TGSI ==== TGSI, Tungsten Graphics Shader Infrastructure, is an intermediate language for describing shaders. Since Gallium is inherently shaderful, shaders are an important part of the API. TGSI is the only intermediate representation used by all drivers. Basics ------ All TGSI instructions, known as *opcodes*, operate on arbitrary-precision floating-point four-component vectors. An opcode may have up to one destination register, known as *dst*, and between zero and three source registers, called *src0* through *src2*, or simply *src* if there is only one. Some instructions, like :opcode:`I2F`, permit re-interpretation of vector components as integers. Other instructions permit using registers as two-component vectors with double precision; see :ref:`doubleopcodes`. When an instruction has a scalar result, the result is usually copied into each of the components of *dst*. When this happens, the result is said to be *replicated* to *dst*. :opcode:`RCP` is one such instruction. Modifiers ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ TGSI supports modifiers on inputs (as well as saturate and precise modifier on instructions). For arithmetic instruction having a precise modifier certain optimizations which may alter the result are disallowed. Example: *add(mul(a,b),c)* can't be optimized to TGSI_OPCODE_MAD, because some hardware only supports the fused MAD instruction. For inputs which have a floating point type, both absolute value and negation modifiers are supported (with absolute value being applied first). The only source of TGSI_OPCODE_MOV and the second and third sources of TGSI_OPCODE_UCMP are considered to have float type for applying modifiers. For inputs which have signed or unsigned type only the negate modifier is supported. Instruction Set --------------- Core ISA ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ These opcodes are guaranteed to be available regardless of the driver being used. .. opcode:: ARL - Address Register Load .. math:: dst.x = (int) \lfloor src.x\rfloor dst.y = (int) \lfloor src.y\rfloor dst.z = (int) \lfloor src.z\rfloor dst.w = (int) \lfloor src.w\rfloor .. opcode:: MOV - Move .. math:: dst.x = src.x dst.y = src.y dst.z = src.z dst.w = src.w .. opcode:: LIT - Light Coefficients .. math:: dst.x &= 1 \\ dst.y &= max(src.x, 0) \\ dst.z &= (src.x > 0) ? max(src.y, 0)^{clamp(src.w, -128, 128))} : 0 \\ dst.w &= 1 .. opcode:: RCP - Reciprocal This instruction replicates its result. .. math:: dst = \frac{1}{src.x} .. opcode:: RSQ - Reciprocal Square Root This instruction replicates its result. The results are undefined for src <= 0. .. math:: dst = \frac{1}{\sqrt{src.x}} .. opcode:: SQRT - Square Root This instruction replicates its result. The results are undefined for src < 0. .. math:: dst = {\sqrt{src.x}} .. opcode:: EXP - Approximate Exponential Base 2 .. math:: dst.x &= 2^{\lfloor src.x\rfloor} \\ dst.y &= src.x - \lfloor src.x\rfloor \\ dst.z &= 2^{src.x} \\ dst.w &= 1 .. opcode:: LOG - Approximate Logarithm Base 2 .. math:: dst.x &= \lfloor\log_2{|src.x|}\rfloor \\ dst.y &= \frac{|src.x|}{2^{\lfloor\log_2{|src.x|}\rfloor}} \\ dst.z &= \log_2{|src.x|} \\ dst.w &= 1 .. opcode:: MUL - Multiply .. math:: dst.x = src0.x \times src1.x dst.y = src0.y \times src1.y dst.z = src0.z \times src1.z dst.w = src0.w \times src1.w .. opcode:: ADD - Add .. math:: dst.x = src0.x + src1.x dst.y = src0.y + src1.y dst.z = src0.z + src1.z dst.w = src0.w + src1.w .. opcode:: DP3 - 3-component Dot Product This instruction replicates its result. .. math:: dst = src0.x \times src1.x + src0.y \times src1.y + src0.z \times src1.z .. opcode:: DP4 - 4-component Dot Product This instruction replicates its result. .. math:: dst = src0.x \times src1.x + src0.y \times src1.y + src0.z \times src1.z + src0.w \times src1.w .. opcode:: DST - Distance Vector .. math:: dst.x &= 1\\ dst.y &= src0.y \times src1.y\\ dst.z &= src0.z\\ dst.w &= src1.w .. opcode:: MIN - Minimum .. math:: dst.x = min(src0.x, src1.x) dst.y = min(src0.y, src1.y) dst.z = min(src0.z, src1.z) dst.w = min(src0.w, src1.w) .. opcode:: MAX - Maximum .. math:: dst.x = max(src0.x, src1.x) dst.y = max(src0.y, src1.y) dst.z = max(src0.z, src1.z) dst.w = max(src0.w, src1.w) .. opcode:: SLT - Set On Less Than .. math:: dst.x = (src0.x < src1.x) ? 1.0F : 0.0F dst.y = (src0.y < src1.y) ? 1.0F : 0.0F dst.z = (src0.z < src1.z) ? 1.0F : 0.0F dst.w = (src0.w < src1.w) ? 1.0F : 0.0F .. opcode:: SGE - Set On Greater Equal Than .. math:: dst.x = (src0.x >= src1.x) ? 1.0F : 0.0F dst.y = (src0.y >= src1.y) ? 1.0F : 0.0F dst.z = (src0.z >= src1.z) ? 1.0F : 0.0F dst.w = (src0.w >= src1.w) ? 1.0F : 0.0F .. opcode:: MAD - Multiply And Add Perform a * b + c. The implementation is free to decide whether there is an intermediate rounding step or not. .. math:: dst.x = src0.x \times src1.x + src2.x dst.y = src0.y \times src1.y + src2.y dst.z = src0.z \times src1.z + src2.z dst.w = src0.w \times src1.w + src2.w .. opcode:: LRP - Linear Interpolate .. math:: dst.x = src0.x \times src1.x + (1 - src0.x) \times src2.x dst.y = src0.y \times src1.y + (1 - src0.y) \times src2.y dst.z = src0.z \times src1.z + (1 - src0.z) \times src2.z dst.w = src0.w \times src1.w + (1 - src0.w) \times src2.w .. opcode:: FMA - Fused Multiply-Add Perform a * b + c with no intermediate rounding step. .. math:: dst.x = src0.x \times src1.x + src2.x dst.y = src0.y \times src1.y + src2.y dst.z = src0.z \times src1.z + src2.z dst.w = src0.w \times src1.w + src2.w .. opcode:: DP2A - 2-component Dot Product And Add .. math:: dst.x = src0.x \times src1.x + src0.y \times src1.y + src2.x dst.y = src0.x \times src1.x + src0.y \times src1.y + src2.x dst.z = src0.x \times src1.x + src0.y \times src1.y + src2.x dst.w = src0.x \times src1.x + src0.y \times src1.y + src2.x .. opcode:: FRC - Fraction .. math:: dst.x = src.x - \lfloor src.x\rfloor dst.y = src.y - \lfloor src.y\rfloor dst.z = src.z - \lfloor src.z\rfloor dst.w = src.w - \lfloor src.w\rfloor .. opcode:: FLR - Floor .. math:: dst.x = \lfloor src.x\rfloor dst.y = \lfloor src.y\rfloor dst.z = \lfloor src.z\rfloor dst.w = \lfloor src.w\rfloor .. opcode:: ROUND - Round .. math:: dst.x = round(src.x) dst.y = round(src.y) dst.z = round(src.z) dst.w = round(src.w) .. opcode:: EX2 - Exponential Base 2 This instruction replicates its result. .. math:: dst = 2^{src.x} .. opcode:: LG2 - Logarithm Base 2 This instruction replicates its result. .. math:: dst = \log_2{src.x} .. opcode:: POW - Power This instruction replicates its result. .. math:: dst = src0.x^{src1.x} .. opcode:: XPD - Cross Product .. math:: dst.x = src0.y \times src1.z - src1.y \times src0.z dst.y = src0.z \times src1.x - src1.z \times src0.x dst.z = src0.x \times src1.y - src1.x \times src0.y dst.w = 1 .. opcode:: DPH - Homogeneous Dot Product This instruction replicates its result. .. math:: dst = src0.x \times src1.x + src0.y \times src1.y + src0.z \times src1.z + src1.w .. opcode:: COS - Cosine This instruction replicates its result. .. math:: dst = \cos{src.x} .. opcode:: DDX, DDX_FINE - Derivative Relative To X The fine variant is only used when ``PIPE_CAP_TGSI_FS_FINE_DERIVATIVE`` is advertised. When it is, the fine version guarantees one derivative per row while DDX is allowed to be the same for the entire 2x2 quad. .. math:: dst.x = partialx(src.x) dst.y = partialx(src.y) dst.z = partialx(src.z) dst.w = partialx(src.w) .. opcode:: DDY, DDY_FINE - Derivative Relative To Y The fine variant is only used when ``PIPE_CAP_TGSI_FS_FINE_DERIVATIVE`` is advertised. When it is, the fine version guarantees one derivative per column while DDY is allowed to be the same for the entire 2x2 quad. .. math:: dst.x = partialy(src.x) dst.y = partialy(src.y) dst.z = partialy(src.z) dst.w = partialy(src.w) .. opcode:: PK2H - Pack Two 16-bit Floats This instruction replicates its result. .. math:: dst = f32\_to\_f16(src.x) | f32\_to\_f16(src.y) << 16 .. opcode:: PK2US - Pack Two Unsigned 16-bit Scalars TBD .. opcode:: PK4B - Pack Four Signed 8-bit Scalars TBD .. opcode:: PK4UB - Pack Four Unsigned 8-bit Scalars TBD .. opcode:: SEQ - Set On Equal .. math:: dst.x = (src0.x == src1.x) ? 1.0F : 0.0F dst.y = (src0.y == src1.y) ? 1.0F : 0.0F dst.z = (src0.z == src1.z) ? 1.0F : 0.0F dst.w = (src0.w == src1.w) ? 1.0F : 0.0F .. opcode:: SGT - Set On Greater Than .. math:: dst.x = (src0.x > src1.x) ? 1.0F : 0.0F dst.y = (src0.y > src1.y) ? 1.0F : 0.0F dst.z = (src0.z > src1.z) ? 1.0F : 0.0F dst.w = (src0.w > src1.w) ? 1.0F : 0.0F .. opcode:: SIN - Sine This instruction replicates its result. .. math:: dst = \sin{src.x} .. opcode:: SLE - Set On Less Equal Than .. math:: dst.x = (src0.x <= src1.x) ? 1.0F : 0.0F dst.y = (src0.y <= src1.y) ? 1.0F : 0.0F dst.z = (src0.z <= src1.z) ? 1.0F : 0.0F dst.w = (src0.w <= src1.w) ? 1.0F : 0.0F .. opcode:: SNE - Set On Not Equal .. math:: dst.x = (src0.x != src1.x) ? 1.0F : 0.0F dst.y = (src0.y != src1.y) ? 1.0F : 0.0F dst.z = (src0.z != src1.z) ? 1.0F : 0.0F dst.w = (src0.w != src1.w) ? 1.0F : 0.0F .. opcode:: TEX - Texture Lookup for array textures src0.y contains the slice for 1D, and src0.z contain the slice for 2D. for shadow textures with no arrays (and not cube map), src0.z contains the reference value. for shadow textures with arrays, src0.z contains the reference value for 1D arrays, and src0.w contains the reference value for 2D arrays and cube maps. for cube map array shadow textures, the reference value cannot be passed in src0.w, and TEX2 must be used instead. .. math:: coord = src0 shadow_ref = src0.z or src0.w (optional) unit = src1 dst = texture\_sample(unit, coord, shadow_ref) .. opcode:: TEX2 - Texture Lookup (for shadow cube map arrays only) this is the same as TEX, but uses another reg to encode the reference value. .. math:: coord = src0 shadow_ref = src1.x unit = src2 dst = texture\_sample(unit, coord, shadow_ref) .. opcode:: TXD - Texture Lookup with Derivatives .. math:: coord = src0 ddx = src1 ddy = src2 unit = src3 dst = texture\_sample\_deriv(unit, coord, ddx, ddy) .. opcode:: TXP - Projective Texture Lookup .. math:: coord.x = src0.x / src0.w coord.y = src0.y / src0.w coord.z = src0.z / src0.w coord.w = src0.w unit = src1 dst = texture\_sample(unit, coord) .. opcode:: UP2H - Unpack Two 16-Bit Floats .. math:: dst.x = f16\_to\_f32(src0.x \& 0xffff) dst.y = f16\_to\_f32(src0.x >> 16) dst.z = f16\_to\_f32(src0.x \& 0xffff) dst.w = f16\_to\_f32(src0.x >> 16) .. note:: Considered for removal. .. opcode:: UP2US - Unpack Two Unsigned 16-Bit Scalars TBD .. note:: Considered for removal. .. opcode:: UP4B - Unpack Four Signed 8-Bit Values TBD .. note:: Considered for removal. .. opcode:: UP4UB - Unpack Four Unsigned 8-Bit Scalars TBD .. note:: Considered for removal. .. opcode:: ARR - Address Register Load With Round .. math:: dst.x = (int) round(src.x) dst.y = (int) round(src.y) dst.z = (int) round(src.z) dst.w = (int) round(src.w) .. opcode:: SSG - Set Sign .. math:: dst.x = (src.x > 0) ? 1 : (src.x < 0) ? -1 : 0 dst.y = (src.y > 0) ? 1 : (src.y < 0) ? -1 : 0 dst.z = (src.z > 0) ? 1 : (src.z < 0) ? -1 : 0 dst.w = (src.w > 0) ? 