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* Remove support for the -no-checking flag (#392)Tim Foley2018-02-02
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | * Remove support for the -no-checking flag Fixes #381 Fixes #383 Work on #382 - No longer expose flag through API (`SLANG_COMPILE_FLAG_NO_CHECKING`) and command-line (`-no-checking`) options - Remove all logic in `check.cpp` that was withholding diagnostics (including errors) when the no-checking mode was enabled - Remove `HiddenImplicitCastExpr`, which was only created to support no-checking mode (it represented an implicit cast that our checking through was needed, but couldn't emit because it might be wrong) - Remove logic for storing function bodies as raw token lists when checking is turned off. I'm leaving in the `UnparsedStmt` AST node in case we ever need/want to lazily parse and check function bodies down the line. - Remove a few of the code-generation paths we had to contend with, but keep the comment about them in place. - Remove GLSL-based tests that can't meaningfully work with the new approach. - Fix other tests that used a GLSL baseline so that their GLSL compiles with `-pass-through glslang` instead of invoking `slang` with the `-no-checking` flag. - Remove tests that were explicitly added to test the "rewriter + IR" path, since that is no longer supported. There is more cleanup that can be done here, now that we know that AST-based rewrite and IR will never co-exist, but it is probably easier to deal with that as part of removing the AST-based rewrite path. We've lost some test coverage here, but actually not too much if we consider that we are dropping GLSL input anyway. * Fixup: test runner was mis-counting ignored tests * Fixup: turn on dumping on test failure under Travis * Fixup: enable extensions in Linux build of glslang
* Work on getting rewriter + IR playing nice together. (#314)Tim Foley2017-12-18
* Work on getting rewriter + IR playing nice together. There are a few different changes here, with the goal of improving the interaction between the "rewriter" code generation approach and the new IR and type legalization code. The main changes are: - Add a new pass that occurs before the AST legalization pass, which walks the (used) AST declarations and tries to discover (1) which declarations need to be specialized/lowered via the IR, and (2) which declarations need to be included in the resulting AST module. - AST-based legalization now uses the generated list when in "rewriter" mode, so that we should be working around issues that users were seeing with types not getting emitted. - TODO: we still need an equivalent fixup in the case of non-"rewriter" emit, so this may still be a problem for `.slang` files. - IR type legalization now precedes AST legalization, so that we can record information on how any IR global values got legalized (e.g., if they got split). Then AST legalization includes logic to reconstruct suitable tuple expressions to reference a split global. - When emitting using IR + AST, we walk all of the declarations that we decided belonged to the IR, but which were subsequently referenced in the AST, to make sure they get output (this would include `struct` types that are declared in a file compiled via IR, but never used in IR-based code). The rewriter+IR use case still doesn't *quite* work, but the logic for walking the AST in a pre-pass ends up being needed/useful to fix some pure rewriter bugs, so I'm getting this checked in sooner rather than later. * Fixup: walk arguments to generic declaration reference The gotcha here is that the code for walking the AST would walk a line of code like: SomeType a; and know to traverse the declaration of `SomeType`, but if it saw a line of code like: ParameterBlock<SomeType> b; it would traverse the declaration of `ParameterBlock`, but fail to visit that of `SomeType`.