Uses the __DRIimage loader interfaces.
v2: Fix _XIOErrors when DRI3 isn't present (change by anholt). Apparently
XCB just terminates your connection if you don't check for extensions
before using them, instead of returning an error like you'd expect.
Signed-off-by: Keith Packard <keithp@keithp.com>
Reviewed-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
These provide an interface between the driver and the loader to allocate
color buffers through the DRIimage extension interface rather than through a
loader-specific extension (as is used by DRI2, for instance).
The driver uses the loader 'getBuffers' interface to allocate color buffers.
The loader uses the createNewScreen2, createNewDrawable, createNewContext,
getAPIMask and createContextAttribs APIS (mostly shared with DRI2).
This interface will work with the DRI3 loader, and should also work with GBM
and other loaders so that drivers need not be customized for each new loader
interface, as long as they provide this image interface.
v2: Fix build of i915 and i965 together (by anholt)
Signed-off-by: Keith Packard <keithp@keithp.com>
Reviewed-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The __DRI_IMAGE_FORMAT codes are used by the image extension, drivers need to
be able to translate between them. Instead of duplicating this translation in
each driver, create a shared version.
Signed-off-by: Keith Packard <keithp@keithp.com>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
Instead of assuming that the size will be height * pitch, have the caller pass
in the size explicitly.
Signed-off-by: Keith Packard <keithp@keithp.com>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
This just renames them so that they can be used with the DRI3 extension
without causing too much confusion.
Signed-off-by: Keith Packard <keithp@keithp.com>
Reviewed-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
There's only one minor functional change, for immediates the pixel offsets
are no longer added since the values are all the same for all elements in
any case (it might be better if those weren't stored as soa vectors in the
first place maybe).
Reviewed-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
After adding $(DEFINES) to AM_CPPFLAGS, the __glXGetCurrentContext
wrapper function is no longer needed and causes compile errors. Using
the correct defines causes it to be a macro!
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
These tests primarilly ensure that the functions added by this extension
don't abuse other interfaces (e.g., glx_screen::query_renderer_integer)
when provided bad data.
These tests helped me find a couple small bugs in the initial
implementation.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
The enumerated values are currently allocated from Intel's range.
v2: Fix a typo. Update the list of functions to which the new enums can
be passed. The "Current" versions were previously missing. Both things
noticed by Marek.
v3: Fix typo in return type of glXQueryRendererIntegerMESA in the spec
body (noticed by Ken). Fix typo in issue #14 referencing itself instead
of issue #13 (noticed by Dave).
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Marek Olšák <marek.olsak@amd.com>
Acked-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
The new functions for this extension were added to a separate file
(dri2_query_renderer.c) to facilitate unit testing. I tried putting
them in dri2_glx.c, and it resulting in an unending chain of
dependencies. It was the proverbial threading hanging from a sweater.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This structures will be accessed by internal functions that will be
added in a file separate from dri2_glx.c. The new code will be added to
a new file to facilitate unit testing.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
v2: Use sysconf instead of sysinfo for improved portability. Suggested
by Ken.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
v2: Use sysconf instead of sysinfo for improved portability. Suggested
by Ken.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
v2: Add assertions that the version string has the expected format.
This will catch build errors (or changes to the version string format)
in debug build without exposing release builds to buffer over-runs.
Suggested by Ken.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This will soon be used in intel_screen.c from a function that doesn't
have a gl_context.
v2: Delete local variables that are now unused. This matches v1 of the
changes to the i915 driver.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This will soon be used in intel_screen.c from a function that doesn't
have a gl_context.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This will soon be used in intel_screen.c from a function that doesn't
have a gl_context.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This will soon be used in intel_screen.c from a function that doesn't
have a gl_context.
v2: Remove spurious break after return.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This will be used to let apps query hardware and driver limits before
creating a GL context.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
If the application requests reset notifiction, connect up the reset
status query method and set gl_context::ResetStrategy.
v2: Update based on kernel interface / libdrm changes.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Soon some drivers will support a different set of flags than other
drivers. If some flags have to be filtered in the driver, we might as
well filter all of them in the driver.
The changes in nouveau use tabs because nouveau seems to have it's own
indentation rules.
v2: Fix some rebase failures noticed by Ken (returning the wrong types,
etc.).
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
No drivers advertise the DRI2 extension yet, so no driver should ever
see a value other than false for notify_reset.
The changes in nouveau use tabs because nouveau seems to have it's own
indentation rules.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Drivers still have to implement dd_function_table::GetGraphicsResetStatus.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
These will be used to determine whether to signal a GPU reset after
another context in the share group has observed a reset.
v2: Change ShareGroupReset from GLboolean to bool. Suggested by Brian.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This allows drivers to determine whether a GPU reset has occured. It
should return non-zero status if a reset was observed by the specified
context. Another mechanism will be used to observe resets occuring in
other contexts in the share group.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This isn't going to be used in the actual implemenation of
glGetGraphicsResetStatus.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
v2: Add comments on the purpose of the auxiliary data structures.
Check for atomic counter overlaps. Use the contains_atomic()
convenience method. Add static assert with the number of expected
shader stages.
v3: Don't resize atomic arrays.
v4: Add comment on the reason why we don't resize atomic counter
arrays. Use 'strcmp(...) == 0' instead of '!strcmp(...)'.
v5 (idr): Don't use STL in the linker.
Signed-off-by: Francisco Jerez <currojerez@riseup.net>
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
v2: Mark atomic counters as read-only variables. Move offset overlap
code to the linker. Use the contains_atomic() convenience method.
v3: Use pointer to integer instead of non-const reference. Add
comment so we remember to add a spec quotation from the next GLSL
release once the issue of atomic counter aggregation within
structures is clarified.
v4 (idr): Don't use std::map because it's overkill. Add an assertion
that ctx->Const.MaxAtomicBufferBindings <= MAX_COMBINED_ATOMIC_BUFFERS.
Signed-off-by: Francisco Jerez <currojerez@riseup.net>
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This reverts most of commit 0f2da77307.
(I chose to leave the additions to brw_defines.h.)
My previous Ironlake implementation was somewhat broken: counter data
was global, rather than per-context. This meant that performance
monitors captured data from your compositor, 2D driver, and other 3D
programs.
Originally, I believed that Sandybridge and later had an easy way to
avoid this problem (setting per-context flags in OACONTROL), while
Ironlake did not. So I'd intended to leave it as a known limitation of
performance monitoring support on Ironlake. However, this turned out
not to be true.
Unfortunately, our hardware only has one set of aggregating performance
counters shared between all 3D programs, and their values are not saved
or restored by hardware contexts. Also, at least on Sandybridge and
Ivybridge, the counters lose their values if the GPU goes to sleep.
To work around both of these problems, we have to snapshot the
performance counters at the beginning and end of each batch, similar to
how we handle query objects on platforms that don't support hardware
contexts.
For occlusion queries, this batch bookending approach is fairly simple:
only one occlusion query can be active at a time, and the result is a
single integer. Performance monitors are more complex: an arbitrary
number of monitors can be active at a time, each monitoring some subset
of our ~30 observability counters. Individual monitors can be started
and stopped at any point during the batch. Tracking where each monitor
started/ended relative to batch flushes ends up being a pain. And you
can run out of space in the buffer.
Properly supporting this required some serious rearchitecting of the
code. Rather than writing patches to try and morph a broken system into
a working one (which operates quite differently), I decided it would be
simplest to revert the old code and start fresh. Parts will look
familiar, but other parts are new.
I also decided it would be best to include Sandybridge and Ivybridge
support from the start, since the newer platforms have added complexity
that I wanted to make sure worked. They're also what most people care
about these days.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Previously, we only exposed them in desktop GL or with:
#extension GL_OES_standard_derivatives : enable
GLSL ES 3.00 includes these without an extension, so we need to expose
them by default.
Note that the above #extension line results in an error or desktop GL,
so we don't need to worry about this.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This just tells the state tracker to turn on the GL_ARB_shader_texture_lod
extension. This simply allows the GLSL compiler to emit TXL and TXD
instructions for both vertex and fragment shaders. We already support
these opcodes in the svga driver. Though, the shadow2DGrad() Piglit
tests are failing.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Improves performance of RoboHornet's 2D Canvas toDataURL benchmark
[http://www.robohornet.org/#e=canvastodataurl] by approximately 5x
on Baytrail on ChromiumOS.
Elapsed time drops by -81.4861% +/- 1.22619% (n=3 s=14.9105, confidence=95%).
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Uses SSE 4.1's MOVNTDQA instruction (streaming load) to read from
uncached memory without polluting the cache.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
This patch make changes to correctly set up the Dispatch GRF Start
Register in case of 'SIMD16 only' FS dispatch.
This fixes an issue of incorrect rendering on dolphin emulator with
GL_SAMPLE_SHADING enabled.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This theoretically works on earlier hardware as well, but the extension
requires at least GL3.0.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
V2: fix interaction with VertexAttribFormat, since that landed after
this was originally written
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
With this patch, the llvmpipe and draw modules will calculate the depth bias
according to floating point depth buffer semantics described in the
arb_depth_buffer_float specification, when the driver has a z buffer bound
with a format type of UTIL_FORMAT_TYPE_FLOAT.
By default, the driver will use the existing UNORM calculation for depth bias.
A new function, draw_set_zs_format, was added to calculate the Minimum
Resolvable Depth value and floating point depth sense for the draw module.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
This brings over the batch-wrap-prevention and aperture space checking
code from the normal brw_draw.c path, so that we don't need to flush the
batch every time.
There's a risk here if the intel_emit_post_sync_nonzero_flush() call isn't
high enough up in the state emit sequences -- before, we implicitly had
one at the batch flush before any state was emitted, so Mesa's workaround
emits didn't really matter. Since the SNB fixes by Ken, I didn't see any
regressions after 3 piglit runs.
Improves cairo-gl performance by 13.7733% +/- 1.74876% (n=30/32)
Improves minecraft apitrace performance by 1.03183% +/- 0.482297% (n=90).
Reduces low-resolution GLB 2.7 performance by 1.17553% +/- 0.432263% (n=88)
Reduces Lightsmark performance by 3.70246% +/- 0.322432% (n=126)
No statistically significant performance difference on unigine tropics
(n=10)
No statistically significant performance difference on openarena (n=755)
The two apps that are hurt happen to include stalls on busy buffer
objects, so I think this is an effect of missing out on an opportune
flush.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
update_array() and update_array_format() are changed to update the new
attrib and binding states, and the client arrays become derived state.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
...and rename it to _mesa_bind_buffer_gen().
This is so the function can be called from _mesa_BindVertexBuffer().
This patch also adds a caller parameter so we can report the right
entry point in error messages.
Based on a patch by Eric Anholt.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This will become derived state as part of the ARB_vertex_attrib_binding
support.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Split out the code for updating the array format into a new function
called update_array_format(). This function will be called by both
update_array() and the new glVertexAttrib*Format() entry points in
ARB_vertex_attrib_binding.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Currently, has_surface_tile_offset is equivalent to gen == 4 && !is_g4x.
We already use it for related checks in brw_wm_surface_state.c, so it
makes sense to use it here too. It's simpler and more future-proof.
Broadwell also lacks surface tile offsets. With this patch, I won't
need to update any generation checking; I can simply not set the flag.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Hardware docs say we can only use SIMD8 dispatch in this condition.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
We weren't adding the soa offsets when constructing the indices
for the gather functions. That meant that we were always returning
the data in the first element.
(Copied straight from the same fix for temps.)
While here fix up a couple of broken comments in the fetch functions,
plus don't name a straight float type float4 which is just confusing.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Otherwise OutputSurface interop has funny results sometimes.
This fixes interop with the mpv media player.
v2 (chk): add proper locking
Signed-off-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
V2: Add comment explaining what emit_alpha_test() is for;
fix spurious temp and bogus whitespace.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The same setup is required here as when the user-provided shader
explicitly uses KIL or discard.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
We have to do this in the shader instead, since these gens lack an
independent RT0 alpha value in their render target write messages.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Now that brw_update_texture_buffer_surface() uses the virtual
emit_buffer_surface_state() function, it works for Gen7+ too.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Now that brw_create_constant_surface uses a virtual function internally,
it doesn't need to be virtual itself. We can delete the Gen7+ variant
and simplify things.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This will allow us to combine the Gen4-6 and Gen7 variants of these
functions.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This entails adding "mocs" and "rw" parameters to the Gen4-5 version.
I made it actually pay attention to the rw flag (even though it is
always false), but mocs is always ignored.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
fix: intel_screen.c:1320:4: warning: initialization from
incompatible pointer type [enabled by default]
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Before the series with 3c9dc2d31b to
dynamically assign our binding table indices, we didn't really track our
binding table count per shader, so we never filled in these fields.
Affects cairo-gl trace runtime by -2.47953% +/- 1.07281% (n=20)
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
SSE can't handle true vector shifts (with variable shift count),
so llvm is turning them into a mess of extracts, scalar shifts and inserts.
It is however possible to emulate them in lp_build_minify with float muls,
which should be way faster (saves over 20 instructions per 8-wide
lp_build_minify). This wouldn't work for "generic" 32bit shifts though
since we've got only 24bits of mantissa (actually for left shifts it would
work by using sse41 int mul instead of float mul but not for right shifts).
Note that this has very limited scope for now, since this is only used with
per-pixel lod (otherwise we're avoiding the non-constant shift count by doing
per-quad shifts manually), and only 1d textures even then (though the latter
should change).
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This will enable removing the dd_function_table::Scissor hook in the
near future.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Francisco Jerez <currojerez@riseup.net>
This will enable removing the dd_function_table::DepthRange hook in the
near future.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Francisco Jerez <currojerez@riseup.net>
The x, y, width, and height parameters aren't used by radeon_viewport,
so don't pass them. This should make future changes to the
dd_function_table::Viewport interface a little easier.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jljusten@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Cc: Courtney Goeltzenleuchter <courtney@lunarg.com>
The i830 and the i915 driver have the same dd_function_table::Viewport
function... it just has two names and lives in two places. Using a
single implementation allows cleaning up the saved_viewport nonsense
too.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jljusten@gmail.com>
Cc: Courtney Goeltzenleuchter <courtney@lunarg.com>
The i965 driver never installed a dd_function_table::Viewport function,
so this wrapper never actually did anything.
No piglit regressions on IVB on DRI2.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jljusten@gmail.com>
Cc: Courtney Goeltzenleuchter <courtney@lunarg.com>
* Goodbye BeOS, we hardly knew thee
* As BeOS was gcc2 only, there was little chance
of this being useful.
* Doesn't effect Haiku in any meaningful way
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Previously, when packing geometry shader input varyings like this:
in float foo[3];
in float bar[3];
lower_packed_varyings would declare a packed varying like this:
(declare (shader_in flat) (array ivec4 3) packed:foo[0],bar[0])
That's confusing, since the packed varying acutally stores all three
values of foo and all three values of bar.
This patch causes it to generate the more sensible declaration:
(declare (shader_in flat) (array ivec4 3) packed:foo,bar)
Note that there should be no functional change for users of geometry
shaders, since the packed name is only used for generating debug
output. But this should reduce confusion when using INTEL_DEBUG=gs.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
* Call mesa viewport call on winndow resize
* Add initial postprocessing code
* Pass hgl_context to private statetracker
as it is more useful than GalliumContext
* Use Lock and Unlock functions to standardize
GalliumContext locking
* Create texture resources in texture validation
Acked-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
The changes between Gen6-7 are minimal, and can easily be solved with
an extra generation check. This cuts a lot of duplicated code.
It also helps prevent even more duplication for Broadwell.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The latency information has been obtained empirically from
measurements taken on Haswell and Ivy Bridge.
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This can deal with all the 15 32-bit untyped atomic operations the
hardware supports, but only INC and PREDEC are going to be exposed
through the API for now.
v2: Represent atomics as GLSL intrinsics. Add support for variably
indexed atomic counter arrays.
v3: Add comment on why we don't need to assign uniform storage for
atomic counters.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This can deal with all the 15 32-bit untyped atomic operations the
hardware supports, but only INC and PREDEC are going to be exposed
through the API for now.
v2: Represent atomics as GLSL intrinsics. Add support for variably
indexed atomic counter arrays. Fix interaction with fragment
discard.
v3: Add comment on why we don't need to assign uniform storage for
atomic counters.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This patch fixes the three dead code elimination passes and the
VEC4/FS instruction scheduling passes so they leave instructions with
side effects alone.
At some point it might be interesting to have the instruction
scheduler calculate the exact memory dependencies between atomic ops,
but they're rare enough that it seems unlikely that it will make any
practical difference.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Inspired by a patch sent to the mailing list by Tom Stellard, but
using a different algorithm to calculate the optimal block size that
has been found to be considerably more effective.
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
dso_list was added as an argument for createInternalizePass in 3.4, and then
it was removed again in the same llvm version.
Tested-by: Mike Lothian <mike@fireburn.co.uk>
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
The new option clamps GL_MAX_SAMPLES to a hardware-supported MSAA mode.
If negative, then no clamping occurs.
v2: (for Paul)
- Add option to i965 only, not to all DRI drivers.
- Do not realy on int->uint cast to convert negative
values to large positive values. Explicitly check for
clamp_max_samples < 0.
v3: (for Ken)
- Don't allow clamp_max_samples to alter context version.
- Use clearer for-loop and correct comment.
- Rename variables.
v4: (for Ken)
- Merge identical if-branches.
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Actually link VS out / FS in based on semantic info, keeping in mind
that position/pointsize can also be an input to the FS. This fixes a
few fragment shaders which were using gl_Position.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robclark@freedesktop.org>
Fixes use of full-precision in fragment shader (ie. don't clobber r0.x
since that can be used by future bary instructions for varying fetch).
And makes use of full-precision the default in fragment shader (but can
be overriden via FD_MESA_DEBUG=fraghalf).
Seems like half precision is often not enough for texture coordinates.
The blob compiler is clever enough to keep texture coords in full
precision registers while using half precision for everything else. But
we aren't quite that clever yet, so better to default to full precision.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robclark@freedesktop.org>
Handle some relative addressing constraints: cannot handle const or
relative in cat5 and src2 of cat3.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robclark@freedesktop.org>
- Enable GEN7_WM_MSDISPMODE_PERSAMPLE, GEN7_WM_POSOFFSET_SAMPLE,
GEN7_WM_OMASK_TO_RENDER_TARGET as per extension's specification.
- Only enable one of GEN7_WM_8_DISPATCH_ENABLE or GEN7_WM_16_DISPATCH_ENABLE
when GEN7_WM_MSDISPMODE_PERSAMPLE is enabled. Refer IVB PRM Vol. 2, Part 1,
Page 288 for details.
V2:
- Use shared function _mesa_get_min_invocations_per_fragment().
- Use brw_wm_prog_data variables: uses_pos_offset, uses_omask.
V3:
- Enable simd16 dispatch with per sample shading.
- Make changes to give preference to 'simd16 only' mode over
'simd8 only' mode in case of non 1x per sample shading.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
- Enable GEN6_WM_MSDISPMODE_PERSAMPLE, GEN6_WM_POSOFFSET_SAMPLE,
GEN6_WM_OMASK_TO_RENDER_TARGET as per extension's specification.
- Only enable one of GEN6_WM_8_DISPATCH_ENABLE or GEN6_WM_16_DISPATCH_ENABLE
when GEN6_WM_MSDISPMODE_PERSAMPLE is enabled.
Refer SNB PRM Vol. 2, Part 1, Page 279 for details.
V2:
- Use shared function _mesa_get_min_invocations_per_fragment().
- Use brw_wm_prog_data variables: uses_pos_offset, uses_omask.
V3:
- Enable simd16 dispatch with per sample shading.
- Make changes to give preference to 'simd16 only' mode over
'simd8 only' mode in case of non 1x per sample shading.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
V2:
- Update comments
- Add a special backend instructions to compute sample_mask.
- Add a new variable uses_omask in brw_wm_prog_data.
V3:
- Make changes to support simd16 mode.
- Delete redundant AND instruction and handle the register
stride in FS backend instruction.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
V2:
- Update comments
- Add compute_sample_id variables in brw_wm_prog_key
- Add a special backend instruction to compute sample_id.
V3:
- Make changes to support simd16 mode.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This is required while adding builtin system value vec{2, 3, 4}
variables. For example:
(declare (sys) vec2 gl_SamplePosition)
Without this patch above glsl ir splits in to:
(declare (temporary) float gl_SamplePosition_x)
(declare (temporary) float gl_SamplePosition_y)
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This function is used to test if we need to do per sample shading or
per fragment shading.
V2: Use MAX2() to make sure the function returns a number >= 1.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
New builtins added by GL_ARB_sample_shading:
in vec2 gl_SamplePosition
in int gl_SampleID
in int gl_NumSamples
out int gl_SampleMask[]
V2: - Use SWIZZLE_XXXX for STATE_NUM_SAMPLES.
- Use "result.samplemask" in arb_output_attrib_string.
- Add comment to explain the size of gl_SampleMask[] array.
- Make gl_SampleID and gl_SamplePosition system values.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Number of samples will be required in fragment shader program by new
GLSL builtin uniform "gl_NumSamples".
V2: Use "state.numsamples" in place of "state.num.samples"
Use _NEW_BUFFERS flag in place of _NEW_MULTISAMPLE
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <idr@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Ken Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
New functions added by GL_ARB_sample_shading:
glMinSampleShadingARB()
New enums:
GL_SAMPLE_SHADING_ARB
GL_MIN_SAMPLE_SHADING_VALUE_ARB
V2: Update comments.
Create new GL4x.xml.
Remove redundant code in get.c.
Update the API_XML list in Makefile.am.
Add extra_gl40_ARB_sample_shading predicate to get.c.
V3:
Fix make check failure.
Add checks for desktop GL.
Use GLfloat in place of GLclampf in glMinSampleShading().
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ken Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This patch implements the common support code required for the
GL_ARB_sample_shading extension.
V2: Move GL_ARB_sample_shading to ARB extension list.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <idr@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Ken Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Only one program's instruction count is changed, but a shader in Tropics
is also affected.
instructions in affected programs: 326 -> 320 (-1.84%)
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
total instructions in shared programs: 1409124 -> 1406971 (-0.15%)
instructions in affected programs: 158376 -> 156223 (-1.36%)
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Helps a lot of Steam games.
total instructions in shared programs: 1409360 -> 1409124 (-0.02%)
instructions in affected programs: 20842 -> 20606 (-1.13%)
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This only operates on constant/uniform values for now, because otherwise I'd
have to deal with killing my available CSE entries when assignments happen,
and getting even this working in the tree ir was painful enough.
As is, it has the following effect in shader-db:
total instructions in shared programs: 1524077 -> 1521964 (-0.14%)
instructions in affected programs: 50629 -> 48516 (-4.17%)
GAINED: 0
LOST: 0
And, for tropics, that accounts for most of the effect, the FPS
improvement is 11.67% +/- 0.72% (n=3).
v2: Use read_only field of the variable, manually check the lod_info union
members, use get_num_operands(), rename cse_operands_visitor to
is_cse_candidate_visitor, move all is-a-candidate logic to that
function, and call it before checking for CSE on a given rvalue, more
comments, use private keyword.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Prior to the GLSL CSE pass, all of our testing happened to have a freshly
computed temporary in op[1], from the multiply by 16 to get a byte offset.
As of CSE you'll get var_refs of a reused value when you've got multiple
loads from the same offset.
Make a proper temporary for computing our temporary value, to avoid
shifting the value farther and farther down. Avoids a regression in
gs-float-array-variable-index
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Previously, the write of each 32-bit half might land in separate batch
buffers, which is insane.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
This depends on ARB_transform_feedback2, so I've predicated it on the
ability to do register writes.
It also depends on ARB_transform_feedback3, which is the only reason we
couldn't expose it previously.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This extension is written a bit strangely. Although it introduces the
concept of multiple transform feedback streams, it doesn't actually
provide more than a single stream.
The ARB_gpu_shader5 extension is what introduces the ability to write to
streams other than stream #0 and increases the required number of streams.
Since we don't yet support ARB_gpu_shader5, we can safely enable
ARB_transform_feedback3 even though we only support a single stream.
This does provide some useful functionality: applications can now use
more than one interleaved transform feedback buffer.
v2: Only expose the extension if ARB_transform_feedback2 is also
available, to avoid confusing applications (suggested by Ian).
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
ARB_transform_feedback3 allows applications to insert blank space
between interleaved varyings by adding fake 1, 2, 3, or 4-component
varyings named gl_SkipComponents[1234].
Mesa's core data structures don't explicitly track these, instead simply
tracking the buffer offset for each real varying. If there is padding
due to gl_SkipComponents, these will not be contiguous.
Our hardware takes the specification quite literally. Instead of
specifying offsets for each varying, it assumes they're all contiguous
and requires you to program fake varyings for each "hole".
This patch adds support for emitting SO_DECL structures for these holes.
Although we've lost the information about exactly how the application
specified their padding (i.e. gl_SkipComponents2, gl_SkipComponents2
vs. a single gl_SkipComponents4), it shouldn't matter. We just need to
emit the right amount of space. This patch emits the minimal number of
hole SO_DECL structures.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Currently, we emit one SO_DECL structure per output, so we use the index
in the Outputs[] array as the index into the so_decl[] array as well.
In order to support the fake "gl_SkipComponents[1234]" varyings from
ARB_transform_feedback3, we'll need to emit SO_DECLs to fill in the
holes between successive outputs. This means we'll likely emit more
SO_DECLs than there are outputs, so we need to count it explicitly.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
With Linux 3.12, register writes work on Ivybridge and Baytrail, but not
Haswell. That will be fixed in a future kernel revision, at which point
this extension will automatically be enabled.
v2: Use I915_GEM_DOMAIN_INSTRUCTION for the register read, and also
correctly set the writeable flag when mapping (caught by Eric).
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
We only want to enable ARB_transform_feedback2 if we can write to
registers from batchbuffers. In order to test that, we need to be able
to submit batches. And for batches to work, we need to program the
initial pipeline state (like PIPELINE_SELECT), which is done from
brw_state_init().
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Implementing the GetTransformFeedbackVertexCount() driver hook allows
the VBO module to call us with the right number of vertices.
The hardware doesn't directly count the number of vertices written by
SOL, so we instead use the SO_NUM_PRIMS_WRITTEN(n) counters and multiply
by the number of vertices per primitive.
Unfortunately, counting the number of primitives generated is tricky:
a program might pause a transform feedback operation, start a second one
with a different object, then switch back and resume. Both transform
feedback operations share the SO_NUM_PRIMS_WRITTEN counters.
To work around this, we save the counter values at Begin, Pause, Resume,
and End. This "bookends" each section where transform feedback is
active for the current object. Adding up differences of pairs gives
us the number of primitives generated. (This is similar to what we
do for occlusion queries on platforms without hardware contexts.)
v2: Fix missing parenthesis in assertion (caught by Eric Anholt).
v3: Reuse prim_count_bo rather than freeing it and immediately
allocating a new one (suggested by Topi Pohjolainen).
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Renaming it makes it obvious that it isn't used, and the assertion
verifies that the VBO module never passes us such an object.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
DrawTransformFeedback() needs to obtain the number of vertices written
to a particular stream during the last Begin/EndTransformFeedback block.
The new driver hook returns exactly that information.
Gallium drivers already implement this by passing the transform feedback
object to the drawing function, counting the number of vertices written
on the GPU, and using draw indirect. This is efficient, but doesn't
always work:
If vertex data comes from user arrays, then the VBO module needs to
know how many vertices to upload, so we need to synchronously count.
Gallium drivers are currently broken in this case.
It also doesn't work if primitive restart is done in software. For
normal drawing, vbo_draw_arrays() performs software primitive restart,
splitting the draw call in two. vbo_draw_transform_feedback() currently
doesn't because it has no idea how many vertices need to be drawn.
The new driver hook gives it that information, allowing us to reuse
the existing vbo_draw_arrays() code to do everything right.
On Intel hardware (at least Ivybridge), using the draw indirect approach
is difficult since the hardware counts primitives, rather than vertices,
which requires doing some simple math. So we always use this hook.
Gallium drivers will likely want to use this hook in some cases, but
want to use the existing draw indirect approach where possible. Hence,
I've added a flag to allow drivers to opt-in to this call.
v2: Make it possible to implement this hook but only use this path
when necessary (suggested by Marek).
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <marek.olsak@amd.com>
The ARB_transform_feedback2 extension introduces the ability to pause
and resume transform feedback sessions. Although only one can be active
at a time, it's possible to switch between multiple transform feedback
objects while paused.
In order to facilitate this, we need to save/restore the SO_WRITE_OFFSET
registers so that after resuming, the GPU continues writing where it
left off.
This functionality also exists in ES 3.0, but somehow we completely
forgot to implement it.
v2: Reduce alignment from 4096 to 64 (it seemed excessive).
v3: Use I915_GEM_DOMAIN_INSTRUCTION instead of RENDER, for consistency
with other writes. It shouldn't matter on IVB+.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This adds the basic driver hooks to allocate/free the brw variant.
It doesn't contain any additional information yet, but it will soon.
v2: Use the new _mesa_init_transform_feedback_object helper function
(requested by Eric and Ian).
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This picks up a missing obj->EverBound = GL_FALSE line, and will catch
any new fields that get added in the future.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <marek.olsak@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Both Gallium and i965 subclass gl_transform_feedback_object, which
requires implementing a custom NewTransformFeedback hook. Creating a
helper function to initialize the fields avoids code duplication and
divergence.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <marek.olsak@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
We'd like to CSE some instructions, like CMP, that often have null
destinations. Instead of replacing them with MOVs to null, just don't
emit the MOV.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This avoids a lot of message setup we had to do otherwise. Improves
GLB2.7 performance with register spilling force enabled by 1.6442% +/-
0.553218% (n=4).
v2: Use BRW_PREDICATE_NONE, improve a comment (by Paul).
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
We were clearing the reg_offset before trying to use it. Oops. Fixes
glsl-fs-texture2drect with the reg spilling debug enabled.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Things blew up when I enabled the debug register spill code without
disabling 16-wide, so I decided to just fix 16-wide spilling.
We still don't generate 16-wide when register spilling happens as part of
allocation (since we expect it to be slower), but now we can experiment
with allowing it in some cases in the future.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
I believe this will never happen in SIMD8 mode, but it could for SIMD16
when we fix it.
v2: Fix off-by-one in my register counting comment (caught by Paul).
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com> (v1)
Now that reg spilling generates new vgrfs, we were looping forever if you
ever turned it on.
Instead, move the debug code into the register allocator right near where
we'd be doing spilling anyway, which should more accurately reflect how
register spilling occurs in the wild.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
I'm going to need to reuse this for fixing register spilling on SIMD16.
Note that BRW_MAX_MRF is 16, which is the same as BRW_MAX_GRF -
GEN7_MRF_HACK_START.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
The ICD loader should be responsible for installing headers.
Reviewed and Tested-by: Aaron Watry <awatry@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Francisco Jerez <currojerez@riseup.net>
When faced with a million instructions that all became candidates at the
same time (none of which individually reduce register pressure), the ones
on the critical path are more likely to be the ones that will free up some
candidates soon.
shader-db:
total instructions in shared programs: 1681070 -> 1681070 (0.00%)
instructions in affected programs: 0 -> 0
GAINED: 40
LOST: 74
Fixes indistinguishable-from-hanging behavior in GLES3conform's
uniform_buffer_object_max_uniform_block_size test, regressed by
c3c9a8c857. Given that
93bd627d5a was unlocked by that commit, the
net effect on 16-wide program count is still quite positive, and I think
this should give us more stable scheduling (less dependency on original
instruction emit order).
v2: Comment suggestions by Paul
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=70943
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This is a step in doing scheduling as described in Muchnick (p538). A
difference is that our latency function is only specific to one
instruction (it doesn't describe, for example, the different latency
between WAR of a send's arguments and RAW of a send's destination), but
that's changeable later. We also don't separately compute the postorder
traversal of the graph, since we can use the setting of the delay field as
the "visited" flag.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Commit aec20d66d9
(automake: properly handle non-default expat installation),
assumed that up-to date distributions use a recent version
of expat that handles security vunerabilities CVE-2012-1147
and CVE-2012-1148. Seems like this is not always the case
and they prefer to backport only the fix, rather than use
the updated library.
This commit adds a default case -lexpat whenever expat is
not found, while properly handling expat.pc if present.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=71022
Reported-By: Bryce Harrington <b.harrington@samsung.com>
Reported-By: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Tested-by: Bryce Harrington <b.harrington@samsung.com>
Signed-off-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
This will simplify the addition of layout(location) qualifiers for
separate shader objects. This was validated with new piglit tests
arb_explicit_attrib_location/1.30/compiler/not-enabled-01.vert and
arb_explicit_attrib_location/1.30/compiler/not-enabled-02.vert.
v2: Refactor error checking to check_explicit_attrib_location_allowed
and eliminate the gotos. Suggested by Paul.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Use mode_string to get the name of the variable mode. Slightly change
the control flow. Both of these changes make it easier to support
separate shader object location layouts.
The format of the message changed because mode_string can return a
string like "shader output". This would result in an awkward message
like "vertex shader shader output..."
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
I made this a function (instead of a method of ir_variable) because it
made the change set smaller, and I expect that there will be an overload
that takes an ir_var_mode enum. Having both functions used the same way
seemed better.
v2: Add missing case for ir_var_system_value.
v3: Change the ir_var_mode_count case to just break. Move the assertion
and the return outside the switch-statment. In the unlikely event that
var->mode is an invalid value other than ir_var_mode_count, the
assertion will still fire, and in release builds we won't wind up
returning a garbage pointer. Suggested by Paul.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Since the separation of ir_var_function_in and ir_var_shader_in (similar
for out), this check is no longer necessary. Previously, global_scope
was the only way to tell which was which.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Future patches will add some extra code to this path, and some of that
code will want to exit from the explicit location code early.
v2: Change a geometry shader "break" to a "return" so that try to apply
a bogus geometry shader location qualifier (which could cause cascading
errors). Suggested by Paul.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
The return value has been unused since commit d348b0c. This was
originally included in another patch, but it was split out by Ian
Romanick.
v2: Drop unnecessary final return. Suggested by Paul.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Cc: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Incremental builds were failing because not all generated source files
were missing dependencies to src/mapi/glapi/gen/*.xml.
Hopefully this change will be the end of these incremental build
failures.
This avoids a defect in lower_output_reads.
The problem is lower_output_reads treats the gl_FragData array as a single
variable. It first redirects all output writes to a temporary variable (array)
and then writes the whole temporary variable to the output, generating
assignments to all elements of gl_FragData.
BTW this pass can be modified to lower all arrays, not just inputs and outputs.
The question is whether it is worth it.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
v2: addressed Paul Berry's comments
Use PKG_CHECK_MODULE over requesting the user to setup the
option at configure time. Drop unused EXPAT_INCLUDE and
update all targets.
NOTE: The this commit removes the --with-expat configure
option. One should ensure that the expat they wish to use
has expat.pc file accessible by pkg-config.
v2:
* Add note about the removal of --with-expat
(per Tom Stellard)
* Drop EXPAT_CFLAGS for targets that do not build DRI_COMMON
(spotted by Matt Turner)
v3:
* Rebase on top of megadrivers (drop EXPAT_CFLAGS from swrast)
Acked-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com> (v2)
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com> (v2)
Signed-off-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
Conflicts:
configure.ac
src/mesa/drivers/dri/common/Makefile.am
The function should have never used it in the first place as it was
a left over from the DRI1 days of the nouveau ddx. While we're around
check if KMS is supported before opening the nouveau device, and
add support for Fermi & Kepler cards.
Compile tested only due to the lack of a Fermi/Kepler card.
Signed-off-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
The function xf86GetEntityInfo() retrieves the entity rather than
doing any changes. Remove this no-op code.
Signed-off-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
v2: Remove xf86PciInfo.h, all drivers provide their own PCI ID list
Signed-off-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
A convenient front end to indices generate/translate code, for emulating
primitives which are not supported natively by the driver.
This handles saving/restoring index buffer state, etc.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robclark@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
The idea of the original order was that you'd dead code eliminate accesses
to push constants. But I've never seen a case of that (nor has
shader-db), while we frequently see sparse accesses of large constant
arrays that would overflow into pull constants.
Cuts pull constant use on csgo, serious sam, planeshift, and the cave:
total instructions in shared programs: 1695103 -> 1688795 (-0.37%)
instructions in affected programs: 92024 -> 85716 (-6.85%)
GAINED: 339
LOST: 0
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
* Use more consistant data sources
* Fix improper color space assignments
* Remove unnecessary comments and code
* Drop unnecessary round_up function (this was leftover
from moving winsys code out of renderer)
Acked-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
* Instead of assuming the displaytarget is the same
stride / colorspace as the destination, lets
actually check the source bitmap.
* Fixes random stride issues in rendering
Acked-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
The MRF variant is going to be used extensively by the atomic counter
intrinsics to assemble untyped atomic and surface read messages
easily.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
The maximum number of atomic buffer objects is somewhat arbitrary, we
can change it in the future easily if it turns out it's not enough...
v2: Add comments with the relevant mesa dirty bits. Fix usage of
BRW_NEW_UNIFORM_BUFFER in the GS ABO state atom.
v3: Update binding table layout diagrams.
v4: Resolve conflicts with the recent dynamic surface index assignment changes.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Almost a trivial change, it boils down to renaming a few identifiers
so their names still make sense for opaque types other than sampler.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Fix the linker to deal with intrinsic functions which are undefined
all the way down to the driver back-end, and introduce intrinsic
definition helpers in the built-in generator.
We still need to figure out what kind of interface we want for drivers
to communicate to the GLSL front-end which of the supported intrinsics
should use a default GLSL implementation and which should use a
hardware-specific override. As there's no default GLSL implementation
for atomic ops, this seems like something we can worry about later on.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
v2: Define local helper function to generate ir_call nodes in the
builtin generator.
And use it to forbid comparisons of opaque operands. According to the
GL 4.2 specification:
> Except for array indexing, structure member selection, and
> parentheses, opaque variables are not allowed to be operands in
> expressions.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
v2: Fix GLSL version in which the type became available. Add
contains_atomic() convenience method. Split off atomic counter
comparison error checking to a separate patch that will handle all
opaque types. Include new ir_variable fields for atomic types.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This patch implements the common support code required for the
ARB_shader_atomic_counters extension. It defines the necessary data
structures for tracking atomic counter buffer objects (from now on
"ABOs") associated with some specific context or shader program, it
implements support for binding buffers to an ABO binding point and
querying the existing atomic counters and buffers declared by GLSL
shaders.
v2: Fix extension checks. Drop unused MAX_ATOMIC_BUFFERS constant.
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Add XML file for the dispatch code generator, update the
dispatch_sanity test and add stub definition for the new entry point.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
These ralloc contexts belong to a specific object and are being
deallocated manually from the class destructor. Now that we've hooked
up destructors to ralloc there's no reason for them to be children of
any other context, and doing so might to lead to double frees under
some circumstances. The class destructor has all the responsibility
of freeing class memory resources now.
This patch makes sure that class destructors are called as they should
be when a C++ object allocated by ralloc is released.
Based on a previous patch by Kenneth Graunke, but it doesn't exhibit
the ~0.8% performance regression in shader compilation times because
we now use the HAS_TRIVIAL_DESTRUCTOR() macro to detect the typical
case where the indirect function call can be avoided because the
object's destructor doesn't need to do anything.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Only implemented on GCC and Clang for now. Other compilers use a
dummy implementation that always returns false, which should be a safe
[but slightly inefficient] assumption in all cases.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This will let us use strcasecmp() from anywhere inside Mesa without
having to worry about the fact that it doesn't exist in MSVC.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
The layer coming from GS needs to be clamped (not sure if that's actually
the correct error behavior but we need something) as the number can be higher
than the amount of layers in the fb. However, this code was using the layer
calculation from the scene, and this was actually calculated in
lp_scene_begin_rasterization() hence too late (so setup was using the value
from the _previous_ scene or just zero if it was the first scene).
Since the value is used in both rasterization and setup, move calculation up
to lp_scene_begin_binning() though it's a bit more inconvenient to calculate
there. (Theoretically could move _all_ code which was in
lp_scene_begin_rasterization() to there, because ever since we got rid of
swizzled render/depth buffers our "map" functions preparing the fb data for
render don't actually change the data in there at all, but it feels like
it would be a hack.)
v2: improve comments
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Before we were only checking the st->vertex_array_out_of_memory flag
after updating array state. But if there's two consecutive glDrawArrays
calls and the first one is skipped because of OOM, the second one should
be skipped too.
Cc: 9.2 <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <marek.olsak@amd.com>
Orbital Explorer was generating a 4000 instruction geometry shader, which
was taking 275 trips through dead code elimination and register
coalescing, each of which updated live variables to get its work done, and
invalidated those live variables afterwards.
By using bitfields instead of bools (reducing the working set size by a
factor of 8) in live variables analysis, it drops from 88% of the profile
to 57%, and reduces overall runtime from I-got-bored-and-killed-it (Paul
says 3+ minutes) to 10.5 seconds.
Compare to f179f419d1 on the FS side.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This prevents unnecessary (and wrong) register allocation in the
scheduler for preloaded values in fixed registers.
Fixes interpolation-mixed.shader_test on rv770
(and probably on all other pre-evergreen chips).
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Andreas Boll <andreas.boll.dev@gmail.com>
I noticed this in a shader in Unigine Heaven that was spilling. While it
doesn't really reduce register pressure, it shaves a few instructions
anyway (7955 -> 7882).
v2: Fix turning "0 >> x" into "x" instead of "0" (caught by Erik
Faye-Lund).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
While ir_builder is slightly less efficient, we're only increasing the
work when there's actual optimization being done, and it's way more
readable code.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Matt and I had each screwed up these common required patterns recently, in
ways that wouldn't have been noticed for a long time if not for code
review. Just enforce it in the caller so that we don't rely on code
review catching these bugs.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
There is nothing in the OpenGL specification which prevents the user from
calling glGenQueries to generate a new query object while another object is
active. Neither is there anything in the Mesa implementation which prevents
this. So remove the INVALID_OPERATION errors in this case.
Similarly, it is explicitly allowed by the OpenGL specification to delete an
active query, so remove the assertion for that case, replacing it with the
necesssary state updates to end the query, (clear the bindpt pointer and call
into the driver's EndQuery hook).
CC: <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Tested-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
The normal drawing path does this, and it's necessary on Ivybridge,
so let's try it on Sandybridge too. It's not explicitly documented
as necessary, but might help with hangs.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Tested-by: Xinkai Chen <yeled.nova@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Cc: "9.2" <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
From the documentation:
"[DevIVB] 3DSTATE_DEPTH_BUFFER must always be programmed along with the
other Depth/Stencil state commands(i.e. 3DSTATE_CLEAR_PARAMS,
3DSTATE_STENCIL_BUFFER, or 3DSTATE_HIER_DEPTH_BUFFER)."
We normally do this, but BLORP was failing to do so in the case where it
disables depth.
Not observed to fix anything yet.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Tested-by: Xinkai Chen <yeled.nova@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Cc: "9.2" <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
For some reason, we put the flush in the caller, rather than just before
emitting the packet. This is more than a cosmetic problem: BLORP calls
gen6_emit_3dstate_multisample() directly, and so it missed the flush.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Tested-by: Xinkai Chen <yeled.nova@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Cc: "9.2" <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
From the comments above intel_emit_post_sync_nonzero_flush:
"[DevSNB-C+{W/A}] Before any depth stall flush (including those
produced by non-pipelined state commands), software needs to first
send a PIPE_CONTROL with no bits set except Post-Sync Operation != 0."
This suggests that every non-pipelined (0x79xx) command needs a
post-sync non-zero flush before it.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Tested-by: Xinkai Chen <yeled.nova@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Cc: "9.2" <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
Otherwise the gen6 w/a in the kernel won't kick in and the write will
land nowhere.
Inspired by a patch Ken pointed me at which had the same issue (but
isn't yet merged and also for a gen7+ feature). An audit of the entire
driver didn't reveal any other case than the one in in the write_reg
helper used by the gen6 queryobj code.
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
Tested-by: Xinkai Chen <yeled.nova@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Cc: "9.2" <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
The main purpose of this patch is to increase readability of
the array code by introducing is_unsized_array() to glsl_types.
Some redundent is_array() checks are also removed, and small number
of other related clean ups.
The introduction of is_unsized_array() should also make the
ARB_arrays_of_arrays code simpler and more readable when it arrives.
V2: Also replace code that checks for unsized arrays directly with the
length variable
Signed-off-by: Timothy Arceri <t_arceri@yahoo.com.au>
v3 (Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>): clean up formatting.
Separate whitespace cleanups to their own patch.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
When a geometry shader is present, the fragment shader gl_PrimitiveID
input acts like an ordinary varying, receiving data from the gs
gl_PrimitiveID output. When there's no geometry shader, we have to
ask the fixed function SF hardware to provide the primitive ID to the
fragment shader instead.
Previously, the SF setup code would handle this situation by
recognizing that the FS gl_PrimitiveID input didn't match to any VS
output; since normally an FS input with no corresponding VS output
leads to undefined data, the SF setup code used to just arbitrarily
assign it to receive data from attribute 0.
This patch changes the SF setup code so that instead of arbitrarily
using attribute 0, it assigns the unmatched FS input to receive
gl_PrimitiveID. In the case where the FS input really is
gl_PrimitiveID, this produces the intended result. In all other
cases, no harm is done since GL specifies that the behaviour is
undefined.
Fixes piglit test primitive-id-no-gs.
v2: If an attribute is already being overridden with point
coordinates, don't try to also override it with gl_PrimitiveID. This
is necessary to avoid regressing piglit tests such as
shaders/glsl-fs-pointcoord.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
v2: Actually implement interop between the gallium
state tracker and the VDPAU backend.
v3: Make it also available in non legacy contexts,
fix video buffer sharing.
v4: deny interop if we don't have the same screen object
v5: rebased on upstream changes
v6: implemented VDPAUGetSurfaceivNV, improved error handling,
unregister all surfaces in VDPAUFiniNV
v7: squash merge with Mareks changes
Signed-off-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
ir_txf expects an ivec* coordinate, and may be larger than ivec2;
shuffle things around so that this will work.
V2: Fix style nits, use ir_builder
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
It turns out that nonzero offsets with gsampler2DRect don't work -- they
just return garbage. Work around this by folding the offset into the
coord.
Done as an IR pass rather than yet another hack in the visitors because
it's clear what's going on this way. Can possibly reuse this to replace
the existing txf coord+offset hacks.
V2: Use ir_builder
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We don't have a message that does 4 independent offsets; a lowering
pass needs to lower it to 4 normal gather4s before reaching this
point.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Note that gather4_po_c's parameters are too long for SIMD16. It might be
worth emitting 2xSIMD8 messages in this case at some point.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
gather4_c's argument layout is straightforward -- refz just goes on the
end.
gather4_po_c's layout however -- the array index is replaced with refz.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
ARB_gpu_shader5's textureGather*() functions which take shadow samplers
have a separate `refz` parameter rather than adding it to the
coordinate.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
V3: fixup crazy check for whether we need to emit the coordinate after
custom handling.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Some texturing ops are about to have nonconstant offset support; the
offset in the header in these cases should be zero.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
The generator code ends up clearer this way than if we had to sniff
via the message length. Implemented via the gather4_po message in
hardware, which is present in Gen7 and later.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Prior to ARB_gpu_shader5 / GLSL 4.0, the offset is required to be
a constant expression.
With that extension, it is relaxed to be an arbitrary expression.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Since 062317d667 (i965: Go back to using the kernel SOL reset feature.)
we've been flushing the batch on BeginTransformFeedback(). So it's not
necessary to do it on EndTransformFeedback(). A PIPE_CONTROL will work.
This makes gen7_end_transform_feedback() exactly the same as the gen6
variant. However, they'll diverge again shortly.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This was a hack to avoid choosing to schedule all texturing before
consumption of any texture results due to the way dependency chains worked
out in the presence of MRFs. On gen7, we don't have MRFs, so the problem
doesn't apply, and this was just badly constraining our scheduling.
total instructions in shared programs: 1615306 -> 1612534 (-0.17%)
instructions in affected programs: 9958 -> 7186 (-27.84%)
GAINED: 259
LOST: 9
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
The LIFO plan was simple: Take the most recently made available
instructions, and pick those first.
But because of the order we were pushing things onto our list of
available-to-schedule instructions, it meant that when a set of
instructions was made available at the same time (for example, everything
at the start of the program that didn't depend on other instructions) we'd
schedule them in reverse order.
If you had 10 texture calls in a row in your program, each with
independent argument setup, we'd set up the last texture call's args and
execute it first, even though we wouldn't be able to consume its results
until we'd finished the other 9 texture calls (assuming consumption of
texture results happens near each texture call, and combines it with
another texture result, which is normal for a convolution shader).
To fix this, walk the list for doing LIFO in the order that instructions
were originally generated in the program, but choose to push
newly-made-available instructions to the other end of the list instead.
total instructions in shared programs: 1587242 -> 1586290 (-0.06%)
instructions in affected programs: 7801 -> 6849 (-12.20%)
GAINED: 76
LOST: 67
Thanks to Chia-I Wu for pointing out the bug in my first version of the
patch that made it a huge loss.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
When PIPE_CAP_MIXED_FRAMEBUFFER_SIZES is not provided, parts of
ARB_framebuffer_object can't be supported, such as on NV30.
Signed-off-by: Ilia Mirkin <imirkin@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Marek Olšák <marek.olsak@amd.com>
This CAP will determine whether ARB_framebuffer_object can be enabled.
The nv30 driver does not allow mixing swizzled and linear zsbuf/cbuf
textures.
Signed-off-by: Ilia Mirkin <imirkin@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Marek Olšák <marek.olsak@amd.com>
In commit 1b4a737 (glsl: Support redeclaration of VS and GS
gl_PerVertex output), I added code to ensure that when an unnamed
gl_PerVertex interface block is redeclared, any ir_variables that
weren't included in the redeclaration are removed from the IR (and the
symbol table). This ensures that only those variables that were
explicitly redeclared may be used.
However, when I wrote this code, I neglected to match the variable
mode when finding variables to remove. This meant that redeclaring a
built-in output block might cause the built-in input gl_in to be
accidentally removed.
Fixes piglit test gs-redeclares-pervertex-out-only.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
The GLSL 4.10 rules for redeclaration of built-in interface blocks
(which we've chosen to regard as clarifications of GLSL 1.50) only
require gl_PerVertex blocks to match in shaders that actually use
those blocks. The easiest way to implement this is to detect
situations where a compiled shader doesn't refer to any elements of
gl_PerVertex, and remove all the associated ir_variables from the
shader at the end of ast-to-ir conversion.
Fixes piglit tests
linker/interstage-{pervertex,pervertex-in,pervertex-out}-redeclaration-unneeded.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Normally when a built-in array (such as gl_ClipDistance) is
redeclared, we call get_variable_being_redeclared() to do the
redeclaration, and it in turn calls check_builtin_array_max_size() to
make sure that the redeclared array size isn't too large.
However when a built-in array is redeclared as part of redeclaring
gl_in, we don't call get_variable_being_redeclared() (since the
individual built-ins aren't each represented by their own ir_variable
anymore). So we need to add an explicit call to
check_builtin_array_max_size() to make sure the new array size isn't
too large.