1 : (src.w < 0) ? -1 : 0 .. opcode:: CMP - Compare .. math:: dst.x = (src0.x < 0) ? src1.x : src2.x dst.y = (src0.y < 0) ? src1.y : src2.y dst.z = (src0.z < 0) ? src1.z : src2.z dst.w = (src0.w < 0) ? src1.w : src2.w .. opcode:: KILL_IF - Conditional Discard Conditional discard. Allowed in fragment shaders only. .. math:: if (src.x < 0 || src.y < 0 || src.z < 0 || src.w < 0) discard endif .. opcode:: KILL - Discard Unconditional discard. Allowed in fragment shaders only. .. opcode:: SCS - Sine Cosine .. math:: dst.x = \cos{src.x} dst.y = \sin{src.x} dst.z = 0 dst.w = 1 .. opcode:: TXB - Texture Lookup With Bias for cube map array textures and shadow cube maps, the bias value cannot be passed in src0.w, and TXB2 must be used instead. if the target is a shadow texture, the reference value is always in src.z (this prevents shadow 3d and shadow 2d arrays from using this instruction, but this is not needed). .. math:: coord.x = src0.x coord.y = src0.y coord.z = src0.z coord.w = none bias = src0.w unit = src1 dst = texture\_sample(unit, coord, bias) .. opcode:: TXB2 - Texture Lookup With Bias (some cube maps only) this is the same as TXB, but uses another reg to encode the lod bias value for cube map arrays and shadow cube maps. Presumably shadow 2d arrays and shadow 3d targets could use this encoding too, but this is not legal. shadow cube map arrays are neither possible nor required. .. math:: coord = src0 bias = src1.x unit = src2 dst = texture\_sample(unit, coord, bias) .. opcode:: DIV - Divide .. math:: dst.x = \frac{src0.x}{src1.x} dst.y = \frac{src0.y}{src1.y} dst.z = \frac{src0.z}{src1.z} dst.w = \frac{src0.w}{src1.w} .. opcode:: DP2 - 2-component Dot Product This instruction replicates its result. .. math:: dst = src0.x \times src1.x + src0.y \times src1.y .. opcode:: TEX_LZ - Texture Lookup With LOD = 0 This is the same as TXL with LOD = 0. Like every texture opcode, it obeys pipe_sampler_view::u.tex.first_level and pipe_sampler_state::min_lod. There is no way to override those two in shaders. .. math:: coord.x = src0.x coord.y = src0.y coord.z = src0.z coord.w = none lod = 0 unit = src1 dst = texture\_sample(unit, coord, lod) .. opcode:: TXL - Texture Lookup With explicit LOD for cube map array textures, the explicit lod value cannot be passed in src0.w, and TXL2 must be used instead. if the target is a shadow texture, the reference value is always in src.z (this prevents shadow 3d / 2d array / cube targets from using this instruction, but this is not needed). .. math:: coord.x = src0.x coord.y = src0.y coord.z = src0.z coord.w = none lod = src0.w unit = src1 dst = texture\_sample(unit, coord, lod) .. opcode:: TXL2 - Texture Lookup With explicit LOD (for cube map arrays only) this is the same as TXL, but uses another reg to encode the explicit lod value. Presumably shadow 3d / 2d array / cube targets could use this encoding too, but this is not legal. shadow cube map arrays are neither possible nor required. .. math:: coord = src0 lod = src1.x unit = src2 dst = texture\_sample(unit, coord, lod) .. opcode:: PUSHA - Push Address Register On Stack push(src.x) push(src.y) push(src.z) push(src.w) .. note:: Considered for cleanup. .. note:: Considered for removal. .. opcode:: POPA - Pop Address Register From Stack dst.w = pop() dst.z = pop() dst.y = pop() dst.x = pop() .. note:: Considered for cleanup. .. note:: Considered for removal. .. opcode:: CALLNZ - Subroutine Call If Not Zero TBD .. note:: Considered for cleanup. .. note:: Considered for removal. Compute ISA ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ These opcodes are primarily provided for special-use computational shaders. Support for these opcodes indicated by a special pipe capability bit (TBD). XXX doesn't look like most of the opcodes really belong here. .. opcode:: CEIL - Ceiling .. math:: dst.x = \lceil src.x\rceil dst.y = \lceil src.y\rceil dst.z = \lceil src.z\rceil dst.w = \lceil src.w\rceil .. opcode:: TRUNC - Truncate .. math:: dst.x = trunc(src.x) dst.y = trunc(src.y) dst.z = trunc(src.z) dst.w = trunc(src.w) .. opcode:: MOD - Modulus .. math:: dst.x = src0.x \bmod src1.x dst.y = src0.y \bmod src1.y dst.z = src0.z \bmod src1.z dst.w = src0.w \bmod src1.w .. opcode:: UARL - Integer Address Register Load Moves the contents of the source register, assumed to be an integer, into the destination register, which is assumed to be an address (ADDR) register. .. opcode:: SAD - Sum Of Absolute Differences .. math:: dst.x = |src0.x - src1.x| + src2.x dst.y = |src0.y - src1.y| + src2.y dst.z = |src0.z - src1.z| + src2.z dst.w = |src0.w - src1.w| + src2.w .. opcode:: TXF - Texel Fetch As per NV_gpu_shader4, extract a single texel from a specified texture image or PIPE_BUFFER resource. The source sampler may not be a CUBE or SHADOW. src 0 is a four-component signed integer vector used to identify the single texel accessed. 3 components + level. Just like texture instructions, an optional offset vector is provided, which is subject to various driver restrictions (regarding range, source of offsets). This instruction ignores the sampler state. TXF(uint_vec coord, int_vec offset). .. opcode:: TXF_LZ - Texel Fetch This is the same as TXF with level = 0. Like TXF, it obeys pipe_sampler_view::u.tex.first_level. .. opcode:: TXQ - Texture Size Query As per NV_gpu_program4, retrieve the dimensions of the texture depending on the target. For 1D (width), 2D/RECT/CUBE (width, height), 3D (width, height, depth), 1D array (width, layers), 2D array (width, height, layers). Also return the number of accessible levels (last_level - first_level + 1) in W. For components which don't return a resource dimension, their value is undefined. .. math:: lod = src0.x dst.x = texture\_width(unit, lod) dst.y = texture\_height(unit, lod) dst.z = texture\_depth(unit, lod) dst.w = texture\_levels(unit) .. opcode:: TXQS - Texture Samples Query This retrieves the number of samples in the texture, and stores it into the x component as an unsigned integer. The other components are undefined. If the texture is not multisampled, this function returns (1, undef, undef, undef). .. math:: dst.x = texture\_samples(unit) .. opcode:: TG4 - Texture Gather As per ARB_texture_gather, gathers the four texels to be used in a bi-linear filtering operation and packs them into a single register. Only works with 2D, 2D array, cubemaps, and cubemaps arrays. For 2D textures, only the addressing modes of the sampler and the top level of any mip pyramid are used. Set W to zero. It behaves like the TEX instruction, but a filtered sample is not generated. The four samples that contribute to filtering are placed into xyzw in clockwise order, starting with the (u,v) texture coordinate delta at the following locations (-, +), (+, +), (+, -), (-, -), where the magnitude of the deltas are half a texel. PIPE_CAP_TEXTURE_SM5 enhances this instruction to support shadow per-sample depth compares, single component selection, and a non-constant offset. It doesn't allow support for the GL independent offset to get i0,j0. This would require another CAP is hw can do it natively. For now we lower that before TGSI. .. math:: coord = src0 component = src1 dst = texture\_gather4 (unit, coord, component) (with SM5 - cube array shadow) .. math:: coord = src0 compare = src1 dst = texture\_gather (uint, coord, compare) .. opcode:: LODQ - level of detail query Compute the LOD information that the texture pipe would use to access the texture. The Y component contains the computed LOD lambda_prime. The X component contains the LOD that will be accessed, based on min/max lod's and mipmap filters. .. math:: coord = src0 dst.xy = lodq(uint, coord); .. opcode:: CLOCK - retrieve the current shader time Invoking this instruction multiple times in the same shader should cause monotonically increasing values to be returned. The values are implicitly 64-bit, so if fewer than 64 bits of precision are available, to provide expected wraparound semantics, the value should be shifted up so that the most significant bit of the time is the most significant bit of the 64-bit value. .. math:: dst.xy = clock() Integer ISA ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ These opcodes are used for integer operations. Support for these opcodes indicated by PIPE_SHADER_CAP_INTEGERS (all of them?) .. opcode:: I2F - Signed Integer To Float Rounding is unspecified (round to nearest even suggested). .. math:: dst.x = (float) src.x dst.y = (float) src.y dst.z = (float) src.z dst.w = (float) src.w .. opcode:: U2F - Unsigned Integer To Float Rounding is unspecified (round to nearest even suggested). .. math:: dst.x = (float) src.x dst.y = (float) src.y dst.z = (float) src.z dst.w = (float) src.w .. opcode:: F2I - Float to Signed Integer Rounding is towards zero (truncate). Values outside signed range (including NaNs) produce undefined results. .. math:: dst.x = (int) src.x dst.y = (int) src.y dst.z = (int) src.z dst.w = (int) src.w .. opcode:: F2U - Float to Unsigned Integer Rounding is towards zero (truncate). Values outside unsigned range (including NaNs) produce undefined results. .. math:: dst.x = (unsigned) src.x dst.y = (unsigned) src.y dst.z = (unsigned) src.z dst.w = (unsigned) src.w .. opcode:: UADD - Integer Add This instruction works the same for signed and unsigned integers. The low 32bit of the result is returned. .. math:: dst.x = src0.x + src1.x dst.y = src0.y + src1.y dst.z = src0.z + src1.z dst.w = src0.w + src1.w .. opcode:: UMAD - Integer Multiply And Add This instruction works the same for signed and unsigned integers. The multiplication returns the low 32bit (as does the result itself). .. math:: dst.x = src0.x \times src1.x + src2.x dst.y = src0.y \times src1.y + src2.y dst.z = src0.z \times src1.z + src2.z dst.w = src0.w \times src1.w + src2.w .. opcode:: UMUL - Integer Multiply This instruction works the same for signed and unsigned integers. The low 32bit of the result is returned. .. math:: dst.x = src0.x \times src1.x dst.y = src0.y \times src1.y dst.z = src0.z \times src1.z dst.w = src0.w \times src1.w .. opcode:: IMUL_HI - Signed Integer Multiply High Bits The high 32bits of the multiplication of 2 signed integers are returned. .. math:: dst.x = (src0.x \times src1.x) >> 32 dst.y = (src0.y \times src1.y) >> 32 dst.z = (src0.z \times src1.z) >> 32 dst.w = (src0.w \times src1.w) >> 32 .. opcode:: UMUL_HI - Unsigned Integer Multiply High Bits The high 32bits of the multiplication of 2 unsigned integers are returned. .. math:: dst.x = (src0.x \times src1.x) >> 32 dst.y = (src0.y \times src1.y) >> 32 dst.z = (src0.z \times src1.z) >> 32 dst.w = (src0.w \times src1.w) >> 32 .. opcode:: IDIV - Signed Integer Division TBD: behavior for division by zero. .. math:: dst.x = \frac{src0.x}{src1.x} dst.y = \frac{src0.y}{src1.y} dst.z = \frac{src0.z}{src1.z} dst.w = \frac{src0.w}{src1.w} .. opcode:: UDIV - Unsigned Integer Division For division by zero, 0xffffffff is returned. .. math:: dst.x = \frac{src0.x}{src1.x} dst.y = \frac{src0.y}{src1.y} dst.z = \frac{src0.z}{src1.z} dst.w = \frac{src0.w}{src1.w} .. opcode:: UMOD - Unsigned Integer Remainder If second arg is zero, 0xffffffff is returned. .. math:: dst.x = src0.x \bmod src1.x dst.y = src0.y \bmod src1.y dst.z = src0.z \bmod src1.z dst.w = src0.w \bmod src1.w .. opcode:: NOT - Bitwise Not .. math:: dst.x = \sim src.x dst.y = \sim src.y dst.z = \sim src.z dst.w = \sim src.w .. opcode:: AND - Bitwise And .. math:: dst.x = src0.x \& src1.x dst.y = src0.y \& src1.y dst.z = src0.z \& src1.z dst.w = src0.w \& src1.w .. opcode:: OR - Bitwise Or .. math:: dst.x = src0.x | src1.x dst.y = src0.y | src1.y dst.z = src0.z | src1.z dst.w = src0.w | src1.w .. opcode:: XOR - Bitwise Xor .. math:: dst.x = src0.x \oplus src1.x dst.y = src0.y \oplus src1.y dst.z = src0.z \oplus src1.z dst.w = src0.w \oplus src1.w .. opcode:: IMAX - Maximum of Signed Integers .. math:: dst.x = max(src0.x, src1.x) dst.y = max(src0.y, src1.y) dst.z = max(src0.z, src1.z) dst.w = max(src0.w, src1.w) .. opcode:: UMAX - Maximum of Unsigned Integers .. math:: dst.x = max(src0.x, src1.x) dst.y = max(src0.y, src1.y) dst.z = max(src0.z, src1.z) dst.w = max(src0.w, src1.w) .. opcode:: IMIN - Minimum of Signed Integers .. math:: dst.x = min(src0.x, src1.x) dst.y = min(src0.y, src1.y) dst.z = min(src0.z, src1.z) dst.w = min(src0.w, src1.w) .. opcode:: UMIN - Minimum of Unsigned Integers .. math:: dst.x = min(src0.x, src1.x) dst.y = min(src0.y, src1.y) dst.z = min(src0.z, src1.z) dst.w = min(src0.w, src1.w) .. opcode:: SHL - Shift Left The shift count is masked with 0x1f before the shift is applied. .. math:: dst.x = src0.x << (0x1f \& src1.x) dst.y = src0.y << (0x1f \& src1.y) dst.z = src0.z << (0x1f \& src1.z) dst.w = src0.w << (0x1f \& src1.w) .. opcode:: ISHR - Arithmetic Shift Right (of Signed Integer) The shift count is masked with 0x1f before the shift is applied. .. math:: dst.x = src0.x >> (0x1f \& src1.x) dst.y = src0.y >> (0x1f \& src1.y) dst.z = src0.z >> (0x1f \& src1.z) dst.w = src0.w >> (0x1f \& src1.w) .. opcode:: USHR - Logical Shift Right The shift count is masked with 0x1f before the shift is applied. .. math:: dst.x = src0.x >> (unsigned) (0x1f \& src1.x) dst.y = src0.y >> (unsigned) (0x1f \& src1.y) dst.z = src0.z >> (unsigned) (0x1f \& src1.z) dst.w = src0.w >> (unsigned) (0x1f \& src1.w) .. opcode:: UCMP - Integer Conditional Move .. math:: dst.x = src0.x ? src1.x : src2.x dst.y = src0.y ? src1.y : src2.y dst.z = src0.z ? src1.z : src2.z dst.w = src0.w ? src1.w : src2.w .. opcode:: ISSG - Integer Set Sign .. math:: dst.x = (src0.x < 0) ? -1 : (src0.x > 0) ? 1 : 0 dst.y = (src0.y < 0) ? -1 : (src0.y > 0) ? 1 : 0 dst.z = (src0.z < 0) ? -1 : (src0.z > 0) ? 1 : 0 dst.w = (src0.w < 0) ? -1 : (src0.w > 0) ? 1 : 0 .. opcode:: FSLT - Float Set On Less Than (ordered) Same comparison as SLT but returns integer instead of 1.0/0.0 float .. math:: dst.x = (src0.x < src1.x) ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.y = (src0.y < src1.y) ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.z = (src0.z < src1.z) ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.w = (src0.w < src1.w) ? \sim 0 : 0 .. opcode:: ISLT - Signed Integer Set On Less Than .. math:: dst.x = (src0.x < src1.x) ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.y = (src0.y < src1.y) ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.z = (src0.z < src1.z) ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.w = (src0.w < src1.w) ? \sim 0 : 0 .. opcode:: USLT - Unsigned Integer Set On Less Than .. math:: dst.x = (src0.x < src1.x) ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.y = (src0.y < src1.y) ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.z = (src0.z < src1.z) ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.w = (src0.w < src1.w) ? \sim 0 : 0 .. opcode:: FSGE - Float Set On Greater Equal Than (ordered) Same comparison as SGE but returns integer instead of 1.0/0.0 float .. math:: dst.x = (src0.x >= src1.x) ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.y = (src0.y >= src1.y) ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.z = (src0.z >= src1.z) ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.w = (src0.w >= src1.w) ? \sim 0 : 0 .. opcode:: ISGE - Signed Integer Set On Greater Equal Than .. math:: dst.x = (src0.x >= src1.x) ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.y = (src0.y >= src1.y) ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.z = (src0.z >= src1.z) ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.w = (src0.w >= src1.w) ? \sim 0 : 0 .. opcode:: USGE - Unsigned Integer Set On Greater Equal Than .. math:: dst.x = (src0.x >= src1.x) ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.y = (src0.y >= src1.y) ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.z = (src0.z >= src1.z) ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.w = (src0.w >= src1.w) ? \sim 0 : 0 .. opcode:: FSEQ - Float Set On Equal (ordered) Same comparison as SEQ but returns integer instead of 1.0/0.0 float .. math:: dst.x = (src0.x == src1.x) ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.y = (src0.y == src1.y) ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.z = (src0.z == src1.z) ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.w = (src0.w == src1.w) ? \sim 0 : 0 .. opcode:: USEQ - Integer Set On Equal .. math:: dst.x = (src0.x == src1.x) ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.y = (src0.y == src1.y) ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.z = (src0.z == src1.z) ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.w = (src0.w == src1.w) ? \sim 0 : 0 .. opcode:: FSNE - Float Set On Not Equal (unordered) Same comparison as SNE but returns integer instead of 1.0/0.0 float .. math:: dst.x = (src0.x != src1.x) ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.y = (src0.y != src1.y) ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.z = (src0.z != src1.z) ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.w = (src0.w != src1.w) ? \sim 0 : 0 .. opcode:: USNE - Integer Set On Not Equal .. math:: dst.x = (src0.x != src1.x) ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.y = (src0.y != src1.y) ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.z = (src0.z != src1.z) ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.w = (src0.w != src1.w) ? \sim 0 : 0 .. opcode:: INEG - Integer Negate Two's complement. .. math:: dst.x = -src.x dst.y = -src.y dst.z = -src.z dst.w = -src.w .. opcode:: IABS - Integer Absolute Value .. math:: dst.x = |src.x| dst.y = |src.y| dst.z = |src.z| dst.w = |src.w| Bitwise ISA ^^^^^^^^^^^ These opcodes are used for bit-level manipulation of integers. .. opcode:: IBFE - Signed Bitfield Extract Like GLSL bitfieldExtract. Extracts a set of bits from the input, and sign-extends them if the high bit of the extracted window is set. Pseudocode:: def ibfe(value, offset, bits): if offset < 0 or bits < 0 or offset + bits > 32: return undefined if bits == 0: return 0 # Note: >> sign-extends return (value << (32 - offset - bits)) >> (32 - bits) .. opcode:: UBFE - Unsigned Bitfield Extract Like GLSL bitfieldExtract. Extracts a set of bits from the input, without any sign-extension. Pseudocode:: def ubfe(value, offset, bits): if offset < 0 or bits < 0 or offset + bits > 32: return undefined if bits == 0: return 0 # Note: >> does not sign-extend return (value << (32 - offset - bits)) >> (32 - bits) .. opcode:: BFI - Bitfield Insert Like GLSL bitfieldInsert. Replaces a bit region of 'base' with the low bits of 'insert'. Pseudocode:: def bfi(base, insert, offset, bits): if offset < 0 or bits < 0 or offset + bits > 32: return undefined # << defined such that mask == ~0 when bits == 32, offset == 0 mask = ((1 << bits) - 1) << offset return ((insert << offset) & mask) | (base & ~mask) .. opcode:: BREV - Bitfield Reverse See SM5 instruction BFREV. Reverses the bits of the argument. .. opcode:: POPC - Population Count See SM5 instruction COUNTBITS. Counts the number of set bits in the argument. .. opcode:: LSB - Index of lowest set bit See SM5 instruction FIRSTBIT_LO. Computes the 0-based index of the first set bit of the argument. Returns -1 if none are set. .. opcode:: IMSB - Index of highest non-sign bit See SM5 instruction FIRSTBIT_SHI. Computes the 0-based index of the highest non-sign bit of the argument (i.e. highest 0 bit for negative numbers, highest 1 bit for positive numbers). Returns -1 if all bits are the same (i.e. for inputs 0 and -1). .. opcode:: UMSB - Index of highest set bit See SM5 instruction FIRSTBIT_HI. Computes the 0-based index of the highest set bit of the argument. Returns -1 if none are set. Geometry ISA ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ These opcodes are only supported in geometry shaders; they have no meaning in any other type of shader. .. opcode:: EMIT - Emit Generate a new vertex for the current primitive into the specified vertex stream using the values in the output registers. .. opcode:: ENDPRIM - End Primitive Complete the current primitive in the specified vertex stream (consisting of the emitted vertices), and start a new one. GLSL ISA ^^^^^^^^^^ These opcodes are part of :term:`GLSL`'s opcode set. Support for these opcodes is determined by a special capability bit, ``GLSL``. Some require glsl version 1.30 (UIF/BREAKC/SWITCH/CASE/DEFAULT/ENDSWITCH). .. opcode:: CAL - Subroutine Call push(pc) pc = target .. opcode:: RET - Subroutine Call Return pc = pop() .. opcode:: CONT - Continue Unconditionally moves the point of execution to the instruction after the last bgnloop. The instruction must appear within a bgnloop/endloop. .. note:: Support for CONT is determined by a special capability bit, ``TGSI_CONT_SUPPORTED``. See :ref:`Screen` for more information. .. opcode:: BGNLOOP - Begin a Loop Start a loop. Must have a matching endloop. .. opcode:: BGNSUB - Begin Subroutine Starts definition of a subroutine. Must have a matching endsub. .. opcode:: ENDLOOP - End a Loop End a loop started with bgnloop. .. opcode:: ENDSUB - End Subroutine Ends definition of a subroutine. .. opcode:: NOP - No Operation Do nothing. .. opcode:: BRK - Break Unconditionally moves the point of execution to the instruction after the next endloop or endswitch. The instruction must appear within a loop/endloop or switch/endswitch. .. opcode:: BREAKC - Break Conditional Conditionally moves the point of execution to the instruction after the next endloop or endswitch. The instruction must appear within a loop/endloop or switch/endswitch. Condition evaluates to true if src0.x != 0 where src0.x is interpreted as an integer register. .. note:: Considered for removal as it's quite inconsistent wrt other opcodes (could emulate with UIF/BRK/ENDIF). .. opcode:: IF - Float If Start an IF ... ELSE .. ENDIF block. Condition evaluates to true if src0.x != 0.0 where src0.x is interpreted as a floating point register. .. opcode:: UIF - Bitwise If Start an UIF ... ELSE .. ENDIF block. Condition evaluates to true if src0.x != 0 where src0.x is interpreted as an integer register. .. opcode:: ELSE - Else Starts an else block, after an IF or UIF statement. .. opcode:: ENDIF - End If Ends an IF or UIF block. .. opcode:: SWITCH - Switch Starts a C-style switch expression. The switch consists of one or multiple CASE statements, and at most one DEFAULT statement. Execution of a statement ends when a BRK is hit, but just like in C falling through to other cases without a break is allowed. Similarly, DEFAULT label is allowed anywhere not just as last statement, and fallthrough is allowed into/from it. CASE src arguments are evaluated at bit level against the SWITCH src argument. Example:: SWITCH src[0].x CASE src[0].x (some instructions here) (optional BRK here) DEFAULT (some instructions here) (optional BRK here) CASE src[0].x (some instructions here) (optional BRK here) ENDSWITCH .. opcode:: CASE - Switch case This represents a switch case label. The src arg must be an integer immediate. .. opcode:: DEFAULT - Switch default This represents the default case in the switch, which is taken if no other case matches. .. opcode:: ENDSWITCH - End