convert-to-sampled-image pass converts images and/or samplers with
given pairs of descriptor set and binding to sampled image.
If a pair of an image and a sampler have the same pair of descriptor
set and binding that is one of the given pairs, they will be
converted to a sampled image. In addition, if only an image has the
descriptor set and binding that is one of the given pairs, it will
be converted to a sampled image as well.
For example, when we have
%a = OpLoad %type_2d_image %texture
%b = OpLoad %type_sampler %sampler
%combined = OpSampledImage %type_sampled_image %a %b
%value = OpImageSampleExplicitLod %v4float %combined ...
1. If %texture and %sampler have the same descriptor set and binding
%combine_texture_and_sampler = OpVaraible %ptr_type_sampled_image_Uniform
...
%combined = OpLoad %type_sampled_image %combine_texture_and_sampler
%value = OpImageSampleExplicitLod %v4float %combined ...
2. If %texture and %sampler have different pairs of descriptor set and binding
%a = OpLoad %type_sampled_image %texture
%extracted_image = OpImage %type_2d_image %a
%b = OpLoad %type_sampler %sampler
%combined = OpSampledImage %type_sampled_image %extracted_image %b
%value = OpImageSampleExplicitLod %v4float %combined ...
* Disallow loading a runtime-sized array
Fixes#4472
* Disallow loading a runtime-sized array or a composite containing one
* Refactor type traversal into a separate function used by both runtime
array checks and sized int/float checks
* Update invalid tests
Only the first two operands were tested for constness, missing the third
one. Since the FoldFPBinaryOp() at the end of FoldClamp1() returns null
when not both of its operands are constant, this doesn't change any
behavior, but it avoids some needless work.
Also the comment for FoldClamp2() was fixed.
When a tool (tested with spirv-dis and spirv-as) runs on a file that
does not exist, it notifies the user and tries to close the stream that
was never successfully opened.
This PR adds a generic dataflow analysis framework to SPIRV-opt, with the intent of being used in SPIRV-lint. This may also be useful for SPIRV-opt, as existing ad-hoc analyses can be rewritten to use a common framework, but this is not the target of this PR.
This PR adds a new executable spirv-lint with a simple "Hello, world!"
program, along with its associated library and a dummy unit test.
For now, only adds to CMake and Bazel; other build systems will be added
in a future PR.
Issue: #3196
Introducing a new mandatory parameter makes it very difficult to roll
Chromium to a new version of SPIRV-Tools, as this project is used by
several third-party projects, and an atomic update of all projects
is very hard to coordinate.
Testing on ClusterFuzz has revealed that the fuzzer sometimes goes
wrong when a shader is very simple - e.g., there have been bugs where
a fuzzer pass has assumed that at least one basic type exists in the
module. This change adds an almost empty SPIR-V example to the shaders
used for testing, to help catch such cases locally.
spirv-fuzz features transformations that should be applicable by
construction. Assertions are used to detect when such transformations
turn out to be inapplicable. Failures of such assertions indicate bugs
in the fuzzer. However, when using the fuzzer at scale (e.g. in
ClusterFuzz) reports of these assertion failures create noise, and
cause the fuzzer to exit early. This change adds an option whereby
inapplicable transformations can be ignored. This reduces noise and
allows fuzzing to continue even when a transformation that should be
applicable but is not has been erroneously created.
The fuzzer pass that adds global variables requires some basic
types. This change makes the fuzzer pass exit gracefully when none are
available.
Fixes#4408.
Control dependence analysis constructs a control dependence graph,
representing the conditions for a block's execution relative to the
results of other blocks with conditional branches, etc.
This is an analysis pass that will be useful for the linter and
potentially also useful in opt. Currently it is unused except for the
added unit tests.
The instruction parameter of CanMakeSynonymOf is an input parameter
that should never be null, so a const reference is a more appropriate
type than a const pointer.
Some generated headers are exposed by headers in the spvtools_opt
target, but its dependency on them is private. This can result in build
flake, since the headers don't need to be generated before compiling
any spvtools_opt dependents.
This fixes the build flake by correctly expressing these as public
dependencies.
Tint reaches out into SPIRV-Tools BUILD.gn file for some targets:
- Adds spvtools_include_gen_dirs so that Tint can add $target_gen_dir
and find autogenerated files.
- Adds spvtools_language_headers that Tint can reference so it
automatically picks up new language headers that are added.
Adds an additional validity check to ensure that every instruction's
context pointer matches the enclosing IR context. Avoids a redundant
copy constructor call in TransformationDuplicateRegionWithSelection
that was leading to a bad IR context for some instructions.
Related: #4387, #4388.
Fixes#4393.
The fuzzer pass was passing the type of a scalar where a vector type
was required, and was not checking whether synonyms could be made for
the operands to the scalar instruction.
Adaps the transformations that add OpConstantUndef and OpConstantNull
to a module so that pointer undefs are not allowed, and null pointers
are only allowed if suitable capabilities are present.
Fixes#4357.
Adds a new transformation that rewrites a scalar operation (like
OpFAdd, opISub) as an equivalent vector operation, adding a synonym
between the scalar result and an appropriate component of the vector
result.
Fixes#4195.
This change is responsible for avoiding the replacement of constant
operands with another one not constant, in the context of atomic
operations. The related rule from the SPIR-V spec is: "All used for
Scope and Memory Semantics in shader capability must be of an
OpConstant."
Fixes#4346.