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path: root/tools/render-test/shader-input-layout.cpp
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* Fixed issue around 4xFloat16 texture on CUDA (#1874)jsmall-nvidia2021-06-06
| | | | | * #include an absolute path didn't work - because paths were taken to always be relative. * Fixes around Float16. Incorrect calculation of 'elementSize'.
* Rework shader object specialization control interface. (#1857)Yong He2021-05-25
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* Allow overriding specialization args via `IShaderObject`. (#1854)Yong He2021-05-25
| | | | | | | * Allow overriding specialization args via `IShaderObject`. * Fixes. Co-authored-by: T. Foley <tfoleyNV@users.noreply.github.com>
* Improvements in -X support (#1852)jsmall-nvidia2021-05-22
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | * #include an absolute path didn't work - because paths were taken to always be relative. * Added SourceLoc handling for command line parsing. * Fix typo in debug. * Fix issue around the DiagnosticSink used in options parsing not having a writer available - by having DiagnosticSink parenting. * Small rename for clarity. * WIP extracting command line args for downstream tools. * Unit tests/bug fixes around extracting args. * Use DownstreamArgs in the EndToEndCompileRequest * Passing downstream compiler options downstream. * Fix issue with endToEndReq being nullptr. * Fix issue with diagnostics number change. * Small improvements to how the source line is displayed if it's too long. Default to 120, as suggested in previous review. * Make render test use x-args parsing and CommandArgReader. * Added missing diagnostics. * More DownstreamArgs to linkage so can be seen by 'components'. Added dxc-x-arg test. * Used combination of name and args instead of two Lists, which whilst equivalent was perhaps a little confusing. * Added documentation for -X support. * Added test for x-args parsing diagnostic. Improved diagnostic with list of known names. * Fix issues from merge. * Fix lookup for -matrix-layout-column-major in render test. * Remove commented out line.
* [gfx] Support StructuredBuffer<IInterface>. (#1851)Yong He2021-05-21
| | | Co-authored-by: T. Foley <tfoleyNV@users.noreply.github.com>
* Half texture support (#1836)jsmall-nvidia2021-05-06
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | * #include an absolute path didn't work - because paths were taken to always be relative. * Split out StringEscapeUtil. * Added StringEscapeUtil. * Fix typo in unix quoting type. * Small comment improvements. * Try to fix linux linking issue. * Fix typo. * Attempt to fix linux link issue. * Update VS proj even though nothing really changed. * Fix another typo issue. * Fix for windows issue. Fixed bug. * Make separate Utils for escaping. * Fix typo. * Split out into StringEscapeHandler. * Windows shell does handle removing quotes (so remove code to remove them). * Handle unescaping if not initiating using the shell. * Slight improvement around shell like decoding. * Simplify command extraction. * Add shared-library category type. * Fix bug in command extraction. * Typo in transcendental category. * Enable unit-test on in smoke test category. * Make parsing failing output as a failing test. * Fixes for transcendental tests. Disable tests that do not work. * Changed category parsing. * Removed the TestResult parameter from _gatherTestsForFile. Made testsList only output. * Remove testing if all tests were disabled. * Make args of CommandLine always unescaped. * Add category. * Don't need escaping on unix/linux. * Remove some no longer used functions. * Add requireSMVersion to CUDAExtensionTracker. * half-calc.slang now works for CUDA. * bit-cast-16-bit works on CUDA. * WIP handling of CUDA vector<half> types. * Half swizzle CUDA. * Half vector test. * Fix swizzle half bug. * Fix compilation issue with narrowing to Index. * Add unary ops. * Add some vector scalar maths ops. * Add half vector conversions for CUDA. * Fix erroneous comment. * Support for half comparisons. * First pass test for half compare. * Fix bug in CUDA specialized emit control. Updated tests to have pre and post inc/dec. * Removed unneeded parts of the cuda prelude. * Half structured buffer works on CUDA. * Added name lookup for Gfx::Format * Support half texture type in test system. * Test for half reading on CUDA. * Add half formats to Vk and D3D utils. * Fix getAt for CUDA - where there might not be a .x member in a vector.
* Refactor D3D12 renderer root signature creation (#1779)Tim Foley2021-04-01
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This change originated as an attempt to re-enable a test case, but it has ended up disabling more tests (for good reasons) than it re-enables. The main change here is a significant overhaul of the way that the D3D12 render path extracts information from the Slang reflection API to produce a root signature. There were also some supporting fixes in the reflection information to make sure it returns what the D3D12 back-end needed. The big picture here is that the D3D12 path now uses the descriptor ranges stored in the reflection data more or less directly. It still needs to use register/space offset information queried via the "old" reflection API, but it only does so at the top level now, for the program and entry points themselves. All other layout information is derived directly from what Slang provides. Smaller changes: * The "flat" reflection API was expanded to include `getBindingRangeDescriptorRangeCount()` which was clearly missing. * The "flat" reflection results for a constant buffer or parameter block that didn't contain any uniform data and was mapped to a plain constant buffer needed to be fixed up. That logic is still way to subtle to be trusted. * Several additional tests were disabled that relied on static specialization, global/entry-point generi type parameters, structured buffers of interfaces or other features we don't officially support with shader objects right now. All of the affected tests were somehow passing by sheer luck and because they often passed in specialization arguments via explicit `TEST_INPUT` lines. * The `inteface-shader-param` test is re-enabled now that we can properly describe its input with the new `set` mode on `TEST_INPUT` * `ShaderCursor::getElement()` can now be used on structure types (in addition to arrays) to support by-index access to fields * The `TEST_INPUT` system was expanded to support both by-name and by-index setting of structure fields for aggregates * The `TEST_INPUT` system was expanded to allow an `out` prefix to mark parts of an expression as outputs on a `set` lines * The `TEST_INPUT` system was expanded so that anything that would be allowed on a `TEST_INPUT` line by itself (like `ubuffer(...)`) can now be used as a sub-expression on a `set` line Co-authored-by: Yong He <yonghe@outlook.com>
* Add a streamlined syntax for TEST_INPUT lines (#1768)Tim Foley2021-03-30