of switch Ends a switch expression. Interpolation ISA ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The interpolation instructions allow an input to be interpolated in a different way than its declaration. This corresponds to the GLSL 4.00 interpolateAt* functions. The first argument of each of these must come from ``TGSI_FILE_INPUT``. .. opcode:: INTERP_CENTROID - Interpolate at the centroid Interpolates the varying specified by src0 at the centroid .. opcode:: INTERP_SAMPLE - Interpolate at the specified sample Interpolates the varying specified by src0 at the sample id specified by src1.x (interpreted as an integer) .. opcode:: INTERP_OFFSET - Interpolate at the specified offset Interpolates the varying specified by src0 at the offset src1.xy from the pixel center (interpreted as floats) .. _doubleopcodes: Double ISA ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The double-precision opcodes reinterpret four-component vectors into two-component vectors with doubled precision in each component. .. opcode:: DABS - Absolute .. math:: dst.xy = |src0.xy| dst.zw = |src0.zw| .. opcode:: DADD - Add .. math:: dst.xy = src0.xy + src1.xy dst.zw = src0.zw + src1.zw .. opcode:: DSEQ - Set on Equal .. math:: dst.x = src0.xy == src1.xy ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.z = src0.zw == src1.zw ? \sim 0 : 0 .. opcode:: DSNE - Set on Equal .. math:: dst.x = src0.xy != src1.xy ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.z = src0.zw != src1.zw ? \sim 0 : 0 .. opcode:: DSLT - Set on Less than .. math:: dst.x = src0.xy < src1.xy ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.z = src0.zw < src1.zw ? \sim 0 : 0 .. opcode:: DSGE - Set on Greater equal .. math:: dst.x = src0.xy >= src1.xy ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.z = src0.zw >= src1.zw ? \sim 0 : 0 .. opcode:: DFRAC - Fraction .. math:: dst.xy = src.xy - \lfloor src.xy\rfloor dst.zw = src.zw - \lfloor src.zw\rfloor .. opcode:: DTRUNC - Truncate .. math:: dst.xy = trunc(src.xy) dst.zw = trunc(src.zw) .. opcode:: DCEIL - Ceiling .. math:: dst.xy = \lceil src.xy\rceil dst.zw = \lceil src.zw\rceil .. opcode:: DFLR - Floor .. math:: dst.xy = \lfloor src.xy\rfloor dst.zw = \lfloor src.zw\rfloor .. opcode:: DROUND - Fraction .. math:: dst.xy = round(src.xy) dst.zw = round(src.zw) .. opcode:: DSSG - Set Sign .. math:: dst.xy = (src.xy > 0) ? 1.0 : (src.xy < 0) ? -1.0 : 0.0 dst.zw = (src.zw > 0) ? 1.0 : (src.zw < 0) ? -1.0 : 0.0 .. opcode:: DFRACEXP - Convert Number to Fractional and Integral Components Like the ``frexp()`` routine in many math libraries, this opcode stores the exponent of its source to ``dst0``, and the significand to ``dst1``, such that :math:`dst1 \times 2^{dst0} = src` . .. math:: dst0.xy = exp(src.xy) dst1.xy = frac(src.xy) dst0.zw = exp(src.zw) dst1.zw = frac(src.zw) .. opcode:: DLDEXP - Multiply Number by Integral Power of 2 This opcode is the inverse of :opcode:`DFRACEXP`. The second source is an integer. .. math:: dst.xy = src0.xy \times 2^{src1.x} dst.zw = src0.zw \times 2^{src1.y} .. opcode:: DMIN - Minimum .. math:: dst.xy = min(src0.xy, src1.xy) dst.zw = min(src0.zw, src1.zw) .. opcode:: DMAX - Maximum .. math:: dst.xy = max(src0.xy, src1.xy) dst.zw = max(src0.zw, src1.zw) .. opcode:: DMUL - Multiply .. math:: dst.xy = src0.xy \times src1.xy dst.zw = src0.zw \times src1.zw .. opcode:: DMAD - Multiply And Add .. math:: dst.xy = src0.xy \times src1.xy + src2.xy dst.zw = src0.zw \times src1.zw + src2.zw .. opcode:: DFMA - Fused Multiply-Add Perform a * b + c with no intermediate rounding step. .. math:: dst.xy = src0.xy \times src1.xy + src2.xy dst.zw = src0.zw \times src1.zw + src2.zw .. opcode:: DDIV - Divide .. math:: dst.xy = \frac{src0.xy}{src1.xy} dst.zw = \frac{src0.zw}{src1.zw} .. opcode:: DRCP - Reciprocal .. math:: dst.xy = \frac{1}{src.xy} dst.zw = \frac{1}{src.zw} .. opcode:: DSQRT - Square Root .. math:: dst.xy = \sqrt{src.xy} dst.zw = \sqrt{src.zw} .. opcode:: DRSQ - Reciprocal Square Root .. math:: dst.xy = \frac{1}{\sqrt{src.xy}} dst.zw = \frac{1}{\sqrt{src.zw}} .. opcode:: F2D - Float to Double .. math:: dst.xy = double(src0.x) dst.zw = double(src0.y) .. opcode:: D2F - Double to Float .. math:: dst.x = float(src0.xy) dst.y = float(src0.zw) .. opcode:: I2D - Int to Double .. math:: dst.xy = double(src0.x) dst.zw = double(src0.y) .. opcode:: D2I - Double to Int .. math:: dst.x = int(src0.xy) dst.y = int(src0.zw) .. opcode:: U2D - Unsigned Int to Double .. math:: dst.xy = double(src0.x) dst.zw = double(src0.y) .. opcode:: D2U - Double to Unsigned Int .. math:: dst.x = unsigned(src0.xy) dst.y = unsigned(src0.zw) 64-bit Integer ISA ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The 64-bit integer opcodes reinterpret four-component vectors into two-component vectors with 64-bits in each component. .. opcode:: I64ABS - 64-bit Integer Absolute Value .. math:: dst.xy = |src0.xy| dst.zw = |src0.zw| .. opcode:: I64NEG - 64-bit Integer Negate Two's complement. .. math:: dst.xy = -src.xy dst.zw = -src.zw .. opcode:: I64SSG - 64-bit Integer Set Sign .. math:: dst.xy = (src0.xy < 0) ? -1 : (src0.xy > 0) ? 1 : 0 dst.zw = (src0.zw < 0) ? -1 : (src0.zw > 0) ? 1 : 0 .. opcode:: U64ADD - 64-bit Integer Add .. math:: dst.xy = src0.xy + src1.xy dst.zw = src0.zw + src1.zw .. opcode:: U64MUL - 64-bit Integer Multiply .. math:: dst.xy = src0.xy * src1.xy dst.zw = src0.zw * src1.zw .. opcode:: U64SEQ - 64-bit Integer Set on Equal .. math:: dst.x = src0.xy == src1.xy ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.z = src0.zw == src1.zw ? \sim 0 : 0 .. opcode:: U64SNE - 64-bit Integer Set on Not Equal .. math:: dst.x = src0.xy != src1.xy ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.z = src0.zw != src1.zw ? \sim 0 : 0 .. opcode:: U64SLT - 64-bit Unsigned Integer Set on Less Than .. math:: dst.x = src0.xy < src1.xy ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.z = src0.zw < src1.zw ? \sim 0 : 0 .. opcode:: U64SGE - 64-bit Unsigned Integer Set on Greater Equal .. math:: dst.x = src0.xy >= src1.xy ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.z = src0.zw >= src1.zw ? \sim 0 : 0 .. opcode:: I64SLT - 64-bit Signed Integer Set on Less Than .. math:: dst.x = src0.xy < src1.xy ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.z = src0.zw < src1.zw ? \sim 0 : 0 .. opcode:: I64SGE - 64-bit Signed Integer Set on Greater Equal .. math:: dst.x = src0.xy >= src1.xy ? \sim 0 : 0 dst.z = src0.zw >= src1.zw ? \sim 0 : 0 .. opcode:: I64MIN - Minimum of 64-bit Signed Integers .. math:: dst.xy = min(src0.xy, src1.xy) dst.zw = min(src0.zw, src1.zw) .. opcode:: U64MIN - Minimum of 64-bit Unsigned Integers .. math:: dst.xy = min(src0.xy, src1.xy) dst.zw = min(src0.zw, src1.zw) .. opcode:: I64MAX - Maximum of 64-bit Signed Integers .. math:: dst.xy = max(src0.xy, src1.xy) dst.zw = max(src0.zw, src1.zw) .. opcode:: U64MAX - Maximum of 64-bit Unsigned Integers .. math:: dst.xy = max(src0.xy, src1.xy) dst.zw = max(src0.zw, src1.zw) .. opcode:: U64SHL - Shift Left 64-bit Unsigned Integer The shift count is masked with 0x3f before the shift is applied. .. math:: dst.xy = src0.xy << (0x3f \& src1.x) dst.zw = src0.zw << (0x3f \& src1.y) .. opcode:: I64SHR - Arithmetic Shift Right (of 64-bit Signed Integer) The shift count is masked with 0x3f before the shift is applied. .. math:: dst.xy = src0.xy >> (0x3f \& src1.x) dst.zw = src0.zw >> (0x3f \& src1.y) .. opcode:: U64SHR - Logical Shift Right (of 64-bit Unsigned Integer) The shift count is masked with 0x3f before the shift is applied. .. math:: dst.xy = src0.xy >> (unsigned) (0x3f \& src1.x) dst.zw = src0.zw >> (unsigned) (0x3f \& src1.y) .. opcode:: I64DIV - 64-bit Signed Integer Division .. math:: dst.xy = \frac{src0.xy}{src1.xy} dst.zw = \frac{src0.zw}{src1.zw} .. opcode:: U64DIV - 64-bit Unsigned Integer Division .. math:: dst.xy = \frac{src0.xy}{src1.xy} dst.zw = \frac{src0.zw}{src1.zw} .. opcode:: U64MOD - 64-bit Unsigned Integer Remainder .. math:: dst.xy = src0.xy \bmod src1.xy dst.zw = src0.zw \bmod src1.zw .. opcode:: I64MOD - 64-bit Signed Integer Remainder .. math:: dst.xy = src0.xy \bmod src1.xy dst.zw = src0.zw \bmod src1.zw .. opcode:: F2U64 - Float to 64-bit Unsigned Int .. math:: dst.xy = (uint64_t) src0.x dst.zw = (uint64_t) src0.y .. opcode:: F2I64 - Float to 64-bit Int .. math:: dst.xy = (int64_t) src0.x dst.zw = (int64_t) src0.y .. opcode:: U2I64 - Unsigned Integer to 64-bit Integer This is a zero extension. .. math:: dst.xy = (uint64_t) src0.x dst.zw = (uint64_t) src0.y .. opcode:: I2I64 - Signed Integer to 64-bit Integer This is a sign extension. .. math:: dst.xy = (int64_t) src0.x dst.zw = (int64_t) src0.y .. opcode:: D2U64 - Double to 64-bit Unsigned Int .. math:: dst.xy = (uint64_t) src0.xy dst.zw = (uint64_t) src0.zw .. opcode:: D2I64 - Double to 64-bit Int .. math:: dst.xy = (int64_t) src0.xy dst.zw = (int64_t) src0.zw .. opcode:: U642F - 64-bit unsigned integer to float .. math:: dst.x = (float) src0.xy dst.y = (float) src0.zw .. opcode:: I642F - 64-bit Int to Float .. math:: dst.x = (float) src0.xy dst.y = (float) src0.zw .. opcode:: U642D - 64-bit unsigned integer to double .. math:: dst.xy = (double) src0.xy dst.zw = (double) src0.zw .. opcode:: I642D - 64-bit Int to double .. math:: dst.xy = (double) src0.xy dst.zw = (double) src0.zw .. _samplingopcodes: Resource Sampling Opcodes ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Those opcodes follow very closely semantics of the respective Direct3D instructions. If in doubt double check Direct3D documentation. Note that the swizzle on SVIEW (src1) determines texel swizzling after lookup. .. opcode:: SAMPLE Using provided address, sample data from the specified texture using the filtering mode identified by the given sampler. The source data may come from any resource type other than buffers. Syntax: ``SAMPLE dst, address, sampler_view, sampler`` Example: ``SAMPLE TEMP[0], TEMP[1], SVIEW[0], SAMP[0]`` .. opcode:: SAMPLE_I Simplified alternative to the SAMPLE instruction. Using the provided integer address, SAMPLE_I fetches data from the specified sampler view without any filtering. The source data may come from any resource type other than CUBE. Syntax: ``SAMPLE_I dst, address, sampler_view`` Example: ``SAMPLE_I TEMP[0], TEMP[1], SVIEW[0]`` The 'address' is specified as unsigned integers. If the 'address' is out of range [0...