Constexpr guaranteed no runtime init in addition to const semantics.
Moving all opt/ to constexpr.
Moving all compile-unit statics to anonymous namespaces to uniformize
the method used (anonymous namespace vs static has the same behavior
here AFAIK).
Signed-off-by: Nathan Gauër <brioche@google.com>
* Remove `spvOpcodeTerminatesExecution`
This function is the same as `spvOpcodeIsAbort` except for
OpUnreachable. The names are so close in meaning that it is hard to
distinguish them. I've removed `spvOpcodeTerminatesExecution` since it
is used in only a single place. I've special cased OpUnreachable in
that location.
At the same time, I fixed up some comments related to the use of the
TerminatesExecution and IsAbort functions.
Following up on #4930.
* Fix comments
* Structural dominance introduced in SPIR-V 1.6 rev2
* Changes the structured cfg validation to use structural dominance
* structural dominance is based on a cfg where merge and continue
declarations are counted as graph edges
* Basic blocks now track structural predecessors and structural
successors
* Add validation for entry into a loop
* Fixed an issue with inlining a single block loop
* The continue target needs to be moved to the latch block
* Simplify the calculation of structured exits
* no longer requires block depth
* Update many invalid tests
Debug[No]Line are tracked and optimized using the same mechanism that tracks
and optimizes Op[No]Line.
Also:
- Fix missing DebugScope at top of block.
- Allow scalar replacement of access chain in DebugDeclare
Includes:
- Shift to use of spirv-header extinst.nonsemantic.shader grammar.json
- Remove extinst.nonsemantic.vulkan.debuginfo.100.grammar.json
- Enable all optimizations for Shader.DebugInfo
Also fixes scalar replacement to only insert DebugValue after all
OpVariables. This is not necessary for OpenCL.DebugInfo, but it is
for Shader.DebugInfo.
Likewise, fixes Private-to-Local to insert DebugDeclare after all
OpVariables.
Also fixes inlining to handle FunctionDefinition which can show up
after first block if early return processing happens.
Co-authored-by: baldurk <baldurk@baldurk.org>
This commit add support for optimizer to not inline functions with DontInline control flag, so that the [noinline] attribute in HLSL will be useful in DXC SPIR-V generation.
This is part of work of github.com/microsoft/DirectXShaderCompiler/issues/3158
It is possible that the result of a void function call is used. In case
it is used, we need something that still defines its id after inlining.
We use an undef for that purpose.
Fixes https://github.com/KhronosGroup/SPIRV-Tools/issues/3704
Handles the OpenCL100Debug extension in inlining. It preserves the information that is available while also adding the debug inlined at for all of the inlining that it does.
- No longer inline functions with early exits. Merge return can modify them so they can be inlined.
- Otherwise no functional change, should be just refactoring.
* Validate that if a construct contains a header and it's merge is
reachable, the construct also contains the merge
* updated block merging to not merge into the continue
* update inlining to mark the original block of a single block loop as
the continue
* updated some tests
* remove dead code
* rename kBlockTypeHeader to kBlockTypeSelection for clarity
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
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.
It is illegal to inline an OpKill instruction into a continue construct because the continue header will no longer dominate the backedge.
This commit adds a check for this, and does not inline.
If we still want to be able to inline a function that contains an OpKill, we can add a new pass that will wrap OpKill instructions into its own function with just the single instruction.
I do not believe that this is a common case right now, so I will not do that yet.
Fixes#2433.
* Move ProcessFunction* function from pass to the context.
There are a few functions that are used to traverse the call tree.
They currently live in the Pass class, but they have nothing to do with
a pass, and may be needed outside of a pass. They would be better in
the ir context, or in a specific call tree class if we ever have a need
for it.
* Don't inline recursive functions.
Inlining does not check if a function is recursive or not. This has
been fine as long as the shader was a Vulkan shader, which forbid
recursive functions. However, not all shaders are vulkan, so either
we limit inlining to Vulkan shaders or we teach it to look for recursive
functions.
I prefer to keep the passes as general as is reasonable. The change
does not require much new code in inlining and gives a reason to refactor
some other code.
The changes are to add a member function to the Function class that
checks if that function is recursive or not.
Then this is used in inlining to not inlining a function call if it calls
a recursive function.
* Add id to function analysis
There are a few places that build a map from ids to Function whose
result is that id. I decided to add an analysis to the context for this
to reduce that code, and simplify some of the functions.
* Add missing file.
If there is only 1 return and it is in a loop, then the function cannot be inlined.
Fix condition when inlined code needs one-trip loop wrapper. The dummy loop is needed when there is a return inside a selection construct. Even if there is only 1 return.
Currently the IRContext is passed into the Pass::Process method. It is
then up to the individual pass to store the context into the context_
variable. This CL changes the Run method to store the context before
calling Process which no-longer receives the context as a parameter.
This CL moves the files in opt/ to consistenly be under the opt::
namespace. This frees up the ir:: namespace so it can be used to make a
shared ir represenation.
We are seeing shaders that have multiple returns in a functions. These
functions must get inlined for legalization purposes; however, the
inliner does not know how to inline functions that have multiple
returns.
The solution we will go with it to improve the merge return pass to
handle structured control flow.
Note that the merge return pass will assume the cfg has been cleanedup
by dead branch elimination.
Fixes#857.
This reimplementation fixes several issues when removing decorations associated
to an ID (partially addresses #1174 and gives tools for fixing #898), as well
as making it easier to remove groups; a few additional tests have been added.