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This change allows the `TEST_INPUT` syntax used by `render-test` to support aggregate values with a single input line more easily. The test writer can now use a syntax like: ``` //TEST_INPUT:set someVar = 3.0 ``` Input lines that start with the `set` keyword will now use a simpler `dst = src` format (instead of `dst:name=src` as the existing syntax used). The right-hand side expression can include: * Numeric literals, both integer and floating-point (currently only supporting 32-bit scalar types; we could fix this later) * Arrays, consisting of zero or more comma-separated expressions inside `[]` * Aggregates, consisting of zero or more comma-separated "fields" inside `{}`. A field can either be `name: <expr>` or just `<expr>` * Objects, which can be written as either `new SomeType{ <fields> }` or `new{ <fields> }` in the case where the type is know-able from context With this approach is should be possible to support almost arbitrary-type inputs on a single line. For now, I have used this support to re-enable an existing test that had been disabled due to lack of support for setting up arrays of objects. Major things left to do: * The new syntax doesn't support the existing cases we had for `Texture2D`, etc. Those should probably be supported but I'd like to find a way to do it without duplicating the parsing logic (ideally the value cases from the existing code should Just Work in the new model) * There is no support right now for non-32-bit scalar types * It would be good if this support (and the shader cursor system) supported treating vectors like aggregates * The actual value-setting logic doesn't currently handle aggregates without field names, so `{ a:0, b:1 }` will work but `{ 0, 1 }` will parse but fail when it comes time to set values * While this approach lets complicated values be set with a single line, that isn't always what a user will want to do: in the future we should provide a way to break up an aggregate value over multiple lines that is consistent with this approach * Once we port all of the relvant tests over, it would be great to drop the `set` prefix and have these lines look as simple and conventional as possible
* Clean up render-test handling of input (#1766)Tim Foley2021-03-25
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | The original goal of this change was to streamline the `TEST_INPUT` system by eliminating options that are no longer relevant once we have eliminated the non-shader-object execution paths. The result is more or less a re-implementation/refactor of the logic around how input is parsed and represented, that tries to set things up for a more general sytem going forward. The main changes isthat the `ShaderInputLayout` no longer tracks a simple flat list of `ShaderInputLayoutEntry` (that is a kind of pseudo-union of the various buffer/texture/value cases), and it instead uses a hierarchical representation composed of `RefObject`-derived classes to represent "values." There are several "simple" cases of values * Textures * Samplers * Uniform/ordinary data (`uniform`) * Buffers composed of uniform/ordinary data (`ubuffer`) Then there are composed/aggregate values that nest other values: * An *aggregate* value is a set of *fields* which are name/value pairs. It can be used to fill in a structure, for example. * An *array* value is a list of values for the elements of an array. It can be used to fill out an array-of-textures parameter, for example. * A combined texture/sampler value is a pair of a texture value and a sampler value (easy enough) * An *object* holds an optional type name for a shader object to allocate (it defaults to the type that is "under" the current shader cursor when binding), and a nested value that describes how to fill in the contents of that object Finally there are cases of values that are just syntactic sugar: * A `cbuffer` is just shorthand for creating an object value with a nested uniform/ordinary data value The big idea with this recursive structure is that it gives us a way to handle more arbitrary data types with name-based binding. Supporting this new capability requires changes to both how input layouts get parsed, and also how they get bound into shader objects. On the parsing side, things have been refactored a bit so that parsing isn't a single monolithic routine. The refactor also tries to make it so that the various options on an input item (e.g., the `size=...` option for textures) are only supported on the relevant type of entry (so you can't specify as many useless options that will be ignored). The bigger change to parsing is that it now supports a hierarchical structure, where certain input elements like `begin_array` can push a new "parent" value onto a stack, and subsequent `TEST_INPUT` lines will be parsed as children of that item until a matching `end` item. This approach means that we can now in principle describe arbitrary hierarchical structures as part of test input without endlessly increasing the complexity of invididual `TEST_INPUT` lines. On the binding side, we now have a central recursive operation called `assign(ShaderCursor, ShaderInputLayout::ValPtr)` that assigns from a parsed `ShaderInputLayout` value to a particular cursor. That operation can then recurse on the fields/elements/contents of whatever the cursor points to. Major open directions: * With this change it is still necessary to use `uniform` entries to set things like individual integers or `float`s and that is a little silly. It would be good to have some streamlines cases for setting individual scalar values. * Further, once we have a hierarchical representation of the values for `TEST_INPUT` lines, it becomes clear that we really ought to move to a format more like `TEST_INPUT: dstLocation = srcValue;` where `srcValue` is some kind of hierarchial expression grammar. Refactoring things in this way should make the binding logic even more clear and easy to understand. The refactored parser should make parsing hierarchical expressions easier to do in the future (even if it uses the push/pop model for now) * One detailed note is that the representation of buffers in this change is kind of a compromise. Just as an "object" value is a thin wrapper around a recursively-contained value for its "content" it seems clear that a buffer could be represented as a wrapper around a content value that could include hierarchical aggregates/objects instead of just flat binary data (this would be important for things like a buffer over a structure type that lays out different on different targets). The main problem right now with changing the representation is actually needing to compute the size of a buffer based on its content, so that can/should be addressed in a subsequent change. Details: * The base `RenderTestApp` class and the `ShaderObjectRenderTestApp` classes have been merged, since the hierarchy no longer serves any purpose. * Disabled the tess that rely on `StructuredBuffer<IWhatever>` because they aren't really supported by our current shader object implementation * Replaced used of `Uniform` and `root_constants` in `TEST_INPUT` lines with just `uniform` * Removed a bunch of uses of `stride` from `cbuffer` inputs, where it wasn't really correct/meaningful * Added the `copyBuffer()` operation to VK/D3D renderers, along with some missing `Usage` cases to support it. * Made `ShaderCursor` handle the logic to look up a name in the entry points of a root shader object, rather than just having that logic in `render-test`. (We probably need to make a clear design choice on this issue)
* Remove old code paths from render-test (#1760)Tim Foley2021-03-17
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | * Remove old code paths from render-test Historically, the `render-test` tool was using three different code paths: * One based on `gfx` and manual (non-reflection-based) parameter setting, used for OpenGL, D3D11, D3D12, and Vulkan * One for CPU that used reflection-based parameter setting but shared no code with the first * One for CUDA that used reflection-based parameter setting and shared some, but not all, code with the CPU path Recently we've updated `render-test` to include a fourth option: * Using `gfx` and the "shader object" system it exposes for a unified reflection-based parameter-setting system taht works across OpenGL, D3D11, D3D12, Vulkan, CUDA, and CPU This change removes the first three options and leaves only the single unified path. A sa result, a bunch of code in `render-test` is no longer needed, and the codebase no longer relies on things like the `IDescriptorSet`-related APIs in `gfx`. Several existing tests had to be disabled to make this change possible. Those tests will need to be audited and either re-enabled once we fix issues in the shader object system, or permanently removed if they don't test stuff we intend to support in the long run (e.g., global-scope type parameters, which aren't a clear necessity). * fixup: CUDA detection logic
