* 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.
Fixes#2104
* Checks the rules for logical addressing and variable pointers
* Has an out for relaxed logical pointers
* Updated PassFixture to expose validator options
* enabled relaxed logical pointers for some tests
* New validator tests
These are bookend passes designed to help preserve line information
across passes which delete, move and clone instructions. The propagation
pass attaches a debug line instruction to every instruction based on
SPIR-V line propagation rules. It should be performed before optimization.
The redundant line elimination pass eliminates all line instructions
which match the previous line instruction. This pass should be performed
at the end of optimization to reduce physical SPIR-V file size.
Fixes#2027.
That function currently only handled OpPtrAccessChain if it was in the
middle of the chain, but not at the start. Fixing that up.
Fixes crbug.com/905271.
* Add base and core bindless validation instrumentation classes
* Fix formatting.
* Few more formatting fixes
* Fix build failure
* More build fixes
* Need to call non-const functions in order.
Specifically, these are functions which call TakeNextId(). These need to
be called in a specific order to guarantee that tests which do exact
compares will work across all platforms. c++ pretty much does not
guarantee order of evaluation of operands, so any such functions need to
be called separately in individual statements to guarantee order.
* More ordering.
* And more ordering.
* And more formatting.
* Attempt to fix NDK build
* Another attempt to address NDK build problem.
* One more attempt at NDK build failure
* Add instrument.hpp to BUILD.gn
* Some name improvement in instrument.hpp
* Change all types in instrument.hpp to int.
* Improve documentation in instrument.hpp
* Format fixes
* Comment clean up in instrument.hpp
* imageInst -> image_inst
* Fix GetLabel() issue.
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.
This CL takes the various opt unit tests and makes a single executable
instead of one per test. This reduces the number of build targets by
~125 when building with ninja.
When looking for a break from a selection construct, we do not realize
that a jump to the continue target of a loop containing the selection
is a break. This causes and infinit loop, or possibly other failures.
Fixes#2004.
When looking for a break from a selection construct, we do not need to
look inside nested constructs. However, if a loop header has an
unconditional branch, then we enter the loop. Entering the loop causes
an infinite loop because we keep going through the loop.
The solution is to look for a merge block, if one exsits, even for block
terminated by an OpBranch.
Fixes#1979.
ADCE liveness algorithm should treat OpUnreachable at least like other
branch instructions. It was being treated as always live which was
preventing useless structured constructs from being eliminated.
OpUnreachable is generated by dead branch elimination which is now
being required by merge return, so this fix should accompany that
change.
We currently run merge-return on all functions, but
dead-branch-elimination only runs on function reachable from an entry
point or exported function. Since dead-branch-elimination is needed for
merge-return, they have to match.
Fixes#1976.
Was removing control structures which didn't have data dependency
with enclosed live loop and otherwise did not contain live code.
An example is a counting loop around a live loop.
Fixes#1967.
Merge return assumes that the only unreachable blocks are those needed
to keep the structured cfg valid. Even those must be essentially empty
blocks.
If this is not the case, we get unpredictable behaviour. This commit
add a check in merge return, and emits an error if it is not the case.
Added a pass of dead branch elimination before merge return in both the
performance and size passes. It is a precondition of merge return.
Fixes#1962.
The current implementation in the folder when seeing a division by zero
is to assert. In the release build, the compiler will attempt to
compute the value, which causes its own problems.
The solution I will go with is to fold the division, and just give it
the value of 0. The same goes for remainder and mod operations.
Fixes#1961.
The HlslCounterBufferGOOGLE that was introduced changed the OpDecorateId
so that is can now reference an id other than the target. If that other
id is used only in the decoration, then the definition of the id will be
removed because decoration do not count as real uses.
However, if the target of the decoration is still live the decoration
will not be removed. This leaves a reference to an id that is not
defined.
There are two solutions to consider. The first is that is the decoration
is kept, then the definition of the id should be kept live. Implementing
this change would be involved because the way ADCE handles decorations
will have to be reimplemented.
