Weaken our dependence on the `once_cell` crate by using functionality
from `std` instead that was upstreamed from `once_cell`.
It's not yet possible to eliminate this dependency entirely, but do what
we can for now.
Improve handling of `Access` expressions whose base is an array or
matrix (not a pointer to such), and whose index is not known at
compile time. SPIR-V does not have instructions that can do this
directly, so spill such values to temporary variables, and perform the
accesses using `OpAccessChain` instructions applied to the
temporaries.
When performing chains of accesses like `a[i].x[j]`, do not reify
intermediate values; generate a single `OpAccessChain` for the entire
thing.
Remove special cases for arrays; the same code now handles arrays and
matrices.
Update validation to permit dynamic indexing of matrices.
For details, see the comments on the new tracking structures in
`naga:🔙:spv::Function`.
Add snapshot test `index-by-value.wgsl`.
Fixes#6358.
Fixes#4337.
Alternative to #6362.
Pull out the code to build a `naga::proc::index::GuardedIndex` from a
`Handle<Expression>` into its own function,
`GuardedIndex::from_expression`. Use that function in
`GuardedIndex::try_resolve_to_constant`.
Pull out the code for building a `naga:🔙:spv::NumericType` from a
`TypeInner` into its own function, `NumericType::from_inner`. Use that
in `LocalType::from_inner`.
Replace the `return_type_override` argument of
`BlockContext::write_expression_pointer` with an enum that says how to
derive the return type from `expr_handle`'s type.
Introduce a new type, `AccessTypeAdjustment`, that covers possible
derivation rules.
This simplifies callers and the callee, in part by making the possible
alternatives less general, and by giving them explicit names (the
variants of the `AccessTypeAdjustment` enum).
Introduce a new function,
`naga:🔙:spv::BlockContext::write_checked_load`, that does the
work of `Expression::Load`.
This change is just code motion, and should have no effect on
behavior. The new function will be used in later commits.
Revert the changes to the vendored copy of web-sys's WebGPU bindings
made in #6377. The only purpose of vendoring is to pin down our WebGPU
JS bindings, not to allow local changes. And as it turns out, removing
the `max_inter_stage_shader_components` accessor isn't necessary in
order to fix#6290.
Delete the function `BlockContext::is_intermediate`. Instead, have
`Access` and `AccessIndex` instructions decide whether to defer code
generation based on the type of the base expression: indexing
operations on pointers are deferred; anything else is not.
Simplify the definition of `naga:🔙:spv::Writer::get_pointer_id`
by using `get_type_id`'s ability to handle `LocalType::Pointer`.
This means that `get_pointer_id` is no longer fallible, and no longer
needs a type arena. Simplify callers, as well as the
`BlockContext::get_pointer_id` convenience function.
In `back::spv`:
- Factor out the numeric variants of `LocalType` into a
new enum, `NumericType`.
- Split the `Value` variant into `Numeric` and `LocalPointer`
variants, and let `LocalPointer` point to any numeric type,
including matrices.
In subsequent commits, we'll need to spill matrices out into temporary
local variables. This means we'll need to generate SPIR-V
pointer-to-matrix types, so `LocalType` needs to be able to represent
that.
Do not neglect to apply bounds checks to indexing operations on
runtime-sized arrays, even when they are accessed via an `AccessIndex`
instruction.
Before this commit, `BlockContext::write_expression_pointer` would not
apply bounds checks to `OpAccessChain` indices provided by an
`AccessIndex` instruction, apparently with the rationale that any
out-of-bounds accesses should have been reported by constant
evaluation.
While it is true that the `index` operand of an `AccessIndex`
expression is known at compile time, and that the WGSL constant
evaluation rules require accesses that can be statically determined to
be out-of-bounds to be shader creation or pipeline creation time
errors, accesses to runtime-sized arrays don't follow this pattern:
even if the index is known, the length with which it must be compared
is not.
Fixes#4441.
Let `BoundsCheckResult::Conditional` provide both the condition to
check before carrying out the access, and the index to use for that
access. The `Conditional` variant indicates that we generated a
runtime bounds check, which implies we must have had a SPIR-V id for
the index to pass to that check, so there's no reason not to provide
that to the callers - especially if the bounds check code was able to
reduce it to a known constant.
At the moment, this is not much of a refactor, but later commits will
use `GuardedIndex` in more places, at which point this will avoid a
re-matching and assertion.
Abstract the code from `write_expression_pointer` to handle one
indexing operation out into its own function,
`BlockContext::write_access_chain_index`.