* Make gfx library visible to external user. (#1719)Yong He2021-02-19
| | | | | * Make gfx library visible to external user. * Fixup
* Add shader object parameter binding to renderer_test. (#1622)Yong He2020-12-03
| | | | | | | | | * Add shader object parameter binding to renderer_test. * remove multiple-definitions.hlsl * Fix cuda implementation. Co-authored-by: Tim Foley <tfoleyNV@users.noreply.github.com>
* Standard library save/loadable (#1592)jsmall-nvidia2020-11-05
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | * #include an absolute path didn't work - because paths were taken to always be relative. * Fix handling of access modifiers inside type definition. * Fix access problem for AST node. Make dumping produce a single function with switch, to potentially make available without Dump specific access. * WIP on serialization design doc. * Remove project references to previously generated files. * More docs on serialization design. * Improve serialization documentation. Remove unused function from IRSerialReader. * Small fixes around naming. Remove long comment from slang-serialize.h - as covered in serialization.md * Remove long comment in slang-serialize.h as covered in serialization.md * More information about doing replacements on read for AST and problems surrounding. * Typo fix. * Spelling fixes. * Value serialize. * Value types with inheritence. * Use value reflection serial conversion for more AST types * Use automatic serialization on more of AST. * Get the types via decltype, simplifies what the extractor has to do. * Update the serialization.md for the value serialization. * Small doc improvements. * Update project. * Remove ImportExternalDecl type Added addImportSymbol and ImportSymbol type Fixed bug in container which meant it wouldn't read back AST module * Because of change of how imports and handled, store objects as SerialPointers. * First pass symbol lookup from mangled names. * Cache current module looked up from mangled name. * Fix SourceLoc bug. Improve comments. * Added diagnostic on mangled symbol not being found * Fix typo. * WIP serializing stdlib. * WIP serializing stdlib in. * Fix problem serializing arrays that hold data that is already serialized. * Remove clash of names in MagicTypeModifier. * Make conversion from char to String explicit. Fix reference count issue with SerialReader. * Add code to save/load stdlib. * Use return code to avoid warning - SerialContainerUtil::write(module, options, &stream)) * Make all String numeric ctors explicit. Added isChar to UnownedStringSlice. Added operator== for UnownedStringSlice to String to avoid need to convert to String and allocate. * Add error check to readAllText. * tabs -> spaces on String.h * tab -> spaces String.cpp * Remove msg for StringBuilder, just build inplace for exceptions. * Check SerialClasses - for name clashes. Renamed Modifier::name as Modifier::keywordName * Handling of extensions when deserializing AST - updating the moduleDecl->mapTypeToCandidateExtensions Co-authored-by: Tim Foley <tim.foley.is@gmail.com>
* Support CUDA bindless texture in dynamic dispatch code. (#1575)Yong He2020-10-09
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* Allow unspecialized existential shader parameters (dynamic dispatch). (#1529)Yong He2020-09-02
| | | | | | | | | * Allow unspecialized existential shader parameters (dynamic dispatch). * Fixes. * Fixes * disable cuda test
* Support dynamic existential shader parameters in render-test (#1525)Yong He2020-09-01
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | * Support dynamic existential shader parameters in render-test * Fix linux build error. * Fixes. * Fix code review issues. * Fix gcc error. * More fixes. * More fixes.
* Change the policy for entry-point uniform parameters on Vulkan (#1476)Tim Foley2020-08-05
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Entry point `uniform` parameters were a feature of the original Cg and HLSL, but have not been used much in production shader code. One of our goals on Slang is to reduce the (ab)use of the global scope, so bringing entry point `uniform` parameters up to a greater level of usability is an important goal. Some policy choices about how global vs. entry-point `uniform` parameters behave have already been made, that shape decisions looking forward: * For DXBC/DXIL, it makes the most sense to follow the lead of fxc/dxc, by treating entry point `uniform` parameters as a kind of syntax sugar for global shader parameters. Any parameters of "ordinary" types are bundles up into an implicit constant buffer, and all the resources (including the implicit constant buffer) are assigned `register`s just as for globals. It is up to the application to decide how to bind those parameters via a root signature (using root descriptors, root constants, descriptor tables, local vs. global root signature, etc.) * For CPU, it makes sense to pass global vs. entry-point parameters as two different pointers, although the details of what we do for CPU are the least constrained across all current targets. * For CUDA compute, it makes the most sense to map global shader parameters to `__constant__` global data, and entry-point `uniform` parameters to kernel parameters. This choice ensures that the signature of a kernel when translated from Slang->CUDA follows the Principle of Least Surprise, at the cost of making entry-point vs. global parameters be passed via different mechanisms. * For OptiX ray tracing, it makes sense to expand on the precedent from CUDA compute: pass global parameters via global `__constant__` data (as is already expected by OptiX for whole-launch parameters), and pass entry-point `uniform` parameters via the "shader record." This establishes a precedent that for ray-tracing shaders, global-scope parameters map to the "global root signature" concept from DXR, while entry-point `uniform` parameters map to a "local root signature" or "shader record." * For Vulkan ray tracing, the precedent from OptiX then argues that entry-point `uniform` parameters should map to the Vulkan "shader record" concept (and thus cannot support things like resource types). * The remaining interesting case is what to do for non-ray-tracing shaders on Vulkan. The dev team agrees that the most reasonable choice to make for non-ray-tracing Vulkan shaders is to map entry-point `uniform` parameters to "push constants." In particular, this makes it easy to express the case of a compute kernel with direct parameters of ordinary/value types in the way that will be implemented most efficiently. The big picture is then that a kernel like: ```hlsl void computeMain(uniform float someValue) { ... } ``` will map to output GLSL like: ```glsl layout(push_constant) uniform { float someValue; } U; void main() { ... } ``` If the user really wanted a constant-buffer binding to be created instead, they can easily change their input to make the buffer explicit: ```hlsl struct Params { float someValue; } void computeMain(uniform ConstantBuffer<Params> params) { ... } ``` (Forcing the user to be explicit about the desire for a buffer here creates a nice symmetry between Vulkan and CUDA; in the first case the user sets up the data in host memory and passes it to the GPU by copy, while in the second case the user must allocate and set up a device-memory buffer for the data. This symmetry extends to D3D if the application chooses to map entry-point `uniform` parameters to root constants.) This change implements logic in the "parameter binding" part of the Slang compiler to make sure that entry-point `uniform` parameters are wrapped up in a push-constant buffer rather than an ordinary constant buffer for non-ray-tracing shaders on Vulkan (and in a shader record "buffer" for