Change-Id: Iafeb13812851271a5262730e9c0642d4469c273f
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/375020
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Now, even if a qualifier has a default value, we will know that it
appeared in the text. We can use that to check for redundant qualifiers
(as is being done here), and in the IR generator to prevent any use of
certain qualifiers, depending on context. (eg, runtime effects, wrong
shader stage, on a parameter declaration, etc.)
Bug: skia:11301
Change-Id: I2cd6ad35c2b4c4d6f87ade97e80aea84dc16ee4b
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/374616
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
At IR generation time, this CL limits our optimizations to only
@switch statements. A regular switch statement will only be optimized
during the optimization phase even if the switch-value is a known
compile-time constant. This is done to avoid upsetting our reachability
analysis.
Most of this CL is moving existing logic from SkSLCompiler into
SkSLAnalysis and SkSLSwitchStatement. Although the diffs look large, the
actual changes are very small.
Change-Id: I90920f41bc386dfa7a980ae7510f6681231a5120
Bug: skia:11340, skia:11342, skia:11319
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/372679
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Bug: skia:10837
Change-Id: I33da2eb1e723ed04ab62d65c21e54306dd362bed
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/372677
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
These were unused - we always enable the advanced blend equation
extension using "blend_support_all_equations" (if enabling the
extension is required at all).
Change-Id: I95fd6483ec54dfaf983290de95629fe0e86c22e8
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/373877
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Chris Dalton <csmartdalton@google.com>
Constant propagation might be going away, but static-switches are likely
here to stay. Avoid conflating the two in this test.
Change-Id: If4b6c99c85f124d3bbc20da858693f09f5e4fd59
Bug: skia:11319
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/374117
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 optimizer now properly recognizes all types of exits from a switch
statement. Break, continue and return are all potential exits and need
to be considered when determining the exit path from the switch.
Previously, dead code elimination was hiding the effects of this bug
from us, but it meant that an optimized switch had the potential to
generate lots of worthless IR nodes which then needed to be detected and
eliminated by the CFG. In particular, this affected the enum form of
blend, causing a catastrophic amount of extra work to be done.
Change-Id: If857e38cadfc016884624ea4db25a273ad3dce5b
Bug: skia:11352
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/372958
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Change-Id: I672345116e3b5538c0f7e8c5f2f74aa56bb81e6d
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/372676
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
When we detect a static switch, the optimizer finds the matching switch-
case and eliminates all the other switch-cases. It handles case
fall-through by scanning forward and looking for an unconditional break.
However, the inliner has an interesting quirk--it can replace `return`
statements inside of a switch with `continue` statements, since the body
of the inlined function has been wrapped with a for-loop to allow for
early exits. The optimizer does not recognize these continue statements
as exits from the switch (although they certainly qualify), so it
treats continues as fallen-through and keeps emitting switch-cases.
The dead-code elimination pass was actually doing us a favor here and
eliminating the excess code later. A flag was added to disable DCE in
order to reveal the problem in a test.
Change-Id: I8ff19fde5e32d0ab73d7c5411da40cb953a446f5
Bug: skia:11352
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/372956
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Surprisingly, this error is actually caught by our parser, which
interprets the default label in a unique way. From the parser comments:
"Requiring default: to be last (in defiance of C and GLSL) was a
deliberate decision. Other parts of the compiler may rely upon this
assumption."
The comment is true--we don't check for duplicate default switch-case
labels anywhere else in the code, just here in the parser.
We rely on this, so we should have a test for it.
Change-Id: I6df5c565aca4d4b8565b96638dce9504efc39ccc
Bug: skia:11340
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/372617
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Change-Id: I4df18946cdb3d9f1f7833461f913f2df94696821
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/372197
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
These were all unused, and only implemented on one backend.
Change-Id: Ibd2fcef1a971e6c1bd9da0784c5d852a60708484
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/372117
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Change-Id: I885149c73be63c223ac88a697ffe046a7f8384d0
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/372116
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Bug: skia:11335
Change-Id: I88c952cbfe2d2c5920e17675da1674928f37b982
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/371480
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
When coercing a type, we would previously call checkValid() so we could
detect function-references and type-references, so we could get a nicer
error message.
It turns out that we can just do the "is this a type-reference/
function-reference?" check directly inside coerce() and get the same
improved error messages. Since we should be coercing all our values to
the right type, and type/function-references aren't coercible to
anything, this should catch them all. I don't expect any of these
to survive all the way to the end of IR generation.
