Just filling in a gap in our tests. The output is a little strange as it
exposes a missed opportunity to constant-fold array accesses, but it
seems fine otherwise.
Change-Id: I6df13e0f9a49455015ceb47d7802bb5e1bbdaa1a
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/339217
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Constructors such as `float[2](0, 0)` add a type to the symbol table;
this type needs to be copied into the new symbol table if the
constructor is cloned by the inliner.
Change-Id: Ifa8d2dec87103c6223ce493e2201a904c14c2137
Bug: oss-fuzz:28050
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/339168
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
SPIR-V previously didn't know what to think when it encountered a Type
with a typeKind of kEnum, and would abort. These are now treated as
32-bit signed integers.
Metal previously emitted the SkSL enum typename, which is meaningless to
Metal since we do not emit the enum itself anywhere. Metal now emits
"int" for an enum-typed variable.
(GLSL already correctly emits "int" for enum types.)
Change-Id: I05975a2a399f9c4a22c00c90be0dccacd99d793b
Bug: skia:11003
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/338856
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
This CL addresses the root cause of the fuzzer issue, by checking for
LayoutIsSupported before getting the MemoryLayout of a type. However,
this array ought to be detected as an error everywhere, as samplers are
opaque types; at present, this code compiles without error in GLSL and
Metal. This is an issue for followup CLs.
GLSL's actual support for arrays of samplers is interesting and probably
too nuanced for us to try to emulate:
https://www.khronos.org/opengl/wiki/Data_Type_(GLSL)#Opaque_arrays
"Under GLSL version 3.30, Sampler arrays (the only opaque type 3.30
provides) can be declared, but they can only be accessed by compile-time
integral Constant Expressions. So you cannot loop over an array of
samplers, no matter what the array initializer, offset and comparison
expressions are.
Under GLSL 4.00 and above, array indices leading to an opaque value can
be accessed by non-compile-time constants, but these index values must
be dynamically uniform. The value of those indices must be the same
value, in the same execution order, regardless of any non-uniform
parameter values, for all shader invocations in the invocation group."
Change-Id: Ib382f5c3b563f996b3c8f1eb6b021b6d31fa9ce7
Bug: oss-fuzz:28107
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/339159
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
This test verifies that dead-stripping works on both built-in and user
functions, if their function call is optimized away.
Change-Id: I3125a34640c69de43c383343cd00d97e5a32ac60
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/338836
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Enums are an SkSL-only concept--when we output code, we emit plain
IntLiterals--so the fix is simply to ignore the Enum program element
when we encounter it. This is what GLSLCodeGen does as well.
Also added a unit test to confirm that enums work normally, and that
enums are subject to optimization and static-comparison checks just as
ints would be.
Change-Id: Ic4f8da7a27983add9eb41b936d46f6638d22bd4b
Bug: skia:11003
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/338800
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
There were a surprisingly small number of dedicated SPIR-V tests.
SkSLSPIRVBadOffset was the only test that didn't already exist in the
golden outputs, although it actually contained two tests.
The SPIRVTest.cpp file has been converted to SPIRVTestbed.cpp, which can
be used for local debugging of SPIR-V issues via dm (like GLSLTestbed
and MetalTestbed).
Change-Id: I978d8a7cf5735af7f537113d2b9411ce42cfcf88
Bug: skia:10694
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/338756
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
This is very unlikely to occur in real-world code, as it's somewhat
nonsense to use the comma operator in this way. However, it's better to
fail cleanly than to assert.
Change-Id: I76481cd8a993cb1a798ee16956400a512efd4c15
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/337636
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Fix code generation for Metal and Vulkan with geometric
intrinsics that have scalar versions in GLSL/SkSL, but no
native support in MSL/SPIR-V.
Change-Id: Id4538a00172e0d233ad9d5ed8d33db6436b83208
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/338276
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Previously, we assumed that if a vector in `is_constant` was not made of
floats, it must be made of integers. This ignores that boolean vectors
also exist. The original code would abort when `getIVecComponent` was
called on a bool vector.
There is another bug here--arithmetic operators on bool types should be
disallowed entirely. That will be addressed in later CLs.
Change-Id: I78781d839abde9376917fd92f2fe6311a1a58b02
Bug: oss-fuzz:27808
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/338055
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Change-Id: I1be21b428939d17bbf3a9347a64db56c7cd69eb4
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/337638
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>
Previously, the code which calculated Constructor constant values
assumed that a constant-value PrefixExpression would always have an
operand of Constructor. It turns out that another valid case is multiple
PrefixExpressions nested within each other (representing repeated
negation). Updated the code to work regardless of the type of the prefix
operand.
Change-Id: Ic9bf54725ae59330ac817bc4ec7a64def384ab54
Bug: oss-fuzz:27663
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/337177
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
We now have SPIR-V golden outputs for `blend` and `shared` tests.