the ray-tracing case). The majority of the actual work was in adding support for root/push constants to the test framework and the graphics API abstraction it uses. To be clear about that support: * Root constant ranges are (perhaps confusingly) treated as a new kind of "slot" that can appear on a descriptor set. This choice ensures that the implicit numbering of registers/spaces used by the back-ends can account for these ranges correctly. * The `TEST_INPUT` lines are extended to allow a `root_constants` case that behaves more or less like `cbuffer` * The CPU and CUDA paths can treat a `root_constants` input identically to a `cbuffer`. They already allocate the actual buffers based on reflection, and just use `cbuffer` as a directive that causes bytes to be copied in. * On D3D12 and Vulkan, a descriptor set allocates a `List<char>` to hold the bytes of root constant data assigned into it, and these bytes are flushed to the command list when the table is actually bound (usually right before rendering). * On D3D11, a descriptor set treats a root constant range more or less like a constant buffer range (with a single buffer), except that it also automatically allocates a buffer to hold the data. Assigning "root constant" data automatically copies it into that buffer. The small number of tests that used entry-point `uniform` parameters of ordinary types were updated to use the new `root_constant` input type, and the bugs that surfaced were fixed. A new test to confirm that entry-point `uniform` parameters map to the shader record for VK ray tracing was added. An important but technically unrelated change is the removal of the `DescriptorSetImpl::Binding` type and related function from the Vulkan implementation of `Renderer`. That type was created to ensure that objects that are bound into a descriptor set don't get released while the descriptor set is still alive, but the implementation relied on a complicated linear search to check for existing bindings, which could create a performance issue for descriptor sets that include large arrays of descriptors. The new implementation makes use of the approach already present in the various `Renderer` implementations (including the Vulkan one) for assigning ranges in a descriptor set a flat/linear index for where their pertinent data is to be bound. As a result, the Vulkan `DescriptorSetImpl` now uses a single flat array of `RefPtr`s to track bound objects, and has no need for linear search when binding. Co-authored-by: Yong He <yonghe@outlook.com>
* Improvements around hashing (#1355)jsmall-nvidia2020-05-26
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | * Fields from upper to lower case in slang-ast-decl.h * Lower camel field names in slang-ast-stmt.h * Fix fields in slang-ast-expr.h * slang-ast-type.h make fields lowerCamel. * slang-ast-base.h members functions lowerCamel. * Method names in slang-ast-type.h to lowerCamel. * GetCanonicalType -> getCanonicalType * Substitute -> substitute * Equals -> equals ToString -> toString * ParentDecl -> parentDecl Members -> members * * Make hash code types explicit * Use HashCode as return type of GetHashCode * Added conversion from double to int64_t * Split Stable from other hash functions * toHash32/64 to convert a HashCode to the other styles. GetHashCode32/64 -> getHashCode32/64 GetStableHashCode32/64 -> getStableHashCode32/64 * Other Get/Stable/HashCode32/64 fixes * GetHashCode -> getHashCode * Equals -> equals * CreateCanonicalType -> createCanonicalType * Catches of polymorphic types should be through references otherwise slicing can occur. * Fixes for newer verison of gcc. Fix hashing problem on gcc for Dictionary. * Another fix for GetHashPos * Fix signed issue around GetHashPos
* WIP on RWTexture types on CUDA/CPU (#1234)jsmall-nvidia2020-02-20
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | * CUDA support for array of resources. * * Add support for Texture2DArray on CPU * Expand texture-simple.slang to test Texture2DArray * Reorganise CUDAComputeUtil to split out createTextureResource. * Add TextureCubeArray support for CPU/CUDA targets. * Pulled out CUDAResource Renamed derived classes to reflect that change. * Creation of SurfObject type. * Functions to return read/write access for simplifying future additions. * WIP for RWTexture access on CPU/CUDA. * CUsurfObject cannot have mips. * Ability to set number of mips on test data. Preliminary support for CUsurfObj and RWTexture1D on CUDA. CUDA docs improvements. * Fix typo.
* Added support for Targets to TypeTextUtil. (#1226)jsmall-nvidia2020-02-18
| | | | | | * Added support for Targets to TypeTextUtil. * Made Function names 'get' and 'find' instead of 'as' in TypeTextUtil.
* Fixes to make all CPU compute shaders work on CUDA (#1211)jsmall-nvidia2020-02-08
| | | | | | | | | | | | | * Launch CUDA test taking into account dispatch size. * Enable isCPUOnly hack to work on CUDA. * Rename 'isCPUOnly' hack to 'onlyCPULikeBinding'. * Add $T special type. Support SampleLevel on CUDA. * Fix typo.
* CUDA/C++ backend improvements (#1198)jsmall-nvidia2020-02-04
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | * WIP with vector float test. * vector-float test working. * Fixed remaing tests broken with init changes. * Improve 64bit-type-support.md * Disable tests broken on CI system for Dx. * WIP: Make type available for comparison. * Moved type conversion into TypeTextUtil. * Add text/type conversions from DownstreamCompiler to TypeTextUtil. * Allow compaison taking into account type. * Removed quantize in vector-float.slang test.
* Feature/test for double behavior (#1186)jsmall-nvidia2020-01-29
| | | | | | | | | | | | * Split out binding writing. * Pass in the entry type. * Take into account output type with -output-using-type Added GPULikeBindRoot Added dxbc-double-problem test. * Add the dxbc-double-problem test.
* Slang -> CUDA kernel runs correctly in test infrastructure (#1167)jsmall-nvidia2020-01-17
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | * First pass at BindLocation. * Added BindSet::init - for initializing with two input constant buffers. Needs better name, and perhaps should be another class. * Fix handling of constant buffer stripping. Improved initialization. * Trying to generalize BindLocation a little more. Split out CPULikeBindRoot. * More work to make BindLocation et al work with non uniform bindings. * Added parsing to a location. * WIP: Trying to get CPU working with BindLocation. * Describe problem of knowing the type of the reference point in the binding table. * More ideas on getBindings fix. * Remove BindSet as member of BindLocation. * Added BindLocation::Invalid * Made BindLocation able to be key in hash * Use BindLocation for bindings on BindingSet. * Added cuda and nvrtc categories to test infrastructure. Disabled CUDA synthetic tests by default. Fixed such that all tests now produce something in BindLocation style. * Use m_userIndex instead of m_userData on Resource. Move the binding setup out of cpu-compute-util (as no longer CPU specific) * Removed CPUBinding - used BindLocation/BindSet instead. Fixed some bugs around indexOf around uniform indirection. * Renamed BindSet::Resource -> BindSet::Value. * Document BindLocation. * Fixes for Clang/GCC Improve invariant requirement handling when constructing from BindPoints. * WIP: First attempt to run CUDA kernel. * Fix some issues around doing CUDA kernel launch. * Fix issues around use of cudaMemCpy . * Better cuda runtime error checking mechanism. * Fixed bug in passing parameters to cuda kernel launch. Simplified initialisation of context. * WIP: Fix CUDA runtime issues. * Add explicit CUDA synchronize so failures don't appear on implicit ones. * Fix problem emitting non shared variable on CUDA. * Fix some typos in CUDA layout. Use just a pointer for now for CUDA StucturedBuffer. * Arg order for CUDA launch was wrong. * First compute kernel runs on CUDA.
