In this PR, the classes that represent the adjust branch weights
transformation and fuzzer pass were implemented. This transformation
adjusts the branch weights of a OpBranchConditional instruction.
The outliner would outline regions ending with a loop header, making
the block containing the call to the outlined function serve as the
loop header. This, however, is incorrect in general, since the whole
outlined function -- rather than just the exit block for the region --
would end up getting called every time the loop would iterate.
This change restricts the outliner so that the last block in a region
cannot be a loop header.
It has been resolved that statically out-of-bounds accesses are not
invalid in SPIR-V (they lead to undefind behaviour at runtime but
should not cause a module to be rejected during validation). This
change tolerates such accesses in donated code, clamping them in-bound
as part of making a function live-safe.
Fixes a bug where, while recursively adding id equation facts, a
reference to a set of id equations could be used after it had been
freed (due to equivalence classes of equations being merged).
The Sample argument of OpImageTexelPointer is sometimes required to be
a zero constant. It thus cannot be replaced with a synonym in
general. This change avoids replacing this argument with a synonym.
The fact manager maintains an equivalence relation on data descriptors
that tracks when one data descriptor could be used in place of
another. An algorithm to compute the closure of such facts allows
deducing new synonym facts from existing facts. E.g., for two 2D
vectors u and v it is known that u.x is synonymous with v.x and u.y is
synonymous with v.y, it can be deduced that u and v are synonymous.
The closure computation algorithm is very expensive if we get large
equivalence relations.
This change addresses this in three ways:
- The size of equivalence relations is reduced by limiting the extent
to which the components of a composite are recursively noted as
being equivalent, so that when we have large synonymous arrays we do
not record all array elements as being pairwise equivalent.
- When computing the closure of facts, equivalence classes above a
certain size are simply skipped (which can lead to missed facts)
- The closure computation is performed less frequently - it is invoked
explicitly before fuzzer passes that will benefit from data synonym
facts. A new transformation is used to control its invocation, so
that fuzzing and replaying do not get out of sync.
The change also tidies up the order in which some getters are declared
in FuzzerContext.
Adds an extra condition on when a region can be outlined to avoid the
case where a region ends with a loop head but such that the loop's
continue target is in the region. (Outlining such a region would mean
that the loop merge is in the original function and the continue target
in the outlined function.)
The function outliner uses a struct to return ids that a region
generates and that are used outside that region. If these ids have
pointer type this would result in a struct with pointer members, which
leads to illegal loading from non-logical pointers if logical
addressing is used. This change bans that outlining possibility.
Provides support for runtime arrays in the code that traverses
composite types when checking applicability of transformations that
replace ids with synonyms.
Demotes the image storage class to Private during donation. Also
fixes an issue where instructions that depended on non-donated global
values would not be handled properly.
The SPIR-V data rules say that all uses of an OpSampledImage
instruction must be in the same block as the instruction, and highly
restrict those instructions that can consume the result id of an
OpSampledImage.
This adapts the transformations that split blocks and create synonyms
to avoid separating an OpSampledImage use from its definition, and to
avoid synonym-creation instructions such as OpCopyObject consuming an
OpSampledImage result id.
The management of equation facts suffered from two problems:
(1) The processing of an equation fact required the data descriptors
used in the equation to be in canonical form. However, during
fact processing it can be deduced that certain data descriptors
are equivalent, causing their equivalence classes to be merged,
and that could cause previously canonical data descriptors to no
longer be canonical.
(2) Related to this, if id equations were known about a canonical data
descriptor dd1, and other id equations known about a different
canonical data descriptor dd2, the equation facts about these data
descriptors were not being merged in the event that dd1 and dd2
were deduced to be equivalent.
This changes solves (1) by not requiring equation facts to be in
canonical form while processing them, but instead always checking
whether (not necessary canonical) data descriptors are equivalent when
looking for corollaries of equation facts, rather than comparing them
using ==.
Problem (2) is solved by adding logic to merge sets of equations when
data descriptors are made equivalent.
In addition, the change also requires elements to be registered in an
equivalence relation before they can be made equivalent, rather than
being added (if not already present) at the point of being made
equivalent.
This change increases the extent to which arbitrary SPIR-V can be used
by the fuzzer pass that donates modules. It handles the case where
various ingredients (such as types, variables and particular
instructions) cannot be donated by omitting them, and then either
omitting their dependencies or replacing their dependencies with
alternative instructions.
