Now we have public headers arranged as follows:
$SPIRV_TOOLS_ROOT/include/spirv-tools/libspirv.h
$SPIRV_TOOLS_ROOT/include/spirv/spirv.h
$SPIRV_TOOLS_ROOT/include/spirv/GLSL.std.450.h
$SPIRV_TOOLS_ROOT/include/spirv/OpenCL.std.h
A project should use -I$SPIRV_TOOLS_ROOT/include
and then #include "spirv-tools/libspirv.h"
The headers from the SPIR-V Registry can be accessed as "spirv/spirv."
for example.
The install target should also install the headers from the SPIR-V
Registry. The libspirv.h header is broken otherwise.
The SPIRV-Tools library depends on the headers from the SPIR-V Registry.
The util/bitutils.h and util/hex_float.h are pulled into the internal
source tree. Those are not part of the public API to SPIRV-Tools.
Note that we are more strict than Google style for one aspect:
pointer/reference indicators are adjacent to their types, not
their variables.
find . -name "*.h" -exec clang-format -i {} \;
find . -name "*.cpp" -exec clang-format -i {} \;
Move the definition of spv_instruction_t to an internal
header file, since it now depends on C++ and is not
used by the external interface.
Use a std::vector<uint32_t> in spv_instruction_t
instead of a fixed size array.
Also removed un-necessary heap-allocation of spv_named_id_table.
This removed the necessity to expose a function to create/destroy it
and simplified the interface.
For example, support combining mask enums with "|",
such as "NotNaN|AllowRecip" for the fast math mode.
This is supported for mask values that don't modify the
expected operand pattern:
- fast math mode
- function control
- loop control
- selection control
TODO: disassembler support to print them as mask expressions.
Added a new enum for supported assembly syntax formats:
Canonical Assembly Format (CAF) and Assignment Assembly Format (AAF).
Updated assembler interface functions to support choice of assembly
syntax format.
The assembler and disassembler now use a dynamically adjusted
sequence of expected operand types. (Internally, it is a deque,
for readability.) Both parsers repeatedly pull an expected operand
type from the left of this pattern list, and try to match the next
input token against it.
The expected pattern is adjusted during the parse to accommodate:
- an extended instruction's expected operands, depending on the
extended instruction's index.
- when an operand itself has operands
- to handle sequences of zero or more operands, or pairs of
operands. These are expanded lazily during the parse.
Adds spv::OperandClass from the SPIR-V specification generator.
Modifies spv_operand_desc_t:
- adds hasResult, hasType, and operandClass array to the opcode
description type.
- "wordCount" is replaced with "numTypes", which counts the number
of entries in operandTypes. And each of those describes a
*logical* operand, including the type id for the instruction,
and the result id for the instruction. A logical operand could be
variable-width, such as a literal string.
Adds opcode.inc, an automatically-generated table of operation
descriptions, with one line to describe each core instruction.
Externally, we have modified the SPIR-V spec doc generator to
emit this file.
(We have hacked this copy to use the old semantics for OpLine.)
Inside the assembler, parsing an operand may fail with new
error code SPV_FAIL_MATCH. For an optional operand, this is not
fatal, but should trigger backtracking at a higher level.
The spvTextIsStartOfNewInst checks the case of the third letter
of what might be an opcode. So now, "OpenCL" does not look like
an opcode name.
In assembly, the EntryPoint name field is mandatory, but can be
an empty string.
Adjust tests for changes to:
- OpSampedImage
- OpTypeSampler
Use double quotes ("). They can be interspersed with
other whitespace characters, just like shell quoting.
A backslash (\) always escapes the next character.
The end of the stream always terminates the word.
Add AutoText struct to unit test utilities, to easily
make spv_text_t values and reference them as spv_text values.