* Bind Location (#1166)jsmall-nvidia2020-01-15
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | * First pass at BindLocation. * Added BindSet::init - for initializing with two input constant buffers. Needs better name, and perhaps should be another class. * Fix handling of constant buffer stripping. Improved initialization. * Trying to generalize BindLocation a little more. Split out CPULikeBindRoot. * More work to make BindLocation et al work with non uniform bindings. * Added parsing to a location. * WIP: Trying to get CPU working with BindLocation. * Describe problem of knowing the type of the reference point in the binding table. * More ideas on getBindings fix. * Remove BindSet as member of BindLocation. * Added BindLocation::Invalid * Made BindLocation able to be key in hash * Use BindLocation for bindings on BindingSet. * Added cuda and nvrtc categories to test infrastructure. Disabled CUDA synthetic tests by default. Fixed such that all tests now produce something in BindLocation style. * Use m_userIndex instead of m_userData on Resource. Move the binding setup out of cpu-compute-util (as no longer CPU specific) * Removed CPUBinding - used BindLocation/BindSet instead. Fixed some bugs around indexOf around uniform indirection. * Renamed BindSet::Resource -> BindSet::Value. * Document BindLocation. * Fixes for Clang/GCC Improve invariant requirement handling when constructing from BindPoints.
* Remove support for explicit register/binding syntax on TEST_INPUT (#1132)Tim Foley2019-11-21
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | The `TEST_INPUT` facility allows textual Slang test cases to provide two kinds of information to the `render-test` tool: 1. Information on what shader inputs exist 2. Information on what values/objects to bind into those shader inputs Under the first category of information, there exists supporting for attaching a `dxbinding(...)` annotation to a `TEST_INPUT` which seemingly indicates what HLSL `register` the input uses. There is a similar `glbinding(...)` annotation, used for OpenGL and Vulkan. It turns out that these annotations were, in practice, completely ignored and had no bearing on how `render-test` allocates or bindings graphics API objects. There was some amount of code attempting to validate that explicit registers/bindings were being set appropriately, but the actual values were being ignored. The visible consequence of the `dxbinding` and `glbinding` annotations being ignored is issue #1036: the order of `TEST_INPUT` lines was *de facto* determining the registers/bindings that were being used by `render-test`. This change simply removes the placebo features and strips things down to what is implemented in practice: the `TEST_INPUT` lines do not need target-API-specific binding/register numbers, because their order in the file implicitly defines them. I added logic to the parsing of `TEST_INPUT` lines to make sure I got an error message on any leftover annotations, and went ahead and systematicaly deleted all of the placebo annotations from our test cases. If we decide to make `TEST_INPUT` lines *not* depend on order of declaration in the future, we can build it up as a new and better considered feature. The main alternative I considered was to keep the annotations in place, and change `render-test` and the `gfx` abstraction layer to properly respect them, but that path actually creates much more opportunity for breakage (since every single test case would suddenly be specifying its root signature / pipeline layout via a different path using data that has never been tested). The approach in this change has the benefit of giving me high confidence that all the test cases continue to work just as they had before.
* Initial work for "global generic value parameters" (#1127)Tim Foley2019-11-19
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | * 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
* Support for unbounded array of arrays (#1078)jsmall-nvidia2019-10-11
| | | | | | | | * WIP: Unsized arrays on CPU. * unbounded-array-of-array working on CPU. * Remove some left over comments.
* Simple test profiling (#1062)jsmall-nvidia2019-09-23
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | * First pass support for performance profiling * Test across all elements * Fix bug - sourceContents is not used, should use rawSource. * * Add ability to get prelude from API. * Allow specifying source language for render-test * Made it possible to compile a test input file as C++ * Special handling for reflection * Added C++ impl to performance-profile.slang * Remove some clang warnings. * Output profile timings on appveyor and other TC. * Remove passing around of StdWriters (can use global). Small comment improvements.
* Clean up some behavior of operator% (#1060)Tim Foley2019-09-18
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Work on #1059 The `%` operator in the Slang implementation had several issues, and this change tries to address some of them: * Renamed most occurences of "mod" describing this operator to be "rem" for "remainder" to better match its semantics in HLSL * Split the operator into distinct integer and floating-point variants (`IRem` and `FRem`) to simplify having different codegen for the two * Added floating-point variants of `operator%` and `operator%=` to the stdlib. * Added custom C++ codegen for `kIROp_FRem` such that it maps to the standard C/C++ `remainder()` function * Added custom GLSL codegen so that `kIROp_FRem` maps to the GLSL `mod()` function (which isn't correct...) * Added a test case to confirm that D3D11, D3D12, and CPU targets all agree on the definition of floating-point `%` * Fixed `render-test-tool` to allow a negative integer in a `data=...` specification. This didn't end up being used in the final test, but still seems like a good fix. * Added a customized baseline for the Vulkan flavor of that test to confirm that we are *not* compiling correctly to SPIR-V just yet Addressing the correctness of the output for GLSL/SPIR-V will have to come as a later change given that the operation we want is not exposed directly by unextended GLSL.
* CPU Performance/Testing improvements (#1055)jsmall-nvidia2019-09-16
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | * First pass of render-test refactor. * Make window construction a function that can choose an implementation. * Remove OpenGL as currently has windows dependency. * Disable Vulkan as Renderer impl has dependency on windows. * Pass Window in as parameter of 'update'. * Add win-window.cpp as was missing. * Fix warning on windows about signs during comparison. * * Added mechanism to add random arrays as buffer inputs and select type * Improved RenderGenerator to generate more types, and to be more careful around int32 ranges. * Added support for security checks (for Visual Studio C++) * Disable Execption handling being on by default when compiling kernels * Added a 'Group' version of the entry point that will evaluate all threads in a group in a single call. In test code use this method if available. * Added -compile-arg to be able to pass arguments to the compile within render-test * Add documention for the _Group execution feature. * Fix some typos in cpu-target.md
* CPU compute testing on non windows targets (#1045)jsmall-nvidia2019-09-09
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | * WIP: Refactor of CPUCompute and stand alone cpu-render-test * Fix compilation on CygWin. * Make CPU compute tests run on non windows targets. * Check that C/C++ compiler is available for CPU compute. * Fix some tabbing issues. * Add -fPIC on gfx * Use dxcompiler_47.dll from slang-binaries on windows. * make https for git module slang-binaries * Fix comment in premake5.lua around d3dcompiler_47.dll * Add resources to the CPUComputeUtil::Context to keep in scope. * Fixes problem compiling on cygwin where dx12 is included in build of gfx lib.
