Once this lands, switch statements will work everywhere--Metal, SPIR-V,
GLSL, and SkVM.
Change-Id: I2797d0a872de8be77bb9f7aa6acb93421d571d70
Bug: skia:12450
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/452356
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
SkVM implements switches as a pseudo-loop; breaks are handled with the
condition mask just like a for loop. Fallthrough is handled via a
scratch Value in a temporary slot. `writeStore` neeeded to be refactored
to support writing into slot(s) without an associated Variable.
At IR generation time, SwitchStatements are now emitted without error
even in strict-ES2 mode. The GLSL code generator currently reports these
as an error in strict-ES2 mode, but this will be fixed in a followup
coming shortly (the switch will be rewritten as ifs inside a one-shot
loop, similar to our IR-rewrite strategy).
Change-Id: I5507257246c42a35d2f46b4b9a89492a5ffeff9b
Bug: skia:12450
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/451421
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Prior to this fix, the new test cases would report that the various loop
terms needed to be constant expressions.
Bug: skia:12472
Change-Id: Ic377ed0c4598136ae38fb2b65c93b6d8609d54cb
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/452276
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
It looks like returning from inside a switch on iOS gives wrong results
in GLSL.
Change-Id: I9d6d8971a7a54600268e27443815444fca6f3c61
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/450994
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
This fails on several platforms in practice, and is of very limited
real-world utility.
Change-Id: Ib476396fc33cb51af6bbcf7fe822d30703ed995d
Bug: skia:12467
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/450993
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
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Change-Id: I17b5e21a28140b8e9313d87af9b1145674214fdb
Bug: skia:12450
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/450989
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Also, removed "switch containing dead code" test. This wasn't testing
anything meaningful. (When we had full CFG analysis, we could have
eliminated some of the assignments inside the switch body, but this is
not something we do anymore.)
Change-Id: Iaeb74ebee41a7f368113ede9a4e30c033b9de8ac
Bug: skia:12450
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/450985
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
The Mac Radeon GLSL driver crashes when given a switch statement that
only contains a default case and returns a value. Adding a case works
around the crash, and doesn't affect the meaning of the switch.
Change-Id: Iabbd267e0e31e8df7d3b7e747a7204d50931d0be
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/450977
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
While I was in this code, I realized that the setVariable method of
InterfaceBlock was unused and there was therefore no reason to be
storing a pointer instead of a reference.
Bug: oss-fuzz:39000
Change-Id: If7505ba87f4060370cfd32ca2e30c76648965101
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/450446
Commit-Queue: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
This is a reland of be056f4f62
The Switch test has been restructured to dodge an iOS bug.
Original change's description:
> Add switch statement support to PipelineStage.
>
> This allows us to write SKSL_TEST_ES3 tests in SkSLTest and have them
> run properly. Previously, such a test would assert inside the pipeline-
> stage generator. In ES2 mode, we will rewrite switches as chained ifs,
> but in ES3 mode we will want to continue emitting them as-is (they will
> be faster than chained ifs on a modern GPU).
>
> `writeSwitchStatement` is adapted from GLSLCodeGenerator.
>
> Change-Id: I532ea5ed49869e7cdffced0cdcd0e353af8d4d79
> Bug: skia:12450
> Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/450478
> Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
> Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
> Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
> Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Bug: skia:12450
Change-Id: I5102081c636ef09cd23f5bc894e6c96e92a4c121
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/450757
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
This fixes a driver bug with the Nexus 7 while retaining the meaningful
part of the test.
Change-Id: I98edab32132f0c52a1f69b03efd403fae43c336b
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/450482
Commit-Queue: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
This reverts commit be056f4f62.
Reason for revert: apparently switch on iOS GLSL is extremely broken
Original change's description:
> Add switch statement support to PipelineStage.
>
> This allows us to write SKSL_TEST_ES3 tests in SkSLTest and have them
> run properly. Previously, such a test would assert inside the pipeline-
> stage generator. In ES2 mode, we will rewrite switches as chained ifs,
> but in ES3 mode we will want to continue emitting them as-is (they will
> be faster than chained ifs on a modern GPU).
>
> `writeSwitchStatement` is adapted from GLSLCodeGenerator.
>
> Change-Id: I532ea5ed49869e7cdffced0cdcd0e353af8d4d79
> Bug: skia:12450
> Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/450478
> Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
> Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
> Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
> Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Bug: skia:12450
Change-Id: If40c90023a64c608181285f6470b3e75303cc3cc
No-Presubmit: true
No-Tree-Checks: true
No-Try: true
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/450756
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Rubber Stamper <rubber-stamper@appspot.gserviceaccount.com>
Bot-Commit: Rubber Stamper <rubber-stamper@appspot.gserviceaccount.com>
This allows us to write SKSL_TEST_ES3 tests in SkSLTest and have them
run properly. Previously, such a test would assert inside the pipeline-
stage generator. In ES2 mode, we will rewrite switches as chained ifs,
but in ES3 mode we will want to continue emitting them as-is (they will
be faster than chained ifs on a modern GPU).
