The relative-addressed case in shader_register_normalise_arrayed_addressing()
leaves the control point id in idx[0], while for constant register
indices it is placed in idx[1]. The latter case could be fixed instead,
but placing the control point count in the outer dimension is more
logical.
For example, this occurred in a shader:
reg_idx write_mask
0 xyz
1 xyzw
2 xyzw
3 xyz
The dcl_indexrange instruction covered only xyz, so once merged, searching for
xyzw failed.
It is impossible to declare an input array where elements have different
component counts, but the optimiser can create this case. One way for
this to occur is to dynamically index input values via a local array
containing copies of the input values. The optimiser converts this to
dynamically indexed inputs.
They were originally made const because no optimization/normalization
pass existed. Now having to cast away const all the time is becoming
more and more burdening.
Regression in signature normalisation, however the old code was not
correct either because it would apply the interpolation mode to all
components. Found in an Assassin's Creed: Valhalla shader.
Specifically, map COLOROUT to OUTPUT, and map INCONTROLPOINT to INPUT for domain
shaders as well as hull shaders.
Obscure the non-existent differences from the view of the backend.
Hull shaders have a different temps count for each phase, and the
parser only reports the count for the patch constant phase.
In order to properly check for temps count on hull shaders, we first
need to decode its phases.
The hull shader barrier used for this was broken by I/O normalization, since
vocp is no longer exposed to the spirv backend.
Restore this barrier by checking for vocp during normalization instead.
It was originally intended that this structure could hold other information
about the next stage which compilation might depend on. For example, compilation
to GLSL needs to know the type of the next shader in some circumstances.
That was never actualized, and since the API is fixed at this point for 1.9, it
makes the most sense to rename the structure to match its actual scope.
The documentation was written and arranged to imply that the structure would
hold other information about the next shader than the varying map; this is
changed accordingly as well.
In Shader Model 6 each signature element can span a range of register
indices, or 'rows', and system values do not share a register index with
non-system values. Inputs and outputs are referenced by element index
instead of register index. This patch merges multiple signature elements
into a single element under the following conditions:
- The register index in a load or store is specified dynamically by
including a relative address parameter with a base register index. The
dcl_index_range instruction is used to identify these.
- A register declaration is split across multiple elements which declare
different components of the register.
- A patch constant function writes tessellation factors. These are an
array in SPIR-V, but in SM 5.x each factor is declared as a separate
register, and these are dynamically indexed by the fork/join instance
id. Elimination of multiple fork/join phases converts the indices to
constants, but merging the signature elements into a single arrayed
element matches the SPIR-V output.
All references to input/output register indices are converted to element
indices. If a relative address is present, the element index is moved up
a slot so it cannot be confused with a constant offset. Existing code
only handles register index relative addressing for tessellation factors.
This patch adds generic support for it.
The SPIR-V backend will emit a default control point phase. Inserting
inputs into the IR allows handling of declarations via the usual path
instead of an ad hoc implementation which may not match later changes
to input handling.
In SPIR-V the address must include the invocation id, but in TPF it
is implicit. Move the register index up one slot and insert an
OUTPOINTID relative address.
Normalise the incoming vkd3d_shader_instruction IR to the shader model 6
pattern. This allows generation of a single patch constant function in
SPIR-V.