* CPU uniform entry point params (#1041)jsmall-nvidia2019-09-03
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | * * Made entry point parameters a separate entry point * Made CPUMemoryBinding work with entry point parameters/initialize constant buffers * Added isCPUOnly to bindings, because entry point parameters do not layout like constant buffer * entry-point-uniform.slang works on CPU * EntryPointParams -> UniformEntryPointParams Updated CPU documentation. * Update cpu-target.md to removed completed issues. * Only allocate CPU buffers if the size is > 0. Small update to cpu-target doc.
* WIP: CPU compute coverage (#1030)jsmall-nvidia2019-08-22
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | * Add support for '=' when defining a name in test. * Add support for double intrinsics. * Add support for asdouble Add findOrAddInst - used instead of findOrEmitHoistableInst, for nominal instructions. Support cloning of string literals. C++ working on more compute tests. * Constant buffer support in reflection. Fixed debugging into source for generated C++. buffer-layout.slang works. * Added cpu test result. * Remove some commented out code. Comment on next fixes. * Improvements to reflection CPU code. * C++ working with ByteAddressBuffer. * Enabled more compute tests for CPU. * Enabled more compute tests on CPU. Added support for [] style access to a vector. * Enabled more CPU compute tests. * Handling of buffer-type-splitting.slang Named buffers can be paths to resources * Fix some warnings, remove some dead code. * Fix problem with verification of number of operands for asuint/asint as they can have 1 or 3 operands. asdouble takes 2. * Fix handling in MemoryArena around aligned allocations. That _allocateAlignedFromNewBlock assumed the block allocated has the aligment that was requested and so did not correct the start address.
* WIP: Compute test running on CPU (#1023)jsmall-nvidia2019-08-19
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | * * 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.
* Use slang- prefix on slang compiler and core source (#973)jsmall-nvidia2019-05-31
| | | | | | | | | | | | * 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.
* String/List closer to conventions, and use Index type (#959)jsmall-nvidia2019-04-29
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | * List made members m_ Tweaked types to closer match conventions. * Use asserts for checking conditions on List. Other small improvements. * List<T>.Count() -> getSize() * List<T> Add -> add First -> getFirst Last -> getLast RemoveLast -> removeLast ReleaseBuffer -> detachBuffer GetArrayView -> getArrayView * List<T>:: AddRange -> addRange Capacity -> getCapacity Insert -> insert InsertRange -> insertRange AddRange -> addRange RemoveRange -> removeRange RemoveAt -> removeAt Remove -> remove Reverse -> reverse FastRemove -> fastRemove FastRemoveAt -> fastRemoveAt Clear -> clear * List<T> FreeBuffer -> _deallocateBuffer Free -> clearAndDeallocate SwapWith -> swapWith * List<T> SetSize -> setSize Reserve -> reserve GrowToSize growToSize * UnsafeShrinkToSize -> unsafeShrinkToSize Compress -> compress FindLast -> findLastIndex FindLast -> findLastIndex Simplify Contains * List<T> Removed m_allocator (wasn't used) Swap -> swapElements Sort -> sort Contains -> contains ForEach -> forEach QuickSort -> quickSort InsertionSort -> insertionSort BinarySearch -> binarySearch Max -> calcMax Min -> calcMin * Initializer::Initialize -> initialize List<T>:: Allocate -> _allocate Init -> _init IndexOf -> indexOf * * Put #include <assert.h> in common.h, and remove unneeded inclusions * Small refactor of ArrayView - remove stride as not used * getSize -> getCount setSize -> setCount unsafeShrinkToSize->unsafeShrinkToCount growToSize -> growToCount m_size -> m_count * Some tidy up around Allocator. * Use Index type on List. * Refactor of IntSet. First tentative look at using Index. * Made Index an Int Did preliminary fixes. Made String use Index. * Partial refactor of String. * String::Buffer -> getBuffer ToWString -> toWString * Small improvements to String. String:: Buffer() -> getBuffer() Equals() -> equals * Try to use Index where appropriate. * Fix warnings on windows x86 builds.
* Hotfix/texture2d gather (#876)jsmall-nvidia2019-03-05
| | | | | | | | | | | | | * First pass test to see if GatherRed works. * Add support for generating R_Float32 textures. * Set default texture format. * * Alter the texture2d-gather to work with a R_Float32 texture * Add support for scalar Texture2d types with GatherXXX in stdlib * Remove some left over commented out test code from texture2d-gather.hlsl
* First steps toward supporting interface-type parameters on shaders (#852)Tim Foley2019-02-19
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | * First steps toward supporting interface-type parameters on shaders What's New ---------- From the perspective of a user, the main thing this change adds is the ability to declare top-level shader parameters (either at global scope, or in an entry-point parameter list) with interface types. For example, the following becomes possible: ```hlsl // Define an interface to modify values interface IModifier { float4 modify(float4 val); } // Define some concrete implementations struct Doubler : IModifier { float4 modify(float4 val) { return val + val; } } struct Squarer : IModifier { ... } // Define a global shader parameter of interface type IModifier gGlobalModifier; // Define an entry point with an interface-type `uniform` parameter void myShader( unifrom IModifier entryPointModifier, float4 inColor : COLOR, out float4 outColor : SV_Target) { // Use the interface-type parameters to compute things float4 color = inColor; color = gGlobalModifier.modify(color); color = entryPointModifier.modify(color); outColor = color; } ``` The user can specialize that shader by specifying the concrete types to use for global and entry-point parameters of interface types (e.g., plugging in `Doubler` for `gGlobalModifier` and `Squarer` for `entryPointModifier`). The "plugging in" process is done in terms of a concept of both global and local "existential slots" which are a new `LayoutResourceKind` that represents the holes where concrete types need to be plugged in for existential/interface types. In simple cases like the above, each interface-type parameter will yield a single existential slot in either the global or entry-point parameter layout. Users can query the start slot and number of slots for each shader parameter, just like they would for any other resource that a parameter can consume. Before generating specialized code, the user plugs in the name of the concrete type they would like to use for each slot using `spSetTypeNameForGlobalExistentialSlot` and/or `spSetTypeNameForEntryPointExistentialSlot`. There are some major limitations to the implementation in this first change: * Parameters must be of interface type (e.g., `IFoo`) and not an array (`IFoo[3]`), or buffer (`ConstantBuffer<IFoo>`) over an interface type. Similarly, `struct` types with interface-type fields still don't work. * The work on interface-type function parameters still doesn't include support for `out` or `inout` parameters, nor for functions that return interface types (that isn't technically related to this change, but affects its usefullness). * No work is being done to correctly lay out shader parameters once the concrete types for existential slots are known, so that this change really only works when the concrete type that gets plugged in is empty. These limitations are severe enough that this feature isn't really usable as implemented in this change, and this merely represents a stepping stone toward a more complete implementation. Implementation -------------- The API side of thing largely mirrors what was already done to support passing strings for the type names to use for global/entry-point generic arguments, so there should be no major surprises there. The logic in `check.cpp` computes the list of existential slots when creating unspecialized `Program`s and `EntryPoint`s (this is logically the "front end" of the compiler), and then checks the supplied argument types against what is expected in each slot when creating specialized `Program`s and `EntryPoint`s. This again mirrors how generic arguments