We need to know how to generate correct SPIRV for cases like
OpConstant %int64 42 since the current parser will encode the 42 as a
32-bit value incorrectly.
This change is the first of a pair. This one tracks types, and makes
sure that OpConstant and OpSpecConstant are only ever called with
Integer or Float types, and OpSwitch is only called with integer
generating values.
Move the definition of spv_instruction_t to an internal
header file, since it now depends on C++ and is not
used by the external interface.
Use a std::vector<uint32_t> in spv_instruction_t
instead of a fixed size array.
All uses of OptionalLiteral by the SPIR-V spec are used
for literal numbers.
Also rename:
- SPV_OPERAND_TYPE_OPTIONAL_LITERAL to
SPV_OPERAND_TYPE_OPTIONAL_LITERAL_NUMBER.
- SPV_OPERAND_TYPE_VARIABLE_LITERAL to
SPV_OPERAND_TYPE_VARIABLE_LITERAL_NUMBER.
- SPV_OPERAND_TYPE_VARIABLE_LITERAL_ID to
SPV_OPERAND_TYPE_VARIABLE_LITERAL_NUMBER_ID.
- SPV_OPERAND_TYPE_VARIABLE_ID_LITERAL to
SPV_OPERAND_TYPE_VARIABLE_ID_LITERAL_NUMBER.
- SPV_OPERAND_TYPE_LITERAL_IN_OPTIONAL_TUPLE to
SPV_OPERAND_TYPE_LITERAL_NUMBER_IN_OPTIONAL_TUPLE.
Add a new operand type SPV_OPERAND_TYPE_MULTIWORD_LITERAL_NUMBER
to represent those operands that can expand into multiple words.
Now only OpConstant and OpSpecConstant have such kind of operand.
Added diagnostic messages for what should be an internal failure
that never happens. I figure if we return "failed" for something the
user cannot control we should print a message for it.
Previous the api used spv_text_t and spv_binary_t for both input
and output, but depending on the usage, you either MUST
call spvBinaryDestroy or you MUST NOT call spvBinaryDestroy on the
pointer.
The assembler and disassembler now use a dynamically adjusted
sequence of expected operand types. (Internally, it is a deque,
for readability.) Both parsers repeatedly pull an expected operand
type from the left of this pattern list, and try to match the next
input token against it.
The expected pattern is adjusted during the parse to accommodate:
- an extended instruction's expected operands, depending on the
extended instruction's index.
- when an operand itself has operands
- to handle sequences of zero or more operands, or pairs of
operands. These are expanded lazily during the parse.
Adds spv::OperandClass from the SPIR-V specification generator.
Modifies spv_operand_desc_t:
- adds hasResult, hasType, and operandClass array to the opcode
description type.
- "wordCount" is replaced with "numTypes", which counts the number
of entries in operandTypes. And each of those describes a
*logical* operand, including the type id for the instruction,
and the result id for the instruction. A logical operand could be
variable-width, such as a literal string.
Adds opcode.inc, an automatically-generated table of operation
descriptions, with one line to describe each core instruction.
Externally, we have modified the SPIR-V spec doc generator to
emit this file.
(We have hacked this copy to use the old semantics for OpLine.)
Inside the assembler, parsing an operand may fail with new
error code SPV_FAIL_MATCH. For an optional operand, this is not
fatal, but should trigger backtracking at a higher level.
The spvTextIsStartOfNewInst checks the case of the third letter
of what might be an opcode. So now, "OpenCL" does not look like
an opcode name.
In assembly, the EntryPoint name field is mandatory, but can be
an empty string.
Adjust tests for changes to:
- OpSampedImage
- OpTypeSampler
Since now we can distinguish between def and use according to
the variable's location, there is no need to keep two variable
prefixes.
Also reformat tests to use the value generating instruction
format ("<result-id> = <opcode> <operand>..").