* Reworked how execution model limitations are checked
* Now OpFunction checks which entry points call it and checks its
registered limitations instead of building a call stack in the entry
point
* New tests
* Moving function to entry point mapping into VState
Refactored validate built-ins to make
GetExecutionModels(entry_point)
and
GetExecutionModes(entry_point)
available in validation state.
Entry points are allowed to have multiple execution modes and execution
models.
Finished the last missing feature in Vulkan built-ins validation:
FragDepth requires DepthReplacing.
Added a framework for validation of BuiltIn variables. The framework
allows implementation of flexible abstract rules which are required for
built-ins as the information (decoration, definition, reference) is not
in one place, but is scattered all over the module.
Validation rules are implemented as a map
id -> list<functor(instrution)>
Ids which are dependent on built-in types or objects receive a task
list, such as "this id cannot be referenced from function which is
called from entry point with execution model X; propagate this rule
to your descendants in the global scope".
Also refactored test/val/val_fixtures.
All built-ins covered by tests
This needs custom code since the rules from the extension
are not encoded in the grammar.
Changes are:
- The new group instructions don't require Group capability
when the extension is declared.
- The Reduce, InclusiveScan, ExclusiveScan normally require the Kernel
capability, but don't when the extension is declared.
Fixes https://github.com/KhronosGroup/SPIRV-Tools/issues/991
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.
NFC. This just makes sure every file is formatted following the
formatting definition in .clang-format.
Re-formatted with:
$ clang-format -i $(find source tools include -name '*.cpp')
$ clang-format -i $(find source tools include -name '*.h')
There are a number of users of spriv-opt that are hitting errors
because of stores with different types. In general, this is wrong, but,
in these cases, the types are the exact same except for decorations.
The options is "--relax-store-struct", and it can be used with the
validator or the optimizer.
We assume that if layout information is missing it is consistent. For
example if one struct has a offset of one of its members, and the other
one does not, we will still consider them as being layout compatible.
The problem will be if both struct has and offset decoration for
corresponding members, and the offset are different.
Function static non-POD data causes problems with DLL lifetime.
This pull request turns all static info tables into strict POD
tables. Specifically, the capabilities/extensions field of
opcode/operand/extended-instruction table are turned into two
fields, one for the count and the other a pointer to an array of
capabilities/extensions. CapabilitySet/EnumSet are not used in
the static table anymore, but they are still used for checking
inclusion by constructing on the fly, which should be cheap for
the majority cases.
Also moves all these tables into the global namespace to avoid
C++11 function static thread-safe initialization overhead.
The pass checks correctness of operands of instruction in opcode range
OpConvertFToU - OpBitset.
Disabled invalid tests
Disabled UConvert validation until Vulkan CTS can catch up.
Add validate_conversion to Android.mk
Also remove duplicate entry in CMakeLists.txt.
Command line application is located at tools/spirv-markv
API at include/spirv-tools/markv.h
At the moment only very basic compression is implemented, mostly varint.
Scope of supported SPIR-V opcodes is also limited.
Using a simple move-to-front implementation instead of encoding mapped
ids.
Work in progress:
- Does not cover all of SPIR-V
- Does not promise compatibility of compression/decompression across
different versions of the code.
Create class to encapsulate control flow analysis and share across
validator and optimizer. A WIP. Start with DepthFirstTraversal. Next
pull in CalculateDominators.
If the variable_pointer extension is used:
* OpLoad's pointer argument may be the result of any of the following:
* OpSelect
* OpPhi
* OpFunctionCall
* OpPtrAccessChain
* OpCopyObject
* OpLoad
* OpConstantNull
* Return value of a function may be a pointer.
* It is valid to use a pointer as the return value of a function.
* OpStore should allow a variable pointer argument.
Known extensions are saved in validation state. Unknown extension
produce a dignostic message, but do not fail the validation.
Moved extension definitions to their own file.
- validation_state.cpp uses functions from opcode.h instead of in-place
switches which need to be updated.
- added new spirv 1.1 type declaration opcodes to a 'is op type
declaration' switch in opcode.cpp.
The limit for the number of struct members is parameterized using
command line options.
Add --max-struct-depth command line option.
Add --max-switch-branches command line option.
Add --max-function-args command line option.
Add --max-control-flow-nesting-depth option.
Add --max-access-chain-indexes option.
If a merge block is reachable, then it must be *strictly* dominated
by its header. Until now we've allowed the header and the merge
block to be the same.
Fixes https://github.com/KhronosGroup/SPIRV-Tools/issues/551
Also: Use dominates and postdominates methods on BasicBlock to
improve readability.
When applied to a structure-type member, all members of that structure
type must also be decorated with BuiltIn. (No allowed mixing of built-in
variables and non-built-in variables within a single structure.)
When applied to a structure-type member, that structure type cannot be
contained as a member of another structure type.
There is at most one object per Storage Class that can contain a
structure type containing members decorated with BuiltIn, consumed per
entry-point.
Added a new file where all the decoration validation can be performed.
In this change the SPIRV Spec Section 2.16.1 is implemented:
"It is illegal to initialize an imported variable. This means
that a module-scope OpVariable with initialization value cannot be
marked with the Import Linkage Type."
Also added unit tests.
* Added the decoration class as well as the code that registers the
decorations for each <id> and also decorations for struct members.
* Added unit tests for decorations in ValidationState as well as
decoration id tests.
According to the SPIRV Spec (2.16.1):
* There is at least one OpEntryPoint instruction, unless the Linkage
capability is being used.
* No function can be targeted by both an OpEntryPoint instruction and an
OpFunctionCall instruction.
Also updated unit tests to includ OpEntryPoint.
entry_block_to_construct_ maps an entry block to its construct. The key
in this map (the entry block) is not unique, and therefore the entry for
the continue construct gets overwritten when the selection construct is
discovered.
Since a given block may be the entry block of different types of
constructs, the (basic_block, construct_type) pair should be able to
uniquely identify the construct.
Adds test:
- In this test, a basic block is the entry block of a continue construct
as well as the entry block of a selection construct.
It can be shown that this unit test would crash without the fix in this
PR and passes with the fix in this PR.
According to Section 2.17 (Universal Limits) of the SPIR-V Spec, the
control flow nesting depth may not be larger than 1023.
This is checked only when we are required to have structured
control flow. Otherwise it's not clear how to compute control
flow nesting depth.
According to sectin 2.17 in SPIR-V Spec, the structure nesting depth may
not be larger than 255. This is interpreted as structures nested in
structures. The code does not look into arrays or follow pointers to see
if it reaches a structure downstream.
Use memoization to avoid exponential runtime.
According to the Universal Limits section of the SPIR-V Spec (2.17), the
number of global variables may not exceed 65,535 and the number of local
variables may not exceed 524,287.
Also added unit tests for each one.