| Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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* Fix GetDimensions for glsl.
* Add test for Load on RWStructuredBuffer as part of GetDimension.
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* WIP: Improving CPU performance/ABI
* Optionally output code on CPU for groupThreadID and groupID.
* Added ability to set compute dispatch size on command line for render-test.
Dispatch compute tests taking into account dispatch size.
Added test for semantics are working.
* Test using GroupRange.
* Fix problem with adding \n for externa diagnostic - to do it if there isn't a \n at the end. Change the ouput order (put result before) so last value is diagnostic string.
* Made GroupRange the default exposed CPU ABI entry point style.
Removed CPU_EXECUTE test style -as tested via the now cross platform render-test
* Split out execution from setup for execution to improve perf.
* For better code coverage/testing test all styles of CPU compute entry point.
* Improve documentation for ABI changes for CPU code.
Add 'expecting' to error message from review.
* Fix small typos.
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* Try to make x86 builds on x86 platforms (not the default for the os).
* Use c style include for stdint.h cos not found on x86 linux.
* Simplified x86 issue for linux.
* Fix typo.
* Remove the need for the shared-library category.
* Disable CPU tests on linux x86.
* Fix typo.
* Named test requirement methods so overloading not confusing (around flags, and SlangPassThroughType which are both 'int')
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* Added setDownstreamCompilerPrelude
Renamed setPassThroughPath to setDownstreamCompilerPath.
Fixed tests.
Added prelude directory & code to TestToolUtil to setup default preludes for testing/command line apis.
* Fix merge problem
* Remove hacks to make prelude work by adding a search path as no longer needed with 'user prelude'.
* Split up prelude into scalar intrinsics, and types.
Use slang.h for main header.
slang-cpp-prelude.h can now just include what it needs (relative to prelude directory) and define the few remaining things/work arounds.
* Fix typo.
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* * Simplify some of test code around CPPCompiler
* Test using 'callable' with pass-through
* Small cpu doc improvements
* Improvements to Clang output parsing.
* Remove temporary file (base filename) .
* Improve handling of external errors - handle severity.
* On error dumping out to 'actual' file for runCPPCompilerCompile.
* Small fixes.
Set the source language type correctly for pass thru.
* Remove warning for test for clang backend c
* Preliminary work around making render-test compute potentiall work with CPU.
Made ShaderCompiler -> a stateless ShaderCompilerUtil.
Means we don't require a Renderer interface to do shader compilation.
* Refactor such that CPU test can take place in without Window or Renderer.
* Hack to look for prelude in source file directory.
Fix bug returning the SharedLibrary for HostCallable.
* Compute test running on CPU.
* Need the prelude currently in same directly as test.
* Hack to remove warning - that then produces an error on appveyor build.
Disable running render CPU test on non-windows.
* Improve handling of disabling CPU tests on linux.
* Added bit-cast.slang working on CPU.
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* First pass support for compiling to a loaded shared library.
* Improve documentation for cpu target.
* Removed the SLANG_COMPILE_FLAG_LOAD_SHARED_LIBRARY flag.
Use the SLANG_HOST_CALLABLE code target
Document mechanism.
* Fix typo in cpp-resource.slang
In test code if the target is 'callable' we don't need to compile (indeed there is no source file).
* Small refactor using CommandLineCPPCompiler as base class to implement VisualStudioCPPCompiler and GCCCPPCompiler.
* Improvements around CPPCompiler.
Mechanism to know products produced.
Cleaning up products after execution.
* Fix multiple definition of 'SourceType'
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* Added CPU_REFLECTION test option - that has two versions of the reflection output depending on ptr size.
* Added 'shared-library' test category. This category is disabled on CI targets that have issues.
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* Expanded prelude for some other resource types. Disable C++ output for ParameterGroup.
* WIP: Layout for CPU.
* Fixes to CPU layout.
* WIP: The uniform is output, but the variable definition is not.
* WIP: Entry point parameters to global scope in C++.
Handling of resource types (in so far as outputting)
* Some discussion of ABI and different input types.
* WIP: More C++ support around resource types.
* WIP: Split up variables into different structures on emit.
* WIP: Emitting C++ with wrapping up of 'Context'
* WIP: C++ code has access to semantic values.
Wrap in struct so can use method calls to pass shared state.
Disable legalizeResourceTypes and legalizeExistentialTypeLayout
* Fix structured buffer layout for CPU.
* Remove testing/handling of global uniforms on CPU path.
Typo fix.
Changed CPU tests to use new CPU calling convention.
* Check globals are working. Initalize context to zero globals.
* Order the global parameters for C++ ouput by their layout.
Note - that layout isn't quite working correctly because the StructuredBuffer<int> the int seems to be consuming uniform space.
* Work around for reflection not having all data needed for layout ordering for C++ code.
* Output constant buffers as pointers.
* Entry point parameters accessed through pointer to struct.
* WIP: Layout for CPU is reasonable for test case.
* Only output 'f' after float literal if type marks as a float.
* Cast construction works on C++.
* Made IntrinsicOp::ConvertConstruct to make intent clearer.
* C++ handling construction from scalar.
Handle access of a scalar with .x.
Check default initialization.
* Comment about need for split of kIROp_construct.
Release build works.
* Added support from constructVectorFromScalar to C/C++ target.
* Handling of in/out in C/C++.
* First pass documentation CPU support.
* Improvements to C++/C slang code generation documentation.
* Small doc change to include need for mechansim to specify cpp compiler path.
* Better handling of swizzling - allow swizzling a scalar into a vector.
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* WIP: Adding support for C/C++ compilation to slang API.
* Removed BackEndType in test harness -> use SlangPassThrough to identify backends
Only require stage for targets that require it.
Detection of all different backends.
* Windows/Unix create temporary filename.
* WIP: Output CPU binaries.
* Added a pass-through c/c++ test.
* Compile C++/C and store in temporary file.
* Read the binary back into memory.
* Set debug info and optimization flags for C/C++.
Make the CPPCompiler debug/optimization levels match slangs.
* Handling of include paths and math precision.
* Dumping c++/c source and exe/shared library.
* Put hex dump into own util.
* End to end pass through c compilation test.
* WIP: Simple execute test working on Linux/Unix.
* Fix typo on linux.
* WIP: To compile slang to cpp shared library. Report backend compiler errors.
* Compiles slang -> cpp and loads as shared library.
* Fix problem on c-cross-compile test because prelude is now included with <> quotes.
* Run slang generated cpp code - using hard coded data.