`writeSwitchStatement` is adapted from GLSLCodeGenerator.
Change-Id: I532ea5ed49869e7cdffced0cdcd0e353af8d4d79
Bug: skia:12450
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/450478
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Missed one more case of Optional<Wrapper<Expression>>. This should be
the last one.
Bug: oss-fuzz:38944
Change-Id: Ic7f790cd99e2a3ee1c3874cc767a4702265d1723
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/450476
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
We didn't have a test case for this particular construct, but we will
emit special code to handle it when rewriting switch statements.
Change-Id: I7ac632f7bee348194940812c956c8a7df51ffaff
Bug: skia:12450
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/450477
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Unreachable code might contain the only reference to a variable or
function. We can eliminate those variables/functions if we remove the
unreachable code first.
(Are there counterexamples where this order leads to worse results? I
couldn't think of any, and pragmatically it didn't show up in any of
our existing tests.)
Change-Id: Ic9f0222851269e0c37eb9570547307998f882b6c
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/450156
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
`increment` and `float a` could be eliminated, but are not.
This is fixed in a followup CL.
Change-Id: I7a5c3ab7341f40020f84f157b08a7152bc067af0
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/450276
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Missed a case when eliminating optional/wrapper in an earlier CL.
Change-Id: If7f80ea6e2172acadf7b0087fe1a05853ccae445
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/449838
Commit-Queue: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
The GLSL spec allows matrix constructors containing vectors that would
split between multiple columns of the matrix. However, in practice, this
does not actually work well on a lot of GPUs!
- "cast not allowed", "internal error":
Tegra 3
Quadro P400
GTX 660
GTX 960
- Compiles, but generates wrong result:
RadeonR9M470X
RadeonHD7770
Since this isn't a pattern we expect to see in user code, we now report
it as an error at compile time. mat2(vec4) is treated as an exceptional
case and still allowed.
Change-Id: Id6925984a2d1ec948aec4defcc790a197a96cf86
Bug: skia:12443
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/449518
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Not a big deal necessarily, but considering using this logic in GLSL as
well, and I'm less confident that your average GLSL ES driver will
optimize away the separate array loads.
Change-Id: I6a9f0d18c0fac138f64ad6426670f615e17f3492
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/449099
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
The fuzzer discovered that it could overflow the program-size value.
Rewrote the logic to use SkSafeMath everywhere, and to early-exit as
soon as a statement manages to exceed the program size.
Change-Id: I01511b2201173c95ebc1ac602901410ac9d74d73
Bug: oss-fuzz:38697
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/449098
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Adjusted default caps in skslc to be consistent with runtime behavior,
and added optional settings mode to enable the feature. Tests for both
scenarios. (The error test crashed prior to the fix).
Bug: oss-fuzz:38726
Change-Id: I5270d4837ac982085d7baf5abd4b361f7bfb8562
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/449062
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
This is a reland of db38ad7b14
Original change's description:
> Fixed DSL assertion error on source files containing nulls
>
> The assertion was there to make sure we weren't running off the end of
> the source, but naturally fails in the presence of legitimate embedded
> nulls.
>
> Change-Id: I3b80499e9b182c9ea046c479f35d7a965d548401
> Bug: oss-fuzz:38107
> Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/447182
> Commit-Queue: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
> Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
> Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Bug: oss-fuzz:38107
Change-Id: Idb1a6b7c64d2bb954edadae828d6de808158fd3f
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/448660
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Change-Id: Id6e1d1be276af01ce05777682dde8b58d803aedc
Bug: oss-fuzz:37837
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/449097
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
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The fuzzer has discovered a bug in our program size-checking logic; for
loops that immediately contain another for loop (with no block) were not
counting the inner loop's iterations. This allowed it to exceed our
maximum program-size threshold (and time out during SkVM compilation).
This test demonstrates the issue. A followup will fix it.
Change-Id: I3b7d4c8a4f0ed04cf0aba3f1a32fdad7d6d784e7
Bug: oss-fuzz:37837
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/449096
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
We already had a test case here, but it wasn't actually in operation.
The test has been split into ES2 (square) and ES3 (non-square) halves,
returns the color like a proper runtime effect, and it's now running in
dm.
Also, Metal doesn't natively support matrixCompMult, so it injects a
helper function; I tweaked the helper so it no longer requires an extra
result variable.
Change-Id: Ie79242768966fcbe879ad73461d17b4fb8e55670
Bug: skia:12202
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/448117
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
We didn't have any tests which exercised the non-square matrix case
(because such a test requires ES3), so it was silently broken. It's
now fixed. The tests exposed a DIFFERENT Quadro P400 bug which will be
fixed separately.