Note: at the moment this is redundant with a test that's done at link
time, so there's no change to piglit results. But the patch that
follows will prevent link errors from being reported if gl_PerVertex
isn't used, so in order to prevent that patch from causing
regressions, we need to add the compile check now. Besides, it's
nicer to report this error at compile time anyhow.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
The queries GEOMETRY_VERTICES_OUT, GEOMETRY_INPUT_TYPE, and
GEOMETRY_OUTPUT_TYPE (defined by GL 3.2) differ from the corresponding
queries in ARB_geometry_shader4 in the following ways:
- They use different enum values
- They can only be queried; they cannot be set.
- Attempting to query them yields INVALID_OPERATION if the program is
not linked, or lacks a geometry shader.
This patch switches us over from the ARB_geometry_shader4 behaviour to
the GL 3.2 behaviour.
Fixes piglit test query-gs-prim-types.
v2: Improve comment above has_core_gs.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
When program_resource_visitor visits variables that were created by
lower_named_interface_blocks, it needs to do extra work to un-do the
effects of lower_named_interface_blocks and construct the proper API
names.
Fixes piglit test
spec/glsl-1.50/execution/interface-blocks-api-access-members.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
These variables will need to be treated specially by
program_resource_visitor, so that they can be addressed through the
API using their interface block name (and array index, for interface
block arrays).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Later patches will use this information to do proper error checking of
interpolation qualifiers that appear inside of interface blocks.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
In future patches, we will need this in order to interpret
interpolation qualifiers that appear inside interface blocks.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Although in principle there is no hardware limitation that prevents
gl_MaxGeometryInputComponents from being set to 128 on Gen7, we have
the following limitations in the vec4 compiler back end:
- Registers assigned to geometry shader inputs can't be spilled or
later re-used for any other purpose.
- The last 16 registers are set aside for the "MRF hack", meaning they
can only be used to send messages, and not for general purpose
computation.
- Up to 32 registers may be reserved for push constants, even if there
is sufficient register pressure to make this impractical.
A shader using 128 geometry input components, and having an input type
of triangles_adjacency, would use up:
- 1 register for r0 (which holds URB handles and various pieces of
control information).
- 1 register for gl_PrimitiveID.
- 102 registers for geometry shader inputs (17 registers per input
vertex, assuming DUAL_INSTANCED dispatch mode and allowing for one
register of overhead for gl_Position and gl_PointSize, which are
present in the URB map even if they are not used).
- Up to 32 registers for push constants.
- 16 registers for the "MRF hack".
That's a total of 152 registers, which is well over the 128 registers
the hardware supports.
Fortunately, the GLSL 1.50 spec allows us to reduce
gl_MaxGeometryInputComponents to 64. Doing that frees up 48
registers, brining the total down to 104 registers, leaving 24
registers available to do computation.
Fixes piglit test
spec/glsl-1.50/execution/geometry/max-input-components.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This is similar to what we do for 16-wide vs 8-wide fragment shaders.
First we try compiling the geometry shader in DUAL_OBJECT mode. If we
can't do that without spilling, we fall back on DUAL_INSTANCED mode,
which should require less spilling (since it uses an interleaved
layout of payload registers).
In an ideal world we'd fall back to SINGLE mode, which would allow us
to interleave general-purpose registers too (resulting in even less
likelihood of spilling). But at the moment, the vec4 generator and
visitor classes don't have the infrastructure to interleave general
purpose registers, so DUAL_INSTANCED is the best we can do.
As a side benefit this paves the way for implementing instanced
geometry shaders (which are incompatible with DUAL_OBJECT mode).
Since most geometry shaders used in piglit testing are small,
DUAL_INSTANCED mode won't get exercised very much in a normal piglit
run. To force DUAL_INSTANCED mode to be used for all geometry
shaders, set INTEL_DEBUG=nodualobj.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Geometry shaders that run in "DUAL_INSTANCED" mode store their inputs
in vec4's. This means that when compiling gl_PointSize input
swizzling (a MOV instruction which uses a geometry shader input as
both source and destination), we need to do two things:
- Set force_writemask_all to ensure that the MOV happens regardless of
which channels are enabled.
- Set the source register region to <4;4,1> (instead of <0;4,1> to
satisfy register region restrictions.
v2: move the source register region fixup to the top of
vec4_generator::generate_vec4_instruction(), so that it applies to all
instructions rather than just MOV.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
In future patches, this will allow us to first try compiling a
geometry shader in DUAL_OBJECT mode (which is more efficient but uses
more registers) and then if spilling is required, fall back on
DUAL_INSTANCED mode.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Otherwise the scheduler would be invoked with prog_data->total_grf ==
0, causing havoc.
In a future patch, this will allow us to try compiling a geometry
shader in DUAL_OBJECT mode with spilling disabled, and then fall back
to DUAL_INSTANCED mode if that failed.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
When geometry shaders are operated in "single" or "dual instanced"
mode, a single set of geometry shader inputs is interleaved into the
thread payload (with each payload register containing a pair of
inputs) in order to save register space.
This patch modifies vec4_visitor::lower_attributes_to_hw_regs so that
it can handle the interleaved format.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
All geometry shaders begin this instruction:
mov(1) g0.2<1>:ud 0x0:ud { align1 }
which sets up GRF0 properly for scratch reads and writes. Since this
instruction has a SIMD size of 1, it will only have an effect if the
first channel is enabled. In practice, the hardware seems to always
dispatch geometry shaders with the first channel enabled, but I can't
find anything in the docs to guarantee that.
So to be on the safe side, set force_writemask_all on the instruction,
which guarantees that it will have the desired effect regardless of
which channels are enabled.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
When lower_named_interface_blocks lowers a built-in interface block
member to an ir_variable, it needs to set explicit_location in the
ir_variable. Otherwise the linker gets confused and treats the
variable as a generic varying.
Fixes the following piglit tests, which were regressed by commit
63974c0 (glsl: Simplify the interface to
link_invalidate_variable_locations):
- clip-distance-bulk-copy
- clip-distance-in-bulk-read
- clip-distance-in-explicitly-sized
- clip-distance-in-param
- clip-distance-in-values
- core-inputs
- gs-redeclares-both-pervertex-blocks
- gs-redeclares-pervertex-in-only
- redeclare-pervertex-subset-vs-to-gs
- unsized-in-named-interface-block-gs
- unsized-in-named-interface-block-multiple
- unsized-in-unnamed-interface-block-gs
- unsized-in-unnamed-interface-block-multiple
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=70820
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This should never have been in the program key in the first place,
since it's determined by the shader source, not by GL state. Change
the code to just refer to gl_program::UsesClipDistanceOut directly.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This will make it easier for back-ends to share code between geometry
shader and vertex shader compilation. Also, it is renamed to
"UsesClipDistanceOut" to clarify that (a) in geometry shaders, it
refers to the gl_ClipDistance output rather than the gl_ClipDistance
input, and (b) it is irrelevant in fragment shaders.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Since gl_ClipDistance is lowered from an array of floats to an array
of vec4's during compilation, transform feedback has special logic to
keep track of the pre-lowered array size so that attempting to perform
transform feedback on gl_ClipDistance produces a result with the
correct size.
Previously, this special logic always consulted the vertex shader's
size for gl_ClipDistance. This patch fixes it so that it uses the
geometry shader's size for gl_ClipDistance when a geometry shader is
in use.
Fixes piglit test spec/glsl-1.50/transform-feedback-type-and-size.
v2: Change the type of LastClipDistanceArraySize to "unsigned", and
clarify the comment above it.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
We've always overriden
ctx->Const.{Vertex,Fragment}Program.MaxTextureImageUnits to reflect
the number of texture image units supported by the hardware (rather
than using the default values assigned by Mesa core) so it seems
sensible to do that for GeometryProgram.MaxTextureImageUnits too. We
set it to 0 if geometry shaders aren't supported.
Once that is done, we can just unconditionally add
GeometryProgram.MaxTextureImageUnits to MaxCombinedTextureImageUnits.
Fixes piglit test "spec/glsl-1.50/built-in
constants/gl_MaxCombinedTextureImageUnits".
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
The encoding of constant, relative, and relative-const src registers is
a bit more complex than originally thought, which gives an extra bit to
encode const reg # at expense of taking a bit from relative offset.
In most cases a3xx seems to actually use a scheme whereby it can encode
an extra bit for const register. You have three possible encodings in
thirteen bits:
register: (11 bits for N.c)
00........... rN.c
relative: (10 bits for N)
010.......... r<a0.x + N>
011.......... c<a0.x + N>
const: (12 bits for N.c)
1............ cN.c
Which means we can deal w/ more consts than previously thought.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robclark@freedesktop.org>
d3d10 requires that cube corners are filtered with accurate weights (that
is, the weight of the non-existing corner texel should be evenly distributed
to the other 3 texels). OpenGL does not require this (but recommends it).
This requires us to use different filtering code, since we need per-texel
weights which our 2d lerp doesn't (and can't) do. And of course the (now
per element) weights need to be adjusted too for it to work.
Invoke the new filtering code whenever there's an edge to keep things simpler,
as it will work for edges too not just corners but of course it's only needed
with corners.
More ugly code for not much gain but at least a hacked up cubemap demo
shows very nice corners now... Not sure yet if and how this should be
configurable...
v2: incorporate feedback from Jose, only use special corner filtering code
when there's a corner not when there's only an edge (as corner filtering code
is slower, though a perf difference was only measureable when always
forcing edge code). Plus some minor style fixes.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
No driver uses it any more, and it's been replaced by megadrivers.
v2: Remove always-on conditional for NEED_LIBPROGRAM (review by Emil)
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com> (v1)
Reviewed-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
v2: drop dridir now that it's unused.
v3: Fix linking after rebase when building just swrast from classic but a
drm-using gallium driver.
v4: Consistently put spaces around += in the updated Makefile.am block.
v5: Set a global driverAPI variable so loaders don't have to update to
createNewScreen2() (though they may want to for thread safety).
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com> (v3)
Reviewed-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
This required some reordering of headers to ensure that the symbol name
redefines happened before any prototypes.
v2: drop dridir now that it's unused.
v3: Consistently put spaces around += in the updated Makefile.am blocks.
v4: Set a global driverAPI variable so loaders don't have to update to
createNewScreen2() (though they may want to for thread safety).
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com> (v2)
Reviewed-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
i915 has symbols for formerly-shared code that conflict with i965, so we
define them away using gen-symbol-redefs.py. Options considered:
- This option. Downsides: The symbols in profiling and debugging don't
match the source. The symbol list may change in the future and we won't
notice without manually running the tool again.
- Use objcopy --localize-hidden to automatically demote our symbols to
locals. This didn't work on i965 due to c++ weak symbols (which can't
be localized), but could work on i915. We could do it on i915 only, but
it does produce libtool warnings at link time due to libtool not knowing
if the resulting .o file is safe to link (stupid libtool). Plus you end
up with different symbols of the same name, which is confusing for
debugging too. On the other hand, no future symbol conflicts long term.
- Write our own libelf tool that handles c++ weak symbols like we want and
apply it to all drivers. All the downsides of above, but applies
uniformly across drivers.
- Edit the files to just rename all the i915 or i965 symbols that
conflict. There are on the order of 100 that have a prefix we used to
share, so it would take a bit of typing. Fewest downsides, but still
can have conflicts long term.
Ultimately, this is the least invasive change at the moment, and we can
see if the "more symbol conflicts appear later" thing is a real concern or
not.
Note that the ability to compile a version of i915 without INTEL_DEBUG env
support is dropped. It's too useful.
v2: drop dridir now that it's unused.
v3: Consistently put spaces around += in the updated Makefile.am block.
v4: Set a global driverAPI variable so loaders don't have to update to
createNewScreen2() (though they may want to for thread safety).
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com> (v2)
Reviewed-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
v2: drop dridir now that it's unused.
v3: Consistently put spaces around += in the updated Makefile.am block.
v4: Set a global driverAPI variable so loaders don't have to update to
createNewScreen2() (though they may want to for thread safety).
v5: Fix missed public symbol in nouveau. (caught by Emil)
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com> (v2)
Reviewed-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
Previously, we've split things such that mesa core is in libdricore,
exposing the whole Mesa core interface in the global namespace, and the
i965_dri.so code all links against that. Along with polluting application
namespace terribly, it requires extra PLT indirections and prevents LTO.
Instead, we can build all of the driver contents into the same .so with
just a few symbols exposed to be referenced from the actual driver .so
file, allowing LTO and reducing our exposed symbol count massively.
FPS improvement on GLB2.7 with INTEL_NO_HW=1: 2.61061% +/- 1.16957% (n=50)
(without LTO, just the PLT reductions from this commit)
Note that the X Server requires commit
7ecfab47eb221dbb996ea6c033348b8eceaeb893 to successfully load this driver!
v2: Set a global driverAPI variable so loaders don't have to update to
createNewScreen2() (though they may want to for thread safety).
v3: Drop AM_CPPFLAGS addition (Emil pointed out I'd missed some cflags
that would be necessary, though only if we actually relied on them).
v4: Fix install with DESTDIR set.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com> (v1)
Reviewed-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com> (v2)
As we move to megadrivers, we are unable to build multiple drivers with
the same public global symbol per driver (Think an X Server with an intel
and a nouveau driver, and the X Server implementing indirect for both --
we have to actually talk to the right driver). By slipping the
driDriverAPI vtable into the driver's extension list, we can replace the
usage of the global symbol with usage of the loader-dlsym()ed driver
information.
v2: Pull in the hunk to avoid crashing on null driver_extensions. Thanks,
Emil!
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com> (v1)
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
This will allow a megadrivers build to reference the actual driver being
loaded from the shared dri_util screen creation code.
v2: Fix indentation, fallback case in EGL (review by Emil).
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com> (v1)
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com> (v1)
Reviewed-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
The previous interface relied on a static struct, which meant that the
driver didn't get a chance to edit the struct before the struct got used.
For megadrivers, I want struct specific to the driver being loaded.
v2: Fix the prototype in the docs (caught by Marek). Since the driver
name was in the function, we didn't need to also pass it in.
v3: Fix asprintf error checking (caught by Matt's gcc).
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com> (v1)
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
Turns out already we have this nice mechanism for providing optional
things from the driver to the loader, and I was going to have to rename
the public global symbol to avoid conflicts when doing megadrivers.
While the former __driConfigOptions is technically loader interface, this
is the only loader that made use of that symbol. Continue paying
attention to it if we can't find the new option, to retain compatibility
with old drivers.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
Based on a similar fix from Aaron Watry. It seems unlikely that we
will ever need a kernel-specific setting for this, and the Gallium API
doesn't support it. Remove kernel::max_block_size() altogether.
The gallium vbuf module, which we've been using for some time now, takes
care of uploading user-space vertex/index data into real buffers. The
upload code in the svga driver was unused.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Print info about packing, format, type, and tiling. This will help debug
future issues with this fastpath.
Reviewed-by: Frank Henigman <fjhenigman@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Fixes texture corruption of Weston clients on cairo-glesv2 backend.
Commit 49ed599 introduced the bug.
Corruption occured when glTexSubImage called
intel_texsubimage_tiled_memcpy() with:
x,y=10,9
w,h=7,7
format=GL_ALPHA(0x1906)
type=GL_UNSIGNED_BYTE(0x1401)
gl_format=MESA_FORMAT_A8(0x18)
packing.alignemnt=4
The function miscalculated the source image's stride as w*cpp=7 without
taking into account the packing alignment. The actual stride was 8.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=70435
Reported-by: U. Artie Eoff <ullysses.a.eoff@intel.com>
Tested-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
Reviewed-by:Frank Henigman <fjhenigman@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
In commit 800610f (i965/fs: Improve accuracy of dFdy() to match
dFdx()) I unrolled the high-accuracy dFdy() computation from a single
SIMD16 instruction to two SIMD8 instructions because of text I found
in the i965 (gen4) PRM saying that instruction compression could not
be used in align16 mode. I couldn't find similar text in later
hardware docs, and I observed problems trying to use instruction
compression on align16 mode on Ivy Bridge, so I assumed that the
restriction still applied and the associated documentation had simply
been lost.
After consultation with the hardware engineers, it turns out this is
not the case. In point of fact, the restriction was dropped in gen5,
re-introduced in Ivy Bridge, and dropped again in Haswell. The reason
I didn't notice this is that in the Ivy Bridge documentation, the
restriction was in a different section, and described using different
language.
Now that we know that the restriction only applies to Gen4 and Ivy
Bridge, we can limit the unrolling to those platforms.
Tested on gen5, gen6, and gen7 (both Ivy Bridge and Haswell).
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
From the GLSL 1.50 spec, section 4.3.8.1 (Input Layout Qualifiers):
The layout qualifier identifiers for geometry shader inputs are
layout-qualifier-id
points
lines
lines_adjacency
triangles
triangles_adjacency
And from section 4.3.8.2 (Output Layout Qualifiers)
The layout qualifier identifiers for geometry shader outputs are
layout-qualifier-id
points
line_strip
triangle_strip
max_vertices = integer-constant
We were erroneously allowing line_strip and triangle_strip to be used
as input qualifiers, and we were allowing lines, lines_adjacency,
triangles, and triangles_adjacency to be used as output qualifiers.
Fixes piglit tests "glsl-1.50-gs-{input,output}-layout-qualifiers *".
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
On DOTA2, framerate on dota2-de1.dem in windowed mode on my laptop
improves by 7.69854% +/- 0.909163% (n=3). In a microbenchmark hitting
this code path (wall time of piglit vbo-subdata-many), runtime decreases
from 0.8 to 0.05 seconds.
v2: Use out of range start/end instead of separate bool for the active
flag (suggestion by Jordan), fix double-upload in the stalling path.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
The brw_prepare_vertices that sets up buffers[] depends on these
parameters, so don't let brw_prepare_vertices() skip it.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Supporting this extension turns out to simplify our code a bit over not
supporting this extension, once the glBufferSubData() synchronization code
lands.
v2: Use 16 byte alignment like we do for uniform buffers, due to unaligned
access penalties.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com> (v1)
This was mostly for the i915 system-memory VBO code, which we don't have
any more, but since that existed we've ended up producing dependencies on
it being there.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
If glBufferData(), glBufferSubData(0, obj->Size), or similar happens, we
get a new drm_intel_bo for the buffer object, and thus need to re-upload
texture buffer state so we point at the new data.
Fixes the new piglit GL_ARB_texture_buffer_object/data-sync
Cc: "9.2" <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
The new function replaces four old functions: set_fragment/vertex/
geometry/compute_sampler_views().
Note: at this time, it's expected that the 'start' parameter will
always be zero.
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <marek.olsak@amd.com>
Tested-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
Writing a 64-bit register value to memory is sufficiently complicated
that it makes sense to reuse this function rather than duplicating it.
Exposing it outside of gen6_queryobj.c means it needs a more descriptive
function name. It could probably be moved to brw_util.c or somewhere
else, but this works too.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The current callers just want to write a single register, so combining
the register read with a pipeline flush made sense. However, in the
future we'll want to do multiple register reads back to back, and we'll
only want to flush once.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The unit tests added in the previous commits prove some things about the
state of some internal data structures. The most important of these is
that all built-in input and output variables have explicit_location
set. This means that link_invalidate_variable_locations doesn't need to
know the range of non-generic shader inputs or outputs. It can simply
reset location state depending on whether explicit_location is set.
There are two additional assumptions that were already implicit in the
code that comments now document.
- ir_variable::is_unmatched_generic_inout is only used by the linker
when connecting outputs from one shader stage to inputs of another
shader stage.
- Any varying that has explicit_location set must be a built-in. This
will be true until GL_ARB_separate_shader_objects is supported.
As a result, the input_base and output_base parameters to
link_invalidate_variable_locations are no longer necessary, and the code
for resetting locations and setting is_unmatched_generic_inout can be
simplified.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Validates:
- ir_variable::explicit_location should not be modified.
- If ir_variable::explicit_location is not set, ir_variable::location,
ir_variable::location_frac, and
ir_variable::is_unmatched_generic_inout must be reset to 0.
- If ir_variable::explicit_location is set, ir_variable::location
should not be modified. ir_variable::location_frac, and
ir_variable::is_unmatched_generic_inout must be reset to 0.
Previous unit tests have shown that all non-generic inputs / outputs
have explicit_location set.
v2: Split the link_invalidate_variable_locations interface change out to
a separate patch. Remove the vertex_in_builtin_without_explicit and
vertex_out_builtin_without_explicit tests. There was a lot of good
discussion about this on the mailing list to which I refer the
interested reader. Both changes suggested by Paul.
http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/mesa-dev/2013-October/046652.html
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This will make it easier to unit test this function in successive
patches. Also, correct the prototype in linker.h. It was... wrong.
v2: Split the interface change from adding the unit tests. Suggested by
Paul.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Checks that the variables generated meet certain criteria.
- Geometry shader inputs have an explicit location.
- Geometry shader outputs have an explicit location.
- Fragment shader-only varying locations are not used.
- Geometry shader uniforms and system values don't have an explicit
location.
- Geometry shader constants don't have an explicit location and are
read-only.
- No other kinds of geometry variables exist.
It does not verify that an specific variables exist.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Checks that the variables generated meet certain criteria.
- Fragment shader inputs have an explicit location.
- Fragment shader outputs have an explicit location.
- Vertex / geometry shader-only varying locations are not used.
- Fragment shader uniforms and system values don't have an explicit
location.
- Fragment shader constants don't have an explicit location and are
read-only.
- No other kinds of fragment variables exist.
It does not verify that an specific variables exist.
v2: Use _mesa_varying_slot_in_fs in
fragment_builtin.inputs_have_explicit_location. Suggested by Paul.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Checks that the variables generated meet certain criteria.
- Vertex shader inputs have an explicit location.
- Vertex shader outputs have an explicit location.
- Fragment shader-only varying locations are not used.
- Vertex shader uniforms and system values don't have an explicit
location.
- Vertex shader constants don't have an explicit location and are
read-only.
- No other kinds of vertex variables exist.
It does not verify that an specific variables exist.
v2: Fix memory management mistakes in
common_builtin::string_starts_with_prefix. Clean up error message
reporting in common_builtin::no_invalid_variable_modes. Both suggested
by Paul.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Ever since the addition of interface blocks with instance names, we have
had an implicit invariant:
var->type->is_interface() ==
(var->type == var->interface_type)
The odd use of == here is intentional because !var->type->is_interface()
implies var->type != var->interface_type.
Further, if var->type->is_array() is true, we have a related implicit
invariant:
var->type->fields.array->is_interface() ==
(var->type->fields.array == var->interface_type)
However, the ir_variable constructor doesn't maintain either invariant.
That seems kind of silly... and I tripped over it while writing some
other code. This patch makes the constructor do the right thing, and it
introduces some tests to verify that behavior.
v2: Add general-ir-test to .gitignore. Update the description of the
ir_variable invariant for arrays in the commit message. Both suggested
by Paul.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
After some discussions about the correct way to update
_mesa_program_state_string, I decided to make a unit test for the
function. It turns out that the function didn't work quite the way I
thought. The unit test proves that the code was already correct.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Cc: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Silence a bunch of MSVC type conversion warnings.
Changed return type of S_FIXED to int32_t (signed). The result
is the same. It just seems more intuitive that a signed conversion
function should return a signed value.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This extension never saw any real use so remove it.
v2: also update tests/num_strings.cpp for 'make check'
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Dead code elimination would get rid of the extra instructions, but
skipping this saves iterations through the optimization loop.
From shader-db:
N Min Max Median Avg Stddev
x 14672 3 16 3 3.1334515 0.59904168
+ 14672 1 16 3 2.8955153 0.77732963
Difference at 95.0% confidence
-0.237936 +/- 0.0158798
-7.59342% +/- 0.506783%
(Student's t, pooled s = 0.693935)
Embarassingly, the classic shadow mapping shader:
void main() { }
used to require three iterations through the optimization loop.
With this patch, it only requires one (which makes no progress).
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Previously one side could be UD while the other was float.
V2: Prefer float; apparently IVB can dispatch float ops faster. (Thanks
Eric)
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Gather unconditionally uses a header, but in some cases the
texture_offset value will be zero.
V2: Don't introduce a bogus conversion.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Previously, Mesa followed the linkage rules outlined in the GLSL
1.20-1.40 specs, which (collectively) said that GLSL versions 1.10 and
1.20 could be linked together, but no other versions could be linked.
In GLSL 4.30, the linkage rules were relaxed so that any two desktop
GLSL versions can be linked together. This change was made because it
reflected the behaviour of nearly all existing implementations (see
Khronos bug 8463). Mesa was one of the few (perhaps the only)
exceptions to prohibit cross-linking of some GLSL versions.
Since the GLSL linkage rules were deliberately relaxed in order to
match the behaviour of existing implementations, it seems appropriate
to relax the rules in Mesa too (even though Mesa doesn't support GLSL
4.30 yet).
Note that linking ES and desktop shaders is still prohibited, as is
linking ES shaders having different GLSL versions.
Fixes piglit tests "shaders/version-mixing {interstage,intrastage}".
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Identifiers with double underscores are reserved, and using them has
undefined behavior according to the C++ spec. It's unlikely to make
any difference, but...
Tested-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
For seamless cube filtering it is necessary to determine new faces and new
coords per sample. The logic for this is _seriously_ complex (what needs
to happen is very "asymmetric" wrt face, x/y under/overflow), further
complicated by the fact that if the 4 samples are in a corner (meaning we
only have actually 3 samples, and all 3 are on different faces) then
falling off the edge is happening _both_ on x and y axis simultaneously.
There was a noticeable performance hit in mesa's cubemap demo when seamless
filtering was forced on (just below 10 percent or so in a debug build, when
disabling all filtering hacks, otherwise it would probably be a bit more) and
when always doing the logic, hence use a branch which it only does it if any
of the pixels in a quad (or in two quads) actually hit this. With that there
was no measurable performance hit in the cubemap demo (neither in a debug nor
release buidl), but this will vary (cubemap demo very rarely hits edges).
Might also be different on other cpus, as this forces SoA sampling path which
potentially can be quite a bit slower.
Note that as for corners, this code gets all the 3 samples which actually
exist right, and the 4th texel will simply be the same as one of the others,
meaning that filter weights will be a bit wrong. This however should be
enough for full OpenGL (but not d3d10) compliance.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Using atomic function for ncs is superfluous since it is
protected by a mutex anyway. Also lock the mutex only once
while retrieving the next CS for submission.
Signed-off-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <marek.olsak@amd.com>
Fixes this build error.
CC clientattrib.lo
In file included from ../../include/GL/glx.h:333,
from glxclient.h:45,
from clientattrib.c:32:
../../include/GL/glxext.h:275: error: redefinition of typedef ‘GLXContextID’
../../include/GL/glx.h:171: note: previous declaration of ‘GLXContextID’ was here
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=70591
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Everything necessary for these appears to be implemented. We'll want to
add more tests to guard against bugs, but it should be functionally
complete.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
translate_sse.c contains code for msabi on x86_64, but it appears to be
untested.
Currently arguments 1 and 2 passed to the generated code are moved as 32-bit
quantities into the registers used by sysvabi, irrespective of the architecture.
Since these may be pointers, they must be moved as 64-bit quantities to avoid
truncation.
Commit f4dd099171 disabled tranlate_sse.c on MinGW
x86_64, I don't know if was due to this issue, or a different one...
Signed-off-by: Jon TURNEY <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Cygwin also uses the msabi calling convention on x86_64, not the sysvabi calling
convention
Signed-off-by: Jon TURNEY <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
ignored, and an empty message aborts the commit.
The heap is NX on 64-bit Cygwin, so use the rtasm_exec_malloc() implementation
which uses mmap() to allocate an anonymous page with execute permission, rather
than the one which just uses malloc().
Signed-off-by: Jon TURNEY <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
With most of the virtual functions gone, brwInitVtbl() is now tiny.
Merging it into the caller allows us to delete the entire file.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Now that i915 and i965 have been split, the separation between
intelDestroyContext and brw_destroy_context is kind of arbitrary.
This patch replaces the only brw->vtbl.destroy() call with the body
of brw_destroy_context (the only implementation of that virtual
function).
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
dri_bo_release is a helper function that calls drm_intel_bo_unreference
but then also sets the pointer to NULL. This is unnecessary, since
brw_destroy_context is called from intelDestroyContext, which also frees
brw completely.
If you're still trying to access them, you've got bigger problems.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Having almost the entire body of the function indented one level for a
check that should never happen seems silly. Just early return.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Since the i915/i965 split, there's only one implementation of this
virtual function. We may as well just call it directly.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Since the i915/i965 split, there's only one implementation of this
virtual function. We may as well just call it directly.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
In commit f878d20 (glsl: Update ir_variable::max_ifc_array_access
properly), I accidentally used the wrong kind of check to determine
whether the variable being accessed was an interface instance (I used
var->get_interface_type() != NULL when I should have used
var->is_interface_instance()). As a result, if an unnamed interface
block contained a struct which contained an array,
update_max_array_access() would mistakenly interpret the struct as a
named interface block and try to dereference a null
var->max_ifc_array_access.
This patch corrects the check, fixing the null dereference.
Fixes piglit test interface-block-struct-nesting.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=70368
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
In desktop GLSL, location qualifiers are case-insensitive. In GLSL
ES, they are case-sensitive. This patch handles the difference by
using a new function to match layout qualifiers,
match_layout_qualifier(), which calls either strcmp() or strcasecmp()
as appropriate.
Fixes piglit tests:
- layout-not-case-sensitive-in.geom
- layout-not-case-sensitive-max-vert.geom
- layout-not-case-sensitive-out.geom
- layout-not-case-sensitive.frag
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This fixes a number of piglit crashes when running on a hacked up llvmpipe.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This just adds the missing bits so the ubo tests don't crash.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
From the ARB_geometry_shader4 spec (section Geometry Shader outputs):
"The built-in special variable gl_Position is intended to hold the
homogeneous vertex position. Writing gl_Position is optional."
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
v2 (Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>: Split out to separate patch
(previously this was part of "glsl: add builtins for geometry
shaders.")
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Exposing 10-bit color configs confuses too many applications that try to
use the chooser to pick an 8 bit config. The chooser consider an fbconfig
with more bits a better match and will thus give a 10 bit config when an
application asks for a config with GLX_RED_SIZE 1 or 8.
One key example is glxinfo, which does this, and then doesn't specify that
it needs a config where GLX_DRAWABLE_TYPE has the GLX_WINDOW_BIT set.
This way it ends up with a 10 bit config that it can't use to create a
GLX window and fails to log extensions.
This reverts commit f354bcc177.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=70557
We can't perform DCE using the liveness pass between GVN and GCM
because it relies on the correct schedule, but GVN doesn't care about
preserving correctness - it's rescheduled later by GCM.
This patch makes dce_cleanup pass perform simple DCE
between GVN and GCM instead of relying on liveness pass.
Fixes https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=70088
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
Two extra instructions in some heroesofnewerth shaders, but a win for
everything else.
total instructions in shared programs: 1531352 -> 1530815 (-0.04%)
instructions in affected programs: 121898 -> 121361 (-0.44%)
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This reverts commit 94d05bf87a as it has a
few problems:
- it breaks windows builds becuase env[LLVM_CXXFLAGS] is never set there
- it is merging not only rtti, but the whole cxxflags (defines etc)
which has proven to be a source of troubles (breaks debugging etc.)
This is required in order for clang to correctly handle the OpenCL C
barrier() builtin which has the following restrictions acording to
the OpenCL 1.1 Specification:
If barrier is inside a conditional statement, then all work-items must
enter the conditional if any work-item enters the conditional statement
and executes the barrier.
If barrier is inside a loop, all work-items must execute the barrier for
each iteration of the loop before any are allowed to continue execution
beyond the barrier.
By linking before otimizations, we can replace calls to barrier() with
calls to a target specific intrinsic which has the noduplicate attribute
This attribute prevents clang from performing optimizations which could
violate the above rules.
This attribute must be applied to the call instruction that invokes
the function, so it is not enough to add this attribute the barrier()
declaration.
As a bonus this will probably speed up compile times since we will no
longer need to run link-time optimizations.
During the recent bind_sampler_states() interface change in gallium
we changed the CSO single_sampler_done() function so that if we were
decreasing the number of sampler states bound in the driver, we'd
null-out the "extra/old" sampler states to unbind them. See commit
1e2fbf265.
However, we didn't make the corresponding fix for sampler views.
This caused an assertion to fail in the svga driver which checked
that the number of sampler views matched the number of sampler states.
This patch fixes cso_restore_sampler_views() so that it nulls-out
the extra/old sampler views if the number of new views is less than
the number of current/old views.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Use GL_MAP_INVALIDATE_RANGE, UNSYNCHRONIZED and FLUSH_EXPLICIT flags
when mapping VBOs during display list compilation. This mirrors what
we do for immediate-mode VBO building in vbo_exec_vtx_map().
This improves performance for applications which interleave display
list compilation with execution. For example:
glNewList(A);
glBegin/End prims;
glEndList();
glCallList(A);
glNewList(B);
glBegin/End prims;
glEndList();
glCallList(B);
Mesa's vbo module tries to combine the vertex data from lists A and B
into the same VBO when there's room. Before, when we mapped the VBO for
building list B, we did so with GL_MAP_WRITE_BIT only. Even though we
were writing to an unused part of the buffer, the map would stall until
the preceeding drawing call finished.
Use the extra map flags and FlushMappedBufferRange() to avoid the stall.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Instead of checking width==height in four places, just do it in
_mesa_legal_texture_dimensions() where we do the other width, height,
depth checks. Similarly, move the check that cube map array depth is
a multiple of 6.
This change also fixes some missing cube dimension checks for the
glTexStorage[23]D() functions.
Remove width==height assertion in _mesa_get_tex_max_num_levels() since
that's called before the other size checks for glTexStorage.
Cc: "9.2" <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
We can now add GBM support for the 10 bit/channel formats which lets us
create a gbm surface that we can use with KMS for display hardware that
support the format.
Signed-off-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
We add support for the ARGB2101010 color format to the DRI image extension,
which allows DRI loaders to create a __DRIimage with this color format.
Signed-off-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
This commit enables ARGB2101010 system framebuffers (that is, DRI drawables)
for the i965 drivers. This is done by generating DRI configs that advertise
this color format as well as teaching intelCreateBuffer to pick the right
color format when it sees such a DRI config.
Signed-off-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
This extends the common dri driver infrastructure with the ability to create
__DRIconfigs for 10 bits/channel + 2 bit alphs formats. This still has
to be supported and requested by a driver, so this doesn't enable anthing yet.
Signed-off-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
The EGLConfig doesn't have the rgba masks, only the rgba sizes. To
make sure a config is usable with a given GBM/KMS format, we need a way
to make sure the formats really match.
All callers now use the more correct rgba mask mechanism for filtering
out mathcing DRI configs. Even if depth and buffer size match, the
color component layout can be different, or in case or ARGB8888 and
ARGB2101010 the color components can even be different sizes.
Since anything that the depth check would reject is also rejected by
the rgba mask comparison, the depth parameter is redundant and not
specific enough. We should probably have removed it when the rgba
masks argument was introduced, but better late than never.
Signed-off-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
Matching on visual depth to buffer size makes 8 bpc RGBA look similar to
10 bit RGB with 2 bit alphs - both have buffer size 32. Instead, build
the rgba masks from the visual data and use that for finding matching
DRI configs.
We need to keep the special case that allows us to match 24 bit visuals
to DRI configs with buffer size 32. We do that by creating an alpha
mask of "all the non-rgb bits" for 24 bit visuals and matching a second
time with that.
Signed-off-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
Add information for RGB565 to the table of image formats so that we can
create a __DRIimage for that format. This in turn enables RGB565
wayland clients.
Signed-off-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
With this patch Wayland clients can now ask EGL for RGB 565 format buffers
and attach them to a Wayland compositor.
Signed-off-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
* The rtti fix actually dug up a bug in the scons build scripts.
* Autotools took the LLVM cpp and cxx flags, while scons only took
the cpp flags.
* This grabs the cxx flags and applies them where needed. We may
want to make the same change for the llvm cpp flags in scons.
* The only linux platform I can find with LLVM no-rtti is Ubuntu.
* Fixes bug #70471
Tested-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
The original intent of the variable was to prevent adding
libdrm dependency for non drm drivers (swrast). This is
already handled with __NOT_HAVE_DRM_H, and with the recent
merge of the dri_util and drisw_util code this variable has
started causing build issues.
Eg. the following will fail
$ ./autogen.sh --with-dri-drivers=swrast --with-gallium-drivers=
$ make
Signed-off-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Andreas Boll <andreas.boll.dev@gmail.com>
When a geometry shader is active, the transform feedback primitive
type ("mode") needs to be validated against the geometry shader output
primitive type, not the primitive type passed to the glDraw*()
function.
Fixes the following piglit tests:
- glsl-1.50-geometry-primitive-types GL_LINES
- glsl-1.50-geometry-primitive-types GL_LINES_ADJACENCY
- glsl-1.50-geometry-primitive-types GL_LINE_STRIP
- glsl-1.50-geometry-primitive-types GL_LINE_STRIP_ADJACENCY
- glsl-1.50-geometry-primitive-types GL_TRIANGLES
- glsl-1.50-geometry-primitive-types GL_TRIANGLES_ADJACENCY
- glsl-1.50-geometry-primitive-types GL_TRIANGLE_FAN
Exposes previously hidden failures in the following piglit tests:
- glsl-1.50-geometry-primitive-id-restart GL_LINES other
- glsl-1.50-geometry-primitive-id-restart GL_LINES_ADJACENCY other
- glsl-1.50-geometry-primitive-id-restart GL_LINE_LOOP ffs
- glsl-1.50-geometry-primitive-id-restart GL_LINE_LOOP other
- glsl-1.50-geometry-primitive-id-restart GL_LINE_STRIP other
- glsl-1.50-geometry-primitive-id-restart GL_LINE_STRIP_ADJACENCY other
- glsl-1.50-geometry-primitive-id-restart GL_TRIANGLES other
- glsl-1.50-geometry-primitive-id-restart GL_TRIANGLES_ADJACENCY other
- glsl-1.50-geometry-primitive-id-restart GL_TRIANGLE_FAN ffs
- glsl-1.50-geometry-primitive-id-restart GL_TRIANGLE_FAN other
- glsl-1.50-geometry-primitive-id-restart GL_TRIANGLE_STRIP other
- glsl-1.50-geometry-primitive-id-restart GL_TRIANGLE_STRIP_ADJACENCY other
(These failures were previously hidden due to a flaw in the test: it
doesn't check for GL errors. I'll fix the test shortly).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Ivy Bridge's "reorder enable" bit gives us a binary choice for the
order in which vertices from triangle strips are delivered to the
geometry shader. Neither choice follows the OpenGL spec, but setting
the bit is better, because it gets triangle orientation correct.
Haswell replaces the "reorder enable" bit with a new "reorder mode"
bit (which occupies the same location in the command packet). This
bit gives us a different binary choice, which affects both triangle
strips and triangle strips with adjacency. Setting the bit ("reorder
trailing") gives the proper order according to the OpenGL spec.
So in either case we want to set the bit.
On Ivy Bridge, fixes piglit test "triangle-strip-orientation".
On Haswell, fixes piglit tests "glsl-1.50-geometry-primitive-types
{GL_TRIANGLE_STRIP,GL_TRIANGLE_STRIP_ADJACENCY}" and
"glsl-1.50-geometry-tri-strip-ordering-with-prim-restart *".
v2: Rename the bit to "REORDER_TRAILING" for consistency with Haswell
docs.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Despite the name, this field wasn't being set to the dispatch width at
all; it was always 8. The only place it was used was that the
constant buffer read length was aligned to it, and as far as I can
tell from the docs, there is no need to align this value to the
dispatch width; aligning it to a multiple of 8 is sufficient. So I've
just replaced it with a hardcoded 8.
v2: In gen6_wm_state, use brw->wm.base.push_const_size for consistency
with VS and GS state upload.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This patch populates the following built-in GLSL 1.50 variables based
on constants stored in ctx->Const:
- gl_MaxVertexOutputComponents
- gl_MaxGeometryInputComponents
- gl_MaxGeometryOutputComponents
- gl_MaxFragmentInputComponents
- gl_MaxGeometryTextureImageUnits
- gl_MaxGeometryOutputVertices
- gl_MaxGeometryTotalOutputComponents
- gl_MaxGeometryUniformComponents
- gl_MaxGeometryVaryingComponents
On i965/gen7, fixes all Piglit tests in "spec/glsl-1.50/built-in
constants/*" except for gl_MaxCombinedTextureImageUnits and
gl_MaxGeometryUniformComponents.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Now that both vec4 and fs are dynamically assigning offsets, a lot of the
code is the same.
v2: Avoid passing around the next offset through the class. (Review by
Paul)
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Note that the dropped comment in brw_context.h is mostly (better written)
in brw_binding_table.c as well.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
It would be nice to be able to pack our binding table so that programs
that use 1 render target don't upload an extra BRW_MAX_DRAW_BUFFERS - 1
binding table entries. To do that, we need the compiled program to have
information on where its surfaces go.
v2: Rename size to size_bytes to be more explicit.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
* As discussed on the mailing list,
forced no-rtti breaks C++ public
API's such as the Haiku C++ libGL.so
* -fno-rtti *can* be still set however
instead of blindly forcing -fno-rtti,
we can rely on the llvm-config
--cppflags output.
If the system llvm is built without
rtti (default), the no-rtti flag will be
present in llvm-config --cppflags
(which we pick up on)
If llvm is built with rtti
(REQUIRES_RTTI=1), then -fno-rtti is
removed from llvm-config --cppflags.
* We could selectively add / remove rtti
from various components, however mixing
rtti and non-rtti code is tricky and
could introduce missing symbols.
* This needs impact tested.
Reviewed-by: Francisco Jerez <currojerez@riseup.net>
Add simple plain C routines for NV12<->YV12 and YUYV<->UYVY
conversions. The NV12->YV12 conversion is commonly used, for instance
by VLC.
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Textures that likely reside in VRAM, are mapped for reading and
don't require direct mapping should be staged into GTT, to avoid bad
performance. This fixes readback performance of VDPAU surfaces.
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <marek.olsak@amd.com>
This new bind flag forces linear storage, but does not have other
side effects like R600_RESOURCE_FLAG_TRANSFER.
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Currently it's hardcoded in the shader, so every change requires
compilation of the shader variant, killing the performance
in Serious Sam 3 and probably other apps.
This patch passes alpha_ref in the user sgpr and removes it from
the shader key.
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
This fixes the issue when dst and src is the same reg and operation on one
channel overwrites the source for other channels, e.g.:
UMUL TEMP[2].xyz, TEMP[0].xyzz, TEMP[2].xxxx
In this example the result of the operation on channel x is written in
TEMP[2].x and then used as a second source operand for channels y and z
instead of original value in TEMP[2].x.
This patch stores the results in temp reg and moves them to
dst after performing operation on all channels.
Fixes https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=70327
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
v2: Keep the random 32-bit only version of memcpy, since Ian says I
can't delete it without data proving it isn't useful.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
brw_context.h includes imports.h which includes compiler.h which already
defines these.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
These make it easy to convert a floating point value to a fixed point
numbers. The second parameter is the number of bits used for the
fractional part of the number.
It looks like core Mesa has similar functions already, but none that
allows an arbitrary number of fractional bits. The more generic version
is probably useful to everyone.
r600g apparently has an identical copy of the S_FIXED macro, but doesn't
include this file. I'm not sure what to do about that, so I'm just
going to leave it for now.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This seems generally useful, so it may as well live in core Mesa.
In fact, the comment for ALIGN() in macros.h actually says to "see also"
ROUND_DOWN_TO, which...was in a driver somewhere.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
intel_batchbuffer_init() sets up initial batchbuffer state; it seems
like a reasonable place to initialize this flag.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Configuring which dirty flags we want sounds like a job for
brw_init_state().
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
It actually just wants generation checking, and brw->gen is the usual
way of doing that. In the future, we'll also want to check brw->hw_ctx,
which isn't available from the screen.
While we're changing the function signature, convert from camel case to
our usual naming conventions.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
There's no point in having two files for context functions. This patch
moves the code from intel_context.c into brw_context.c unmodified
(other than whitespace fixes).
Right now, this looks silly; future patches will merge functions and
tidy things up.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
brw_init_surface_formats already sets entries in TextureFormatsSupported
to true; it may as well take care of initializing it to false too.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This flag is only used in one place, and is only set on one platform.
Just check for original Gen4 in the relevant function.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This seems like a better place for it, and helps clean up
brwCreateContext (which is full of a lot of random stuff).
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This was always set to false, and is only used for debugging.
To enable it, simply change the if (0) block and recompile.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Since each kind of device has its own brw_device_info structure, we can
simply store the URB and thread limits there. This eliminates all the
large if-ladders, and simplifies the context initialization code quite a
bit.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This option was useful during initial development, but it's been ages
since I've heard of anyone using it. Plus, Gen7+ mandates separate
stencil, so it was really only useful on Sandybridge anyway.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
The idea is that struct brw_device_info should store statically-known
information about hardware features. Using the new family name in the
PCI ID table, we can easily grab the right structure.
This is basically the equivalent of intel_device_info in the kernel.
This patch also makes the new structure available from intel_screen, but
nothing uses it. Right now, it looks very redundant with existing
fields, but that will change.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
I removed this a while ago, since we never used it, but I'm finally
resurrecting the idea in the next commits.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Nothing uses the #define name, and it's not terribly useful - the
numerical ID serves the same purpose. The only thing we could really do
with it is generate slightly prettier preprocessed code. But who looks
at that?
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Using a helper function clarifies the context initialization code.
I would've liked to completely centralize it, but moving the optionCache
code from intelInitExtensions into here would've required setting flags
in the context, which seems like a waste.
v2: Rebase for the introduction of disable_derivative_optimization.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Now that intelInitContext isn't shared between i915 and i965, the split
is fairly arbitrary. This patch moves a bunch of the basic context
creation and generation checking code up to the top-level function
(and slightly earlier).
More will follow.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Now that there isn't an intel_context structure, the split between
brw_context.[ch] and intel_context.[ch] is rather awkward and arbitrary.
Removing intel_context.[ch] seems desirable, but not everything really
belongs in brw_context.[ch], either.
Moving INTEL_DEBUG handling into separate intel_debug.[ch] files should
make them relatively easy to find.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
"error" is a very generic name. dri_ctx_error is the name used in
intelInitContext(), which is more specific.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Geometry shader support is now working well, and adequately piglit
tested. There are just a few piglit failures left to fix. So there's
no need for an "experimental" warning anymore.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Geometry shaders were the last thing we needed to finish before
turning on GLSL 1.50 and GL 3.2 support. They are now working well,
with just a few piglit failures left to fix.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
With code dump enabled LLVM may generate disassembly during compilation.
Show this disassembly when available and prefer it to SI bytecode dump.
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
Signed-off-by: Jay Cornwall <jay@jcornwall.me>
Fix coord wrapping (and face selection too) in case of edges.
Unfortunately, the coord wrapping is way more complicated than what
the code did, as it depends on the face and the direction where the
texel falls off the face (the logic needed to get this right in fact
seems utterly ridiculous).
Also fix a bug in (y direction under/overflow) face selection.
And get rid of complicated cube corner handling. Just like edge case,
the coord wrapping was wrong and it seems very difficult to fix.
I'm near certain it can't always work anyway (though ordinary seamless
filtering on edge has actually a similar problem but not as severe)
because we don't have per-pixel face, hence could have multiple corner
texels which would make it very difficult to average the remaining texels
correctly. Hence simply pick a texel which would only have fallen off one
edge but not both instead, which is not quite accurate but actually I think
should be enough to meet OpenGL (but not d3d10) requirements.
v2: small fixes suggested by Brian, add some comments.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
The previous limit of of 128*1024 was reported to cause frequent recompiles
in some apps due to shader variant thrashing on IRC in some apps leading
to noticeable lags.
Note that the LP_MAX_SHADER_VARIANTS limit (1024) was more or less impossible
to reach, since even simple fragment shaders without texturing (glxgears) used
more than twice than 128 instructions, hence the instruction limit would have
always been reached first (excluding things like trivial shaders not writing
color). Even with the new limit it is VERY likely the instruction limit is hit
first.
Should help with such lags due to recompiles (though other shader types have
their own limits, LP_MAX_SETUP_VARIANTS and DRAW_MAX_SHADER_VARIANTS, in
particular the latter seems a bit small (128)).
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Fixes this build error.
CC imports.lo
../../src/mesa/main/imports.c: In function '_mesa_strtof':
../../src/mesa/main/imports.c:570:20: error: expected '=', ',', ';', 'asm' or '__attribute__' before 'loc'
../../src/mesa/main/imports.c:570:20: error: 'loc' undeclared (first use in this function)
../../src/mesa/main/imports.c:570:20: note: each undeclared identifier is reported only once for each function it appears in
../../src/mesa/main/imports.c:572:7: error: implicit declaration of function 'newlocale'
../../src/mesa/main/imports.c:572:23: error: 'LC_CTYPE_MASK' undeclared (first use in this function)
../../src/mesa/main/imports.c:574:4: error: implicit declaration of function 'strtof_l'
../../src/mesa/main/imports.c:580:1: warning: control reaches end of non-void function
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Now that libEGL has been fixed to not leak all kinds of symbols, gbm
links to its own copy of the libwayland-drm.a helper library. That means
we can't rely on comparing the addresses of a static vtable symbol in that
library to determine if a wl_buffer is a wl_drm_buffer. Instead, we
move the vtable into the wl_drm struct and use that for comparing.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=69437
Cc: 9.2 <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
execinfo.h is not available on NetBSD.
Fixes this bulid error.
CC glapi_gentable.lo
glapi_gentable.c:44:22: fatal error: execinfo.h: No such file or directory
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
This was overriding the top-level .dir-locals.el causing some settings
(like forcing spaces instead of tabs!) to be lost.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
We should be able to safely set the framebuffer state without a
fragment shader bound. bind_ps_state will take care of updating the
necessary state bits later.
v2: check in update_db_shader_control
Fixes GL2ExtensionTests/egl_image_external/TestSimpleUnassociated.test
which is part of gles2/3 conformance suite. Here image external
textures are switched to be treated the same as 2D textures. These
can be associated with the fallback texture providing fixed sample
values of (0, 0, 0, 1).
The OES_EGL_image_external spec says:
"Sampling an external texture which is not associated with any EGLImage
sibling will return a sample value of (0,0,0,1)."
"External textures cannot be used with TexImage2D, TexSubImage2D,
CompressedTexImage2D, CompressedTexSubImage2D, CopyTexImage2D, or
CopyTexSubImage2D, and an INVALID_ENUM error will be generated if
this is attempted."
And quoting Chad:
"That's enforced in _mesa_TexImage*() by calling
legal_teximage_target(), and enforced in _mesa_TexSubImage*() by
calling legal_texsubmimage_target(). Each of the
legal_tex*image_target() functions reject external textures.
Therefore, allowing GL_TEXTURE_EXTERNAL_OES in store_texsubimage()
won't violate the above spec quote.