* Added cpp-execute-simple, and test output.
* Fix warning that broke win32 build.
* Fix compilation problem on osx.
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* WIP: Emitting Cpp
* Added HLSLType instead of using IRInst - because they don't seem to be deduped.
* Removed need for lexer to take a String.
Added mechansim to lookup intrinsic functions on C++.
* A c/c++ cross compilation test.
* WIP Cpp output using cloning and slang types.
* More work to generate mul funcs.
* WIP: Outputting some simple C++.
* Expose findOrEmitHoistableInst to IRBuilder to aid cloning,
* Simplification for checking for BasicTypes.
Test infrastructure compiles output C++ code.
* Dot and mat/vec multiplication output.
* First pass at swizzling.
* First support for binary ops.
* Builtin binary and unary functions.
* Any and all.
* WIP adding support for other functions.
Added code to generate function signature.
* Add scalar functions to slang-cpp-prelude.h
* Support for most built in operations.
* Tested first ternary.
* Checking the emitting of corner cases functions - normalize, length, any, all, normalize, reflect.
* Check asfloat etc work.
* Fmod support.
* WIP Array handling in C++.
* First stage in being able to handl arbitrary type output for CLikeSourceEmitter
* Removed Handler/Emitter split - so can implement more easily complex type naming.
* Array passing by value first pass.
* Rename Array -> FixedArray
* Outputs structs in C++.
* Emit the thread config.
* Dimension -> TypeDimension
* SpecializedOperation -> SpecializedIntrinsic
Operation -> IntrinsicOp
Use shared impl of isNominalOp
Commented use of m_uniqueModule etc.
* Add code to test slang->cpp when compiled doesn't have errors. Does so by building shared library and exporting the entry point.
* Fix linux clang/gcc compile error about override not being specified.
* Make sure c-cross-compile is run on linux targets/smoke.
* Remove c-cross-compile.slang from smoke.
* Fix running tests/cross-compile/c-cross-compile.slang on Ubuntu 16.04
* Only add -std=c++11 for C++ source.
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* Removed the need for VisualStudio specific CPPCompiler
Improved the version parsing for gcc/clang
Removed need for slang-unix-cpp-compiler-util.cpp/.h
Remove binary before compiling in the compile c tests
* Moved VisualStudio calcArgs into CPPCompilerUtil - as code is not windows specific.
* Set up compile time version for gcc and clang
* Fix compilation on OSX - use remove instead of unlink for file deletion.
* On OSX - clang uses different string format.
* Removed /bin/sh invoking as not required for OSX.
* First pass working testing with shared libraries.
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* Work in progress to be able to invoke VS from within code.
* First pass at windows version of refactor of OSProcessSpawner
* Closer to getting VS path lookup working.
* Make OSString assignable/ctor able
* Work out program files directory directly, so don't have to expand %%.
* WIP: Improve handling of process spawning.
* Add support for splitting input by line.
* * Correctly locates visual studio install
* Added functionality to invoke vs via cmd
* Add option to execute the command line.
* Handle in ProcessUtil for windows -> WinHandle.
* Rename files slang-win-visual-studio-util.cpp/.h and slang-process-util.h
* First pass at unix/linux version of ProcessUtil.
* Fix reading Visual Studio path from the registry.
* Get compiling on linux with.
* Fix vcvarsall.bat name
* Use ProcessUtil to execute external code.
* Remove OSProcessSpawner.
* Remove includes for "os.h" where no longer needed.
* Fix tabbing issue in premake5.lua
Remove test code from slang-test-main.cpp
* Fix premake4.lua tabbing issue.
* Small fixes to slang-process-util.h
Init ExecuteResult on Win execute.
* Improve comments.
* Fix bug in StringUtil::calcLines - with oddly terminated source input being able to read past end.
Make slang-generate use StringUtil over it's own impl.
* Fix off by one bug in working out Visual Studio version.
* Fix bug in calculating Visual Studio Version
* Fix compilation on linux with string parameter being passed to messageFormat.
* Remove erroneous use of kOSError codes - use Result.
* First effort to generate standard compiler options.
* Initial efforts in compiling source code in test framework for VisualStudio.
* Testing compiling c code on VisualStudio on Windows.
* Fix warning on linux.
* Fix clang on linux warning (and therefore failing) returning a StringBuilder as String.
* Disable return-std-move on clang.
* CommandLine arguments are now tagged if they are escaped or not. That it is the clients responsibility to escape command lines that cannot be automatically escaped.
* Add checks on unix/linux that command line args are all unescaped.
* WIP getting runtime GCC to work.
* First pass compiler working on unix-like targets.
* Enable c-compile.c test on 'smoke'.
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* Work in progress to be able to invoke VS from within code.
* First pass at windows version of refactor of OSProcessSpawner
* Closer to getting VS path lookup working.
* Make OSString assignable/ctor able
* Work out program files directory directly, so don't have to expand %%.
* WIP: Improve handling of process spawning.
* Add support for splitting input by line.
* * Correctly locates visual studio install
* Added functionality to invoke vs via cmd
* Add option to execute the command line.
* Handle in ProcessUtil for windows -> WinHandle.
* Rename files slang-win-visual-studio-util.cpp/.h and slang-process-util.h
* First pass at unix/linux version of ProcessUtil.
* Fix reading Visual Studio path from the registry.
* Get compiling on linux with.
* Fix vcvarsall.bat name
* Use ProcessUtil to execute external code.
* Remove OSProcessSpawner.
* Remove includes for "os.h" where no longer needed.
* Fix tabbing issue in premake5.lua
Remove test code from slang-test-main.cpp
* Fix premake4.lua tabbing issue.
* Small fixes to slang-process-util.h
Init ExecuteResult on Win execute.
* Improve comments.
* Fix bug in StringUtil::calcLines - with oddly terminated source input being able to read past end.
Make slang-generate use StringUtil over it's own impl.
* Fix off by one bug in working out Visual Studio version.
* Fix bug in calculating Visual Studio Version
* Fix compilation on linux with string parameter being passed to messageFormat.
* Remove erroneous use of kOSError codes - use Result.
* First effort to generate standard compiler options.
* Initial efforts in compiling source code in test framework for VisualStudio.
* Testing compiling c code on VisualStudio on Windows.
* Fix warning on linux.
* Fix clang on linux warning (and therefore failing) returning a StringBuilder as String.
* Disable return-std-move on clang.
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* WIP: Setting up C/Cpp source compilation targets.