Change-Id: Icf24acad5ea6f18aea3d8aa5a903e7bea41a5c23
Bug: skia:12443
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/448379
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Bug: skia:12302
Change-Id: Ifc107ca2cf13c1daa59521b93fe4ad1d3c215258
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/447297
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
This exposes a bug in the Metal code generator which will be resolved
in a followup CL.
Change-Id: If073835dbee474ea9a805eb92b42dc1fca2afbd0
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/448378
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
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Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Throughout SkSL we've begun using doubles as a convenient way to store
any SkSL value (int, float, bool) in a single type. This idea has now
been extended to literals. Rather than having three expression kinds for
integers, floats and boolean literals, we can have just one. These can
be accessed in a type-specific way (`floatValue`, `intValue`, and
`boolValue` return the expected type, or assert if it's not the
matching type), or in a type-agnostic way (`value` will return a double
and works on any type of Literal).
This allows us to remove a complex template trick (Literal<T> is gone),
removes two redundant Expression types, and and lets us reduce our code
size in ConstantFolder, FunctionCall, etc.
Most of the conversion process was pretty straightforward:
* `IntLiteral::Make` becomes `Literal::MakeInt`
* `x.is<IntLiteral>()` becomes `x.isIntLiteral()`
* `x.as<IntLiteral>.value()` becomes `x.as<Literal>.intValue()`
Change-Id: Ic328533611e4551669c7fc9d7f9c03e34699f3f6
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/447836
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
The fuzzer found that the `DetectVarDeclarationWithoutScope` check was
placed too late in the function, and could be skipped over by for-loops
containing multiple variables. This was caught in ForStatement::Make,
which mirrors the Convert postconditions with matching assertions.
Change-Id: I6e9d97c7c9ca969aba65e601bbcd9fe676105838
Bug: oss-fuzz:38560
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/448116
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
This reverts commit db38ad7b14.
Reason for revert: breaking g3 roll since it thinks the test case is "binary" not flagged as binary
Original change's description:
> Fixed DSL assertion error on source files containing nulls
>
> The assertion was there to make sure we weren't running off the end of
> the source, but naturally fails in the presence of legitimate embedded
> nulls.
>
> Change-Id: I3b80499e9b182c9ea046c479f35d7a965d548401
> Bug: oss-fuzz:38107
> Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/447182
> Commit-Queue: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
> Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
> Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Bug: oss-fuzz:38107
Change-Id: I650d12d728b5d932bda79e81205b873d8b44771f
No-Presubmit: true
No-Tree-Checks: true
No-Try: true
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/447936
Bot-Commit: Rubber Stamper <rubber-stamper@appspot.gserviceaccount.com>
Commit-Queue: Michael Ludwig <michaelludwig@google.com>
The assertion was there to make sure we weren't running off the end of
the source, but naturally fails in the presence of legitimate embedded
nulls.
Change-Id: I3b80499e9b182c9ea046c479f35d7a965d548401
Bug: oss-fuzz:38107
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/447182
Commit-Queue: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Bug: oss-fuzz:38140
Change-Id: I76a1b3ef8289b3089192d043d173677c00741a54
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/445836
Commit-Queue: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Change-Id: If57fb5acbf5bd0cfeadc54dd12c3ba1da0840491
Bug: skia:12202
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/447416
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Compile-time optimization is not yet implemented so the generated code
contains a lot of checks which will be optimized away in a followup CL.
Change-Id: I83b5df8580a6712686d18812e3848a703feac315
Bug: skia:12202
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/447300
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
In response to a non-identifier token after a dot, DSLParser would
attempt to swizzle a zero-length field and fail an assertion.
The same basic code path exists in the old compiler, but the resulting
parse error causes the process to abort before it attempts to process
the zero-length swizzle.
Bug: oss-fuzz:38106
Change-Id: Ifd997ce1d564b5f6ef0a9a785d8d9e254785e600
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/446185
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Metal doesn't natively offer this intrinsic at all, but we now write an
equivalent template function whenever the intrinsic is encountered.
Proper testing will be added in a followup CL (when outerProduct is made
available in public SkSL).
Change-Id: Ie8d6bf8d735d0ab45b7559be68036b08c5802365
Bug: skia:12202
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/447296
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
This includes compile-time optimization and tests.
The unit test is disabled in a followup CL
(http://review.skia.org/447057) because it exposes a Radeon 5300M bug
in OpenGL.
Change-Id: I8b2f0411358aeb68c4edfeb0bd7a2814c4be1f40
Bug: skia:12202
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/447056
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
It turned out that Metal had equivalent intrinsics/casts all along; we
just needed to emit them.