(In case one of these types does slip through, I've left the error case
in checkValid, but I've also put in an assertion. If the fuzzer can
make that assertion fire, we are probably missing a call to coerce()
somewhere.)
This cleanup is meant to help migrate coerce() out of IRGenerator.
Change-Id: I031809adf439b1766048768b782c57e7f2494006
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/371479
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Adds trivial name mangling to the .stage output, so we can verify that
it's working in all places (declarations, references, etc). Also added
another global variable whose initializer is - in turn - another global.
Bug: skia:11295
Change-Id: Ic220bfae0a6d1eeeba66ade30d3d781af15c5dea
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/371477
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Includes variables with and without initializers. Note that both the
.skvm and .stage output is incorrect right now. (No declarations for
global variables in .stage, and the initializer is dropped in .skvm).
Bug: skia:11295
Change-Id: Icb6d797616be6a1bc7cbdc9db4fefa7e30c65656
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/371143
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
None of these are legal in GLSL ES 1.0. Added a new test that previously
compiled without error. Started out with just assignment and equality,
then realized that sequence and ternary should be blocked, too.
Bug: skia:11323
Change-Id: I02691f819565afabeadbb12cab6c07acf40093f7
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/370880
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
When SPIR-V generates function calls to an intrinsic, it assumes that
it can get a pointer to out-parameters referenced by the intrinsic.
This does not account for swizzled out-parameters; these are valid
lvalues, but do not work with getPointer().
The two intrinsics supported by SkSL which have an out-parameter are
frexp and modf, so these tests were fleshed out to trigger the error.
Neither of these are supported in ES2, though, so we cannot test them
via Runtime Effects.
Change-Id: Ib92707a28ba6d1c282d20e29a2a387bddf74ad23
Bug: skia:11052
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/370116
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
The out-param helpers emitted by the Metal code gen (intended to provide
GLSL out-parameter semantics in Metal) emitted bad code if passed the
same variable for two separate out parameters. It would previously
create two parameters in the helper with the same name. The helper
function now omits the name of the second variable in the parameter list
if it is redundant; we already know the caller is passing the same
variable twice.
Change-Id: Ibdc6c02a9e9e4bdb4f4546a25068f2018aa07b10
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/370258
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
GLSL ES2 documentation on out parameters: "Evaluation of an out
parameter results in an l-value that is used to copy out a value when
the function returns."
The inliner does not do any alias checking when inlining an `out` param.
That is, passing the same variable to two separate `out` parameters
would not generate two distinct lvalues in the inlined code; it reuses
the same variable for each out-params in the inlined code.
(Amusingly, our CFG can fully optimize away this test code so it just
returns "red".)
Change-Id: Ib781d2cfdac54f01b6abe159af0c84ff24ff6976
Bug: skia:11326
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/370256
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Multi-dimensional arrays aren't legal in GLSL/SkSL, so this should be
caught and flagged as an error. The parser now verifies that a
variable's type isn't an array-type before accepting a `[` token to
open an array on the variable name.
This CL also refactors the IR generator's `convertArraySize` method to
make sure that various checks are made for all callers. Originally this
restructuring was used to verify array multi-dimensionality, but that
didn't detect errors inside struct declarations (which get no error
checking inside the IR generator) so the IR generator updates no longer
need to check the array dimensions.
Bug: skia:11322
Change-Id: Id33f4bdfb544019ddf995a8196c3c09cfe5a4525
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/369916
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
We now interpret any statement of the form `Type identifier...` as a
var-declaration and report errors as such. Previously, if a var-decl
statement generated an error during parse, we'd report errors as if it
were an expression-statement, which meant that slightly-invalid code
could return out-of-context, misleading errors.
Bug: skia:11287
Change-Id: I2c6cf2984760eb34593c80cb30f8c4e007d42027
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/370036
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>
Bug: skia:11314
Change-Id: I66476543462ae378a5bfb6cbd902dfa2f5fc45f5
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/369917
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
We don't need to do these tests every time we run CFG optimization; we
can do them once at the end of optimization, as a separate step.
Change-Id: If0e72fbacb938b62387fd2ffdbf34d1153bf3bd4
Bug: skia:11319
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/369481
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 CL at http://review.skia.org/366399 introduced a bug with
LValue::getPointer. Specifically, getPointer used to return zero when
no pointer is available. (This happens when the LValue is a swizzle.)
