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* Added 'truncate' for fixing floats, for floats near the max value (as opposed to making infinite).
Put AreNearlyEqual into Math
* Test for ::make static method.
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* Upper camel -> lowerCamel
m_ prefix members where appropriate
_ prefix module local functions
* m_ prefix members in Lexer. Fit's standard because type has methods/ctor.
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* WIP: 64 literal diagnostic and truncation.
* Improve how integer truncation is handled/supported.
Added literal-int64.slang test.
Set a suffix on all literals.
Fixed problem on C++ based targets where l suffix was not the same as int() cast. So on C++ derived emitters, int() is used instead of l suffix to have same behavior across targets.
* Add literal diagnostic testing.
* Allow lexer to lex - in front of literals.
* Fix lexing and converting int literal with -.
* Too large small values of floats become inf.
Handling writing inf types out on different targets.
Add function to deterimine if a float literals kind.
* Roll back the support of lexer lexing negative literals.
* Fixed tests broken because of diagnostics numbers.
Improved _isFinite
* Fix compilation on linux.
* Fix problem with abs on linux - use Math::Abs.
* Fix typo.
* * Improve warnings for float literals zeroed
* Improved 64 bit type documentation
* Handle half
* Improved comments
* Fixed tests broken
* Use capital letters for suffixes.
* Make default behavior on outputting a int literal that is an 'int32_t' is cast (not suffix) to avoid platform inconsistencies.
Improve documentation for 64 bit types.
Make tests cover material in docs.
* Fixed tests.
* Rename FloatKind::Normal -> Finite
* Fix half zero check.
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* Initial work for "global generic value parameters"
The main new feature here is support for the `__generic_value_param` keyword, which introduces a *global generic value parameter*.
For example:
__generic_value_param kOffset : uint = 0;
This declaration introduces a global generic value parameter `kOffset` of type `uint` that has a nominal default value of zero.
The broad strokes of how this feature was added are as follows:
* A new `GlobalGenericValueParamDecl` AST node type is introduces in `slang-decl-defs.h`
* A new `parseGlobalGenericValueParamDecl` subroutine is added to `slang-parser.cpp`, and is added to the list of declaration cases as the callback for the `__generic_value_param` name.
* Cases for `GlobalGenericValueParamDecl` are added to the declaration checking passes in `slang-check-decl.cpp`, mirroring what is done for other variable declaration cases.
* A case for `GlobalGenericValueParamDecl` is aded to the `Module::_collectShaderParams` function, so that it is recognized as a kind of specialization parameter. This introduces a specialization parameter of flavor `SpecializationParam::Flavor::GenericValue` (which was already defined before this change, although it was unused).
* A case for `SpecializationParam::Flavor::GenericValue` is added in `Module::_validateSpecializationArgsImpl` to check that a specialization argument represents a compile-time-constant value (not a type).
* A case for `GlobalGenericValueParmDecl` is introduced in `slang-lower-to-ir.cpp` that introduces a global generic parameter in the IR
* The `IRBuilder` is extended to support creating `IRGlobalGenericParam`s for the distinct cases of type, witness-table, and value parameters. The same IR instruction type/opcode is used for all cases, and only the type of the IR instruction differs.
* The existing mechanisms for lowering specialization arguments to the IR, and doing specialization on the IR itself Just Work with global generic value parameters since they already support value parameters on explicit generic declarations.
That's the santized version of things, but there were also a bunch of cleanups and tweaks required along the way:
* The `SpecializationParam` type was extended to also track a `SourceLoc` to help in diagnostic messages, which meant some churn in the code that collects specialization parameters.
* The `_extractSpecializationArgs` function is tweaked to support any kind of "term" as a specialization argument (either a type or a value).
* To allow *parsing* specialization arguments that can't possibly be types (e.g., integer literals) we replace the existing `parseTypeString` routine with `parseTermString` and then in `parseTermFromSourceFile` call through to a general case of expression parsing (which can also parse types) rather than only parsing types directly.
* Right before doing back-end code generation, we check if the program we are going to emit has remaining (unspecialized) parameters, in which case we emit a diagnostic message for the parameters that haven't been specialized rather than go on to emit code that will fail to compile downstream.
* Within the `render-test` tool we collapse down the arrays that held both "generic" and "existential" specialization arguments, so that we just have *global* and *entry-point* specialization argument lists. This mirrors how Slang has worked internally for a while, but the difference hasn't been important to the test tool because no tests currently mix generic and existential specialization. The logic for parsing `TEST_INPUT` lines has been streamlined down to just the global and entry-point cases, but the pre-existing keywords are still allowed so that I don't have to tweak any test cases.
There are several significant caveats for this feature, which mean that it isn't really ready for users to hammer on just yet:
* There is no support for `Val`s of anything but integers, so there is no way to meaningfully have a generic value param with a type other than `int` or `uint`.