Tests will be improved in a followup CL which adds the ES3-compatible
packing intrinsics into sksl_public.
Change-Id: Iec8a20b9f9fe9b1badea2944eb0b1f0a17c74560
Bug: skia:12351
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/446744
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
The test has been improved and now covers a variety of values. Because
this intrinsic has side-effects (an out-param), we do not support
optimizing it or treating it as a constant-expression.
The modf documentation doesn't mention anything about constant-
expression support or lack thereof. Experimentally, modf is also not
treated as a constant-expression by Apple GLSL or glslang:
http://screen/4RWwYKr6vCjxCPQhttp://screen/45ttDTVAFGDRyxP
Change-Id: I15bb1de80e90fa97ddf8e9d3803352603b9608d0
Bug: skia:12202
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/446396
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
The code in writeFunctionCall which supported swizzled out-params has
been factored out into a pair of helper functions. The code for emitting
intrinsics now relies on these helpers when emitting out-params.
Change-Id: I4436185ae107d70b529e7e1ea0dd89f844c6a673
Bug: skia:11052
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/446719
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
This reverts commit 0f4304e6e7.
Reason for revert: breaks Adreno 6xx
Original change's description:
> Add RelaxedPrecision decoration to function-call temp vars.
>
> This is really same basic issue as http://review.skia.org/446640. We
> were creating a temp variable but ignoring its type's precision.
>
> Change-Id: I9a5fedd7ada864d36757fc196f42ff95bac7d706
> Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/446718
> Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
> Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
> Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Change-Id: I6ae4e264b60f7f38a1abb5f1d0324461a33c896d
No-Presubmit: true
No-Tree-Checks: true
No-Try: true
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/446742
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Rubber Stamper <rubber-stamper@appspot.gserviceaccount.com>
Bot-Commit: Rubber Stamper <rubber-stamper@appspot.gserviceaccount.com>
This is really same basic issue as http://review.skia.org/446640. We
were creating a temp variable but ignoring its type's precision.
Change-Id: I9a5fedd7ada864d36757fc196f42ff95bac7d706
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/446718
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
We don't need to initialize input values for `out` params. (We were
treating them the same as `inout`.)
Change-Id: Ib447d15de237a6a03740ad012180691dc60a50bd
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/446717
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Previously we were not honoring the variable precision at all (passing
null to nextId).
Change-Id: I0e217e6c0d3d701dc0540d4d4069a3597abdad11
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/446640
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
DSL was improperly allowing interface blocks in runtime shaders, which
caused PipelineStageGenerator to get upset.
Bug: oss-fuzz:38131
Change-Id: I593e68f2cab3db9151d606e65e2826ffa9c494e2
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/446324
Commit-Queue: Ravi Mistry <rmistry@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Two minor changes:
- Converting a Block with bad statements will now generate a partial
block instead of nullptr.
The change mirrors how DSL behaves; functions containing invalid
statements will now be created and added to the program. Previously, we
would discard a function definition with any invalid statements inside;
this prevented duplicate-function-definition errors from appearing.
- Converting a return with a bad expression will now generate a
poisoned return instead of nullptr.
This change improves diagnostics for functions with invalid return
statements. If we eliminate the return statements (by returning null),
we report bad return statements as "function can exit without returning
a value" (which is confusing).
Change-Id: I6d998d5c50585f8d96bb7e3cb7f59b63125d6a62
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/446325
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
To do this with a clean conscience, I needed to convert the unroll-
counting logic from a linear time algorithm to constant-time. Getting
all the edge cases correct requires a lot of care, and there are now
plenty of unit tests.
Change-Id: I620909d069ac425b7310e345bf80ec844fe035f8
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/445643
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Several fuzzer issues, and one Chromium issue that's blocking the roll.
Bug: chromium:1246795
Bug: skia:12423
Change-Id: I00370b74569b447e543d9a1f22c588eb493063da
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/445960
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Auto-Submit: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
An ES2-compatible for loop supports six separate rel-ops:
< <= > >= != ==
Each rel-op, in addition to its expected usage, is also able to
represent a loop which never terminates, as well as a loop which
terminates instantly. Since SkVM unrolls these loops, we should make
sure we do it properly. We now have unit tests for all of these cases.
Change-Id: Icae04d48bc158bf8c0c98db97f76756a1a29110c
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/445756
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Intrinsic-call optimization can be triggered during inlining. In this
case, inlining turned `normalize(x)` into `normalize(constant-value)`.
DSL is used to implement optimizations for a handful of intrinsic calls,
including `normalize`, which internally relies on `length`.
The DSL expects that it can use the IRGenerator to handle function
calls. This was not working because we were finished with the initial
compilation pass, and the IRGenerator's symbol table is removed when
finish() was called.
We now temporarily give a symbol table back to the IRGenerator while
the inliner runs. We remove it again as soon as inlining is complete.