That CL changed the error code to -1. However, it did not fix up all
the call sites that checked the return value of getPointer().
This CL fixes up those call sites to use -1 consistently, and adds
TODOs in spots which do not check the result from getPointer() at all
(instead assuming it cannot fail). This will allow swizzled out-
parameters to work in SPIR-V as they did before. (Except in intrinsics,
where they seem to have been broken all along, but those are now marked
with a TODO at least.)
Note that we still do not fully emulate GLSL semantics for out
parameters, as out-parameters should only be copied back to the original
variable at the end of the function call to be fully GLSL compliant.
(This CL also replaces a tuple with a named struct for readability.)
Change-Id: I708dc7a69296a4244ba9ceb85c3e68d1f331bbc9
Bug: skia:11052
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/368618
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Uses the pipeline-stage callback mechanism. It mangles the type name
(with a test to verify that this works), and then calls defineStruct
with the entire SkSL struct definition string.
Bug: skia:10939
Change-Id: If14cf1b11faaa80ad8d4086cdacf68532bac43fc
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/368809
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
This was being set to zero instead of one by mistake. Interestingly,
this was undetected by the CPU backend, but appears to matter sometimes
on the GPU side.
Change-Id: If827863f69c140f933696c6ff55c8a7095620c29
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/368858
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Disabled on Adreno 5xx/6xx as the tests do not pass on those GPUs:
http://screen/3Dkgs9syj37cjBV
Change-Id: Ib935d01e8f06dbfe7decd5cc4e52e0688b48be08
Bug: skia:11306, skia:11308
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/368805
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
"Constant" is an address space qualifier and can't be applied to a
local variable. "Const" in GLSL (and hypothetically SkSL) is meant to
apply to a constant expression regardless of address space.
Our previous test was not finding any error because the optimizer was
eliminating the constant expressions entirely.
Change-Id: I6cfe8e2a621c79945b33e0166780d81e79890a1b
Bug: skia:11304
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/368517
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
This reverts commit c501857188.
Reason for revert: breaking many bots
Original change's description:
> Add support for matrix == and != in Metal shaders.
>
> We need to polyfill an operator== and != when these are first
> encountered in the code.
>
> Change-Id: I539c838ee1871bcb0c4b66abb8a4a0f91146cd4f
> Bug: skia:11306
> Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/368496
> Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
> Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
TBR=brianosman@google.com,ethannicholas@google.com,johnstiles@google.com
Change-Id: Id583109a0d167c2c58a57644b14cd5f49d670737
No-Presubmit: true
No-Tree-Checks: true
No-Try: true
Bug: skia:11306
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/368801
Reviewed-by: Greg Daniel <egdaniel@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Greg Daniel <egdaniel@google.com>
We need to polyfill an operator== and != when these are first
encountered in the code.
Change-Id: I539c838ee1871bcb0c4b66abb8a4a0f91146cd4f
Bug: skia:11306
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/368496
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Currently, SkSL is able to constant-propagate `x = x + constant` into
`x = constant` when the starting value of x is known. However, it is not
able to do the same optimization for `x += constant`. This test
demonstrates that once += is encountered, we lose track of x's value and
can no longer propagate its value.
(This is equally true of all the op-assignment operators, += -=
*= /= etc.)
Change-Id: I3523e96baf9a73982cf3b09f0d23b95adacf106b
Bug: skia:11192
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/368248
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
The leftover tests in shared/ are not easily testable as Runtime
Effects; they do things that ES2 doesn't support or use a feature not
exposed directly by Runtime Effects.
Change-Id: I7ebe170cf713c4a0d2dbef333c1fcbac2410c67f
Bug: skia:11009
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/367059
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
These cover new ground; when combined with some additional optimization
work, they can cause crashes in the optimizer that we don't see from any
existing test.
Change-Id: I3958a5522cfe0929d0753e6e617d72e032c7f5a3
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/367063
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
SkSL.
It would previously catch 1 / 0, but fail to detect x / 0.
Bug: skia:11051
Change-Id: I3adb5942cce03a7ad40a13a8ca5d5a7f2029d6ad
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/366720
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Auto-Submit: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
This takes away one of our gadgets for thwarting dead-code elimination
in unit tests, but it's the right thing to do. Comma expression left-
sides without side effects are clearly dead code.