are handled. Type layout was extended to compute the number of existential slots that a type consumes, and will thus automatically assign ranges of slots to top-level and entry-point shader parameters in the same way it already allocates `register`s and `binding`s. The big missing feature is the ability to specialize a layout to account for the concrete types plugged into the existential-type slots. IR generation for specialized programs and entry points was slightly extended so that it attaches information about the concrete types plugged into the existential slots, and the witness tables that show how they conform to the interface for that slot. The linking step needed some small tweaks to make sure that information gets copied over to the target-specific program when we start code generation. The meat of the IR-level work is in `ir-bind-existentials.cpp`, which takes the information that was placed in the IR module by the generation/linking steps and uses it to rewrite shader parameters. For example, if there is a shader parameter `p` of type `IModifier`, and the corresponding existential slot has the type `Doubler` in it, we will rewrite the parameter to have type `Doubler`, and rewrite any uses of `p` to instead use `makeExistential(p, /*witness that Doubler conforms to IModifier*/)`. Once the replacement is done on the parameters, the existing work for specializing existential-based code when the input type(s) are known kicks in and does the rest. Testing ------- A single compute test is added to validate that this feature works. It is narrowly tailored to not require any of the features not supported by the initial implementation (e.g., all of the concrete types used have no members). The test case *does* include use of an associated type through one of these existential-type parameters, which has exposed a subtle bug in how "opening" of existential values is implemented in the front-end. Rather than fix the underlying problem, I cleaned up the code in the front-end to special case when the existential value being opened is a variable bound with `let`, to directly use a reference to that variable rather than introduce a temporary. Similarly, in the IR generation step, I added an optimization to make variables declared with `let` skip introducing an IR-level variable and just use the SSA value of their initializer directly instead. * fixup: missing files * fixup: incorrect type for unreachable return * fixup: actually comment ir-bind-existentials.cpp
* Split front- and back-ends (#846)Tim Foley2019-02-15
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | * Split front- and back-ends This change is a major refactor of several of the types that provide the behind-the-scenes implementation of the public C API. The goal of this refactor is primarily to allow for future API services that let the user operate both the front- and back-ends of the compiler in a more complex fashion. For example, as user should be able to compile a bunch of source code into modules, look up types, functions, etc. in those modules, specialize generic types/functions to the types they've looked up, and then finally request target code to be gernerated for specialized entry points. The back-end code generation they trigger should re-use the front-end compilation work (parsing, semantic checking, IR generation) that was already performed. The most visible change is that `CompileRequest` has been split up into several smaller types that take responsibility for parts of what it did: * The `Linkage` type owns the storage for `import`ed modules, and well as the `TargetRequest`s that represent code-generation targets. The intention is that an application could use a single `Linkage` for the duration of its runtime (so long as it was okay with the memory usage), so that each `import`ed module only gets loaded once. For now, this type needs to manage the search paths, file system, and source manager, because of its responsibility for loading files. * A `FrontEndCompileRequest` owns the stuff related to parsing, semantic checking, and initial IR generation. This most notably includes the `TranslationUnitRequest`s and the `FrontEndEntryPointRequest`s (which used to be just `EntryPointRequest`s). It's main job is to produce AST and IR modules for each translation unit, and to find and validate the entry points. The front-end request does *not* interact with generic arguments for global or entry-point generic parameters. * The main output of both `import` operations and front-end translation units is the `Module` type, which is just a simple container for both the AST module (to service the reflection/layout APIs, and also for semantic checking of code that `import`s the module) and the IR module (for linking and code generation). This type captures the commonalities between the old `LoadedModule` (which is now just an alias for `Module`) and `TranslationUnitRequest` (which now owns a `Module`). * The secondary output of front-end compilation is a `Program`, which comprises a list of referenced `Module`s and validated `EntryPoint`s that will be used together. Layout and code generation both need a `Program` to tell them what modules and entry points will be used together (we don't want to just code-gen everythin that has ever been loaded into the linakge). The `Program`s created by the front-end do not include generic arguments, so they may provide incomplete layout information and/or be unsuitable for code generation. * A `BackEndCompileRequest` owns stuff related to turning a `Program` into output kernels for the targets of a `Linkage`. Most of the data it owns beyond the `Program` to be compiled is minor, so this is a good candidate for demotion from a heap-allocated object to just a `struct` of options that gets passed around. * The `CompileRequestBase` type is an attempt to wrap up the common functionality of both front-end and back-end compile requests. Most of it is just exposing the availability of a linkage and `DiagnosticSink`, so this type is a good candidate for subsequent removal. The main interesting thing it has is the flags related to dumping and validation of IR, so there is probably a good refactoring still to be made around deciding how options should be handled going forward. * Behind the scenes, the `Program` type is set up to handle some level of on-line compilation and layout work. The `Program` knows the `Linkage` it belongs to, and allows for a `TargetProgram` to be looked up based on a specific `TargetRequest`. A `TargetProgram` then allows layout information and compiled kernel code to be asked for on-demand, in order to support eventual "live" compilation scenarios. * The `EndToEndCompileRequest` type is a composition/coordination type that replaces the old `CompileRequest` in a way that uses the services of the various other types. It owns a few pieces of state that only make sense in the context of an end-to-end compile (e.g., there is really no way to "pass through" code when the front- and back-ends are run separately) or a command-line compile (everything to do with specifying output paths for files is really just for the benefit of `slangc`, and might even be moved there over time). * One important detail is that the `EndToEndCompilRequest` owns all of the string-based generic arguments for both global and entry-point generic parameters. The logic in `check.cpp` for dealing with those arguments has been heavily refactored to separate out the parsings steps that are specific to end-to-end compilation with string-based type arguments, and the semantic checking steps that result in a specialized `Program` (which can be exposed through new APIs that aren't tied to end-to-end compilation). It is perhaps not surprising that this change had a lot of consequences, so I'll briefly run over some of the main categories of changes required: * I changed the way that global generic arguments are passed via API (use `spSetGlobalGenericArgs` instead of the generic arguments for `spAddEntryPointEx`, which are not just for entry-point generics), which has been a change that we've needed for a long time. This is technically a breaking API change, although we should have very few client applications that care about it. * A bunch of places that used to take "big" objects like `CompileRequest` now just take