Change-Id: I6da98788d93749ffeb008c1f4c3f72b436e8ceeb
Bug: oss-fuzz:37994
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/445956
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Change-Id: Id894eb70273454716eb33c85dff2056333e90cdd
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/445281
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Bug: skia:12302
Change-Id: I4ff394f1f9d93d2def19a9f9d49cb208651aff10
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/445639
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Also update RELEASE_NOTES to describe new syntax.
Change-Id: I2666551b98f80b61ae3a48c92a9e306cdc7242b0
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/444735
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
This analysis pass assumes we have a program with a valid structure--all
loops must be ES2-compliant, and all function-calls must reference real
functions that exist. If we detected an error during compilation, our
program might not meet these criteria.
Change-Id: I4c7aefb3221438643614f1e0cbc2bad40b94b161
Bug: skia:12396
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/444982
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
This moves the swizzle domain test into the path used by the DSL so that
the error check benefits both sides. To make this possible we need to
be able to distinguish between equivalent swizzle components like x and
r, so they aren't collapsed down to the same component until the very
end.
Change-Id: I48f2582886391eabd7ce6eae949babdeead6051e
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/445280
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Our program-size analysis pass needs to recurse into called functions;
depending on the exact order of functions in the program, this recursion
can hypothetically be as deep as the deepest function-call chain. Set an
upper bound on recursion here, so we don't overflow the stack while
trying to check the program size. In practice, 50 frames is far deeper
than a regular shader should ever go.
Change-Id: I733ee48dad6f8053facdfd9f6d8a2b9b2a4af188
Bug: skia:12396
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/445279
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
This allows us to remove the static-recursion analysis pass entirely,
while still providing the same results.
Change-Id: If1564cd4df55be86ca4e0bf53ecc094ba76007df
Bug: skia:12396
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/445296
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
The fuzzer is currently learning to make unboundedly-large programs by
nesting medium-size loops repeatedly. SkVM doesn't have a mechanism to
limit the ensuing explosion of code and ends up making unreasonably deep
stacks and/or unreasonably large programs.
SkSL now enforces an upper bound of approximately 100,000 IR nodes on a
fully-flattened, fully-inlined strict-ES2 program. The limit is picked
out of thin air, but this should be enough to prevent SkVM from going
haywire while still being large enough to handle any reasonable program.
We can definitely tune this value if we find that it is too large
(admitting dangerous code) or too small (rejecting good code).
Change-Id: I11735636175721fbc79460b4e194d8e4b42dc47d
Bug: skia:12396, oss-fuzz:37827, oss-fuzz:37837
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/444358
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Most of the logic in IRGenerator::finish has moved to
Compiler::finalize. The @if/@switch pass has been combined with the pass
that verifies no dangling FunctionReference/TypeReference expressions,
saving one walk through the IR tree. Most program-finalization logic now
exists in Compiler and Analysis.
This change reorders our error generation logic slightly, and manages to
squeeze a few extra (valid) errors out of one of our fuzzer-generated
tests, but is not really intended to affect results in any significant
way.
Change-Id: I461de7c31f3980dedf74424e7826c032b1f40fd2
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/444757
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
The fuzzer discovered that, when we attempt to verify that an array
doesn't contain any literal values that are out-of-range for its base
type, we pay a linear-time cost based on the size of the array. This
happens even when the array value isn't known at compile time; we still
iterate over its slot count and diligently discover that every single
constant-subexpression slot in the expression is "null".
We now have a helper function on Expression,
`allowsConstantSubexpressions`, which only returns true for expression
kinds that can contain constant subexpressions. We use this helper to
skip over this linear-per-subexpression check when the expression
cannot possibly contain a constant subexpression. In particular,
`AnyConstructor::compareConstant` and `Type::checkForOutOfRangeLiteral`
will now early-out for expressions that can't possibly contain a
constant subexpression.
Change-Id: Ia34e422afa67b478a8616acb0a0e9cd211b29698
Bug: oss-fuzz:37900
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/444136
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
We had a logic bug when attempting to optimize the following code:
const vecN x = vecN(a, b, c);
-x;
The goal was to replace `-x` with `vecN(-a, -b, -c)` but we accidentally
tried to cast the `x` VariableReference to a Constructor. We
unfortunately didn't cover this in any of our test cases, but the fuzzer
managed to synthesize it by mixing and matching elements from its new
corpus.
This affected several different constructor types: splat, diagonal-
matrix, compound and array.
Change-Id: I10dd2460ab26ba3e820b0cff5db091368fb7e648
Bug: oss-fuzz:37764, oss-fuzz:37861
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/443407
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
These only existed for geometry shader interface blocks.