* We allow for a default-value expression on global generic parameters, but do not actually make use of that value for anything (e.g., to allow a programmer to omit specialization arguments), nor check that it meets the constraints of being compile-time constant.
* Global generic value parameters are *not* currently being treated the same as explicit generic parameters in terms of how they can be used for things like array sizes or other things that require constants. This will probably be relaxed at some point, but allowing a global generic to be used to size an array creates questions around layout.
* The IR optimization passes in Slang currently won't eliminate entire blocks of code based on constant values, so using a global generic value parameter to enable/disable features will *not* currently lead to us outputting drastically different HLSL or GLSL. That said, we expect most downstream compilers to be able to handle an `if(0)` well.
* Fix regression for tagged union types
The change that made specialization arguments be parsed as "terms" first, and then coerced to types meant that any special-case logic that is specific to the parsing of types would be bypassed and thus not apply.
Most of that special-case logic isn't wanted for specialization arguments, since it pertains to cases were we want to, e.g, declare a `struct` type while also declaring a variable of that type.
The one special case that *is* useful is the `__TaggedUnion(...)` syntax, which is the only way to introduce a tagged union type right now.
In order to get that case working again, all I had to do was register the existing logic for parsing `__TaggedUnion` as an expression keyword with the right callback, and the existing logic in expression parsing kicks in (that logic was already handling expression keywords like `this` and `true`).
I left in the existing logic for handling `__TaggedUnion` directly where types get parsed, rather than try to unify things.
A better long-term fix is to make the base case for type parsing route into `parseAtomicExpr` so that the two paths share the core logic.
That change should probably come as its own refactoring/cleanup, because it creates the potential for some subtle breakage.
* fixup: typo
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* IROutputControlPointsDecoration
* IROutputTopologyDecoration
* IRPartitioningDecoration
* IRDomainDecoration
* Use IRPatchConstantDecoration alone for hlsl output.
* IRMaxVertexCountDecoration
* IRInstanceDecoration
* Removed _emitHLSLAttributeSingleString and _emitHLSLAttributeSingleInt
Removed GLSLBindingAttribute and just use NumThreadsAttribute
* Added IRNumThreadsDecoration.
* Added IRNumThreadsDecoration
* Fix build problem on x86.
Improve diagnostic text based on review.
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* Start exposing a new COM-lite API
This change is mostly about exposing a new API to the Slang compiler that allows more fine-grained control over the compilation flow. The basic concepts in the new API are:
* An `IGlobalSession` is the granularity at which we load/parse the Slang stdlib, and therefore gives applications a way to amortize startup cost for the library across multiple compiles. This is a concept that might be able to go away in a future version of Slang.
* An `ISession` owns all the code that gets loaded/compiled/generated. Any `import`ed modules are shared across everything in a session (we don't re-parse/-check the code when we see another `import` for the same module). Any generic- or interface-based code in the session can be specialized using types from the same session (but not necessarily across sessions).
* An `IModule` is the unit of code loading and scoping. It doesn't expose any API in this change, but would be the right scope for looking up types or entry points by name.
* An `IProgram` is a "linked" combination of modules and entry points from which code can be generated and reflection information queried.
This change re-uses the existing reflection API types, rather than introduce a new API that duplicates that functionality. That will probably change in a future revision.
There are two major pieces of functionality added here that aren't related to the new API:
* We now have an API concept of "entry point groups" which are one or more entry points that are intended to be used together so that they need to have non-overlapping parameters. For now this is being used to handle "hit groups" and local root signatures for ray tracing, but I'm not sure this is a concept we will keep in the long run.
* We have a very special-case (client-application-specific) flag that ascribes special meaning to the `shared` keyword, so that it can be attached to global parameters to indicate that they are actually to be part of the local root signature rather than the global one for DXR.
None of the API design (including naming) here is finalized; the only reason to check in the changes at this point to avoid having a long-running branch that leads to merge pain. Clients should *not* try to depend on the new API just yet, since it is still a work in progress.
* fixup: clang warning
* fixup: try to detect clang C++11 support
* fixup
* fixup
* fixup
* fixup
* fixup: review feedback
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A literal like:
2.0h
is supposed to default to `half` precision, but there was a typo in our logic that meant that the `half` case was mistakenly checking for `l` and not `h` and so it would never trigger (because the `double` case right before it was checking for `l` first), and certainly wouldn't trigger on an `h`.
There was also a bug that a literal with `hf`:
2.0hf
would go into the path for the `f` suffix without considering the `h`.
These changes really ought to have some tests for them, but this was also just a quick issue I noticed while working on something else.
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* Prefixing source files in source/slang with slang-
* Prefix source in source/slang with slang- prefix.
* Rename core source files with slang- prefix.
* Update project files.
* Fix problems from automatic merge.
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