* Remove Impl struct in Reducer; we can re-add it later (in a cleaner fashion) if we need to.
* Add cleanup passes in Reducer; needed so that removal of constants can be disabled during the main passes, and then enabled during cleanup passes, otherwise some main passes can perform worse due to lack of available constants.
* Delete passes: remove op name, remove relaxed precision. And delete associated tests.
* Add more tests for remove unreferenced instructions.
* Always return and write the output file, even if there was a reduction failure.
* Only exit with 0 if the reduction completed or we hit the reduction step limit.
Issue #2919 identifies a problem in spirv-fuzz's ability to determine
when it is safe to add a new control flow edge without breaking
dominance rules. This change adds a (currently disabled) test to
expose the issue, and a comment to document that the current solution
is incomplete.
We want to handle OpKill better. The wrap opkill causes lots of extra
code to be generated, even when they are not needed to avoid the main
problem: OpKill cannot be found directly in a continue construct.
This change will be more selective on which functions the OpKill will be
wrapped and inlining will avoid inlining.
Fixes#2912
* Add continue construct analysis to struct cfg analysis
Add the ability to identify which blocks are in the continue construct for a
loop, and to get functions that are called from those blocks, directly or
indirectly.
Part of https://github.com/KhronosGroup/SPIRV-Tools/issues/2912.
There is nothing in the spir-v spec that says the last
instructions in a module cannot be OpLine or OpNoLine.
However, the code that parses the module will simply drop
these instructions.
We add code that will preserve these instructions.
Strip-debug-info is updated to remove these instructions.
Fixes https://crbug.com/1000689.
Because dominance information becomes a bit unreliable when blocks are
unreachable, this change makes it so that the 'dead break'
transformation will not introduce a break to an unreachable block.
Fixes#2907.
This change introduces a robust check for whether an index in an
access chain is indexing into a struct, in which case the index needs
to be an OpConstant and cannot be replaced with a synonym.
Fixes#2906.
Issues #2898 and #2900 identify some cases where adding a dead
continue would lead to an invalid module, and these turned out to be
due to the lack of sensible dominance information when a continue
target is unreachable. This change requires that the header of a loop
dominates the loop's continue target if a dead continue is to be
added.
Furthermore, issue #2905 identified a shortcoming in the algorithm
being used to identify when it is OK, from a dominance point of view,
to add a new break/continue edge to a control flow graph. This change
replaces that algorithm with a simpler and more obviously correct
algorithm (that incidentally does not require the new edge to be a
break/continue edge in particular).
Fixes#2898.
Fixes#2900.
Fixes#2905.
Before this change, spirv-fuzz would replace a pointer argument to a
function call with a synonym, which is problematic when the synonym is
not a memory object declaration, since function call arguments are
required to be memory object declarations. This change adds a check
to ensure that such a replacement is not made.
Fixes#2896.
Before this change, spirv-fuzz would replace a constant boolean
argument to an OpPhi with the result of a binary operation, inserting
the instruction to compute the binary operation right before the
OpPhi, leading to an invalid module. This change conservatively
disallows replacing OpPhi arguments. Issue #2902 notes that there is
scope for being less conservative.
Fixes#2897.
* Handle extract with no indexes
It is possible that OpCompositeExtract instructions will not have any
indexes. This is not handled well by scalar replacement and instruction
folding.
Fixes https://crbug.com/1006435
* Fix typo.
This change to spirv-fuzz uses ideas from "Swarm Testing" (Groce et al. 2012), so that a random subset of fuzzer passes are enabled. These passes are then applied repeatedly in a randomized fashion, with the aggression with which they are applied being randomly chosen per pass.
There is plenty of scope for refining the probabilities introduce in this change; this is just meant to be a reasonable first effort.
* Use OpReturn* in wrap-opkill
The warp-opkill pass is generating incorrect code. It is placing an
OpUnreachable at the end of a basic block, when the block can be
reached. We can't reach the end of the block, but we can reach the end.