* WIP: Emitting C/CPP.
* WIP: Split out SourceSink, and use it for source output on emit.
* SourceSink -> SourceStream
* * Made SourceStream use m_ prefixing of members.
* Make all methods use lower camel
* Removed methods from SourceStream interface that are not used externally (use _ prefixing)
* Improvements to documentation
* EmitContext is now effectively empty, so just use SharedEmitContext as EmitContext.
* SharedEmitContext -> EmitContext
* Methods to LowerCamel in emit.cpp
* Split out EmitContext and ExtensionUsageTracker into separate files.
* Split out EmitVisitor into slang-c-like-source-emitter files.
* EmitVisitor -> CLikeSourceEmitter
* Tidy up around CLikeSourceEmitter - simplify header.
* Small tidy up - removing repeated comments that are in header.
* Remove EmitContext paramter threading.
* Small tidy up.
Use prefixed macros for slang-c-like-source-emitter.h
* Small tidy up in slang-c-like-source-emitter.cpp
* First pass at splitting out UnmangleContext.
* MangledNameParser -> MangledLexer.
* WIP making EmitOp (EOp) enum available outside of cpp
* Generating EmitOpInfo from macro.
* Split out emit precedence handling.
Don't use kOp_ style anymore, just use an array indexed by EmitOp.
* Disable C simple test for now.
* Keep g++/clang happy with token pasting.
* Fix win32 narrowing warning.
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* Translate .Load() to imageLoad() for Vulkan
We were already emitting calls to `imageLoad()` and `imageStore` when a `RWTexture*` was used with `operator[]`:
```hlsl
RWTexture2D<float> myTex;
...
float value = myTex[xy]; // becomes an imageLoad
myTex[xy] = value; // becomes an imageStore
```
However, we were *not* correctly handling the translation of an explicit `.Load()` operation:
```hlsl
float value = myTex.Load(xy);
```
The `.Load()` operation was being translated to a GLSL `texelFetch` as it would be a for a `Texture2D`, and not to an `imageLoad()` as would make sense for a `RWTexture2D` (which becomes a GLSL `image2D`).
This fix is confined to the stdlib, and is mostly a matter of emitting either `texelFetch` or `imageLoad` as the GLSL function name depending on the "access" of the resource type. It is messy code, but straightforward.
One extra detail was that there had been logic to emit a `, 0` argument in the `texelFetch` calls in the non-read-only case, because `texelFetch` usualy requires an explicit mip-level argument and `.Load()` on a `RWTexture*` doesn't recieve an LOD parameter. This is a non-issue now that we are calling `imageLoad()` instead, because `imageLoad` doesn't need/want the extra argument.
* fixup: change test baseline based on recent GLSL output changes
* fixup: review feedback
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* Specify glsl semantic format - such that conversions are possible from hlsl sematics.
* Comment improvements. Give appropriate type in glsl for sv_tessfactor. Note that sv_tessfactor is not functional though.
* Work in progress for comparison of types.
* * Fix type comparison issues around the hash.
* Fix tests whos output changed with use of isTypeEqual
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Fixes #858
The `precise` keyword exists in both HLSL and GLSL and when applied to a variable declaration is supposed to indicate that all computations that contribute to the value of that variable should not be altered based on "fast-math" optimizations. The main examples are that separate multiply and add operations should not be turned into fused multiply-add (fma) operations, and that operations cannot ignore the possibility of infinity or not-a-number values (e.g., by assuming that `x * 0.0f` is always `0.0f`).
(Aside: it is possible that my understanding of what the semantics of `precise` are in HLSL and GLSL is imperfect so that either the GLSL variant isn't sufficient to provide the semantics of the HLSL keyword, or that the definition of "all computations that contribute" to a value isn't actually correct. We may need to revise this implementation based on subsequent learnings.)
The basic idea here is to turn the AST `precise` keyword into a `[precise]` decoration in the IR and then emit that as a `precise` keyword again in the output.
The main catch is that whereas most of our existing IR decorations apply to things like global shader parameters or `struct` members that usually stick around for the duration of compilation, `[precise]` will get slapped on local variables that will often get optimized away by our SSA pass. There are two ways a variable can get eliminated/replaced during the SSA pass:
1. A use of the variable can be replaced with an ordinary instruction that computes its value.
2. A use of the variable can be replaced with a reference to a "phi node" that will take on the appropriate value based on control flow.
These two cases already had logic to copy a "name hint" decoration from the variable over to an instruction that will replace it, and I simply extended them to also propagate over a `[precise]` decoration.
The test case added with this change intentionally constructs a case where `[precise]` needs to be propagated over to an SSA "phi node" in order to generate correct output code.
The other gotcha is that we can emit variable declarations in various places in `emit.cpp`, and all of these needed to handle `[precise]`. Not only do we have actually local variables (`IRVar`), but we also have SSA phi nodes (`IRParam`), and then there are cases where an intermediate computation (an ordinary instruction) should be `[precise]` and thus we need to emit it as a temporary (not folding it into its use sites) and make sure that the temporary itself gets the `precise` keyword.
I have manually confirmed that in the output SPIR-V, this change results in the `NoContraction` SPIR-V decoration being added to the relevant operations, and the output DXBC contains a multiply and an add in place of a multiply-add. The output DXIL does not show any obvious changes due to `precise`, although the exact order and operands of the math instructions emitted does differ when `precise` is added/removed. In all cases the output is equivalent to hand-written HLSL/GLSL with a `precise`-qualified local variable.
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* Add better control over image formats for GLSL/SPIR-V targets
Currently Slang emits GLSL code assuming all R/W images need to have explicit formats, and thus we try to infer a format from the element type of the image.
E.g., given a `RWTexture2D<half4>` we might infer that a qualifier of `layout(rgba16f)` should be used.
This strategy has two notable shortcomings:
* Sometimes the user will want a format that doesn't match an existing HLSL type. E.g., if they want the equivalent of `layout(r11f_g11f_b10f)`, then what should they put in their `RWTexture2D<...>` to make the inference do what they need?
* Sometimes the user knows that they don't need to specify a format *at all*, because using the `GL_EXT_shader_image_load_formatted` extension, they can still perform non-atomic load/store on images with no format specified in the SPIR-V.
This change adds two features directed at these challenges.
First, we add an explicit `[format(...)]` attribute that can be used to specify an explicit image format, including ones that don't match any HLSL type.
