The transformation can, for example, replace "true" with "12.0 > 6.0",
if constants for those floating-point values are available.
This introduces a new 'id use descriptor' structure, which provides a
way to describe a particular use of an id, and which will be heavily
used in future transformations. Describing an id use is trivial if
the use occurs in an instruction that itself generates an id, but is
less straightforward if the id of interest is used by an instruction
such as OpStore that does not have a result id. The 'id use
descriptor' structure caters for such cases.
This new pass adds some basic ingredients to a module on which future
passes are likely to depend, such as boolean constants and some
specfic integer and floating-point values. This is not a fuzzer pass
in the true sense in that it does not employ randomization, but it
makes sense to define it as a fuzzer pass since it is the first of a
number of transformations passes that the fuzzer will run on a module.
With this pass, the fuzzer can split blocks in the input module. This
is mainly useful in order to give other (future) transformations more
opportunities to apply.
Adds a library for spirv-fuzz, consisting of a Fuzzer class that will
transform a module with respect to (a) facts about the module provided
via a FactManager class, and (b) a source of random numbers and
parameters to control the transformation process provided via a
FuzzerContext class. Transformations will be applied via classes that
implement a FuzzerPass interface, and both facts and transformations
will be represented via protobuf messages. Currently there are no
concrete facts, transformations nor fuzzer passes; these will follow.