(# texels - 1)] the result of the fetch is always 0 in all components. As such the instruction doesn't honor address wrap modes, in cases where that behavior is desirable 'SAMPLE' instruction should be used. address.w always provides an unsigned integer mipmap level. If the value is out of the range then the instruction always returns 0 in all components. address.yz are ignored for buffers and 1d textures. address.z is ignored for 1d texture arrays and 2d textures. For 1D texture arrays address.y provides the array index (also as unsigned integer). If the value is out of the range of available array indices [0... (array size - 1)] then the opcode always returns 0 in all components. For 2D texture arrays address.z provides the array index, otherwise it exhibits the same behavior as in the case for 1D texture arrays. The exact semantics of the source address are presented in the table below: +---------------------------+----+-----+-----+---------+ | resource type | X | Y | Z | W | +===========================+====+=====+=====+=========+ | ``PIPE_BUFFER`` | x | | | ignored | +---------------------------+----+-----+-----+---------+ | ``PIPE_TEXTURE_1D`` | x | | | mpl | +---------------------------+----+-----+-----+---------+ | ``PIPE_TEXTURE_2D`` | x | y | | mpl | +---------------------------+----+-----+-----+---------+ | ``PIPE_TEXTURE_3D`` | x | y | z | mpl | +---------------------------+----+-----+-----+---------+ | ``PIPE_TEXTURE_RECT`` | x | y | | mpl | +---------------------------+----+-----+-----+---------+ | ``PIPE_TEXTURE_CUBE`` | not allowed as source | +---------------------------+----+-----+-----+---------+ | ``PIPE_TEXTURE_1D_ARRAY`` | x | idx | | mpl | +---------------------------+----+-----+-----+---------+ | ``PIPE_TEXTURE_2D_ARRAY`` | x | y | idx | mpl | +---------------------------+----+-----+-----+---------+ Where 'mpl' is a mipmap level and 'idx' is the array index. .. opcode:: SAMPLE_I_MS Just like SAMPLE_I but allows fetch data from multi-sampled surfaces. Syntax: ``SAMPLE_I_MS dst, address, sampler_view, sample`` .. opcode:: SAMPLE_B Just like the SAMPLE instruction with the exception that an additional bias is applied to the level of detail computed as part of the instruction execution. Syntax: ``SAMPLE_B dst, address, sampler_view, sampler, lod_bias`` Example: ``SAMPLE_B TEMP[0], TEMP[1], SVIEW[0], SAMP[0], TEMP[2].x`` .. opcode:: SAMPLE_C Similar to the SAMPLE instruction but it performs a comparison filter. The operands to SAMPLE_C are identical to SAMPLE, except that there is an additional float32 operand, reference value, which must be a register with single-component, or a scalar literal. SAMPLE_C makes the hardware use the current samplers compare_func (in pipe_sampler_state) to compare reference value against the red component value for the surce resource at each texel that the currently configured texture filter covers based on the provided coordinates. Syntax: ``SAMPLE_C dst, address, sampler_view.r, sampler, ref_value`` Example: ``SAMPLE_C TEMP[0], TEMP[1], SVIEW[0].r, SAMP[0], TEMP[2].x`` .. opcode:: SAMPLE_C_LZ Same as SAMPLE_C, but LOD is 0 and derivatives are ignored. The LZ stands for level-zero. Syntax: ``SAMPLE_C_LZ dst, address, sampler_view.r, sampler, ref_value`` Example: ``SAMPLE_C_LZ TEMP[0], TEMP[1], SVIEW[0].r, SAMP[0], TEMP[2].x`` .. opcode:: SAMPLE_D SAMPLE_D is identical to the SAMPLE opcode except that the derivatives for the source address in the x direction and the y direction are provided by extra parameters. Syntax: ``SAMPLE_D dst, address, sampler_view, sampler, der_x, der_y`` Example: ``SAMPLE_D TEMP[0], TEMP[1], SVIEW[0], SAMP[0], TEMP[2], TEMP[3]`` .. opcode:: SAMPLE_L SAMPLE_L is identical to the SAMPLE opcode except that the LOD is provided directly as a scalar value, representing no anisotropy. Syntax: ``SAMPLE_L dst, address, sampler_view, sampler, explicit_lod`` Example: ``SAMPLE_L TEMP[0], TEMP[1], SVIEW[0], SAMP[0], TEMP[2].x`` .. opcode:: GATHER4 Gathers the four texels to be used in a bi-linear filtering operation and packs them into a single register. Only works with 2D, 2D array, cubemaps, and cubemaps arrays. For 2D textures, only the addressing modes of the sampler and the top level of any mip pyramid are used. Set W to zero. It behaves like the SAMPLE instruction, but a filtered sample is not generated. The four samples that contribute to filtering are placed into xyzw in counter-clockwise order, starting with the (u,v) texture coordinate delta at the following locations (-, +), (+, +), (+, -), (-, -), where the magnitude of the deltas are half a texel. .. opcode:: SVIEWINFO Query the dimensions of a given sampler view. dst receives width, height, depth or array size and number of mipmap levels as int4. The dst can have a writemask which will specify what info is the caller interested in. Syntax: ``SVIEWINFO dst, src_mip_level, sampler_view`` Example: ``SVIEWINFO TEMP[0], TEMP[1].x, SVIEW[0]`` src_mip_level is an unsigned integer scalar. If it's out of range then returns 0 for width, height and depth/array size but the total number of mipmap is still returned correctly for the given sampler view. The returned width, height and depth values are for the mipmap level selected by the src_mip_level and are in the number of texels. For 1d texture array width is in dst.x, array size is in dst.y and dst.z is 0. The number of mipmaps is still in dst.w. In contrast to d3d10 resinfo, there's no way in the tgsi instruction encoding to specify the return type (float/rcpfloat/uint), hence always using uint. Also, unlike the SAMPLE instructions, the swizzle on src1 resinfo allowing swizzling dst values is ignored (due to the interaction with rcpfloat modifier which requires some swizzle handling in the state tracker anyway). .. opcode:: SAMPLE_POS Query the position of a sample in the given resource or render target when per-sample fragment shading is in effect. Syntax: ``SAMPLE_POS dst, source, sample_index`` dst receives float4 (x, y, undef, undef) indicated where the sample is located. Sample locations are in the range [0, 1] where 0.5 is the center of the fragment. source is either a sampler view (to indicate a shader resource) or temp register (to indicate the render target). The source register may have an optional swizzle to apply to the returned result sample_index is an integer scalar indicating which sample position is to be queried. If per-sample shading is not in effect or the source resource or render target is not multisampled, the result is (0.5, 0.5, undef, undef). NOTE: no driver has implemented this opcode yet (and no state tracker emits it). This information is subject to change. .. opcode:: SAMPLE_INFO Query the number of samples in a multisampled resource or render target. Syntax: ``SAMPLE_INFO dst, source`` dst receives int4 (n, 0, 0, 0) where n is the number of samples in a resource or the render target. source is either a sampler view (to indicate a shader resource) or temp register (to indicate the render target). The source register may have an optional swizzle to apply to the returned result If per-sample shading is not in effect or the source resource or render target is not multisampled, the result is (1, 0, 0, 0). NOTE: no driver has implemented this opcode yet (and no state tracker emits it). This information is subject to change. .. _resourceopcodes: Resource Access Opcodes ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ For these opcodes, the resource can be a BUFFER, IMAGE, or MEMORY. .. opcode:: LOAD - Fetch data from a shader buffer or image Syntax: ``LOAD dst, resource, address`` Example: ``LOAD TEMP[0], BUFFER[0], TEMP[1]`` Using the provided integer address, LOAD fetches data from the specified buffer or texture without any filtering. The 'address' is specified as a vector of unsigned integers. If the 'address' is out of range the result is unspecified. Only the first mipmap level of a resource can be read from using this instruction. For 1D or 2D texture arrays, the array index is provided as an unsigned integer in address.y or address.z, respectively. address.yz are ignored for buffers and 1D textures. address.z is ignored for 1D texture arrays and 2D textures. address.w is always ignored. A swizzle suffix may be added to the resource argument this will cause the resource data to be swizzled accordingly. .. opcode:: STORE - Write data to a shader resource Syntax: ``STORE resource, address, src`` Example: ``STORE BUFFER[0], TEMP[0], TEMP[1]`` Using the provided integer address, STORE writes data to the specified buffer or texture. The 'address' is specified as a vector of unsigned integers. If the 'address' is out of range the result is unspecified. Only the first mipmap level of a resource can be written to using this instruction. For 1D or 2D texture arrays, the array index is provided as an unsigned integer in address.y or address.z, respectively. address.yz are ignored for buffers and 1D textures. address.z is ignored for 1D texture arrays and 2D textures. address.w is always ignored. .. opcode:: RESQ - Query information about a resource Syntax: ``RESQ dst, resource`` Example: ``RESQ TEMP[0], BUFFER[0]`` Returns information about the buffer or image resource. For buffer resources, the size (in bytes) is returned in the x component. For image resources, .xyz will contain the width/height/layers of the image, while .w will contain the number of samples for multi-sampled images. .. opcode:: FBFETCH - Load data from framebuffer Syntax: ``FBFETCH dst, output`` Example: ``FBFETCH TEMP[0], OUT[0]`` This is only valid on ``COLOR`` semantic outputs. Returns the color of the current position in the framebuffer from before this fragment shader invocation. May return the same value from multiple calls for a particular output within a single invocation. Note that result may be undefined if a fragment is drawn multiple times without a blend barrier in between. .. _threadsyncopcodes: Inter-thread synchronization opcodes ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ These opcodes are intended for communication between threads running within the same compute grid. For now they're only valid in compute programs. .. opcode:: MFENCE - Memory fence Syntax: ``MFENCE resource`` Example: ``MFENCE RES[0]`` This opcode forces strong ordering between any memory access operations that affect the specified resource. This means that previous loads and stores (and only those) will be performed and visible to other threads before the program execution continues. .. opcode:: LFENCE - Load memory fence Syntax: ``LFENCE resource`` Example: ``LFENCE RES[0]`` Similar to MFENCE, but it only affects the ordering of memory loads. .. opcode:: SFENCE - Store memory fence Syntax: ``SFENCE resource`` Example: ``SFENCE RES[0]`` Similar to MFENCE, but it only affects the ordering of memory stores. .. opcode:: BARRIER - Thread group barrier ``BARRIER`` This opcode suspends the execution of the current thread until all the remaining threads in the working group reach the same point of the program. Results are unspecified if any of the remaining threads terminates or never reaches an executed BARRIER instruction. .. opcode:: MEMBAR - Memory barrier ``MEMBAR type`` This opcode waits for the completion of all memory accesses based on the type passed in. The type is an immediate bitfield with the following meaning: Bit 0: Shader storage buffers Bit 1: Atomic buffers Bit 2: Images Bit 3: Shared memory Bit 4: Thread group These may be passed in in any combination. An implementation is free to not distinguish between these as it sees fit. However these map to all the possibilities made available by GLSL. .. _atomopcodes: Atomic opcodes ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ These opcodes provide atomic variants of some common arithmetic and logical operations. In this context atomicity means that another concurrent memory access operation that affects the same memory location is guaranteed to be performed strictly before or after the entire execution of the atomic operation. The resource may be a BUFFER, IMAGE, or MEMORY. In the case of an image, the offset works the same as for ``LOAD`` and ``STORE``, specified above. These atomic operations may only be used with 32-bit integer image formats. .. opcode:: ATOMUADD - Atomic integer addition Syntax: ``ATOMUADD dst, resource, offset, src`` Example: ``ATOMUADD TEMP[0], BUFFER[0], TEMP[1], TEMP[2]`` The following