An example of using this new attribute is:
```hlsl
[format("r11f_g11f_b10f")]
RWTexture2D<float3> myImage;
```
For simplicity in initial bring-up, the new formats all use the same naming as formats in GLSL (this should make it easy for a programmer who knows what they expect to get in the GLSL output). We can change the naming convention for formats at a later time, so long as we keep these existing names in as a compatibility feature.
Note that this is *not* given a `vk::` prefix since the attribute should signal the programmer's intent to provide an image with that format on *all* targets (although only some targets might act on that information).
Also note that the attribute takes a string (`[format("rgba8")`) instead of a bare identifier (`[format(rgba8)]`) because this is consistent with the existing convention for attributes in HLSL.
When `[format(...)]` is left off, the default compiler behavior will still be to infer a format, but this behavior can be overidden for a single image using an explicit format of `"unknown"`:
```hlsl
[format("unknown")]
RWTexture2D<float4> mysteryMachine;
```
The second new feature is that if a user knows they are coding for a GPU that supports the `"unknown"` format in all non-atomic cases, then they can opt into making that the default for images without an explicit `[format(...)]`, using the new `-default-image-format-unknown` command-line option for `slangc`.
The new test case included with this change confirms that we correctly see the explicit formats in the output GLSL and *no* formats for images without explicit `[format(...)]` when using the new command-line option. The test stresses images declared at global scope, in parameter blocks, and in entry-point parameter lists, to try and make sure that all the relevant IR passes in the compiler preserve the format information.
* fixup: missing file
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Before type legalization we might have code like: (using pseudo-Slang-IR):
struct P { ... Texture2D<float>[] t; }
global_param p : ParameterBlock<P>;
...
// p.t[someIndex].Load(...);
//
let ptrToArrayOfTextures = getFieldPtr(p, "t") : Ptr<Texture2D<float>[]>;
let ptrToTexture = getElementPtr(ptrToArrayOfTextures, someIndex) : Ptr<Texture2D<float>>;
let texture = load(ptrToTexture) : Texture2D<float>;
let result = call(loadFunc, texture, ...) : float;
Legalization needs to move the `t` array there out of the `p` parameter block, so the global declarations become something like:
struct P_Ordinary { ... }; // no more "t" field
global_param p_ordinary : ParameterBlock<p_ordinary);
global_param p_t : Texture2D<float>[];
In terms of the code to access `p.t[someIndex]` the problem is that `p_t` has one less level of indirection than `p.t` had. We solve this in the type legalization pass using "pseudo-types" and "pseudo-values," where one of the cases is `implicitIndirect` which holds a value of type `T`, but indicates that it should act like a value of type `T*`.
We then use some basic rules for dealing with `implicitIndirect` values, such as:
load(implicitDeref(x)) : T => x : T
getFieldPtr(implicitDeref(s), f) => implicitDeref(getField(s, f))
getElementPtr(implicitDeref(a), i) => implicitDeref(getElement(a, i))
The bug here was that for the `getFieldPtr` and `getElementPtr` cases, we weren't computing the type of the `getField` or `getElement` instruction correctly. We were copying the type from the `getFieldPtr` or `getElementPtr` operation over directly, but those will be *pointer* types and we need the type of whatever they point to.
Once the types are fixed, we can properly generate legalized IR for `p.t[someIndex].Load(...) that looks like:
let arrayOfTextures = p_t : Texture2D<float>[];
let texture = getElement(arrayOfTextures, someIndex) : Texture2D<float>;
let result = call(loadFunc, texture, ...) : float;
The old was giving the `texture` intermediate a type of `Ptr<Texure2D<float>>`. That didn't actually trip up too many things, because we mostly just went on to emit code from something with slightly incorrect types for intermediates that never show up in the generated HLSL/GLSL.
Where this caused a problem is for some of the intrinsic function definitions for the GLSL/Vulkan back-end, because those do things that inspect operand types. In particular the `$z` opcode in our intrinsic function strings triggers logic that looks at a texture operand, and uses its type to try to find the appropriate swizzle to get from a 4-component vector to the appropriate type for the operation (e.g., for a load from a `Texture2D<float>` we need to swizzle with `.x` to get a single scalar out of the matching GLSL texture fetch operation).
The main fix in this change is thus to make `getElementPtr` and `getFieldPtr` legalization properly account for the fact that when switching to `getElement` or `getField` we need a result type that is the "pointee" of the original result.
There was already logic to extract the pointed-to type from a pointer in `ir-specialize.cpp`, so I extracted that to a re-usable function in the IR as `tryGetPointedToType` (returns null if the type isn't actually a pointer).
This logic needed to be extended for type legalization, to deal with the various "pseudo-type" cases.
There is another fix in this change which is marking the `NonUniformResourceIndex` function as `[__readNone]`, which enables it to be more aggressively folded into use sites. Without that fix, we risk emitting code like:
```glsl
int tmp = nonUniformEXT(someIndex);
vec4 result = texelFetch(arrayOfTextures[tmp], ...);
```
The problem with that code is that (at least by my reading of the spec), assigning to the variable `tmp` that isn't declared with the `nonUniformEXT` qualifier effectively loses that qualifier, and drivers are free to assume that `tmp` is uniform when used to index into `arrayOfTextures`.
Marking the `NonUniformResourceIndex` function as `[__readNone]` indicates that it has no side effects, which should mean that our emit logic no longer needs to emit it was its own line of code to be safe.
The effects of this change are confirmed by both the new test case added, and the existing `non-uniform-indexing` test.
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* Output readonly on buffers for glsl if resource is readonly.
Didn't add to emitGLSLParameterGroup because the cases there seem to to either be implicitly read only, or allow write.
* * Improve comments around use of 'readonly' on glsl output
* Use readonly with shaderRecord
* Add comment pointing out shader record can be rw on vk, so might require changes in the future.
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* * Make vector comparisons out correct functions on glsl
* Test for vector comparisons
* Typo fixes
* Glsl vector comparisons use functions.
* Added a coercion test.
* Do checking for the SV_DispatchThreadId type to see if it appears valid.
* Fix typo
* Make glsl do type conversion for SV_DispatchThreadID parameter.
* Fix glsl to match func-resource-param-array with changes to how SV_DispatchThreadID changes.
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This allows generic types to be used in entry point parameters.
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A user found that the `Texture2D<float2>.Load(...)` operation was not being compiled to GLSL properly, such that it returned a `vec4` instead of the expected `vec2`.
