For fulfilling this purpose, the |opcode| field in the
|spv_parsed_instruction_t| struct is changed to of type uint16_t.
Also add functions to query the information of a given SPIR-V
target environment.
Now we have public headers arranged as follows:
$SPIRV_TOOLS_ROOT/include/spirv-tools/libspirv.h
$SPIRV_TOOLS_ROOT/include/spirv/spirv.h
$SPIRV_TOOLS_ROOT/include/spirv/GLSL.std.450.h
$SPIRV_TOOLS_ROOT/include/spirv/OpenCL.std.h
A project should use -I$SPIRV_TOOLS_ROOT/include
and then #include "spirv-tools/libspirv.h"
The headers from the SPIR-V Registry can be accessed as "spirv/spirv."
for example.
The install target should also install the headers from the SPIR-V
Registry. The libspirv.h header is broken otherwise.
The SPIRV-Tools library depends on the headers from the SPIR-V Registry.
The util/bitutils.h and util/hex_float.h are pulled into the internal
source tree. Those are not part of the public API to SPIRV-Tools.
Previously the opcode table is declared as an global array and we
have spvOpcodeTableInitialize() modifying it. That can result in
race condition. Now spvOpcodeTabelGet() copies the whole underlying
array.
The binary parser has a C API, described in binary.h.
Eventually we will make it public in libspirv.h.
The API is event-driven in the sense that a callback is called
when a valid header is parsed, and for each parsed instruction.
Classify some operand types as "concrete". The binary parser uses
only concrete operand types to describe parsed instructions.
The old disassembler APIs are moved into disassemble.cpp
TODO: Add unit tests for spvBinaryParse.
Note that we are more strict than Google style for one aspect:
pointer/reference indicators are adjacent to their types, not
their variables.
find . -name "*.h" -exec clang-format -i {} \;
find . -name "*.cpp" -exec clang-format -i {} \;