This exposes a handful of SPIR-V limitations for us to address.
Change-Id: Ie5278889b8a61432403d06231b17765885bee0ac
Bug: skia:10694
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/337182
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 fix submitted at http://review.skia.org/335868 did not support
casts. The fuzzer discovered this shortcoming right away.
Change-Id: I2f5166528cee41367348564d4e664476fd5704ff
Bug: oss-fuzz:27650
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/336656
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
The fuzzer managed to create a test case which temporarily evaluates to
expression `half2(half(0.2)) + 2` as it is optimized. This requires a
bunch of temporary nonsense math as the IR Generator is attempting to
simplify as it goes; various attempts to remove terms from the fuzzer
test-case would cause it to stop reproducing the error.
Constructor::getVecComponent assumed that any constructor with a single
scalar argument would always implement `getConstantFloat` and
`getConstantInt`; however, constructors themselves did not actually
implement these methods. This meant that nesting a scalar constructor
inside a non-scalar constructor would abort when it tried to deduce the
value inside the inner constructor.
This has been fixed by implementing `getConstantFloat` and
`getConstantInt` for Constructors. These methods will assert if the
constructor has more than one argument or is a non-scalar type. This
should allow any number of nested constructors, e.g.
`half4(half(half(half(1))))` should recursively evaluate properly,
should we somehow generate this as an intermediate expression.
Change-Id: Iaee4284cba03974443cd7b5dccfd7909c1a5f3a6
Bug: oss-fuzz:27614
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/335868
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 slightly complicated by the fact that this syntax indicates an
array with a known size:
float[] x = float[](1, 2, 3, 4);
Of course, the size is 4; it's just never explicitly stated in the
code. (The SkSL parser never actually deduces the size, but it doesn't
apparently have a need to; we don't do much in the way of optimization
for arrays.) However, this prevents us from simply failing whenever we
parse "[]" in non-builtin code; we need to keep scanning and see if the
variable is initialized. We already check this in the
ArrayConstructors.sksl test file.
Change-Id: I5b86958e81bd9bf5edf28a617cecf95c1875583e
Bug: skia:10957
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/335240
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
This is a followup to http://review.skia.org/335196. This detects opaque
types (samplers and textures) at parsing or IR generation time and
reports an error regardless of backend. This check occurs before Metal
or SPIR-V would have a chance to detect the error, so it changes their
output to a slightly more focused error message. The Metal/SPIR-V fix in
the prior CL is still a nice broad catch-all for preventing spurious
ABORTs, though.
Change-Id: I4cce92a8767d72b5d3d7277a8afde8ce5ce86db2
Bug: skia:10956
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/335217
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Previously, MemoryLayout would ABORT if it encountered any types that
we can't layout in memory (e.g. opaque types like samplers). Instead of
an abort, this case is now detected cleanly and an error is reported
identifying the offending type.
This should unwedge the fuzzer, which appears to be very
enthusiatically generating interface blocks with nonsense types inside.
(Note that code generators which don't actually try to compute a memory
layout--that is, GLSL--will still accept these types. This should still
be caught and reported as an error, since it's still illegal in GLSL,
but that's for a future CL.)
Change-Id: I88a9649bcd8c75dadc8cca679f3c5e94570742bc
Bug: skia:10956, oss-fuzz:27525
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/335196
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>
Metal-specific tests are pretty thin on the ground here, and some of
the remaining tests no longer added value as they were already covered
pretty well by existing tests in Shared. The majority of remaining tests
were specific to Metal's lack of flexible matrix casting (and SkSL's
ability to paper over this with helper functions).
Change-Id: I7b3c445268b95320e7f46ec88d793c315d43ee8a
Bug: skia:10694
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/334956
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
This prevents OOMing when given a pathological input, but is large
enough that almost all inputs should continue to compile as-is.
Change-Id: If5c46711b886ee08495bfd09af537e9dc7ea5649
Bug: skia:10945, oss-fuzz:27442
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/334838
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
In practice, the inline threshold does a good job of limiting the
blast radius here.
Change-Id: I495184116e733262ea9d84fec30885ea047ca116
Bug: skia:10945
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/334597
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
This fixes a fuzzer crash in Metal.
Private types aren't meant to be used directly; we can't generate a
valid MemoryLayout for them. We will now detect them during IR
generation and report an error. (Note that unreferenced structs
currently don't have any IR representation at all, so structs have to be
used somewhere in the code to trigger the error.)
Bug: oss-fuzz:27288
Change-Id: I432f0a69fbb54cd33ff5b90a9f3d4757a9370117
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/334830
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
At present, we do not report any error; the values wrap silently.