The GLSL texture-related functions always return (and take) 4-component vectors, and we already have infrastructure in `emit.cpp` for recognizing a `$z` operator in the GLSL intrinsic definition to stand in for an appropriate swizzle based on teh number of components in the texture result type.
This change just adds that `$z` operator to the GLSL code for several more texture operations (including `Load()`) that are defined on a `Texture*<T>` and that return `T`.
This change doesn't try to add additional GLSL translations for texture-related operations (e.g., additional variations like `SampleCmp` that we have defined in the stdlib but not given GLSL translations for). That work still needs to be done.
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The underlying problem here was that legalization of entry point parameters for GLSL eliminates all the parameters to `main()`, but we still left a dangling reference to one of those parameters if it was a geometry shader output stream. The un-parented parameter would lead to an infinite loop in a later IR step, because it would never be reached by the transformation, and thus could never change its status to the one for "visited" instructions.
The fix here is to simply replace any refernces to the GS input stream parameter with an `undefined` instruction in the IR, and then rely on the fact that the downstream GLSL emit logic wouldn't actually reference that value anyway (hence why the danlging reference wasn't originally an issue).
I included a basic cross-compilation test case for geometry shaders to try to avoid subsequent regressions like this (Vulkan GS support is one of the most commonly recurring regressions we've had).
The comment I put into the IR legalization logic makes it clear that the strategy used there isn't 100% rock-solid anyway (it only works in all the `EmitVertex()` calls come from the shader entry point function, and not subroutines. Adding a better (more robust) translation strategy for geometry shaders would be a nice bit of future work.
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fixes #602
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* Added support for converting SlangResult to string in PlatformUtil.
* * Added reportExternalCompilerError
* Made external compilers use this
* Made DiagnosticSink accept UnownedStringSlice
* Made emitXXX compiler functions return SlangError
* Use smart pointers to handle life of Com interfaces
* * Make SlangResult compatible with HRESULT for some common cases.
* Make PlatformUtil::appendResult return SlangResult
* Compile check SLANG_RESULT.
* Add tests for checking diagnostics from external compilers.
* * Make external compiler tests only run on windows for now.
* Added 'windows' and 'unix' categories
* Added categories based on what backends are available. Will make more tests run on linux and handle case where dxcompiler is not available on appveyor.
* * Added spSessionCheckPassThroughSupport
* Use to determine whats available for categories for tests
* Add support for outputting source filename/s when using pass through.
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Previously the IR codegen logic was treating function-scope `static const` variables just like `static` variables, which results in them generating less efficient output HLSL/GLSL.
This change special-cases function-local `static const` variables with logic that mirrors how we handle global-scope `static const` variables.
The approach in this change attempts to find a simpler solution to deal with `static const` variables inside of generic functions than what is currently done for `static` variables in generic functions, but I haven't tested whether that works in practice, so I didn't apply the same approach to the plain `static` case. That would make a good follow-on change.
I've included a single test case to demonstrate that with this fix the Slang compiler generates output DXBC that uses an indexable "immediate" constant buffer, whereas without the fix it generates an array in local memory (slow).
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* Remove AppContext. Use StdChannels to hold writers, and TestToolUtil to hold test tool specific functionality.
* StdChannels -> StdWriters
* getStdOut -> getOut, getStdError -> getError
* Renamed main.cpp files of tools to try and stop visual studio getting confused between files - such that clicking on an error takes editor to the right location.
* Work in progress on being able to serialize debug information.
* * Added MemoryStream
* First pass converting to IRSerialData
* Able to read and write IRSerialData with debug data
* Start at reconstruting IR serialized data.
* First pass of generation debug SourceLocs from debug data. Works for test set for line nos.
* Bug fixes.
Moved testing of serialization into IRSerialUtil
* Work around problem with irModule = generateIRForTranslationUnit(translationUnit); two times in a row produces different output(!). Fix by just creating once.
* Remove problem with use of ternary op in slang.cpp on gcc/clang.
* Added -verify-debug-serial-ir option that makes IR modules go through full serialization with debug information and verification.
* Add a test that does serial debug verification that is run by default on linux.
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* Fix output comparison for compute tests
There was some vestigial logic there that was first doing a string-based comparison of actual/expected output, and then falling back to a path that parsed the expected output as a float, then converted that to an integer, then printed that integer in hex, and did the comparison with the result of that conversion.
I'm not even clear on what that code was trying to accomplish, but its main effect was allowing a test failure to slide by unnoticed becaues somehow an all-zeroes actual output file was matching an expected output file with no zeros. My understanding is that it went something like this:
* The first line of expected output was `A` (as in hexidecimal for the decimal integer `10`), and the first line of actual output was `0`.
* The `StringToFloat` function was failing on the input string `"A"` and returned `0.0` to indicate failure (rather than reporting any kind of error)
* We then converted the `0.0` to integer `0` and converted it to a base-16 string `"0"`
* The comparison to the actual output passed, and then a careless early exit in the comparison loop meant that a full test would pass as soon as one line of output passed according to this "second change" logic.
This change removes the broken code in the test runner since nothing was relying on it, other than the one broken test case we wanted to fix anyway.
* Fix the declarations of byte-address buffer methods for Vulkan
The HLSL `ByteAddressBuffer` and `RWByteAddressBuffer` types have methods `Load` and `Store` that take *byte* offsets from the start of the buffer, but we translate them into GLSL that uses `uint[]` array, so that indexing into that array will be off by a factor of four.
Somehow the code for mutable byte address buffers was written to add 4, 8, and 12 bytes to the base offset of a vector to get to its subsequent components, but I never thought about the implications this would have for the base address itself.
This change includes the following fixes:
* Any place in the translation of a byte-address `Load` or `Store` method that was using the address/offset value has been changed to use `$1 / 4` instead of `$1`.
* The offsets of 4, 8, and 12 have been changed to 1, 2, and 3 since they are now being added to an *index* instead of a byte offset
* The `GetDimensions` methods have introduced a factor of `* 4` to account for the fact that they need to return a byte size and not a count of elements.
With this change the existing `byte-address-buffer` test now produces the desired output under Vulkan.
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* Specialize away resource-type function parameters
Work on #397.
Introduction
------------
Suppose a user writes a function that takes a resource type as a parameter:
```hlsl
float4 getThing(RWStructuredBuffer<float4> buffer, int index)
{
return buffer[index];
}
```
This function creates challenges when generating code for GLSL-based targets, because a global shader parameter of type `RWStructuredBuffer`:
```hlsl
RWStructuredBuffer<float4> gBuffer;
```
translates to a global GLSL `buffer` declaration:
```hlsl
buffer _S0
{
float4 _data[];
} gBuffer;
```
There is no equivalent to that `buffer` declaration that can be used in function parameter position, and it is illegal in GLSL to pass `gBuffer` into a function.