Change-Id: Ie82252715fe5e6babb85e3b437c6edd811fab955
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/442695
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Our analysis pass for checking if an expression is a constant-expression
would assert if the expression contained a TypeReference or a
FunctionReference. This could happen if you passed in an expression that
had not yet been type-coerced. This check seemed overly strict, so the
assertion has been removed (although such an expression will be reported
as 'not a constant expression').
This bit us in global-variable declaration, where we checked if a
global variable's initial-value expression was constant before coercing
it to the variable's type. This has also been reordered so the type-
coercion happens first. (Either order is now valid, but the type-
coercion related errors tend to be more detailed.)
Change-Id: I5104cf817767d65fd84421243d9530734ba624a9
Bug: oss-fuzz:37710
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/442693
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Bug: skia:8451 skia:10827
Change-Id: I5b38a1d72cd4558f8e2a92aaf9b12f05efce0923
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/442683
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Chris Dalton <csmartdalton@google.com>
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
This is a first step towards replacing `finalizeFunction` with a
`FunctionDefinition::Convert` method living outside of the IRGenerator.
Previously this code would assert that we had no early returns from a
vertex-program main() method; this has been turned into an error.
(The original assertion was also tied to fRTFlip, because the *problem*
with early-returns in main is tied to the lack of RTFlip fixups, but
we fundamentally don't allow early returns, so it makes more sense to
just universally disallow it.)
Change-Id: Iba0742f7ef3cbc83995ea130fec1eb1ef2556c44
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/442691
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
The fuzzer invented a much more elaborate example, but I was able to
winnow it down to a simple otherwise-normal test case. This also fixes
a latent DSL bug; DSL functions were not updating the list of referenced
intrinsics, so the compiler might emit finished programs that called
built-in functions that didn't exist in the code.
Change-Id: I095bb566b9db9f87cbe9460732c300b7973eb112
Bug: oss-fuzz:37659
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/442325
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
The fuzzer managed to trigger an assertion by returning an invalid type
from a void function. We were neglecting to clear out the expression
when reporting it as invalid, leaving it for `checkValid` to find later.
Change-Id: Icc152c867a3316fe994967e192601fb4d10da98f
Bug: oss-fuzz:37704
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/442678
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
No-op arithmetic simplification will convert expressions like `x += 0`
to `x`. When making this simplification, we will also downgrade the ref-
kind of `x` from "write" to "read" since the new expression is no longer
an assignment.
The fuzzer discovered that the ref-kind downgrade was too aggressive,
and would also traverse into nested subexpressions and downgrade them
as well. That is, for `x[y=z] += 0` would convert both `x` and `y`
into "read" references, which is incorrect; `y` is still being written
to.
The fuzzer managed to turn this mistake into an assertion by leveraging
a separate optimization. It added a leading, side-effect-less comma
expression for us to detect as worthless and eliminate. In doing so, we
clone the expression with the busted ref-kind, triggering an assertion.
Change-Id: I42fc31f6932f679ae875e2b49db2ad2f4e89e2cb
Bug: oss-fuzz:37677
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/442536
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
This reverts commit 9155b338bb.
Reason for revert: disable test for GLSL + Adreno 6xx
Original change's description:
> Revert "Add ES3 intrinsics isinf/isnan to public SkSL ES3."
>
> This reverts commit e43714f490.
>
> Reason for revert: Several Pixel (Adreno) devices failing the test
>
> Original change's description:
> > Add ES3 intrinsics isinf/isnan to public SkSL ES3.
> >
> > The ES3 spec doesn't mandate that `isnan` actually has to do anything,
> > so the Isnan test is not enabled. (It doesn't work on my personal
> > machine unless I make the NaN detectable at compile-time.)
> >
> > We do not support these functions in constant-expressions, as we
> > currently avoid optimizing anything into a non-finite value; we leave
> > expressions alone if we calculate a NaN/inf result for their value.
> >
> > Change-Id: Ibfdfb47b6e6134165c8780db570de04a916d2bfa
> > Bug: skia:12022
> > Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/441581
> > Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
> > Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
> > Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
>
> TBR=brianosman@google.com,ethannicholas@google.com,johnstiles@google.com,skcq-be@skia-corp.google.com.iam.gserviceaccount.com
>
> Change-Id: I89899ed391aa870350d0452bab4a0fb75bd7be38
> No-Presubmit: true
> No-Tree-Checks: true
> No-Try: true
> Bug: skia:12022
> Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/441716
> Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
> Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Bug: skia:12022, skia:12377
Change-Id: Ib149dbc1138feb3ee2bf6f7e31e9e8a9414560bc
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/441884
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Our SPIR-V code generator did not implement support for negating a uint.
However, this is something that GLSL allows (as does the rest of SkSL).
