Previously, an error was thrown when assigning a float1 to a scalar float,
or similar for other basic types. This allows that.
Also, this allows calling functions accepting scalars with float1 params,
so for example sin(float1) will work. This is a minor change in
HlslParseContext::findFunction().
Rationalizes the entire tracking of the linker object nodes, effecting
GLSL, HLSL, and SPIR-V, to allow tracked objects to be fully edited before
their type snapshot for linker objects.
Should only effect things when the rest of the AST contained no reference to
the symbol, because normal AST nodes were not stale. Also will only effect such
objects when their types were edited.
These HLSL types are guaranteed to have at least the given number of bits, but may have more.
min{16,10}float is mapped to EbtFloat at medium precision -> SPIRV RelaxedPrecision
min{16,12}int and min16uint are mapped to mediump -> SPIR-V RelaxedPrecision
This PR adds handling of the numthreads attribute for compute shaders, as well as a general
infrastructure for returning attribute values from acceptAttributes, which may be needed in other
cases, e.g, unroll(x), or merely to know if some attribute without params was given.
A map of enum values from TAttributeType to TIntermAggregate nodes is built and returned. It
can be queried with operator[] on the map. In the future there may be a need to also handle
strings (e.g, for patchconstantfunc), and those can be easily added into the class if needed.
New test is in hlsl.numthreads.comp.
- add optional callback to handle mapping of uniform variables in linking phase
- if no resolver is provided, it uses the internal default resolver with all shifts and auto bind settings
Change-Id: Icfe38a9eabe8bfc8f8bb6d8150c06f7ed38bb762
This PR only changes a few lines of code, but is subtle.
In HLSL, comparison operators (<,>,<=,>=,==,!=) operate component-wise
when given a vector operand. If a whole vector equality or inequality is
desired, then all() or any() can be used on the resulting bool vector.
This PR enables this change. Existing shape conversion is used when
one of the two arguments is a vector and one is a scalar.
Some existing HLSL tests had assumed == and != meant vector-wise
instead of component-wise comparisons. These tests have been changed
to add an explicit any() or all() to the test source. This verifably
does not change the final SPIR-V binary relative to the old behavior
for == and !=. The AST does change for the (now explicit, formerly
implicit) any() and all(). Also, a few tests changes where they
previously had the return type wrong, e.g, from a vec < vec comparison
in hlsl.shapeConv.frag.
Promotion of comparison opcodes to vector forms
(EOpEqual->EOpVectorEqual) is handled in promoteBinary(), as is setting
the proper vector type of the result.
EOpVectorEqual and EOpVectorNotEqual are now accepted as either
aggregate or binary nodes, similar to how the other operators are
handled. Partial support already existed for this: it has been
fleshed out in the printing functions in intermOut.cpp.
There is an existing defect around shape conversion with 1-vectors, but
that is orthogonal to this PR and not addressed by it.
HLSL holds the compare value in a separate intrinsic arg, but the AST wants
a vector including the cmp val, except in the 4-dim coord case, where it
doesn't fit and is in fact a separate AST parameter. This is awkward but
necessary, given AST semantics. In the process, a new vector is constructed
for the combined result, but this vector was not being given the correct
TType, so was causing some downstream troubles.
Now it is. A similar defect existed in OpTextureBias, and has also been
fixed.
This fixes defects as follows:
1. handleLvalue could be called on a non-L-value, and it shouldn't be.
2. HLSL allows unary negation on non-bool values. TUnaryOperator::promote
can now promote other types (e.g, int, float) to bool for this op.
3. HLSL allows binary logical operations (&&, ||) on arbitrary types, similar
(2).
4. HLSL allows mod operation on arbitrary types, which will be promoted.
E.g, int % float -> float % float.
This PR sets the TQualifier layoutFormat according to the HLSL image type.
For instance:
RWTexture1D <float2> g_tTex1df2;
becomes ElfRg32f. Similar on Buffers, e.g, Buffer<float4> mybuffer;
The return type for image and buffer loads is now taken from the storage format.
Also, the qualifier for the return type is now (properly) a temp, not a global.
All the underpinnings are there; this just parses multiple array dimensions
and passes them through to the existing mechanisms.
Also, minor comment fixes, and add a new test for multi-dim arrays.
- hlsl.struct.frag variable changed to static, assignment replacd.
- Created new low level functions addBinaryNode and addUnaryNode. These are
used by higher level functions such as addAssignment, and do not do any
argument promotion or conversion of any sort.
- Two functions above are now used in RWTexture lvalue conversions. Also,
other direction creations of unary or binary nodes now use them, e.g, addIndex.
This cleans up some existing code.
- removed handling of EOpVectorTimesScalar from promote()
- removed comment from ParseHelper.cpp
This commit splits lValueErrorCheck into machine dependent and independent
parts. The GLSL form in TParseContext inherits from and invokes the
machine dependent part in TParseContextBase. The base form checks language
independent things. This split does not change the set of errors tested
for: the test results are identical.
The new base class interface is now used from the HLSL FE to test lvalues.
There was one test diff due to this, where the test was writing to a uniform.
It still does the same indirections, but does not attempt a uniform write.
This commit adds l-value support for RW texture and buffer objects.
Supported are:
- pre and post inc/decrement
- function out parameters
- op-assignments, such as *=, +-, etc.
- result values from op-assignments. e.g, val=(MyRwTex[loc] *= 2);
Not supported are:
- Function inout parameters
- multiple post-inc/decrement operators. E.g, MyRWTex[loc]++++;
This commit adds r-value support for RW textures and buffers.
Supported is:
- Function in parameter conversions
- conversion of rvalue use to imageLoad
There's a lot to do for RWTexture and RWBuffer, so it will be broken up into
several PRs. This is #1.
This adds RWTexture and RWBuffer support, with the following limitations:
* Only 4 component formats supported
* No operator[] yet
Those will be added in other PRs.
This PR supports declarations and the Load & GetDimensions methods. New tests are
added.
If a member-wise assignment from a non-flattened struct to a flattened struct sees a complex R-value
(not a symbol), it now creates a temporary to hold that value, to avoid repeating the R-value.
This avoids, e.g, duplicating a whole function call. Also, it avoids re-using the AST node, making a
new one for each member inside the member loop.
The latter (re-use of AST node) was also an issue in the GetDimensions intrinsic decomposition,
so this PR fixes that one too.
- Add new queries: TProgram::getUniformTType and getUniformBlockTType,
which return a const TType*, or nullptr on a bad index. These are valid for
any source language.
- Interface name for HLSL cbuffers is taken from the (only) available declaration name,
whereas before it was always an empty string, which caused some troubles with reflection
mapping them all to the same index slot. This also makes it appear in the SPIR-V binary
instead of an empty string.
- Print the binding as part of the reflection textual dump.
- TType::clone becomes const. Needed to call it from a const method, and anyway it doesn't
change the object it's called on.
- Because the TObjectReflection constructor is called with a TType *reference* (not pointer)
so that it's guaranteed to pass in a type, and the "badReflection" value should use a nullptr
there, that now has a dedicated static method to obtain the bad value. It uses a private
constructor, so external users can't create one with a nullptr type.
Previously, the binding auto-mapping facility was free to use any unused
binding. This change makes auto-bindings use the same offset value as
explicit bindings.