Change-Id: I8c435cfdd81f6c2e5fd87e9c39c708138bf4ec82
Bug: skia:10932
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/333676
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
This addresses a sanitizer issue discovered in
https://oss-fuzz.com/testcase-detail/4908118777266176 (it has not been
assigned an oss-fuzz bug number yet; coming soon)
This puts an upper bound on struct nesting, again to prevent memory-
layout and other recursive type-handling code from overflowing the
stack. Coincidentally, while researching GLSL behavior around this bug,
I learned that WebGL has a similar limitation but caps nested structs to
4 deep. (I could not find any documented GLSL upper bound.)
Note that both the GLSL and Metal outputs for StructMaxDepth are badly
malformed. (Structs cannot be embedded within another struct in GLSL;
structs SA7 and below are never declared in GLSL; the array list for SA7
is backwards in GLSL; Metal is missing structs SA1 through SA8; Metal
puts the array list on the type instead of the variable name.)
These issues will be addressed in separate CLs.
Change-Id: I0f1059b6faa400cd0647dd7010ec839f73779a36
Bug: skia:10922, skia:10923, skia:10925, skia:10926
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/333316
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
This addresses a sanitizer issue discovered in
https://oss-fuzz.com/testcase-detail/4908118777266176 (it has not been
assigned an oss-fuzz bug number yet; coming soon)
We need to set some sort of limit here to avoid stack overflow. Eight
array dimensions seems like more than enough for any sort of code that
we might realistically need, but the limit is definitely flexible if we
wanted to increase it. (The fuzzer needed to generate a several-
hundred-dimensional array before encountering a crash.)
Change-Id: I3630ab40e47cc58a2280ba200b485e1958371fdc
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/333160
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
This addresses a sanitizer issue discovered in
https://oss-fuzz.com/testcase-detail/4908118777266176 (it has not been
assigned an oss-fuzz bug number yet; coming soon)
A followup CL will limit array dimensionality to 8. This is an arbitrary
choice which is hopefully larger than any reasonable program will need.
Change-Id: I4cf05f40ec92c1c3444c71c45f759bb30d7da3c9
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/333135
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
`in` vars shouldn't support initializer expressions at all. The fuzzer
noticed that dead-stripping interacts poorly with `in` var initializer
expressions, which makes sense because it's an unsupported and untested
path. In a followup CL, lines 1 and 3 will both become errors.
Change-Id: Ibb64ca319a046b040eea976acb6798a1402451de
Bug: oss-fuzz:27300
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/333128
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: I19a9564ac4d52b709b8fdd757b99222372c626f4
Bug: oss-fuzz:26942
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/331598
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>
- Prototypes for never-declared functions
- Prototype before use
- Prototype after use
- A variety of inputs and outputs on the prototyped functions.
- Calling declared-but-undefined functions
Currently, the prototypes are not actually emitted in the generated GLSL
or Metal output at all. This CL is demonstrates our baseline before
proper prototype support is added.
Change-Id: I6112e0a89ab9bbecefccaca9fba985bb8011fff1
Bug: skia:10872
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/331376
Commit-Queue: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
This improves the test output for Metal. Previously, the Metal output
was just an error message, since 1D textures were unsupported. Now we
have a valid golden output for the 2D case in Metal. (1D is still
unsupported and is likely to remain unsupported; Skia currently has no
use case for 1D textures.)
Change-Id: I91977712030f08e371cc6bfb2afa578940ca00b7
Bug: skia:10797
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/330940
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
This error was caused by an unbalanced symbol table push. This could
occur when an interface block encountered an error while parsing its
var-decls.
Change-Id: I910a980ac92fac7c0786c48b8dc3003ee3e75e5b
Bug: oss-fuzz:26700
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/330896
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
(This CL also adds modulo to the IntFolding shared test, since this was
absent from the test. It's implemented and working properly already.)
Change-Id: I24a947ab38754bff2624cd5b58cf7a39553ca888
Bug: skia:10870
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/330596
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>
`func1` and `func2` emit bad code, `return %s()`, and because they don't
consume their `%s` format argument. This leaves the format argument list
unbalanced and all future args are wrong.
Another serious problem is that we don't actually know the names of the
functions that they need to call, because we haven't emitted them yet.
`func3` is not emitted at all. Sampling from a fragment processor
apparently fails in this context.
This is a more general case repro for skia:10684--it turns out that
recursion in particular wasn't the issue, but nested function calls just
don't work properly at all in FP files. This wasn't an issue in practice
because we don't have any existing FP files which nest function calls,
and the inliner also tends to aggressively flatten everything out if we
don't explicitly disable it.
Change-Id: Iff029c459c7d90be566f9b4c9be0e3150e459866
Bug: skia:10684
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/329367
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
The generated code does not assign to sk_OutColor correctly; it assigns
into the `factorial` function name instead, which doesn't make sense.
