The current method of removing an instruction is to call ToNop. The
problem with this is that it leaves around an instruction that later
passes will look at. We should just delete the instruction.
In MemPass there is a utility routine called DCEInst. It can delete
essentially any instruction, which can invalidate pointers now that they
are actually deleted. The interface was changed to add a call back that
can be used to update any local data structures that contain
ir::Intruction*.
Re-formatted the source tree with the command:
$ /usr/bin/clang-format -style=file -i \
$(find include source tools test utils -name '*.cpp' -or -name '*.h')
This required a fix to source/val/decoration.h. It was not including
spirv.h, which broke builds when the #include headers were re-ordered by
clang-format.
NFC. This just makes sure every file is formatted following the
formatting definition in .clang-format.
Re-formatted with:
$ clang-format -i $(find source tools include -name '*.cpp')
$ clang-format -i $(find source tools include -name '*.h')
This change will move the instances of the def-use manager to the
IRContext. This allows it to persists across optimization, and does
not have to be rebuilt multiple times.
Added test to ensure that the IRContext is validating and invalidating
the analyses correctly.
This is the first part of adding the IRContext. This class is meant to
hold the extra data that is build on top of the module that it
owns.
The first part will simply create the IRContext class and get it passed
to the passes in place of the module. For now it does not have any
functionality of its own, but it acts more as a wrapper for the module.
The functions that I added to the IRContext are those that either
traverse the headers or add to them. I did this because we may decide
to have other ways of dealing with these sections (for example adding a
type pool, or use the decoration manager).
I also added the function that add to the header because the IRContext
needs to know when an instruction is added to update other data
structures appropriately.
Note that there is still lots of work that needs to be done. There are
still many places that change the module, and do not inform the context.
That will be the next step.
Including a re-factor of common behaviour into class Pass:
The following functions are now in class Pass:
- IsLoopHeader.
- ComputeStructuredOrder
- ComputeStructuredSuccessors (annoyingly, I could not re-factor all
instances of this function, the copy in common_uniform_elim_pass.cpp
is slightly different and fails with the common implementation).
- GetPointeeTypeId
- TakeNextId
- FinalizeNextId
- MergeBlockIdIfAny
This is a NFC (non-functional change)
This optimizes a single index extract whose composite value terminates with a
CompositeConstruct (or ConstantComposite) by evaluating to the correct
component. This was needed for opaque legalization.
This highlights the need/opportunity to improve this optimization to deal
with more complex composite expressions including currently handled ops
plus Null ops and special vector composition. A TODO has been added.
Includes code to deal correctly with OpFunctionParameter. This
is needed by opaque propagation which may not exhaustively inline
entry point functions.
Adds ProcessEntryPointCallTree: a method to do work on the
functions in the entry point call trees in a deterministic order.
Currently only SPV_KHR_variable_pointers is disallowed in passes which
do pointer analysis. Positive and negative tests of the general extensions
mechanism were added to aggressive_dce but cover all passes.