The other solution is to remove the decoration the id is otherwise dead.
This works for this specific case. Also this is the more desirable
behaviour in this case. The id will always be the id of a variable that
belongs to a descriptor set. If that variable is not bound and we do
not remove it, the driver will complain.
I chose to implement the second solution. The first will be left to when
a case for it comes up.
Fixes https://github.com/KhronosGroup/SPIRV-Tools/issues/1885.
* Check rules from Execution Mode tables, 2.16.2 and the Vulkan
environment spec
* Allows MeshNV execution model with the following execution modes
* LocalSize, LocalSizeId, OutputPoints and OutputVertices
* Done to not break their validation
There are a few spots where copy propagate arrays is trying
to go from a Type to an id, but the type is not unique. When generating
code this pass needs specific ids, otherwise we get type mismatches.
However, the ambigous types means we can sometimes get the wrong type
and generate invalid code.
That code has been rewritten to not rely on the type manager, and just
look at the instructions instead.
I have opened https://github.com/KhronosGroup/SPIRV-Tools/issues/1939 to
try to get a way to make this more robust.
In DecorationManager::RemoveDecorationsFrom, we do not remove the id
from a decoration group if the group has no decorations. This causes
problems because KillNamesAndDecorates is suppose to remove all
references to the id, but in this case, there is still a reference.
This is fixed by adding a special case.
Also, there is the possibility of a double free because
RemoveDecorationsFrom will delete the instructions defining |id| when
|id| is a decoration group. Later, KillInst would later write to memory
that has been deleted when trying to turn it into a Nop. To fix this,
we will only remove the decorations that use |id| and not its definition
in RemoveDecorationsFrom.
It seems like the current implementation of KillNameAndDecorates does
not handle group decorations correctly. The id being removed is not
removed from the OpGroupDecorate instructions. Even worst, any
decorations that apply to that group are removed.
The solution is to use the function in the decoration manager that will
remove the decorations and update the instructions instead of doing the
work itself.
Adds unrolling to the legalization passes.
After enabling unrolling I found a bug when there is a self-referencing
phi node. That has been fixed.
The test that checks for that the order of optimizations is correct also
needed to be updated.
The current implementation of merge return can create bad, but correct,
code. When it is not in a loop construct, it will insert a lot of
extra branch around code. The potentially large number of branches are
bad. At the same time, it can separate code store to variables from
its uses hiding the fact that the store dominates the load.
This hurts the later analysis because the compiler thinks that multiple
values can reach a load, when there is really only 1. This poorer
analysis leads to missed optimizations.
The solution is to create a dummy loop around the entire body of the
function, then we can break from that loop with a single branch. Also
only new merge nodes would be those at the end of loops meaning that
most analysies will not be hurt.
Remove dead code for cases that are no longer possible.
It seems like some drivers expect there the be an OpSelectionMerge
before conditional branches, even if they are not strictly needed.
So we add them.
* Create structed cfg analysis.
There are lots of optimization that have to traverse the CFG in a
structured order just because it wants to know which constructs a
basic block in contained in. This adds extra complexity to these
optimizations, for causes too much refactoring of older optimizations.
To help with this problem, I have written an analysis that can give this
information.
* Identify branches breaking from loops.
Dead branch elimination does a search for a conditional branch to the
end of the current selection construct. This search assumes that the
only way to leave the construct is through the merge node. But that is
not true. The code can jump to the merge node of a loop that contains
the construct.
The search needs to take this into consideration.
In merge blocks, we do not allow the merging of two blocks with merge
instructions. This is because if the two block are merged only 1 of
those instructions can exists. However, if the successor block is the
merge block of the predecessor, then we can delete the merge instruction
in the predecessor. In this case, we are able to merge the blocks.
* Create a new entry point for the optimizer
Creates a new struct to hold the options for the optimizer, and creates
an entry point that take the optimizer options as a parameter.
The old entry point that takes validator options are now deprecated.