(Aside: yes, we could in principle translate a function parameter like `RWStructuredBuffer<float4> buffer` to `float4 buffer[]`, but that will not in turn generalize to arrays of structured buffers; it is a dead-end strategy)
The solution employed by many shader compilers is to "inline everything" to eliminate the need for parameters of resource types, and then rely on dataflow optimization to eliminate locals of resource types. This strategy can of course lead to an increase in code size, and it also means that call stacks are lost when doing step-through debugging. Another serious issue is that an "early `return`" from a function can turn into the equivalent of a multi-level `break` when inlined, and not all of our targets support multi-level `break`.
The solution implemented in this change works around some, but not all, of the problems with full inlining.
The approach here generates specialized versions of a function like `getThing`, adapted to the actual arguments provided at different call sites.
Thus if we have code like:
```hlsl
RWStructuredBuffer<float4> gA;
RWStructuredBuffer<float4> gB[10];
...
getThing(gA, x);
getThing(gA, y);
getThing(gB[someVal], z);
```
we will generate two specializations of `getThing`: one specialized for the `buffer` parameter being `gA` and the other for `gB`:
```hlsl
float4 getThing_gA(int index) { return gA[index]; }
float4 getThing_gB(int _val, int index) { return gB[_val][index]; }
```
and the call sites will change to match:
```hlsl
getThing_gA(x);
getThing_gA(y);
getThing_gB(someVal, z);
```
Note how in the case where the argument being passed in was obtained by indexing into an array of resources, the callee is specialized to the identity of the global shader parameter (`gB`), and now accepts a new parameter to indicate the array index into it.
While this description motivates the change based on GLSL output, the same basic issue can arise for other targets.
For example, while current HLSL has added the `ConstantBuffer<T>` type, it is not supported on older targets, and it turns out that even dxc does not allow functions to have `ConstantBuffer<T>` parameters.
Longer-term, we will likely need to do even more aggressive specialization both in order to generate SPIR-V output directly, and also to deal with function that have return values or `out` parameters of resource types.
Implementation
--------------
The meat of the change is in `ir-specialize-resources.{h,cpp}`, where we have a pass that looks at all call sites (`IRCall` instructions) in the program, and attempts to replace them with calls to specialized functions, where the specializations are generated on-demand.
The code in this pass is heavily commented, so hopefully it serves to explain itself all right.
After specialization is complete, we may still have functions like the original `getThing` that will produce invalid code when emitted as GLSL, so we need a way to make sure they don't appear in the output.
To date we've had some very ad hoc approaches for ignoring IR constructs that we don't want to affect emitted code, but this change goes ahead and adds a more real dead code elimination (DCE) pass in `ir-dce.{h,cpp}`.
This pass follows a straightforward approach of tagging instructions that are "live" and then propagating liveness through the whole program, before making a single pass to delete anything that isn't live.
When I first added the DCE pass it eliminated *everything* because there were no "roots" for liveness.
I solved this for now by adding a new decoration, `IREntryPointDecoration`, to mark shader entry points in the IR which should always be live (as should anything they depend on).
A secondary problem that arose was that for GLSL ray tracing shaders it is possible for the incoming/outgoing payload or attributes parameters to be unused, but eliminating them as dead would change the signature of a shader an potential break the rules for how ray tracing programs communicate.
I added a very simple `IRDependsOnDecoration` that allows one IR instruction to keep another alive *as if* it used it, without actually using it.
There's also a fixup in the IR dumping logic where I was forgetting to store anything in the mapping from instruction to their names, so that the name of an instruction was getting incremented each time it was referenced.
Testing
-------
There are three different tests added as part of this change:
* The `compute/func-resource-param` test covers the basic `RWStructuredBuffer` case above, which we expect to work fine for D3D11/12, but fail for Vulkan without specialization.
* The `cross-compile/func-resource-param-array` test covers the case where we don't just have one resource, but an array of them. This is not an end-to-end compute test primarily because our `render-test` application doesn't yet handle arrays of resources correctly in its binding logic.
* The `compute/func-cbuffer-param` test covers the case of a function with a `ConstantBuffer<T>` parameter, which requires specialization to become valid for any of our targets.
* fixup: warnings/errors from other compilers
* fixup: typos and cleanup
* fixup: typos
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Before this change, global shader parameters were represented in the IR as just being ordinary global variables.
The only indication that a particular global represented a parameter was when it got a layotu attached to it (as part of back-end processing), and we've had a number of bugs related to layouts being dropped so that what should have been a shader parameter turned into an ordinary global variable in the output.
This change is more strongly motivated by the fact that making shader parameters look like globals means that we cannot easily reason about their value when doing IR transformations.
If we see two `load`s from the same global variable can we assume they yield the same value?
In the general case we cannot, and this means that any transformation that wants to rely on the fact that an input `Texture2D` shader parameter can't actually change over the life of the program needs to do extra work.
The fix here is to introduce a new kind of IR instruction that represents a global shader parameter directly (not a pointer to it as a global would), at which point there isn't even such a notion as a "load" from the parameter, since it represents the value directly.
In several cases logic that used to apply to global variables in case they were shader parameters (by looking for a layout) is now moved to apply to these global parameters.
The biggest source of issues in this change was that switching from pointers to plain values to represent these shader parameters stresses different cases in type legalization. I also had to deal with the case of legalization for GLSL where we actually *do* need global shader parameters that are writable (since varying output goes in the global scope), but in that case I borrowed the use of pointer-like `Out<...>` and `InOut<...>` types to represent that intent, which we were already using for function parameters representing outputs.
A few tests started failing because the changes lead to a slightly different order of code emission, which in some HLSL tests resulted in a function parameter named `s` getting emitted before a global parameter named `s`, leading to the latter getting the name `s_1` instead of `s_0`.
A few SPIR-V tests started failing because the new approach means that we no longer end up performing a load from all varying input parameters at the start of `main` and instead reference the varying inputs directly. The resulting code is more idomatic, but it differed from the baselines for those tests.
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* Change how buffers are emitted
This is a change with a lot of pieces, which can't always be separated out cleanly. I'm going to walk through them in what I hope is a logical order.