DecorationManager::RemoveDecoration() will still not delete dead decorations it
created, but I do not think it is its job either; given the following input
```
OpCapability Shader
OpCapability Linkage
OpMemoryModel Logical GLSL450
OpDecorate %2 Restrict
%2 = OpDecorationGroup
OpGroupDecorate %2 %1 %3
OpDecorate %4 Invariant
%4 = OpDecorationGroup
OpGroupDecorate %4 %2
%uint = OpTypeInt 32 0
%1 = OpVariable %uint Uniform
%3 = OpVariable %uint Uniform
```
which of the following two outputs would you expect RemoveDecoration(2) to produce:
```
OpCapability Shader
OpCapability Linkage
OpMemoryModel Logical GLSL450
%uint = OpTypeInt 32 0
%1 = OpVariable %uint Uniform
%3 = OpVariable %uint Uniform
```
or
```
OpCapability Shader
OpCapability Linkage
OpMemoryModel Logical GLSL450
OpDecorate %4 Invariant
%4 = OpDecorationGroup
%uint = OpTypeInt 32 0
%1 = OpVariable %uint Uniform
%3 = OpVariable %uint Uniform
```
Fixes https://github.com/KhronosGroup/SPIRV-Tools/issues/924
Fixes https://github.com/KhronosGroup/SPIRV-Tools/issues/1174
When inlining a function call the instructions in the same basic block
as the call get cloned. The clone is added to the set of new blocks
containing the inlined code, and the original instructions are deleted.
This PR will change this so that we simply move the instructions to the
new blocks. This saves on the creation and deletion of the
instructions.
Contributes to #1328.
There seems to only be a single location where the def-use manager is
used. It is to get information about a type. We can do that with the
type manager instead.
Fixes#1285
In order to keep track of all of the implicit capabilities as well as
the explicit ones, we will add them all to the feature manager. That is
the object that needs to be queried when checking if a capability is
enabled.
The name of the "HasCapability" function in the module was changed to
make it more obvious that it does not check for implied capabilities.
Keep an spv_context and AssemblyGrammar in IRContext
When a private variable is used in a single function, it can be
converted to a function scope variable in that function. This adds a
pass that does that. The pass can be enabled using the option
`--private-to-local`.
This transformation allows other transformations to act on these
variables.
Also moved `FindPointerToType` from the inline class to the type manager.
types. This allows the lookup of type declaration ids from arbitrarily
constructed types. Users should be cautious when dealing with non-unique
types (structs and potentially pointers) to get the exact id if
necessary.
* Changed the spec composite constant folder to handle ambiguous composites
* Added functionality to create necessary instructions for a type
* Added ability to remove ids from the type manager
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.
Replaced representation of uses
* Changed uses from unordered_map<uint32_t, UseList> to
set<pairInstruction*, Instruction*>>
* Replaced GetUses with ForEachUser and ForEachUse functions
* updated passes to use new functions
* partially updated tests
* lots of cleanup still todo
Adding an unique id to Instruction generated by IRContext
Each instruction is given an unique id that can be used for ordering
purposes. The ids are generated via the IRContext.
Major changes:
* Instructions now contain a uint32_t for unique id and a cached context
pointer
* Most constructors have been modified to take a context as input
* unfortunately I cannot remove the default and copy constructors, but
developers should avoid these
* Added accessors to parents of basic block and function
* Removed the copy constructors for BasicBlock and Function and replaced
them with Clone functions
* Reworked BuildModule to return an IRContext owning the built module
* Since all instructions require a context, the context now becomes the
basic unit for IR
* Added a constructor to context to create an owned module internally
* Replaced uses of Instruction's copy constructor with Clone whereever I
found them
* Reworked the linker functionality to perform clones into a different
context instead of moves
* Updated many tests to be consistent with the above changes
* Still need to add new tests to cover added functionality
* Added comparison operators to Instruction
Adding tests for Instruction, IRContext and IR loading
Fixed some header comments for BuildModule
Fixes to get tests passing again
* Reordered two linker steps to avoid use/def problems
* Fixed def/use manager uses in merge return pass
* Added early return for GetAnnotations
* Changed uses of Instruction::ToNop in passes to IRContext::KillInst
Simplifying the uses for some contexts in passes
Each instruction is given an unique id that can be used for ordering
purposes. The ids are generated via the IRContext.
Major changes:
* Instructions now contain a uint32_t for unique id and a cached context
pointer
* Most constructors have been modified to take a context as input
* unfortunately I cannot remove the default and copy constructors, but
developers should avoid these
* Added accessors to parents of basic block and function
* Removed the copy constructors for BasicBlock and Function and replaced
them with Clone functions
* Reworked BuildModule to return an IRContext owning the built module
* Since all instructions require a context, the context now becomes the
basic unit for IR
* Added a constructor to context to create an owned module internally
* Replaced uses of Instruction's copy constructor with Clone whereever I
found them
* Reworked the linker functionality to perform clones into a different
context instead of moves
* Updated many tests to be consistent with the above changes
* Still need to add new tests to cover added functionality
* Added comparison operators to Instruction
* Added an internal option to LinkerOptions to verify merged ids are
unique
* Added a test for the linker to verify merged ids are unique
* Updated MergeReturnPass to supply a context
* Updated DecorationManager to supply a context for cloned decorations
* Reworked several portions of the def use tests in anticipation of next
set of changes
To make the decoration manger available everywhere, and to reduce the
number of times it needs to be build, I add one the IRContext.
As the same time, I move code that modifies decoration instruction into
the IRContext from mempass and the decoration manager. This will make
it easier to keep everything up to date.
This should take care of issue #928.
Fixes issue #728. Currently the inliner is not generating decorations for
inlined code which corresponds to function code which has decorations. An
example of decorations that are relevant: RelaxedPrecision, NoContraction.
The solution is to replicate the decoration during inlining.