operation is performed atomically: .. math:: dst_x = resource[offset] resource[offset] = dst_x + src_x .. opcode:: ATOMXCHG - Atomic exchange Syntax: ``ATOMXCHG dst, resource, offset, src`` Example: ``ATOMXCHG TEMP[0], BUFFER[0], TEMP[1], TEMP[2]`` The following operation is performed atomically: .. math:: dst_x = resource[offset] resource[offset] = src_x .. opcode:: ATOMCAS - Atomic compare-and-exchange Syntax: ``ATOMCAS dst, resource, offset, cmp, src`` Example: ``ATOMCAS TEMP[0], BUFFER[0], TEMP[1], TEMP[2], TEMP[3]`` The following operation is performed atomically: .. math:: dst_x = resource[offset] resource[offset] = (dst_x == cmp_x ? src_x : dst_x) .. opcode:: ATOMAND - Atomic bitwise And Syntax: ``ATOMAND dst, resource, offset, src`` Example: ``ATOMAND TEMP[0], BUFFER[0], TEMP[1], TEMP[2]`` The following operation is performed atomically: .. math:: dst_x = resource[offset] resource[offset] = dst_x \& src_x .. opcode:: ATOMOR - Atomic bitwise Or Syntax: ``ATOMOR dst, resource, offset, src`` Example: ``ATOMOR TEMP[0], BUFFER[0], TEMP[1], TEMP[2]`` The following operation is performed atomically: .. math:: dst_x = resource[offset] resource[offset] = dst_x | src_x .. opcode:: ATOMXOR - Atomic bitwise Xor Syntax: ``ATOMXOR dst, resource, offset, src`` Example: ``ATOMXOR TEMP[0], BUFFER[0], TEMP[1], TEMP[2]`` The following operation is performed atomically: .. math:: dst_x = resource[offset] resource[offset] = dst_x \oplus src_x .. opcode:: ATOMUMIN - Atomic unsigned minimum Syntax: ``ATOMUMIN dst, resource, offset, src`` Example: ``ATOMUMIN TEMP[0], BUFFER[0], TEMP[1], TEMP[2]`` The following operation is performed atomically: .. math:: dst_x = resource[offset] resource[offset] = (dst_x < src_x ? dst_x : src_x) .. opcode:: ATOMUMAX - Atomic unsigned maximum Syntax: ``ATOMUMAX dst, resource, offset, src`` Example: ``ATOMUMAX TEMP[0], BUFFER[0], TEMP[1], TEMP[2]`` The following operation is performed atomically: .. math:: dst_x = resource[offset] resource[offset] = (dst_x > src_x ? dst_x : src_x) .. opcode:: ATOMIMIN - Atomic signed minimum Syntax: ``ATOMIMIN dst, resource, offset, src`` Example: ``ATOMIMIN TEMP[0], BUFFER[0], TEMP[1], TEMP[2]`` The following operation is performed atomically: .. math:: dst_x = resource[offset] resource[offset] = (dst_x < src_x ? dst_x : src_x) .. opcode:: ATOMIMAX - Atomic signed maximum Syntax: ``ATOMIMAX dst, resource, offset, src`` Example: ``ATOMIMAX TEMP[0], BUFFER[0], TEMP[1], TEMP[2]`` The following operation is performed atomically: .. math:: dst_x = resource[offset] resource[offset] = (dst_x > src_x ? dst_x : src_x) .. _interlaneopcodes: Inter-lane opcodes ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ These opcodes reduce the given value across the shader invocations running in the current SIMD group. Every thread in the subgroup will receive the same result. The BALLOT operations accept a single-channel argument that is treated as a boolean and produce a 64-bit value. .. opcode:: VOTE_ANY - Value is set in any of the active invocations Syntax: ``VOTE_ANY dst, value`` Example: ``VOTE_ANY TEMP[0].x, TEMP[1].x`` .. opcode:: VOTE_ALL - Value is set in all of the active invocations Syntax: ``VOTE_ALL dst, value`` Example: ``VOTE_ALL TEMP[0].x, TEMP[1].x`` .. opcode:: VOTE_EQ - Value is the same in all of the active invocations Syntax: ``VOTE_EQ dst, value`` Example: ``VOTE_EQ TEMP[0].x, TEMP[1].x`` .. opcode:: BALLOT - Lanemask of whether the value is set in each active invocation Syntax: ``BALLOT dst, value`` Example: ``BALLOT TEMP[0].xy, TEMP[1].x`` When the argument is a constant true, this produces a bitmask of active invocations. In fragment shaders, this can include helper invocations (invocations whose outputs and writes to memory are discarded, but which are used to compute derivatives). .. opcode:: READ_FIRST - Broadcast the value from the first active invocation to all active lanes Syntax: ``READ_FIRST dst, value`` Example: ``READ_FIRST TEMP[0], TEMP[1]`` .. opcode:: READ_INVOC - Retrieve the value from the given invocation (need not be uniform) Syntax: ``READ_INVOC dst, value, invocation`` Example: ``READ_INVOC TEMP[0].xy, TEMP[1].xy, TEMP[2].x`` invocation.x controls the invocation number to read from for all channels. The invocation number must be the same across all active invocations in a sub-group; otherwise, the results are undefined. Explanation of symbols used ------------------------------ Functions ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ :math:`|x|` Absolute value of `x`. :math:`\lceil x \rceil` Ceiling of `x`. clamp(x,y,z) Clamp x between y and z. (x < y) ? y : (x > z) ? z : x :math:`\lfloor x\rfloor` Floor of `x`. :math:`\log_2{x}` Logarithm of `x`, base 2. max(x,y) Maximum of x and y. (x > y) ? x : y min(x,y) Minimum of x and y. (x < y) ? x : y partialx(x) Derivative of x relative to fragment's X. partialy(x) Derivative of x relative to fragment's Y. pop() Pop from stack. :math:`x^y` `x` to the power `y`. push(x) Push x on stack. round(x) Round x. trunc(x) Truncate x, i.e. drop the fraction bits. Keywords ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ discard Discard fragment. pc Program counter. target Label of target instruction. Other tokens --------------- Declaration ^^^^^^^^^^^ Declares a register that is will be referenced as an operand in Instruction tokens. File field contains register file that is being declared and is one of TGSI_FILE. UsageMask field specifies which of the register components can be accessed and is one of TGSI_WRITEMASK. The Local flag specifies that a given value isn't intended for subroutine parameter passing and, as a result, the implementation isn't required to give any guarantees of it being preserved across subroutine boundaries. As it's merely a compiler hint, the implementation is free to ignore it. If Dimension flag is set to 1, a Declaration Dimension token follows. If Semantic flag is set to 1, a Declaration Semantic token follows. If Interpolate flag is set to 1, a Declaration Interpolate token follows. If file is TGSI_FILE_RESOURCE, a Declaration Resource token follows. If Array flag is set to 1, a Declaration Array token follows. Array Declaration ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Declarations can optional have an ArrayID attribute which can be referred by indirect addressing operands. An ArrayID of zero is reserved and treated as if no ArrayID is specified. If an indirect addressing operand refers to a specific declaration by using an ArrayID only the registers in this declaration are guaranteed to be accessed, accessing any register outside this declaration results in undefined behavior. Note that for compatibility the effective index is zero-based and not relative to the specified declaration If no ArrayID is specified with an indirect addressing operand the whole register file might be accessed by this operand. This is strongly discouraged and will prevent packing of scalar/vec2 arrays and effective alias analysis. This is only legal for TEMP and CONST register files. Declaration Semantic ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Vertex and fragment shader input and output registers may be labeled with semantic information consisting of a name and index. Follows Declaration token if Semantic bit is set. Since its purpose is to link a shader with other stages of the pipeline, it is valid to follow only those Declaration tokens that declare a register either in INPUT or OUTPUT file. SemanticName field contains the semantic name of the register being declared. There is no default value. SemanticIndex is an optional subscript that can be used to distinguish different register declarations with the same semantic name. The default value is 0. The meanings of the individual semantic names are explained in the following sections. TGSI_SEMANTIC_POSITION """""""""""""""""""""" For vertex shaders, TGSI_SEMANTIC_POSITION indicates the vertex shader output register which contains the homogeneous vertex position in the clip space coordinate system. After clipping, the X, Y and Z components of the vertex will be divided by the W value to get normalized device coordinates. For fragment shaders, TGSI_SEMANTIC_POSITION is used to indicate that fragment shader input (or system value, depending on which one is supported by the driver) contains the fragment's window position. The X component starts at zero and always increases from left to right. The Y component starts at zero and always increases but Y=0 may either indicate the top of the window or the bottom depending on the fragment coordinate origin convention (see TGSI_PROPERTY_FS_COORD_ORIGIN). The Z coordinate ranges from 0 to 1 to represent depth from the front to the back of the Z buffer. The W component contains the interpolated reciprocal of the vertex position W component (corresponding to gl_Fragcoord, but unlike d3d10 which interpolates the same 1/w but then gives back the reciprocal of the interpolated value). Fragment shaders may also declare an output register with TGSI_SEMANTIC_POSITION. Only the Z component is writable. This allows the fragment shader to change the fragment's Z position. TGSI_SEMANTIC_COLOR """"""""""""""""""" For vertex shader outputs or fragment shader inputs/outputs, this label indicates that the register contains an R,G,B,A color. Several shader inputs/outputs may contain colors so the semantic index is used to distinguish them. For example, color[0] may be the diffuse color while color[1] may be the specular color. This label is needed so that the flat/smooth shading can be applied to the right interpolants during rasterization. TGSI_SEMANTIC_BCOLOR """""""""""""""""""" Back-facing colors are only used for back-facing polygons, and are only valid in vertex shader outputs. After rasterization, all polygons are front-facing and COLOR and BCOLOR end up occupying the same slots in the fragment shader, so all BCOLORs effectively become regular COLORs in the fragment shader. TGSI_SEMANTIC_FOG """"""""""""""""" Vertex shader inputs and outputs and fragment shader inputs may be labeled with TGSI_SEMANTIC_FOG to indicate that the register contains a fog coordinate. Typically, the fragment shader will use the fog coordinate to compute a fog blend factor which is used to blend the normal fragment color with a constant fog color. But fog coord really is just an ordinary vec4 register like regular semantics. TGSI_SEMANTIC_PSIZE """"""""""""""""""" Vertex shader input and output registers may be labeled with TGIS_SEMANTIC_PSIZE to indicate that the register contains a point size in the form (S, 0, 0, 1). The point size controls the width or diameter of points for rasterization. This label cannot be used in fragment shaders. When using this semantic, be sure to set the appropriate state in the :ref:`rasterizer` first. TGSI_SEMANTIC_TEXCOORD """""""""""""""""""""" Only available if PIPE_CAP_TGSI_TEXCOORD is exposed ! Vertex shader outputs and fragment shader inputs may be labeled with this semantic to make them replaceable by sprite coordinates via the sprite_coord_enable state in the :ref:`rasterizer`. The semantic index permitted with this semantic is limited to <= 7. If the driver does not support TEXCOORD, sprite coordinate replacement applies to inputs with the GENERIC semantic instead. The intended use case for this semantic is gl_TexCoord. TGSI_SEMANTIC_PCOORD """""""""""""""""""" Only