Change-Id: Ibad1d47f2f9c4fbb410b5277cea6e1022daf8b9d
Bug: skia:10684
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/329360
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 cases where multiple variables were declared on a single line, it is
legal for variable initialization-expressions to reference variables
declared earlier in the var-decl statement. It is NOT legal for the
inliner to move those references up to the previous statement, where the
variable doesn't exist yet.
This is mitigated by disabling the IRGenerator inliner for var-decls
past the first one in a var-decls statement. (The optimizer will still
pass over this code later and is able to inline it correctly, if it is
worth doing.)
Change-Id: I7a0d45eab20e30ed9f6b2f5c1251b6e0d8eeaea3
Bug: oss-fuzz:26167
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/329357
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
These don't compile in GLSL, so they shouldn't compile in SkSL either--
and fortunately, they do not.
(In C++, and consequently in Metal, these expressions are considered
legal by the grammar and do compile, but generate garbage output.)
Change-Id: I6c7bea70b3d91677ccd8fcbad1eba123d655e856
Bug: skia:10694
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/329359
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>
Our Metal codegen assumes that out params are pointers, but Metal's
built-in frexp actually takes a reference for the exponent, not a
pointer. We now add in a helper function to translate.
Change-Id: I24686347d07151dd99a1ff1c43aff2b35c3181e5
Bug: skia:10762
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/328387
Reviewed-by: Jim Van Verth <jvanverth@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Jim Van Verth <jvanverth@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
As a prelude to going back to sharing global data (safely), we want to
eliminate as much mutation of shared state as possible. The special
cases for global variable declaration were unnecessary, so just remove
them. The editing of main's parameters immediately after they were
created is also unnecessary - just hoist the logic up so we create the
variables correctly in the first place.
There is still one use, related to invocation ID. That's more
complicated (?), so leaving it as a separate CL.
Change-Id: Ia3dad78dd5a634273b2e2239368be7adaff65f38
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/325661
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Auto-Submit: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Declaring max_vertices before invocations fails to adjust max_vertices
when invocation support is not present. (It should be 4, not 2 in this
case).
Bug: skia:10827
Change-Id: Ief7af97eabf5414ea8363808fc1ad2e9c480fe10
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/325664
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
This golden verifies that when the inline threshold is zero, inlining is
not performed.
Change-Id: Icad6e1faed569dd1b2469874be3b9e635ad0b9ad
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/325656
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
These aren't allowed in GLSL, and typically don't make sense.
Change-Id: I0afca0df638590466922a809e91ef0be35b13ca8
Bug: skia:10765
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/324816
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Ethan Nicholas <ethannicholas@google.com>
This is a reland of 6bbf026b54
Original change's description:
> Add sk_Caps.builtinDeterminantSupport and use it in cross().
>
> This CL partially relands http://review.skia.org/321790.
>
> Change-Id: I26a1aefda8a01167783e6e7fa15a51aa35ee5d82
> Bug: skia:10819, skia:10810
> Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/323784
> Reviewed-by: Chris Dalton <csmartdalton@google.com>
> Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Bug: skia:10819
Bug: skia:10810
Change-Id: I7731f93db07bc917707cbbe1daca2e5ce0f763d7
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/324620
Reviewed-by: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Change-Id: Ib1374e1dce1a654a83813dbe341774bd91729796
Bug: skia:10694, skia:10819
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/324356
Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
This CL also alphabetizes the various factories in ShaderCapsFactory.
Change-Id: I0378ceb821678173e72690d5563d2a9a92d90201
Bug: skia:10694, skia:10819
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/324257
Commit-Queue: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Auto-Submit: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
This reverts commit 6bbf026b54.
Reason for revert: Breaking Metal bot.
Original change's description:
> Add sk_Caps.builtinDeterminantSupport and use it in cross().
>
> This CL partially relands http://review.skia.org/321790.
>
> Change-Id: I26a1aefda8a01167783e6e7fa15a51aa35ee5d82
> Bug: skia:10819, skia:10810
> Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/323784
> Reviewed-by: Chris Dalton <csmartdalton@google.com>
> Commit-Queue: John Stiles <johnstiles@google.com>
TBR=csmartdalton@google.com,johnstiles@google.com
Change-Id: I4a6c1a63dc38682dd965f78f0c1da98f35b6dbad
No-Presubmit: true
No-Tree-Checks: true
No-Try: true
Bug: skia:10819
Bug: skia:10810
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/324264
Reviewed-by: Jim Van Verth <jvanverth@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Jim Van Verth <jvanverth@google.com>
Just a typo fix.
Change-Id: I2fe1f6ae1c99d7f20a4fa5f49eefea514e224652
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/321977
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>