RTTI and witness-table information, plus whatever bytes are needed to story "any value" of a conforming type). * Then we modify the "legacy" layout rules so that if a value of concrete type can fit in the reserved "any value" space for a given interface, then it is laid out there exactly like the dynamic dispatch rules would do. Otherwise, we fall back to the previous legacy rules (since we don't need to agree with the dynamic-dispatch layout on types that can't be used with dynamic dispatch). Details ======= * Renamed `ExistentialBox` to `BoundInterfaceType` to better clarify how it relates to `BindExistentialsType` * Unconditionally apply the `lowerGenerics` pass during emit, since it is now responsible for aspects of the lowering of existential types when specialization is used. * Made IR type layout take the target into account, so that the layout of resource types can vary by target (e.g., being POD on some targets, and invalid on others) * Cleaned up some issues around using global shader parameters as the "key" for their layout information in the global-scope layout (only comes up when there are global-scope `uniform` parameters) * Made there be a default any-value size (16) instead of making it be an error to leave out. This was the simplest option; we could try to go back to having an error, but we'd need to only issue it if we are sure a type/interface is being used with dynamic dispatch, since static dispatch doesn't have to obey the restrictions. * Changed lowering of existential types to tuples so that bound interfaces where the concrete type won't fit use a "pseudo-pointer" instead of an "any-value" to hold the payload * Changed IR type legalization to handle the "pseudo-pointer" case and apply layout information from an interface type over to the payload part when static specialization was used. * Changed some details of how witness tables were being lowered, so that we didn't have to create "proxy" witness tables for the constraints on associated types (just use the actual requirement entries we generate) * Changed witness tables so that they know the subtype doing the conforming * Added logic so that we don't generate pack/unpack logic and witness table wrapper functions for types that are incompatible with any-value/dynamic dispatch for a given interface. * Changed the core AST-level type layout logic to use the dynamic-dispatch layout in case things fit, and the legacy static specialization case when things don't (while also reserving space for the dynamic-dispatch fields) * Changed a bunch of test cases for static specialization to properly use the new layout (which introduces new buffers in some cases, and moves data around in others). Future Work =========== The experience of trying to reconcile our older way of handling interface-type specialization with our newer model (that supports dynamic dispatch) makes it clear that we really need to make similar changes to our handling of generic type parameters on entry points and at the global scope. A future change should make it so that a global type parameter is lowered with a type layout similar to a value parameter of interface type, including the RTTI and witness-table pieces, and just leaving out the "any value" piece. A similar translation strategy should apply to entry-point generic parameters (mirroring how we lower generic functions for dynamic dispatch already), and value specialization parameters. Co-authored-by: Yong He <yonghe@outlook.com>
2020-11-10Use integer RTTI/witness handles in existential tuples. (#1598)Yong He
* Use integer RTTI/witness handles in existential tuples. * Fix clang error. * Fix IR serialization to use 16bits for opcode. * Undo accidental comment change. * Use variable length encoding for opcode. * Fix compile error. * Fixing issues * Fix code review issues.
2020-09-04Allow mixing unspecialized and specialized existential parameters. (#1533)Yong He
* Allow mixing unspecialized and specialized existential parameters. * Fixes.
2020-08-26Reorder existential tuple elements. (#1516)Yong He
Co-authored-by: Tim Foley <tim.foley.is@gmail.com>
2020-08-18Support initializing an existential value from a generic value. (#1503)Yong He
* Support initializing an existential value from a generic value. * Remove trailing spaces and clean up debugging code.
2020-08-14Lower existential types. (#1497)Yong He
Co-authored-by: Tim Foley <tfoleyNV@users.noreply.github.com>