This is needed for accessing types/variables within a member function body that are
not known until after the struct is finished being declared. However, that funtionality
is not yet present, this is just the deferred processing, which is working for
static member functions.
This is slightly cleaner today for entry-point wrapping, which sometimes made
two subtrees for a function definition instead of just one subtree. It will be
critical though for recognizing a struct with multiple member functions.
This is a partial implemention of structurebuffers supporting:
* structured buffer types of:
* StructuredBuffer
* RWStructuredBuffer
* ByteAddressBuffer
* RWByteAddressBuffer
* Atomic operations on RWByteAddressBuffer
* Load/Load[234], Store/Store[234], GetDimensions methods (where allowed by type)
* globallycoherent flag
But NOT yet supporting:
* AppendStructuredBuffer / ConsumeStructuredBuffer types
* IncrementCounter/DecrementCounter methods
Please note: the stride returned by GetDimensions is as calculated by glslang for std430,
and may not match other environments in all cases.
This obsoletes WIP PR #704, which was built on the pre entry point wrapping master. New version
here uses entry point wrapping.
This is a limited implementation of tessellation shaders. In particular, the following are not functional,
and will be added as separate stages to reduce the size of each PR.
* patchconstantfunctions accepting per-control-point input values, such as
const OutputPatch <hs_out_t, 3> cpv are not implemented.
* patchconstantfunctions whose signature requires an aggregate input type such as
a structure containing builtin variables. Code to synthesize such calls is not
yet present.
These restrictions will be relaxed as soon as possible. Simple cases can compile now: see for example
Test/hulsl.hull.1.tesc - e.g, writing to inner and outer tessellation factors.
PCF invocation is synthesized as an entry point epilogue protected behind a barrier and a test on
invocation ID == 0. If there is an existing invocation ID variable it will be used, otherwise one is
added to the linkage. The PCF and the shader EP interfaces are unioned and builtins appearing in
the PCF but not the EP are also added to the linkage and synthesized as shader inputs.
Parameter matching to (eventually arbitrary) PCF signatures is by builtin variable type. Any user
variables in the PCF signature will result in an error. Overloaded PCF functions will also result in
an error.
[domain()], [partitioning()], [outputtopology()], [outputcontrolpoints()], and [patchconstantfunction()]
attributes to the shader entry point are in place, with the exception of the Pow2 partitioning mode.
This introduces parallel types for IO-type containing aggregates used as
non-entry point function parameters or return types, or declared as variables.
Further uses of the same original type will share the same sanitized deep
structure.
This is intended to be used with the wrap-entry-point branch.
Previously, a type graph would turn into a type tree. That is,
a deep node that is shared would have multiple copies made.
This is important when creating IO and non-IO versions of deep types.
This needs some render testing, but is destined to be part of master.
This also leads to a variety of other simplifications.
- IO are global symbols, so only need one list of linkage nodes (deferred)
- no longer need parse-context-wide 'inEntryPoint' state, entry-point is localized
- several parts of splitting/flattening are now localized