available if PIPE_CAP_TGSI_TEXCOORD is exposed ! Fragment shader inputs may be labeled with TGSI_SEMANTIC_PCOORD to indicate that the register contains sprite coordinates in the form (x, y, 0, 1), if the current primitive is a point and point sprites are enabled. Otherwise, the contents of the register are undefined. The intended use case for this semantic is gl_PointCoord. TGSI_SEMANTIC_GENERIC """"""""""""""""""""" All vertex/fragment shader inputs/outputs not labeled with any other semantic label can be considered to be generic attributes. Typical uses of generic inputs/outputs are texcoords and user-defined values. TGSI_SEMANTIC_NORMAL """""""""""""""""""" Indicates that a vertex shader input is a normal vector. This is typically only used for legacy graphics APIs. TGSI_SEMANTIC_FACE """""""""""""""""" This label applies to fragment shader inputs (or system values, depending on which one is supported by the driver) and indicates that the register contains front/back-face information. If it is an input, it will be a floating-point vector in the form (F, 0, 0, 1), where F will be positive when the fragment belongs to a front-facing polygon, and negative when the fragment belongs to a back-facing polygon. If it is a system value, it will be an integer vector in the form (F, 0, 0, 1), where F is 0xffffffff when the fragment belongs to a front-facing polygon and 0 when the fragment belongs to a back-facing polygon. TGSI_SEMANTIC_EDGEFLAG """""""""""""""""""""" For vertex shaders, this sematic label indicates that an input or output is a boolean edge flag. The register layout is [F, x, x, x] where F is 0.0 or 1.0 and x = don't care. Normally, the vertex shader simply copies the edge flag input to the edgeflag output. Edge flags are used to control which lines or points are actually drawn when the polygon mode converts triangles/quads/polygons into points or lines. TGSI_SEMANTIC_STENCIL """"""""""""""""""""" For fragment shaders, this semantic label indicates that an output is a writable stencil reference value. Only the Y component is writable. This allows the fragment shader to change the fragments stencilref value. TGSI_SEMANTIC_VIEWPORT_INDEX """""""""""""""""""""""""""" For geometry shaders, this semantic label indicates that an output contains the index of the viewport (and scissor) to use. This is an integer value, and only the X component is used. If PIPE_CAP_TGSI_VS_LAYER_VIEWPORT or PIPE_CAP_TGSI_TES_LAYER_VIEWPORT is supported, then this semantic label can also be used in vertex or tessellation evaluation shaders, respectively. Only the value written in the last vertex processing stage is used. TGSI_SEMANTIC_LAYER """"""""""""""""""" For geometry shaders, this semantic label indicates that an output contains the layer value to use for the color and depth/stencil surfaces. This is an integer value, and only the X component is used. (Also known as rendertarget array index.) If PIPE_CAP_TGSI_VS_LAYER_VIEWPORT or PIPE_CAP_TGSI_TES_LAYER_VIEWPORT is supported, then this semantic label can also be used in vertex or tessellation evaluation shaders, respectively. Only the value written in the last vertex processing stage is used. TGSI_SEMANTIC_CULLDIST """""""""""""""""""""" Used as distance to plane for performing application-defined culling of individual primitives against a plane. When components of vertex elements are given this label, these values are assumed to be a float32 signed distance to a plane. Primitives will be completely discarded if the plane distance for all of the vertices in the primitive are < 0. If a vertex has a cull distance of NaN, that vertex counts as "out" (as if its < 0); The limits on both clip and cull distances are bound by the PIPE_MAX_CLIP_OR_CULL_DISTANCE_COUNT define which defines the maximum number of components that can be used to hold the distances and by the PIPE_MAX_CLIP_OR_CULL_DISTANCE_ELEMENT_COUNT which specifies the maximum number of registers which can be annotated with those semantics. TGSI_SEMANTIC_CLIPDIST """""""""""""""""""""" Note this covers clipping and culling distances. When components of vertex elements are identified this way, these values are each assumed to be a float32 signed distance to a plane. For clip distances: Primitive setup only invokes rasterization on pixels for which the interpolated plane distances are >= 0. For cull distances: Primitives will be completely discarded if the plane distance for all of the vertices in the primitive are < 0. If a vertex has a cull distance of NaN, that vertex counts as "out" (as if its < 0); Multiple clip/cull planes can be implemented simultaneously, by annotating multiple components of one or more vertex elements with the above specified semantic. The limits on both clip and cull distances are bound by the PIPE_MAX_CLIP_OR_CULL_DISTANCE_COUNT define which defines the maximum number of components that can be used to hold the distances and by the PIPE_MAX_CLIP_OR_CULL_DISTANCE_ELEMENT_COUNT which specifies the maximum number of registers which can be annotated with those semantics. The properties NUM_CLIPDIST_ENABLED and NUM_CULLDIST_ENABLED are used to divide up the 2 x vec4 space between clipping and culling. TGSI_SEMANTIC_SAMPLEID """""""""""""""""""""" For fragment shaders, this semantic label indicates that a system value contains the current sample id (i.e. gl_SampleID) as an unsigned int. Only the X component is used. If per-sample shading is not enabled, the result is (0, undef, undef, undef). TGSI_SEMANTIC_SAMPLEPOS """"""""""""""""""""""" For fragment shaders, this semantic label indicates that a system value contains the current sample's position as float4(x, y, undef, undef) in the render target (i.e. gl_SamplePosition) when per-fragment shading is in effect. Position values are in the range [0, 1] where 0.5 is the center of the fragment. TGSI_SEMANTIC_SAMPLEMASK """""""""""""""""""""""" For fragment shaders, this semantic label can be applied to either a shader system value input or output. For a system value, the sample mask indicates the set of samples covered by the current primitive. If MSAA is not enabled, the value is (1, 0, 0, 0). For an output, the sample mask is used to disable further sample processing. For both, the register type is uint[4] but only the X component is used (i.e. gl_SampleMask[0]). Each bit corresponds to one sample position (up to 32x MSAA is supported). TGSI_SEMANTIC_INVOCATIONID """""""""""""""""""""""""" For geometry shaders, this semantic label indicates that a system value contains the current invocation id (i.e. gl_InvocationID). This is an integer value, and only the X component is used. TGSI_SEMANTIC_INSTANCEID """""""""""""""""""""""" For vertex shaders, this semantic label indicates that a system value contains the current instance id (i.e. gl_InstanceID). It does not include the base instance. This is an integer value, and only the X component is used. TGSI_SEMANTIC_VERTEXID """""""""""""""""""""" For vertex shaders, this semantic label indicates that a system value contains the current vertex id (i.e. gl_VertexID). It does (unlike in d3d10) include the base vertex. This is an integer value, and only the X component is used. TGSI_SEMANTIC_VERTEXID_NOBASE """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""" For vertex shaders, this semantic label indicates that a system value contains the current vertex id without including the base vertex (this corresponds to d3d10 vertex id, so TGSI_SEMANTIC_VERTEXID_NOBASE + TGSI_SEMANTIC_BASEVERTEX == TGSI_SEMANTIC_VERTEXID). This is an integer value, and only the X component is used. TGSI_SEMANTIC_BASEVERTEX """""""""""""""""""""""" For vertex shaders, this semantic label indicates that a system value contains the base vertex (i.e. gl_BaseVertex). Note that for non-indexed draw calls, this contains the first (or start) value instead. This is an integer value, and only the X component is used. TGSI_SEMANTIC_PRIMID """""""""""""""""""" For geometry and fragment shaders, this semantic label indicates the value contains the primitive id (i.e. gl_PrimitiveID). This is an integer value, and only the X component is used. FIXME: This right now can be either a ordinary input or a system value... TGSI_SEMANTIC_PATCH """"""""""""""""""" For tessellation evaluation/control shaders, this semantic label indicates a generic per-patch attribute. Such semantics will not implicitly be per-vertex arrays. TGSI_SEMANTIC_TESSCOORD """"""""""""""""""""""" For tessellation evaluation shaders, this semantic label indicates the coordinates of the vertex being processed. This is available in XYZ; W is undefined. TGSI_SEMANTIC_TESSOUTER """"""""""""""""""""""" For tessellation evaluation/control shaders, this semantic label indicates the outer tessellation levels of the patch. Isoline tessellation will only have XY defined, triangle will have XYZ and quads will have XYZW defined. This corresponds to gl_TessLevelOuter. TGSI_SEMANTIC_TESSINNER """"""""""""""""""""""" For tessellation evaluation/control shaders, this semantic label indicates the inner tessellation levels of the patch. The X value is only defined for triangle tessellation, while quads will have XY defined. This is entirely undefined for isoline tessellation. TGSI_SEMANTIC_VERTICESIN """""""""""""""""""""""" For tessellation evaluation/control shaders, this semantic label indicates the number of vertices provided in the input patch. Only the X value is defined. TGSI_SEMANTIC_HELPER_INVOCATION """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""" For fragment shaders, this semantic indicates whether the current invocation is covered or not. Helper invocations are created in order to properly compute derivatives, however it may be desirable to skip some of the logic in those cases. See ``gl_HelperInvocation`` documentation. TGSI_SEMANTIC_BASEINSTANCE """""""""""""""""""""""""" For vertex shaders, the base instance argument supplied for this draw. This is an integer value, and only the X component is used. TGSI_SEMANTIC_DRAWID """""""""""""""""""" For vertex shaders, the zero-based index of the current draw in a ``glMultiDraw*`` invocation. This is an integer value, and only the X component is used. TGSI_SEMANTIC_WORK_DIM """""""""""""""""""""" For compute shaders started via opencl this retrieves the work_dim parameter to the clEnqueueNDRangeKernel call with which the shader was started. TGSI_SEMANTIC_GRID_SIZE """"""""""""""""""""""" For compute shaders, this semantic indicates the maximum (x, y, z) dimensions of a grid of thread blocks. TGSI_SEMANTIC_BLOCK_ID """""""""""""""""""""" For compute shaders, this semantic indicates the (x, y, z) coordinates of the current block inside of the grid. TGSI_SEMANTIC_BLOCK_SIZE """""""""""""""""""""""" For compute shaders, this semantic indicates the maximum (x, y, z) dimensions of a block in threads. TGSI_SEMANTIC_THREAD_ID """"""""""""""""""""""" For compute shaders, this semantic indicates the (x, y, z) coordinates of the current thread inside of the block. TGSI_SEMANTIC_SUBGROUP_SIZE """"""""""""""""""""""""""" This semantic indicates the subgroup size for the current invocation. This is an integer of at most 64, as it indicates the width of lanemasks. It does not depend on the number of invocations that are active. TGSI_SEMANTIC_SUBGROUP_INVOCATION """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" The