The validator options will be one of the optimizer options.
Part of the optimizer options will also be the upper bound on the id bound.
* Add a command line option to set the max value for the id bound. The default is 0x3FFFFF.
* Modify `TakeNextIdBound` to return 0 when the limit is reached.
* Copy decorations when creating new ids.
When creating a new value based on an old value, we need to copy the
decorations to the new id. This change does this in 3 places:
1) The variable holding the return value of the function generated by
merge return should get decorations from the function.
2) The results of the OpPhi instructions should get decorations from the
variable they are replacing in the ssa writer.
3) In local access chain convert the intermediate struct (result of
OpCompositeInsert) generated for the store replacement should get its
decorations from the variable being stored to.
Fixes#1787.
If seems like at least 1 driver does not like a condition jump to the end
of a selection construct. We are generating these in the merge return
pass. This change stops merge return from generating this sequence.
Part of #1861.
When doing predicate blocks, we need to traverse every block in
structured order in order to keep track of which construct a block is
contained in. The standard way of traversing code in structured order
is to create a list with all of the nodes in order. However, when
predicating blocks, new blocks are created, and those blocks are missed.
This causes branches that go too far.
The solution is to update the order as new blocks are created. Since
we are using an std::list, we do not have to worry about invalidation of
iterators when changing the list.
* Refactor PredicateBlocks
Refactor PredicateBlocks so that we know which constructs a return
is contained in. Will be used later.
* Have PredicateBlocks jump the existing merge blocks.
In PredicateBlocks, we currently skip instructions with side effects,
but it still follows the same control flow (sort-of). This causes a
problem, when we are trying to predicate code in a loop. We skip all
of the code with side effects (IV increment), but still follow the
same control flow (jump back the start of the loop). This creates an
infinite loop because the code will keep jumping back to the start of
the loop without changing the values that effect the exit condition.
This is a large change to merge-return. When predicating a block that
is in a loop or merge construct, it will jump to the merge block of the
construct. Once out of all constructs we will generate code as we did
before.
* Handle breaks from structured-ifs in DCE.
dead code elimination assumes that are conditional branches except for
breaks and continues in loops will have an OpSelectionMerge before them.
That is not true when breaking out of a selection construct.
The fix is to look for breaks in selection constructs in the same place
we look for breaks and continues for loops.
When dead-branch-elim folds a conditional branch, it also deletes the
OpSelectionMerge instruction. If that construct contains a
conditional branch to the merge node, it will not have its own
OpSelectionMerge. When the headers merge instruction is deleted, the
the inner conditional branch will no longer be legal. It will be a
selection to a node that is not a merge node.
We fix this up by moving the OpSelectionMerge to a new location if it is
still needed.
In local-access-chain-convert, we replace loads by load the entire
variable, then doing the extract. The extract will have the same value
as the load. However, if the load has a decoration on it, the
decoration is lost because we do not copy any them to the new id.
This is fixed by rewritting the load into the extract and keeping the
same result id.
This change has the effect that we do not call DCEInst on the loads
because the load is not being deleted, but replaced. This could leave
OpAccessChain instructions around that are not used. This is not a
problem for -O and -Os. They run local_single_*_elim passes and then
dead code elimination. The dce will remove the unused access chains,
and the load elimination passes work even if there are unused access
chains. I have added test to them to ensure they will not loss
opportunities.
Fixes#1787.
The code in source/message was only used in a single set of tests to
format the output results. This CL changes the test to verify the
message instead of all the error values and removes the source/message
code.
* Run the validator in the optimization fuzzers.
The optimizers assumes that the input to the optimizer is valid. Since
the fuzzers do not check that the input is valid before passing the
spir-v to the optimizer, we are getting a few errors.
The solution is to run the validator in the optimizer to validate the
input.
For the legalization passes, we need to add an extra option to the
validator to accept certain types of variable pointers, even if the
capability is not given. At the same time, we changed the option
"--legalize-hlsl" to relax the validator in the same way instead of
turning it off.