I think it's safe to allow GL_TEXTURE_EXTERNAL_OES in
store_texsubimage(), as long as the texture has only a single
plane. Luckily, that's the only type of external textures that
Mesa currently supports."
CC: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Topi Pohjolainen <topi.pohjolainen@intel.com>
Extend the fast texture upload from BGRA X-tiled to include RGBA,
Alpha/Luminance, and Y-tiled. Speed improvements, measured with
mesa demos teximage program, on 256 x 256 texture, in MB/s, on a
Sandy Bridge (Ivy is comparable):
before after increase
BGRA/X-tiled 3266 4524 1.39x
BGRA/Y-tiled 1739 3971 2.28x
RGBA/X-tiled 474 4694 9.90x
RGBA/Y-tiled 477 3368 7.06x
L/X-tiled 1268 1516 1.20x
L/Y-tiled 1439 1581 1.10x
v2: Cosmetic changes only: reformat and reword comments, make doxygen-friendly,
rename variables, use existing macros, add an assert.
Signed-off-by: Frank Henigman <fjhenigman@google.com>
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
This is part of the prep for megadrivers, which won't allow using a single
global symbol due to the fact that there will be multiple drivers built
into the same dri.so file. For that, we'll need screen init to take a
reference to the driver to set up this vtable.
v2: Fix two missed references to driDriverAPI.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org> (v1)
The intel_screen.c used to be a dispatch to one of 3 driver functions, but
was down to 1, so it was kind of a waste. In addition, it was trying to
free all of the data that might have been partially freed in the kernel
3.6 check (which comes after intelInitContext, and thus might have had
driverPrivate set and result in intelDestroyContext() doing work on the
freed data). By moving the driverPrivate setup earlier, we can use
intelDestroyContext() consistently and avoid such problems in the future.
v2: Adjust the prototype of brwCreateContext to use the proper enum
(fixing a compiler warning in some builds)
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org> (v1)
If bufmgr didn't get created, then screen creation failed, and we never
should have got here in the first place. This was added by Chris Wilson
in 2010 with no explanation for why it would be needed.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
i965, i915, radeon, r200, swrast, and nouveau were mostly trying to do the
same logic, except where they failed to. Notably, swrast had code that
appeared to try to enable GLES1/2 but forgot to set api_mask (thus
preventing any gles context from being created), and the non-intel drivers
didn't support MESA_GL_VERSION_OVERRIDE.
nouveau still relies on _mesa_compute_version(), because I don't know what
its limits actually are, and gallium drivers don't declare limits up front
at all. I think I've heard talk about doing so, though.
v2: Compat max version should be 30 (noted by Ken)
Drop r100's custom max version check, too (noted by Emil Velikov)
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The only important difference was not calling drmGetVersion, and making
the swrast extension vtable. That doesn't justify duplicating the other
330 lines of code.
v2: fix the scons build (code by Emil Velikov)
v3: fix scons build with swrast-only (code by Emil Velikov)
v4: Drop the new define I added, when we already have __NOT_HAVE_DRM_H.
Signed-off-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
Looking at Lightsmark's shaders, the way we used MRFs (or in gen7's
case, GRFs) was bad in a couple of ways. One was that it prevented
compute-to-MRF for the common case of a texcoord that gets used
exactly once, but where the texcoord setup all gets emitted before the
texture calls (such as when it's a bare fragment shader input, which
gets interpolated before processing main()). Another was that it
introduced a bunch of dependencies that constrained scheduling, and
forced waits for texture operations to be done before they are
required. For example, we can now move the compute-to-MRF
interpolation for the second texture send down after the first send.
The downside is that this generally prevents
remove_duplicate_mrf_writes() from doing anything, whereas previously
it avoided work for the case of sampling from the same texcoord twice.
However, I suspect that most of the win that originally justified that
code was in avoiding the WAR stall on the first send, which this patch
also avoids, rather than the small cost of the extra instruction. We
see instruction count regressions in shaders in unigine, yofrankie,
savage2, hon, and gstreamer.
Improves GLB2.7 performance by 0.633628% +/- 0.491809% (n=121/125, avg of
~66fps, outliers below 61 dropped).
Improves openarena performance by 1.01092% +/- 0.66897% (n=425).
No significant difference on Lightsmark (n=44).
v2: Squash in the fix for register unspilling for send-from-GRF, fixing a
segfault in lightsmark.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
For texturing from GRFs, we now have payloads of arbitrary sizes up to the
message length limit.
v2 (Kenneth Graunke): Rebase on intel_context -> brw_context change.
v3: Add some comment text.
v4: Change some magic 16s to BRW_MAX_MRF (noted by Ken). Leave the 11,
which is the magic "max sampler message length". BRW_MAX_MRF sizing
on the little int arrays is retained because I could see us needing to
extend in the future if we move to GRFs for FB writes (those go to at
least 12 long in a quick scan of the specs)
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org> (v2)
Acked-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This will let us coalesce into texture-from-GRF arguments, which would
otherwise be prevented due to the live interval for the whole vgrf
extending across all the MOVs setting up the channels of the message
v2 (Kenneth Graunke): Rebase for renames.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Now optimization passes will be able to look at the per-channel ranges.
v2: Rebase on various optimization pass changes.
v3 (Kenneth Graunke): Rename live_variables to live_intervals; split
introduction of invalidate_live_intervals() into a separate patch.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
When compacting the list of VGRFs, we patch up the live interval ranges
(which are indexed by VGRF number). Unfortunately, once we make
per-component data available, this will become too complicated to
maintain. Instead, simply invalidate them.
This was pulled out of a patch by Eric Anholt.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
In compute_live_intervals(), start and end are shorter names for
the virtual_grf_start and virtual_grf_end class members.
Now that the fs_live_intervals class has arrays named start and end
which are indexed by var, rather than VGRF, reusing the name is
confusing. Plus, most of the code has been factored out, so using the
long names isn't as inconvenient.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This is the information we'll actually use to replace the
virtual_grf_start[]/end[] arrays.
No change in shader-db.
v2 (Kenneth Graunke): Rebase; minor comment updates.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
These blocks are about to grow some more code, and the indentation was
getting out of hand.
v2 (Kenneth Graunke): Rebase, minor typo fixes and style changes.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
For now, this simply sets live_intervals_valid = false, but in the
future it will do something more sophisticated.
Based on a patch by Eric Anholt.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This significantly improves our handling of VGRFs of size > 1.
Previously, we only marked VGRFs as def'd if the whole register was
written by a single instruction. Large VGRFs which were written
piecemeal would not be considered def'd at all, even if they were
ultimately completely written.
Without being def'd, these were then marked "live in" to the basic
block, often extending the range to preceding blocks and sometimes
even the start of the program.
The new per-component tracking gives more accurate live intervals,
which makes register coalescing more effective.
In the future, this should help with texturing from GRFs on Gen7+.
A sampler message might be represented by a 2-register VGRF which
holds the texture coordinates. If those are incoming varyings,
they'll be produced by two PLN instructions, which are piecemeal writes.
No reduction in shader-db instruction counts. However, code which
prints the live interval ranges does show that some VGRFs now have
smaller (and more correct) live intervals.
v2: Rebase on current send-from-GRF code requiring adding extra use[]s.
v3: Rebase on live intervals fix to include defs in the end of the
interval.
v4 (Kenneth Graunke): Rebase; split off a few preparatory patches;
add lots of comments; minor style changes; rewrite commit message.
v5 (Eric Anholt): whitespace nit.
Written-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net> [v1-3]
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org> [v4]
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net> (v4)
num_vars was shorthand for the number of virtual GRFs. num_vgrfs is a
bit clearer. Plus, the next patch will introduce "vars" which are
distinct from vgrfs.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This has no functional effect, but should make subsequent changes a
little simpler.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
From section 4.1.9 (Arrays) of the GLSL 4.40 spec (as of revision 7):
However, unless noted otherwise, blocks cannot be redeclared;
an unsized array in a user-declared block cannot be sized
through redeclaration.
The only place where the spec notes that interface blocks can be
redeclared is to allow for redeclaration of built-in interface blocks
such as gl_PerVertex. Therefore, user-defined interface blocks can
never be redeclared. This is a clarification of previous intent (see
Khronos bug 10659).
We were already preventing interface block redeclaration using the
same block name at compile time, but we weren't preventing interface
block redeclaration using the same instance name (and different block
names) at compile time. And we weren't preventing an instance name
from conflicting with a previously-declared ordinary variable.
In practice the problem would be caught at link time, but only because
of a coincidence: since ast_interface_block::hir() wasn't doing any
checking to see if the instance name already existed in the shader, it
was creating a second ir_variable in the shader having the same name
but a different type. Coincidentally, when the linker checked for
intrastage consistency of global variable declarations, it treated the
two declarations from the same shader as a conflict, so it reported a
link error.
But it seems dangerous to rely on that linker behaviour to catch
illegal redeclarations that really ought to be detected at compile
time.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This patch verifies that:
- The gl_PerVertex input interface block may only be redeclared in a
geometry shader, and that it may only be redeclared as gl_in[].
- The gl_PerVertex output interface block may only be redeclared in a
vertex or geometry shader, and that it may only be redeclared as a
non-array without an interface name.
- gl_PerVertex may not be redeclared as any other type of interface
block (i.e. as a uniform interface block).
As a side-effect, the code now keeps track of what the previous
declaration of gl_PerVertex was--this will be needed in future
patches.
Fixes piglit tests:
- spec/glsl-1.50/compiler/gs-redeclares-pervertex-in-with-incorrect-name.geom
- spec/glsl-1.50/compiler/gs-redeclares-pervertex-out-as-array.geom
- spec/glsl-1.50/compiler/gs-redeclares-pervertex-out-with-instance-name.geom
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
In later patches, we'll use this in order to implement the required
behaviour that after the gl_PerVertex interface block has been
redeclared, only members of the redeclared interface block may be
used.
v2: Update the function name and comment to clarify that we aren't
actually removing the variable from the symbol table, just disabling
it.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This will be used by future patches to change an ir_variable's
interface type when the gl_PerVertex built-in interface block is
redeclared.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This patch modifies the get_variable_being_redeclared() function so
that it no longer relies on the ast_declaration for the variable being
redeclared. In future patches, this will allow
get_variable_being_redeclared() to be used for processing
redeclarations of the built-in gl_PerVertex interface block.
v2: Also make get_variable_being_redeclared() static.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Note: we need to make an exception for the gl_PerVertex interface
block, since in geometry shaders it is allowed to be redeclared with
the instance name gl_in. Future patches will make redeclaration of
gl_PerVertex work properly.
Fixes piglit test
spec/glsl-1.50/compiler/interface-block-instance-name-uses-gl-prefix.vert.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Note: we need to make an exception for the gl_PerVertex interface
block, since built-in variables are allowed to be redeclared inside
it. Future patches will make redeclaration of gl_PerVertex work
properly.
Fixes piglit tests:
- spec/glsl-1.50/compiler/interface-block-array-elem-uses-gl-prefix.vert
- spec/glsl-1.50/compiler/named-interface-block-elem-uses-gl-prefix.vert
- spec/glsl-1.50/compiler/unnamed-interface-block-elem-uses-gl-prefix.vert
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Note: we need to make an exception for the gl_PerVertex interface
block, since this is allowed to be redeclared. Future patches will
make redeclaration of gl_PerVertex work properly.
Fixes piglit test
spec/glsl-1.50/compiler/interface-block-name-uses-gl-prefix.vert.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Note: some limited amount of redeclaration is actually allowed,
provided the shader is redeclaring the built-in gl_PerVertex interface
block. Support for this will be added in future patches.
Fixes piglit tests
spec/glsl-1.50/compiler/unnamed-interface-block-elem-conflicts-with-prev-{block-elem,global}.vert.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
GLSL reserves identifiers beginning with "gl_" or containing "__", but
we haven't been consistent about enforcing this rule. This patch
makes a new function to check whether identifier names are valid. In
the process it closes a loophole where we would previously allow
function argument names to contain "__".
v2: Rename check_valid_identifier() -> validate_identifier(). Add
curly braces in validate_identifier().
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
In commit e2660770731b018411fbe1620cacddaf8dff5287 (glsl: Keep track
of location for interface block fields), I neglected to update
glsl_type::record_key_compare to account for the fact that interface
types now contain location information. As a result, interface types
that differ only by their location information would not be properly
distinguished.
At the moment this is not a problem, because the only interface block
in which location information != -1 is gl_PerVertex, and gl_PerVertex
is always created in the same way. However, in the patches that
follow, we'll be adding new ways to create gl_PerVertex (by
redeclaring it), so we'll need location information to be handled
properly.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Although these interfaces can't be accessed directly by GLSL (since
they don't have an instance name), they will be necessary in order to
allow redeclarations of gl_PerVertex.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Currently, we create just a single gl_PerVertex interface block for
geometry shader inputs. In later patches, we'll also need to create
an interface block for geometry and vertex shader outputs. Moving the
code into its own class will make reuse easier.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
We use a location of -1 for variables which don't have their own
assigned locations--this includes ir_variables which represent named
interface blocks. Technically the location assigned to gl_in doesn't
matter, since gl_in is only accessed via its members (which have their
own locations). But it's nice to be consistent.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Calling radeon_drm_cs_flush from multiple threads might cause deadlocks,
fix this by immediately signaling the semaphore after waiting for it.
This is a candidate for the stable branch(es).
Partially fixes: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=70123
v2: some fixes on commit message
Signed-off-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Unless the polygon fill mode is different from PIPE_POLYGON_MODE_FILL,
so checking the the polygon mode is sufficient.
Testing done: no regression in polygon-mode-offset
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Not used since ages, and it wouldn't work at all with explicit derivatives now
(not that it did before as it ignored them but now the code would just use
the derivs pre-projected which would be quite random numbers).
v2: also get rid of 3 helper functions no longer used.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
They need some special handling. Quite complicated.
Additionally, use the same code for implicit derivatives too if no_rho_approx
and no_quad_lod is set, because it seems while generally it should be ok
to use per quad lod for implicit derivatives there's at least some test which
insists that in case of cubemaps the shared lod value MUST come from a pixel
inside the primitive (due to the derivatives becoming different if a different
larger major axis is chosen).
v2: based on Brian's feedback, clean up code a bit.
And use sign bit of major axis instead of pre-select s/t/r sign for coord
mirroring (which should be the same in the end, saves 2 ands).
Also fix two bugs with select/mirror of derivatives, the minor axes need to
use major axis sign as well (instead of major derivative axis sign), and
don't mistakenly use absolute values of major derivative and inverse major
values.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
There's two reasons for this:
1) even when ignoring rho approximation for cube maps, the result is still
not correct, but it's better as the max error at edges is now sqrt(2) instead
of 2 (which was a full mip level), same as it is for ordinary 2d maps when
doing rho approximations (so the error actually goes from factor 2 at edges and
sqrt(2) completely inside a face to sqrt(2) at edges and 0 inside a face).
2) I want to repurpose rho_no_approx for cubemaps for fully correct cubemap
derivatives (so don't need yet another debug var).
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
We were already setting the array size of unsized arrays that appeared
inside unnamed interface blocks, but we weren't updating
ir_variable::interface_type to reflect the new array size, causing
bogus link errors.
This patch causes array_sizing_visitor to keep track of all the
unnamed interface types it sees, and the ir_variables corresponding to
each one. After the visitor runs, a new function,
fixup_unnamed_interface_types(), adjusts each unnamed interface type
to correctly correspond with the array sizes in the ir_variables.
Fixes piglit tests:
- spec/glsl-1.50/execution/unsized-in-unnamed-interface-block-gs
- spec/glsl-1.50/execution/unsized-in-unnamed-interface-block-multiple
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
When multiple shaders of the same type access an interface block
containing an unsized array, we need to set the array size based on
the maximum array element accessed across all the shaders. This is
similar to what we already do with unsized arrays occurring outside of
interface blocks.
Note: one corner case is not yet addressed by these patches: the case
where one compilation unit defines an interface block containing
unsized arrays and another compilation unit defines the same interface
block containing sized arrays.
Fixes piglit test:
- spec/glsl-1.50/execution/unsized-in-named-interface-block-multiple
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Unsized arrays appearing inside named interface blocks now get a
proper size assigned by the array_sizing_visitor.
Fixes piglit tests:
- spec/glsl-1.50/execution/unsized-in-named-interface-block
- spec/glsl-1.50/execution/unsized-in-named-interface-block-gs
- spec/glsl-1.50/linker/unsized-in-named-interface-block
- spec/glsl-1.50/linker/unsized-in-named-interface-block-gs
- spec/glsl-1.50/linker/unsized-in-unnamed-interface-block-gs (*)
(*) is fixed by dumb luck--support for unsized arrays in unnamed
interface blocks will come in a later patch.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
This patch modifies update_max_array_access() so that it updates
ir_variable::max_ifc_array_access to reflect the shader's use of
arrays appearing within interface blocks.
v2: Use an ordinary function in ast_array_index.cpp rather than a
virtual function in ir_rvalue. Avoid dereferencing NULL when handling
accesses to ordinary structs.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
For interface blocks that contain arrays, this field will contain the
maximum element of each contained array that is accessed by the
shader. This is a first step toward supporting unsized arrays in
interface blocks.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Currently, when converting an access to an array element from ast to
IR, we need to see if the array is an ir_dereference_variable, and if
so update the variable's max_array_access.
When we add support for unsized arrays in interface blocks, we'll also
need to account for cases where the array is an ir_dereference_record
and the record is an interface block.
To make this easier, move the update into its own function.
v2: Use an ordinary function in ast_array_index.cpp rather than a
virtual function in ir_rvalue.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Although it's not explicitly stated in the GLSL 1.50 spec, unsized
arrays are allowed in interface blocks.
section 1.2.3 (Changes from revision 5 of version 1.5) of the GLSL
1.50 spec says:
* Completed full update to grammar section. Tested spec examples
against it:
...
* add unsized arrays for block members
And section 7.1 (Vertex and Geometry Shader Special Variables)
includes an unsized array in the built-in gl_PerVertex interface
block:
out gl_PerVertex {
vec4 gl_Position;
float gl_PointSize;
float gl_ClipDistance[];
};
Furthermore, GLSL 4.30 contains an example of an unsized array
occurring inside an interface block. From section 4.3.9 (Interface
Blocks):
uniform Transform { // API uses "Transform[2]" to refer to instance 2
mat4 ModelViewMatrix;
mat4 ModelViewProjectionMatrix;
vec4 a[]; // array will get implicitly sized
float Deformation;
} transforms[4];
This patch adds the parser rule to support unsized arrays inside
interface blocks. Later patches in the series will add the
appropriate semantics to handle them.
Fixes piglit tests:
- spec/glsl-1.50/execution/unsized-in-unnamed-interface-block
- spec/glsl-1.50/linker/unsized-in-unnamed-interface-block
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Interface declarations have two names associated with them: the block
name and the instance name. It's the block name that needs to be
passed to get_interface_instance(). This patch renames the argument
so that there's no confusion.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
BLORP performs blits by drawing a rectangle with a shader that samples
from the source texture, and writes color data to the destination.
The sampler always returns 32-bit RGBA float data, regardless of the
source format's component ordering or data type. Likewise, the render
target write message takes 32-bit RGBA float data, and converts it
appropriately. So the bulk of the work is already taken care of for us.
This greatly accelerates a lot of CopyTexSubImage calls, and makes
Legends of Aethereus playable on Ivybridge. At the default settings,
LOA continually blits between SRGBA8888 (the window format) and
RGBA16_FLOAT. Since neither BLORP nor our BLT paths supported this,
it fell back to meta, spending 33% of the CPU in floorf() converting
between floats and half-floats.
v2: Use != instead of ^ (suggested by Ian). Note that only
CopyTexSubImage is affected by this patch (caught by Eric).
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
The previous code for sRGB overrides assumes that the source and
destination formats are equal, other than the color space. This won't
be feasible when we add support for format conversions.
Here are a few cases, and how the old code handled them:
1. RGB8 -> SRGB8, MSAA ==> SRGB8 -> SRGB8
2. RGB8 -> SRGB8, single ==> RGB8 -> RGB8
3. SRGB8 -> RGB8, MSAA ==> RGB8 -> RGB8
4. SRGB8 -> RGB8, single ==> SRGB8 -> SRGB8
Apparently, preserving the behavior of #1 is important. When doing a
multisample to single-sample resolve, blending the samples together in
an sRGB correct fashion results in a noticably higher quality image.
It also is necessary to pass Piglit's EXT_framebuffer_multisample
accuracy color tests.
Paul, Eric, Anuj, and I talked about this, and aren't sure that it
matters in the other cases.
This patch preserves the behavior of #1, but otherwise reverts to
doing everything in linear space, changing the behavior of case #4.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
We could conceivably use BRW_SURFACEFORMAT_R24_UNORM_X8_TYPELESS for
Z24 source images, allowing conversions from Z24 to either Z16 or Z32F.
Unfortunately, we can't use it for destination images since it isn't
supported as a render target.
Using different formats for sources or destinations would be painful,
so for now, punt.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
Currently, all that matters is that we copy the correct number of bits,
so any format that has 32-bits of data will work fine.
Once BLORP begins handling format conversions, the sampler will need to
correctly interpret the data. We don't need a depth format, but we do
need the right number of components and data type (FLOAT).
For Z32F, this means using R32_FLOAT.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
Currently, all that matters is that we copy the correct number of bits,
so any format that has 16-bits of data will work fine.
Once BLORP begins handling format conversions, the sampler will need to
correctly interpret the data. We don't need a depth format, but we do
need the right number of components and data type (UNORM).
For Z16, this means using R16_UNORM.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
Once blorp gains the ability to do format conversions, it's conceivable
that the source format may be texturable but not supported as a render
target. This would break Paul's code, which assumes that it can use the
render_target_format array even for the source format.
There are three ways to convert MESA_FORMAT enums to BRW_SURFACEFORMAT
enums:
1. brw_format_for_mesa_format()
This translates the Mesa format to the most equivalent BRW format.
2. brw->render_target_format[]
This is used for renderbuffers, and handles the subset of formats
that are renderable. However, it's not always equivalent, since
it overrides a few non-renderable formats. For example, it
converts B8G8R8X8_UNORM to B8G8R8A8_UNORM so it can be rendered to.
3. translate_tex_format()
This is used for textures. It wraps brw_format_for_mesa_format(),
but overrides depth textures, and one sRGB case on Gen4.
BLORP has a fourth function, which uses brw->render_target_format[]
and overrides depth formats (differently than translate_tex_format).
This patch makes the BLORP function to use brw_format_for_mesa_format()
for textures/source data, since not everything will be a render target.
It continues using brw->render_target_format[] for render targets, since
it needs the format overrides that provides.
We don't use translate_tex_format() since the additional overrides are
not useful or simply redundant.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
As we're moving towards expanding the number of subpixel
bits and the width of the variables used in the computations
we need to make this code a bit more centralized.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
The code introduces two new 32bit integer multiplication opcodes which
can be used to produce correct 64 bit results. GLSL, OpenCL and D3D10+
require them. We use two seperate opcodes, because they match the
behavior of GLSL and OpenCL, are a lot easier to add than a single
opcode with multiple destinations and because there's not much (any)
difference wrt code-generation.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
The UD values were getting set up as floats. This happened to work out
because they were used as the second argument where the first was a dword,
and gen6+ doesn't do source conversions. But it did trigger fulsim
warnings, and it meant if you used the push constant as the first operand
you would have been disappointed.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
The EGL library has some references to x11 but it gets the link flags
from the XCB_DRI2_LIBS if and only if HAVE_EGL_PLATFORM_X11 is true.
The X11_LIBS variable was probably coming from a PKG_CHECK_MODULES (x11)
earlier in history.
If it is possible to have HAVE_EGL_DRIVER_GLX without HAVE_EGL_PLATFORM_X11
then the link flags for libX11 should be passed. However, it won't come
from X11_LIBS which is undefined.
Reported-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Gaetan Nadon <memsize@videotron.ca>
The compiler cannot find the Xlib.h in the installed system headers.
All supplied include directives point to inside the mesa module.
The X11_CFLAGS variable is undefined (not defined in config.status).
It appears the intent was to use X11_INCLUDES defined in configure.ac.
The Xlib.h file is not installed on my workstation. It is supplied in
the libx11-dev package. This allows an X developer control over which
version of this file is used for X development.
Use to test: --enable-gallium-egl --enable-xlib-glx --disable-dri
Acked-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Gaetan Nadon <memsize@videotron.ca>
The compiler cannot find the Xlib.h in the installed system headers.
All supplied include directives point to inside the mesa module.
The X11_CFLAGS variable is undefined (not defined in config.status).
It appears the intent was to use X11_INCLUDES defined in configure.ac.
The Xlib.h file is not installed on my workstation. It is supplied in
the libx11-dev package. This allows an X developer control over which
version of this file is used for X development.
Acked-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Gaetan Nadon <memsize@videotron.ca>
The X11_CFLAGS variable is undefined (not defined in config.status).
It appears the intent was to use X11_INCLUDES defined in configure.ac.
It is used for building the code in the x11 subdir.
The build does not fail on this one as LIBDRM_CFLAGS happens to have
the inludedir value as the one for X11. It will not always be the case.
The option --enable-gallium-egl is required durimg configuration.
Acked-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Gaetan Nadon <memsize@videotron.ca>
OutputSurfaces have simple YCbCr rendering functionality built in,
but so far only 4:2:0 subsampling worked correctly. This fixes 4:2:2
and 4:4:4 formats.
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
It doesn't work (decodes to garbage) with most videos on UVD 3.0. Worse
yet, it often results in random memory corruption or GPU hangs. Rumor
has it only the newest UVD hardware could do it anyway.
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
The DPB size calculations seem to be off; there is various random
corruption happening, even with advanced profile. Always assuming
a minimum number of references appears to fix it, similarly to
H.264. This might overallocate the DPB. Also clean up the SPS/PPS
field setup so that it matches VC-1 specifications better.
With these changes, all advanced profile VC-1 files I could get my
hand on work fine.
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
UVD can only support NV12 in the case of hardware decoding, but we
can still use all other formats for software decoding. Use the UNKNOWN
profile to signal that we're not interesting in hardware decoding.
v2: use profile instead of entrypoint
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
which contains -Wl,-Bsymbolic. If I understand it correctly, it prevents
symbols from clashing if multiple drivers are loaded at the same time.
Tested-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
Copy sechalf to the new register, otherwise we would read wrong HW registers.
Signed-off-by: Chia-I Wu <olv@lunarg.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
When the instruction to send the sampler message is forced uncompressed or
sechalf, send SIMD8 one even in SIMD16 mode.
Signed-off-by: Chia-I Wu <olv@lunarg.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
SIMD8 sampler messages are allowed in SIMD16 mode, and they could not work
without BRW_COMPRESSION_2NDHALF. Later PRMs (gen5 and later) do not
explicitly state whether BRW_COMPRESSION_2NDHALF is allowed, but they do have
examples using send with SecHalf. It should be safe to assume SecHalf is
valid.
Signed-off-by: Chia-I Wu <olv@lunarg.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
gl_PointSize is stored in the w component of VARYING_SLOT_PSIZ, but
the geometry shader infrastructure assumes that it should look for all
geometry shader inputs of type float in the x component. So when
compiling a geomtery shader that uses a gl_PointSize input, fix it up
during the shader prolog by moving the w component to the x component.
This is similar to how we emit fixups and workarounds for vertex
shader attributes.
Fixes piglit test spec/glsl-1.50/execution/geometry/core-inputs.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
This corresponds to the lowering of gl_ClipDistance to
gl_ClipDistanceMESA for vertex and geometry shader outputs. Since
this lowering pass occurs after lower_named_interface blocks, it deals
with 2D arrays (gl_ClipDistance[vertex][clip_plane]) rather than 1D
arrays in an interface block
(gl_in[vertex].gl_ClipDistance[clip_plane]).
v2 (Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>): Fix indexing order for
gl_ClipDistance input lowering. Properly lower bulk assignment of
gl_ClipDistance inputs. Rework for GLSL 1.50 style geometry shaders.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
v3 (Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>): Add comments and assertions
to clarify that the 2D version of clip distance is only used for
geometry shader inputs.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Previously, builtin_variables.cpp was written assuming that we
supported ARB_geometry_shader4 style geometry shader inputs, meaning
that each built-in varying input to a geometry was supplied via an
array variable whose name ended in "In", e.g. gl_PositionIn or
gl_PointSizeIn.
However, in GLSL 1.50 style geometry shaders, things work
differently--built-in inputs are supplied to geometry shaders via a
built-in interface block called gl_in, which contains all the built-in
inputs using their usual names (e.g. the gl_Position input is supplied
to the geometry shader as gl_in[i].gl_Position).
This patch adds the necessary logic to builtin_variables.cpp to create
the gl_in interface block and populate it accordingly for geometry
shader inputs. The old ARB_geometry_shader4 style varyings are
removed, though they can easily be added back in the future if we
decide to support ARB_geometry_shader4.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
This patch adds a "location" element to struct glsl_struct_field, so
that we can keep track of the gl_varying_slot associated with each
built-in geometry shader input.
In lower_named_interface_blocks, we use this value to populate the
"location" field in the ir_variable that stores each geometry shader
input.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
For a few reasons.
1: In the (current) common case, these conditionals are never true. All
we're doing by checking them is slowing down MakeCurrent. The server
does these checks already anyway.
2: GLX >= 3.0 contexts may legally be made current without a bound
framebuffer.
This does not fix piglit/glx-create-context-current-no-framebuffer, but
is a prerequisite for fixing it.
Cc: "9.1 9.2" <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Adam Jackson <ajax@redhat.com>
The new sampler bind sends us NULL samplers, so we need to count
the number of valid samplers ourselves. This fixes ~500 piglit
regressions from the sampler rework.
While we're at it, let's also support start.
In 3DSTATE_DEPTH_BUFFER, we set Width and Height to the miptree slice's
physical dimensions. (Logical and physical dimensions may differ for
multisample surfaces).
However, in SURFACE_STATE, we always set Width and Height to the slice's
logical dimensions. We should do the same for 3DSTATE_DEPTH_BUFFER,
because the hw docs say so.
No Piglit regressions (-x glx -x glean) on Ivybridge with Wayland.
v2: No Piglit regressions, for real this time.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Now, one can do the following to generate and read the i965 Doxygen:
cd $MESA_TOP/doxygen
make
firefox i965/index.html
Reviewed-by: Frank Henigman <fjhenigman@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
The registers in the architecture register file don't share much in
common, so there's no point in grouping them together. Use the HW_REG
class instead. The vec4 backend already does this.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Accidentally pushed an old version of the patch.
v2: Set destination register using brw_null_reg().
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
CSE would otherwise combine the two mul(8) emitted by [iu]mulExtended:
mul(8) acc0 x y
mach(8) null x y
mov(8) lsb acc0
...
mul(8) acc0 x y
mach(8) msb x y
Into:
mul(8) temp x y
mov(8) acc0 temp
mach(8) null x y
mov(8) lsb acc0
...
mov(8) acc0 temp
mach(8) msb x y
But mul(8) into the accumulator produces more than 32-bits of precision,
which is required and lost if multiplying into a general register and
moving to the accumulator.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
These built-ins have two "out" parameters, which makes implementing them
efficiently with our current compiler infrastructure difficult. Instead,
implement them in terms of the existing ir_binop_mul IR (to return the
low 32-bits) and a new ir_binop_mul64 which returns the high 32-bits.
v2: Rename mul64 -> imul_high as suggested by Ken.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
i965 implements this with a single (multiple destination) instruction,
SUBB. Emitting SUBB directly from usubBorrow() would be ideal, but our
optimization passes don't know how to copy with expressions with
side-effects.
Radeon has an SUBB_UINT instruction that only generates the borrow
bit. I've chosen to go this route and implement usubBorrow() by doing the
subtraction and the borrow operations separately.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
i965 implements this with a single (multiple destination) instruction,
ADDC. Emitting ADDC directly from uaddCarry() would be ideal, but our
optimization passes don't know how to copy with expressions with
side-effects.
Radeon has an ADDC_UINT instruction that only generates the carry
bit. I've chosen to go this route and implement uaddCarry() by doing the
addition and the carry operations separately.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Calculates the carry out of the addition of two values and the
borrow from subtraction respectively. Will be used in uaddCarry() and
usubBorrow() built-in implementations.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
The only GLSL extension that is not enabled is AMD_vertex_shader_layer.
I think the standalone-compiler could enable this (as shading language
support is complete), but no driver enables it.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Infer whether or not to use ES based on the GLSL version (100 or 300 are
for ES). This replaces the --glsl-es command line option. Set various
compiler limits based on the minimums required for the specified GLSL
version.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The choices aren't just 0 and 1, so using the enum names is much more
clear.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This allows application developers to use Mesa's compiler as a
standalone validator for their shaders.
This is mostly a revert of commit 569f0e4.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Pull the data directly from the context like the other varying related
limits. The parser state shadow copies were added back when the parser
state didn't have a pointer to the context. There's no reason to do it
now days.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
gl_MaxVertexOutputVectors => ctx->Const.VertexProgram.MaxOutputComponents
gl_MaxFragmentInputVectors => ctx->Const.FragmentProgram.MaxInputComponents
v2: Add types so that the code compiles. Pointed out by Brian.
v3: Leave gl_MaxVaryingFloats et al. as-is. Suggested by Paul.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com> [v2]
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <marek.olsak@amd.com> [v2]
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com> [v2]
Starting with OpenGL 3.2 input limits and output limits for stages may
not match. This means they need to be accounted separately.
No piglit regressions.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <marek.olsak@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
No need to keep a copy of the message in system memory anymore,
since it should now be in GART memory on newer chips.
Signed-off-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
This fixes issues where get_rt_format would see a 0 format because the
nouveau_surface had not been properly initialized. Fixes crash on
supertuxkart startup (which still fails due to out-of-vram issues).
Signed-off-by: Ilia Mirkin <imirkin@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Francisco Jerez <currojerez@riseup.net>
As of ARB_gpu_shader5, textureGather doesn't always read the
post-swizzle RED channel -- so we can't just look at the red swizzle
state.
Theoretically we could only flag the quirk if *some* green swizzle is in
use, but that's probably more trouble than it's worth.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
- For HSW: Select the channel based on the component selected (swizzle
is done in HW)
- For IVB: Select the channel based on the swizzle state for the
component selected. Only apply the RG32F w/a if we actually want
green -- we're about to flag it regardless of swizzle state.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
- For HSW: Select the channel based on the component selected (swizzle
is done in HW)
- For IVB: Select the channel based on the swizzle state for the
component selected. Only apply the RG32F w/a if we actually want
green -- we're about to flag it regardless of swizzle state.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
- gsampler2DRect support
- optional `comp` parameter
Future patches will add shadow sampler support and
textureGatherOffsets().
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
ARB_gpu_shader5 introduces new variants of textureGather* which have an
explicit component selector, rather than relying purely on the sampler's
swizzle state.
This patch adds the GLSL plumbing for the extra parameter.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Theoretically would work on Gen5 as well but requires GLSL 1.30, which
is not (yet) enabled by default there.
V2: Enable for Gen5 conditionally on GLSL version.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Previously we special-cased textureSize() but this is the more correct
condition.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
* This in essence means that Mesa would be
taking control of Haiku's OpenGL kit.
* This works by dispatching renderers from the
OpenGL add-ons directory
This patch fixes this Oracle Solaris Studio build error.
"../../src/glsl/ir_constant_expression.cpp", line 1398: Error: The function "isnormal" must have a prototype.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
All texture instructions can use offsets, not just TXF. Offsets into
the literals array were wrong, too.
Signed-off-by: Marek Olšák <marek.olsak@amd.com>
We return 0 for GL_NUM_SHADER_BINARY_FORMATS, so
GL_SHADER_BINARY_FORMATS should not write any data to the application
buffer.
Fixes piglit test 'arb_get_program_binary-overrun shader'.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
As we march over the source buffer we're uploading in pieces, we
need to memcpy from the current offset, not the start of the buffer.
Fixes graphical corruption when drawing very large vertex buffers.
Cc: "9.2" <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Matthew McClure <mcclurem@vmware.com>
This patch adds the lrint, lrintf, llrint, and llrintf rounding utility
functions. When packing unorm depth values, we will round to nearest.
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
With commit cb1febb07, I have incorrectly removed HAVE_COMMON_DRI
assuming that swrast does not need to build the translations for
driconf options, as effectively swrast/drisw does not use them.
With the incoming unification work of dri and drisw, it makes
sense just to revert the offending hunk.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=70057
Reported-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Tested-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Signed-off-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
Previously, we computed dFdy() using the following instruction:
add(8) dst<1>F src<4,4,0)F -src.2<4,4,0>F { align1 1Q }
That had the disadvantage that it computed the same value for all 4
pixels of a 2x2 subspan, which meant that it was less accurate than
dFdx(). This patch changes it to the following instruction when
c->key.high_quality_derivatives is set:
add(8) dst<1>F src<4,4,1>.xyxyF -src<4,4,1>.zwzwF { align16 1Q }
This gives it comparable accuracy to dFdx().
Unfortunately, align16 instructions can't be compressed, so in SIMD16
shaders, instead of emitting this instruction:
add(16) dst<1>F src<4,4,1>.xyxyF -src<4,4,1>.zwzwF { align16 1H }
We need to unroll to two instructions:
add(8) dst<1>F src<4,4,1>.xyxyF -src<4,4,1>.zwzwF { align16 1Q }
add(8) (dst+1)<1>F (src+1)<4,4,1>.xyxyF -(src+1)<4,4,1>.zwzwF { align16 2Q }
Fixes piglit test spec/glsl-1.10/execution/fs-dfdy-accuracy.
Acked-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The inferface/prototype in native_wayland_bufmgr.h uses boolean/int, as
well as the rest of the file. Convert to improve consistency and to
prevent gcc compiler warnings due to type miss-match.
Signed-off-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Clean up inconsistency in enum decoration:
- Use the undecorated enums where possible.
- MAX_PROGRAM_TEXTURE_GATHER_COMPONENTS_ARB remains decorated, since it
has no undecorated equivalent in GL4.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=70054
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The new surface channel select bits allow us to avoid having to
recompile the shader for this workaround.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This allows us to use a different surface format for gather4, which is
required for R32G32_FLOAT to work on Gen7.
V4: - Only emit alternate surface state for shaders which will actually
use it.
- Pass a simple 'for_gather' flag rather than a function pointer.
The callee can decide what w/a to apply.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Worst-case is that *every* texunit uses a format that needs overriding.
V4: Place the gather slots last, so shaders which don't use gather don't
get penalized by having a huge binding table.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
gather4 GREEN channel against a surface with format R32G32_FLOAT doesn't work
correctly on IVB. w/a from bspec:
- use R32G32_FLOAT_LD = 0x97 instead, for gather4 only.
- select BLUE channel to read GREEN
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
V4: Only flag quirks if there are any uses of gather in the shader,
to avoid spurious recompiles just because someone happened to use
RG32F.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Pretty much the same as the FS case. Channel select goes in the header,
V2: Less mangling.
V3: Avoid sampling at all, for degenerate swizzles.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Lowers ir_tg4 (from textureGather and textureGatherOffset builtins) to
SHADER_OPCODE_TG4.
The usual post-sampling swizzle workaround can't work for ir_tg4,
so avoid doing that:
* For R/G/B/A swizzles use the hardware channel select (lives in the
same dword in the header as the texel offset), and then don't do
anything afterward in the shader.
* For 0/1 swizzles blast the appropriate constant over all the output
channels instead of sampling.
V2: Avoid duplicating header enabling block
V3: Avoid sampling at all, for degenerate swizzles.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Adds the Gen7 message IDs, a new SHADER_OPCODE_TG4 pseudo-op, and
low-level support for emitting it via generate_tex().
V3: Updated for changes in master.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
When used with a cube array in VS, failed assertion in ir_validate:
Assignment count of LHS write mask channels enabled not
matching RHS vector size (3 LHS, 4 RHS).
To fix this, swizzle the RHS correctly for the writemask.
This showed up in the ARB_texture_gather tests, which exercise cube
arrays in the VS.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Cc: "9.2" <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Consider only the top-left and top-right pixels to approximate DDX in a 2x2
subspan, unless the application requests a more accurate approximation via
GL_FRAGMENT_SHADER_DERIVATIVE_HINT or this optimization is disabled from the
new driconf option disable_derivative_optimization.
This results in a less accurate approximation. However, it improves the
performance of Xonotic with Ultra settings by 24.3879% +/- 0.832202% (at 95.0%
confidence) on Haswell. No noticeable image quality difference observed.
The improvement comes from faster sample_d. It seems, on Haswell, some
optimizations are introduced to allow faster sample_d when all pixels in a
subspan have the same derivative. I considered SAMPLE_STATE too, which allows
one to control the quality of sample_d on Haswell. But it gave much worse
image quality without giving better performance comparing to this change.
No piglit quick.tests regression on Haswell (tested with v1).
v2: better guess for precompile program key
Signed-off-by: Chia-I Wu <olv@lunarg.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
We have the destination framebuffer object passed in; there's no need to
go digging around in the context.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Using it encourages the (IMHO worrying) practice of leaving member
variables uninitialized in constructor definitions. This macro
shouldn't be necessary anymore after the last patch series fixing all
its users to initialize all member variables from the class
constructor. Remove it.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
All member variables of glsl_to_tgsi_instruction are already being
initialized from its implicitly defined constructor, it's not
necessary to use rzalloc to allocate its memory.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
All member variables of ir_to_mesa_instruction are already being
initialized from its implicitly defined constructor, it's not
necessary to use rzalloc to allocate its memory.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
All member variables of vec4_live_variables are already being
initialized from its constructor, it's not necessary to use rzalloc to
allocate its memory, and doing so makes it more likely that we will
start relying on the allocator to zero out all memory if the class is
ever extended with new member variables.
That's bad because it ties objects to some specific allocation scheme,
and gives unpredictable results when an object is created with a
different allocator -- Stack allocation, array allocation, or
aggregation inside a different object are some of the useful
possibilities that come to my mind.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
All member variables of fs_live_variables are already being
initialized from its constructor, it's not necessary to use rzalloc to
allocate its memory, and doing so makes it more likely that we will
start relying on the allocator to zero out all memory if the class is
ever extended with new member variables.
That's bad because it ties objects to some specific allocation scheme,
and gives unpredictable results when an object is created with a
different allocator -- Stack allocation, array allocation, or
aggregation inside a different object are some of the useful
possibilities that come to my mind.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
All member variables of fs_inst are already being initialized from its
constructor, it's not necessary to use rzalloc to allocate its memory,
and doing so makes it more likely that we will start relying on the
allocator to zero out all memory if the class is ever extended with
new member variables.
That's bad because it ties objects to some specific allocation scheme,
and gives unpredictable results when an object is created with a
different allocator -- Stack allocation, array allocation, or
aggregation inside a different object are some of the useful
possibilities that come to my mind.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
All member variables of ip_record are already being initialized from
its constructor, it's not necessary to use rzalloc to allocate its
memory, and doing so makes it more likely that we will start relying
on the allocator to zero out all memory if the class is ever extended
with new member variables.
That's bad because it ties objects to some specific allocation scheme,
and gives unpredictable results when an object is created with a
different allocator -- Stack allocation, array allocation, or
aggregation inside a different object are some of the useful
possibilities that come to my mind.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The cfg_t object relies on the memory allocator zeroing out its
contents before it's initialized, which is quite an unusual practice
in the C++ world because it ties objects to some specific allocation
scheme, and gives unpredictable results when an object is created with
a different allocator -- Stack allocation, array allocation, or
aggregation inside a different object are some of the useful
possibilities that come to my mind. Initialize all fields from the
constructor and stop using the zeroing allocator.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The bblock_t object relies on the memory allocator zeroing out its
contents before it's initialized, which is quite an unusual practice
in the C++ world because it ties objects to some specific allocation
scheme, and gives unpredictable results when an object is created with
a different allocator -- Stack allocation, array allocation, or
aggregation inside a different object are some of the useful
possibilities that come to my mind. Initialize all fields from the
constructor and stop using the zeroing allocator.
v2: Use zero initialization for numeric types instead of default construction.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
All member variables of ast_type_qualifier are already being
initialized from its implicitly defined constructor, it's not
necessary to use rzalloc to allocate its memory.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
All member variables of ast_node are already being initialized from
its constructor, but some of its derived classes were leaving members
uninitialized -- Fix them.
Using rzalloc makes it more likely that we will start relying on the
allocator to zero out all memory if the class is ever extended with
new member variables. That's bad because it ties objects to some
specific allocation scheme, and gives unpredictable results when an
object is created with a different allocator -- Stack allocation,
array allocation, or aggregation inside a different object are some of
the useful possibilities that come to my mind.
v2: Use NULL initialization instead of default construction for pointers.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The vec4_instruction object relies on the memory allocator zeroing out
its contents before it's initialized, which is quite an unusual
practice in the C++ world because it ties objects to some specific
allocation scheme, and gives unpredictable results when an object is
created with a different allocator -- Stack allocation, array
allocation, or aggregation inside a different object are some of the
useful possibilities that come to my mind. Initialize all fields from
the constructor and stop using the zeroing allocator.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The _mesa_glsl_parse_state object relies on the memory allocator
zeroing out its contents before it's initialized, which is quite an
unusual practice in the C++ world because it ties objects to some
specific allocation scheme, and gives unpredictable results when an
object is created with a different allocator -- Stack allocation,
array allocation, or aggregation inside a different object are some of
the useful possibilities that come to my mind. Initialize all fields
from the constructor and stop using the zeroing allocator.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Several C++ source files include "main/uniforms.h" from an extern "C"
block, which is both unnecessary, because "uniforms.h" already checks
for a C++ compiler and sets the right linkage, and incorrect, because
the header file includes other C++ headers ("glsl_types.h" and
"ir_uniform.h") that are supposed to get C++ linkage.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
In commit 247f90c77e (i965/gs: Set
control data header size/format appropriately for EndPrimitive()), I
incorrectly numbered the DWORDs in the 3DSTATE_GS command starting
from 1 instead of starting from 0. This caused the control data
format to be programmed into the wrong DWORD, resulting in corruption
in some geometry shaders that used an output type of points.
This patch numbers the DWORDs starting from 0, as we do for all other
commands, which causes the control data format to be programmed into
the correct DWORD.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
The spec doesn't say GL_INVALID_VALUE should be raised for bufSize <= 0.
In any case, memcpy(len < 0) will lead to a crash, so don't allow it.
CC: "9.2" <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Error checking bufSize isn't mentioned in the spec, but it is in the
man pages. However, I believe the man page is incorrect. Typically,
GL functions that take GLsizei parameters check that they're positive
or non-negative. Negative values don't make sense here.
A spec bug has been filed with Khronos/ARB.
v2: check for negative values, not <= 0.
This incorporates Vinson's change to check for a null src pointer as
detected by coverity.
Also, rename the function params to be src/dst, const-qualify src,
and use GL types to match the calling functions. And add some more
comments.
Reviewed-by: Timothy Arceri <t_arceri@yahoo.com.au>
libllvmradeon.la is available whenever NEED_RADEON_LLVM is set, using
R600_NEED_RADEON_GALLIUM is rather ambiguous and unnecessary. Drop it
in favour of NEED_RADEON_LLVM.
Signed-off-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
The mesa/drivers/dri/Makefile.am already guards the individual
targets/subdirs with HAVE_*_DRI before including them. Thus making
the additional check within each Makefile.am unnecessary.
Signed-off-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
libdricommon.la is available whenever a non swrast driver is built.
All the classic dri drivers make use of the prebuild library but all
of the gallium ones rebuild it explicitly.
While we're here gallium/{llvm,soft}pipe does not require HAVE_COMMON_DRI
thus do not set in during configure.
v2: [Emil] Add commit message and drop HAVE_COMMON_DRI from configure.ac
v3: [Emil] Rebase and resolve targets/r*/dri conflicts
Signed-off-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
shader has already been dereferenced earlier so cannot be null here.
Fixes "Dereference before null check" defect reported by Coverity.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
The block size for all formats is currently at least 1 byte. Add an
assertion for this.
This should silence several Coverity "Division or modulo by zero"
defects.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
There is an earlier null check for draw so draw could be null here as
well.
Fixes "Dereference after null check" defect reported by Coverity.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Fix build errors.
CC surface.lo
surface.c: In function 'vlVdpVideoSurfaceGetBitsYCbCr':
surface.c:247:10: error: implicit declaration of function 'util_copy_rect' [-Werror=implicit-function-declaration]
CC output.lo
output.c: In function 'vlVdpOutputSurfaceGetBitsNative':
output.c:216:4: error: implicit declaration of function 'util_copy_rect' [-Werror=implicit-function-declaration]
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Fix build error.
CC device.lo
device.c: In function 'vlVdpDefaultSamplerViewTemplate':
device.c:251:4: error: implicit declaration of function 'util_format_description' [-Werror=implicit-function-declaration]
device.c:251:9: warning: assignment makes pointer from integer without a cast [enabled by default]
device.c:252:12: error: dereferencing pointer to incomplete type
device.c:252:28: error: 'UTIL_FORMAT_SWIZZLE_0' undeclared (first use in this function)
device.c:252:28: note: each undeclared identifier is reported only once for each function it appears in
device.c:254:12: error: dereferencing pointer to incomplete type
device.c:256:12: error: dereferencing pointer to incomplete type
device.c:258:12: error: dereferencing pointer to incomplete type
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
This patch fixes the build error introduced with commit
81bb98e928.
CC subpicture.lo
subpicture.c: In function 'upload_sampler':
subpicture.c:181:4: error: implicit declaration of function 'util_copy_rect' [-Werror=implicit-function-declaration]
subpicture.c: In function 'XvMCClearSubpicture':
subpicture.c:304:21: error: storage size of 'uc' isn't known
subpicture.c:328:4: error: implicit declaration of function 'util_fill_rect' [-Werror=implicit-function-declaration]
subpicture.c:304:21: warning: unused variable 'uc' [-Wunused-variable]
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
The svga/d3d9 convention is that pixel centers are at integer coordinates.
Fixes piglit glsl-arb-fragment-coord-conventions test.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Using the map/unmap path for glTexImage is a little bit faster
than blitting. Also, this fixes about 50 assorted piglit failures
that seem to be related to the blit version of glReadPixels.
Reviewed-by: Thomas Hellstrom <thellstrom@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
u_rect.h was including u_surface.h just to avoid touching a bunch
of other source files after some functions were moved from u_rect.h
to u_surface.h. This patch cleans up that hack.
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
The format of the window system framebuffer changed from ARGB8888 to
SARGB8, but we're still supposed to render to it the same as ARGB8888
unless the user flipped the GL_FRAMEBUFFER_SRGB switch.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
I believe this extension was enabled by accident. As far as I can tell,
there has never been any code in Mesa to actually support it. Not only
that, this extension is only useful in the common-lite profile, and Mesa
does the common profile.
This "fixes" the piglit test oes_matrix_get-api.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Cc: "9.1 9.2" <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
For some reason that I don't yet fully understand, Glaze does not work with
libEGL unless libEGL is linked with -Bsymbolic.[*]
Beyond that specific reason, all of the reasons for which libGL.so is linked
with -Bsymbolic, (see the commit history), should also apply here.