Instead we will add a return instruction.
Fixes#2875.
A previous change that disabled long-running tests by default failed
to enable short-running tests when long-running tests are enabled.
This change fixes that problem.
To aid in debugging issues in spirv-fuzz, this change adds an option whereby the SPIR-V module is validated after each transformation is applied during replay. This can assist in finding a transformation that erroneously makes the module invalid, so that said transformation can be debugged.
spirv-fuzz has useful tests that run the fuzzer and shrinker, to give
the whole tool a good shake up, effectively "fuzzing the fuzzer". The
problems that this detects are sensitive to the source of randomness
that is used, which can change from test platform to test platform.
It is thus not a good idea to run these tests by default during
continuous integration - they may end up failing due to environtal
factors, making it look like an unrelated change has broken the fuzzer
when really the fuzzer has revealed an already-existing bug in itself.
This change makes the tests disabled by default; they can enabled
during dedicated testing of the fuzzer.
The warp-opkill pass is generating incorrect code. It is placing an
OpUnreachable at the end of a basic block, when the block can be
reached. We can't reach the end of the block, but we can reach the end.
Instead we will add a return instruction.
Fixes#2875.
Many of the places in copy propagate arrays assumes that integer constant will be defined by an OpConstant instruction. That is not always true. We fix these spots by allowing for an OpConstantNull.
If the fuzzer's fact manager knows that ids A and B are synonymous, it
can replace a use of A with a use of B, so long as various conditions
hold (e.g. the definition of B must dominate the use of A, and it is
not legal to replace a use of an OpConstant in a struct's access chain
with a synonym that is not an OpConstant).
This change adds a fuzzer pass to sprinke such synonym replacements
through the module.
* When input or result is a pointer type also allow 32-bit integer
vectors for the other type
* Relaxation only applies to SPIR-V 1.5 or in the presence of
SPV_KHR_physical_storage_buffer
* new tests
* Vulkan specific checks
* storage buffer variables must be structs or arrays of structs
* storage buffer struct must be Block decorated
* uniform struct must be Block or BufferBlock decorated
* new tests
* Ensure same enum values have consistent extension lists
* val: fix checking of capabilities
The operand for an OpCapability should only be
checked for the extension or core version.
The InstructionPass registers a capability, and all its implied
sub-capabilities before actually checking the operand to an
OpCapability.
* Add basic support for SPIR-V 1.5
- Adds SPV_ENV_UNIVERSAL_1_5
- Command line tools default to spv1.5 environment
- SPIR-V 1.5 incorporates several extensions. Now the disassembler
prefers outputing the non-EXT or non-KHR names. This requires
updates to many tests, to make strings match again.
- Command line tests: Expect SPIR-V 1.5 by default
* Test validation of SPIR-V 1.5 incorporated extensions
Starting with 1.5, incorporated features no longer require
the associated OpExtension instruction.
If an OpKill instruction is inlined into a continue construct, then the
spir-v is no longer valid. To avoid this issue, we do inline into an
OpKill at all. This method was chosen because it is difficult to keep
track of whether or not you are in a continue construct while changing
the function that is being inlined into. This will work well with wrap
OpKill because every will still be inlined except for the OpKill
instruction itself.
Fixes#2554Fixes#2433
This reverts commit aa9e8f5380.
The implementation of these passes had overlooked the fact that adding
a new edge to a control flow graph can change dominance information.
Adding a dead break/continue risks causing uses to no longer be
dominated by their definitions. This change introduces various tests
to expose such scenarios, and augments the preconditions for these
transformations with checks to guard against the situation.
* Handle id overflow in the ssa rewriter.
Remove LocalSSAElim pass at the same time. It does the same thing as the SSARewrite pass. Then even share almost all of the same code.
Fixes crbug.com/997246
The first pass applies the RelaxedPrecision decoration to all executable
instructions with float32 based type results. The second pass converts
all executable instructions with RelaxedPrecision result to the equivalent
float16 type, inserting converts where necessary.