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Fixes i965 piglit vs-varying-array-mat[234]-row-rd.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <[email protected]>
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Fixes i965 piglit:
vs-varying-array-mat[234]-col-row-wr
vs-varying-array-mat[234]-index-col-row-wr
vs-varying-array-mat[234]-index-row-wr
vs-varying-array-mat[234]-row-wr
vs-varying-mat[234]-col-row-wr
vs-varying-mat[234]-row-wr
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <[email protected]>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <[email protected]>
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Leaving the unused registers with other values caused assertion
failures and other problems in places that blindly iterate over all
sources.
brw_vs_emit.c:1381: get_src_reg: Assertion `c->regs[file][index].nr !=
0' failed.
Fixes i965 piglit:
vs-uniform-array-mat[234]-col-row-rd
vs-uniform-array-mat[234]-index-col-row-rd
vs-uniform-array-mat[234]-index-row-rd
vs-uniform-mat[234]-col-row-rd
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <[email protected]>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <[email protected]>
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Fixes i965 piglit:
vs-temp-array-mat[234]-col-row-wr
vs-temp-array-mat[234]-index-col-row-wr
vs-temp-array-mat[234]-index-row-wr
vs-temp-mat[234]-col-row-wr
Fixes swrast piglit:
fs-temp-array-mat[234]-col-row-wr
fs-temp-array-mat[234]-index-col-row-wr
fs-temp-array-mat[234]-index-row-wr
fs-temp-mat[234]-col-row-wr
vs-temp-array-mat[234]-col-row-wr
vs-temp-array-mat[234]-index-col-row-wr
vs-temp-array-mat[234]-index-row-wr
vs-temp-mat[234]-col-row-wr
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <[email protected]>
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This fixes many cases of accessing arrays of matrices using
non-constant indices at each level.
Fixes i965 piglit:
vs-temp-array-mat[234]-index-col-rd
vs-temp-array-mat[234]-index-col-row-rd
vs-temp-array-mat[234]-index-col-wr
vs-uniform-array-mat[234]-index-col-rd
Fixes swrast piglit:
fs-temp-array-mat[234]-index-col-rd
fs-temp-array-mat[234]-index-col-row-rd
fs-temp-array-mat[234]-index-col-wr
fs-uniform-array-mat[234]-index-col-rd
fs-uniform-array-mat[234]-index-col-row-rd
fs-varying-array-mat[234]-index-col-rd
fs-varying-array-mat[234]-index-col-row-rd
vs-temp-array-mat[234]-index-col-rd
vs-temp-array-mat[234]-index-col-row-rd
vs-temp-array-mat[234]-index-col-wr
vs-uniform-array-mat[234]-index-col-rd
vs-uniform-array-mat[234]-index-col-row-rd
vs-varying-array-mat[234]-index-col-rd
vs-varying-array-mat[234]-index-col-row-rd
vs-varying-array-mat[234]-index-col-wr
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <[email protected]>
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If the non-constant index was in the LHS of an assignment, any
existing condititon on that assignment would be lost.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <[email protected]>
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If the non-constant index was in the LHS of an assignment, any
existing condititon on that assignment would be lost.
Fixes i965 piglit:
fs-temp-array-mat[234]-col-row-wr
fs-temp-array-mat[234]-index-col-row-wr
fs-temp-array-mat[234]-index-col-wr
fs-temp-array-mat[234]-index-row-wr
vs-varying-array-mat[234]-index-col-wr
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <[email protected]>
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The previous implementation could easily get tricked if the LHS of an
assignment included a non-constant index that was "inside" another
dereference. For example:
mat4 m[2];
m[0][i] = vec4(0.0);
Due to the way it tracked whether the array was being assigned, it
would think that the non-constant index was in an r-value. The new
code fixes that by tracking l-values and r-values differently. The
index is also replaced by cloning the IR and replacing the index
variable instead of the odd way it was done before.
v2: Apply some simplifications suggested by Eric Anholt. Making
assignment_generator::rvalue be ir_dereference instead of ir_rvalue
simplified the code a bit.
Fixes i965 piglit fs-temp-array-mat[234]-index-wr and
vs-varying-array-mat[234]-index-wr.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=34691
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <[email protected]>
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Other code will soon need to know if an array needs lowering based
exclusively on the storage mode.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <[email protected]>
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There's no reason for it to be there, and another class that may not
have access to the visitor will need it soon.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <[email protected]>
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Not sure how I computed these, but they were wrong (which explains why
bumping the polynomial order before never improved precision).
This allows to pass the EXP test cases of PSPrecision/VSPrecision DCTs.
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Add an iteration step, which makes rqsqrt precision go from 12bits to
24, and fixes RSQ/NRM test case of PSPrecision/VSPrevision DCTs.
There are no uses of this function outside shader translation.
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Never used so far -- we only used the base 2 variants -- which is why
it went unnoticed so far.
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Conflicts:
src/gallium/drivers/llvmpipe/SConscript
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These tests invoke do_lower_jumps() in isolation (using the glsl_test
executable) and verify that it transforms the IR in the expected way.