[*] The specific behavior I am seeing is that when Glaze calls dlopen for
libEGL.so, ifunc resolvers within Glaze for EGL functions are called before
the dlopen returns. These resolvers cannot succeed, as they need the return
value from dlopen in order to find the functions to resolve to. I don't know
what's causing these resolvers to be called, but I have verified that linking
libEGL with -Bsymbolic causes this problematic behavior to stop.
CC: "9.1 and 9.2" <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
From the bspec documentation of the SEND instruction:
"destination region cannot cross the 256-bit register boundary."
To avoid violating this restriction when executing SIMD16 texturing
operations (such as those used by blorp), we need to ensure that the
destination of the SEND instruction doesn't exceed 256 bits in size.
An easy way to do this is to set the type of the destination register
to UW (unsigned word), since 16 unsigned words can fit inside a
256-bit register. Fortunately, this has no effect on the sampling
operation, since the sampler always infers the destination data type
from the sampler message rather than from the type of the instruction
operand.
Previously, we did this for texturing operations issued by the vec4
and fs back-ends, but not for blorp. This patch makes blorp use the
same trick.
I haven't observed any behavioural difference on actual hardware due
to this patch, but it avoids a warning from the simulator so it seems
like the right thing to do.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Acked-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
We originally had a path just did the loop and called
ctx->Driver.AllocTextureImageBuffer(), which I moved into Mesa core. But
we can do better, avoiding incorrect miptree size guesses and later
texture validations by just directly allocating the miptree and setting it
to all the images.
v2: drop debug printf.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
As long as the baselevel, maxlevel still sit inside the range we had
previously validated, there's no need to reallocate the texture.
I also hope this makes our texture validation logic much more obvious.
It's taken me enough tries to write this change, that's for sure. Reduces
miptree copy count on a piglit run by 1.3%, though the change in amount of
data moved is much smaller.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Given that a teximage that calls us with this flag set will immediately
proceed to allocate the other levels, we can probably just go ahead and
allocate those levels now.
Reduces miptree copies in piglit by about .05%.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
If the caller shows up with GL_BASE_LEVEL != 0, it doesn't mean that the
texture will over the course of its lifetime have that nonzero baselevel,
it means that the caller is filling the texture from the bottom up for
some reason (one could imagine demand-loading detailed texture layers at
runtime, for example). If we allocate from just the current baselevel, it
means when they come along with the next level up, we'll have to allocate
a new miptree and copy all of our bits out of the first miptree.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Let's say you started allocating your 2D texture with level 2 of a tree as
a 1x1 image. The driver doesn't know if this means that level 0 is 4x4 or
4x1 or 1x4, so we would just allocate a single 1x1 and let it get copied
in to the real location at texture validate time later.
Since this is just a temporary allocation that *will* get copied, the
extra space allocation of just taking the normal path which will happen to
producing a 4x1 level 0, 2x1 level 1, and 1x1 level 2 is the right way to
go, to reduce complexity in the normal case.
No change in miptree copies over the course of a piglit run.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
This has no effect currently, because intel_finalize_mipmap_tree() always
makes mt->first_level == tObj->BaseLevel.
The change I made before to handle it
(b1080cfbdb) got very close to working, but
after fixing some unrelated bugs in the series, it still left
tex-miplevel-selection producing errors when testing textureLod(). The
problem is that for explicit LODs, the sampler's LOD clamping is ignored,
and only the surface's MIP clamping is respected. So we need to use
surface mip clamping, which applies on top of the sampler's mip clamping,
so the sampler change gets backed out.
Now actually tested with a non-regressing series producing a non-zero
computed baselevel.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
We know that the object's mt is equal to the firstimage's mt because it's
gone through intel_finalize_mipmap_tree(). Saves a lookup of firstimage
on pre-gen7.
v2: Merge in the warning fix that appeared later in the series (noted by
Chad)
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
The function r600_choose_tiling is new and needs a review.
The only change in functionality is that it enables 2D tiling for compressed
textures on SI. It was probably accidentally turned off.
v2: don't make scanout buffers linear
More work needs to be done for this to be entirely shared with r600g.
I'm just trying to share r600_texture.c now.
The reason I put the implementation to si_descriptors.c is that the emit
function had already been there.
This doesn't fix any known issue (I haven't run piglit with this yet),
but the code was obviously completely wrong. It looks like copy-pasted from CMP.
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
If the argument to emit_bool_to_cond_code() is an ir_expression, we
loop over the operands, calling accept() on each of them, which
generates assembly code to compute that subexpression. We then emit
one or two final instruction that perform the top-level operation on
those operands.
If it's not an expression (say, a boolean-valued variable), we simply
call accept() on the whole value.
In commit 80ecb8f1 (i965/fs: Avoid generating extra AND instructions on
bool logic ops), Eric made logic operations jump out of the expression
path to the non-expression path.
Unfortunately, this meant that we would first accept() the two operands,
skip generating any code that used them, then accept() the whole
expression, generating code for the operands a second time.
Dead code elimination would always remove the first set of redundant
operand assembly, since nothing actually used them. But we shouldn't
generate it in the first place.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Ironlake's counters are always enabled; userspace can simply send a
MI_REPORT_PERF_COUNT packet to take a snapshot of them. This makes it
easy to implement.
The counters are documented in the source code for the intel-gpu-tools
intel_perf_counters utility.
v2: Adjust for core data structure changes. Add a table mapping buffer
object offsets to exposed counters (which changes each generation).
Finally, add report ID assertions to sanity check the BO layout
(thanks to Carl Worth).
v3: Update for core BeginPerfMonitor hook changes (requested by Brian).
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This provides an interface for applications (and OpenGL-based tools) to
access GPU performance counters. Since the exact performance counters
available vary between vendors and hardware generations, the extension
provides an API the application can use to get the names, types, and
minimum/maximum values of all available counters. Counters are also
organized into groups.
Applications create "performance monitor" objects, select the counters
they want to track, and Begin/End monitoring, much like OpenGL's query
API. Multiple monitors can be in flight simultaneously.
v2: Pass ctx to all driver hooks (suggested by Christoph), and attempt
to fix overallocation of bitsets (caught by Christoph). Incomplete.
v3: Significantly rework core data structures. Store counters in groups
rather than in a global list. Use their array index in the group's
counter list as the ID rather than trying to store a globally unique
counter ID. Use bitsets for active counters within a group, and
also track which groups are active so that's easy to query.
v4: Remove _mesa_ prefix on static functions; detect out of memory
conditions in new_performance_monitor(); make BeginPerfMonitor hook
return a boolean rather than setting m->Active or raising an error.
Switch to GLuint/unsigned for NumGroups, NumCounters, and
MaxActiveCounters (which also means switching a bunch of temporary
variable types). All suggested by Brian Paul. Also, remove
commented out code at the bottom of the block. Finally, fix the
dispatch sanity test (noticed by Ian Romanick).
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com> [v3]
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This is better than overriding the extension enable based on the
language version; it's robust against shaders that do:
#version 140
#extension GL_ARB_uniform_buffer_object : disable
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Explicit attribute locations are supported with GLSL 3.30, GLSL ES 3.00,
or "#extension GL_ARB_explicit_attrib_location: enable". Using a helper
function makes it easy to check for this.
This enables support in GLSL 3.30, which was previously missing.
Previously, we overrode the extension enable flag for ES 3.00. This is
not robust against a shader such as:
#version 330
#extension GL_ARB_explicit_attrib_location : disable
Disabling extensions should not remove core language functionality.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Hardware requires the magnitude of the largest component to not exceed
1; brw_cubemap_normalize ensures that this is the case.
Unfortunately, we would previously multiply the array index for cube
arrays by the normalization factor. The incorrect array index would then
cause the sampler to attempt to access either the wrong cube, or memory
outside the cube surface entirely, resulting in garbage rendering or in
the worst case, hangs.
Alter the normalization pass to only multiply the .xyz components.
Fixes broken rendering in the arb_texture_cube_map_array-cubemap piglit,
which was recently adjusted to provoke this behavior.
V2: Fix indent.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Cc: "9.2" mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Compress empty triangles (don't emit more than one in a row) and
never emit empty triangles if we already generated a triangle
covering a non-null area. We can't skip all null-triangles
because c_primitives expects ones that were generated from vertices
exactly at the clipping-plane, to be emitted.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
We need to count the clipper primitives before the rasterizer
discards one it considers to be null.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
We need to subdivide triangles if either of the dimensions is
larger than the max edge length, not when both of them are larger.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
The fix is at the end (TGSI_TEXTURE_SHADOWCUBE handling), but I also
restructured the code for it to be more readable.
Fixes spec/!OpenGL 3.0/sampler-cube-shadow.
Reviewed-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
This fixes some piglits, e.g:
spec/!OpenGL 3.0/required-renderbuffer-attachment-formats.
This can be ported to r600g.
Reviewed-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Only create one screen for each winsys instance.
This helps with buffer sharing and interop handling.
v2: rebased and some minor cleanup
Signed-off-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <marek.olsak@amd.com>
This reverts commit 755c11dc5e.
We agreed that this is band-aid that's not very useful and
the proper solution is to rewrite the rasterization algo
so that it operates on 64 bit values.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
No such argument exists since this commit:
commit 92f3fca0ea
Author: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
AuthorDate: Sun Aug 21 17:23:58 2011 -0700
Commit: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
CommitDate: Tue Aug 23 14:52:09 2011 -0700
mesa: Remove target parameter from dd_function_table::BufferSubData
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
When subdiving a triangle we're using a temporary array to store
the new coordinates for the subdivided triangles. Unfortunately
the array used for that was not aligned properly causing
random crashes in the llvm jit code which was trying to load
vectors from it.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
This patch fixes the MSVC build error introduced by commit
673129e0b9.
enums.c
mesa\main\enums.c(3776) : error C2143: syntax error : missing ';' before 'type'
mesa\main\enums.c(3781) : error C2065: 'elt' : undeclared identifier
mesa\main\enums.c(3781) : warning C4047: '!=' : 'int' differs in levels of indirection from 'void *'
mesa\main\enums.c(3782) : error C2065: 'elt' : undeclared identifier
mesa\main\enums.c(3782) : error C2223: left of '->offset' must point to struct/union
mesa\main\enums.c(3782) : warning C4033: '_mesa_lookup_enum_by_nr' must return a value
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Normally, LD_PRELOAD will take precedence over your own symbols, which you
want for things like malloc() in libc. But we don't have any local
symbols we would want overridden (like hash_table_insert(), for example!),
so tell the linker to resolve them internally. This also avoids calls
through the PLT.
Saves almost 100k on libdricore's size, and gets us a bunch of the
performance back that we had with non-dricore.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@.intel.com>
This gives the compiler the chance to inline and not export class symbols
even in the absence of LTO. Saves about 60kb on disk.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@.intel.com>
Noticed while grepping through the code for something else.
v2: Don't convert really-runtime asserts to static asserts.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@.intel.com>
Since it's only used for debug information, we can misalign the struct and
save the disk space. Another 19k on a 64-bit build.
v2: Make a compiler.h macro to only use the attribute if we know we can.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@.intel.com>
Now that there's no name -> enum direction, we can drop the extra strings,
and merge the offsets table and the reduced_enums table.
Between the previous commit and this one, Mesa core drops by 30k.
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@.intel.com>
It's been unused for a long time. I stopped digging through git history
as of 2009.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@.intel.com>
Unfortunately d3d10 requires a lot higher precision (e.g.
wgf11clipping tests for it). The smallest number of precision
bits with which it passes is 8. That means that we need to
decrease the maximum length of an edge that we can handle without
subdivision by 4 bits. Abstracted the code a bit to make it easier
to change once to switch to 64bit rasterization.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
This patch fixes these MSVC build errors.
ir_constant_expression.cpp
src\glsl\ir_constant_expression.cpp(564) : warning C4244: '=' : conversion from 'int' to 'float', possible loss of data
src\glsl\ir_constant_expression.cpp(1384) : error C3861: 'isnormal': identifier not found
src\glsl\ir_constant_expression.cpp(1385) : error C3861: 'copysign': identifier not found
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=69541
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Acked-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Share the winsys between different fd's if they point to the same device.
Signed-off-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <marek.olsak@amd.com>
Waiting for an empty queue is nonsense and can lead to deadlocks if we have
multiple waiters or another thread that continuously sends down new commands.
Just post the cs to the queue and immediately wait for it to finish.
This is a candidate for the stable branch.
Signed-off-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <marek.olsak@amd.com>
Kill the thread only after we checked that it's not used any more, not before.
Signed-off-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <marek.olsak@amd.com>
The rescale_texcoord(), if it does something, will return just the
GLSL-sized coordinate, leaving out the 3rd and 4th components where we
were storing our projected shadow compare and the texture projector.
Deref the shadow compare before using the shared rescale-the-coordinate
code to fix the problem.
Fixes piglit tex-shadow2drect.shader_test and txp-shadow2drect.shader_test
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=69525
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Probably non-intentional, but the SURFACE_STATE setup refactoring
for buffer surfaces had missed the scs bits when creating constant
surface states.
Fixes broken GLB 2.5 on Haswell where the knight's textures are missing
Signed-off-by: Abdiel Janulgue <abdiel.janulgue@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
These classes declared a placement new operator, but didn't declare a
delete operator. Switching to the macro gives them a delete operator,
which probably is a good idea anyway.
This also eliminates a lot of boilerplate.
v2: Properly use RZALLOC in Mesa IR/TGSI translators. Caught by Eric
and Chad.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Most of our C++ classes define placement new and delete operators so we
can do convenient allocation via:
thing *foo = new(mem_ctx) thing(...)
Currently, this is done via a lot of boilerplate. By adding simple
macros to ralloc, we can condense this to a single line, making it
trivial to add this feature to a new class.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Allocate a CMASK on demand and use it to fast clear single-sample
colorbuffers. Both FBOs and window system colorbuffers are fast
cleared. Expand as needed when colorbuffers are mapped or displayed
on screen.
v2: cosmetics, move transfer expansion into dma_blit
Signed-off-by: Marek Olšák <marek.olsak@amd.com>
r600g needs explicit flushing before DRI2 buffers are presented on the screen.
v2: add (stub) implementations for all drivers, fix frontbuffer flushing
v3: fix galahad
Signed-off-by: Marek Olšák <marek.olsak@amd.com>
We must take rounding in consideration when re-scaling to narrow
normalized channels, such as 2-bit normalized alpha.
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
GL_MAX_GEOMETRY_TEXTURE_IMAGE_UNITS, GL_MAX_GEOMETRY_OUTPUT_VERTICES,
GL_MAX_GEOMETRY_TOTAL_OUTPUT_COMPONENTS, and
GL_MAX_GEOMETRY_UNIFORM_COMPONENTS all have the same enum value and
meaning as their _ARB counterparts.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <marek.olsak@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
The comment '# GL 3.0 / GLES3' was incorrect. The
MAX_VERTEX_OUTPUT_COMPONENTS and MAX_FRAGMENT_INPUT_COMPONENTS queries
were added in OpenGL 3.2 (with geometry shaders) and OpenGL ES 3.0.
This just fixes that comment.
v2: Add the GEOMETRY queries in the existing '# GL 3.2' section since
they have nothing to do with GLES3. Suggested by Paul.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <marek.olsak@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
In OpenGL ES 3.0 the minimum-maximum for GL_MAX_VERTEX_OUTPUT_VECTORS is 16,
but the minimum-maximum for GL_MAX_FRAGMENT_INTPUT_VECTORS is 15.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <marek.olsak@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
In OpenGL ES 3.0 the minimum-maximum for GL_MAX_VERTEX_OUTPUT_VECTORS is 16,
but the minimum-maximum for GL_MAX_FRAGMENT_INTPUT_VECTORS is 15.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <marek.olsak@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Now that MaxVaryings is > 16, VertexProgram.MaxOutputComponents,
GeometryProgram.MaxInputComponents, GeometryProgram.MaxOutputComponents,
and FragmentProgram.MaxInputComponents also need to be set.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Cc: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Previously gl_constants::MaxVaryingComponents was used. Now
gl_constants::VertexProgram::MaxOutputs and
gl_constants::GeometryProgram::MaxOutputs are used.
This means that st_extensions.c had to be updated to set these fields
instead of MaxVaryingComponents. It was previously the only place that
set MaxVaryingComponents.
I believe that the structure is allocated by calloc, so the value should
be initialized to zero in non-Gallium drivers before and after my
change. Right now nobody enables GL_ARB_geometry_shader4, so it's
pretty much dead code anyway.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <marek.olsak@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Cc: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
In OpenGL 3.2 these are independently queryable. In addition, the spec
has different minimum-maximums for various values.
GL_MAX_VERTEX_OUTPUT_COMPONENTS is 64, but
GL_MAX_GEOMETRY_OUTPUT_COMPONENTS (and GL_MAX_FRAGMENT_INPUT_COMPONENTS)
is 128.
In OpenGL ES 3.0 these are also independently queryable. The spec has
different minimum-maximums for various values.
GL_MAX_VERTEX_OUTPUT_VECTORS is 16, but GL_MAX_FRAGMENT_INTPUT_VECTORS
is 15.
None of these values are used yet. I have just added space to the
structures. Future patches will add users and eventually remove some
old fields.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <marek.olsak@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Cc: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
This was an embarassingly large amount of copy and pasted code,
and it wasn't particularly simple code either. By factoring it out
into a helper function, we consolidate the complexity.
v2: Properly NULL-check bo. Caught by Eric Anholt.
v3: Do the subtraction by 1 in gen7_emit_buffer_surface_state, rather
than making callers do it. This makes the buffer_size parameter
the actual size of the buffer. Suggested by Paul Berry.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This was an embarassingly large amount of copy and pasted code,
and it wasn't particularly simple code either. By factoring it out
into a helper function, we consolidate the complexity.
v2: Properly NULL-check bo. Caught by Eric Anholt.
v3: Do the subtraction by 1 in gen7_emit_buffer_surface_state, rather
than making callers do it. This makes the buffer_size parameter
the actual size of the buffer. Suggested by Paul Berry.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The value that's split into width/height/depth needs to be the size of
the buffer minus one. This makes it consistent with the constant buffer
and shader time SURFACE_STATE setup code.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This fixes myriads of regressions since commit 169f9c030c
("i965: Add an assertion that writemask != NULL for non-ARFs.").
On Sandybridge, our control flow handling (such as brw_IF) does:
brw_set_dest(p, insn, brw_imm_w(0));
insn->bits1.branch_gen6.jump_count = 0;
This results in a IMM destination with zero for the writemask. IMM
destinations are rather bizarre, but the code has been working for ages,
so I'm loathe to change it.
Fixes glxgears on Sandybridge.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
I would use _mesa_delete_shader, but it's declared static, and we don't
really need any of the stuff in it anyway.
This fixes a memory leak caught by Valgrind.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
&a and &b are the address of the local stack variables, not the actual
structures. Instead of comparing the fields of a and b, we compared
...some stack memory.
Not a candidate for stable since GS code doesn't exist in 9.2.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
The code to upload the binding tables for each stage was scattered
across brw_{vs,gs,wm}_surface_state.c and brw_misc_state.c, which also
contain a lot of code to populate individual SURFACE_STATE structures.
This patch brings all the binding table upload code together, and splits
it out from the code which fills in SURFACE_STATE entries.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This is not quite the same: brw_upload_binding_table() also has code to
early-return if there are no entries, while the existing code did not.
The PS binding table is unlikely to be empty since it will have at least
one color buffer. If it ever is empty, early returning seems wise.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Instead of passing in a brw_vec4_prog_data structure, we can simply
pass the one field it needs: the number of entries in the binding table.
We also need to pass in the shader time surface index rather than
hardcoding SURF_INDEX_VEC4_SHADER_TIME.
Since the resulting function is stage-agnostic, this patch removes
"vec4_" from the name.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This is probably more efficient. At any rate, it's less code.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The first comment was a bit stale; there are more kinds of surfaces than
textures and pull constants.
The second was a leftover "to do" comment for something I already did.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
xlib_sw_winsys.h:5:22: fatal error: X11/Xlib.h: No such file or directory
The compiler cannot find the Xlib.h in the installed system headers.
All supplied include directives point to inside the mesa module.
The X11_CFLAGS variable is undefined (not defined in config.status).
It appears the intent was to use X11_INCLUDES defined in configure.ac.
The Xlib.h file is not installed on my workstation. It is supplied in
the libx11-dev package. This allows an X developer control over which
version of this file is used for X development.
Signed-off-by: Gaetan Nadon <memsize@videotron.ca>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
egl_glx.c:40:22: fatal error: X11/Xlib.h: No such file or directory
The compiler cannot find the Xlib.h in the installed system headers.
All supplied include directives point to inside the mesa module.
The X11_CFLAGS variable is undefined (not defined in config.status).
It appears the intent was to use X11_INCLUDES defined in configure.ac.
The Xlib.h file is not installed on my workstation. It is supplied in
the libx11-dev package. This allows an X developer control over which
version of this file is used for X development.
Signed-off-by: Gaetan Nadon <memsize@videotron.ca>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Technically without seamless filtering enabled GL allows any wrap mode, which
made sense when supporting true borders (can get seamless effect with border
and CLAMP_TO_BORDER), but gallium doesn't support borders and d3d9 requires
wrap modes to be ignored and it's a pain to fix up the sampler state (as it
makes it texture dependent). It is difficult to imagine a situation where an
app really wants another behavior so just cheat here. (It looks like some
graphics hw (intel) actually requires this too hence it should be safe.)
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This removes a lot of code, but not everything, as util_blit_pixels_tex
is still useful when one needs to override pipe_sampler_view::swizzle_?.
Reviewed-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <marek.olsak@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
By calling util_map_texcoords2d_onto_cubemap.
A new parameter for util_blit_pixels_tex is necessary, as
pipe_sampler_view::first_layer is always supposed to point to the first
face when sampling from cubemaps.
Reviewed-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <marek.olsak@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
The previous names were really confusing to talk about:
- brw_fs_visitor() contained methods named emit_whatever().
- brw_fs_generator() contained methods named generate_whatever(), but
lived in brw_fs_emit.cpp.
So when someone said "the emit layer", or "emit code", we weren't sure
whether they meant the visitor's emit() functions or the generator in
brw_fs_emit.cpp.
By renaming these files, the method names, class names, and file names
all match, which is much less confusing.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
I initially implemented frexp() as an IR opcode with a lowering pass,
but since it returns a value and has an out-parameter, it would break
assumptions our optimization passes make about ir_expressions being pure
(i.e., having no side effects).
For example, if opt_tree_grafting encounters this code:
uniform float u;
void main()
{
int exp;
float f = frexp(u, out exp);
float g = float(exp)/256.0;
float h = float(exp) + 1.0;
gl_FragColor = vec4(f, g, h, g + h);
}
it may try to optimize it to this:
uniform float u;
void main()
{
int exp;
float g = float(exp)/256.0;
float h = float(exp) + 1.0;
gl_FragColor = vec4(frexp(u, out exp), g, h, g + h);
}
Some hardware has an instruction which performs frexp(), but we would
need some other compiler infrastructure to be able to generate it, such
as an intrinsics system that would allow backends to emit specific code
for particular bits of IR.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Note the parameter name change in the int version of ir_constant, to
avoid the conflict with the loop iterator.
v2: Make analogous change to builtin_builder::imm().
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
These data structures are used for debug output, so it wasn't hurting
anything that there were missing bits. But it's good to keep things
up to date.
This patch also adds static asserts so that the {brw,cache}_bits[]
arrays are the proper size, so that we don't forget to add to them in
the future. Unfortunately there's no convenient way to assert that
mesa_bits[] is the proper size.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
If the geometry shader refers to the built-in variable
gl_PrimitiveIDIn, we need to set a bit in 3DSTATE_GS to tell the
hardware to dispatch primitive ID to r1, and we need to leave room for
it when allocating registers.
Note: this feature doesn't yet work properly when software primitive
restart is in use (the primitive ID counter will incorrectly reset
with each primitive restart, since software primitive restart works by
performing multiple draw calls). I plan to address that in a future
patch series.
Fixes piglit test "spec/glsl-1.50/execution/geometry/primitive-id-in".
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
When we previously implemented primitive restart, we didn't add cases
to brw_primitive_restart.c's can_cut_index_handle_prims() for the
primitive types that are introduced with geometry shaders. It turns
out that all of the new primitive types are supported by hardware
primitive restart.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
As part of its support for geometry shaders, GL 3.2 introduces four
new primitive types: GL_LINES_ADJACENCY, GL_LINE_STRIP_ADJACENCY,
GL_TRIANGLES_ADJACENCY, and GL_TRIANGLE_STRIP_ADJACENCY.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Simply adjust wrap mode to clamp_to_edge. This is all that's needed for a
correct implementation for nearest filtering, and it's way better than
using repeat wrap for instance for linear filtering (though obviously this
doesn't actually do seamless filtering).
v2: fix s/t wrap not r/s...
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Specifying a miptree layout makes no sense for constant buffers.
This has no functional change since BRW_SURFACE_MIPMAPLAYOUT_BELOW is
just a #define for 0.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This paves the way for using gen7_upload_constant_state for PS data.
The formula is copied from gen7_wm_state.c.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
GL 3.2 requires us to support 128 varying components for geometry
shader outputs and fragment shader inputs, and 64 varying components
otherwise. But there's no hardware limitation that restricts us to 64
varying components, and core Mesa doesn't currently allow different
stages to have different maximum values, so just go ahead and enable
128 varying components for all stages. This gets us better test
coverage anyway.
Even though we are only working on GL 3.2 support for gen7 right now,
gen6 also supports 128 varying components, so go ahead and switch it
on there too.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Previously we only ever did 1 URB write, since the maximum number of
varyings we support is small enough to fit in 1 URB write (when using
BRW_URB_SWIZZLE_NONE, which is what the pre-Gen7 GS always uses). But
we're about to increase the number of varying components we support
from 64 to 128.
With 128 varyings, the most URB writes we'll have to do is 2, but it's
just as easy to write a general-purpose loop.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The "{VS,GS} URB Entry Allocation Size" fields of 3DSTATE_URB allow
values in the range 0-4, but they are U8-1 fields, so the range of
possible allocation sizes is 1-5. We were erroneously prohibiting a
size of 5.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Previously we only ever did 1 or 2 URB writes, since the maximum
number of varyings we support is small enough to fit in 2 URB writes.
But GL 3.2 requires the geometry shader to support 128 output varying
components, and this could require up to 3 URB writes.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Since the SF/SBE stage is only capable of performing arbitrary
reorderings of 16 varying slots, we can't arrange the fragment shader
inputs in an arbitrary order if there are more than 16 input varying
slots in use. We need to make sure that slots 16-31 match the
corresponding outputs of the previous pipeline stage.
The easiest way to accomplish this is to just make all varying slots
match up with the previous pipeline stage.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The for loop was rather silly. In addition to checking brw->gen < 6
on each loop iteration, it took pains to exclude bits from
fp->Base.InputsRead that don't correspond to fragment shader inputs.
But those bits would never have been set in the first place, since the
only bits that are ever set in fp->Base.InputsRead are fragment shader
inputs.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Now that the vertex shader output VUE map is determined solely by a
64-bit bitfield, we don't have to store it in its entirety in the
geometry shader program key; instead, we can just store the bitfield,
and let the geometry shader infer the VUE map at compile time.
This dramatically reduces the size of the geometry shader program key,
which we want to keep small since it gets recomputed whenever the
active program changes.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Previously, on Gen6+, we laid out the vertex (or geometry) shader VUE
map differently depending whether user clipping was active. If it was
active, we put the clip distances in slots 2 and 3 (where the clipper
expects them); if it was inactive, we assigned them in the order of
the gl_varying_slot enum.
This made for unnecessary recompiles, since turning clipping on/off
for a shader that used gl_ClipDistance might rearrange the varyings.
It also required extra bookkeeping, since it required the user
clipping flag to be provided to brw_compute_vue_map() as a parameter.
With this patch, we always put clip distances at in slots 2 and 3 if
they are written to. do_vs_prog() and do_gs_prog() are responsible
for ensuring that clip distances are written to when user clipping is
enabled (as do_vs_prog() previously did for gen4-5).
This makes the only input to brw_compute_vue_map() a bitfield of which
varyings the shader writes to, a fact that we'll take advantage of in
forthcoming patches.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Previously, if a fragment shader accessed gl_FragCoord or
gl_FrontFacing, we would assign them their own slots in the fragment
shader input attribute array, using up space that could be made
available to real varyings. This was not strictly necessary (since
these values are not true varyings, and are instead computed from
other data available in the FS payload). But we had to do it anyway
because the SF/SBE setup code assumed that every 1 bit in the
gl_program::InputsRead bitfield corresponded to a genuine varying
variable.
Now that the SF/SBE code consults brw_wm_prog_data and only sets up
the attributes that the fragment shader actually needs, we don't have
to do this anymore.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Previously, the SF/SBE setup code delivered varying inputs to the FS
in the order in which they appear in the gl_program::InputsRead
bitfield, since that's what the FS expects.
When we add support for more than 64 varying components, this will no
longer always be the case, because the Gen6+ SF/SBE stage is only
capable of performing arbitrary reorderings of 16 varying slots. So,
when there are more than 16 vec4's worth of varying inputs, the FS
will have to adjust the order its input varyings in order to partially
match the order of outputs from the geometry or vertex shader.
To allow extra flexibility in the ordering of FS varyings, this patch
causes the SF/SBE to deliver varying inputs to the FS in exactly the
order that the FS requests, by consulting brw_wm_prog_data::urb_setup
and brw_wm_prog_data::num_varying_inputs.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We always program the SF unit to start reading the vertex URB entry at
offset 1. In upcoming patches, we'll be adding FS code that relies on
this. So consistently use the constant BRW_SF_URB_ENTRY_READ_OFFSET
rather than hardcoding a 1.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Previously, we assumed that the number of varying inputs consumed by
the fragment shader was equal to the number of bits set in
gl_program::InputsRead. However, we'll soon be making two changes
that will cause that not to be true:
- We'll stop wasting varying input space for gl_FragCoord and
gl_FrontFacing, which aren't varyings.
- For fragment shaders that have more than 16 varying inputs, we'll
adjust the layout of the inputs to account for the fact that the
SF/SBE pipeline stage can't reorder inputs beyond the first 16; if
there are GS outputs that the FS doens't use (or vice versa) this
may cause the number of FS varying inputs to change.
So, instead of trying to guess the number of FS inputs from
gl_program::InputsRead, simply read it from
brw_wm_prog_data:num_varying_inputs, which is guaranteed to be correct
since it's populated by fs_visitor::calculate_urb_setup().
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
On gen4-5, the FS stage reads varying inputs from URB entries that
were output by the SF thread, where each register stores the
interpolation setup for two components of a vec4, therefore the FS
urb_read_length is twice the number of FS input varyings. On gen6+,
varying inputs are directly deposited in the FS payload by the SF/SBE
fixed function logic, so urb_read_length is irrelevant.
However, in future patches, it will be nice to be able to consult
brw_wm_prog_data to determine how many varying inputs the FS expects
(rather than inferring it from gl_program::InputsRead). So instead of
storing urb_read_length, we simply store num_varying_inputs in
brw_wm_prog_data. On gen4-5, we multiply this by 2 to recover the URB
read length.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
At the moment, for Gen6+, the FS assumes that all varying inputs are
delivered to it in the order in which they appear in the
gl_program::InputsRead bitfield, and the SF/SBE setup code ensures
that they are delivered in this order.
When we add support for more than 64 varying components, this will no
longer always be possible, because the Gen6+ SF/SBE stage is only
capable of performing arbitrary reorderings of 16 varying slots.
To allow extra flexibility in the ordering of FS varyings, this patch
causes the FS to advertise exactly what ordering it expects.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
For each sampler type, this tests that:
- The base type is GLSL_TYPE_SAMPLER.
- The dimensionality is set correctly.
- The returned data type is correct.
- The sampler_array and sampler_shadow flags are set correctly.
- sampler_coordinate_components() returns the correct value.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <idr@freedesktop.org>
It seems a user app can get us into this state, I trigger the fail
running fbo-maxsize inside virgl, it fails to create the backing
storage for the texture object, but then segfaults here when it
should fail the completeness test.
Cc: "9.2" <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Fix the return type and allow src and dst types for comparison
to be separate, this at least fixes the two test cases I've written.
v2: drop the u32->s32 change
Acked-by: Christoph Bumiller <christoph.bumiller@speed.at>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
When the old contents do not need to be preserved, it is faster to
create a new backing bo rather than stall.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robclark@freedesktop.org>
max_index may be 0xffffffff. The hardware does not need 1 + max_index
(although it does not hurt unless max_index wraps around to zero).
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robclark@freedesktop.org>
For mem->gmem we don't sample depth/stencil as it's native type. So we
need to setup the swizzle state for the sampler based on the format used
for sampling.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robclark@freedesktop.org>
Needed by some games, like etuxracer and supertuxkart which use alpha
test rather than blending, to handle texture transparency.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robclark@freedesktop.org>
With a debug option to force DIRECT (mainly to make it easier for
capturing cmdstream dumps). Using INDIRECT for large shaders at least
makes a noticable reduction in CPU load, which helps for CPU limited
games.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robclark@freedesktop.org>
Because of how the tiling works, we can't really flush at arbitrary
points very easily. So wraparound is handled by resetting to top of
ringbuffer. Previously this would stall until current rendering is
complete. Instead cycle through multiple ringbuffers to avoid a stall.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robclark@freedesktop.org>
Emit markers by writing to scratch registers in order to "triangulate"
gpu lockup position from post-mortem register dump. By comparing
register values in post-mortem dump to command-stream, it is possible to
narrow down which DRAW_INDX caused the lockup.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robclark@freedesktop.org>
Have a single helper that all draws come through.. mainly for a
convenient debug and instrumentation point.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robclark@freedesktop.org>
The varying-out config comes from the inputs of the frag shader (so that
we aren't exporting unneeded varyinges). The varyings-count should come
from the frag shader as well, to avoid a discrepency in configuration
and resulting gpu lockup.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robclark@freedesktop.org>
These functions are defined in EXT_texture_array, which makes no
mention of what shader types they should be allowed in. At the time
EXT_texture_array was introduced, functions ending in "Lod" were
available only in vertex shaders, however this restriction was lifted
in later spec versions and extensions.
We already have the function lod_exists_in_stage() for figuring out
whether functions ending in "Lod" should be available, so just re-use
that.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Since BRW_MAX_WM_SURFACES is greater than BRW_MAX_VEC4_SURFACES, the
existing array isn't large enough to be used by the WM. Increasing it
will make it possible to share them.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
These are largely based on the similar fields in brw->wm.
v2: Add a better comment than "Scratch buffer".
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Everyone at the Khronos meeting was as surprised that GLSL didn't
already support this as we were. Several vendors said they'd ship it,
but there didn't seem to be enough interest to put in the effort to make
it ARB or KHR.
v2: Fix a couple typos and rename the spec file to
EXT_shader_integer_mix.spec. Suggested by Roland.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
start_instance doesn't affect gl_InstanceID.
There's no piglit test, but it's kinda obvious the code was wrong.
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
The shader is responsible for writing to streamout buffers using
the TBUFFER_STORE_FORMAT_* instructions.
The locations of some input SGPRs and VGPRs are assigned dynamically, because
the input SGPRs controlling streamout are not declared if they are not needed,
decreasing the indices of all following inputs.
Reviewed-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
So that the "init" state is always emitted first and not later in draw_vbo.
This fixes streamout where the "init" state, which disables streamout,
was emitted in draw_vbo after streamout was enabled.
Reviewed-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
This could happen if set_stream_output_targets is called twice
in a row without a draw call in between.
Reviewed-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Paused transform feedback objects may refer to a program other than the
current program. If any active objects refer to a program, LinkProgram
must reject the request to relink.
The code to detect this is ugly since _mesa_HashWalk is awkward to use,
but unfortunately we can't use hash_table_foreach since there's no way
to get at the underlying struct hash_table (and even then, we'd need to
handle locking somehow).
Fixes the last subcase of Piglit's new ARB_transform_feedback2
api-errors test.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <marek.olsak@amd.com>
This is actually a pretty important error condition: otherwise, you
could set up transform feedback with one program, and resume it with
a program that generates a completely different set of outputs.
Fixes a subcase of Piglit's new ARB_transform_feedback2 api-errors test.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <marek.olsak@amd.com>
The next few patches will use this for API error checking.
All of the drivers appear to CALLOC_STRUCT transform feedback objects,
so this should be properly NULL initialized on creation.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <marek.olsak@amd.com>
Fixes a subcase of Piglit's new ARB_transform_feedback2 api-errors test.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <marek.olsak@amd.com>
Move the code back into the common UVD files since we now
have base structures for R600 and radeonsi.
Signed-off-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Fixes FTBFS on kfreebsd-*
Debian GNU/kFreeBSD doesn't provide getprogname() since it uses stdlib.h
from glibc. Instead it provides program_invocation_short_name from glibc.
You can find the same order in src/mesa/drivers/dri/common/xmlconfig.c
Cc: "9.2" <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
Tested-by: Julien Cristau <jcristau@debian.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
It was wrong for EXP.y, as we clamped the source before computing the
fractional part, and this opcode should be rarely used, so it's not
worth the hassle.
We used to pass the number of components actually used for the
coordinate (rather than padding, shadow comparitors, and projectors) by
hand, specifying it on every _texture() call.
The new helper function can just compute this, eliminating a lot of
potential mistakes.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This computes the number of components necessary to address a sampler
based on its dimensionality. It will be useful for texturing built-ins.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
It is planned to ship openSUSE 13.1 with -shared libs.
nouveau.la, nv30.la, nv50.la and nvc0.la are currently LIBADDs in all nouveau
related targets.
This change makes it possible to easily build one shared libnouveau.so which is
then LIBADDed.
Also dlopen will be faster for one library instead of three and build time on
-jX will be reduced.
Whitespace fixes were requested by 'git am'.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Obermayr <johannesobermayr@gmx.de>
Acked-by: Christoph Bumiller <christoph.bumiller@speed.at>
Acked-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
According to GLSL, the shader may call EndPrimitive() at any point
during its execution, causing the line or triangle strip currently
being output to be terminated and a new strip to be begun.
This is implemented in gen7 hardware by using one control data bit per
vertex, to indicate whether EndPrimitive() was called after that
vertex was emitted.
In order to make this work without sacrificing too much efficiency, we
accumulate 32 control data bits at a time in a GRF. When we have
accumulated 32 bits (or when the shader terminates), we output them to
the appropriate DWORD in the control data header and reset the
accumulator to 0.
We have to take special care to make sure that EndPrimitive() calls
that occur prior to the first vertex have no effect.
Since geometry shaders that output a large number of vertices are
likely to be rare, an optimization kicks in if max_vertices <= 32. In
this case, we know that we can wait until the end of shader execution
before any control data bits need to be output.
I've tried to write the code in such a way that in the future, we can
easily adapt it to output stream ID bits (which are two bits/vertex
instead of one).
Fixes piglit tests "spec/glsl-1.50/glsl-1.50-geometry-end-primitive *".
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Previously, brw_urb_WRITE() would always generate a URB_WRITE_HWORD
message, we always wanted to write data to the URB in pairs of varying
slots or larger (an HWORD is 32 bytes, which is 2 varying slots).
In order to support geometry shader EndPrimitive functionality, we'll
need the ability to write to just a single OWORD (16 byte) slot, since
we'll only be outputting 32 of the control data bits at a time. So
this patch adds a flag that will cause brw_urb_WRITE to generate a
URB_WRITE_OWORD message.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Previously, brw_urb_WRITE() would unconditionally override the channel
masks in the URB_WRITE message to 0xff (indicating that all channels
should be written to the URB).
In order to support geometry shader EndPrimitive functionality, we'll
need the ability to set the channel masks programatically, so that we
can output just 32 of the control data bits at a time. So this patch
adds a flag that will prevent brw_urb_WRITE() from overriding them.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The gen7 geometry shader uses a "control data header" at the beginning
of the output URB entry to store either
(a) flag bits (1 bit/vertex) indicating whether EndPrimitive() was
called after each vertex, or
(b) stream ID bits (2 bits/vertex) indicating which stream each vertex
should be sent to (when multiple transform feedback streams are in
use).
Fortunately, OpenGL only requires separate streams to be supported
when the output type is points, and EndPrimitive() only has an effect
when the output type is line_strip or triangle_strip, so it's not a
problem that these two uses of the control data header are mutually
exclusive.
This patch modifies do_vec4_gs_prog() to determine the correct
hardware settings for configuring the control data header, and
modifies upload_gs_state() to propagate these settings to the
hardware.
In addition, it modifies do_vec4_gs_prog() to ensure that the output
URB entry is large enough to contain both the output vertices *and*
the control data header.
Finally, it modifies vec4_gs_visitor so that it accounts for the size
of the control data header when computing the offset within the URB
where output vertex data should be stored.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
v2: Fixed incorrect handling of IVB/HSW differences.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This information will be useful in the i965 back end, since we can
save some compilation effort if we know from the outset that the
shader never calls EndPrimitive().
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
v2: Do not attempt to share the code that uploads
3DSTATE_BINDING_TABLE_POINTERS_GS, 3DSTATE_SAMPLER_STATE_POINTERS_GS,
or 3DSTATE_GS with VS.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
v3: Add _NEW_TRANSFORM to gen7_gs_state.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This will allow us to reuse some code when setting up the geometry
shader stage.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Mesa provides the wayland-egl libs and the pkgconfig file, but the headers
originate from the wayland package. Ensure everything matches, by requiring
application builds to look at the wayland headers as well.
Signed-off-by: Torsten Duwe <duwe@suse.de>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Obermayr <johannesobermayr@gmx.de>
Commit b77316ad75
st/dri: always copy new DRI front and back buffers to corresponding MSAA buffers
introduced creating a pipe_context for every call to validate, which is not required
because the callers have a context anyway.
Only exception is egl_g3d_create_pbuffer_from_client_buffer, can someone test if it
still works with NULL passed as context for validate? From examining the code I
believe it does, but I didn't thoroughly test it.
Signed-off-by: Maarten Lankhorst <maarten.lankhorst@canonical.com>
Cc: 9.2 <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <marek.olsak@amd.com>
We've observed GPU hangs on Ivybridge from the following instruction:
mov(8) g115<1>.F 0D { align16 WE_normal NoDDChk 1Q };
There should be no reason to ever set the writemask on a destination
register to zero, except for perhaps the ARF NULL register.
This patch adds an assertion to enforce this for non-ARF registers.
Excluding ARFs is conservative yet should still catch the majority
of mistakes.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Otherwise, coordinates with four components would result in a MOV
with a destination writemask that has no channels enabled:
mov(8) g115<1>.F 0D { align16 WE_normal NoDDChk 1Q };
At best, this is stupid: we emit code that shouldn't do anything.
Worse, it apparently causes GPU hangs (observable with Chris's
textureGather test on CubeArrays.)
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <idr@freedesktop.org>
Cc: mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org
This was originally introduced by commit
ba47aabc98, but unfortunately the commit message
doesn't go into much detail about why +INF would be a problem here.
A similar issue exists for STATE_FOG_PARAMS_OPTIMIZED, but allowing infinity
there would potentially introduce NaNs where they shouldn't exist, depending
on the values of fog end and the fog coord. Since STATE_FOG_PARAMS_OPTIMIZED
is only used for fixed function (including ARB_fragment_program with fog
option), and the calculation there probably isn't very stable to begin with
when fog start and end are close together, it seems best to just leave it
alone.
This fixes piglit glsl-fs-fogscale, and a couple of Wine D3D tests. No piglit
regressions on Cayman.
Signed-off-by: Henri Verbeet <hverbeet@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
278372b47e added the uninitialized pointer
field gl_sync_object:Label. A free of this pointer, added in commit
6d8dd59cf5, resulted in a crash.
This patch fixes piglit ARB_sync regressions with swrast introduced by
6d8dd59cf5.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
These instructions will be used with immediate arguments in the upcoming
ldexp lowering pass and frexp implementation.
v2: Add vec4 support as well.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
It's a ?: that operates per-component on vectors. Will be used in
upcoming lowering pass for ldexp and the implementation of frexp.
csel(selector, a, b):
per-component result = selector ? a : b
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
builtin_info was originally going to be a structure containing a bunch
of information, but after various rewrites, it turned into a boolean
availability predicate.
builtin_avail is a better name than builtin_info, since it doesn't
store any information other than availability.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This creates a new replacement for the existing built-in function code.
The new module lives in builtin_functions.cpp (not builtin_function.cpp)
and exists in parallel with the existing system. It isn't used yet.
The new built-in function code takes a significantly different approach:
Instead of implementing built-ins via printed IR, build time scripts,
and run time parsing, we now implement them directly in C++, using
ir_builder. This translates to faster load times, and a much less
complex build system.
It also takes a different approach to built-in availability: each
signature now stores a boolean predicate, which makes it easy to
construct arbitrary expressions based on _mesa_glsl_parse_state's
fields. This is much more flexible than the old system, and also
easier to use.
Built-ins are also now stored in a single gl_shader object, rather
than being spread out across a number of shaders that need to be linked.
When searching for a matching prototype, we simply consult the
availability predicate. This also simplifies the code.
v2: Incorporate Matt Turner's feedback: use the new fma() function rather
than expr(). Don't expose textureQueryLOD() in GLSL 4.00 (since it
was renamed to textureQueryLod()). Also correct some #undefs.
v3: Incorporate Paul Berry's feedback: rename legacy to compatibility;
add comments to explain a few things; fix uvec availability; include
shaderobj.h instead of repeating the _mesa_new_shader prototype.
v4: Fix lack of TEX_PROJECT on textureProjGrad[Offset] (caught by oglc).
Add an out_var convenience function (more feedback by Matt Turner).
v5: Rework availability predicates for Lod functions. They were broken.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Enthusiastically-acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Each ir_factory needs an instruction list and memory context in order to
be useful. Rather than creating an object and manually assigning these,
we can just use optional parameters in the constructor.
This makes it possible to create a ready-to-use factory in one line:
ir_factory body(&sig->body, mem_ctx);
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Adding new convenience emitters makes it easier to generate IR involving
these opcodes.
bitfield_insert is particularly useful, since there is no expr() for
quadops.
v2: Add fma() and rename lrp() operands to x/y/a to match the GLSL
specification (suggested by Matt Turner). Fix whitespace issues.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
IR builder already offers a lot of swizzling functions, such as
swizzle_xxxx, swizzle_z, or swizzle_for_size.
The swizzle_xxxx style is convenient if you statically know which
components you want. swizzle_for_size is great if you want to select
the first few components. However, if you want to select components
based on, say, a loop counter, none of those are sufficient.
IR builder actually already had support for arbitrary swizzling, but
didn't expose it. This patch exposes that API.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
dotlike() uses ir_binop_mul for scalars, and ir_binop_dot for vectors.
When generating built-in functions, we often want to use regular
multiply for scalar signatures, and dot() for vector signatures.
ir_binop_dot only works on vectors, so we have to switch opcodes,
even if the code is otherwise identical. dotlike() makes this easy.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
We use "ret" as the function name since "return" is a C++ keyword, and
"ir_return" is already a class name.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This adds two new signatures:
assign(lhs, rhs, condition, writemask);
assign(lhs, rhs, condition);
All the other existing APIs still exist.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
We already have ir_expression constructors for unary and binary
operations, which automatically infer the type based on the opcode and
operand types.
These are convenient and also required for ir_builder support.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This isn't strictly necessary, since creators of ir_texture objects
should set LOD when relevant. However, it's nice to have a NULL pointer
in case they forget.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
During compilation, we'll use this to determine built-in availability.
The plan is to have a single shader containing every built-in in every
version of the language, but filter out the ones that aren't actually
available to the shader being compiled.
At link time, we don't actually need this filtering capability: we've
already imported prototypes for every built-in that the shader actually
calls, and they're flagged as is_builtin(). The linker doesn't import
any additional prototypes, so it won't pull in any unavailable
built-ins. When resolving prototypes to function definitions, the
linker ensures the values of is_builtin() match, which means that a
shader can't trick the linker into importing the body of an unavailable
built-in by defining a suspiciously similar prototype.
In other words, during linking, we can just pass in NULL. It will work
out fine.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
We can simply call the stored predicate function. If state is NULL,
just report that the function is available.
v2: Add a comment (requested by Paul Berry).
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This promises the method won't modify the contents of the object.
This allows us to call it even with a const pointer to the state.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
A signature is a built-in if and only if builtin_info != NULL, so we
don't actually need a separate flag bit. Making a boolean-valued
method allows existing code to ask the same question while not worrying
about the internal representation.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
For the upcoming built-in function rewrite, we'll need to be able to
answer "Is this built-in function signature available?".
This is actually a somewhat complex question, since it depends on the
language version, GLSL vs. GLSL ES, enabled extensions, and the current
shader stage.
Storing such a set of constraints in a structure would be painful, so
instead we store a function pointer. When creating a signature, we
simply point to a predicate that inspects _mesa_glsl_parse_state and
answers whether the signature is available in the current shader.
Unfortunately, IR reader doesn't actually know when built-in functions
are available, so this patch makes it lie and say that they're always
present. This allows us to hook up the new functionality; it just won't
be useful until real data is populated. In the meantime, the existing
profile mechanism ensures built-ins are available in the right places.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Otherwise, coordinates with four components would result in a MOV
with a destination writemask that has no channels enabled:
mov(8) g115<1>.F 0D { align16 WE_normal NoDDChk 1Q };
At best, this is stupid: we emit code that shouldn't do anything.
Worse, it apparently causes GPU hangs (observable with Chris's
textureGather test on CubeArrays.)
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Cc: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Cc: mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org
The change is very small. Do seamless filtering if either the context
enable is set or the sampler enable is set.
The AMD_seamless_cubemap_per_texture says:
"If TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_SEAMLESS_ARB is emabled (sic) globally or the
value of the texture's TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_SEAMLESS_ARB parameter is
TRUE, seamless cube map sampling is enabled..."
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Appendix F.2 of the OpenGL ES 3.0.0 spec says:
"OpenGL ES 3.0 requires that all cube map filtering be
seamless. OpenGL ES 2.0 specified that a single cube map face be
selected and used for filtering."
Setting the field only in the context will work fine with sampler
objects (and drivers that support AMD_seamless_cubemap_per_texture)
because seamless filtering is used if *either* the context or the
sampler enable it:
"If TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_SEAMLESS_ARB is emabled (sic) globally or the
value of the texture's TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_SEAMLESS_ARB parameter is
TRUE, seamless cube map sampling is enabled..."
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reported-by: Maxence Le Dore <maxence.ledore@gmail.com>
Thanked-by: Maxence Le Dore <maxence.ledore@gmail.com>
There is no GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_SEAMLESS in any version of OpenGL ES or
in any extension that applies to OpenGL ES. The same error check
already occurs for glTexParameteri.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Cc: Maxence Le Dore <maxence.ledore@gmail.com>
This aligns the gfx, compute, and dma IBs to 8 DW boundries.
This aligns the the IB to the fetch size of the CP for optimal
performance. Additionally, r6xx hardware requires at least 4
DW alignment to avoid a hw bug. This also aligns the DMA
IBs to 8 DW which is required for the DMA engine. This
alignment is already handled in the gallium driver, but that
patch can be removed now that it's done in the winsys.