The main goal of this change was to allow arrays of structured buffers to translate to Vulkan. Consider two declarations of structured buffers in HLSL/Slang:
```hlsl
StructuredBuffer<X> single;
StructuredBuffer<Y> multiple[10];
```
The current translation logic was handling `single` by translating it into an *unnamed* GLSL `buffer` block like:
```glsl
layout(std430)
buffer _S1
{
X single[];
};
```
That syntax allows an expression like `single[i]` in Slang to be translated simply as `single[i]` in GLSL.
But that naive translating doesn't work for `multiple`, since we need to declare a array of blocks in GLSL, which requires giving the whole thing a name:
```glsl
layout(std430)
buffer _S2
{
Y _data[];
} multiple[10];
```
Now a reference to `multiple[i][j]` in Slang needs to become `multiple[i]._data[j]` in GLSL.
To avoid having way too many special cases around single structured buffers vs. arrays, it makes sense to allows emit things in the latter form, so that we instead lower `single` as:
```glsl
layout(std430)
buffer _S1
{
X _data[];
} single;
```
So that now a reference to `single[i]` becomes `single._data[i]` in GLSL.
Most of that can be handled in the standard library translation of the structured buffer indexing operations.
The only wrinkle there is that there were some *old* special-case instructions in the IR intended to handle buffer load/store operations (these were added back when I was trying to keep the "VM" path working). These aren't really needed to have structured-buffer operations work; they can be handled as ordinary functions as far as the stdlib is concerned. I removed the old instructions.
Along the way, it became clear that a few other cases follow the same pattern. Byte-addressed buffers are an obvious case. We were lowering HLSL/Slang:
```hlsl
ByteAddressBuffer b;
...
uint x = b.Load(0);
```
to GLSL like:
```glsl
layout(std430)
buffer _S1
{
uint b[];
};
...
uint x = b[0];
```
That logic would fail for arrays the same way that the structured buffer case was failing. The fix is the same: use named `buffer` blocks and then introduce an explicit `_data` field:
```glsl
layout(std430)
buffer _S1
{
uint _data[];
} b;
...
uint x = b._data[0];
```
Just like with structured buffers, all of the VK translation for operations on byte-addressed buffers can be implemented directly in teh stdlib, so once the emit logic was changed it was just a matter of adding `._data` to a bunch of VK tranlsations.
It turns out that arrays of constant buffers have more or less the same problem, and furthermore we have some problems with any code that directly uses the modern HLSL `ConstantBuffer<T>` type.
Note: the emit logic around constant buffers sometimes refers to "parameter groups" because that is being used in the compiler as a catch-all term for constant buffers, texture buffers, and parameter blocks.
The existing code was going out of its way to reproduce the way that constant buffer declarations are implicitly referenced in HLSL:
```hlsl
cbuffer C { float f; }
...
float tmp = f; // No reference to `C` here
```
This can be seen in the emit logic with the `isDerefBaseImplicit` function, which is used to take the internal IR representation for a reference to `f` (which is closer to the expression `(*C).f` or `C->f`) and leave off any reference to `C` so that we emit just `f`.
That kind of logic just flat out doesn't work in some important cases. Arrays of constant buffers are a clear one:
```hlsl
ConstantBuffer<X> cbArray[3];
...
X x = cbArray[0];
```
There is no way to translate that to an ordinary `cbuffer` declaration at all. The same problem can be created without arrays, though:
```hlsl
ConstantBuffer<X> singleCB;
...
X x = singleCB;
```
The current strategy for translating constant buffers was translating `singleCB` into a `cbuffer` declaration that reproduced the fields of `X` as its members, which just wouldn't work:
```hlsl
cbuffer singleCB
{
float f; // field of `X`
}
...
X x = singleCB; // ERROR: there is nothing named `singleCB` in this HLSL
```
The new strategy is more consistent. We still generate a `cbuffer` declaration for a single constant buffer, but we always give it a single field of the chosen element type:
```hlsl
cbuffer singleCB
{
X singleCB;
}
...
X x = singleCB; // this works fine!
```
And in the array case we generate code that uses the explicit `ConstantBuffer<T>` type:
```hlsl
ConstantBuffer<X> cbArray[3];
...
X x = cbArray[0];
```
The GLSL output is more complicated because unlike with HLSL there is no implicit conversion from a uniform block to its element type (there is no notion of an element type). The array case thus needs a `_data` field similar to what we do for structured buffers:
```glsl
layout(std140)
uniform _S3
{
X _data;
} cbArray[3];
...
X x = cbArray[0]._data;
```
And then the non-array case needs to have a similar `_data` field for consistency:
```glsl
layout(std140)
uniform _S1
{
X _data;
} singleCB;
...
X x = singleCB._data;
```
This is handled by inserting the necessary reference to `_data` whenever we dereference a constant buffer, either as part of a load instruction (loading from the whole CB as a pointer), or an `IRFieldAddress` instruction which forms a pointer into the CB (e.g., `&(singleCB->f)` becomes `singleCB._data.f`).
The current emit logic handles `ParameterBlock<X>` differently from `ConstantBuffer<X>`, but really only to allow parameter blocks to be explicitly named in the output, while constant buffers were left implicit by default. Thus the only difference was a legacy one (from back when trying to exactly reproduce the HLSL text we got as input was considered an important goal), and the new approach to emitting constant buffers would get rid of it.
I removed the separate logic for emitting `ParameterBlock<X>` and just let the handling for constant buffers deal with it.
Note that any resource types inside of a `ParameterBlock<X>` would have been moved out as part of legalization, so that a parameter block is 100% equivalent to a constant buffer when it comes time to emit code.
Unsurprisingly, changing the way we generate HLSL and GLSL output for all these buffer types meant that any tests that were directly comparing the output of `slangc` against `fxc`, `dxc`, or `glslang` broke.
The basic approach to fixing the breakage in GLSL tests was to update the GLSL baseline to reflect the new output startegy. In some cases I used macros to name the various `_S<digits>` temporaries so that future renaming will hopefully be easier (it would be great if we auto-generated temporary names with a bit more context). There was one GLSL test (`tests/bugs/vk-structured-buffer-binding`) that was using raw GLSL expected output, and this was changed to use a GLSL baseline to generate SPIR-V for comparison.
For HLSL tests we were sometimes running the same input file through `slangc` and `fxc`/`dxc`, and in these cases I macro-ized the various `cbuffer` declarations to generate different declarations depending on the compiler.
I completely dropped the tests coming from the D3D SDK because they aren't providing much coverage, and updating them would change them so far from the original code that the purported benefit (using a body of existing shaders) would be lost.