I checked glslang and it uses OpSNegate here. The SPIR-V docs indicate
that OpSNegate allows any type of integer, and the validator lets it
pass, so we now use OpSNegate here as well.
http://screen/33mkq92uxAT5Xu8http://screen/4YBTh3gCWz8eZx7http://screen/388HtXyytcN5vLZ
Change-Id: I8c142018fd5e162dcd051abe1bc5d69a6e034794
Bug: oss-fuzz:37627
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/441880
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Previously, a struct containing a vardecl with multiple declarations
would interpret arrays incorrectly. An array would be applied to ALL
variables in the decl after its initial appearance. That is,
`int w, x[10], y, z;` would be interpreted as
`int w, x[10], y[10], z[10];`.
This is now fixed and our test case runs as expected.
Change-Id: I5b4a617c58cdfb83face651effd42770a1f68638
Bug: oss-fuzz:37622
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/441879
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
The fuzzer detected a serious parsing error; a struct containing a
vardecl with multiple declarations would interpret arrays incorrectly.
An array would be applied to ALL variables in the decl after its initial
appearance. That is, `int w, x[10], y, z;` would be interpreted as
`int w, x[10], y[10], z[10];`. The fuzzer caught this by putting two
arrayed variables in a row; the second variable was interpreted as a
nested array, which led to an assertion.
This CL contains a simple hand-written test case demonstrating the bug,
with the fix coming in a followup.
Change-Id: I42d7372ba77fa1528ae24eb8c29a2e5903784139
Bug: oss-fuzz:37622
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/441878
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
We weren't coercing the expression because we don't care about its type,
but that allowed intermediate-expressions to pass through without
reporting an error. Now we coerce the expression to its present type,
which will always fail if the type is disallowed and succeed otherwise.
Change-Id: Ic0de0d17f0f5d56360575efe992ce4d74dec2a5a
Bug: oss-fuzz:37620
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/441876
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
This reverts commit e43714f490.
Reason for revert: Several Pixel (Adreno) devices failing the test
Original change's description:
> Add ES3 intrinsics isinf/isnan to public SkSL ES3.
>
> The ES3 spec doesn't mandate that `isnan` actually has to do anything,
> so the Isnan test is not enabled. (It doesn't work on my personal
> machine unless I make the NaN detectable at compile-time.)
>
> We do not support these functions in constant-expressions, as we
> currently avoid optimizing anything into a non-finite value; we leave
> expressions alone if we calculate a NaN/inf result for their value.
>
> Change-Id: Ibfdfb47b6e6134165c8780db570de04a916d2bfa
> Bug: skia:12022
> Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/441581
> Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
> Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
> Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
TBR=brianosman@google.com,ethannicholas@google.com,johnstiles@google.com,skcq-be@skia-corp.google.com.iam.gserviceaccount.com
Change-Id: I89899ed391aa870350d0452bab4a0fb75bd7be38
No-Presubmit: true
No-Tree-Checks: true
No-Try: true
Bug: skia:12022
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/441716
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Bug: skia:12302
Change-Id: I8cf958acf9214d0de903a4097647afd74f2a659e
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/441541
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
The ES3 spec doesn't mandate that `isnan` actually has to do anything,
so the Isnan test is not enabled. (It doesn't work on my personal
machine unless I make the NaN detectable at compile-time.)
We do not support these functions in constant-expressions, as we
currently avoid optimizing anything into a non-finite value; we leave
expressions alone if we calculate a NaN/inf result for their value.
Change-Id: Ibfdfb47b6e6134165c8780db570de04a916d2bfa
Bug: skia:12022
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/441581
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
If x is a known compile-time constant value, it can already be optimized
to a final value.
If x is not known, it could be zero, and 0/0 should result in a NaN.
Change-Id: I643a7c6da0a43ec366235c4df39fc78d3b361de7
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/441580
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Change-Id: I26754745aa26313a2f76a86bd41699c7ac5b8a46
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/441596
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Auto-Submit: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
After further discussion, using intrinsics with signatures similar to
sample keeps us looking like GLSL. However, using "sample" is still
misleading, so this adds explicit "shade", "filter", and "blend"
intrinsics. After migrating clients, the "sample" versions will be
removed.
Bug: skia:12302
Change-Id: Ia03e4b3794fc1fc5ae3c3099a7a350343ec7702e
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/441457
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Salomon <bsalomon@google.com>
The additional tests from http://review.skia.org/441238 uncovered a gap
in the constant folder's abilities; it was not able to fold away
boolean vector comparisons even when they were constant. These are ES2
constant-expressions, so folding them properly is a requirement.
Change-Id: Ia0b4d5d1215c5fc2b247ac3f0dec4c8747d2153e
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/441579
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Much easier to maintain, especially with an upcoming change to the
sampling syntax.