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <marek.olsak@amd.com>
Signed-off-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
CC: "9.2" <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
CC: "9.1" <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
We support indirect addressing only on the vertex index, but some
shaders also use indirect addressing on attributes. This patch
adds support for indirect addressing on both dimensions inside
gs arrays.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
When adding a new buffer to the beginning of the memory pool, we were
accidentally deleting the buffer that was first in the buffer list.
This was caused by a bug in the memory pool's linked list
implementation.
DPA2 is listed in the "Defeatured Instructions" section of the
965 PRM, Volume 4:
"The following instructions are removed from Gen4 implementation mainly
due to implementation cost/schedule reasons. They are candidates for
future generations."
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
RSR and RSL are listed in the "Defeatured Instructions" section of the
965 PRM, Volume 4:
"The following instructions are removed from Gen4 implementation mainly
due to implementation cost/schedule reasons. They are candidates for
future generations."
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Fixes a bug where if an uniform array is passed to a function the accesses
to the array are not propagated so later all but the first vector of the
uniform array are removed in parcel_out_uniform_storage resulting in
broken shaders and out of bounds access to arrays in
brw::vec4_visitor::pack_uniform_registers.
Cc: mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org
Reviewed-and-Tested-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Dominik Behr <dbehr@chromium.org>
Haswell GT2 and GT3 require the number of vertex shader URB entries to
be at least 64, not 32.
At the moment, we always meet this requirement automatically, because
in the absence of a geometry shader, we assign all available URB space
to the vertex shader. But when we turn on support for geometry
shaders, this lower limit will become important.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
This patch creates a new file brw_vec4_vs_visitor.cpp, to contain code
that is specific to the vertex shader. Now the organization of vertex
shader and geometry shader visitor code is symmetric: vs-specific code
is in brw_vec4_vs_visitor.cpp, gs-specific code is in
brw_vec4_gs_visitor.cpp, and code shared between vs and gs is in
brw_vec4_visitor.cpp.
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This will allow it to be shared between brw_vec4_visitor.cpp and
brw_vec4_vs_visitor.cpp (which will be created in the next patch).
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The fixup code emulates non-BGRA render targets by adding an
extra instruction at the end of fragment shaders to swizzle the
output. To do this, we also swizzle the blend function. However
an oversight until now was that the writemask wasn't getting
swizzled. This patch fixes that which fixes a bunch of piglit
tests.
The old code in dri2_glx suffered from a typographical error that caused
the default version to be 2.1 instead of 1.2 (minimum required by the
Linux OpenGL ABI). drisw_glx had a similar error resulting in a default
version of 0.1.
Some driver/card combinations (r200/RV280, i915/915G) don't support
OpenGL 2.1. These create in some corner cases an indirect context
instead of a direct context when calling glXCreateContextAttribsARB().
This happens because of a bad default value. To avoid this, just used
the default value specified by the GLX_ARB_create_context specification:
"The default values for GLX_CONTEXT_MAJOR_VERSION_ARB and
GLX_CONTEXT_MINOR_VERSION_ARB are 1 and 0 respectively. In this
case, implementations will typically return the most recent version
of OpenGL they support which is backwards compatible with OpenGL 1.0
(e.g. 3.0, 3.1 + GL_ARB_compatibility, or 3.2 compatibility
profile)"
Refactor all the default value setting to dri2_convert_glx_attribs, and
make sure the correct defaults are set in that one place.
Signed-off-by: Rico Schüller <kgbricola@web.de>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Bugzilla http://bugs.winehq.org/show_bug.cgi?id=34238
Cc: "9.1 9.2" <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
This patch adds liveness analysis to i915g and a couple
optimizations which benefit from it. One interesting
optimization turns (fake) indirect texture accesses into direct
texture accesses (the i915 supports a maximum of 4 indirect
texture accesses). Among other things this fixes a bunch of
piglit tests.
The vertex shader color outputs (gl_FrontColor, gl_BackColor,
gl_FrontSecondaryColor, and gl_BackSecondaryColor) don't have the same
names as the matching fragment shader color inputs (gl_Color and
gl_SecondaryColor). As a result, the qualifiers on them were not being
properly cross validated.
Full spec compliance required ir_variable::used and
ir_variable::assigned be set properly. Without the preceeding patch,
which fixes the ::clone method to copy them, this will not be the case.
Fixes all of the previously failing piglit
spec/glsl-1.30/linker/interpolation-qualifiers tests.
v2: Update callers of cross_validate_types_and_qualifiers and
cross_validate_front_and_back_color. The function signature changed in
v2 of a previous patch. Suggested by Paul.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=47755
The new function, cross_validate_types_and_qualifiers, will have
multiple callers from this file in future commits.
v2: Don't pass the names of the producer / consumer stages to
cross_validate_types_and_qualifiers. Instead, pass the types and get
the names only in the error paths. Suggested by Paul.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Changes to the grammar for GL_ARB_shading_language_420pack (commit
6eec502) moved precision qualifiers out of the type_specifier production
chain. This caused declarations such as:
struct S {
lowp float f;
};
to generate parse errors. Section 4.1.8 (Structures) of both the GLSL
ES 1.00 spec and GLSL 1.30 specs says:
"Member declarators may contain precision qualifiers, but may not
contain any other qualifiers."
So, it sure seems like we shouldn't generate a parse error. :)
Instead of type_specifier, use fully_specified_type in struct members.
However, fully_specified_type allows a lot of other qualifiers that are
not allowed on structure members, so expeclitly disallow them.
Note, this makes struct_declaration look an awful lot like
member_declaration (used for interface blocks). We may want to
(somehow) unify these rules to reduce code duplication at some point.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=68753
Reported-by: Aras Pranckevicius <aras@unity3d.com>
Cc: Aras Pranckevicius <aras@unity3d.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Cc: "9.2" <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
Remap any type or severity exclusive to KHR_debug to
something suitable for ARB_debug_output
Signed-off-by: Timothy Arceri <t_arceri@yahoo.com.au>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
V3: make sure to add null terminator when setting label,
generate error when the client specifies an explicit
length that exceeds MAX_LABEL_LENGTH, set label pointer
to NULL when freed, and output correct length in
MAX_LABEL_LENGTH error message.
V2: fixed indentation of comment
Signed-off-by: Timothy Arceri <t_arceri@yahoo.com.au>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
The main GL context's swtnl_im field is the VBO module's vbo_context
structure. Using the name "swtnl" in the name is confusing since
some drivers use hardware texturing and lighting, but still rely on the
VBO module for drawing.
v2: Forward declare the type and use that instead of void *
(suggested by Eric Anholt).
v3: Remove unnecessary cast (pointed out by by Topi Pohjolainen).
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Some drawing functions take a single _mesa_prim object, while others
take an array of primitives. Both kinds of functions used a parameter
called "prim" (the singular form), which was confusing.
Using the plural form, "prims," clearly communicates that the parameter
is an array of primitives.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
can_cut_index_handle_prims() was passed an array of _mesa_prim objects
and a count, and ran a loop for that many iterations. However, it
treated the array like a pointer, repeatedly checking the first element.
This patch makes it actually check every primitive.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Fixes assertion failues in 24 piglit tests with
MESA_GL_VERSION_OVERRIDE=3.0, 12 of which are now passing.
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <marek.olsak@amd.com>
LIBGL_SHOW_FPS=1 makes GLX print FPS every second while other values do
nothing. Extend it so that LIBGL_SHOW_FPS=N will print the FPS every N
seconds.
Signed-off-by: Chia-I Wu <olvaffe@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <marek.olsak@amd.com>
The VBO module actually calls us with an array of _mesa_prim objects.
For example, it may break up a DrawArrays() call into multiple
primitives when primitive restart is enabled.
Previously, we treated prim like a pointer, always accessing element 0.
This worked because all of the primitive objects in a single draw call
have the same value for num_instances and basevertex.
However, accessing an array as a pointer and using the wrong object's
fields is misleading. For stylistic reasons alone, we should use the
right object.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
These functions have almost identical code; the only difference is that
a few of the bits moved around. Adding a few trivial conditionals
allows the same function to work on all generations, and the resulting
code is still quite readable.
v2: Comment that the workaround flush is only necessary on SNB
(requested by Paul Berry).
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Fixes broken rendering if these MRFs contained anything other than zero.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
There is a slight functionality change. Previously we would compute a
common value for num_samplers for all stages, and populate that many
entries in each stage's surf_offset table regardless of how many
samplers each stage used. Now we only populate the number of entries
in the surf_offset table corresponding to the number of samplers
actually used by the stage.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Previously these functions would accept a pointer to the binding table
and an index indicating which entry in the binding table should be
updated. Now they merely take a pointer to the binding table entry to
be updated.
This will make it easier to generalize brw_texture_surfaces to support
geometry shaders.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This patch implements pull constant upload, binding table upload, and
surface setup for geometry shaders, by re-using vertex shader code
that was generalized in previous patches.
Based on work by Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>.
v2: Update ditry bits for brw_gs_ubo_surfaces to account for commit
77d8fbc (mesa: add & use a new driver flag for UBO updates instead of
_NEW_BUFFER_OBJECT).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The hardware requires that after constant buffers for a stage are
allocated using a 3DSTATE_PUSH_CONSTANT_ALLOC_{VS,HS,DS,GS,PS}
command, and prior to execution of a 3DPRIMITIVE, the corresponding
stage's constant buffers must be reprogrammed using a
3DSTATE_CONSTANT_{VS,HS,DS,GS,PS} command.
Previously we didn't need to worry about this, because we only
programmed 3DSTATE_PUSH_CONSTANT_ALLOC_{VS,HS,DS,GS,PS} once on
startup (or, previous to that, whenever BRW_NEW_CONTEXT was flagged).
But now that we reallocate the constant buffers whenever geometry
shaders are switched on and off, we need to make sure the constant
buffers are reprogrammed.
We do this by adding a new bit, BRW_NEW_PUSH_CONSTANT_ALLOCATION, to
brw->state.dirty.brw.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Previously, we would always use the same push constant allocation
regardless of what shader programs were being run: the available push
constant space was split into 2 equal size partitions, one for the
vertex shader, and one for the fragment shader.
Now that we are adding geometry shader support, we need to do
something smarter. This patch adjusts things so that when a geometry
shader is in use, we split the available push constant space into 3
nearly-equal size partitions instead of 2.
Since the push constant allocation is now affected by GL state, it can
no longer be set up by brw_upload_initial_gpu_state(); instead it must
be set up by a state atom.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This is required by the internal hardware docs and the PRM. Probably
the reason we were getting away with not doing it was because we only
emitted 3DSTATE_PUSH_CONSTANT_ALLOC_PS during startup. However that's
going to change with the introduction of geometry shaders.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Previously, we gave all of the URB space (other than the small amount
that is used for push constants) to the vertex shader. However, when
a geometry shader is active, we need to divide it up between the
vertex and geometry shaders.
The size of the URB entries for the vertex and geometry shaders can
vary dramatically from one shader to the next. So it doesn't make
sense to simply split the available space in two. In particular:
- On Ivy Bridge GT1, this would not leave enough space for the worst
case geometry shader, which requires 64k of URB space.
- Due to hardware-imposed limits on the maximum number of URB entries,
sometimes a given shader stage will only be capable of using a small
amount of URB space. When this happens, it may make sense to
allocate substantially less than half of the available space to that
stage.
Our algorithm for dividing space between the two stages is to first
compute (a) the minimum amount of URB space that each stage needs in
order to function properly, and (b) the amount of additional URB space
that each stage "wants" (i.e. that it would be capable of making use
of). If the total amount of space available is not enough to satisfy
needs + wants, then each stage's "wants" amount is scaled back by the
same factor in order to fit.
When only a vertex shader is active, this algorithm produces
equivalent results to the old algorithm (if the vertex shader stage
can make use of all the available URB space, we assign all the space
to it; if it can't, we let it use as much as it can).
In the future, when we need to support tessellation control and
tessellation evaluation pipeline stages, it should be straightforward
to expand this algorithm to cover them.
v2: Use "unsigned" rather than "GLuint".
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This paves the way for sharing the code that will set up the vertex
and geometry shader pipeline state.
v2: Rename the base class to brw_stage_state.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Defines that previously referred to VS now refer to VEC4, since they
will be shared by the user-programmable vertex shader and geometry
shader stages.
Defines that previously referred to the Gen6 geometry shader stage
(which is only used for transform feedback) are now renamed to
explicitly refer to Gen6, to avoid confusion with the Gen7
user-programmable geometry shader stage.
Based on work by Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
This will avoid confusion when we add geometry shaders, since these
data structures will be shared by vertex and geometry shaders.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Now that the name "gs" is no longer used to refer to the legacy fixed
function geometry shaders, we can use it to refer to user-defined
geometry shaders.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
"ff" is for "fixed function". This frees up the name "gs" to refer to
user-defined geometry shaders.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
This mimics r600g. The R600_CONTEXT_xxx flags are added to rctx->b.flags
and si_emit_cache_flush emits the packets. That's it. The shared radeon code
tells us when the streamout cache should be flushed, so we have to check
the flags anyway.
There is a new atom "cache_flush", because caches must be flushed *after*
resource descriptors are changed in memory.
Functional changes:
* Write caches are flushed at the end of CS and read caches are flushed
at its beginning.
* Sampler view states are removed from si_state, they only held the flush
flags.
* Everytime a shader is changed, the I cache is flushed. Is this needed?
Due to a hw bug, this also flushes the K cache.
* The WRITE_DATA packet is changed to use TC, which fixes a rendering issue
in openarena. I'm not sure how TC interacts with CP DMA, but for now it
seems to work better than any other solution I tried. (BTW CIK allows us
to use TC for CP DMA.)
* Flush the K cache instead of the texture cache when updating resource
descriptors (due to a hw bug, this also flushes the I cache).
I think the K cache flush is correct here, but I'm not sure if the texture
cache should be flushed too (probably not considering we use TC
for WRITE_DATA, but we don't use TC for CP DMA).
* The number of resource contexts is decreased to 16. With all of these cache
changes, 4 doesn't work, but 8 works, which suggests I'm actually doing
the right thing here and the pipeline isn't drained during flushes.
Reviewed-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Tested-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
There is a new "class" si_buffer_resources, which should be good enough for
implementing any kind of buffer bindings (constant buffers, vertex buffers,
streamout buffers, shader storage buffers, etc.)
I don't even keep a copy of pipe_constant_buffer - we don't need it.
The main motivation behind this is to have a well-tested infrastrusture
for setting up streamout buffers.
Reviewed-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Tested-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
This streamout state code will be used by radeonsi.
There are new structures r600_common_context and r600_common_screen.
What is inherited by what is shown here:
pipe_context -> r600_common_context -> r600_context
pipe_screen -> r600_common_screen -> r600_screen
The common structures reside in drivers/radeon. Currently they only contain
enough functionality to be able to handle streamout. Eventually I'd like
the whole pipe_screen implementation to be shared and some of the context
stuff too.
This is quite big, but most changes are because of the new structures and
the fact r600_write_value is replaced by radeon_emit.
Thanks to Tom Stellard for fixing the build for r600g/compute.
Reviewed-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Tested-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
It is incorrect to assume that src[0] of a SEND-from-GRF opcode is the
GRF. For example, FS_OPCODE_UNIFORM_PULL_CONSTANT_LOAD uses src[1] for
the GRF.
To be safe, loop over all the source registers and mark any GRFs. We
probably won't ever have more than one, but it's simpler to just check
all three rather than attempting to bail early.
Not observed to fix anything yet, but likely to. Parallels the bug fix
in the previous commit, which actually does fix known failures.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Cc: mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org
It is incorrect to assume that src[0] of a SEND-from-GRF opcode is the GRF.
VS_OPCODE_PULL_CONSTANT_LOAD_GEN7 uses an IMM as src[0], and stores the
GRF as src[1].
To be safe, loop over all the source registers and mark any GRFs. We
probably won't ever have more than one, but it's simpler to just check
all three rather than attempting to bail early.
Fixes assertion failures in Unigine Sanctuary since we started making
register allocation rely on split_virtual_grfs working. (The register
classes were actually sufficient, we were just interpreting an IMM as
a virtual GRF number.)
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=68637
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Cc: mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org
pstipple/aaline stages used PIPE_MAX_SAMPLER instead of
PIPE_MAX_SHADER_SAMPLER_VIEWS when dealing with sampler views.
Now these stages can't actually handle sampler_unit != texture_unit anyway
(they cannot work with d3d10 shaders at all due to using tex not sample
opcodes as "mixed mode" shaders are impossible) but this leads to crashes if
a driver just installs these stages and then more than PIPE_MAX_SAMPLER views
are set even if the stages aren't even used.
Reviewed-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Turns out we don't need to do much extra work for detecting this case,
since we are guaranteed to get a empty static texture state in this case,
hence just rely on format being 0 and return all zero then.
Previously needed dummy textures (would just have crashed on format being 0
otherwise) which cannot return the correct result for size queries and when
sampling textures with wrap modes using border.
As a bonus should hugely increase performance when sampling unbound textures -
too bad it isn't a useful feature :-).
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
No idea if this is working right but copied straight from llvmpipe.
(Not only does this check the so_target but also use buffer->data instead
of buffer for the mapping.)
Just trying to get rid of a segfault testing something else...
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
The only reason this was needed was because the fetch texel function had to
get the (dynamic) border color, but this is now done much earlier.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Instead of enhancing the AoS path so it can deal with it, just use SoA. Fixing
AoS path wouldn't be all that difficult (use all the same logic as SoA) but
considered not worth it for now.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
If the app is asking us to do GL_COMPRESSED_RGBA, then the app obviously
doesn't have pre-compressed data to hand us. So don't choose a storage
format that we won't actually be able to compress and store.
Fixes black screen in warzone2100 when libtxc_dxtn is not present. Also
66 piglit tests.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.2 branch.
Reported-by: Paul Wise <pabs@debian.org>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
You should only be flagging the formats as supported if you support them
anyway.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.2 branch. (required for next commit)
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Thanks to Ken for trawling through my neglected public branches and
finding the bug in this change (inside a megacommit) that made me abandon
this work.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This avoids the need to get the inter- and intra-tile offset and adjust
our miptree info based on them.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
These are things that happen to be occurring because of the batch flush at
the start of the blorp op (which exists to prevent batch space or aperture
space overflow), but the intention was for this sequence of state resets at
the end of blorp to be everything necessary for the next draw call.
Found when debugging the next commit, by comparing brw_new_batch() and
intel_batchbuffer_reset() to brw_blorp_exec().
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
The code that got replaced with map_raw didn't do the flush, but now
map_raw() is responsible for it and we don't have to worry about it.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This gives us more information about why we're flushing that we can
use for handling our throttling.
v2 (Kenneth Graunke): Rebase on latest master, add missing
FLUSH_VERTICES and FLUSH_CURRENT, which fixes a regression in Glean's
polygonOffset test.
v3 (anholt): Drop FLUSH_CURRENT -- FLUSH_VERTICES is what we need, which
is "get any queued prims out of VBO and into the driver", not "update
ctx->Current so we can read it with the CPU." Also drop batch->used
check, which intel_batchbuffer_flush() does anyway.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This was already happening because blorp happens to flush at the end of
every call, but we have been talking about removing that at some point,
and this would surely get overlooked.
v2 (Kenneth Graunke): Rebase on latest master. Note that we did remove
the other flush, and this change actually did get overlooked!
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
intel_flush() now did nothing except call through (and
intel_batchbuffer_flush() does the no-op check, too!)
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
df06745c5a made it so that we didn't
allocate extra uniform space for unused clip planes, which also
incidentally made us not allocate any space at all, which we were relying
on for this no-uniforms case. Instead of putting the knowledge of this
special HW exception into the thing that normally preallocates prog_data
for us, just allocate it here.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=68766
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Since we can have per-pixel lod we should also honor the filter per-pixel
(in fact we didn't honor it per quad neither in the multiple quad case).
Do this by running the linear path and simply beating the weights into shape
(the sample with the higher weight is the one which should have been chosen
with nearest filtering hence adjust filter weight to 1.0/0.0 based on that).
If all pixels use nearest filter (either min and mag) then still run just a
nearest filter as this is way cheaper (probably around 4 times faster for 2d,
more for 3d case) and it should be relatively rare that pixels really need
different filtering. OTOH if all pixels would require linear don't do anything
special since the linear path with filter adjustments shouldn't really be all
that much more expensive than ordinary linear, and we think it's rare that
min/mag filters are configured differently so there doesn't seem much value
in trying to optimize this further.
This does not yet fix the AoS path (though currently AoS is only used for
single quads hence it could be considered less broken, just never honoring
per-pixel filter decision but doing it per quad).
v2: simplify code a bit (unify min linear and min nearest cases)
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
While a sqrt here and there shouldn't hurt much (depending on the cpu) it is
possible to completely omit it since rho is only used for calculating lod and
there log2(x) == 0.5*log2(x^2). Depending on the exact path taken for
calculating lod this means we get a simple mul instead of sqrt (in case of
nearest mip filter in fact we don't need to replace the sqrt with something
else at all), only in some not very useful path this doesn't work (combined
brilinear calculation of int level and fractional lod, accurate rho calc but
brilinear filtering seems odd).
Apart from being faster as an added bonus this should increase our crappy
fractional accuracy of lod, since fast_log2 is only good for ~3bits and this
should increase accuracy by one bit (though not used if dimension is just one
as we'd need an extra mul there as we never had the squared rho in the first
place).
v2: use separate ilog2_sqrt function if we have squared rho.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This is just preparation for per-pixel (or per-quad in case of multiple quads)
min/mag filter since some assumptions about number of miplevels being equal
to number of lods no longer holds true.
This change does not change behavior yet (though theoretically when forcing
per-element path it might be slower with different min/mag filter since the
code will respect this setting even when there's no mip maps now in this case,
so some lod calcs will be done per-element just ultimately still the same
filter used for all pixels).
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Fixes "Missing break in switch" defect reported by Coverity.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <marek.olsak@amd.com>
The downstream android kernel driver is "kgsl", the upstream drm/kms
driver is called "msm". Since libdrm_freedreno handles the differences
between the two, we need to load the same thing for either device.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robclark@freedesktop.org>
We need to set the flag on all the .xyzw components that are written by
the instruction, not just on .x. Otherwise a later use of rN.y (for
example) will not trigger the appropriate sync bit to be set.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robclark@freedesktop.org>
Seems like most/all instructions have some restrictions about const src
registers. In seems like the 2 src (cat2) instructions can take at most
one const, and the 3 src (cat3) instructions can take at most one const
in the first 2 arguments. And so on. Handle this properly now.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robclark@freedesktop.org>
GLSL 1.30 doesn't allow precision qualifiers on sampler types,
but in GLSL ES, sampler types are also allowed. This seems like
an oversight (since the intention of including these in GLSL 1.30
is to allow compatibility with ES shaders).
Currently, Mesa allows "default" precision qualifiers to be set for
sampler types in GLSL (commit d5948f2). This patch makes it follow
GLSL ES rules and also allow declaring sampler variables with a
precision qualifier in GLSL 1.30 (and later). e.g.
uniform lowp sampler2D sampler;
This fixes a shader compilation error in Khronos OpenGL conformance
test "depth_texture_mipmap".
V2: Update comments.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <idr@lists.freedesktop.org>
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <idr@lists.freedesktop.org>
Cc: <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
Previously, we allocated space in brw_vs_prog_data's params and
pull_params arrays for MAX_CLIP_PLANES vec4s---even when it wasn't
necessary.
On a 64-bit architecture, this used 0.5 kB of space (8 clip planes *
4 floats per plane * 8 bytes per float pointer * 2 arrays of pointers =
512 bytes). Since this cost was per-vertex shader, it added up.
Conveniently, we already store the number of clip plane constants in the
program key. By using that, we can allocate the exact amount of space
needed. For the common case where user clipping is disabled, this means
0 bytes.
While we're here, mention exactly what code requires this extra space,
since it wasn't obvious.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
When validating draw parameters move check for 0 draw count last
(drawing with count 0 is not an error), so that other parameters (e.g.: the
primitive type) are validated and the correct errors (if applicable) are
generated.
>From the OpenGL 3.3 spec page 33 (page 48 of the PDF):
"[Regarding DrawArraysOneInstance, in terms of which other draw operations
are defined:]
If count is negative, an INVALID_VALUE error is generated."
This patch also changes the bahavior of MultiDrawElements to perform the draw
operation if some primitive's index counts are zero.
Signed-off-by: Fabian Bieler <fabianbieler@fastmail.fm>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
MAD will be generated directly from ir_triop_fma, so this assertion
checks that all ir_expressions are usable.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
MSAA was tested by one user on RS690 and it works for him with color
compression (CMASK) disabled. Our theory is that his chipset lacks CMASK RAM.
Since we don't have hardware documentation about which chipsets actually have
CMASK RAM, I had to take a guess based on the presence of HiZ.
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
In particular noone is interested in the vertex count, so drop that,
and also drop the duplicated num_primitives_generated /
so.primitives_storage_needed variables in drivers. I am unable for now to figure
out if primitives_storage_needed in SO stats (used for d3d10) should
increase if SO is disabled, though the equivalent num_primitives_generated
used for OpenGL definitely should increase. In any case we were only counting
when SO is active both in softpipe and llvmpipe anyway so don't pretend there's
an independent num_primitives_generated counter which would count always.
(This means the PIPE_QUERY_PRIMITIVES_GENERATED count will still be wrong just
as before, should eventually fix this by doing either separate counting for this
query or adjust the code so it always counts this even if SO is inactive depending
on what's correct for d3d10.)
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
SEQ and SNE are not native i915 instructions, so they each generate at
least 3 instructions. If both operands are uniforms or constants, we
get 5 instructions like:
U[1] = MOV CONST[1]
U[0].xyz = SGE CONST[0].xxxx, U[1]
U[1] = MOV CONST[1].-x-y-z-w
R[0].xyz = SGE CONST[0].-x-x-x-x, U[1]
R[0].xyz = MUL R[0], U[0]
This code is stupid. Instead of having the individual calls to
i915_emit_arith generate the moves to utemps, do it in the caller. This
results in code like:
U[1] = MOV CONST[1]
U[0].xyz = SGE CONST[0].xxxx, U[1]
R[0].xyz = SGE CONST[0].-x-x-x-x, U[1].-x-y-z-w
R[0].xyz = MUL R[0], U[0]
This allows fs-temp-array-mat2-index-col-wr and
fs-temp-array-mat2-index-row-wr to fit in hardware limits (instead of
falling back to software rasterization).
NOTE: Without pending patches to the piglit tests, these tests will now
fail. This is an unrelated, pre-existing issue.
v2: Copy most of the body of the commit message into comments in the
code. Suggested by Eric.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The command is submitted once the event has been triggered, but it might not
have completed yet. Therefore, we have to add it to deps in order to wait on it.
Signed-off-by: Niels Ole Salscheider <niels_ole@salscheider-online.de>
Reviewed-by: Francisco Jerez <currojerez@riseup.net>
I previously fixed this partly in 9e8400f4c9,
however I didn't go far enough in testing it, now when I parse a TGSI shader
with arrays in it my iterator can see the ArrayID set to the proper value.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Now that we use a fixed set of register classes, we can set up the
register set and conflict graphs once, at context creation, rather than
on every VS compile. This is obviously less expensive, and also what
we already do in the FS backend.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
We're soon going to be calling brw_alloc_reg_set() from outside of the
visitor, where we don't have the precomputed "max_grf" variable handy.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
For now, nothing else can get allocated over them. That may change at
some point in the future.
This also means that base_reg_count can be computed without knowing the
number of registers used for the payload, which is required if we want
to allocate the register set once at context creation time.
See commit 551e1cd44f, which implemented
virtually identical code in the FS backend.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Arrays, structures, and matrices use large VGRFs of arbitrary sizes.
However, split_virtual_grfs() breaks those down into VGRFs of size 1.
For reference, commit 5d90b98879 is the
analogous change to the FS backend.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
(From a suggestion by Francisco Jerez)
If an enum represents a bitfield of flags, e.g.:
enum E {
A = 1,
B = 2,
C = 4,
D = 8,
};
then C++ normally prohibits statements like this:
enum E x = A | B;
because A and B are implicitly converted to ints before OR-ing them,
and an int can't be stored in an enum without a type cast. C, on the
other hand, allows an int to be implicitly converted to an enum
without casting.
In the past we've dealt with this situation by storing flag bitfields
as ints. This avoids ugly casting at the expense of some type safety
that C++ would normally have offered (e.g. we get no warning if we
accidentally use the wrong enum type).
However, we can get the best of both worlds if we override the |
operator. The ugly casting is confined to the operator overload, and
we still get the benefit of C++ making sure we don't use the wrong
enum type.
v2: Remove unnecessary comment and unnecessary use of "enum" keyword.
Use static_cast.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Francisco Jerez <currojerez@riseup.net>
We never noticed that this field was uninitialized because it is only
used in an error path that reports internal Mesa errors.
But it's silly to have it around anyway because &brw->ctx is
equivalent.
Should fix Coverity defect CID 1063351: Uninitialized pointer field
(UNINIT_CTOR) /src/mesa/drivers/dri/i965/brw_vec4_emit.cpp: 148
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
If brwNewProgram is asked to create a program for an unrecognized
target, don't bother falling back on _mesa_new_program(). That just
hides bugs.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
v2: Use assert() rather than _mesa_problem().
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
330.frag is a direct copy of 150.frag.
330.glsl is 150.glsl combined with ARB_shader_bit_encoding.glsl.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
These are necessary in order to compile the built-in functions.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
glIsQuery is supposed to return false for names returned by glGenQueries
until their first use. BeginQuery is a use, but QueryCounter is also a
use.
From the ARB_timer_query spec:
"A timer query object is created with the command
void QueryCounter(uint id, enum target);
[...] If <id> is an unused query object name, the
name is marked as used [...]"
Fixes Piglit's spec/ARB_timer_query/query-lifetime.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Cc: mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org
I assume this should have been part of commit
7727fbb7c5. This (obviously) fixes a lot tests.
Signed-off-by: Henri Verbeet <hverbeet@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Commit 53e20b8b introduced the use of a template to initialize some
common fields. Move this copying of fields to before the common vp3
fields are initialized.
Reported-by: Martin Peres <martin.peres@labri.fr>
Signed-off-by: Ilia Mirkin <imirkin@alum.mit.edu>
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
The cmps.f.* instruction doesn't actually seem to give a float 1.0 or
0.0 output. It either needs a cov.u16f16 or add.s + sel.f16. This
makes SGT/SLT/etc more similar to CMP, so handle them in trans_cmp().
This fixes a bunch of piglit tests.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robclark@freedesktop.org>
It seems there are a number of cases where instructions have limitations
about taking reading src's from const register file, so make
get_unconst() a bit easier to use.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robclark@freedesktop.org>
We probably should get rid of assert() entirely, but at this stage it is
more useful for things to crash where we can catch it in a debugger.
With compile_error() we have a single place to set an error flag (to
bail out and return an error on the next instruction) so that will be a
small change later when enough of the compiler bugs are sorted.
But re-arrange/cleanup the error/assert stuff so we at least get a dump
of the TGSI that triggered it. So we see some useful output in piglit
logs.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robclark@freedesktop.org>
Don't crash when no color buffer bound. Something caught when starting
to run piglit, fixes a hanful of piglit tests.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robclark@freedesktop.org>
Category 4 instructions (rsq, rcp, sqrt, etc) seem to be unable to take
a const register as src. In these cases we need to move the src to a
temporary gpr first.
This is the second case of such a restriction, where the instruction
encoding appears to support a const src, but in fact the hw appears to
ignore that bit. So split things out into a helper that can be re-used
for any instructions which have this limitation.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robclark@freedesktop.org>
Our current (rather naive) register assignment is based on mapping
different register files (INPUT, OUTPUT, TEMP, CONST, etc) based on the
max register index of the preceding file. But in some cases, the lowest
used register in a file might not be zero. In which case
file_count[file] != file_max[file] + 1.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robclark@freedesktop.org>
Sometimes things other than color dst need saturating, like if there is
a 'clamp(foo, 0.0, 1.0)'. So for saturated dst add the extra
instructions to fix up dst.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robclark@freedesktop.org>
The 1st src to add.s needs (r) flag (repeat), otherwise it will end up:
add.s dst.xyzw, tmp.xxxx -1
instead of:
add.s dst.xyzw, tmp.xyzw, -1
Also, if we are using a temporary dst to avoid clobbering one of the src
registers, we actually need to use that as the dst for the sel
instruction.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robclark@freedesktop.org>
This patch adds support for:
PIPE_COMPUTE_CAP_MAX_INPUT_SIZE
PIPE_COMPUTE_CAP_MAX_LOCAL_SIZE
Return the values reported by the closed source driver for now.
Signed-off-by: Niels Ole Salscheider <niels_ole@salscheider-online.de>
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
Previously, the min/mag switchover point when using nearest/none mip
filter was effectively -0.5 which can't be right. Looks like new OpenGL
thinks it's ok if it's always 0.0 (older versions required 0.5 in some
cases), let's hope everybody else thinks that's fine too.
Refactor this slightly and get the per-quad/per-pixel min/mag decision
values further down to sampling, though still only the first component
is used yet.
While here also fix code trying to skip lod bias application etc. when
mipfilter is none, as this is still needed for determining min/mag filter.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
As of "2f142d59 build: Add --enable-gallium-osmesa flag." the pkgconfig
file from classic osmesa is no longer installed when building gallium
osmesa, so copy it to gallium osmesa and install the copy instead.
CC: "9.2" <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This patch introduces the vec4_gs_visitor class, which translates
geometry shaders from GLSL IR to back-end opcodes.
This class is derived from vec4_visitor (which is also the base class
for vec4_vs_visitor), so as a result most of the back end code is
shared. The only parts that differ are:
- Geometry shaders use a different input payload organization, since
the inputs need to match up with the outputs of the previous
pipeline stage (vec4_gs_visitor::setup_payload() and
vec4_gs_visitor::setup_varying_inputs()).
- Geometry shader input array dereferences need a special stride
computation, since all geometry shader inputs are interleaved into
one giant array (vec4_gs_visitor::compute_array_stride()).
- There are no geometry shader system values
(vec4_gs_visitor::make_reg_for_system_value()).
- At the beginning of a geometry shader, extra data in R0 needs to be
zeroed out, and a vertex counter needs to be initialized
(vec4_gs_visitor::emit_prolog()).
- When EmitVertex() appears in the shader, the current contents of
output variables need to be emitted to the URB, and the vertex
counter needs to be incremented
(vec4_gs_visitor::visit(ir_emit_vertex *)).
- When generating a URB_WRITE message to output vertex data, the
current state of the vertex counter needs to be used to store a
write offset in the message header
(vec4_gs_visitor::emit_urb_write_header()).
- The URB_WRITE message that outputs vertex data needs to be sent
using GS_OPCODE_URB_WRITE, since VS_OPCODE_URB_WRITE would overwrite
the offsets in the message header
(vec4_gs_visitor::emit_urb_write_opcode()).
- At the end of a geometry shader, the final vertex count needs to be
delivered using a URB WRITE message
(vec4_gs_visitor::emit_thread_end()).
- EndPrimitive() functionality is not implemented yet
(vec4_gs_visitor::visit(ir_end_primitive *)).
- There is no support for assembly shaders
(vec4_gs_visitor::emit_program_code()).
v2: Make num_input_vertices const. Refer to registers as rN rather
than gN, for consistency with the PRM. Fix misspelling. Improve
comment in the ir_emit_vertex visitor explaining why we emit vertices
inside a conditional. Enclose the conditional code in the
ir_emit_vertex visitor between curly braces.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This will be used by geometry shaders to implement the EmitVertex()
function, since it requires writing data to a dynamically-determined
offset within the geometry shader's URB entry.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
The arguments to brw_urb_WRITE() were getting pretty unwieldy, and we
have to add more flags to support geometry shaders anyhow.
Also plumb these flags through brw_clip_emit_vue(),
brw_set_urb_message(), and the vec4_instruction class.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
When I initially generalized the vec4_visitor class in preparation for
geometry shaders, I assumed that the setup_attributes() function would
need to be different between vertex and geometry shaders, but its
caller, setup_payload(), could be shared. So I made
setup_attributes() a virtual function.
It turns out this isn't true; setup_payload() needs to be different
too, since the geometry shader payload sometimes includes an extra
register (primitive ID) that has to come before uniforms.
So setup_payload() needs to be the virtual function instead of
setup_attributes().
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Both 3DSTATE_VS and 3DSTATE_GS have a dispatch_grf_start_reg control,
which determines the register where the hardware delivers data sourced
from the URB (push constants followed by per-vertex input data).
For vertex shaders, we always set dispatch_grf_start_reg to 1, since
R1 is always the first register available for push constants in vertex
shaders.
For geometry shaders, we'll need the flexibility to set
dispatch_grf_start_reg to different values depending on the behvaiour
of the geometry shader; if it accesses gl_PrimitiveIDIn, we'll need to
set it to 2 to allow the primitive ID to be delivered to the thread in
R1.
This patch eliminates the assumption that dispatch_grf_start_reg is
always 1. In vec4_visitor, we record the regnum that was passed to
vec4_visitor::setup_uniforms() in prog_data for later use. In
vec4_generator, we consult this value when converting an abstract
UNIFORM register to a concrete hardware register. And in the code
that emits 3DSTATE_VS, we set dispatch_grf_start_reg based on the
value recorded in prog_data.
This will allow us to set dispatch_grf_start_reg to the appropriate
value when compiling geometry shaders. Vertex shaders will continue
to always use a dispatch_grf_start_reg of 1.
v2: Make dispatch_grf_start_reg "unsigned" rather than "GLuint".
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This patch moves the following things into brw_vec4.{cpp,h}:
- struct brw_vec4_compile
- struct brw_vec4_prog_key
- brw_vec4_prog_data_compare()
- brw_vec4_prog_data_free()
This will allow us to avoid having to include brw_vs.h in
geometry-shader-specific files.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
The patch that follows will move the definition of struct
brw_vec4_prog_key from brw_vs.h to brw_vec4.h, making it necessary for
brw_vs.h to include brw_vec4.h (because brw_vs.h defines struct
brw_vs_prog_key, which contains brw_vec4_prog_key as a member). Since
brw_vs.h is included from C source files, that means that brw_vec4.h
will need to be safe to include from C. Same for brw_shader.h, since
it is included by brw_vec4.h.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This is backwards from what we are going to want in the long term, which is:
- brw_vec4.h declares general-purpose vec4 infrastructure needed by
both VS and GS
- brw_vs.h includes brw_vec4.h and adds VS-specific parts.
- brw_gs.h includes brw_vec4.h and adds GS-specific parts.
Note that at the moment brw_vec.h contains a fair amount of
VS-specific declarations--I plan to address that in a later patch.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Otherwise any GS that requires lowering (e.g. one that uses
gl_ClipDistance as an input or output) will fail to work.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This patch extracts the following logic from
validate_vertex_shader_executable():
(a) Generate an error if the shader writes to both gl_ClipDistance and
gl_ClipVertex.
(b) Record whether the shader writes to gl_ClipDistance in
gl_shader_program for use by the back-end.
(c) Record the size of gl_ClipDistance in gl_shader_program for use by
transform feedback logic.
And moves it into a function that is shared between vertex and
geometry shaders.
Strictly speaking we only need to have shared logic for (b) and (c)
right now (since (a) only matters in compatibility contexts, and we're
only implementing geometry shaders in core contexts right now). But
the three are closely related enough that it seems sensible to keep
them together.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
enums were being converted twice resulting in incorrect values.
The extra conversion has been removed and the redundant assert is
removed also.
Cc: 9.2 <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
Signed-off-by: Timothy Arceri <t_arceri@yahoo.com.au>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
The previous value of (GLuint64) ~0 has some problems:
GL_MAX_SERVER_WAIT_TIMEOUT is supposed to be a GLuint64 value, but has
to be queried via GetInteger64v(), which returns a GLint64. This means
that some applications are likely to treat it as a signed integer, where
~0 means -1. Negative values are nonsensical and problematic.
When interpreted correctly, ~0 translates to about 0.58 million years,
which seems rather excessive.
This patch changes it to 0x1fff7fffffff, which is about 1.11 years.
This is still plenty long, and is the same as both an int64 and uint64.
Applications that accidentally store it in a 32-bit int/unsigned also
get a non-negative value, which is again the same as both int and
unsigned. This value was suggested by Ian Romanick.
v2: Add the ULL prefix on the constant (suggested by Ian).
Fixes Piglit's spec/!OpenGL 3.2/get-integer-64v.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Cc: mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org
_mesa_meta_begin() sets up an orthographic project and initializes the
viewport based on the current drawbuffer's width and height. This is
likely the window size, since it occurs before the meta operation binds
any temporary buffers.
decompress_texture_image needs the viewport to be the size of the image
it's trying to draw. Otherwise, it may only draw part of the image.
v2: Actually set the projection properly too.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=68250
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Cc: Mak Nazecic-Andrlon <owlberteinstein@gmail.com>
Fixes inconsistent failure of gles2conform/GL2Tests/glUniform/glUniform.test
under gnome-shell. What follows is a description of the bug and its fix.
When intel_update_renderbuffers() allocates a miptree for a winsys
renderbuffer, it propagates the renderbuffer's format to become also the
miptree's format.
If the winsys color buffer format is SARGB, then, in the first call to
eglMakeCurrent, intel_gles3_srgb_workaround() changes the renderbuffer's
format to ARGB. That is, it changes the format from sRGB to non-sRGB.
However, it changes the renderbuffer's format *after*
intel_update_renderbuffers() has allocated the renderbuffer's miptree.
Therefore, when eglMakeCurrent returns, the miptree format (SARGB)
differs from the renderbuffer format (ARGB).
If the X server reallocates the color buffer,
intel_update_renderbuffers() will create a new miptree for the
renderbuffer. The new miptree's format (ARGB) will differ from old
miptree's format (SARGB). This mismatch between old and new miptrees
causes bugs.
Fix the bug by moving intel_gles3_srgb_workaround() to occur *before*
intel_update_renderbuffers().
CC: "9.2" <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=67934
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Except for explicit derivs with cube maps which are very bogus anyway.
Just like explicit lod this is only used if no_quad_lod is set in
GALLIVM_DEBUG env var.
Minification is terrible on cpus which don't support true vector shifts
(but should work correctly). Cannot do the min/mag filter decision (if
they are different) per pixel though, only selecting different mip levels
works.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
block size depth is always 1 even for compressed formats (unless someone
invents true 3d compressed formats at least which we can't represent).
Nearest (and soa) path had it right.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
We have set up 3DSTATE_SBE (or 3DSTATE_SF on GEN6) in
ilo_shader_select_kernel_routing(). There is no need to pass the last shader
stage to the GPE function.
The Gallium implementation is apparently not ready for regular
consumption, so as much as I hate adding more build-time options, here's
another.
Acked-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
The variable means that UBO qualifiers are allowed in a particular
context (e.g., not allowed in a struct field declaration), rather than a
particular set of UBO qualifiers are valid.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
This was invaluable when debugging the global copy propagation
algorithm. We may as well commit it in case someone needs to print
out the sets in the future.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
The (complicated!) math is all identical, there's just minimal differences how
sign bit is calculated plus there's an additional subtraction for the argument
going into the polynomial for cos.
The logic stays 100% the same (with a small exception, sign bit calculation for
sin is minimally simplified, applying sign mask after xoring the arguments
instead of applying it to each argument).
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
IVB/BYT also has the same L3 cacheability control in MOCS as HSW,
so let's make use of it.
pts/xonotic and pts/reaction @ 1920x1080 gain ~4% on my IVB GT2. Most
other things show less gains/no regressions, except furmark which
loses some 10 points.
I didn't have a BYT at hand for testing.
v2: Don't check (brw->gen == 7) in gen7 functions. (chadv)
Signed-off-by: Ville Syrjälä <ville.syrjala@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Just spotted these unpopulated MOCS fields when comparing the code
against BSpec. Set the MOCS to the same as everywhere else in Haswell:
L3-cacheable.
v2: Annotate state packet fields (chadv).
Signed-off-by: Ville Syrjälä <ville.syrjala@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
The NVIDIA driver doesn't expose them, and piglit's
arb_texture_compression-invalid-formats expects them to not be there.
This, with the previous commit, fixes piglit
arb_texture_compression-invalid-formats.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Cc: "9.2" <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
This is required by the spec, and it's a bit tricky because the default
precision is scoped. As a result, I'm slightly abusing the symbol
table.
Fixes piglit no-default-float-precision.frag tests and the piglit
default-precision-nested-scope-0[1234].frag tests that are currently on
the piglit mailing list for review.
On IRC I got confirmation from cwabbot that ARM (Mali T6xx and T400)
enforces this requirement and from kusma that NVIDIA (Tegra2) enforces
this requirement. We should be safe from regressing shipping
applications.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Cc: "9.2" <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
We never noticed this before because we previously didn't enfoce GLSL ES
fragement shader requirements that precision be defined. There may also
have been some interaction here with the addition of
GL_ARB_shading_language_420pack, but it doesn't appear to me that it
added any new bugs (just perhaps uncovered some old ones).
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Cc: "9.2" <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
Going to need this soon (not going to bother with avx2 intrinsics at this time
but don't want to do workarounds for true vector shifts if llvm itself can use
them just fine and won't need the gazillion instruction emulation).
Not really tested other than my cpu returns 0 for these features...
(I have no idea if llvm actually would emit avx2/xop instructions neither...)
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Need to check the wrap mode of the actually used coords not a fixed 2.
While checking more than necessary would only potentially disable aos and
not cause any harm I'm pretty sure for 3d textures it could have caused
assertion failures (if s,t coords have simple filter and r not).
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Turns out it is actually very complicated to figure out what a format really
is wrt range, as using channel information for determining unorm/snorm etc.
doesn't work for a bunch of cases - namely compressed, subsampled, other.
Also while here add clamping for uint/sint as well - d3d10 doesn't actually
need this (can only use ld with these formats hence no border) and we could
do this outside the shader for GL easily (due to the fixed texture/sampler
relation) do it here too just so I can forget about it.
v2: move border color clamping out of fetch texel. Also change it to clamp
the whole border vector at once (and use vectorized load of border color),
which saves a couple of instructions - needs some different handling of
mixed signed/unsigned formats so skip the per channel stuff and just derive
this from first channel except for special formats.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
There's a new debug value used to disable per-quad lod optimizations
in fragment shader (ignored for vs/gs as the results are just too wrong
typically). Also trying to detect if a supplied lod value is really a
scalar (if it's coming from immediate or constant file) in which case
sampler code can use this to stay on per-quad-lod path (in fact for
explicit lod could simplify even further and use same lod for both
quads in the avx case but this is not implemented yet).
Still need to actually implement per-element lod bias (and derivatives),
and need to handle per-element lod in size queries.
v2: fix comments, prettify.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The rules were writing files to e.g. util/u_indices_gen.py, but in an
out-of-tree build this directory doesn't exist in the build directory. So,
create the directories just in case.
Cc: mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com>
The LLVM R600 backend currently always uses separate VGPRs for these.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=68162
(Centroid interpolation is identical to center interpolation without
multisampling, so the shader hardware was only pre-loading one set of
interpolation coefficients, and the pixel shader code was using
uninitialized values as the centroid interpolation coefficients)
Cc: mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org
Tested-by: Laurent Carlier <lordheavym@gmail.com>
Now that we have the number of samplers available, we don't need to
iterate over all 16. This should be particularly helpful for vertex
shaders.
v2: Use the correct shader program (caught by Paul Berry).
This needs to initialize the exact same set of sampler swizzles as
the actual key setup, or else we end up doing recompiles due to some
being XYZW and others being 0.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
The first field of a record in a UBO has the aligment of the record
itself.
Fixes piglit vs-struct-pad, fs-struct-pad, and (with the patch posted to
the piglit list that extends the test) layout-std140.
NOTE: The bit of strangeness with the version of visit_field without the
record_type poitner is because that method is pure virtual in the base
class. The original implementation of the class did this to ensure
derived classes remembered to implement that flavor. Now they can
implement either flavor but not both. I don't know a C++ way to enforce
that.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=68195
Cc: "9.2 9.1" mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org
The outer-most record is passed into the visit_field method for
the first field. In other words, in the following structure:
struct S1 {
vec4 v;
float f;
};
struct S {
S1 s1;
S1 s2;
};
uniform Ubo {
S s;
};
s.s1.v would get record_type = S (because s1.v is the first non-record
field in S), and s.s2.v would get record_type = S1. s.s1.f and s.s2.f
would get record_type = NULL becuase they aren't the first field of
anything.
This new overload isn't used yet, but the next patch will add several
uses.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Cc: "9.2 9.1" mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org
For some reason, we didn't use this information even though the VS
backend has computed it (albeit poorly) for ages.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Unlike the FS, the VS backend already computed the binding table size.
However, it did so poorly: after compilation, it looked to see if any
pull constants/textures/UBOs were in use, and set num_surfaces to the
maximum surface index for that category. If the VS only used a single
texture or UBO, this overcounted by quite a bit.
The shader time surface was also noted at state upload time (during
drawing), not at compile time, which is inefficient. I believe it also
had an off by one error.
This patch computes it accurately, while also simplifying the code.
It also renames num_surfaces to binding_table_size, since num_surfaces
wasn't actually the number of surfaces used. For example, a VS that
used one UBO and no other surfaces would have set num_surfaces to
SURF_INDEX_VS_UBO(1) == 18, rather than 1. A bit of a misnomer there.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Computing the minimum size was easy, and done at compile-time for no
extra overhead here. Making the binding table smaller wastes less batch
space.
Adding the CACHE_NEW_WM_PROG dirty bit isn't strictly necessary, since
other atoms depend on it and flag BRW_NEW_SURFACES. However, it's best
to add it for clarity and safety. It shouldn't add any new overhead.
v2: Use binding_table_size, rather than max_surface_index.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
By tracking the maximum surface index used by the shader, we know just
how small we can make the binding table.
Since it depends entirely on the shader program, we can just compute
it once at compile time, rather than at binding table emit time (which
happens during drawing).
v2: Store binding_table_size, rather than max_surface_index, for
consistency with the VS (which needs to be able to represent 0
surfaces).
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
SURF_INDEX_DRAW() has been the identity function since the dawn of time,
and both the shader code and binding table upload code relied on that,
simply using X rather than SURF_INDEX_DRAW(X).
Even if that continues to be true, using the macro clarifies the code.
The comment about draw buffers needing to be first in order for
headerless render target writes to work turned out to be wrong; with
this change, SURF_INDEX_DRAW can be changed to arbitrary indices and
everything continues working.
The confusion was over the "Render Target Index" field in the FB write
message header. If it were a binding table index, then RT 0 would have
to be at index 0 for headerless FB writes to work. However, it's
actually an index into the blend state table, so there's no problem.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Cc: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Now that we have the number of samplers available, we don't need to
iterate over all 16. This should be particularly helpful for vertex
shaders.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Previously, we computed sampler counts when generating the SAMPLER_STATE
table. By computing it earlier, we should be able to shorten a bunch of
loops.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This allows us to avoid uploading the VS sampler state table if only the
fragment program changes.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Now, each shader stage has a sampler state table that only refers to the
samplers actually used by that problem. This should make the VS table
non-existant or very small.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Also upload separate sampler default/texture border color entries.