The unit tests may be run from the top level directory using "make
check".
For reference, I've also checked in the Python script
create_test_cases.py, which was used to generate these tests. It is
not necessary to run this script in order to run the tests.
Acked-by: Chad Versace <[email protected]>
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This patch adds a new build artifact, glsl_test, which can be used for
testing optimization passes in isolation.
I'm hoping that we will be able to add other useful standalone tests
to this executable in the future. Accordingly, it is built in a
modular fashion: the main() function uses its first argument to
determine which test function to invoke, removes that argument from
argv[], and then calls that function to interpret the rest of the
command line arguments and perform the test. Currently the only test
function is "optpass", which tests optimization passes.
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This patch moves the following functions from main.cpp (the main cpp
file for the standalone executable that is used to create the built-in
functions) to standalone_scaffolding.cpp, so that they can be re-used
in other standalone executables:
- initialize_context()*
- _mesa_new_shader()
- _mesa_reference_shader()
*initialize_context contained some code that was specific to main.cpp,
so it was split into two functions: initialize_context() (which
remains in main.cpp), and initialize_context_from_defaults() (which is
in standalone_scaffolding.cpp).
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Several Mesa headers redundantly define the INLINE macro. Adding this
guard prevents the compiler from complaining about macro redefinition.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <[email protected]>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <[email protected]>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <[email protected]>
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This reverts commit b56daf71d2f63d044d4c53ab49c6f87e02991a28.
The bug is actually in softpipe's blend and writemask interaction.
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This is an alternative to the draw module's polygon stipple stage.
The softpipe implementation here is just a test. The advantange of
using the new polygon stipple utility module (with other drivers)
is we can avoid software vertex processing in the draw module and
get much better performance.
Polygon stipple doesn't require special vertex processing like
the other draw module stage.
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We'll need shader variants to accomodate the new polygon stipple utility.
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u_vbuf_upload_buffers modifies the buffer offsets. If they are not
restored, and any of the vertex formats is not supported natively, the
next u_vbuf_mgr_draw_begin call will translate the vertex buffers with
incorrect buffer offsets.
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ES 2.0.25 page 127 says:
If the value of FRAMEBUFFER_ATTACHMENT_OBJECT_TYPE is NONE, then
querying any other pname will generate INVALID_ENUM.
See also:
b9e9df78a03edb35472c2e231aef4747e09db792
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 7.10 and 7.11 branches.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <[email protected]>
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This doesn't include nvfx since its context struct is not derived
from common nouveau_context (yet).
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The GLSL 1.20 and later specs say:
"Recursion is not allowed, not even statically. Static recursion is
present if the static function call graph of the program contains
cycles."
Recursion is detected and rejected both a compile-time and at
link-time. The complie-time check happens to detect some cases that
may be removed by various optimization passes. The spec doesn't seem
to allow this, but other vendors (e.g., NVIDIA) appear to only check
at link-time after all optimizations.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33885
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <[email protected]>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <[email protected]>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <[email protected]>
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Also clarify the documentation for one of the parameters.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <[email protected]>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <[email protected]>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <[email protected]>
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See also comments in the code.
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The behavior of flushes in the hardware is a maze of twisty passages,
and strangely the VS constants appear to be loaded during a pipeline
flush instead of at the time of the packet emit according to the
simulator. On moving the STATE_BASE_ADDRESS packet to where it really
needed to live (in order for data loads by other packets to be
correct), we sometimes no longer got a flush between those packets
where we apparently needed it. This replicates the flushes implied by
a STATE_BASE_ADDRESS update, fixing the GPU hangs in OGLC and the
"engine" demo.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36821
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=39257
Tested-by: Keith Packard <[email protected]> (bzflag and etracer fixed)
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <[email protected]>
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There's scary stuff going on in PIPE_CONTROL internals, and if the
BSpec says to do this to make PIPE_CONTROL work, I'll go ahead and do
it because we'll probably never be able to debug it after the fact.
v2: Use stall at scoreboard instead of depth stall, as noted by Ken.
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For this and occlusion queries, we're trying to avoid setting
I915_GEM_DOMAIN_RENDER for the write domain, because the data written
is definitely not going through the render cache, but we do need to
tell the kernel that the object has been written. However, with using
I915_GEM_DOMAIN_GTT, the kernel on retiring the batchbuffer sees that
the w/a BO has a write domain of GTT, and puts it on the flushing
list. If something tries to wait for that BO to finish rendering
(such as the AUB dumper reading the contents of BOs), we get into
wait_request (since obj->active) but with a 0 seqno (since the object
is on the flushing list, not actually on a ringbuffer), and BUG_ONs.
To avoid the kernel bug (which I'm hoping to delete soon anyway), just
use I915_GEM_DOMAIN_INSTRUCTION like occlusion queries do. This
doesn't result in more flushing, because we invalidate INSTRUCTION on
every batchbuffer now that we're state streaming, anyway.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <[email protected]>
Tested-by: Kenneth Graunke <[email protected]>
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