I also dropped the explicit matrix layout qualifiers in the `matrix-layout` test because the new output strategy breaks those for GLSL (you can't put matrix layout qualifiers on `struct` fields, and now the body of every constant buffer is inside a `struct`). This isn't as big of a loss as it seems, because our handling of those qualifiers wasn't really right to begin with. Slang users should only be setting the matrix layout mode globally (and we should probably switch to error out on the explicit qualifiers for now).
The other thing that got dropped is tests involving `packoffset` modifiers.
Slang already warns that it doesn't support these, and the way they were used in the test cases is actually misleading. For the binding/layout-related tests, the goal was to show that Slang reproduces the same layout as fxc, in which case explicitly enforcing a layout via `packoffset` seems like cheating (are we sure we enforced the layout fxc would have produced?). The real reason was that Slang used to emit explicit `packoffset` on *every* field of a `cbuffer` it would output, because of an `fxc` bug where you couldn't use `register` on textures/samplers declared inside a `cbuffer` unless *every* field in the `cbuffer` used a `register` or `packoffset` modifier. Slang hasn't required that behavior in a while because it now splits textures and samplers, and the one test case where we needed `packoffset` to work around the `fxc` bug in the baseline HLSL has been macro-ified even more to work around the bug.
The amount of churn in the test cases is unfortunate, but it continues to point at the weakness of any testing strategy that checks for exact equivalent between Slang's output and that of other compilers. We need to keep working to replace these tests with better alternatives.
In `check.cpp` there is logic to perform implicit dereferencing, so that if you write `obj.f` where `obj` is a `ConstantBuffer<X>` (or some other "pointer-like" type) and `f` is a field in `X`, then this effectively translates as `(*obj).f`. That is, we dereference the value of type `ConstantBuffer<X>` to get a value of type `X`, and then refer to the field of the `X` value.
There was a problem where the logic to insert that kind of implicit dereference operation was using a reference (`auto& type = ...`) for the type of the expression being dereferenced, and then clobbering it. This would mean that an expression of type `ConstantBuffer<X>` would have its type overwritten to be just `X` and then codegen would break later on.
I'm not sure how we haven't run into that before.
The `array-of-buffers` test case was added to confirm that we now support arrays of constant, structured, and byte-address buffers for both DXIL and SPIR-V output.
Okay, so that was a lot of stuff, but hopefully it is clear how this all works to make the output of the compiler more consistent and explicit, while also supporting the required new functionality.
* fixup: review feedback
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Fixes #730
The most basic of these already had translations added, and the Slang approach to cross-compilation made adding the new ones almost trivial. I also took the time to confirm that using "operator comma" for the sequencing (since the single HLSL function call needs to expand to a sequence of GLSL function calls) works fine with glslang.
I added a test case to confirm that all of these operations can compile down to SPIR-V.
I am not personally confident that these translations are perfect, but they are based on what was [linked](https://anteru.net/blog/2016/mapping-between-hlsl-and-glsl/index.html) from #730. The one difference is where that blog post was listing `memoryBarrierImage, memoryBarrierImage` I assumed they meant `memoryBarrierImage, memoryBarrierBuffer`.
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* First pass support for early depth stencil.
* Add a simple test to check if output has attributes.
* Use cross compilation to test [earlydepthstencil] on glsl.
* If target is dxil, use dxc to test against.
Add hlsl to test earlydepthstencil against.
* * Added spSessionHasCompileTargetSupport
* Made slang-test use spSessionHasCompileTargetSupport to ignore tests that cannot run
|
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These calls translate to uses of the `nonuniformEXT` qualifier introduced by the `GL_EXT_nonuniform_qualifier` extension.
The standard library changes in this case are straightforward uses of existing compiler mechanisms. The test case is one of the less pleasant ones where we compare SPIR-V output against SPIR-V generated from a hand-coded GLSL baseline. This is a case where a simpler test type that just checks for specific textual matches in the output (and not whole files) would be better, but that is out of scope for this change.
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|
The basic change is simple: remove support for all code generation paths other than the IR.
There is a lot of vestigial code left, but the main logic in `ast-legalize.*` is gone.
Doing this breaks a *lot* of tests, for various reasons:
- We can no longer guarantee exactly matching DXBC or SPIR-V output after things pass through out IR
- Many builtins don't have matching versions defined for GLSL output via IR (even when they had versions defined via the earlier approach that worked with the AST)
- A lot of code creates intermediate values of opaque types in the IR, which turn into opaque-type temporaries that aren't allowed (this breaks many GLSL tests, but also some HLSL)
I implemented some small fixes for issues that I could get working in the time I had, but most of the above are larger than made sense to fix in this commit.
For now I'm disabling the tests that cause problems, but we will need to make a concerted effort to get things working on this new substrate if we are going to make good on our goals.
|
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* 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
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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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The basic syntax is:
$for(i in Range(0,99))
{
/* stuff goes here */
}
Note that the exact form is very restrictive. All that you are allowed to change is `i`, `0`, `99` or `/* stuff goes here */`.
As a tiny bit of syntax sugar, the following should work:
$for(i in Range(99))
{
/* stuff goes here */
}
Note that the range given is half-open (C++ iterator `[begin,end)` style).
Both the beginning and end of the range must be compile-time constant expressions that Slang knows how to constant-fold.
The implementation will basically generate code for `/* stuff goes here */` N times, once for each value in the half-open range.
Each time, the variable `i` will be replaced with a different compile-time-constant expression.
While I was working on a test case for this, I also found that our build of glslang had an issue with resource limits, so I fixed that.
Clients will need to build a new glslang to use the fix.
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`gl_Layer` as a fragment input requires at least version 4.30 of GLSL, so we try to track that information when we see the name used.
Note that this does *not* override a user-specified `#version` line.
This required re-ordering when lowering happens relative to emitting the `#version` directive, since this code works by actually modifying the chosen profile for the entry point.
Yes, that is kind of gross and we should do something cleaner in the long term.
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Fixes #104
- Map HLSL `nointerpolation` to GLSL `flat`
- When lowering a `struct` type varying input/output, look for interpolation modifiers along the "chain" from the leaf field up to the original shader input variable (and take the first one found)
- Not sure if this is strictly needed, but it seems like a reasonable policy
- Add `flat` to varying input of integer type, with no other interpolation modifier
- Note: I do *not* do anything to ignore a manually imposed interpolation modifier that might be incorrect
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