At the moment, this is completely idiotic: both tables contain exactly
the same contents, so we're simply wasting batch space and CPU time.
However, soon we'll only upload data for textures actually /used/ in
a particular stage, which will usually make the VS table empty and
very likely eliminate all redundancy. This is just a stepping stone.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Like the previous patch, this simply pushes direct access to brw->wm up
one level in the call chain. Rather than passing the whole array, we
just pass a pointer to the correct spot in the array, similar to what we
do for the actual sampler state structure.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
When we begin uploading separate sampler state tables for VS and FS,
we won't be able to use &brw->wm.sdc_offset[ss_index]. By passing it in
as a parameter, we push the problem up to the caller.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Currently, we only have a single sampler state table shared among all
stages, so we just copy wm.sampler_count into vs.sampler_count.
In the future, each shader stage will have its own SAMPLER_STATE table,
at which point we'll need these separate sampler counts.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
I believe the data flow analysis actually works now, and it should be
safe to re-enable global copy propagation. It even does things now.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Since the initial value for livein is an overestimation (0xffffffff),
it's extremely likely that it will shrink, which means we can't simply
OR in new bits - we need to fully recompute it based on the current
liveout values.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Since we start with an overestimation of livein (0xffffffff), successive
steps can actually take away values. This means we can't simply OR in
new liveout values; we need to recompute it from scratch at each
iteration of the fixed-point algorithm.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
The starting block always has livein = 0 and liveout = copy. Since we
start with real data, not estimates, there's no need to refine it with
the fixed point algorithm.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
The previous commit properly initialized liveout. This previous
(and incorrect) initialization is no longer necessary.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Previously, livein was initialized to 0 for all blocks. According to
the textbook, it should be the universal set (~0) for all blocks except
the one representing the start of the program (which should be 0).
liveout also needs to be initialized to COPY for the initial block.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
According to page 360 of the textbook, the proper formula for liveout
is:
CPout(n) = COPY(i) union (CPin(i) - KILL(i))
Previously, we omitted COPY.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Excluding the existing liveout bits is a deviation from the textbook
algorithm. The reason for doing so was to determine if the value
changed, which means the fixed-point algorithm needs to run for another
iteration.
The simpler way to do that is to save the value from step (N-1) and
compare it to the new value at step N.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This is the "COPY" set from Muchnick's textbook, which is necessary
to do the dataflow algorithm correctly.
v2: Simplify initialization based on Paul Berry's observation that
out_acp contains exactly what needs to be in the COPY set.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Although this function currently only initializes the KILL set, it will
soon initialize other data flow sets as well.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
To compute the actual liveout/livein data flow values, we start with
some initial values and apply a fixed-point algorithm until they settle.
Previously, we iterated through all blocks, updating both liveout and
livein together in one pass. This is awkward, since computing livein
for a block requires knowing liveout for all parent blocks. Not all
of those parent blocks may have been processed yet.
This patch separates the two. First, we update liveout for all blocks.
At iteration N of the fixed-point algorithm, this uses livein values
from iteration N-1. Secondly, we update livein for all blocks. At
step N, this uses the liveout information we just computed (in step N).
This ensures each computation has a consistent picture of the data,
rather than seeing an random mix of data from steps N-1 and N depending
on the order of the blocks in the CFG data structure.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This variable indicates that the fixed-point algorithm made changes to
the data at this step, so it needs to run for another iteration.
"progress" seems a nicer name for that.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
The fixed-point algorithm needs to run at least once, so a do-while loop
is more natural.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
The dataflow analysis used for global copy propagation is severely
broken, and I believe it doesn't actually do anything. Fixing it will
require a lot of changes, each of which might break things.
Once all the fixes land, we can re-enable this.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Any decent compiler will do this for us, although doing this
will make grepping through the code alot easier.
v2: In both mixer and query interface
v3: rebase
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com> [v1]
Signed-off-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
Code should loop through and cleanup the three (VL_NUM_COMPONENTS) idct
buffers, rather than doing the first one three times.
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Signed-off-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
Free any allocated memory and return BadAlloc if create_video_buffer()
has failed to create a buffer.
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Signed-off-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
Not seen in the wild yet, but seems like a reasonable thing to do.
[suggested by Christian]
Signed-off-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
I was looking into some minor 422 issues/discrepencies I noticed long
ago using vdpau on my rv790.
I noticed that there is code that is halving height rather than width -
422 is full height AFAIK.
Making the changes below doesn't actually make any noticable difference
to what I was looking into.
Maybe there are more but here's three I've found so far
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
We are getting close to the maximum number of BRW_NEW_* bits that can
be stored in brw->state.dirty.brw without overflowing 32 bits, and
geometry shaders are going to add more. Add a STATIC_ASSERT so that
we will be alerted when we need to switch to 64 bits.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Previously, we were asserting that each driver specified an NConfigOptions
exactly equal to the number of options they supplied, leading to frequent
bugs when people would forget to adjust the value when adjusting driver
options. Instead, just overallocate the table by a bit and leave sanity
checking to the assert in findOption().
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Consistently using a "The ___ driver hook." line at the the top of each
function's comment block makes it easy to see at a glance what function
is being implemented.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This code upload performs batched uploads via a BO. By moving it out to
a separate file, intel_buffer_objects.c only provides the core buffer
object functionality.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
GL_APPLE_object_purgeable creates a mechanism for marking OpenGL objects
as "purgeable" so they can be thrown away when system resources become
scarce. It specifically applies to buffer objects, textures, and
renderbuffers.
The intel_buffer_objects.c file provides core functionality for GL
buffer objects, such as MapBufferRange and CopyBufferSubData. Having
texture and renderbuffer functionality in that file is a bit strange.
The 2010 copyright on the new file is because Chris Wilson first added
this code in January 2010 (commit 755915fa).
v2: Actually remember to call the new dd table setup function.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
The surface allocator understands the scanout flag just fine.
This seems to improve performance for Ubuntu Unity on top of st/xorg
and it fixes the cursor.
Reviewed-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
This started as an attempt to add support for MSAA texture transfers and
MSAA depth-stencil decompression for the DB->CB copy path.
It has gotten a bit out of control, but it's for the greater good.
Some changes do not make much sense, they are there just to make it look
like the other driver.
With a few cosmetic modifications, r600_texture.c can be shared with
a symlink.
Reviewed-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
This is glBlitFramebuffer support for MSAA surfaces as required by GL 3.0
and texturing as required by GL 3.2 and GL_ARB_texture_multisample.
Reviewed-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
This is basic MSAA support which should work with most apps.
Some features are missing, those will be implemented by other commits.
Reviewed-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
It moves all sampler view descriptors to a buffer.
It supports partial resource updates and it can also unbind resources
(required for FMASK texturing).
The buffer contains all sampler view descriptors for one shader stage,
represented as an array. On top of that, there are N arrays in the buffer,
which are used to emulate context registers as implemented by the previous
ASICs (each array is a context).
This uses the RCU synchronization approach to avoid read-after-write hazards
as discussed in the thread:
"radeonsi: add FMASK texture binding slots and resource setup"
CP DMA is used to clear the descriptors at context initialization and to copy
the descriptors from one context to the next.
v2: - use PKT3_DMA_DATA on CIK (I'll test CIK later)
- turn the bool CP DMA parameters into self-explanatory flags
- add a nice simple API for packet emission to radeon_winsys.h
- use 256 contexts, 128 causes texture corruption in openarena
It shouldn't be necessary to call radeon_winsys::cs_flush() from
radeonsi_launch_grid(), because the state tracker is responsible for
flushing the pipeline at the appropriate time. The current behavior is
also wrong, because radeonsi_launch_grid() submits packets to the
compute ring, but when the state tracker calls pipe->flush() everything
is submitted to the graphics ring. This has the potential to create a
race condition.
The downside of removing this flush is that the compute dispatch packets
will be sent to the graphics ring rather than the compute ring.
In the future we will need to come up with a way to detect 'compute'
command streams and submit them to the appropriate ring.
Signed-off-by: Marek Olšák <marek.olsak@amd.com>
Previously, INTEL_DEBUG=bat would dump messages like:
intel_mipmap_tree.c:1643: Batchbuffer flush with 456b used
This only reported the space used for command packets, and didn't
report any information on the space used for indirect state.
Now it dumps:
intel_context.c:366: Batchbuffer flush with 6128b (pkt) + 4288b (state)
= 10416b (31.8%)
This conveniently shows the breakdown of space used for packets vs.
state, as well as the percentage of batchbuffer space.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
We emit these before configuring depth in the normal path, or actually
using the depth buffer in BLORP - we just failed to emit them when
disabling depth altogether.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
We emit these before configuring depth in the normal path, or actually
using the depth buffer in BLORP - we just failed to emit them when
disabling depth altogether.
On Sandybridge, this also requires the post_sync_nonzero flush.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Previously, copy propagation would cause bitcast_f2u(abs(float)) to
be performed in a single step, but the application of source modifiers
(abs, neg) happens after type conversion, leading to incorrect results.
That is, for bitcast_f2u(abs(float)) we would in fact generate code to
do abs(bitcast_f2u(float)).
For example, whereas bitcast_f2u(abs(float)) might result in a register
argument such as
(abs)g2.2<0,1,0>UD
v2: Set interfered = true and break in register_coalesce instead of
returning false.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereoytpe441@gmail.com>
Necessary to avoid combining a bitcast and a modifier into a single
operation. Otherwise if safe, the MOV should be removed by
copy-propagation or register coalescing.
With this and the next patch, there are only four changes in shader-db:
all a single extra instruction. The code does something like
mov a.w, -b.x
and copy propagation doesn't work because it only handles no-op
swizzles. Seems acceptable, given the known limitation of our copy
propagation.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereoytpe441@gmail.com>
Currently single sample scaled blits with GL_LINEAR filter falls
back to meta path. Patch removes this limitation in BLORP engine
and implements single sample scaled blit with bilinear filter.
No piglit, gles3 regressions are observed with this patch on Ivybridge.
V2: Use "sample" message to utilize the linear filtering functionality
built in to hardware.
V3: Define a bool variable (bilinear_filter) to handle the conditions
for GL_LINEAR blits.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
New function clamp_tex_coords() clamps the texture coordinates
to texture boundaries. This function will also be utilized later
for the BLORP implementation of single-sample scaled blit with
bilinear filter.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
When we talk about both multi-sample and single-sample scaled blits,
rect_grid_{x1, y1} are more appropriate variable names as compared
to sample_grid_{x1, y1}. There are no functional changes in this patch.
It just prepares for the BLORP implementation of single-sample scaled
blit with bilinear filter.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This patch fixes a case of framebuffer blitting with renderbuffer
as color attachment and GL_LINEAR filter. Meta implementation of
glBlitFrambuffer() converts source color buffer to a texture and
uses it to do the scaled blitting in to destination buffer. Using
the exact source rectangle to create the texture does incorrect
linear filtering along the edges. This patch makes the changes to
extend the texture edges by one pixel in x, y directions. This
ensures correct linear filtering.
It fixes failing piglit fbo-attachments-blit-scaled-linear test.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
CC: "9.2" <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
CC: "9.1" <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
h264/mpeg4 remain disabled for pre-nvc0, there's some minor
bug/difference which causes the decoding to hang after some frames.
Signed-off-by: Ilia Mirkin <imirkin@alum.mit.edu>
The error code was changed from INVALID_VALUE to INVALID_OPERATION
in OpenGL 3.3. We should also generate an error when size is BGRA
and normalized is FALSE.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Sandybridge is the only platform that supports an IF instruction
with an embedded comparison. In this case, we need to emit a CMP
to go along with the SEL.
Fixes regressions in Piglit's glsl-fs-atan-3, fs-unpackHalf2x16,
fs-faceforward-float-float-float, isinf-and-isnan fs_basic, and
isinf-and-isnan fs_fbo.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=68086
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Tested-by: lu hua <huax.lu@intel.com>
If clipdistance for one of the vertices is nan (or inf) then the
entire primitive should be discarded.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Doing the comparisons pre-filter is highly recommended by OpenGL (and d3d9)
and definitely required by d3d10.
This actually doesn't do it pre-filter but more "in-filter" as otherwise
need to push the comparisons even further down into fetch code and this
also trivially allows using a somewhat cheaper lerp.
Doing it pre-filter would actually have some performance advantage for UNORM
formats (because the comparisons should be done in texture format, we'd only
need to convert the shadow ref coord to texture format once, but in turn would
save converting the per-sample texture values to floats) but this gets a bit
messy as this has implications for border color handling as well (which needs
to be done prior to depth comparisons, hence would also need to convert border
color to texture format too or use some other tricks like doing separate border
color / shadow ref comparison and simply using that result directly when doing
border replacement).
Should make no difference for nearest filtering, and performance for linear
filtering should be mostly the same too (essentially have one more comparison
instruction per sample, and replace the sub/mul/add lerp with a sub/and/and/add
special "lerp" which all in all shouldn't be much of a difference).
v2: get rid of old code completely
Reviewed-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
E.g. the Source engine seems to always write to gl_ClipVertex, but normally
doesn't enable any GL_CLIP_DISTANCEn states. This change removes some
irrelevant parts from the generated vertex shader code in such cases.
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
This is a very well hidden bug found by accident (only the fixed glean
tstencil2 test so far seems to hit it).
We must use new mask with combined s_pass values and orig_mask values
for zpass/zfail stencil ops, otherwise both the sfail op and one of
zpass/zfail op are applied (probably not hit in most tests because
some of the ops tend to be KEEP usually).
Note: this is a candidate for the 9.2 branch.
Reviewed-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Should get rid of some float-to-int conversions (with negation).
No piglit regressions (with llvmpipe).
v2: fix bogus formatting spotted by Brian.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This also allows people who don't want to install the binary blobs
required for VP2 to still get MPEG decoding.
Signed-off-by: Ilia Mirkin <imirkin@alum.mit.edu>
There's no need to use a clip flag for NEGW on these gens, so
no reason we can't just enable 8 planes.
V2: - Bump (and document!) MAX_VERTS in the clip code.
- Fix clip flag masks in the clip unit state and in the shader
prolog
- Move this to the end of the series for less breakage.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This does the same thing as we do for triangle clipping -- select the
appropriate source (either dot(hpos,fixed plane) or a clipdistance
slot).
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Nothing in the clipper uses gl_ClipVertex any more, so we don't care
where it is.
V2: Don't bother fishing out the clipvertex offset either.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Soon the dp4 is only going to be used for fixed clip planes.
V2: Remove old inaccurate comment about the behavior of this function;
add a better explanation above.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
V2: - Use the new VS_OPCODE_UNPACK_FLAGS_SIMD4X2 to correctly split the
flags for the two vertices being processed together.
- Don't apply bogus masking of clip flags. The set of plane enables
aren't included in the shader key, and we wouldn't want the
recompiles anyway.
V3: - Tidy up spurious instructions, name temps properly.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
[V2] Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Splits the bottom 8 bits of f0.0 for further wrangling
in a SIMD4x2 program. The 4 bits corresponding to the channels in each
program flow are copied to the LSBs of dst.x visible to each flow.
This is useful for working with clipping flags in the VS.
V3: - Fixup immediate types
- Teach scheduler about the hidden dep on flags
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
V2: Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
We're about to have an instruction that depends on the flags but isn't
predicated. This lays the groundwork.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Previously we had disabled interpolation of the clip distances as a
special case, since they were unused.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
We need to produce clip flags for the vertex header on Gen4/5, so
clip plane lowering has to be done before we try to emit the flags/psiz
attribute.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
V2: We don't particularly care where they fall in the VUE map, as long
as they are allocated somewhere, and occupy two contiguous slots. Don't
fiddle with the SF layout at all -- there's no need.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Fixes build error introduced with commit
d1ba1055d9.
CC nouveau_video.lo
nouveau_video.c: In function 'nouveau_screen_get_video_param':
nouveau_video.c:866:33: error: 'screen' undeclared (first use in this function)
nouveau_video.c:866:33: note: each undeclared identifier is reported only once for each function it appear
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
This makes things a bit nicer, and more importantly it fixes an issue
where a "downgraded" array texture (due to view reduced to 1 layer and
addressed with (non-array) samplec instruction) would use the wrong
coord as shadow reference value. (This could also be fixed by passing
target through the sampler interface much the same way as is done for
size queries, might do this eventually anyway.)
And if we'd ever want to support (shadow) cube map arrays, we'd need
5 coords in any case.
v2: fix bugs (texel fetch using wrong layer coord for 1d, shadow tex
using wrong shadow coord for 2d...). Plus need to project the shadow
coord, and just for fun keep projecting the layer coord too.
Reviewed-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Instead of passing s,t,r coordinates pass a coord array - the reason is that
I need to pass more coords (in particular for shadow "coord", future will also
need another one for cube map arrays) so just pass them as an array.
Also, to simplify things, use fixed location for the shadow reference value I
want to get rid of the silly "where is the right coord value" game.
Keep old-style however for aos sampling (which is not going to need shadow
coord, though for cube map arrays it still would need fixing).
(Next patch will pass those through using the new arrangement directly from
sampler interface.)
v2: fix up soa split path (unreachable currently but still...)
Reviewed-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
We need to put border color into texture format color space which
essentially means clamping for non-float, normalized formats (not entirely
sure if we're also meant to quantize the float but it's probably ok not to
do it thankfully).
For OpenGL we could do this easily outside generated code due to the
1:1 sampler/texture correspondence but not for d3d10 which is terrible
(as we recalculate a constant over and over again per shader invocation).
Fortunately border color should be rare enough that we don't care THAT much.
Reviewed-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
If the fragment shader is null then pixel shader invocations have
to be equal to zero. And if we're running a null ps then clipper
invocations and primitives should be equal to zero but only
if both stancil and depth testing are disabled.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Calling the prepare outputs cleans up the slot assignments
for outputs, unfortunately aapoint and aaline didn't have
code to reset their slots after the initial setup, this
was messing up our slot assignments. The unfilled stage
was just missing the initial assignment of the face slot.
This fixes all of the reported piglit failures.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
In commit 8fc41df (glsl: Modify ir_set_program_inouts to handle
geometry shaders), when attempting to pattern match the "foo" part of
expressions such as:
foo[i][j]
foo[i]
I incorrectly called as_dereference_variable() on the subexpression
foo[i] instead of foo. As a result, the pattern never matched, so
ir_set_program_inouts would fall back on marking the entire variable
as used, rather than just the portion indexed by the array.
This didn't result in incorrect behaviour, but it could have resulted
in inefficiency by causing the back-end to allocate resources for
unused parts of an input or output array.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This patch adds the level query support to the video decoders
and uses some more reasonable defaults.
v2: (ck) add commit message
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Previously we would emit a warning for empty declarations like
float;
We would also emit the same warning for things like
highp float;
However, this second case is most likely the application trying to set
the default precision. This makes the compiler generate a stronger
warning with some suggestion of a fix.
It really seems like this should be an error. I'll bet that 100% of the
time someone writes 'highp float;' the actually meant 'precision highp
float;'. Alas, both AMD and NVIDIA accept this syntax, and the spec
doesn't explicitly forbid it.
This makes piglit's precision-05.vert generate the following warnings:
0:12(11): warning: empty declaration with precision qualifier, to set the default precision, use `precision lowp float;'
0:13(12): warning: empty declaration with precision qualifier, to set the default precision, use `precision mediump int;'
v2: Add { } around a one-line if body and fix a comment. Suggested by
Ken.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Cc: "9.2" <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
Previously, we were accidentally calling
handle_geometry_shader_input_decl() on non-input interface block
declarations, resulting in bogus error checking.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Previously, if a geometry shader input was declared as a non-array, we
would flag the proper compiler error, but then before we got a chance
to report it to the client, handle_geometry_shader_input_decl() would
assertion fail.
With this patch, handle_geometry_shader_input_decl() ignores
non-arrays.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Move the arrays to the new header brw_multisample_state.h, which will be
shared with Broadwell code.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Place each array in the brw namespace by renaming it:
sample_positions_4x -> brw_multisample_positions_4x
sample_positions_8x -> brw_multisample_positions_8x
This prepares for moving the arrays to a header shared by gen6 and gen8.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
GLSL ES does not allow unsized arrays, and GLSL ES 1.00 does not allow
array initializers. However, GLSL ES 3.00 allows array initializers,
and the initializer can explicitly size the array. The specification
even includes some examples of this:
float x[] = float[2] (1.0, 2.0); // declares an array of size 2
float y[] = float[] (1.0, 2.0, 3.0); // declares an array of size 3
float a[5];
float b[] = a;
Move the unsized array check to after the initializer has been
processed. If the array is still unsized, generate the error. This
should have no effect in GLSL ES 1.00 because, as previously mentioned,
array initializers are not allowed.
Fixes piglit "glsl-es-3.00 compiler array-sized-by-initializer.vert".
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Cc: "9.1 9.2" <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
The functional change is that now invalidate_framebuffer is called if
the texture is actually detached from one of the currently bound FBOs.
Previously this was only done for renderbuffers.
The remaining changes make the texture delete path look more similar to
the renderbuffer delete path. This includes adding relevant spec
quotations to justify the behavior.
Fixes piglit fbo-incomplete "delete texture of bound FBO" test.
v2: Move 'fb->Attachment[i].Texture == att' check from previous patch to
this patch... where it was intended to be in the first place. Noticed
by Chad.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Cc: "9.2" <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
Also add a return value indicating whether any work was done.
This will be used by the next patch.
v2: Move 'fb->Attachment[i].Texture == att' check to the next
patch... where it was intended to be in the first place. Noticed by
Chad.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Cc: "9.2" <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
Looks like the same issue that was seen with MULADD in trans slot on
R7xx also affects MULADD_IEEE (maybe all OP3 instructions and MULADD is
just a most frequently used?). So the workaround is to not allow affected
instructions to be placed into the trans slot.
Fixes https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=67927
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
Cc: "9.2" <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
FSEQ/FSGE/FSLT/FSNE work just the same as SEQ/SGE/SLT/SNE except skip the
select.
And just for consistency use the same appropriate ordered/unordered comparisons
for the old opcodes as well.
Reviewed-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Also while here add a bunch of other forgotten (integer) instructions to
tgsi_util_get_inst_usage_mask() (which isn't used for much except optimizing
away unused input components), though it may still be incomplete.
Reviewed-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Newer graphic languages don't want messy float mask results but instead true
"boolean" mask results for float comparisons. Otherwise just need to convert
the floats back to integers. Need to keep the old opcodes however due to both
legacy (gl and d3d9) needing them and because older hw can't really deal with
integers. These new FSEQ/FSGE/FSLT/FSNE opcodes are part of integer API and
hence must be supported if a driver claims to support glsl 1.30 (or
PIPE_SHADER_CAP_INTEGERS).
Reviewed-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Because we must maintain an exec_mask even if there's currently nothing
on the mask stack, we can still have an exec_mask at the end of the program.
Effectively, this mask should be set back to default when returning from main.
Without relying on END/RET opcode (I think it's valid to have neither) it is
actually difficult to do this, as there doesn't seem any reasonable place to
do it, so instead let's just say the exec_mask is invalid outside main (which
it really is effectively).
The problem is that geometry shader called end_primitive outside the shader
(in the epilogue), and as a result used a bogus mask, leading to bugs if we
had to set the (somewhat misnamed) ret_in_main bit anywhere. So just avoid
the mask combining function when called from outside the shader.
Reviewed-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
The code was quite weird, the second comparison was in fact a complete no-op
and we can also do the comparison with the vector directly instead of scalar,
which should not also be faster but it is way more obvious how that mask
is actually going to look like.
Reviewed-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Instead of reducing masks to 0/1 simply use the mask directly as -1.
Also use some signed comparison instead of unsigned (as far as I understand
these values have to be (very) small and signed means llvm doesn't have to
apply additional logic to do the unsigned comparisons the cpu can't do).
Saves a couple of instructions in some test geometry shader here.
v2: that was a bit to much optimization, don't skip combining the masks...
Reviewed-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
CMP instructions use BRW_ARF_NULL as a destination. Prior to this
patch, dump_instruction() decoded the destination as "???".
Now it decodes BRW_ARF_NULL as "(null)" and other ARFs numerically.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This resulted in printouts like:
246: cmp.cmod.f0.0
???, vgrf152, 0.000000f, (null),
With this patch, CMP is properly printed on one line.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Many GLSL shaders contain code of the form:
x = condition ? foo : bar
The compiler emits an ir_if tree for this, since each subexpression
might be a complex tree that could have side-effects and short-circuit
logic operations.
However, the common case is to simply pick one of two constants or
variable's values---which is exactly what SEL is for. Replacing IF/ELSE
with SEL also simplifies the control flow graph, making optimization
passes which work on basic blocks more effective.
The shader-db statistics:
total instructions in shared programs: 1655247 -> 1503234 (-9.18%)
instructions in affected programs: 949188 -> 797175 (-16.02%)
2,970 shaders were helped, none hurt. Gained 181 SIMD16 programs.
This helps Valve's Source Engine games (max -41.33%), The Cave
(max -33.33%), Serious Sam 3 (max -18.64%), Yo Frankie! (max -30.19%),
Zen Bound (max -22.22%), GStreamer (max -6.12%), and GLBenchmark 2.7
(max -1.94%).
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
The instruction
(+f0.0) SEL dst, src0, src1
will write either src0 or src1 to dst, depending on the predicate.
Unlike most predicated instructions, it always writes to dst.
fs_inst::is_partial_write() is supposed to return true if the whole
register is guaranteed to be written. The !inst->predicated check makes
sense for most instructions, which might not write the whole register,
but SEL is a special case.
This caused live interval analysis to ignore the destination of
predicated SEL instructions when computing "def" information.
Requires the previous commit to avoid regressions.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
The existing inst->is_partial_write() already disallows predicated
instructions, so this has no functional change. However, it's worth
doing explicitly since the CSE pass does not consider the flag register.
This means it could blindly factor out operations that use the same
sources, but which have different condition codes set.
This prevents a regression in the next commit.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Usually, the driver creates both 8-wide and 16-wide variants of every
fragment shader. When 16-wide compilation fails, it logs a performance
warning explaining why only an 8-wide program exists.
However, when there are pull parameters, the driver won't even bother
trying the 16-wide compile (since it would fail). In this case, it
failed to emit a performance warning, leaving no explanation for the
missing 16-wide program.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Fix ilo_gpe_init_view_surface_for_buffer to allow buffer to be NULL, and add
ilo_gpe_set_view_surface_bo to set it later. This allows us to set up
SURFACE_STATE early for constant buffers backed by user buffers.
In finalize_index_buffer(), when the current index buffer was destroyed due to
u_upload_data(), it may happen that the new index buffer is at the same
address as the old one. Comparing the pointers to the two buffers could fail
to work, and 3DSTATE_INDEX_BUFFER would be incorrectly skipped.
Holding a reference to the current index buffer before calling u_upload_data()
should fix the problem.
Makes this flag appear in the output for INTEL_DEBUG=state
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
INTEL_DEBUG=vue now emits a listing of each slot in the VUE map,
and the corresponding interpolation mode.
V2: Fix whitespace issues.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
My previous attempt at doing so double-failed miserably (minification of
zero still gives one, and even if it would not the value was never written
anyway).
While here also rename the confusingly named int_vec bld as we have int vecs
of different sizes, and rename need_nr_mips (as this also changes out-of-bounds
behavior) to is_sviewinfo too.
Reviewed-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
d3d10 has no notion of distinct array resources neither at the resource nor
sampler view level. However, shader dcl of resources certainly has, and
d3d10 expects resinfo to return the values according to that - in particular
a resource might have been a 1d texture with some array layers, then the
sampler view might have only used 1 layer so it can be accessed both as 1d
or 1d array texture (I think - the former definitely works). resinfo of a
resource decleared as array needs to return number of array layers but
non-array resource needs to return 0 (and not 1). Hence fix this by passing
the target from the shader decl to emit_size_query and use that (in case of
OpenGL the target will come from the instruction itself).
Could probably do the same for actual sampling, though it may not matter there
(as the bogus components will essentially get clamped away), possibly could
wreak havoc though if it REALLY doesn't match (which is of course an error
but still).
Reviewed-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Specifically, must return 0 for non-existent mip levels (and non-existent
textures which is an unsolved problem) for everything but total mip count.
Reviewed-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
GLSL 1.50 incorporates the functionality of the
ARB_fragment_coord_conventions extension, so we need to make this
functionality available even if the extension isn't enabled.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
From section E.1 (Profiles and Deprecated Features of OpenGL 3.0)
of the OpenGL 3.0 spec:
"LineWidth is not deprecated, but values greater than 1.0
will generate an INVALID VALUE error"
From context it is clear that values greater than 1.0 should only
generate an INVALID VALUE error in a forward-compatible context.
The code was correctly quoting this spec text, but it was disallowing
all line widths in forward-compatible contexts, instead of just widths
greater than 1.0.
This patch introduces the correct check, so that setting a line width
of 1.0 or less is permitted.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
We can't be injecting the primitive id's in the pipeline because
by that time the primitives have already been decomposed. To
properly number the primitives we need to handle the adjacency
primitives by hand. This patch moves the prim id injection into
the original primitive assembler and completely removes the
useless pipeline stage.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Without reseting the vertex id, with primitives where the same
vertex is used with different primitives (e.g. tri/lines strips)
our vbuf module won't re-emit those vertices with the changed
primitive id. So lets reset the vertex id whenever injecting
new primitive id to make sure that the vertex data is correctly
emitted.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Before inserting new front face and prim id outputs cleanup
the old extra outputs, otherwise our cache will use previous
output slots which will break as soon as outputs of the current
shader don't match the last.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
libEGL was incorrectly exporting *all* symbols, public and private.
This patch adds -fvisibility=hidden to libEGL's linker flags to ensure
that only symbols annotated with __attribute__((visibility("default")))
get exported.
Sanity-checked with libEGL's builtin DRI2 driver and the i965 DRI driver
by running Piglit on X/EGL and by running weston-gears on Weston as an
X client.
Sanity-checked with libEGL's Gallium driver (which is not built-in) and
the swrast Gallium driver by running es2gears_x11.
Kristian reviewed the symbol diff in `nm libEGL.so`.
CC: "9.2" <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
CC: Ian Romanick <idr@freedesktop.org>
Acked-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
Reviewed-by: Jakob Bornecrantz <jakob@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
This is wrong both for OpenGL and d3d. (In fact clamping is a side effect
of converting to depth format, so this should really do quantization too
at least in d3d10 for the comparisons to be truly correct.)
Reviewed-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Clearly the returned values need to be per-element if the lod is per element.
Does not actually change behavior yet.
Reviewed-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
This opcode is quite problematic in tgsi, while it tries to mirror
d3d10 resinfo it can't really do what's stated there due to missing
the crazy return type modifiers. Hence specify this is ignored along
with the swizzle.
(Other options would be to have multiple opcodes or specify the ret
type modifier maybe in dst_reg as there's padding bits left there but
it is the only instruction allowing this.)
Reviewed-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
For d3d10 and ARB_robust_buffer_access_behavior, we are required to return
0 for out-of-bounds coordinates (for which we can just enable the code already
there was just disabled). Additionally, also need to return 0 for
out-of-bounds mip level and out-of-bounds layer. This changes the logic
so instead of clamping the level/layer, an out-of-bound mask is computed
instead in this case (actual clamping then can be omitted just like with
coordinates, since we set the fetch offset to zero if that happens anyway).
Reviewed-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
While so far this only causes some harmless test failures, there's lots more
cpus with DAZ. All 64bit capable ones can do it (particularly relevant for
AMD cpus as they supported sse3 very very late) but if really necessary we
can check support for that for real with some more magic.
(In fact just about ANY cpu with sse2 can support DAZ, I believe the only
exception are first gen P4 (Willamette) and from those only early steppings
which can't do it it's almost like intel forgot to add it... - a real pity
though docs say you can't just try to set it as they will throw a GPF.)
While this was meant to address https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=67672
it does not fix it. Most likely the tests need fixing as I don't think
there's any guarantee about denorm handling in the reference math library
functions if the flags aren't set to standard values. Nevertheless enabling
DAZ on all cpus which can do it should be the right thing to do.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Should be much faster, seems to work in softpipe.
While here (also it's now disabled) fix up the pow factor - the former value
is what is in GL core it is however not actually accurate to fp32 standard
(as it is 1.0/2.4), and if someone would do all the accurate math there's no
reason to waste 8 mantissa bits or so...
v2: use real table generating function instead of just printing the values
(might take a bit longer as it does calculations on some 3+ million floats
but much more descriptive obviously).
Also fix up another inaccurate pow factor (this time in the python code) -
wondering where the couple one bit errors came from :-(.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Since Wayland 1.2, struct wl_buffer and a few functions are deprecated.
References to wl_buffer are replaced with wl_resource and some getter
functions and calls to deprecated functions are replaced with the proper
new API. The latter changes are related to resource versioning.
Signed-off-by: Ander Conselvan de Oliveira <ander.conselvan.de.oliveira@intel.com>
A listener is added just after the interface is bound, in
registry_handle_global().
Signed-off-by: Ander Conselvan de Oliveira <ander.conselvan.de.oliveira@intel.com>
The helper provides a series of functions to easy the implementation
of the WL_bind_wayland_display extension on different platforms. But
even with the helpers there was still a bit of duplicated code between
platforms, with the drm authentication being the only part that
differs.
This patch changes the bufmgr interface to provide a self contained
object with a create function that takes a drm authentication callback
as an argument. That way all the helper functions are made static and
the "_helper" suffix was removed from the sources file name.
This change also removes the mix of Wayland client and server code in
the wayland drm platform source file. All the uses of libwayland-server
are now contained in native_wayland_drm_bufmgr.c.
Changes to the drm platform are only compile tested.
Signed-off-by: Ander Conselvan de Oliveira <ander.conselvan.de.oliveira@intel.com>
Since llvm -3.4svn r187618, TargetOptions doesn't provide
RealignStack, so only enable it with llvm<3.4
This option must now be specified using function attributes, see LLVM
commit r187618
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
This command reads a value from memory and writes it to a register (the
opposite of MI_STORE_REGISTER_MEM). It's only available on Gen7+.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This prevents a crash in a future patch.
_mesa_initialize_context() creates a default transform feedback object
by calling the NewTransformFeedbackObject() driver hook. Eventually,
we'll want to subclass that and allocate a buffer object. This means
passing brw->bufmgr to drm_intel_alloc_bo(), and crashing if it isn't
initialized yet.
The buffer manager is actually already initialized; we just hadn't
copied the pointer from intel_screen to intel_context quite early
enough.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Gen7+ supports four transform feedback streams. Using a function-like
macro makes it easy to access them by stream number or loop over them.
"GEN7_" prefixes are more common than "_IVB" suffixes, so use that.
Gen6 only supports a single stream, so the single #define should be
fine. However, SO_NUM_PRIM_STORAGE_NEEDED was a poor name. For one,
the word "NUM" doesn't appear in the actual name of the register.
It's also confusingly generic, as it doesn't exist on Gen7+. Add a
"GEN6_" prefix for clarity.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Gen7+ supports four transform feedback streams. Using a function-like
macro makes it easy to access them by stream number or loop over them.
"GEN7_" prefixes are more common than "_IVB" suffixes, so we use that.
Gen6 only supports a single stream, so the single #define should be
fine. However, SO_NUM_PRIMS_WRITTEN was confusingly generic, as it
doesn't exist on Gen7+. Add a "GEN6_" prefix for clarity.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Previously only the slice of a 3D texture was validated in the FBO
completeness check. This fixes the failure in the 'invalid layer of an
array texture' subtest of piglit's fbo-incomplete test.
v2: 1D_ARRAY textures have Depth == 1. Instead, compare against Height.
v3: Handle CUBE_MAP_ARRAY textures too. Noticed by Marek.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Cc: "9.1 9.2" mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org
This fixes the segfault in the 'invalid slice of 3D texture' and
'invalid layer of an array texture' subtests of piglit's fbo-incomplete
test.
The 'invalid layer of an array texture' subtest still fails.
v2: Fix off-by-one comparison error noticed by Chris Forbes. Also,
1D_ARRAY textures have Depth == 1. Instead, compare against Height.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org> [v1]
Cc: "9.1 9.2" mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org
Allow user-generated names for glBindFramebufferEXT on desktop GL.
Disallow its use altogether for core profiles.
Names bound with glBindFramebuffer in desktop OpenGL are still
(incorrectly) shared across the share group instead of being
per-context. This gets us a bit closer to being strictly conformant.
v2: Disallow glBindFramebufferEXT in 3.1 by not installing it in the
dispatch table. Suggested by Jordan.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org> [v1]
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com> [v1]
Cc: mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org
Allow user-generated names for glBindRenderbufferEXT on desktop GL.
Disallow its use altogether for core profiles.
v2: Disallow glBindRenderbufferEXT in 3.1 by not installing it in the
dispatch table. Suggested by Jordan.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org> [v1]
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com> [v1]
Cc: mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org
These are only used on Gen4-5. Why waste the 8kB of space?
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
If gs is null, then freeing state->shader.tokens would result in a null
dereference.
Fixes "Dereference after null check" defect reported by Coverity.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Fixes "Uninitialized pointer read" defect reported by Coverity.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
unfilled_stage::face_slot is of type int.
Fixes "Unsigned compared against 0" defect reported by Coverity.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
pp_free_bos dereferences ppq without a null check.
Fixes "Dereference before null check" defect reported by Coverity.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
the issue is that stream output is run before the pipeline, which
means that unless we decompose the primitives before the so
then things crash. we could convert the entire stream output
code into a pipeline stage but it will take a bit, so for now
fix the crashes by simply re-adding the old input assembler
which is run before the SO.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
we used to have a face primitive assembler that we ran after if
the gs was missing but we had adjacency primitives in the pipeline,
lets convert it to a pipeline stage, which allows us to use it
to inject outputs (primitive id) into the vertices. it's also
a lot cleaner because the decomposition is already handled for us.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Inject front face only if the fragment shader uses it and
propagate through all channels because otherwise we'll
need to figure out the exact swizzle that the fs expects and
it's just simpler to make sure all the components within
the front face register are correctly set.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Replace "fulldecl->Semantic.Name/Index" with semName/semIndex.
Simplify if/else logic for TGSI_FILE_OUTPUT code.
Remove old comment.
Fix indentation.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Previously we would mark a renderbuffer as needing a depth resolve.
But, to support layered rendering, we need to look at the attachment
instead, since the attachment knows if layered rendering is being
used.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
This function is needed to support layered rendering. With
layered rendering, the attachment stores the state of whether
layered rendering is being used.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
When layered rendering is being used, we should not set
FORCE_ZERO_RTAINDEX in the clip state to allow render target
array values other than zero to be used.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This restriction was related to programming the offset fields
of the depth buffer packet. We are now setting these offsets
to 0 now, so this restriction should no longer be required.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Previously we would always find the 2D sub-surface of interest,
and then program the surface to this location. Now we always
program the 3DSTATE_DEPTH_BUFFER at the start of the surface.
To select the lod/slice, we utilize the lod & minimum array
element fields.
As part of this change, we must revert 1f112ccf:
Revert "i965/gen7: Align all depth miplevels to 8 in the X direction."
We also must disable brw_workaround_depthstencil_alignment for
gen >= 7. Now the hardware will handle alignment when rendering
to additional slices/LODs.
v2:
* Merge with recent MOCS changes
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
For gen >= 7, we will use the lod/minimum-array-element fields to
support layered rendering. This means that we must restrict
the depth & stencil attachments to match in various more retrictive
ways. (Now the width, height, depth, LOD and layer must match)
The reason width, height, and depth must match is that the hardware
has a single set of width, height, and depth settings (in
3DSTATE_DEPTH_BUFFER) that affect both the depth and stencil buffers.
Since these controls determine the miptree layout, they need to be
set correctly in order for lod and minimum-array-element to work
properly. So the only way rendering can work is if the width,
height, and depth match.
In the future, if this restriction proves to be a problem (say
because some crucial client application relies on rendering to
different levels/layers of stencil and depth buffers), then we can
always work around the restriction by copying depth and/or stencil
data to a temporary buffer prior to rendering (much in the same way
that brw_workaround_depthstencil_alignment() does today for
gen < 7), but hopefully that won't be necessary.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
When performing hiz ops, we must ensure that the region sizes
have an 8 aligned width and 4 aligned height. We can tweak the
size for blorp hiz operations at LOD 0, but for the others we
can't. Therefore, we disable hiz for these miplevels if they
don't meet the size alignment requirements.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This will be used in 3DSTATE_DEPTH_BUFFER in a later patch.
Note: Cube maps are treated as 2D arrays with 6 times as
many array elements as the cube map array would have.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This will be used in 3DSTATE_DEPTH_BUFFER in a later patch.
Note: Cube maps are treated as 2D arrays with 6 times as
many array elements as the cube map array would have.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
In a future pass this will allow us to exit-early from this
routine to disable it for gen >= 7.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Some videos specify mb_adaptive_frame_field_flag instead of
field_pic_flag. This implies that the pic height needs to be halved, and
this field needs to be passed to the VP engine.
Cc: "9.2" mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org
Signed-off-by: Ilia Mirkin <imirkin@alum.mit.edu>
The loop was iterating over all the fs inputs and setting them
to perspective interpolation, then after the loop we were
creating extra output slots with the correct interpolation. Instead
of injecting bogus extra outputs, just set the interpolation
on front face and prim id correctly when doing the initial scan
of fs inputs.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
clipping would drop the extra outputs because it always
used the number of standard vertex shader outputs, without
geometry shader or extra outputs. The commit makes sure
that clipping with geometry shaders which have more outputs
than the current vertex shader and with extra outputs correctly
propagates the entire vertex.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Draw module can decompose primitives into wireframe models, which
is a fancy word for 'lines', unfortunately that decomposition means
that we weren't able to preserve the original front-face info which
could be derived from the original primitives (lines don't have a
'face'). To fix it allow draw module to inject a fake face semantic
into outputs from which the backends can figure out the original
frontfacing info of the primitives.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Draw sometimes injects extra shader outputs (aa points, lines or
front face), unfortunately most of the pipeline and llvm code
didn't handle them at all. It only worked if number of inputs
happened to be bigger or equal to the number of shader outputs
plus the extra injected outputs. In particular when running
the pipeline which depends on the vertex_id in the vertex_header
things were completely broken. The patch adjust the code to
correctly use the total number of shader outputs (the standard
ones plus the injected ones) to make it all stop crashing and
work.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Instead of using the magical 4 use the above computed
vertex size. Doesn't change the behavior, just makes the code
a bit cleaner.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
when dumping shader outputs it's nice to have the integer
values of the outputs, in particular because some values
are integers.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Adding code to detect the usage of prim id and front face
semantics in fragment shaders.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
we forgot to add ucmp to the list of opcodes, so it was never
generated for ureg.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The spec says that front-face is true if the value is >0 and false
if it's <0. To make sure that we follow the spec, lets just
subtract 0.5 from our value (llvmpipe did 1 for frontface and 0
otherwise), which will get us a positive num for frontface and
negative for backface.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
We'll need proper values for max_gs_threads when we eventually support
geometry shaders. Also, we initialize it for every other platform.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Commit 2548092ad8 switched the sense of interpolation qualifier
checks in order to permit them on geometry shader in/out variables.
In doing so, it accidentally allowed interpolation qualifiers to be
applied to ordinary variables and function parameters.
Fixes a regression in Piglit's local-smooth-01.frag.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Commit 7cfefe6965 introduced a check for whether linked->Type equals
GL_GEOMETRY_SHADER. However, linked may be NULL due to an earlier error
condition.
Since the entire function after the error path is (or should be) guarded
by linked != NULL checks, we may as well just return early and remove
the checks.
Fixes crashes in 9 Piglit tests.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
v2:
- upon success close the given file descriptors
v3:
- use specific entry for dma buffers instead of the basic for
primes, and enable the extension based on the availability
of the hook
v4 (Chad):
- use ARRAY_SIZE
- improve the comment about the number of file descriptors
- in case of invalid format report EGL_BAD_ATTRIBUTE instead
of EGL_BAD_MATCH
- take into account specific error set by the driver.
v5:
- fix error handling
v6 (Chad):
- fix invalid plane count checking
v7 (Chad):
- fix indentation and reset loop counter before checking
for excess attributes
Signed-off-by: Topi Pohjolainen <topi.pohjolainen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Memory originating outside mesa stack is meant to be for reading
only. In addition, the restrictions imposed by the image external
extension should apply. For example, users shouldn't be allowed
to generare mip-trees based on these images.
v2 (Chad): document using full extension names, fix the comment
style itself and emit description of error
Signed-off-by: Topi Pohjolainen <topi.pohjolainen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
As specified in:
http://www.khronos.org/registry/egl/extensions/EXT/EGL_EXT_image_dma_buf_import.txt
Checking for the valid fourcc values is left for drivers avoiding
dependency to drm header files here.
v2: enforce EGL_NO_CONTEXT
v3: declare the extension as EGL (not GLES)
v4: do not update eglext.h manually but rely on update from
Khronos instead
v5: (Eric) report invalid context as EGL_BAD_PARAMETER instead of as
EGL_BAD_CONTEXT
v6: (Chad) fix the checking for valid hints. Before all values were
rejected.
v7: (Chad) comment style change from
/**
* Multi-
* line
into
/* Multi-
* line
Signed-off-by: Topi Pohjolainen <topi.pohjolainen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
v2: do not break ABI, but instead introduce new entry point for
dma buffers and bump up the dri-interface version to eight
v3 (Chad): allow the hook to specify an error originating from the
driver. For now only unsupported format is considered.
I thought about rejecting the hints also as they are
addressing only YUV sampling which is not supported at
the moment but then thought against it as the spec is
not saying one way or the other.
v4 (Eric, Chad): restrict to rgb formatted only
v5: rebased on top of i915/i965 split
v6 (Chad): document using full extension name
Signed-off-by: Topi Pohjolainen <topi.pohjolainen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Geometry shader support in the Mesa front end is still fairly
preliminary. Many features are untested, and the following things are
known not to work:
- The gl_in interface block
- The gl_ClipDistance input
- Transform feedback of geometry shader outputs
- Constants that are new in GLSL 1.50 (e.g. gl_MaxGeometryInputComponents)
This isn't a problem, since no back-end drivers currently enable
geometry shaders. However, to make sure no one gets the wrong
impression, emit a nasty warning to let the user know that geometry
shader support isn't complete.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Section 4.3.8.1 (Input Layout Qualifiers) of the GLSL 1.50 spec
contains some tricky rules for how the sizes of geometry shader input
arrays are related to the input layout specification. In essence,
those rules boil down to the following:
- If an input array declaration does not specify a size, and it
follows an input layout declaration, it is sized according to the
input layout.
- If an input layout declaration follows an input array declaration
that didn't specify a size, the input array declaration is given a
size at the time the input layout declaration appears.
- All input layout declarations and input array sizes must ultimately
match. Inconsistencies are reported as soon as they are detected,
at compile time if the inconsistency is within one compilation unit,
otherwise at link time.
- At least one compilation unit must contain an input layout
declaration.
(Note: the geom_array_resize_visitor class was contributed by Bryan
Cain <bryancain3@gmail.com>.)
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
From the GLSL ES 3.00 spec:
"All indexes used to index a uniform block array must be constant
integral expressions."
Similar text exists in GLSL specs since 1.50.
When we implemented this, the only type of interface block supported
by Mesa was uniform blocks, so we required all indexes used to index
any interface block to be constant integral expressions.
Now that we are adding interface block support for GLSL 1.50, we need
a more specific check.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This gets piglit's geometry-basic test running.
TODO: Still need to validate that the GS layout qualifiers don't get used
in places they shouldn't (like an interface block, or a particular shader
input or output)
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Next step is to validate them at link time.
v2 (Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>): Don't attempt to export the
layout qualifiers in the event of a compile error, since some of them
are set up by ast_to_hir(), and ast_to_hir() isn't guaranteed to have
run in the event of a compile error.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
v3 (Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>): Use PRIM_UNKNOWN to
represent "not set in this shader".
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Limited semantic checking (compatibility between declarations, checking
that they're in the right shader target, etc.) is done.
v2: Remove stray debug printfs.
v3 (Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>): Process input layout
qualifiers at ast_to_hir time rather than at parse time, since certain
error conditions depend on the relative ordering between input layout
qualifiers, declarations, and calls to .length().
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We do some tests of qualifiers using a union containing an int and the
struct full of bitfields, so make sure the bitfields don't spill
outside the int.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
From section 2.15 (Geometry Shaders) the OpenGL 3.2 spec:
A program object that includes a geometry shader must also include
a vertex shader; otherwise a link error will occur.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
ARB_geometry_shader4 spec Errors:
"The error INVALID_VALUE is generated by ProgramParameteriARB if <pname>
is GEOMETRY_VERTICES_OUT_ARB and <value> is negative."
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
In geometry shaders, outputs are consumed at the time of a call to
EmitVertex() (as opposed to all other shader types, where outputs are
consumed when the shader exits). Therefore, when packing geometry
shader output varyings using lower_packed_varyings, we need to do the
packing at the time of the EmitVertex() call.
This patch accomplishes that by adding a new visitor class,
lower_packed_varyings_gs_splicer, which is responsible for splicing
the varying packing code into place wherever EmitVertex() is found.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This patch modifies lower_packed_varyings to store the packing code it
generates in a temporary exec_list, and then splice that list into the
shader's main() function when it's done. This paves the way for
supporting geometry shader outputs, where we'll have to splice a clone
of the packing code before every call to EmitVertex().
As a side benefit, varying packing code is now emitted in the same
order for inputs and outputs; this should make debug output a little
easier to read.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Since geometry shader inputs are arrays (where the array index
indicates which vertex is being examined), varying packing needs to
treat them differently.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
From section 4.3.4 (Inputs) of the GLSL 1.50 spec:
Geometry shader input variables get the per-vertex values written
out by vertex shader output variables of the same names. Since a
geometry shader operates on a set of vertices, each input varying
variable (or input block, see interface blocks below) needs to be
declared as an array.
Therefore, the element type of each geometry shader input array should
match the type of the corresponding vertex shader output.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The documentation for gl_shader_program.Geom and gl_geometry_program
says that the former is copied to the latter at link time, but this
wasn't happening. This patch causes _mesa_ir_link_shader() to perform
the copy, and updates comment accordingly.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This patch creates a single function to copy the the UsesClipDistance
flag from gl_shader_program.Vert to gl_vertex_program. Previously
this logic was duplicated in the i965-specific function
brw_link_shader() and the core mesa function _mesa_ir_link_shader().
This logic will have to be expanded to support geometry shaders, and I
don't want to have to update it in two separate places.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This commit adds all of the parsing and semantics for GLSL 150 style
geometry shaders.
v2 (Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>): Add a few missing calls to
get_pipeline_stage(). Fix some signed/unsigned comparison warnings.
Fix handling of NULL consumer in assign_varying_locations().
v3 (Bryan Cain <bryancain3@gmail.com>): fix indexing order of 2D
arrays. Also, allow interpolation qualifiers in geometry shaders.
v4 (Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>): Eliminate
get_pipeline_stage()--it is no longer needed thanks to 030ca23 (mesa:
renumber shader indices according to their placement in pipeline).
