* 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.
This CL moves the files in opt/ to consistenly be under the opt::
namespace. This frees up the ir:: namespace so it can be used to make a
shared ir represenation.
Add SPV_ENV_WEBGPU_0 for work-in-progress WebGPU.
val: Disallow OpUndef in WebGPU env
Silence unused variable warnings when !defined(SPIRV_EFFCE)
Limit visibility of validate_instruction.cpp's symbols
Only InstructionPass needs to be visible so all other functions are put
in an anonymous namespace inside the libspirv namespace.
For each loop in a function, the pass walks the loops from inner to outer most loop
and tries to peel loop for which a certain amount of iteration can be done before or after the loop.
To limit code growth, peeling will not happen if the growth in code size goes above a configurable threshold.
The loop peeler util takes a loop as input and create a new one before.
The iterator of the duplicated loop then set to accommodate the number
of iteration required for the peeling.
The loop peeling pass that decided to do the peeling and profitability
analysis is left for a follow-up PR.