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authorTimothy Arceri <[email protected]>2018-04-04 16:01:21 +1000
committerTimothy Arceri <[email protected]>2019-03-06 23:05:20 +0000
commitecceb076e5c99cea94b853a9600947fe78b3ca74 (patch)
tree6a48b2ef025f4e9d6ca7803814d62ce6820ecef8 /src/gallium/drivers/iris/iris_blit.c
parente2fd96a563bbb63d8e3c1f874c65c1350fb19a0d (diff)
st/glsl: start spilling out common st glsl conversion code
The NIR and TGSI paths are currently intertwined which makes it not only hard to follow but also makes it hard to take advantage of the differences in IR. Here we take the first step to splitting that path apart. With this we take the opportunity to no longer call the GLSL IR optimisation passes after the final lowering calls for NIR. We can instead just use the NIR passes which can produce better code and should also result in faster compile times. The speed-up can be measured in some dolphin uber shaders due to no longer calling lower_if_to_cond_assign() for example dolphin/ubershaders/120.shader_test goes from ~1.63 -> ~1.53 seconds on my machine. There are some code changes as a result of not calling lower_if_to_cond_assign(), this is because it flattens ifs that contain UBOs where as NIR's peephole select doesn't. This is were most of the regressions in Max Waves happens with shader-db. shader-db results (VEGA): Totals from affected shaders: SGPRS: 2349056 -> 2349640 (0.02 %) VGPRS: 1322160 -> 1323300 (0.09 %) Spilled SGPRs: 21190 -> 21527 (1.59 %) Spilled VGPRs: 99 -> 99 (0.00 %) Private memory VGPRs: 0 -> 0 (0.00 %) Scratch size: 72 -> 72 (0.00 %) dwords per thread Code Size: 57260904 -> 57270932 (0.02 %) bytes Compile Time: 1107186 -> 1022942 (-7.61 %) milliseconds LDS: 786 -> 786 (0.00 %) blocks Max Waves: 391932 -> 391619 (-0.08 %) Wait states: 0 -> 0 (0.00 %) Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <[email protected]>
Diffstat (limited to 'src/gallium/drivers/iris/iris_blit.c')
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