Remove 2D stuff. Move vertices_per_prim() to ir.h, so that it will be
accessible from outside the linker. Remove
inject_num_vertices_visitor. Rework for GLSL 1.50.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
v5 (Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>): Split out
do_set_program_inouts() argument refactoring to a separate patch.
Move geom_array_resizing_visitor to later in the series.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
There's no reason to be clever about this. By making separate
allocations for vertex and fragment shaders, we'll allow geometry
shaders to be added without introducing any complication.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
v2 (Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>): Account for rework of
builtin_variables.cpp. Use INTERP_QUALIFIER_FLAT for gl_PrimitiveID
so that it will obey provoking vertex conventions. Convert to GLSL
1.50 style geometry shaders.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
v3 (Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>): Be less obscure about
setting interpolation field of gl_Primitive variables.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
These correspond to the EmitVertex and EndPrimitive functions in GLSL.
v2 (Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>): Add stub implementations of
new pure visitor functions to i965's vec4_visitor and fs_visitor
classes.
v3 (Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>): Rename classes to be more
consistent with the names used in the GL spec.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Previously, we assumed that the only way Mesa would expose geometry
shader support was via the ARB_geometry_shader4 extension. But this
extension has some extra complications over GL 3.2 (interactions with
compatibility-only features, and link-time initialization of the
constant gl_VerticesIn). So we want to allow for the possibility of
supporting GL 3.2 (with GLSL 1.50 style geometry shaders) even if
ctx->Extensions.ARB_geometry_shader4 is false.
This patch adds a new function, _mesa_has_geometry_shaders(), which
returns true if either ARB_geometry_shader4 is supported or the GL
version is at least 3.2 desktop. Since compute_version() only enables
GL 3.2 functionality when GLSL 1.50 support is present, a sufficient
way for a back-end to advertise geometry shader support is to set
ctx->Const.GLSLVersion >= 150.
v2: Remove unnecessary ctx->Const.GeometryShaders150 constant.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We can't just use a ".glsl" file since the Lod variants are only
available in vertex and geometry shaders, while the bias variants are
only available in the fragment shader.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Commit 586b4b5 (glsl: Also update implicit sizes of varyings at link
time) extended update_array_sizes() to apply to both uniforms and
shader ins/outs. However, doing creates problems for geometry
shaders, because update_array_sizes() assumes that variables with
matching names in different parts of the pipeline should have the same
sizes. With the addition of geometry shaders, this is no longer true
(e.g. both vertex and geometry shaders have a gl_ClipDistance output
variable, but there's no reason these variables should have the same
sizes).
The original reason for commit 586b4b5 (avoid problems with
gl_TexCoord being 0 length) has since been addressed by commit 6f53921
(linker: Ensure that unsized arrays have a size after linking). So go
ahead and switch update_array_sizes() back to only acting on uniforms.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
According to GLSL, indexing into an array or matrix with an
out-of-range constant results in a compile error. However, indexing
with an out-of-range value that isn't constant merely results in
undefined results.
Since optimization passes (e.g. loop unrolling) can convert
non-constant array indices into constant array indices, it's possible
that ir_set_program_inouts will encounter a constant array index that
is out of range; if this happens, just mark the whole array as used.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The code in ir_set_program_inouts that marks just a portion of a
variable as used (rather than the whole variable) only works on a few
kinds of indexing operations:
- Indexing into matrices
- Indexing into arrays of matrices, vectors, or scalars.
Fortunately these are the only kinds of indexing operations that we
expect to see; everything else is either handled by a
previously-executed lowering pass or prohibited by GLSL.
However, that could conceivably change in the future (the GLSL rules
might change, or we might modify the lowering passes). To avoid
mysterious bugs in the future, let's have ir_set_program_inouts report
an assertion failure if it ever encounters an unexpected kind of
indexing operation (and in release builds, fall back to just marking
the whole variable as used).
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This patch extracts the functions mark_whole_variable() and
try_mark_partial_variable() from the ir_set_program_inouts visitor
functions. This will make the code easier to follow when we add
geometry shader support.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Our previous justification for leaving this function out of glsl_type
was that it implemented counting rules that were specific to GLSL
1.50. However, these counting rules also describe the number of
varying slots that Mesa will assign to a varying in the absence of
varying packing. That's useful to be able to compute from outside of
the linker code (a future patch will use it from
ir_set_program_inouts.cpp). So go ahead and move it to glsl_type.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This will allow us to add geometry shader support without having to
add another boolean argument.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
llvm shifts are undefined for shift counts exceeding (or matching) bit width,
so need to apply a mask for the tgsi shift instructions.
v2: only use mask for the tgsi shift instructions, not for the build shift
helpers. None of the internal callers need this behavior, and while llvm can
optimize away the masking for constants there are legitimate cases where it
might not be able to do so even if we know that shift count must be smaller
than type width (currently all such callers do not use the build shift
helpers).
Reviewed-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
c shifts are undefined for shift counts exceeding (or matching) bit width,
so need to apply a mask (on x86 it actually would usually probably work as
shifts do masking on int domain shifts - unless some auto-vectorizer would
come along at last as simd domain does not mask the shift count).
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Previously, nothing was said what happens with shift counts exceeding
bit width of the values to shift. In theory 3 behaviors are possible:
1) undefined (classic c definition)
2) just shift out all bits (so result is zero, or -1 potentially for ashr)
3) mask the shift count to bit width - 1
API's either require 3) or are ok with 1). In particular, GLSL (as well as a
couple uninteresting legacy GL extensions) is happy with undefined, whereas
both OpenCL and d3d10 require 3). Consequently, most hw also implements 3).
So, for simplicity we just specify that 3) is required rather than saying
undefined and then needing state trackers to work around it.
Also while here specify shift count as a vector, not scalar. As far as I
can tell this was a doc bug, neither state trackers nor drivers used scalar
shift count.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This hasn't done anything in a long time, and it's only used in a couple
places...which means we couldn't use it without doing a bunch of work
anyway.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Previously, if TEXTURE_IMMUTABLE_FORMAT was TRUE, the levels were allowed to
be set like usual, but ARB_texture_storage states:
> if TEXTURE_IMMUTABLE_FORMAT is TRUE, then level_base is clamped to the range
> [0, <levels> - 1] and level_max is then clamped to the range [level_base,
> <levels> - 1], where <levels> is the parameter passed the call to
> TexStorage* for the texture object
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Corey Richardson <corey@octayn.net>
This patch ensures that integers will pass through unscathed. Doing
(useless) computations on them is risky, especially when their bit
patterns correspond to values like inf or nan.
[V1-2]: Signed-off-by: Olivier Galibert <galibert at pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Adds support for interpolating noperspective varyings linearly in screen
space when clipping.
Based on Olivier Galibert's patch from last year:
http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/mesa-dev/2012-July/024341.html
At this point all -fixed and -vertex interpolation tests work.
V5: Add brw_clip_compile.has_noperspective_shading rather than another
key flag.
V6: Real bools.
[V1-2]: Signed-off-by: Olivier Galibert <galibert at pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Previously we only gave special treatment to the builtin color varyings.
This patch adds support for arbitrary flat-shaded varyings, which is
required for GLSL 1.30.
Based on Olivier Galibert's patch from last year:
http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/mesa-dev/2012-July/024340.html
V5: Move key.do_flat_shading to brw_clip_compile.has_flat_shading
V6: Real bools.
[V1-2]: Signed-off-by: Olivier Galibert <galibert at pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Previously the SF only handled the builtin color varying specially.
This patch generalizes that support to cover user-defined varyings,
driven by the interpolation mode array set up alongside the VUE map.
Based on the following patches from Olivier Galibert:
- http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/mesa-dev/2012-July/024335.html
- http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/mesa-dev/2012-July/024339.html
With this patch, all the GLSL 1.3 interpolation tests that do not clip
(spec/glsl-1.30/execution/interpolation/*-none.shader_test) pass.
V5: Move key.do_flat_shading to brw_sf_compile.has_flat_shading; drop
vestigial hunks.
V6: Real bools.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The interpolation map (in brw->interpolation_mode) is a new auxiliary
structure alongside the post-GS VUE map, which describes the
interpolation modes for each VUE slot, for use by the clip and SF
stages.
This patch introduces a new state atom to compute the interpolation map,
and adjusts the program keys for the clip and SF stages, but it is not
actually used yet.
[V1-2]: Signed-off-by: Olivier Galibert <galibert at pobox.com>
V3: Updated for vue_map changes, intel -> brw merge, etc. (Chris Forbes)
V4: Compute interpolation map as a new state atom rather than tacking it
on the front of the clip setup
V5: Rework commit message, make interpolation_mode_map a struct.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We recently proposed a new syntax for stable-patch nominations such as:
CC: "9.2 and 9.1" <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
and this has already appeared in the wild.
So we extend the regular expression to pick this up as well.
MP_TEMP_SIZE must be aligned to 0x8000, while TEMP_SIZE on NVE4_3D
must be aligned to 0x20000, so perform both alignments to be sure
we allocate enough space (actually the bo will most likely use 128
KiB pages and not aligning to that would be a waste anyway).
Cc: "9.2" mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org
YYLEX_PARAM is no longer supported as of Bison 3.0. Instead, the Bison
developers recommend using %lex-param.
%lex-param takes a type and variable name, similar to %parse-param,
so you can't pass an arbitrary expression like state->scanner. But Flex
insists on passing the actual scanner object, not an arbitrary object
like state.
To solve this, the parser defines a wrapper lex() function which accepts
"state," and calls Flex's lex() function with state->scanner.
Fixes the build with Bison 3.0. Also works with Bison 2.7.1.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=67354
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Laurent Carlier <lordheavym@gmail.com>
Cc: "9.2" mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org
YYLEX_PARAM is no longer supported as of Bison 3.0. Instead, the Bison
developers recommend using %lex-param.
%lex-param takes a type and variable name, similar to %parse-param,
so you can't pass an arbitrary expression like state->scanner. But Flex
insists on passing the actual scanner object, not an arbitrary object
like state.
To solve this, the parser defines a wrapper lex() function which accepts
"state," and calls Flex's lex() function with state->scanner.
Fixes the build with Bison 3.0. Also works with Bison 2.7.1.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=67354
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Laurent Carlier <lordheavym@gmail.com>
Cc: "9.2" mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org
I had removed it in commit 1e7776ca2b
because it was obviously wrong -- why do we care whether the server is a
version that emits events, if we're not watching for the server's events,
anyway? And why would you only invalidate on a server that emits
invalidate events, when the comment said to emit invalidates if the server
*doesn't*? Only, I missed that we otherwise don't flag that our buffers
might have changed at swap time at all, so the driver was only checking
for new buffers when triggered by the Viewport hack. Of course you don't
expect Viewport to be called after a swap.
So, this is effectively a revert of the previous commit, except that I
dropped the check for only emitting invalidates on a new server -- we
*always* need to invalidate if we're doing a SwapBuffers.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=63435
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Cc: "9.1 and 9.2" <mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org>
Previously we were using truncation, which gives the correct result
only for numbers in [0.5-1.0] range (because there's no mantissa bits
to do any rounding there).
This is frequently hit (and probably only used there) when converting
fragment depth to depth format (d24s8 etc.) or otherwise dealing with
depth format.
v2: as spotted by Jose, get rid of extra type (src_type is already unsigned).
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The code that checks if some texture target is valid for
glGetTexLevelParameter*() was not programmed to check for multisampling
proxy textures. This made it impossible(?) to use the proxy textures
for their intended purpose as glGetTexLevelParameter*() would just fail
on you.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Cc: mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org
glTexStorage*() functions make textures immutable. This carries on to
proxy textures. Error checking in texture storage functions prevents
proxy textures from working after first time because internally, they
became immutable.
This commit makes the error checking ignore the immutability flag when
working with proxy textures.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Cc: mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org
When working with the glTexStorage*() functions, the error checking
checks that a non-default (i.e., non-zero) texture is currently bound.
However, this check made glTexStorage*() functions fail with proxy
textures when the default texture is bound. Proxy textures do not care
about the current texture bindings so for them this check should not
be done.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Cc: mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org
The function _mesa_get_tex_max_num_levels() is supposed to calculate
the number of mipmap levels but it was not written to handle proxy
textures, at best returning a maximum of 1 mipmap level. Because of
this, at least glTexStorage*() calls would incorrectly fail when used
with proxy textures with more than one mipmap level.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Cc: mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org
Free all our temporary buffers in one place at the end of the
function. Fixes memory leak detected by Coverity.
Note: This is a candidate for the 9.x branches
Cc: mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The variable 'usage' was being used for two different things.
Sometimes for PIPE_USAGE_x and other times for PIPE_TRANSFER_x.
This renames usage to access when we're talking about PIPE_TRANSFER_x
flags. Plus, add a bunch of comments to remind us what's going on.
Also, use unsigned for PIPE_TRANSFER_x bitmask to be consistent with
other places. And add a missing const qualifier.
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
We should probably be using map()/unmap() when accessing resource
data, but this is a little better.
v2: assert that the resource is not a display target, per Jose.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This was never a problem since the Mesa state tracker always gives
us a user-space constant buffer with buffer_offset=0. But if another
state tracker ever gave us a "HW" constant buffer with non-zero
buffer_offset we'd mis-render.
Also, use the correct buffer size. And move an assertion to the
top of the function.
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The cap means _can_ accept user-space constant buffers; it doesn't
mean _only_ accepts user-space constant buffers.
v2: also update the PIPE_CAP_USER_VERTEX_BUFFERS and
PIPE_CAP_USER_INDEX_BUFFERS descriptions as well. Per Jose.
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
vblank_mode is read by dri_util.c and falls under the "dri2" driver name,
which is not connected to the actual Mesa/Gallium driver in any way.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
PP saves current states to cso_context and then util_blit_pixels does
the same. cso_context doesn't like that and the original state is not
correctly restored.
Cc: mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Surprisingly all drivers supporting MSAA can already do this (r300g and r600g
for sure) and I think Christoph wanted to have this feature for his Nouveau
drivers anyway.
We recently adopted a new convention that patches can be nominated for the
stable branch by including a line in the commit message as follows:
CC: mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org
This is a convenient syntax as "git send-email" will notice this line and
automatically copy the resulting patch email to the mesa-stable mailing list.
Here we extend the regular expression in the get-pick-list.sh script to also
notice this pattern, (as well as the traditional "NOTE: This patch is a
candidate..." form.
The linker_error() function sets prog->LinkStatus to false. There's
no reason for the caller of linker_error() to also do so.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
We're now emitting this error from a point where we have easy access
to the name of the block that failed to match, so go ahead and include
that in the error message, as we do for intrastage interface block
mismatches.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This patch changes link_shaders() so that it sets prog->LinkStatus to
true when it starts, and then relies on linker_error() to set it to
false if a link failure occurs.
Previously, link_shaders() would set prog->LinkStatus to true halfway
through its execution; as a result, linker functions that executed
during the first half of link_shaders() would have to do their own
success/failure tracking; if they didn't, then calling linker_error()
would add an error message to the log, but not cause the link to fail.
Since it wasn't always obvious from looking at a linker function
whether it was called before or after link_shaders() set
prog->LinkStatus to true, this carried a high risk of bugs.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Previously we failed to link (which is correct), but we did not output
an error message, which could have been confusing for users.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
A comment in link_intrastage_shaders(), and an if-test that followed
it, seemed to indicate that link_uniform_blocks() would return a
negative value in the event of an error. But this is not the
case--all error checking has already been performed by
validate_intrastage_interface_blocks(), and link_uniform_blocks() can
only return unsigned values.
So get rid of the if-test and change the return type of
link_intrastage_shaders() to clarify that it can only return unsigned
values.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
To have non-static buffers in local memory, it is necessary to pass them
as arguments to the kernel.
For r600, the correct lds size must be set to the SQ_LDS_ALLOC register.
The correct size is the clover size plus the size reported by the
compiler.
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
Here is an updated patch with no line wrapping and respecting 80-column limit (for my changes).
v2: Tom Stellard
- Create global arguments for constant buffers so we don't break
r600g.
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
For GLSL programs, enabledTargets can have more than one bit set. For
example, a shader that uses sampler2D and samplerCube uniforms will have
both TEXTURE_2D_BIT and TEXTURE_CUBE_BIT set.
The code that sets _ReallyEnabled already handles this, selecting the
"highest priority" texture target. We should simply use that.
Fixes new Piglit test incomplete-textures-of-multiple-types.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=62698
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Rather than having to keep track of all the build systems and their respecitve
definition of the mesa version, use a single top file VERSION. Every build
system is responsible for reading/parsing the file and using it
v2:
* remove useless bulletpoint from the documentation, suggested by Matt
* "Androing is Linux. Use '/' in stead of '\'", spotted by Chad V
* use cleaner code to get the version in scons, suggested by Chad V
v3:
* ensure leading and trailing whitespace characters are stripped while parsing
* android: handle GNU shell commands approapriately
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
We already skip this for API_OPENGL_CORE; ES2+ is very similar.
The primary user of the swrast context is GL_SELECT and GL_FEEDBACK,
which have never existed in ES.
This saves approximately 18MB of memory in GLBenchmark 2.7 Egypt (ES2).
No regressions in es3conform on Ivybridge.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
Certain extensions only add functionality to particular shader stages.
(For example, ARB_draw_instanced only adds variables to the vertex
shader stage.)
Previously, we only allowed such extensions to be enabled in the shader
stages where they're useful. However, I've never found any text which
mandates that behavior; in my opinion, you should be able to turn on
extensions in any shader stage, even if they have no effect.
Fixes Piglit tests glslparsertest/glsl2/draw_buffers-05.vert and
ARB_draw_instanced/preprocessor/feature-macro-enabled.frag.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=29185
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
EGL_KHR_surfaceless_context extension allows contexts to be made current
without a default winsys fbo. This extension specifies what ES 1.1 and
2.0 should do (the ES 3.0 spec already does).
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Commit 8c3d3622d9 introduced a new assertion,
but since it causes lp_test_conv failures remove it again and let's hope
we don't really hit bugs caused by the potentially bogus code (it is possible
the assert() caught some cases which work correctly too).
The second 'const' says that the pointer itself is constant. This in
unenforcible in C++, so GCC emits a warning (see) below for each of
these functions in every file that includes glsl_types.h. It's a lot of
warning spam.
../../../src/glsl/glsl_types.h:176:58: warning: type qualifiers ignored on function return type [-Wignored-qualifiers]
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Cc: mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org
The majority of calls to _mesa_glsl_error(), _mesa_glsl_warning(), and
_mesa_glsl_parse_state::check_version() use a message that begins with
a lower case letter and ends without a period. This patch makes all
messages follow that convention.
Also, error/warning messages shouldn't end in '\n', since
_mesa_glsl_msg() automatically adds '\n' at the end of the message.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Just like the UNORM case we need to use round to nearest, not trunc.
(There's also another problem, we're using the formula for SNORM->float
which will produce a value below -1.0 for the most negative value which
according to both OpenGL and d3d10 would need clamping. However, no actual
failures have been observed due to that hence keep cheating on that.)
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
I am not able to find _any_ rounding behavior specified for OpenGL for
float to half-float conversions. However, it is specified for fp11/fp10
which suggests round to next finite value but round-to-zero would also
be allowed, but finite values must not be flushed to infinity in either
case.
Hence I believe it makes sense to do the same for half-floats too.
We could probably also use round-to-zero consistently, which is in fact
required by d3d10 (but it doesn't seem to matter much).
Does not match the mesa core function doing the same though (which is
saying it was built to match intel gpus which I don't believe for a
second as it would cause failures in d3d10, moreover the PRM (for
ivy bridge, not listed in older manuals) while not specifying rounding
behavior clearly states finite numbers are never flushed to infinity).
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
unlike OpenGL, the texel swizzle is embedded in the instruction, so honor
that.
(Technically we now execute both the sampler_view swizzle and the
per-instruction swizzle but this should be quite ok.)
v2: add documentation note as it's not obvious.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
GL_EXT_framebuffer_object differs from GL_ARB_framebuffer_object in ways
that we can't and don't implement in core profiles. Exposing it is a
lie, so we shouldn't do that.
It's possible the some other GL_EXT_framebuffer_* extensions should be
disabled, but it's not quite so clear cut.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
If any component used the ZERO or ONE swizzle, its corresponding member
in the `swizzle` array would never be initialized. We *mostly* got away
with this, except when that memory happened to contain a value that
clobbered another channel when combined using BRW_SWIZZLE4().
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This fixes the dri2 opening to check if DRI_PRIME is set,
and picks the correct drm device path to open, this along
with a change to libvdpau allows vdpauinfo to work at least,
Martin Peres tested with nouveau, and there seems to be a
further issue with final displaying, it only works sometimes,
but this patch is at least necessary to help debug further.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Cc: mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=67283
Tested-by: Armin K. <krejzi@email.com>
This reverts commit c9db037dc9.
Eric believes that the viewport hacks are still necessary for EGL;
invalidate events aren't hooked up properly.
This commit caused a regression where EFL applications wouldn't show
anything other than window decorations; GLBenchmark also showed issues.
The revert had conflicts due to the intel_context/brw_context merge.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=66606
Cc: mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org
Wrapping every character of an email address in <em> looks bizarre, and
makes it impossible to read the text. Apparently Brian did this in 2003
to try and obfuscate email addresses and avoid spam.
Of course, mesa-*@lists.freedesktop.org are public mailing lists and
trivial to find on the internet. So obfuscation buys us nothing
(assuming the <em> technique even works at all, which I doubt).
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
LOLed-at-by: Matt Turner :)
Bump major version, as the change to require explicit
xa_context_flush(), the addition of the handle-type parameter to
xa_surface_handle(), and change of surface to ref/unref will require a
minor change in DDX.
For freedreno DDX, we have to create the scanout GEM bo in a special way
(until we have our own KMS/DRM kernel driver.. and even then for
phones/tablets you probably need to use the android drivers if you don't
want to port the lcd panel driver support). The easiest way to handle
this is let the DDX create the scanout bo, and then create the xa
surface from that.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robclark@freedesktop.org>
TargetOptions::NoFramePointerElimNonLeaf was removed in LLVM 3.4
r187093.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The is_loop_terminator() function was asserting that the following
kind of if statement could never occur:
if (...) { } else { }
(presumably based on the assumption that such an if statement would be
eliminated by previous optimization stages). But that isn't the
case--it's possible that previous optimization stages might simplify
more complex code down to this empty if statement, in which case it
won't be eliminated until the next time through the optimization loop.
So is_loop_terminator() needs to handle it. Fortunately it's easy to
handle--it's not a loop terminator because it does nothing.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=64330
CC: mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Two callers of brw_search_cache() weren't initializing that function's
inout_offset parameter: brw_blorp_const_color_params::get_wm_prog()
and brw_blorp_const_color_params::get_wm_prog().
That's a benign problem, since the only effect of not initializing
inout_offset prior to calling brw_search_cache() is that the bit
corresponding to cache_id in brw->state.dirty.cache may not be set
reliably. This is ok, since the cache_id's used by
brw_blorp_const_color_params::get_wm_prog() and
brw_blorp_blit_params::get_wm_prog() (BRW_BLORP_CONST_COLOR_PROG and
BRW_BLORP_BLIT_PROG, respectively) correspond to dirty bits that are
not used.
However, failing to initialize this parameter causes valgrind to
complain. So let's go ahead and fix it to reduce valgrind noise.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=66779
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The linker matches up variables in interface blocks according to their
block name and variable name. When support for interface block arrays
was added in commit d6863acb, we renamed variables appearing in
interface blocks so that their name included the array size. For
example, in a block like this:
out foo {
float bar
} baz[3];
The variable "bar" would get renamed to "bar[3]".
This is unnecessary, and leads to problems in supporting geometry
shaders, since geometry shaders require vertex shader outputs which
are non-arrays to be linked up to geometry shader inputs which are
arrays.
This patch makes the behaviour of interface block arrays the same as
simple non-array interface blocks; in both cases, the variables
contained within them are not renamed.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
vertex id has to be unaffected by the start index (i.e. when calling
draw arrays with start_index = 5, the first vertex_id has to still
be 0, not 5) and it has to be equal to the index when performing
indexed rendering (in which case it has to be unaffected by the
index bias). This fixes our behavior.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The instance id system value always starts at 0, even if the
specified start instance is larger than 0. Instead of implicitly
setting instance id to instance id plus start instance and then
having to subtract instance id when computing the buffer offsets
lets just set instance id to the proper instance id. This fixes
instance id computation and cleansup buffer offset computation.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
There are earlier returns for PIPE_FUNC_NEVER and PIPE_FUNC_ALWAYS. The
switch value of 'func' cannot be either of those values.
Fixes "Logically dead code" defects reported by Coverity.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Looks like a thinko, "Hey, constant buffers can be at most 64 KiB
in size, offset can't be larger." But it can, of course.
I think piglit lacks a test for UBO and BindBufferRange that
tests if it actually works.
Since disabling denorms in draw_vbo() we require the util_cpu_caps to be
initialized there. Hence add another util_cpu_detect() call in
draw_create_context() which should ensure this.
(There is another call in draw_get_option_use_llvm() which only gets called
with x86 (not x86_64) but calling it always there wouldn't help since it most
likely wouldn't get called when compiling without llvm, so leave it alone
there.)
This fixes https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=66806.
(Because util_cpu_caps wasn't initialized when first calling util_fpstate_get()
hence it returning zero, but it would later get initialized by rtasm translate
code hence when draw call returned it unmasked all exceptions by calling
util_fpstate_set(). This was happening only with DRAW_USE_LLVM=0 or not
compiling with llvm, otherwise the llvm init code was calling it on time too.)
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Tested-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
The codeword must be unsigned (otherwise will shift in 1's from above when
merging low/high parts so some texels decode wrong).
This also affects gallium's util/u_format_rgtc.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
For AVX it's not sufficient to only rely on the cpuid flags. If the CPU
supports these extensions, but the OS doesn't, issuing these insns will
trigger an undefined opcode exception.
In addition to the AVX cpuid bit we also need to:
* test cpuid for OSXSAVE support
* XGETBV to check if the OS saves/restores AVX regs on context switches
See "Detecting Availability and Support" at
http://software.intel.com/en-us/articles/introduction-to-intel-advanced-vector-extensions
Signed-off-by: Andre Heider <a.heider@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Test infs, zeros and nans with our arith functions to assure
correct/defined behavior with those values.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Same as log2_safe, which means that it can handle infs, 0s and
nans.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Only the floating point operarators change everything else
is the same so it makes sense to share the code.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
sin/cos for anything not finite is nan and everything else has
to be between [-1, 1].
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
That means that if input is:
* - less than zero (to and including -inf) then NaN will be returned
* - equal to zero (-denorm, -0, +0 or +denorm), then -inf will be returned
* - +infinity, then +infinity will be returned
* - NaN, then NaN will be returned
It's a separate function because the checks are a little bit costly
and in most cases are likely unnecessary.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
exp(0) has to be exactly 1, exp(-inf) has to be 0, exp(inf) has
to be inf and exp(nan) has to be nan, this fixes all of those
cases.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Both D3D10 and OpenCL say that if one the inputs is nan then
the other should be returned. To preserve that behavior
the patch fixes both the sse and the non-sse paths in both
functions and adds helper code for handling nans.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
It's not the first time that, due to missing build dependencies or
incomplete commits, we end up with a broken libGL.so that's missing
symbols, causing all tests to fail catastrophically.
Instead try to catch this sort of issues earlier.
Almost all of the functions between the ARB and the EXT share the same
GLX protocol because the functionality is, essentially, identical.
However, there are some differences between the extensions:
- In the ARB extension, names must come from glGenBuffers.
- In the ARB extension, framebuffer objects are not shared (but they are
in the EXT).
For these reasons, glBindFramebuffer and glBindRenderbuffer have
different GLX protocol opcodes than their EXT counterparts. Currently
these functions alias each other in the dispatch table. This makes it
impossible to be truly spec conformant.
This patch enables fixing the conformance issue by splitting
glBindFramebuffer / glBindFramebufferEXT and glBindRenderbuffer /
glBindRenderbufferEXT into separate dispatch table entries.
Patches will be available shortly to:
- Fix the conformance issue.
- Stop advertising the EXT in OpenGL 3.1 (or core profiles).
HOWEVER, this does represent a compatibility break between the loader
(libGL or the Xserver GLX module) and the driver. Mesa drivers compiled
without this change will request a single dispatch table entry for
glBindFramebuffer and glBindFramebufferEXT. Since the updated loader
has different entries for each, the request will fail, and the driver
will die in a fire.
Drivers built with the change should continue to load fine on loaders
without the change. In this case, the driver will separately ask for
entries for glBindFramebuffer and glBindFramebufferEXT, and the loader
will tell it the same location. Since the loader in the server's GLX
module is not (yet) updated, this should not be a problem. We also do
not advertise the ARB extension from the server, so, again, this should
not be a problem for the server.
HOWEVER, this means that DRI1 drivers (remember mga_dri.so?) will no
longer load with libGL build hereafter. That means this patch will need
to be back ported to the 8.0 branch.
v2 (idr): Added missing GLX protocol opcodes for the EXT functions and
corrected the opcodes for the ARB functions. Updated GLX indirect_api
unit test and dispatch sanity unit test.
Signed-off-by: Tomasz Lis <tomasz.lis@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Bartosz Zawistowski <bartosz.l.zawistowski@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com> [v1]
Any driver that supports GLSL 1.30 should be able to handle this
extension, as it's entirely implemented in the GLSL compiler.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
While all the work is in the shared GLSL compiler, this extension
requires GLSL 1.30, which is currently only supported on Gen6+.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
layout(binding = N) is equivalent to calling glUniformBlockBinding(_,N).
This currently only handles the GLSL 1.40 case - no interface names, no
arrays of uniform blocks. This is okay since we don't yet support GLSL
1.50, and don't expose ARB_shading_language_420pack in ES 3.0.
v2: Move into the other function; use binding, not constant_value.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Without an instance name, there is no ir_variable representing the
actual uniform block declaration. When the linker goes to set uniform
initializers, it only sees the members as ir_variables; never the block.
So, unfortunately, the members need to know about the binding.
There has to be a better way to do this.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Normally, uniform array variables are initialized by array literals.
That is, val->type->array_elements >= storage->array_elements.
However, samplers are different. Consider a declaration such as:
layout(binding = 5) uniform sampler2D[3];
The initializer value is a single integer (5), while the storage has 3
array elements. The proper behavior here is to increment one for each
element; they should be initialized to 5, 6, and 7.
This patch introduces new code for sampler types which handles both
arrays of samplers and single samplers correctly.
v2: Move into the other function; use binding, not constant_value.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Sampler uniforms and uniform blocks do not have a var->constant_value.
Instead, they have an integer var->binding value.
This makes extending set_uniform_initializer() somewhat problematic: it
assumes that there is an ir_constant * which represents the initializer,
and that it's safe to dereference that without any NULL checks.
Instead, this patch creates an analogous function for binding
qualifiers, and calls one or the other as appropriate.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
There is existing code to handle sampler uniform initializers. Prior to
GLSL 4.20's "binding" keyword, sampler uniforms don't have initializers
at all, so this is somewhat surprising.
The existing code is broken into two cases: one where both the variable and
initializer are arrays, and a second where the variable and initializer are
scalars.
The first case should never occur, since array-typed initializers do not
exist for sampler uniforms. Even with the binding keyword, the
initializer is a single integer which represents the texture unit to use
for the first array element.
The second is apparently used for some fixed-function code.
v2: Rewrite the commit message - suggested by Paul.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
All compilation units need to agree on the binding point, if they
specify one at all.
v2: Use binding, not constant_value.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Rather than creating a new "binding" field in ir_variable, we reuse
constant_value since the linker code for handling uniform initializers
uses that.
Since UBOs and samplers can't otherwise have initializers/constant
values, there shouldn't be a conflict.
v2: Propagate the new binding variable around too.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
These are not used yet, but they exist and are copied appropriately.
v2: Add an explicit "int binding" variable rather than reusing
constant_value, as suggested by Paul Berry.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
The "binding" qualifier only applies to UBO blocks and samplers, along
with arrays of those types. (It would also apply to images and atomic
counters, but we don't support those yet.)
This also validates sampler bindings against the maximum number of
texture units, and UBO bindings against the number of uniform buffer
binding points.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Nothing actually uses this yet.
v2: Remove >= 0 checks. They'll be handled in later validation.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
The idea of this code is to disallow layout(...) sections with the
deprecated "varying" or "attribute" keywords, unless a few select
extensions are enabled which allow a more relaxed check.
In order to detect a layout(...) section, the code checks for a number
of layout qualifiers. However, it failed to check for all of them,
which could lead to layout(...) not being detected when it should.
By replacing this with has_layout(), we properly check for all layout
qualifiers, and also guarantees that new qualifiers added in the future
will not be forgotten.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
These were already semi-relaxed, since the storage qualifier rule
already skipped when 420pack was enabled.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
The GL_ARB_shading_language_420pack extension/GLSL 4.20 split centroid
off into a new category, "auxiliary storage qualifiers," and allow these
to be placed anywhere in the series. So we have to stop recognizing
"centroid in"/"centroid out"/"centroid varying" in the grammar and get
more creative.
The same approach used before works here, too.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This is necessary for the parser to be able to accept precision
qualifiers not immediately adjacent to the type, such as "const highp
inout float foo".
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Currently, we store precision in ast_type_specifier, rather than
ast_type_qualifier. This works because precision is the last qualifier,
and immediately adjacent to the type.
Default precision statements (such as "precision highp float") are
represented as ast_type_specifier objects, with a boolean to indicate
that it's a default precision statement rather than an ordinary type.
ast_type_specifier::precision will be moving to ast_type_qualifier soon,
in order to support arbitrary qualifier ordering. However, we still
need to store a "this is a precision statement" flag /and/ the default
precision in ast_type_specifier.
This patch changes the boolean into a new field, default_precision.
If default_precision != ast_precision_none, it's a precision statement
with the specified precision. Otherwise, it's an ordinary type.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This makes the complier accept both "const in" and "in const".
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This will make it easy to support both "const in" and "in const", as
required by GLSL 4.20/ARB_shading_language_420pack.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
"Parameter direction qualifier" is a new term I invented just now; it's
not part of any GLSL specification.
This paves the way handling multiple parameter qualifiers, in any order,
as required by GLSL 4.20/ARB_shading_language_420pack.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Most of ast_type_qualifier is simply a bitfield (represented as a
structure of unsigned:1 bits in a union with an unsigned). However, it
also contains ARB_explicit_attrib_location's location/index fields.
In the past, this has worked by simply returning the layout qualifier's
ast_type_qualifier and merging the other bits into it. However, that's
not obvious until you break it by switching $1 and $2.
Using merge_qualifier() copies them appropriately, and also properly
overrides layout qualifiers. It also checks for duplicate qualifiers,
which renders some of the checks in the previous patch unnecessary.
However, those checks provide better error messages, such as "Duplicate
interpolation qualifier", rather than just "duplicate qualifier".
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This makes the compiler accept invariant, storage, layout, and
interpolation qualifiers in any order when ARB_shading_language_420pack
is enabled.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
The GL_ARB_shading_language_420pack extension/GLSL 4.20 allow qualifiers
to be specified in (basically) any order. In order to support this, we
can't hardcode the ordering restrictions in the grammar.
This patch alters the grammar to accept invariant, storage, layout, and
interpolation qualifiers in any order, but adds C code to enforce the
ordering requirements. In the 420pack case, we should be able to simply
skip the error checks.
As a bonus, this also lets us generate decent error messages, rather
than Bison's awful "unexpected TOKEN" errors.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
"Auxiliary storage qualifiers" is the new term given to "centroid",
"patch", and "sample" by GLSL 4.20/GL_ARB_shading_language_420pack.
Even though we only support "centroid", it's useful to add this now
so that all auxiliary storage qualifiers get handled in the right places
once they're eventually supported.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This makes it easy to check if any storage qualifiers are set.
"centroid" is not considered a storage qualifier. In the old language
rules, you can't specify "centroid" by itself; it's always "centroid
in", "centroid out", or "centroid varying." So one of the other storage
qualifiers will always be set; there's no need to specifically check for
centroid.
In the new 4.20 rules, centroid is an auxiliary storage qualifier, not a
storage qualifier.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This makes it easy to check if any layout qualifiers are set.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
All four URB packets need to be programmed together in order for the GPU
state to be valid. Putting them in separate BEGIN..ADVANCE blocks is
risky: if we're nearing the end of a batch, the batch could be flushed
inbetween two of the commands, causing the URB programming to be split
into two batchbuffers.
This -might- be okay with hardware contexts, but it offers no advantages
over keeping them together, and has a potential for hangs.
Putting them into a single BEGIN..ADVANCE block ensures they'll be kept
in the same batch, which seems wise.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Change from "not cacheable" to "cacheable" in L3.
Do so for the draw upload path and blorp.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Change from "not cacheable" to "cacheable" in L3.
Do so for the draw upload path and blorp.
In blorp, change only the PS packet, because the VS packet is disabled.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Change from "not cacheable" to "cacheable" in L3.
Do so for the draw upload path and blorp.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Change from "not cacheable" to "cacheable" in L3.
Do so for the draw upload path and blorp.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Some render types, such as floating-point, aren't valid with EGL.
Return NULL in those cases to drop them.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Mark __DRI_ATTRIB_FLOAT_MODE as deprecated, and introduce new flags to
__DRI_ATTRIB_RENDER_TYPE for float modes. Both signed float
(fbconfig_float) and unsigned (packed_float) are introduced. The old
attribute should be set for both float modes.
v2 (idr): Require that the render mode from the DRI attributes matches the
render mode of the config exactly. This is the behavior of the old code.
Signed-off-by: Tomasz Lis <tomasz.lis@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Make sure that init_fbconfig_for_chooser sets correct value of
drawableType for visual configs and fbconfigs.
Signed-off-by: Tomasz Lis <tomasz.lis@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Correctly handle the value of renderType in GLX context. In case of the
value being incorrect, context creation fails.
v2 (idr): indirect_create_context is just a memory allocator, so don't
validate the GLX_RENDER_TYPE there. Fixes regressions in several
GLX_ARB_create_context piglit tests.
Signed-off-by: Tomasz Lis <tomasz.lis@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
v2 (idr): Open-code the check for GLX_RENDER_TYPE.
dri2_convert_glx_attribs can't be called from here because that function
only exists in direct-rendering builds. Also add a stub version of
indirect_create_context_attribs to tests/fake_glx_screen.cpp to prevent
'make check' regressions.
Signed-off-by: Tomasz Lis <tomasz.lis@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Set the correct values of renderType in glXCreateContext and
init_fbconfig_for_chooser.
Signed-off-by: Tomasz Lis <tomasz.lis@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Correctly handle the value of renderType and drawableType in
fbconfig. Modify glXInitializeVisualConfigFromTags to read the parameter
value, or detect it if it's not there.
v2 (idr): If there was no GLX_RENDER_TYPE property, set the type based
purely on the rgbMode as the previous code did. It is impossible for
floatMode to be set at this point, so we can't have a float config. The
previous code regressed a large number of piglit GLX tests because those
tests don't set GLX_RENDER_TYPE in the glXChooseConfig call. Restoring
the old behavior for that case fixes those regressions.
Also fix handling of GLX_DONT_CARE for GLX_RENDER_TYPE. Fixes a
regression in glx-dont-care-mask.
Signed-off-by: Tomasz Lis <tomasz.lis@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Make sure that context creation routines are provided with the value of
RENDER_TYPE retrieved from GLX attribs.
v2 (idr): Minor formatting changes. Change type of
dri2_convert_glx_attribs render_type parameter to uint32_t to silence
some GCC warnings.
Signed-off-by: Tomasz Lis <tomasz.lis@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Make sure that renderType property value is stored in GLX context while
it's being created. Further patches will be provided to make the value
correspond to fbconfig's renderType.
v2 (idr): Move a hunk from the next patch to this patch to prevent a
build break.
Signed-off-by: Tomasz Lis <tomasz.lis@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
The L3 controls are identical on all platforms, but LLC differs:
- Ivybridge has a "cache in LLC" flag
- Baytrail has no LLC, but instead has a snoop bit:
"data accesses in this page must be snooped in the CPU caches."
- Haswell has writeback/uncached flags for LLC and eLLC (eDRAM).
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
The current gen_matypes logic assumes that the host compiler will produce
information that is useful for the target compiler. Unfortunately, this
is not the case whenever cross-compiling.
When we detect that we're cross-compiling and using GCC, use the target
compiler to produce assembly from the gen_matypes.c source, then process
it with a shell script to create a usable header. This is similar to how
the linux kernel creates its asm-offsets.c file.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
This is required in case a wrapper or symlink is used. This patch
has also been sent upstream, awaiting moderation.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Andreas Oberritter <obi@saftware.de>
Adds the dependencies of builtin_compiler as sources when cross
compiling instead of using libtool to share compilation with src/glsl.
The builtin_compiler executable is built for the host when cross
compiling so it doesn't make sense to share compilation with src/glsl
built for the target in this case.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44618
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Liu <net147@gmail.com>
Usually with fixed point renderbuffers clamping is done as part of conversion.
However, since we blend in float format, we essentially skip all conversion
steps pre-blend but since this is still a fixed point renderbuffer we must
still clamp the inputs in this case. Makes no difference for piglit though.
Obviously we could skip this if fragment color clamping is enabled, but a)
this is deprecated in OpenGL (d3d never had it) and b) we don't support it
natively so it gets baked into the shader.
Also add some comment about logic ops being broken for srgb, luckily no test
tries to do that as there's no easy fix...
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
We were fixing up the blend factor to ZERO, however this only works correctly
with fixed point render buffers where the input values are clamped to 0/1
(because src_alpha_saturate is min(As, 1-Ad) so can be negative with unclamped
inputs). Haven't seen any failure anywhere due to that with fixed point SNORM
buffers (which clamp inputs to -1/1) but it should apply there as well (snorm
blending is rare, even opengl 4.3 doesn't require snorm rendertargets at all,
d3d10 requires them but they are not blendable).
Doesn't look like piglit hits this though (some internal testing hits the
float case at least). (With legacy OpenGL we could theoretically still use the
fixup to zero if the fragment color clamp is enabled, but we can't detect that
easily since we don't support native clamping hence it gets baked into the
shader.)
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Adds H.264 and MPEG2 codec support via VP2, using firmware from the
blob. Acceleration is supported at the bitstream level for H.264 and
IDCT level for MPEG2.
Known issues:
- H.264 interlaced doesn't render properly
- H.264 shows very occasional artifacts on a small fraction of videos
- MPEG2 + VDPAU shows frequent but small artifacts, which aren't there
when using XvMC on the same videos
Signed-off-by: Ilia Mirkin <imirkin@alum.mit.edu>
Use grep -w instead of the empty string escape sequences
which are less portable. Makes the grep tests
function as intended on OpenBSD.
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Gray <jsg@jsg.id.au>
Reviewed-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Fixes this build error on OpenBSD 5.3.
In file included from ../../src/mesa/main/ff_fragment_shader.cpp:53:
./../glsl/ir_optimization.h:64: error: comma at end of enumerator list
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Fixes these build errors on OpenBSD 5.3.
In file included from ../../src/mesa/main/errors.h:47,
from ../../src/mesa/main/imports.h:41,
from ../../src/mesa/main/ff_fragment_shader.cpp:32:
../../src/mesa/main/mtypes.h:3286: error: comma at end of enumerator list
../../src/mesa/main/mtypes.h:3296: error: comma at end of enumerator list
../../src/mesa/main/mtypes.h:3303: error: comma at end of enumerator list
../../src/mesa/main/mtypes.h:3356: error: comma at end of enumerator list
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Use "or" instead of "add" (this is a classic select sequence, which at
least newer llvm versions can actually recognize (3.2+?), and the "add"
might prevent that - and we really don't want an add instead of an or with
avx if it isn't recognized (even without avx logic ops might be cheaper)).
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Instead of just ignoring the srgb/linear conversions, simply call the
corresponding conversion functions, for all of pack/unpack/fetch,
both for float and unorm8 versions (though some don't make a whole
lot of sense, i.e. unorm8/unorm8 srgb/linear combinations).
Refactored some functions a bit so don't have to duplicate all the code
(there's a slight change for packing dxt1_rgb, as there will now be
always 4 components initialized and sent to the external compression
function so the same code can be used for all, the quite horrid and
ad-hoc interface (by now) should always have worked with that).
Fixes llvmpipe/softpipe piglit texwrap GL_EXT_texture_sRGB-s3tc.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Scheduler/register allocator in r600-sb was developed and optimized
on evergreen (VLIW-5) hardware, so currently it's not optimal for
VLIW-4 chips.
This patch should improve performance on cayman gpus due to better alu
packing, but also it tends to increase register usage, so overall positive
effect on performance has to be proven by real benchmarks yet.
Some results with bfgminer kernel on cayman:
source bytecode: 60 gprs, 3905 alu groups,
sbcl before the patch: 45 gprs, 4088 alu groups,
sbcl with this patch: 55 gprs, 3474 alu groups.
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
Ex-scalar instructions that became multislot on cayman do replicate result
to all channels - handle them similar to DOT4.
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
Actually PS doesn't make sense for cayman and isn't even mentioned in
cayman docs, but llvm backend currently uses it in bytecode and, assuming
that hw seems to be mostly ok with it, this will allow sb to parse such
source bytecode correctly.
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
Every function but the above four uses explicitly sized types for their
src and dst arguments. Even fetch_rgba_{s,u}int follows the convention.
Signed-off-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
MCJIT is the only supported LLVM JIT on AArch64 and ARM (the regular
JIT has bit-rotted badly on ARM and doesn't exist on AArch64.)
Signed-off-by: Kyle McMartin <kyle@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@gmail.com>
Historically, we indented grammar production rules with a single 8-space
tab, but code inside of blocks used Mesa's 3-space indents.
This meant when editing code, you had to use an 8-space tab for the
first level of indentation, and 3-spaces after that. Unless you
specifically configure your editor to understand this, it will get the
indentation wrong on every single line you touch, which quickly devolves
into a colossal waste of time.
It's also inconsistent with every other file in the entire project.
This patch removes all tabs and moves to a consistent 3-space indent.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
When working on a parser, it's very easy to accidentally introduce
new shift/reduce conflicts. Failing the build guarantees they'll
be noticed and fixed.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
The single remaining shift/reduce conflict was the classic ELSE problem:
292 selection_rest_statement: statement . ELSE statement
293 | statement .
ELSE shift, and go to state 479
ELSE [reduce using rule 293 (selection_rest_statement)]
$default reduce using rule 293 (selection_rest_statement)
The correct behavior here is to shift, which is what happens by default.
However, resolving it explicitly will make it possible to fail the build
on new errors, making them much easier to detect.
The classic way to solve this is to use right associativity:
http://www.gnu.org/software/bison/manual/html_node/Non-Operators.html
Since there is no THEN token in GLSL, we need to fake one. %right THEN
creates a new terminal symbol; the %prec directive says to use the
precedence of that terminal.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
opt_return_value was not initialized if mode != ast_return.
Fixes "Uninitialized pointer field" defect reported by Coverity.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
This should fix missing symbols in a osmesa built against shared glapi
osmesa build. All opengl exports were missing that are defined in the
static glapi, so link against both to fix this.
This is a candidate for the stable series.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=47824
Signed-off-by: Maarten Lankhorst <maarten.lankhorst@canonical.com>
We always emit U,V,R coordinates for this message, but the sampler gets
very angry if we pass garbage in the R coordinate for at least some
texture formats.
Fill the remaining coordinates with zero instead.
Fixes broken rendering on GM45 in Source games, and in VDrift.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=65236
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
brw_tex_layout.c sets up the align_w/h fields, and has all the
appropriate spec references already.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The Sandybridge code had a citation for the range of the "Maximum Number
of Threads" field, and the Ivybridge code just mentioned the "BSpec" in
general. That's documented in the obvious place, so people can find it
without a spec reference.
The real value of the comment is to say "we tried zero, and it exploded,
so program it to a valid number even if pixel shading is off."
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Unfortunately, the workaround text never made it into the Sandybridge
PRM, so we still have to refer to the BSpec.
It also wasn't obvious why we needed this workaround at all, since we
don't currently do VS passthrough - but BLORP can turn off the VS.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Sadly, the Ivybridge PRM can't be cited, as it is missing the relevant
text for some reason. However, the Sandybridge PRM has the text Chad
originally quoted, and the modern BSpec has the same text.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
I cut and pasted these comments from the Gen4 code during Ivybridge
enabling, and didn't understand what they meant at the time.
The data cache is NOT the same as the sampler cache on Ivybridge.
The sampler cache has L1 and L2 caches in addition to the L3 cache,
while data port messages to the "data cache" hit L3 directly.
This means that the sampler domain is technically wrong, but we stopped
caring about read/write domains quite a while ago. The kernel just
flushes all the caches at the end of each batchbuffer, and our render to
texture code flushes the sampler caches when necessary.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Presumably, this comment exists to justify the usage of
I915_GEM_DOMAIN_SAMPLER for this relocation. At one point, this was
necessary to ensure that the right flushing was done to keep caches
coherent. These days, the kernel just flushes everything, so I don't
think it matters.
Still, the comment is interesting, so leave it in place.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The Ivybridge PRM adds new SFIDs and lists them in a different volume
than Sandybridge, so it's worth adding a reference.
I also removed the BSpec reference, as the section it referred to
was moved somewhere, and I couldn't find it. This leaves one Haswell
SFID without a citation, but we can add one once the PRMs are out.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Just use the new conversion functions to do the work. The way it's plugged
in into the blend code is quite hacktastic but follows all the same hacks
as used by packed float format already.
Only support 4x8bit srgb formats (rgba/rgbx plus swizzle), 24bit formats never
worked anyway in the blend code and are thus disabled, and I don't think anyone
is interested in L8/L8A8. Would need even more hacks otherwise.
Unless I'm missing something, this is the last feature except MSAA needed for
OpenGL 3.0, and for OpenGL 3.1 as well I believe.
v2: prettify a bit, use separate function for packing.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The splitting of a draw call into several draw commands was broken, because
the split sometimes took place in the middle of a primitive. The splitting
was supposed to be dealing with the case when there are more indices than
the maximum size of a CS.
This commit throws that code away and uses a real index buffer instead.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=66558
Cc: mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org
_mesa_ast_set_aggregate_type walks through declarations initialized with
C-style aggregate initializers and stops when it runs out of LHS
declarations or RHS expressions.
In the example
vec4 v = {{{1, 2, 3, 4}}};
_mesa_ast_set_aggregate_type would not recurse into the subexpressions
(since vec4s do not contain types that can be initialized with an
aggregate initializer) to set their <constructor_type>s. Later in ::hir
we would dereference the NULL pointer and segfault.
If <constructor_type> is NULL in ::hir we know that the LHS and RHS
were unbalanced and the code is illegal.
Arrays, structs, and matrices were unaffected.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Previously, we had a separate function for setting up the built-in
variables for each combination of shader stage and GLSL version
(e.g. generate_110_vs_variables to generate the built-in variables for
GLSL 1.10 vertex shaders). The functions called each other in ad-hoc
ways, leading to unexpected inconsistencies (for example,
generate_120_fs_variables was called for GLSL versions 1.20 and above,
but generate_130_fs_variables was called only for GLSL version 1.30).