the sub-pieces they care about (e.g., a function might have only needed a `Linkage` and a `DiagnosticSink`). This makes many subroutines or "context" struct types more generally useful, at the cost of taking more parameters. * In a few cases the conceptually clean separation of the layers breaks down (often for edge-case or compatibility features), and so we may pass along additional objects that are allowed to be null, but are used when present. A big example of this is how the back-end code generation routines accept an `EndToEndCompileRequest` that is optional, and only used to check whether "pass through" compilation is needed. We should probably look into cleaning this kind of logic up over time so that we don't need to violate the apparent separation of phases of compilation. * In cases where separation of layers was being broken for the sake of GLSL features, I went ahead and ripped them out, since all of that should be dead code anyway. * In many cases I increased the encapsulation of data in the core types to help track down use sites and make sure they are following invariants better. * In cases where code was doing, e.g., `context->shared->compileRequest->session->getThing()` I have tried to introduce convenience routines so that the usage site is just `context->getThing()` to improve encapsulation and allow changes to be made more easily going forward. * The `noteInternalErrorLoc` functionality was moved off of the compile request and into `DiagnosticSink`, since that is the one type you can rely on having around when you want to note an internal error. We may consider going forward if (and how) it should reset the counter used for noting locations on internal errors. * A few APIs now take `DiagnosticSink*` arguments where they didn't before, and as a result some public APIs need to create `DiagnosticSink`s to pass in, before going ahead and ignoring the messages. In the future there should be variations of these APIs that accept an `ISlangBlob**` parameter for the output. * fixup: missing include for compilers with accurate template checking (non-VS) * fixup: review feedback
* Fix atomic operations on RWBuffer (#593)Tim Foley2018-06-05
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | * Fix atomic operations on RWBuffer An earlier change added support for passing true pointers to `__ref` parameters to fix the global `Interlocked*()` functions when applied to `groupshared` variables or `RWStructureBuffer<T>` elements. That change didn't apply to `RWBuffer<T>` or `RWTexture2D<T>`, etc. because those types had so far only declared `get` and `set` accessors, but not any `ref` accessors (which return a pointer). The main fixes here are: * Add `ref` accessors to the subscript oeprations on the `RW*` resource types * Adjust the logic for emitting calls to subscript accessors so that we don't get quite as eager about invoking a `ref` accessor, and instead try to invoke just a `get` or `set` accessor when these will suffice. This is important for Vulkan cross-compilation, where we don't yet support the semantics of our `ref` accessors. * Add a test case for atomics on a `RWBuffer` * Fix up `render-test` so that we can specify a format for a buffer resource, which allows us to use things other than `*StructuredBuffer` and `*ByteAddressBuffer`. The work there is probably not complete; I just did what I could to get the test working. * A bunch of files got whitespace edits thanks to the fact that I'm using editorconfig and others on the project seemingly arent... * fixup: remove ifdefed-out code
* Allow arbitrary type string as type argument in spAddEntryPointEx.Yong He2018-01-19
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* Add support for global generic parameters (#285)Yong He2017-11-17
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | * Add support for global generic parameters (In-progress work) This commit include: 1. Update Slang API to allow specification of generic type arguments in an `EntryPointRequest` 2. Add parsing of `__generic_param` construct, which becomes a GlobalGenericParamDecl, contains members of `GenericTypeConstraintDecl`. 3. Semantics checking will check whether the provided type arguments conform to the interfaces as defined by the generic parameter, and store SubtypeWitness values in the EntryPointRequest, which will be used by `specializeIRForEntryPoint` when generating final IR. 4. Add a new type of substitution - `GlobalGenericParamSubstitution` for subsittuting references to `__generic_param` decls or to its member `GenericTypeConsraintDecl` with the actual type argument or witness tables. 5. Update `IRSpecContext` to apply `GlobalGenericParamSubstitution` when specializing the IR for an EntryPointRequest. 6. Update `render-test` to take additional `type` inputs, which specifies the type arguments to substitute into the global `__generic_param` types. This commit does not include ProgramLayout specialization. * IR: pass through `[unroll]` attribute (#284) The initial lowering was adding an `IRLoopControlDecoration` to the instruction at the head of a loop, but this was getting dropped when the IR gets cloned for a particular entry point. The fix was simply to add a case for loop-control decorations to `cloneDecoration`. * fix warnings * IR: support `CompileTimeForStmt` (#286) This statement type is a bit of a hack, to support loops that *must* be unrolled. The AST-to-AST pass handles them by cloning the AST for the loop body N times, and it was easy enough to do the same thing for the IR: emit the instructions for the body N times. The only thing that requires a bit of care is that now we might see the same variable declarations multiple times, so we need to play it safe and overwrite existing entries in our map from declarations to their IR values. Of course a better answer long-term would be to do the actual unrolling in the IR. This is especially true because we might some day want to support compile-time/must-unroll loops in functions, where the loop counter comes in as a parameter (but must still be compile-time-constant at every call site). * Add support for global generic parameters (In-progress work) This commit include: 1. Update Slang API to allow specification of generic type arguments in an `EntryPointRequest` 2. Add parsing of `__generic_param` construct, which becomes a GlobalGenericParamDecl, contains members of `GenericTypeConstraintDecl`. 3. Semantics checking will check whether the provided type arguments conform to the interfaces as defined by the generic parameter, and store SubtypeWitness values in the EntryPointRequest, which will be used by `specializeIRForEntryPoint` when generating final IR. 4. Add a new type of substitution - `GlobalGenericParamSubstitution` for subsittuting references to `__generic_param` decls or to its member `GenericTypeConsraintDecl` with the actual type argument or witness tables. 5. Update `IRSpecContext` to apply `GlobalGenericParamSubstitution` when specializing the IR for an EntryPointRequest. 6. Update `render-test` to take additional `type` inputs, which specifies the type arguments to substitute into the global `__generic_param` types. progress on parameter binding * Add a more contrived test case for specializing parameter bindings * update render-test to align buffers to 256 bytes (to get rid of D3D complains on minimal buffer size). * adding one more test case for parameter binding specialization. * Cleanup according to @tfoleyNV 's suggestions. * fix a bug introduced in the cleanup
* add new test mode: COMPARE_RENDER_COMPUTE, which runs a input ↵YONGH\yongh2017-10-25
| | | | vertex/fragment shader pair, but instead of comparing the resulting framebuffer, it expects the test shader to write results into a UAV, and compares the pixel shader UAV output to the reference output.
* finish up opengl renderer implementation for input resource binding.YONGH\yongh2017-10-25
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* Work in-progress: simple compute test passed. (d3d renderer)Yong He2017-10-23
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* in-progress work: allow render-test to generate and bind various resource ↵YONGH\yongh2017-10-20
inputs for running test shaders with arbitrary parameter definitions. This commit contains the parser of the resource input definition.