GLSL and RelaxedPrecision are quite different in what they affect.
RelaxedPrecision affects operations, while this is merely implied in
GLSL based on inputs.
This leads to situations where we have to promote mediump inputs to
highp, and the simplest approach is to force highp temporaries for
inputs which are consumed in a highp context. For completeness, we also
demote RelaxedPrecision inputs to mediump variables.
PHI is handled by copying the PHI into a temporary.
We have to be very careful with hoisted temporaries, since the child
temporary will not be analyzed up-front. We inherit the hoisted-ness
state and emit the hoisted child temporary as necessary. When faking the
temporaries with OpCopyObject, we make sure to block any variable
hoisting.
Hoisting children of PHI variables is fine, since PHIs are not hoisted with
the same framework as other temporaries.
Just like we try to fixup struct names for block types, inner structs
can be "anonymous" structs. HLSL codegen from DXC tends to emit this,
and emitting dummy struct names tends to break GL linkage on some
drivers.
Makes codegen from typical D3D emulation SPIR-V more readable.
Also makes cross compilation with NotEqual more sensible.
It's very rare to actually need the strict NaN-checks in practice.
Also, glslang now emits UnordNotEqual by default it seems, so give up
trying to assume OrdNotEqual. Harmonize for UnordNotEqual as the sane
default.
Introduces an idea of a recompilation making forward progress.
There are some extreme edge cases where we need more than 3 loops, but
only allow this in specific circumstances where we can reason about
forward progress being made.
This is somewhat awkward to support, but the best effort we can do here
is to analyze various Load/Store opcodes and deduce the ideal overall
alignment based on this. This is not a 100% perfect solution, but should
be correct for any reasonable use case.
Also fix various nitpicks with BDA support while I'm at it.
Apparently, it's legal to use a selection construct where both paths
branch to same location, but a different merge point is used.
This breaks many assumptions the variable scope analyzer makes.
The only logical way to generate code for this scenario is to treat the
selection construct as a trivial switch construct with only a default
case.
Need special workarounds to handle array load/store since array size is
unsized in GLSL, and array copy is not possible.
Also, consider bitcast for scalar loads and stores.
- Do not silently drop reserved identifiers in the parser. This makes it
possible to reflect identifiers which are reserved by the
cross-compiler module.
- Instead of dropping the name, emit _RESERVED_IDENTIFIER_FIXUP in the
source to make it clear that a name has been rewritten.
- Document what is reserved and not.