Change-Id: I378811b7be0afcce5b7e68a942e7b46d96568155
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/441518
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Auto-Submit: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
The inliner contained a type error when attempting to inline a function
that takes an array as input. The scratch copy of the array was created
as `float[123] var;` instead of `float var[123];`. This led to an
assertion in VarDeclaration::Make.
Change-Id: I5128fe71462bb59a015a7b4e59c1a74800828b16
Bug: oss-fuzz:37466
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/441576
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
This fixes an assertion failure uncovered by the fuzzer.
Bug: oss-fuzz:37469
Change-Id: I626c003cfa8a0bc65851899df3a7695dbe29200b
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/441311
Commit-Queue: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
During constant-folding, we baked in an assertion stating that any
const-typed variable reference ought to have an initial value, because
you can't declare a const variable without assigning a value. However,
function parameters are an exception to this rule! They are variable
references and are allowed to be const, but will not have an initial
value. (In this case, `const` just means you can't alter the value.)
In this case, all we needed to do was remove the assertion; we already
treated this case defensively and with the appropriate care.
Change-Id: I61242c6d08c59886c6992898f195771e6334f2b4
Bug: oss-fuzz:37465
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/441239
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
This was another place where we needed to use
`getConstantSubexpression` to rebuild vectors/matrices; it is a more
robust approach than trying handle each ctor type individually. The
fuzzer found an edge case with double-casting matrices to vectors that
fell through the cracks with the original approach.
In adding additional tests, I also found a case that the constant-folder
seems to ignore, `bool4(x,x,x,x) == bool4(x)`. This does fold for ints
and floats, so this ought to be fixable in a followup, but it's not a
big deal either way; this is very unlikely to occer in real code.
Change-Id: I4d577c87ef7049306685ca95250ecdf93b1dbc06
Bug: oss-fuzz:37464
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/441238
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Improved tests caught a longstanding bug in the compile-time
optimization logic for round/roundEven. These would *always* round to an
even number even when it didn't make sense to do so. (e.g. 3.1 would
round to 4.)
RoundEven isn't available in lower shader models of Direct3D;
SPIRV-Cross throws if it's unavailable. We may need a caps bit for this.
Change-Id: I3cc50238a2116b8d4e2c4059730d8b5cfb2bb056
Bug: skia:12022, skia:12352
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/441078
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
The fuzzer noticed insufficient guards in IndexExpression::Convert when
converting an array size from an IntLiteral to a SKSL_INT. We had code
in IRGenerator which did this properly, so I moved our array-size
conversion logic into SkSLType and had IndexExpression share it.
Also, a variety of tests around similar error conditions were added.
Change-Id: I51529dea25f9029f81ae236511610069d66be29f
Bug: oss-fuzz:37462
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/441236
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
We now stop processing a var-declaration if its array-size expression is
invalid. Previously, we'd pass a null array-size expression into
convertVar, which would assert (but would fail cleanly afterwards).
Change-Id: I976f3326e32afbc7045a86d73c0dcb28f418a6f4
Bug: oss-fuzz:37457
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/441079
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
These now have proper testing and compile-time optimization support.
Change-Id: I7978161ec126e1c3096b9ca9dfbb2be7d8ea02f5
Bug: skia:12202
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/440859
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
The no-op-arithmetic simplifier was written before we allowed casting a
mat2x2 to a float4, and did not expect a matrix inside a vector ctor.
The expression `float4(myMat2) * float4(anything)` would assert when we
tried to determine if `myMat2` was a constant zero or constant one.
The code has been rewritten to use getConstantSubexpression and now
allows matrices inside.
Change-Id: Id625141256bf89d816c57d2d21f16b0ec252c158
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/440858
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
The prototype has been added sksl_public, compile-time optimization is
implemented, and test code has been improved.
Change-Id: I536d6bd7fcae437a03744941b008940bf2a3b1c1
Bug: skia:12202
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/440524
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
When compiling test shaders, we were setting SK_FRAGCOORD_BUILTIN on the
`coords` parameter to main() instead of SK_MAIN_COORDS_BUILTIN. These
two built-ins don't have the same type (float2 vs. float4) and don't
mean quite the same thing.
The SPIR-V code generator saw a variable with the SK_FRAGCOORD_BUILTIN
builtin value and assumed the presence of a global variable named
`sk_FragCoord`, which didn't exist (because it was never referenced in
the code, so it was never cloned in from the sksl_frag module).
This is only a concern when compiling test shaders with skslc; real
shaders don't hit these code paths. The generated code here is still
imperfect; if you look closely, you'll see the GLSL and Metal code is
referencing the `coords` variable but it's never declared anywhere.
Change-Id: I3ad249469927ff35eb1e75d6536f95317502708f
Bug: skia:12340
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/440520
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Change-Id: I9ddb80b8886827250e243dc9174bb3679e70df9b
Bug: skia:12202
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/440262
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>