The change pays particular attention to allowing code that manipulates
image types to be handled (by skipping anything image-specific).
(1) Runtime arrays are turned into fixed-size arrays, by turning
OpTypeRuntimeArray into OpTypeArray and uses of OpArrayLength into
uses of the constant used for the length of the fixed-size array.
(2) Atomic instructions are not donated, and uses of their results are
replaced with uses of constants of the result type.
The fuzzer pass that constructs composites had an issue where it would
regard isomorphic but distinct structs (similarly arrays) as being
interchangeable when constructing composites. This change fixes the
problem by relying less on the type manager.
To avoid problems where global and local variables of opaque or
runtime-sized types are added to a module, this change introduces the
notion of a 'basic type' -- a type made up from floats, ints, bools,
or vectors, matrices, structs and fixed-size arrays of basic types.
Added variables have to be of basic type.
Some transformations (e.g. TransformationAddFunction) rely on running
the validator to decide whether the transformation is applicable. A
recent change allowed spirv-fuzz to take validator options, to cater
for the case where a module should be considered valid under
particular conditions. However, validation during the checking of
transformations had no access to these validator options.
This change introduced TransformationContext, which currently consists
of a fact manager and a set of validator options, but could in the
future have other fields corresponding to other objects that it is
useful to have access to when applying transformations. Now, instead
of checking and applying transformations in the context of a
FactManager, a TransformationContext is used. This gives access to
the fact manager as before, and also access to the validator options
when they are needed.
In this PR, the classes that represent the toggle access chain
instruction transformation and fuzzer pass were implemented. This
transformation toggles the instructions OpAccessChain and
OpInBoundsAccessChain between them.
Fixes#3193.
This introduces a new fuzzer pass to add instructions to the module
that define equations, and support in the fact manager for recording
equation facts and deducing synonym facts from equation facts.
Initially the only equations that are supported involve OpIAdd,
OpISub, OpSNegate and OpLogicalNot, but there is scope for adding
support for equations over various other operators.
This fixes a bug where the type id of a type instruction, rather than
its result id, was being used. It also favours using zero as the
return value when replacing an OpKill or OpUnreachable with a return
instruction, and adds a check that the donor module is valid when
doing module donation.
Fixes#3187.
This change adds a fuzzer pass that sprinkles access chain
instructions into a module at random. This allows other passes to
have a richer set of pointers available to them, in particular the
passes that add loads and stores.
Adds a fuzzer pass that inserts function calls into the module at
random. Calls from dead blocks can be arbitrary (so long as they do
not introduce recursion), while calls from other blocks can only be to
livesafe functions.
The change fixes some oversights in transformations to replace
constants with uniforms and to obfuscate constants which testing of
this fuzzer pass identified.
This change ensures that global and local variables donated from other
modules are always initialized at their declaration in the module
being transformed. This is to help limit issues related to undefined
behaviour that might arise due to accessing uninitialized memory.
The change also introduces some helper functions in fuzzer_util to
make it easier to find the pointee types of pointer types.
This change adds fuzzer passes that sprinkle loads and stores into a
module at random, with stores restricted to occur in either dead
blocks, or to use pointers for which it is known that the pointee
value does not influence the module's overall behaviour.
The change also generalises the VariableValueIsArbitrary fact to
PointeeValueIsIrrelevant, to allow stores through access chains or
object copies of variables whose values are known to be irrelevant.
The change includes some other minor refactorings.
Adds two new fuzzer passes to add variables to a module: one that adds
Private storage class global variables, another that adds Function
storage class local variables.
Adds a fuzzer pass that randomly adds vector and matrix types not
already present in the module, and randomly adds structs with random
field types and arrays with random base types and sizes. Other passes
will be able to create variables and ids using these types.
If the fuzzer object-copies a pointer we would like to be able to
perform loads from the copy (and stores to it, if its value is known
not to matter). Undefined and null pointers present a problem here,
so this change disallows copying them.
This change adds a new kind of fact to the fact manager, which records
when a variable (or pointer parameter) refers to an arbitrary value,
so that anything can be stored to it, without affecting the observable
behaviour of the module, and nothing can be guaranteed about values
loaded from it. Donated modules are the current source of such
variables, and other transformations, such as outlining, have been
adapted to propagate these facts appropriately.