We currently do not set stdout to binary mode when writing a binary
file on Windows. This cause some extra characters to be written that
mess up the output. We try to fix that.
Fixes#4793
* Remove deprecated `--decompose-initialized-variables` from spirv-opt help message
* Remove deprecated --strip-atomic-counter-memory flag from spirv-opt help message
spirv validation require OpFunctionCall with memory object, usually this
is non issue as all the functions are inlined.
This pass deal with some case for
DontInline function. accesschain input operand would be replaced new
created variable
In newer versions of protobuf the Status building code has been made
internal, so that embedders cannot build their own instances like is
being done here.
Changing this code to just use the .ok() method on the status object,
since if the status is OK or not is what is actually being tested.
This will make it easier in the future to update external/protobuf.
spirv-diff is a new tool that produces diff-style output comparing two
SPIR-V modules. The instructions between the src and dst modules are
matched as best as the tool can, and output is produced (in src
id-space) that shows which instructions are removed in src, added in dst
or modified between them. The order of instructions are not retained.
Matching instructions between two SPIR-V modules is not trivial, and
thus a number of heuristics are applied in this tool. In particular,
without debug information, it's hard to match functions as they can be
reordered. As such, this tool is primarily useful to produce the diff
of two SPIR-V modules derived from the same source.
This tool can be useful in a number of scenarios:
- Compare the SPIR-V before and after modifying a shader
- Compare the SPIR-V produced from a shader before and after compiler
codegen changes.
- Compare the SPIR-V produced from a shader before and after some
transformation or optimization.
- Compare the SPIR-V produced from a shader with different compilers.
Add a pass to spread Volatile semantics to variables with SMIDNV,
WarpIDNV, SubgroupSize, SubgroupLocalInvocationId, SubgroupEqMask,
SubgroupGeMask, SubgroupGtMask, SubgroupLeMask, or SubgroupLtMask BuiltIn
decorations or OpLoad for them when the shader model is the ray
generation, closest hit, miss, intersection, or callable shaders. This
pass can be used for VUID-StandaloneSpirv-VulkanMemoryModel-04678 and
VUID-StandaloneSpirv-VulkanMemoryModel-04679 (See "Standalone SPIR-V
Validation" section of Vulkan spec "Appendix A: Vulkan Environment for
SPIR-V").
Handle variables used by multiple entry points:
1. Update error check to make it working regardless of the order of
entry points.
2. For a variable, if it is used by two entry points E1 and E2 and
it needs the Volatile semantics for E1 while it does not for E2
- If VulkanMemoryModel capability is enabled, which means we have to
set memory operation of load instructions for the variable, we
update load instructions in E1, but do not update the ones in E2.
- If VulkanMemoryModel capability is disabled, which means we have
to add Volatile decoration for the variable, we report an error
because E1 needs to add Volatile decoration for the variable while
E2 does not.
For the simplicity of the implementation, we assume that all functions
other than entry point functions are inlined.
* test/linker: Code factorisation and small tweaks
* linker: Do not fail when going over limits
The limits are minima and implementations or APIs might support higher
limits, so just warn the user about it. And only check for the limits
right before emitting the binary, as limits might change earlier when
removing duplicate instructions, function prototypes, etc.
The only check performed right before merging, is making sure the ID
bound will not overflow the 32 bits following the merge.
Also, use the defines for the limits instead of hard-coding them.
* linker: Require a memory model in each input module
The existing code could run into weird situation. For example, if the
first module had no memory model, it would not emit any memory model
(sort of reasonable) and would accept without complains all possible mix
from later modules as it would not verify them.
* linker: Replace hex version with SPV_SPIRV_VERSION_WORD
* linker: Error out when linking together different versions
Fixes https://github.com/KhronosGroup/SPIRV-Tools/issues/4135
* tools/linker: Do not write to disk if linking failed
Also, do not consider warnings as errors.
* tools/linker: Fix formatting in help message
* tools/linker: Further clarify the use of --target-env
Also update the text for the default version to reflect the change made
in 7d768812 ("Basic support for SPIR-V 1.6 (#4663)").
