This is simply unnecessary and wastes time.
As part of this, simply remove the "all" directive. Only for a couple of tests
is it even potentially interesting to validate all pixels (e.g.
nointerpolation.shader_test), and for those "all" is replaced with an explicit
(0, 0, 640, 480) rect.
In all other cases we just probe (0, 0).
Properly passing the inverse-trig.shader_test tests whose qualifiers
have been removed requires making spirv.c capable of handling ABS.
The same happens for the ps_3_0 equality test in
float-comparison.shader_test.
When the "if" qualifier is added to a directive, the directive is
skipped if the shader->minimum_shader_model is not included in the
range.
This can be used on the "probe" directives for tests that have different
expected results on different shader models, without having to resort to
[require] blocks.
At the current moment this is a little odd because for SM1 [test]
directives are skipped, and the [shader] directives are not executed by
the shader_runner_vulkan.c:compile_shader() but by the general
shader_runner.c:compile_shader(). So in principle it is a little weird
that we go through the vulkan runner.
But fret not, because in the future we plan to make the parser agnostic
to the language of the tests, so we will get rid of the general
shader_runner.c:compile_shader() function and instead call a
runner->compile_shader() function, defined for each runner. Granted,
most of these may call a generic implementation that uses native
compiler in Windows, and vkd3d-shader on Linux, but it would be more
conceptually correct.
For relative addressing, the vkd3d_shader_registers must point to
another vkd3d_shader_src_param. For now, use the sm4_instruction to save
them, since the only purpose of this struct is to be used as paramter
for write_sm4_instruction.