Change-Id: Iaee490b4a742d06a0a0be94cddaa69a51543d8f5
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/366719
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
- MultipleAssignments
- NegatedVectorLiteral
- NumberCasts
- OutParams
- OutParamsTricky (disabled on GPU due to skia:11269)
Change-Id: I87dc9c5019931f3d2dc3aafbe1e02d0eee2e1a05
Bug: skia:11009, skia:11269
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/366400
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 is enforced by ANGLE in Strict ES2 mode; we need to enforce it as
well.
Change-Id: I6e2f547ad8e0ce817742cf84659764cf6bce38b9
Bug: skia:11270
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/366339
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 38df4c8470.
Reason for revert: updated ArrayTypes test for ES2 compatibility
Original change's description:
> Revert "Improve support for arrays in Metal."
>
> This reverts commit dd904af566.
>
> Reason for revert: breaks ANGLE
>
> Original change's description:
> > Improve support for arrays in Metal.
> >
> > Arrays in Metal now use the `array<T, N>` type instead of the C-style
> > `T[N]` type. This gives them semantics much more in line with GLSL,
> > so they can be initialized and assigned like GLSL arrays.
> >
> > This allows the ArrayTypes and Assignment tests to pass, so they have
> > been added to our dm SkSL tests. (ArrayConstructors also passes, but
> > is not ES2-compliant so it is not enabled.)
> >
> > Change-Id: Id1028311963084befd0e044e11e223af6a064dda
> > Bug: skia:10761, skia:10760, skia:11022, skia:10939
> > Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/365699
> > Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
> > Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
> > Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
>
> TBR=brianosman@google.com,ethannicholas@google.com,johnstiles@google.com
>
> Change-Id: If6a18dea7d6a45fa7836e9129bf81c2e536f07e3
> No-Presubmit: true
> No-Tree-Checks: true
> No-Try: true
> Bug: skia:10761
> Bug: skia:10760
> Bug: skia:11022
> Bug: skia:10939
> Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/365976
> Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
> Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
TBR=brianosman@google.com,ethannicholas@google.com,johnstiles@google.com
Bug: skia:10761
Bug: skia:10760
Bug: skia:11022
Bug: skia:10939
Change-Id: Ia1c4917f5d3c41162d282b3093814d861707ad30
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/366144
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
This reverts commit dd904af566.
Reason for revert: breaks ANGLE
Original change's description:
> Improve support for arrays in Metal.
>
> Arrays in Metal now use the `array<T, N>` type instead of the C-style
> `T[N]` type. This gives them semantics much more in line with GLSL,
> so they can be initialized and assigned like GLSL arrays.
>
> This allows the ArrayTypes and Assignment tests to pass, so they have
> been added to our dm SkSL tests. (ArrayConstructors also passes, but
> is not ES2-compliant so it is not enabled.)
>
> Change-Id: Id1028311963084befd0e044e11e223af6a064dda
> Bug: skia:10761, skia:10760, skia:11022, skia:10939
> Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/365699
> Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
> Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
> Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
TBR=brianosman@google.com,ethannicholas@google.com,johnstiles@google.com
Change-Id: If6a18dea7d6a45fa7836e9129bf81c2e536f07e3
No-Presubmit: true
No-Tree-Checks: true
No-Try: true
Bug: skia:10761
Bug: skia:10760
Bug: skia:11022
Bug: skia:10939
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/365976
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Arrays in Metal now use the `array<T, N>` type instead of the C-style
`T[N]` type. This gives them semantics much more in line with GLSL,
so they can be initialized and assigned like GLSL arrays.
This allows the ArrayTypes and Assignment tests to pass, so they have
been added to our dm SkSL tests. (ArrayConstructors also passes, but
is not ES2-compliant so it is not enabled.)
Change-Id: Id1028311963084befd0e044e11e223af6a064dda
Bug: skia:10761, skia:10760, skia:11022, skia:10939
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/365699
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
We now catch this error at IR generation time; previously we'd send it
to the driver (where it would fail to compile).
Change-Id: I45890214ffa164be1c0f359320f942bc4dc479ca
Bug: skia:11265
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/365697
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
This uncovered a bug in Metal code generation of `matX *= matY` which is
now fixed. (It was emitting the helper function more than once.)
Change-Id: I0aeb0efe7ab5fbf5592a8ca6f4f5b50354d3d7f4
Bug: skia:11262
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/365489
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>