* Basic support for SPIR-V 1.6
* Update SPIRV-Headers deps
* Add new environment enum for SPIR-V 1.6
* Make default environment 1.6 for most tools
* Update tests
* Disallow conditional branch with duplicate labels
* Disallow Dim=Buffer with sampled images
* Do not require the non-semantic extension after SPIR-V 1.5
In https://github.com/KhronosGroup/SPIRV-Tools/pull/3110, the strip reflect
pass was changed to also remove all explicitly nonsemantic instructions. This
makes it so that the name of the pass no longer reflects what the pass actually
does. This change renames the pass so that it reflects what the pass actaully does.
* detect iOS with CMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME
IOS_PLATFORM is not a regular variable, it comes from unofficial iOS toolchain
* fix installation of executables if BUNDLE enabled
CMAKE_MACOSX_BUNDLE is enabled by default if CMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME is iOS, tvOS or watchOS.
So installation of executables needs a BUNDLE DESTINATION otherwise configuration fails.
Allow LocalSizeId as a way of sizing compute workgroups where the
environment allows it. A command-line switch is also added to force
acceptance even where the environment would not otherwise allow it.
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 ...
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 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
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 new pass will removed interface variable on the OpEntryPoint instruction when they are not statically referenced in the call tree of the entry point.
It can be enabled on the command line using the options `remove-unused-interface-variables`.
The fuzzer library depended on CLIMessageConsumer, due to its explicit
use in a function. This change removes that dependency so that,
instead, a message consumer parameter is passed.
* Use standard function to get stdin to binary mode.
The fisrt implementation to try to change stdin to binary mode is not
protable. Using freopen has a lot of implementation defined behaviour,
and the code relied on that working.
Looking into the MSVC documentation, I do not see a protable way of
doing this. I've implemented a Windows specific method and do nothing
for other systems. In general, UNIX based systems do make a distinction
between text and binary files, so nothing needs to be done for them.
Fixes#2518
* Split ReadFile into two different functions.
We want to remove the flag parameter. So the original function has been
replaced with ReadBinaryFile and ReadTextFile. This should make the
code more readable.
* Change name of CorrectlyReadFile to avoid confusion.
* Validate SPV_KHR_workgroup_memory_explicit_layout
* Check if SPIR-V is at least 1.4 to use the extension.
* Check if either only Workgroup Blocks or only Workgroup non-Blocks
are used.
* Check that if more than one Workgroup Block is used, variables are
decorated with Aliased.
* Check layout decorations for Workgroup Blocks.
* Implicitly use main capability if the ...8BitAccess or
...16BitAccess are used.
* Allow 8-bit and 16-bit types when ...8BitAccess and ...16BitAccess
are used respectively.
* Update SPIRV-Headers dependency
Bump it to include SPV_KHR_workgroup_memory_explicit_layout.
* Add option to validate Workgroup blocks with scalar layout
Validate the equivalent of scalarBlockLayout for Workgroup storage
class Block variables from SPV_KHR_workgroup_memory_explicit_layout.
Add option to the API and command line tool.
* tools/linker: Error out on unrecognized options
Fixes#4083.
* tools/linker: Use early returns when parsing options
This was already the case for some linker options, and other tools were
doing so for all of their options.
* tools/linker: Rework the usage output
* The new formatting for long options taking a value makes it explicit
that there is no equal sign between the option name and the value.
* The options are sorted by lexicographical order.
* Change the option formatting from 90 columns to 80, to match the other
tools.
* tools/linker: Change the default environment to spv1.5
* tools/linker: Change the default output to spv.out
Instead of writing to the standard output when the "-o" option is not
specified, the resulting linked SPIR-V binary will be written to
"spv.out".
One can still have the output sent to the standard output by specifying
"-o -".
* tools/linker: Update the reported target for --version
Running `spirv-link --version` will now report the currently selected
environment.
* tools/linker: Sort header includes
* linker: Improve module-related error messages
* Use 1-based indexing of modules;
* Say which module could not be built;
* Use the correct total number of input modules in the error message
when one fails to build.