index of the current invocation within its subgroup. TGSI_SEMANTIC_SUBGROUP_EQ_MASK """""""""""""""""""""""""""""" A bit mask of ``bit index == TGSI_SEMANTIC_SUBGROUP_INVOCATION``, i.e. ``1 << subgroup_invocation`` in arbitrary precision arithmetic. TGSI_SEMANTIC_SUBGROUP_GE_MASK """""""""""""""""""""""""""""" A bit mask of ``bit index >= TGSI_SEMANTIC_SUBGROUP_INVOCATION``, i.e. ``((1 << (subgroup_size - subgroup_invocation)) - 1) << subgroup_invocation`` in arbitrary precision arithmetic. TGSI_SEMANTIC_SUBGROUP_GT_MASK """""""""""""""""""""""""""""" A bit mask of ``bit index > TGSI_SEMANTIC_SUBGROUP_INVOCATION``, i.e. ``((1 << (subgroup_size - subgroup_invocation - 1)) - 1) << (subgroup_invocation + 1)`` in arbitrary precision arithmetic. TGSI_SEMANTIC_SUBGROUP_LE_MASK """""""""""""""""""""""""""""" A bit mask of ``bit index <= TGSI_SEMANTIC_SUBGROUP_INVOCATION``, i.e. ``(1 << (subgroup_invocation + 1)) - 1`` in arbitrary precision arithmetic. TGSI_SEMANTIC_SUBGROUP_LT_MASK """""""""""""""""""""""""""""" A bit mask of ``bit index > TGSI_SEMANTIC_SUBGROUP_INVOCATION``, i.e. ``(1 << subgroup_invocation) - 1`` in arbitrary precision arithmetic. Declaration Interpolate ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ This token is only valid for fragment shader INPUT declarations. The Interpolate field specifes the way input is being interpolated by the rasteriser and is one of TGSI_INTERPOLATE_*. The Location field specifies the location inside the pixel that the interpolation should be done at, one of ``TGSI_INTERPOLATE_LOC_*``. Note that when per-sample shading is enabled, the implementation may choose to interpolate at the sample irrespective of the Location field. The CylindricalWrap bitfield specifies which register components should be subject to cylindrical wrapping when interpolating by the rasteriser. If TGSI_CYLINDRICAL_WRAP_X is set to 1, the X component should be interpolated according to cylindrical wrapping rules. Declaration Sampler View ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Follows Declaration token if file is TGSI_FILE_SAMPLER_VIEW. DCL SVIEW[#], resource, type(s) Declares a shader input sampler view and assigns it to a SVIEW[#] register. resource can be one of BUFFER, 1D, 2D, 3D, 1DArray and 2DArray. type must be 1 or 4 entries (if specifying on a per-component level) out of UNORM, SNORM, SINT, UINT and FLOAT. For TEX\* style texture sample opcodes (as opposed to SAMPLE\* opcodes which take an explicit SVIEW[#] source register), there may be optionally SVIEW[#] declarations. In this case, the SVIEW index is implied by the SAMP index, and there must be a corresponding SVIEW[#] declaration for each SAMP[#] declaration. Drivers are free to ignore this if they wish. But note in particular that some drivers need to know the sampler type (float/int/unsigned) in order to generate the correct code, so cases where integer textures are sampled, SVIEW[#] declarations should be used. NOTE: It is NOT legal to mix SAMPLE\* style opcodes and TEX\* opcodes in the same shader. Declaration Resource ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Follows Declaration token if file is TGSI_FILE_RESOURCE. DCL RES[#], resource [, WR] [, RAW] Declares a shader input resource and assigns it to a RES[#] register. resource can be one of BUFFER, 1D, 2D, 3D, CUBE, 1DArray and 2DArray. If the RAW keyword is not specified, the texture data will be subject to conversion, swizzling and scaling as required to yield the specified data type from the physical data format of the bound resource. If the RAW keyword is specified, no channel conversion will be performed: the values read for each of the channels (X,Y,Z,W) will correspond to consecutive words in the same order and format they're found in memory. No element-to-address conversion will be performed either: the value of the provided X coordinate will be interpreted in byte units instead of texel units. The result of accessing a misaligned address is undefined. Usage of the STORE opcode is only allowed if the WR (writable) flag is set. Properties ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Properties are general directives that apply to the whole TGSI program. FS_COORD_ORIGIN """"""""""""""" Specifies the fragment shader TGSI_SEMANTIC_POSITION coordinate origin. The default value is UPPER_LEFT. If UPPER_LEFT, the position will be (0,0) at the upper left corner and increase downward and rightward. If LOWER_LEFT, the position will be (0,0) at the lower left corner and increase upward and rightward. OpenGL defaults to LOWER_LEFT, and is configurable with the GL_ARB_fragment_coord_conventions extension. DirectX 9/10 use UPPER_LEFT. FS_COORD_PIXEL_CENTER """"""""""""""""""""" Specifies the fragment shader TGSI_SEMANTIC_POSITION pixel center convention. The default value is HALF_INTEGER. If HALF_INTEGER, the fractionary part of the position will be 0.5 If INTEGER, the fractionary part of the position will be 0.0 Note that this does not affect the set of fragments generated by rasterization, which is instead controlled by half_pixel_center in the rasterizer. OpenGL defaults to HALF_INTEGER, and is configurable with the GL_ARB_fragment_coord_conventions extension. DirectX 9 uses INTEGER. DirectX 10 uses HALF_INTEGER. FS_COLOR0_WRITES_ALL_CBUFS """""""""""""""""""""""""" Specifies that writes to the fragment shader color 0 are replicated to all bound cbufs. This facilitates OpenGL's fragColor output vs fragData[0] where fragData is directed to a single color buffer, but fragColor is broadcast. VS_PROHIBIT_UCPS """""""""""""""""""""""""" If this property is set on the program bound to the shader stage before the fragment shader, user clip planes should have no effect (be disabled) even if that shader does not write to any clip distance outputs and the rasterizer's clip_plane_enable is non-zero. This property is only supported by drivers that also support shader clip distance outputs. This is useful for APIs that don't have UCPs and where clip distances written by a shader cannot be disabled. GS_INVOCATIONS """""""""""""" Specifies the number of times a geometry shader should be executed for each input primitive. Each invocation will have a different TGSI_SEMANTIC_INVOCATIONID system value set. If not specified, assumed to be 1. VS_WINDOW_SPACE_POSITION """""""""""""""""""""""""" If this property is set on the vertex shader, the TGSI_SEMANTIC_POSITION output is assumed to contain window space coordinates. Division of X,Y,Z by W and the viewport transformation are disabled, and 1/W is directly taken from the 4-th component of the shader output. Naturally, clipping is not performed on window coordinates either. The effect of this property is undefined if a geometry or tessellation shader are in use. TCS_VERTICES_OUT """""""""""""""" The number of vertices written by the tessellation control shader. This effectively defines the patch input size of the tessellation evaluation shader as well. TES_PRIM_MODE """"""""""""" This sets the tessellation primitive mode, one of ``PIPE_PRIM_TRIANGLES``, ``PIPE_PRIM_QUADS``, or ``PIPE_PRIM_LINES``. (Unlike in GL, there is no separate isolines settings, the regular lines is assumed to mean isolines.) TES_SPACING """"""""""" This sets the spacing mode of the tessellation generator, one of ``PIPE_TESS_SPACING_*``. TES_VERTEX_ORDER_CW """"""""""""""""""" This sets the vertex order to be clockwise if the value is 1, or counter-clockwise if set to 0. TES_POINT_MODE """""""""""""" If set to a non-zero value, this turns on point mode for the tessellator, which means that points will be generated instead of primitives. NUM_CLIPDIST_ENABLED """""""""""""""""""" How many clip distance scalar outputs are enabled. NUM_CULLDIST_ENABLED """""""""""""""""""" How many cull distance scalar outputs are enabled. FS_EARLY_DEPTH_STENCIL """""""""""""""""""""" Whether depth test, stencil test, and occlusion query should run before the fragment shader (regardless of fragment shader side effects). Corresponds to GLSL early_fragment_tests. NEXT_SHADER """"""""""" Which shader stage will MOST LIKELY follow after this shader when the shader is bound. This is only a hint to the driver and doesn't have to be precise. Only set for VS and TES. CS_FIXED_BLOCK_WIDTH / HEIGHT / DEPTH """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" Threads per block in each dimension, if known at compile time. If the block size is known all three should be at least 1. If it is unknown they should all be set to 0 or not set. MUL_ZERO_WINS """"""""""""" The MUL TGSI operation (FP32 multiplication) will return 0 if either of the operands are equal to 0. That means that 0 * Inf = 0. This should be set the same way for an entire pipeline. Note that this applies not only to the literal MUL TGSI opcode, but all FP32 multiplications implied by other operations, such as MAD, FMA, DP2, DP3, DP4, DPH, DST, LOG, LRP, XPD, and possibly others. If there is a mismatch between shaders, then it is unspecified whether this behavior will be enabled. FS_POST_DEPTH_COVERAGE """""""""""""""""""""" When enabled, the input for TGSI_SEMANTIC_SAMPLEMASK will exclude samples that have failed the depth/stencil tests. This is only valid when FS_EARLY_DEPTH_STENCIL is also specified. Texture Sampling and Texture Formats ------------------------------------ This table shows how texture image components are returned as (x,y,z,w) tuples by TGSI texture instructions, such as :opcode:`TEX`, :opcode:`TXD`, and :opcode:`TXP`. For reference, OpenGL and Direct3D conventions are shown as well. +--------------------+--------------+--------------------+--------------+ | Texture Components | Gallium | OpenGL | Direct3D 9 | +====================+==============+====================+==============+ | R | (r, 0, 0, 1) | (r, 0, 0, 1) | (r, 1, 1, 1) | +--------------------+--------------+--------------------+--------------+ | RG | (r, g, 0, 1) | (r, g, 0, 1) | (r, g, 1, 1) | +--------------------+--------------+--------------------+--------------+ | RGB | (r, g, b, 1) | (r, g, b, 1) | (r, g, b, 1) | +--------------------+--------------+--------------------+--------------+ | RGBA | (r, g, b, a) | (r, g, b, a) | (r, g, b, a) | +--------------------+--------------+--------------------+--------------+ | A | (0, 0, 0, a) | (0, 0, 0, a) | (0, 0, 0, a) | +--------------------+--------------+--------------------+--------------+ | L | (l, l, l, 1) | (l, l, l, 1) | (l, l, l, 1) | +--------------------+--------------+--------------------+--------------+ | LA | (l, l, l, a) | (l, l, l, a) | (l, l, l, a) | +--------------------+--------------+--------------------+--------------+ | I | (i, i, i, i) | (i, i, i, i) | N/A | +--------------------+--------------+--------------------+--------------+ | UV | XXX TBD | (0, 0, 0, 1) | (u, v, 1, 1) | | | | [#envmap-bumpmap]_ | | +--------------------+--------------+--------------------+--------------+ | Z | XXX TBD | (z, z, z, 1) | (0, z, 0, 1) | | | | [#depth-tex-mode]_ | | +--------------------+--------------+--------------------+--------------+ | S | (s, s, s, s) | unknown | unknown | +--------------------+--------------+--------------------+--------------+ .. [#envmap-bumpmap] http://www.opengl.org/registry/specs/ATI/envmap_bumpmap.txt .. [#depth-tex-mode] the default is (z, z, z, 1) but may also be (0, 0, 0, z) or (z, z, z, z) depending on the value of GL_DEPTH_TEXTURE_MODE.