If enabled the following targets will be created:
* `${SPIRV_TOOLS}-static` - `STATIC` library. Has full public symbol visibility.
* `${SPIRV_TOOLS}-shared` - `SHARED` library. Has default-hidden symbol visibility.
* `${SPIRV_TOOLS}` - will alias to one of above, based on BUILD_SHARED_LIBS.
If disabled the following targets will be created:
* `${SPIRV_TOOLS}` - either `STATIC` or `SHARED` based on the new `SPIRV_TOOLS_LIBRARY_TYPE` flag. Has full public symbol visibility.
* `${SPIRV_TOOLS}-shared` - `SHARED` library. Has default-hidden symbol visibility.
Defaults to `ON`, matching existing build behavior.
This flag can be used by package maintainers to ensure that all libraries are built as shared objects.
This fixes a problem where TransformationInlineFunction could lead to
distinct instructions having identical unique ids. It adds a validity
check to detect this problem in general.
Fixes#3911.
Adds a virtual method, GetFreshIds(), to Transformation. Every
transformation uses this to indicate which ids in its protobuf message
are fresh ids. This means that when replaying a sequence of
transformations the replayer can obtain a smallest id that is not in
use by the module already and that will not be used by any
transformation by necessity. Ids greater than or equal to this id
can be used as overflow ids.
Fixes#3851.
This CL adds some extra new lines and context comments into the
spirv-dis output format. This CL adds:
- Blank line and '; Annotations' before decorations
- Blank line and '; Debug Information' before debug instructions
- Blank line and '; Types, variables and constants' before type section
- Blank line and '; Function <name>' before each function.
Issue #788
Before this change, the replayer would return a SPIR-V binary. This
did not allow further transforming the resulting module: it would need
to be re-parsed, and the transformation context arising from the
replayed transformations was not available. This change makes it so
that after replay an IR context and transformation context are
returned instead; the IR context can subsequently be turned into a
binary if desired.
This change paves the way for an upcoming PR to integrate spirv-reduce
with the spirv-fuzz shrinker.
In preparation for some upcoming work on the shrinker, this PR changes
the interfaces of Fuzzer, Replayer and Shrinker so that all data
relevant to each class is provided on construction, meaning that the
"Run" method can become a zero-argument method that returns a status,
transformed binary and sequence of applied transformations via a
struct.
This makes greater use of fields, so that -- especially in Fuzzer --
there is a lot less parameter passing.
This change introduces various strategies for controlling the manner
in which fuzzer passes are applied repeatedly, including infrastructure
to allow fuzzer passes to be recommended based on which passes ran
previously.
Motivated by integrating spirv-reduce into spirv-fuzz, so that an
added function can be made smaller during shrinking, this adds support
in spirv-reduce for asking reduction to be restricted to the
instructions of a single specified function.
This change adds the notion of "overflow ids", which can be used
during shrinking to facilitate applying transformations that would
otherwise have become inapplicable due to earlier transformations
being removed.
Rename the `${SPIRV_TOOLS}` target to `${SPIRV_TOOLS}-static` and alias `${SPIRV_TOOLS}` to either `${SPIRV_TOOLS}-static` or `${SPIRV_TOOLS}-shared` depending on `BUILD_SHARED_LIBS`.
Re-point all internal uses of `${SPIRV_TOOLS}` to `${SPIRV_TOOLS}-static`.
`${SPIRV_TOOLS}-static` is explicitly renamed to just `${SPIRV_TOOLS}` to ensure the name does not change from current behavior.
Build the `SPIRV-Tools-*` libraries as static, as this is what they always were.
Force the external targets `gmock` and `effcee` to be built statically. These either do not support being built as shared libraries, or require special flags.
Issue: #3482
This change increases the set of validator options that can be passed
to spirv-opt, to match those options that spirv-reduce and spirv-fuzz
accept. This is useful to still allow some validation, at the start
of and during optimisation, for SPIR-V modules that the strict
validator would reject.