In addition, it led to a lot of code duplication, since many varyings
had to be duplicated in both the FS and VS code paths. With the
advent of geometry shaders (and later, tessellation control and
tessellation evaluation shaders), this code duplication was going to
get a lot worse.
So this patch reworks things so that instead of having a separate
function for each shader type and GLSL version, we have a function for
constants, one for uniforms, one for varyings, and one for the special
variables that are specific to each shader type.
In addition, we use a class, builtin_variable_generator, to keep track
of the instruction exec_list, the GLSL parse state, commonly-used
types, and a few other variables, so that we don't have to pass them
around as function arguments. This makes the code a lot more compact.
Where it was feasible to do so without introducing compilation errors,
I've also gone ahead and introduced the variables needed for
{ARB,EXT}_geometry_shader4 style geometry shaders. This patch takes
care of everything except the GS variable gl_VerticesIn, the FS
variable gl_PrimitiveID, and GLSL 1.50 style geometry shader inputs
(using the gl_in interface block). Those remaining features will be
added later.
I've also made a slight nomenclature change: previously we used the
word "deprecated" to refer to variables which are marked in GLSL 1.40
as requiring the ARB_compatibility extension, and are marked in GLSL
1.50 onward as requiring the compatibilty profile. This was
misleading, since not all deprecated variables require the
compatibility profile (for example gl_FragData and gl_FragColor, which
have been deprecated since GLSL 1.30, but do not require the
compatibility profile until GLSL 4.20). We now consistently use the
word "compatibility" to refer to these variables.
This patch doesn't introduce any functional changes (since geometry
shaders haven't been enabled yet).
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
v2: Rename "typ" -> "type". Add blank line between inline functions
and declarations in builtin_variable_generator class. Use the
standard comment "/* FALLTHROUGH */" for compatibility with static
code analysis tools.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
In certain rare cases (such as those involving dereference of a
literal constant array of structs),
flatten_named_interface_blocks_declarations's rvalue visitor may be
invoked on an ir_dereference_record whose variable_referenced() method
returns NULL.
Check for this case to avoid a segfault.
Prevents crashes in piglit tests
{vs,fs}-deref-literal-array-of-structs.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Vertex shader inputs are not allowed to be arrays until GLSL 1.50. We
were accidentally enabling them for GLSL 1.40 (although we haven't
written any tests for them, so it's not clear whether they actually
work).
NOTE: although this is a simple bug fix, it probably isn't sensible to
cherry-pick it to stable release branches, since its only effect is to
cause incorrectly-written shaders to fail to compile.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Fixes undefined results if a back color is written, but the
corresponding front color is not, and only backfacing primitives are
drawn. Results are still undefined if a frontfacing primitive is drawn,
but that's OK.
The other reasonable way to fix this would have been to just pick
the one color slot that was populated, but that dilutes the value of
the tests.
On Gen6+, the fixed function clipper and triangle setup already take
care of this.
Fixes 11 piglits:
spec/glsl-1.10/execution/interpolation/interpolation-none-gl_Back*Color-*
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Some lame compilers can't do exp2f() and as far as I can tell they can't do
exp2() (with doubles) neither so instead of providing some workaround for
that (wouldn't actually be too bad just replace with pow) and since it is
used with a constant only just use the precalculated constant.
When only the offset to the index buffer is changed, we can skip the
3DSTATE_INDEX_BUFFER if we always use 0 for the offset, and add
(offset / index_size) to Start Vertex Location in 3DPRIMITIVE.
srgb-to-linear is using 3rd degree polynomial for now which should be _just_
good enough. Reverse is using some rational polynomials and is quite accurate,
though not hooked into llvmpipe's blend code yet and hence unused (untested).
Using a table might also be an option (for srgb-to-linear especially).
This does not enable any new features yet because EXT_texture_srgb was already
supported via util_format fallbacks, but performance was lacking probably due
to the external function call (the table used by the util_format_srgb code may
not be all that much slower on its own).
Some performance figures (taken from modified gloss, replaced both base and
sphere texture to use GL_SRGB instead of GL_RGB, measured on 1Ghz Sandy Bridge,
the numbers aren't terribly accurate):
normal gloss, aos, 8-wide: 47 fps
normal gloss, aos, 4-wide: 48 fps
normal gloss, forced to soa, 8-wide: 48 fps
normal gloss, forced to soa, 4-wide: 47 fps
patched gloss, old code, soa, 8-wide: 21 fps
patched gloss, old code, soa, 4-wide: 24 fps
patched gloss, new code, soa, 8-wide: 41 fps
patched gloss, new code, soa, 4-wide: 38 fps
So there's a performance hit but it seems acceptable, certainly better
than using the fallback.
Note the new code only works for 4x8bit srgb formats, others (L8/L8A8) will
continue to use the old util_format fallback, because I can't be bothered
to write code for formats noone uses anyway (as decoding is done as part of
lp_build_unpack_rgba_soa which can only handle block type width of 32).
Compressed srgb formats should get their own path though eventually (it is
going to be expensive in any case, first decompress, then convert).
No piglit regressions.
v2: use lp_build_polynomial instead of ad-hoc polynomial construction, also
since keeping both linear to srgb functions for now make sure both are
compiled (since they share quite some code just integrate into the same
function).
v3: formatting fixes and bugfix in the complicated (disabled) linear-to-srgb
path.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
We had to disable fast rsqrt before because it wasn't precise enough etc.
However in situations when we know we're not going to need more precision
we can still use a fast rsqrt (which can be several times faster than
the quite expensive sqrt). Hence introduce a new helper which does exactly
that - it is probably not useful calling it in some situations if there's
no fast rsqrt available so make it queryable if it's available too.
v2: use fast_rsqrt consistently instead of rsqrt_fast, fix indentation,
let rsqrt use fast_rsqrt.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
gl_TexCoord was deprecated in GLSL 1.30. In GLSL 1.40 it was marked
as ARB_compatibility-only, and in GLSL 1.50 and above it was marked as
only appearing in the compatibility profile. It has never appeared in
GLSL ES.
However, Mesa erroneously included it in all desktop versions of GLSL,
even versions 1.40 and 1.50 (which do not currently support the
compatibility profile). This patch makes gl_TexCoord available in the
compatibility profile (and GLSL versions 1.30 and prior) only.
NOTE: although this is a simple bug fix, it probably isn't sensible to
cherry-pick it to stable release branches, since its only effect is to
cause incorrectly-written shaders to fail to compile.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
The compiler does not know that ilo_3d_pipeline_estimate_size() is pure and
can be eliminated in a release build in gen6_pipeline_end(). Move the call
into the assert().
The AC_CHECK_FILE macro can't be used for cross compiling as it will
result in "error: cannot check for file existence when cross compiling".
Replace it with the AS_IF macro.
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Liu <net147@gmail.com>
GLSL spec says that rsq is undefined for src<=0, but the D3D10
spec says it needs to be a NaN, so lets stop taking an absolute
value of the source which completely breaks that behavior. For
the gl program we can simply insert an extra abs instrunction
which produces the desired behavior there.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
TGSI_OPCODE_KIL and KILP had confusing names. The former was conditional
kill (if any src component < 0). The later was unconditional kill.
At one time KILP was supposed to work with NV-style condition
codes/predicates but we never had that in TGSI.
This patch renames both opcodes:
TGSI_OPCODE_KIL -> KILL_IF (kill if src.xyzw < 0)
TGSI_OPCODE_KILP -> KILL (unconditional kill)
Note: I didn't just transpose the opcode names to help ensure that I
didn't miss updating any code anywhere.
I believe I've updated all the relevant code and comments but I'm
not 100% sure that some drivers had this right in the first place.
For example, the radeon driver might have llvm.AMDGPU.kill and
llvm.AMDGPU.kilp mixed up. Driver authors should review their code.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
KILP is really unconditional fragment kill.
We've had KIL and KILP transposed forever. I'll fix that next.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The code happened to work in the past since the (scalar) src args
effectively always have a swizzle of .xxxx, .yyyy, .zzzz, or .wwww so
whether you grab the X or Y component doesn't really matter. Just
fixing the code to make it look right.
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
This update fixes the problem with duplicated typedefs for
GLclampf and GLclampd in the previous version.
It also changes some parameter types for glDebugMessageCallbackARB()
and glTransformFeedbackVaryingsEXT().
Note we should someday update the glapi-gen code so that it
understands void pointer parameters. Currently, the Python code
only understands "GLvoid *" but not "void *". Luckily, the
compilers don't seem to complain about mixing GLvoid and void.
If the size argument isn't a multiple of four, we would have read/
copied uninitialized memory.
Fixes an issue reported by Myles C. Maxfield <myles.maxfield@gmail.com>
They are a non-standard GCC extension that's not widely supported by
other C/C++ compilers.
Use a dynamic array instead.
Trivial. Should fix the MSVC build.
Required by GL_ARB_shading_language_420pack.
Parts based on work done by Todd Previte and Ken Graunke, implementing
basic support for C-style initializers of arrays.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Will be used in a later commit to differentiate between a structure type
declaration and a variable declaration of a struct type. I.e., the
difference between
struct S { float x; }; (is_declaration = true)
and
S s; (is_declaration = false)
Also note that is_declaration = true for
struct S { float x; } s;
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Will be used in a future commit. An ast_type_specifier is stored (rather
than an ast_struct_specifier) with the idea that we may have more
general uses for this in the future. struct names are prefixed with
'#ast.' to avoid collisions with the glsl_types in the symbol table.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
The code float a[2] = float[2]( 3.4, 4.2, 5.0 ); previously generated
this:
error: array constructor must have at least 2 parameters
when in fact it requires exactly two.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romainck@intel.com>
libglslcore.la and libglcpp.la that are built with builtin_compiler are also
linked to by drivers not using libdricore. Since there is no public symbol in
them, it is better to mark all symbols hidden.
Signed-off-by: Chia-I Wu <olvaffe@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
We mark ARB_uniform_buffer_object as enabled under ES 3 since it
contains that functionality, which tricked the compiler into tokenizing
"row_major".
Acked-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This patch adds support for some math optimizations that are generally
considered unsafe, that's why they are currently disabled for compute
shaders.
GL requirements are less strict, so they are enabled for
for GL shaders by default. In case of any issues with
applications that rely on higher precision than guaranteed by GL,
'sbsafemath' option in R600_DEBUG allows to disable them.
v2 - always set proper src vector size for transformed instructions
- check for clamp modifier in the expr_handler::fold_assoc
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
From BSpec: 3D-Media-GPGPU Engine > 3D Pipeline > Pixel >
Pixel Backend > MCS Buffer for Render Target(s) [DevIVB+]:
[DevHSW:GT3]: Clear rectangle must be aligned to two times
the number of pixels in the table shown below...
Observed no piglit, gles3conform regressions with this patch.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=65744
It seems __builtin_ia32_ldmxcsr is only available on gcc and only when
-msse is used. xmmintrin.h/pmmintrin.h provide portable intrinsics, but
these too are only available with gcc when -msse/-msse3 are set.
scons build always sets -msse on x86 builds, but autotools doesn't seem
to.
We could try to get this working on gcc x86 without -msse by emitting
assembly, but I believe that in this day and age we really should be
building Mesa with -msse and -msse2.
The D3D10 spec is very explicit about treatment of denorm floats and
the behavior is exactly the same for them as it would be for -0 or
+0. This makes our shading code match that behavior, since OpenGL
doesn't care and on a few cpu's it's faster (worst case the same).
Float16 conversions will likely break but we'll fix them in a follow
up commit.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Most functions no longer use intel_context, so this patch additionally
removes the local "intel" variables to avoid compiler warnings.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Things worked out in the past because both brw and intel share the same
memory address (by virtue of intel being the first member of brw).
However, brw is what actually gets rzalloc'd (brw_context.c:285), so
freeing that seems safer and more obvious.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
This makes brw_context available in every function that used
intel_context. This makes it possible to start migrating fields from
intel_context to brw_context.
Surprisingly, this actually removes some code, as functions that use
OUT_BATCH don't need to declare "intel"; they just use "brw."
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
These files have forward declarations for intel_context. This makes
brw_context available in the same places without further #include
monkeying.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
brw_context.h includes intel_context.h, but additionally makes the
brw_context structure available. Switching this allows us to start
using brw_context in more places.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
brwCreateContext() has a lot of random things to do. Factoring out the
part that initializes ctx->Const values and shader compiler options
makes the main function a bit easier to read.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Technically, needs_ff_sync was set on Gen5+, but it was only consulted
in the clipper threads and quad/lineloop decomposition code, which are
both Gen4-5 only. So in reality it only identified Ironlake.
The named flag doesn't really clarify things, and seems like overkill.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
perf_debug() doesn't add a newline for you; without this, all the
INTEL_DEBUG=perf output was jumbled together.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Resolves the following gcc warning
opt_flip_matrices.cpp:84:32: warning: unused variable 'deref'
v2: keep the variable, but wrap it in a ifndef NDEBUG block
(suggested by Ian)
Signed-off-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Resolves the following gcc warnings
warning: 'iface_type_name' may be used uninitialized in this function
warning: 'var_mode' may be used uninitialized in this function
Note: The variables are initialised to UNKNOWN and ir_var_auto
Signed-off-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
driver->ProgramStringNotify is only called for ARB programs, fixed
function vertex programs, and ir_to_mesa (which isn't used by the i965
back-end). Therefore, even after geometry shaders are added,
brwProgramStringNotify should only ever be called with a target of
GL_VERTEX_PROGRAM_ARB or GL_FRAGMENT_PROGRAM_ARB.
This patch adds an assertion to clarify that.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
It's done automatically for vertex buffers, but not for constant buffers,
textures, and colorbuffers.
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
This should increase performance if constant uploads are done with the CP DMA,
because only the cache that needs to be flushed is flushed.
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
also flushing any cache in evergreen_emit_cs_shader seems to be superfluous
(we don't flush caches when changing the other shaders either)
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
1. flush SH with read caches
2. add flag for DB flushes
3. add flag for CB flushes
v2: flush all CBs, remove redundant emit_state variable.
v3: Marek: also set the new flags in r600_context_flush, the CP dma functions,
and texture_barrier, and rename them
Signed-off-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
The winsys should do this, because it measures how much time we spend
in buffer_map doing synchronization, which can be viewed with the gallium
HUD.
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
It was wrong, because the offset shouldn't be applied to MSAA depth buffers.
This small cleanup should prevent such issues in the future.
This fixes a lockup in "piglit/fbo-depthstencil default_fb -samples=n".
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Include src0 alpha in the RT write message when using MRT, so it is used
for the alpha test instead of the normal per-RT alpha value.
Fixes broken rendering in Dota2 under Wine [FDO #62647].
No Piglit regressions on Ivybridge.
V2: reuse (and simplify) existing sample_alpha_to_coverage flag in
the FS key, rather than adding another redundant one.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewd-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=62647
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
The logic for choosing number of lods was bogus.
(The code should ultimately handle the case of only one lod even with multiple
quads but currently can't.)
It is perfectly valid for the swizzle to be bigger than 2. For example the
texel offsets could be
SAMPLE ..., IMM[0].zzz
What is not correct is for chan_index to be bigger than 2.
Trivial.
Shaders need a lot of work still. Basic stuff generally works, so this
is basically just fine for gnome-shell, OA etc at this point.
Signed-off-by: Ben Skeggs <bskeggs@redhat.com>
The assertion was always broken but the code unused until enabling the
per-element lod code. Fixes piglit texelFetch vs isampler1D and similar
tests (only run with GL 3.0 version override).
d3d10 requires per-pixel lod calculations for explicit lod, lod bias and
explicit derivatives, and we should probably do it for OpenGL too - at least
if they are used from vertex or geometry shaders (so doesn't apply to lod
bias) this doesn't just affect neighboring pixels.
Some code was already there to handle this so fix it up and enable it.
There will no doubt be a performance hit unfortunately, we could do better
if we'd knew we had a real vector shift instruction (with variable shift
count) but this requires AVX2 on x86 (or a AMD Bulldozer family cpu).
Don't do anything for lod bias and explicit derivatives yet, though
no special magic should be needed for them neither.
Likewise, the size query is still broken just the same.
v2: Use information if lod is a (broadcast) scalar or not. The idea would be
to base this on the actual value, for now just pretend it's a scalar in fs
and not a scalar otherwise (so, per-pixel lod is only used in gs/vs but same
code is generated for fs as before).
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The semantics for overflow detection are a bit tricky with
indexed rendering. If the base index in the elements array
overflows, then the index of the first element should be used,
if the index with bias overflows then it should be treated
like a normal overflow. Also overflows need to be checked for
in all paths that either the bias, or the starting index location.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
The comparison, incorrectly, was greater-than-or-equal to
elt max.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
The texture alignment unit functions are called from brw_tex_layout.c,
so it makes sense to put them there. Since the only caller of
intel_get_texture_alignment_unit() is in brw_tex_layout.c, it could be
made into a static function. However, this patch instead simply folds
it into the caller, as it's only two lines anyway.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
intel_miptree_create_layout() calls intel_get_texture_alignment_unit()
and then immediately calls brw_miptree_layout(). There are no other
callers.
intel_get_texture_alignment_unit() populates the miptree's alignment
unit fields, which are used by brw_miptree_layout() to determine where
to place each miplevel. Since brw_miptree_layout() needs those to be
present, it makes sense to have it initialize them as the first step.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
The driver is compiled in C99 mode, so this is not a problem. It's
slighlty tidier.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This uses Doxygen style for the file comments, and generally makes it
more consistent with the rest of the driver.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Now that both 2DArray and Cube layouts are taken care of by helper
functions, it's easy to just call the right function for each
generation. This is a little cleaner than falling through.
This also reworks the comments. Referencing "Volume 1" of the BSpec
isn't very helpful, since that's only available inside Intel, and it
doesn't even use volume numbers. Also, "Ironlake...finally" sounds a
bit strange considering that almost all hardware uses the 2D array
approach. At this point, Gen4 is the only special case.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
maxBatchSize was only ever initialized to BATCH_SZ, and a few places
used BATCH_SZ directly anyway.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
brw_annotate_aub() is the only implementation of this function, so it
makes sense to just call it directly.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
brw_debug_batch() is the only implementation of this function, so it
makes sense to just call it directly.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
brw_render_target_supported() is the only implementation of this
function, so it makes sense to just call it directly.
Rather than adding an #include of brw_wm.h, this patch moves the
prototype to brw_context.h. Prototypes seem to be in rather arbitrary
places at the moment, and either place seems as good as the other.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
brw_is_hiz_depth_format() is the only implementation of this function,
so it makes sense to just call it directly.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
These functions translate GLenum comparison operations into the hardware
enumerations. They should never be passed something other than a GL
comparison operator, or something is very broken.
Assertions seem more appropriate than fprintf.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Both intel_context.h and brw_defines.h have #defines for comparison
functions, stencil ops, blending logic ops, and blending factors.
They're exactly the same values, so it makes sense to pick one.
brw_defines.h is the logical place for this kind of stuff, so this patch
converts intel_state.c to use the set defined there.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
The __DRI_USE_INVALIDATE extension was added in May 11th, 2010 by commit
4258e3a2e1. At this point, it's unlikely that anyone's using the
right mix of new and old components to hit this path. Deleting it
removes an untested code path and cleans up the driver a bit.
Cc: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
Cc: Keith Packard <keithp@keithp.com>
This wasn't called from anywhere; presumably it was used to examine
brw_regs when debugging shader assembly. However, it prints registers
in a different notation than brw_disasm.c which everyone is used
to...which means I doubt anyone will want to use it.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Having a header file for a single prototype seems rather excessive.
Plus, the actual function is in brw_clear.c, not intel_clear.c, so
there isn't even the .c/.h filename symmetry one might expect.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
This was only used for BOs backed by system memory on i915. With that
gone, there's nothing that even sets source to non-zero, so this is
purely dead code.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Commit cf31a19300 removed support for BOs
backed by system memory, as it was only useful for i915. However, it
removed a little too much code: intel_bufferobj_buffer() used to call
intel_bufferobj_alloc_buffer(), and after that commit, it didn't.
This led to NULL pointer dereferences in several test cases, such as
es3conform's transform_feedback_state_variables test.
This commit restores the allocation, preserving the original behavior.
It may not be the cleanest approach, but tidying should come later.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=66432
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
This eliminates built-in varyings such as gl_Color, gl_SecondaryColor,
gl_TexCoord, and gl_FogFragCoord if they are unused by the next stage or
not written at all (e.g. gl_TexCoord elements). The gl_TexCoord array is
broken down into separate vec4s if needed.
v2: - use a switch statement in varying_info_visitor::visit(ir_variable*)
- use snprintf
- disable the optimization for GLES2
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This ensures that inter-shader outputs and inputs are properly eliminated
across 3 or more shader stages. The behavior is unchanged with 2 or less
shader stages.
For example, elimination of unused FS inputs causes elimination of matching
GS outputs, which causes elimination of the GS inputs that were needed for
evaluation of the eliminated GS outputs, which causes elimination of
matching VS outputs. An unused FS input is all that's needed to trigger
this chain reaction.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
See my explanation in mtypes.h.
v2: don't do this in gallium
v3: also updated the comment at the gl_shader_type definition
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This patch adds texture() for isamplerCubeArray and usamplerCubeArray,
which were entirely missing.
It also makes texture() with a LOD bias fragment shader specific. The
main GLSL specification explicitly says that texturing with LOD bias
should not be allowed for vertex shaders.
Affects Piglit's ARB_texture_cube_map_array/compiler/tex_bias-01.vert.
which tries to use bias in a vertex shader. Currently, it expects this
to pass (so this patch regresses the test), but I've sent a patch to
reverse the expected behavior (so this patch would fix the updated test):
http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/piglit/2013-June/006123.html
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
If reg->Register.Indirect is true then the immediate is not truly a
constant LLVM expression.
There is no performance regression in using LLVMBuildBitCast, as it will
fallback to LLVMConstBitCast internally when the argument is a constant.
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Current implementation of ext_framebuffer_multisample_blit_scaled in
i965/blorp uses nearest filtering for multisample scaled blits. Using
nearest filtering produces blocky artifacts and negates the benefits
of MSAA. That is the reason why extension was not enabled on i965.
This patch implements the bilinear filtering of samples in blorp engine.
Images generated with this patch are free from blocky artifacts and show
big improvement in visual quality.
Observed no piglit and gles3 regressions.
V3:
- Algorithm used for filtering assumes a rectangular grid of samples
roughly corresponding to sample locations.
- Test the boundary conditions on the edges of texture.
V4:
- Clip texcoords and use conditional MOVs.
- Send texture dimensions as push constants.
- Remove the optimization in case of scaled multisample blits.
V5:
- Move mcs_fetch() inside the 'for' loop after computing pixel coordinates.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
We were incorrectly computing the buffer offset when using the
instances. The buffer offset is always equal to:
start_instance * stride + (instance_num / instance_divisor) *
stride
We were completely ignoring the start instance quite
often producing instances that completely wrong, e.g. if
start instance = 5, instance divisor = 2, then on the first
iteration it should be:
5 * stride, not (5/2) * stride as we'd have currently, and if
start instance = 1, instance divisor = 3, then on the first
iteration it should be:
1 * stride, not 0 as we'd have.
This fixes it and adjusts all the code to the changes.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
clipper invocations are computed earlier (of course
before the emittion) so this code was adding bogus
numbers to already computed clipper invocations.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Integers could easily overflow is the starting instance
was large enough. Instead of letting bogus counts through
set the instance to max if it overflown and let our
regular buffer overflow computation handle it.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Our buffer overflow arithmetic was susceptible to integer
overflows which was the buffer overflow logic to break.
Lets use the llvm overflow intrinsics to check for integer
overflows while computing the stride/needed buffer size.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
We weren't taking into account the size of element
that is to be fetched, which meant that it was possible
to overflow the buffer reads if the stride was very
close to the end of the buffer, e.g. stride = 3, buffer
size = 4, and the element to be read = 4. This should
be properly detected as an overflow.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
In the generic Unix case use the "unsigned long" type instead of 32-bit
integers so that the type sizes are consistant on 64-bit machines between X11
and not-X11.
Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
eglplatform.h defaults to X11 on Unix unless told otherwise, so if we're doing a
build without any X11 support tell it so that we don't try including headers
that don't exist.
Also set GL_PC_FLAGS so that the definition is in egl.pc, so that applications
using EGL don't try to pull in X11 headers on systems where EGL was configured
without X11 support.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=64959
Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
The only reason the checks existed were paranoia, when I first
wrote the code I wasn't sure it was correct. Now that I am,
the asserts triggered when XBMC was dropping frames, so remove it.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
The assembly parser can be used to load r300 assembly dumps
and run them through any of the r300 compiler passes.
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Allows MSAA colorbuffers, which have a CMASK automatically and don't
need any further special handling, to be fast cleared. Instead
of clearing the buffer, set the clear color and the CMASK to the
cleared state.
Fast clear is used only when all bound colorbuffers fulfill certain
conditions: a CMASK is required, we have to be able to create a clear
color value for the format and the texture mustn't contain multiple
images. Technically, it should be possible to support array textures
and cubemaps if all images are attached to the framebuffer,
but this does not appear to be common.
v2: fix fast clear check
v3: Marek: - disable fast clear with 128-bit formats, which are unsupported
- set tex->dirty_level_mask in r600_clear, so that the driver knows
the resource must be decompressed/expanded
- return early from r600_clear if there's nothing else to do
Signed-off-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
b04a295a4a removed seemingly unnecessary
code in get_query. Turns out this code could in fact be reached - while
timestamps are always binned, if there are no bins (which happens if fb
size is 0) then the rasterization query code filling this in is still
never executed.
So fix this up by filling in some timestamp, but do it at EndQuery time
not GetQuery time which should be more appropriate.
Makes piglit arb_timer_query-timestamp-get happy again.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
While i915 does have hardware contexts in hardware, we don't expect there
to ever be SW support for it (given that support hasn't even made it back
to gen5 or gen4).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Every driver left in Mesa that enables one also enables the other.
There's no reason to let it be optional.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
In Mesa, this extension is implemented purely in software. Drivers may
*optionally* provide optimized paths. If a driver enables,
GL_ARB_texture_multisample, it gets GL_ARB_texture_storage_multisample
for free.
NOTE: This has the side effect of enabling the extension in Gallium
drivers that enable GL_ARB_texture_multisample.
v2 (Ken): Still prevent multisample texture targets in TexParameter for
implementations that don't support multisampling.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
In Mesa, this extension is implemented purely in software. Drivers may
*optionally* provide optimized paths.
NOTE: This has the side effect of enabling the extension in the radeon,
r200, and nouveau drivers.
v2: Minor whitespace tidying (suggested by Brian).
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This extension just provides some of the most basic software framework
for GLSL. Without GL_ARB_vertex_shader or GL_ARB_fragment_shader,
applications still cannot use GLSL. There's no value in
conditionalizing support for this extension.
NOTE: This has the side effect of enabling the extension in the radeon,
r200, and nouveau drivers.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This extension just provides some of the most basic software framework
for GLSL. Without GL_ARB_vertex_shader or GL_ARB_fragment_shader,
applications still cannot use GLSL. There's no value in
conditionalizing support for this extension.
NOTE: This has the side effect of enabling the extension in the radeon,
r200, and nouveau drivers.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Every driver left in Mesa enables this extension all the time. There's
no reason to let it be optional.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Every driver left in Mesa enables this extension all the time. There's
no reason to let it be optional.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Every driver left in Mesa enables this extension all the time. There's
no reason to let it be optional.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Every driver left in Mesa enables this extension all the time. There's
no reason to let it be optional.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Commit bab755a made the implementation a no-op, and it was only ever
enabled by software rasterizers.
v2: Move the spec into docs/specs/OLD since it's now obsolete
(squashed patch from Andreas Boll)
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
_mesa_enable_sw_extensions enables all the extensions (and more) that
the others enable. Also, don't duplicate the DXTn checks.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This copy of the source file is only used for GEN >= 4, so extensions
that are enabled for GEN >= 4 are always enabled.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This copy of the source file is only used for GEN >= 4, so extensions
that are enabled for GEN >= 3 are always enabled.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This copy of the source file is only used for GEN <= 3, so remove the
dead code.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
brw_wm_surface_state.c has gotten rather large and unwieldy. At this
point, it consists of two separate portions:
1. Surface format code
This includes the giant table of surface formats and what features
they support on each generation, as well as the code to translate
between Mesa formats and hardware formats.
This is used across all generations.
2. Binding table (SURFACE_STATE) related code.
This is the code to generate SURFACE_STATE entries for renderbuffers,
textures, transform feedback buffers, constant buffers, and so on, as
well as the code to assemble them into binding tables.
This is only used on Gen4-6; gen7_surface_state.c has Gen7+ code.
Since the two are logically separate, and one is reused on every
generation while the other is not, it makes a lot of sense to split
them out. It should also make finding code easier.
No code is changed by this patch. I simply copied the file then deleted
portions of both.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
On CIK, DB switches back to using per-surface tiling
parameters rather than the tile index used on SI.
Signed-off-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Assertions are not sufficient to check for null pointers as they don't
show up in release builds. So, return ZeroVec/dummyReg instead of NULL
pointer in get_{src,dst}_register_pointer(). This should calm down the
warnings from static analysis tool.
Note: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
If allocation fails in intel_miptree_create_layout(), don't proceed to
dereference the miptree. Return an early NULL.
Fixes static analysis error reported by Klocwork.
Note: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
This was just ignored (unless for some reason like unfilled polys draw was
handling this).
I'm not convinced of that code, putting the float for the clamp in the key
isn't really a good idea. Then again the other floats for depth bias are
already in there too anyway (should probably have a jit_context for the
setup function), so this is just a quick fix.
Also, the "minimum resolvable depth difference" used isn't really right as it
should be calculated according to the z values of the current primitive
and not be a constant (of course, this only makes a difference for float
depth buffers), at least for d3d10, so depth biasing is still not quite right.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
If there are queries active the opaque optimization reseting the bin needs to
be disabled.
(Not really tested since the bug was discovered by code inspection not
an actual test failure.)
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This patch fixes segfaults observed when enabling the post processing
features. When the format is not supported, or a texture cannot be
created, the code must gracefully handle failure and report the error to
the calling code for proper failure handling.
To accomplish this the following changes were made to the filters.h
prototypes:
- bool return for pp_init_func
- Added pp_free_func for filter specific resource destruction
Fixes segfaults from backtraces:
* util_destroy_blit
pp_free
* u_transfer_inline_write_vtbl
pp_jimenezmlaa_init_run
pp_init
This patch also uses tgsi_alloc_tokens to allocate temporary tokens in
pp_tgsi_to_state, instead of allocating the array on the stack. This
fixes the following stack corruption segfault in pp_run.c:
* _int_free
aaline_delete_fs_state
pp_free
Bug Number: 1021843
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
OpenGL doesn't support this but d3d10 does.
It is a bit of a pain as it is necessary to keep track of queries
still active at the end of a scene, which is also why I cheat a bit
and limit the amount of simultaneously active queries to (arbitrary)
16 (simplifies things because don't have to deal with a real list
that way). I can't think of a reason why you'd really want large
numbers of overlapping/nested queries so it is hopefully fine.
(This only affects queries which need to be binned.)
v2: don't copy remainder of array when deleting an entry simply replace
the deleted entry with the last one (order doesn't matter).
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Previously lp_rast_begin_query commands were always inserted into each bin,
and re-issued if the scene was restarted, while lp_rast_end_query commands
were executed for each still active query at the end of tile rasterization.
Also, the ps_invocations and vis_counter were set to zero when the respective
command was encountered.
This however cannot work for multiple queries of the same type (note that
occlusion counter and occlusion predicate while different type were also
affected).
So, change the logic to always set the ps_invocations and vis_counter to zero
at the start of tile rasterization, and then use "start" and "end" per-thread
query values when encountering the begin/end query commands instead, which
should work for multiple queries of the same type. This also means queries do
not have to be reissued in a new scene, however they still need to be finished
at end of tile rasterization, so a list of queries still active at the end of
a scene needs to be maintained.
Also while here don't bin the queries which don't do anything in rasterization.
(This change does not actually handle multiple queries of the same type yet,
as the list of active queries is just a simple fixed array and setup can still
only have one query active per type.)
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Now that i915's forked off, they don't need to live in a shared directory.
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Acked-by: Adam Jackson <ajax@redhat.com>
(and I hear second hand that idr is OK with it, too)
Of this 15000 lines of code in intel/, we've identified 4000 lines that
are trivially unnecessary for i915, and another 1000 that are pointless for
i965, and expect to find more as time goes on. Split the i915 driver off,
so that we can continue active development on i965 without worrying about
breaking i915.
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Acked-by: Adam Jackson <ajax@redhat.com>
(and I hear second hand that idr is OK with it, too)
This has the (intended!) side effect that vertex shader inputs and
fragment shader outputs will appear in the IR in the same order that
they appeared in the shader code. This results in the locations being
assigned in the declared order. Many (arguably buggy) applications
depend on this behavior, and it matches what nearly all other drivers
do.
Fixes the (new) piglit test attrib-assignments.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches (and requires the
previous commit to prevent a regression in OpenGL ES 2.0 conformance
test stencil_plane_operation).
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
The checks to determine when the data can be uploaded in an interleaved
fashion can be tricked by certain data layouts. For example,
float data[...];
glVertexAttribPointer(0, 4, GL_FLOAT, GL_FALSE, 16, &data[0]);
glVertexAttribPointer(1, 4, GL_FLOAT, GL_FALSE, 16, &data[4]);
glDrawArrays(GL_POINTS, 0, 1);
will hit the interleaved path with an incorrect size (16 bytes instead
of 32 bytes). As a result, the data for attribute 1 never gets
uploaded. The single element draw case is the only sensible case I can
think of for non-interleaved-that-looks-like-interleaved data, but there
may be others as well.
To fix this, make sure that the end of the element in the array being
checked is within the stride "window." Previously the code would check
that the begining of the element was within the window.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The 20130624 version of glext.h changed this to match the
glMultiDrawElements() function which already had the extra const
qualifier.
Fixes warnings/errors that seem to vary from one compiler to the next.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
vec4_visitor::generate_code() switches on vec4_instruction::opcode and
calls into the brw_eu_emit.c layer to generate code for some of them.
It then has a default case which calls generate_vec4_instruction() to
handle the rest...which switches on opcode and handles the rest of the
cases.
The split apparently is that generate_code() handles the actual hardware
opcodes (BRW_OPCODE_*) while generate_vec4_instruction() handles the
virtual opcodes (SHADER_OPCODE_* and VS_OPCODE_*). But this looks
fairly arbitrary, and it makes more sense to combine the two switches.
This patch moves the cases from generate_code() into the helper function
so that generate_code() isn't as large.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Commit 526ffdfc03 attempted to generalize
the source register type assertions to allow D and UD. However, the
src1 and src2 assertions actually checked src0.type against D and UD due
to a copy and paste bug.
It also began setting the source and destination register types based on
dest.type, ignoring src0/src1/src2.type completely. BFE and BFI2 may
actually pass mixed D/UD types and expect them to be ignored, which is
arguably a bit sloppy, but not too crazy either.
This patch simply removes the source register assertions as those values
aren't used anyway. It also clarifies the comment above the block that
sets the register types.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Commit 526ffdfc03 relaxed the type
assertions in brw_alu3 to allow D/UD types (required by BFE and BFI2).
This lost us the strict type checking for MAD and LRP, which require
all four types to be float.
This patch adds a new ALU3F wrapper which checks these once again.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Over the last few years, the compiler has grown to support 7 different
language versions and 6 extensions that add new built-in types. With
more and more features being added, some of our core code has devolved
into an unmaintainable spaghetti of sorts.
A few problems with the old code:
1. Built-in types are declared...where exactly?
The types in builtin_types.h were organized in arrays by the language
version or extension they were introduced in. It's factored out to
avoid duplicates---every type only exists in one array. But that
means that sampler1D is declared in 110, sampler2D is in core types,
sampler3D is a unique global not in a list...and so on.
2. Spaghetti call-chains with weird parameters:
generate_300ES_types calls generate_130_types which calls
generate_120_types and generate_EXT_texture_array_types, which calls
generate_110_types, which calls generate_100ES_types...and more
Except that ES doesn't want 1D types, so we have a skip_1d parameter.
add_deprecated also falls into this category.
3. Missing type accessors.
Common types have convenience pointers (like glsl_type::vec4_type),
but others may not be accessible at all without a symbol table (for
example, sampler types).
4. Global variable declarations in a header file?
#include "builtin_types.h" in two C++ files would break the build.
The new code addresses these problems. All built-in types are declared
together in a single table, independent of when they were introduced.
The macro that declares a new built-in type also creates a convenience
pointer, so every type is available and it won't get out of sync.
The code to populate a symbol table with the appropriate types for a
particular language version and set of extensions is now a single
table-driven function. The table lists the type name and GL/ES versions
when it was introduced (similar to how the lexer handles reserved
words). A single loop adds types based on the language version.
Explicit extension checks then add additional types. If they were
already added based on the language version, glsl_symbol_table simply
ignores the request to add them a second time, meaning we don't need
to worry about duplicates and can simply list types where they belong.
v2: Mark uvecs and shadow samplers as ES3 only, and 1DArrayShadow as
unsupported in ES entirely. Add a touch more doxygen.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Using a random glsl_type convenience pointer as an array is a really bad
idea, for all the reasons mentioned in the previous commit.
The new glsl_type::bvec() function is simpler anyway.
Prevents breakage in the next commit.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Currently, vector types are linked together closely: the glsl_type
objects for float, vec2, vec3, and vec4 are all elements of the same
array, in that exact order. This makes it possible to obtain vector
types via pointer arithmetic on the scalar type's convenience pointer.
For example, float_type + (3 - 1) = vec3.
However, relying on this is extremely fragile. There's no particular
reason the underlying type objects need to be stored in an array. They
could be individual class members, possibly with padding between them.
Then the pointer arithmetic would break, and we'd get bad pointers to
non-heap allocated data, causing subtle breakage that can't be detected
by valgrind. Cue insanity.
Or someone could simply reorder the type variables, causing us to get
the wrong type entirely. Also cue insanity.
Writing this explicitly is much safer. With the new helper functions,
it's a bit less code even.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This patch introduces new functions to quickly grab a pointer to a
vector type. For example:
glsl_type::bvec(4) returns glsl_type::bvec4_type
glsl_type::ivec(3) returns glsl_type::ivec3_type
glsl_type::uvec(2) returns glsl_type::uvec2_type
glsl_type::vec(1) returns glsl_type::float_type
This is less wordy than glsl_type::get_instance(GLSL_TYPE_BOOL, 4, 1),
which can help avoid extra word wrapping.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
In glapi_priv.h we always need the typedef for the GLclampx type
since GL_OES_fixed_point is now defined in glext.h but the
GLclampx type is not. GLclampx is not used by anything in glext.h
but we need it for GL ES dispatch.
This is a huge patch because the structure of the file has been
changed.
The following extensions are new, however:
GL_AMD_interleaved_elements
GL_AMD_shader_trinary_minmax
GL_IBM_static_data
GL_INTEL_map_texture
GL_NV_compute_program5
GL_NV_deep_texture3D
GL_NV_draw_texture
GL_NV_shader_atomic_counters
GL_NV_shader_storage_buffer_object
GL_NVX_conditional_render
GL_OES_byte_coordinates
GL_OES_compressed_paletted_texture
GL_OES_fixed_point
GL_OES_query_matrix
GL_OES_single_precision
And these extensions were removed:
GL_FfdMaskSGIX
GL_INGR_palette_buffer
GL_INTEL_texture_scissor
GL_SGI_depth_pass_instrument
GL_SGIX_fog_scale
GL_SGIX_impact_pixel_texture
GL_SGIX_texture_select
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This prevents trampling beyond the end of the command stream during flushes.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reported-by: Christoph Bumiller <christoph.bumiller@speed.at>
Signed-off-by: Maarten Lankhorst <maarten.lankhorst@canonical.com>
max_threads cannot be greater than 28. It is either 21 or 28.
Fixes "Logically dead code" defect reported by Coverity.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Chia-I Wu <olvaffe@gmail.com>
We want to access the user buffer, if available, when primitive restart is
enabled and the restart index/primitive type is not natively supported.
And since we are handling index buffer uploads in the driver with this change,
we can also work around misalignment of index buffer offsets.
Rename ilo_finalize_states() to ilo_finalize_3d_states(), and bind
pipe_draw_info to the context when it is called. This saves us from having to
pass pipe_draw_info around in several places.
The polygon offset math used for triangles by the WM is "OffsetUnits * 2 *
MRD + OffsetFactor * m" where 'MRD' is the minimum resolvable difference
for the depth buffer (~1/(1<<16) or ~1/(1<<24)), 'm' is the approximated
slope from the GL spec, and '2' is this magic number from the original
i965 code dump that we deviate from the GL spec by because "it makes glean
work" (except that it doesn't, because of some hilarity with 0.5 *
approximately 2.0 != 1.0. go glean!).
This clipper code for unfilled polygons, on the other hand, was doing
"OffsetUnits * garbage + OffsetFactor * m", where garbage was MRD in the
case of 16-bit depth visual (regardless the FBO's depth resolution), or
128 * MRD for 24-bit depth visual.
This change just makes the unfilled polygons behavior match the WM's
filled polygons behavior.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
There's no reason to care about the window system visual's depth for
handling polygon offset in an FBO, and it could only lead to pain.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The separate function for the fallback checks wasn't particularly
clarifying things, so I put the improved checks in the caller. (Note that
the dropped _mesa_update_state() had already happened once at the start of
the caller)
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
I think we've all added instrumentation at one point or another to see
what's being called in blorp. Now you can quickly get output like:
Testing glCopyPixels(depth).
intel_hiz_exec depth clear to mt 0x16d9160 level 0 layer 0
intel_hiz_exec depth resolve to mt 0x16d9160 level 0 layer 0
intel_hiz_exec hiz ambiguate to mt 0x16d9160 level 0 layer 0
intel_hiz_exec depth resolve to mt 0x16d9160 level 0 layer 0
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Commit 551c991606 tried to avoid spilling
registers that were trivially colorable. But since we do optimistic
coloring, the top of the stack also contains nodes that are not trivially
colorable, so we need to consider them for spilling (since they are some
of our best candidates).
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=58384
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=63674
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
It should never happen, but it does, and at this point, you're going to
_mesa_problem() and abort() (unless it's just in precompile). Give the
developer something to look at.
Some shells does not set variables sequentially in a statement i.e. "a=X
b=${a}" won't set "b" to "X" but empty value.
This patch introduce ";" to make sure "mo" is set properly before "lang"
assignment.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=471302
The last piece of code with an effect was flagging _NEW_BUFFERS. Only,
that is already flagged from everything that calls this function: Mesa GL
state updates flag it before even calling down into the driver, and the
calls from the DRI2 window system framebuffer update path end up flagging
it as part of the ResizeBuffers() hook.
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The computed fields are updated appropriately as part of the normal draw
call path due to _NEW_BUFFERS being set.
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
For winsys FBOs, the bounds are appropriately updated immediately upon
_mesa_resize_framebuffer(). For user FBOs, they're updated as part of the
normal draw path state update due to _NEW_BUFFERS having been flagged.
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Of the places noting a _NEW_DEPTH dependency, all were already checking
for _NEW_BUFFERS if appropriate.
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
2/3 packets depending on Stencil._Enabled already checked for
_NEW_BUFFERS, so just add _NEW_BUFFERS to the remaining one.
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The viewport (ctx->Viewport._WindowMap) doesn't change with drawable size
changes, and we update scissor (ctx->DrawBuffer->_Xmin and friends) on
_NEW_BUFFERS in things like brw_sf_state.c.
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Things like brw_sf.c that need to know about orientation are already
recomputing on _NEW_BUFFERS.
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
_mesa_resize_framebuffer(), the default value of the ResizeBuffers hook,
already checks for a window system framebuffer and walks the renderbuffers
calling AllocStorage().
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
_mesa_resize_framebuffer(), the default value of the ResizeBuffers hook,
already checks for a window system framebuffer and walks the renderbuffers
calling AllocStorage().
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This existed to tell the core not to call GetBufferSize, except that even
if you didn't set it nothing happened because nobody had a GetBufferSize.
v2: Remove two more instances of setting the field (from Brian)
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Only the GDI driver set it to non-NULL any more, and that driver has a
Viewport hook that should keep it limping along as well as it ever has.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
commit 26d86d26f9 added
gl_shader_program::UniformLocationBaseScale. According to the code
comments in that commit, UniformLocationBaseScale "must be >=1".
UniformLocationBaseScale is of type unsigned. Coverity reported a "Macro
compares unsigned to 0" defect as well.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
The function does array bounds checking. Note, this exposes a
bug in the svga_mark_surface_dirty() function: we're calling
svga_age_texture_view() with a texture slice instead of mipmap
level. This can lead to a failed assertion. That'll be fixed next.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
- use mgwhelp -- the successor for bfdhelp which does not have a hard
dependency on BFD, and works on 64bits.
- use a macro instead of hand-typing to dispatch DbgHelp functions
- dump line numbers
- dump module names when symbols are not available
- support 64bits.
- add comments
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Because our code couldn't handle it we were skipping rendering
if we detected overflows. According to the spec we should
still render but with all 0 vertices, which is what the llvm
code already does. So for the llvm paths lets enable processing
even if an overflow condition has been detected.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Before we could easily overflow if start+count>max integer. To
avoid it we can just iterate over the count. This makes sure
that we never crash, since most of the overflow conditions
is already handled.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Make pass_render_condition() available for blitter, and check for render
condition in (and only in) clear(), clear_render_target(), and
clear_depth_stencil().
Add ilo_shader_select_kernel_routing() to construct 3DSTATE_SBE. It is called
in ilo_finalize_states(), rather than in create_fs_state(), as it depends on
VS/GS and rasterizer states.
With this change, ilo_shader_internal.h is no longer needed for
ilo_gpe_gen6.c.
This allows us to remove ilo_shader_internal.h from ilo_gpe_gen7.c. The
unfinished code in 3DSTATE_DS, 3DSTATE_HS, and INTERFACE_DESCRIPTOR_DATA are
partly or entirely removed.
The unmodified pipe_stream_output_info describes its outputs as if they are in
TGSI_FILE_OUTPUT. Remap the register indices to where they appear in the VUE.
TGSI_SEMANTIC_PSIZE needs a little care because it is at the W channel.
When a new VS kernel is generated, a newly added function,
ilo_gpe_init_vs_cso(), is called to construct 3DSTATE_VS command in
ilo_shader_cso. When the command needs to be emitted later, we copy the
command from the CSO instead of constructing it dynamically.
Add ilo_shader_get_type() to query the type (PIPE_SHADER_x) of the shader.
Add ilo_shader_get_kernel_offset() and ilo_shader_get_kernel_param() to query
the cache offset and various kernel parameters of the selected kernel.
Add ilo_shader_select_kernel() to replace the dependency table,
ilo_shader_variant_init(), and ilo_shader_state_use_variant().
With the changes, we no longer need to include ilo_shader_internal.h in
ilo_state.c.
Replace ilo_shader_state_create() by
ilo_shader_create_vs()
ilo_shader_create_gs()
ilo_shader_create_fs()
ilo_shader_create_cs()
Rename ilo_shader_state_destroy() to ilo_shader_destroy(). The old
ilo_shader_destroy() is renamed to ilo_shader_destroy_kernel().
To prevent segfaults in the AA line module, the code will check for a
valid pointer to the aaline_stage in the draw context.
Fixes segfault from backtrace:
* aaline_stage_from_pipe
aaline_delete_fs_state
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
swrastGetImage rounds the pitch up to 4 bytes for compatibility reasons
that are explained in drisw_glx.c:bytes_per_line, so drisw_update_tex_buffer
must do the same.
Fixes window skew seen while running firefox over vnc on a 16-bit screen.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
[ajax: fixed typo in comment]
Reviewed-by: Stéphane Marchesin <marcheu@chromium.org>
Signed-off-by: Richard Sandiford <rsandifo@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Squashed commit of the following:
commit 0857a7e105bfcbc4d1431b2cc56612094c747ca3
Author: Richard Sandiford <r.sandiford@uk.ibm.com>
Date: Tue Jun 18 12:25:07 2013 -0400
gallivm: Fix lp_build_rgba8_to_fi32_soa for big endian
Reviewed-by: Adam Jackson <ajax@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Sandiford <r.sandiford@uk.ibm.com>
commit 0d65131649a8aa140e2db228ba779d685c4333e3
Author: Richard Sandiford <r.sandiford@uk.ibm.com>
Date: Tue Jun 18 12:25:07 2013 -0400
gallivm: Fix big-endian machines
This adds a bit-shift count to the format table, and adds the concept of
vector or bitwise alignment on gathers.
Reviewed-by: Adam Jackson <ajax@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Sandiford <r.sandiford@uk.ibm.com>
commit 9740bda9b7dc894b629ed38be9b51059ce90818f
Author: Richard Sandiford <r.sandiford@uk.ibm.com>
Date: Tue Jun 18 12:25:07 2013 -0400
llvmpipe: Fix convert_to_blend_type on big-endian
Reviewed-by: Adam Jackson <ajax@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Sandiford <r.sandiford@uk.ibm.com>
commit ae037c2de0f029e4e99371c0de25560484f0d8df
Author: Richard Sandiford <r.sandiford@uk.ibm.com>
Date: Tue Jun 18 12:25:06 2013 -0400
util: Convert color pack to packed formats
This fixes them on big-endian.
Reviewed-by: Adam Jackson <ajax@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Sandiford <r.sandiford@uk.ibm.com>
commit 5b05ac0c89ae092ea8ba5bba9f739708d7396b5c
Author: Richard Sandiford <r.sandiford@uk.ibm.com>
Date: Tue Jun 18 12:25:06 2013 -0400
graw-xlib: Convert to packed formats
Reviewed-by: Adam Jackson <ajax@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Sandiford <r.sandiford@uk.ibm.com>
commit 51396e7d098cb6ff794391cf11afe4dbf86dbea0
Author: Richard Sandiford <r.sandiford@uk.ibm.com>
Date: Tue Jun 18 12:25:06 2013 -0400
format: Convert to packed formats
Reviewed-by: Adam Jackson <ajax@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Sandiford <r.sandiford@uk.ibm.com>
commit 417b60bc66eb450e68a92ab0e47f76e292b385e6
Author: Adam Jackson <ajax@redhat.com>
Date: Tue Jun 18 12:25:06 2013 -0400
st/dri: Convert to packed formats
Reviewed-by: Adam Jackson <ajax@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Sandiford <r.sandiford@uk.ibm.com>
commit 0934b2e022a5e0847d312c40734e2b44cac52fd8
Author: Richard Sandiford <r.sandiford@uk.ibm.com>
Date: Tue Jun 18 12:25:06 2013 -0400
st/xlib: Convert to packed formats
Reviewed-by: Adam Jackson <ajax@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Sandiford <r.sandiford@uk.ibm.com>
commit a307ea3c3716a706963acce7966b5e405ba11db9
Author: Richard Sandiford <r.sandiford@uk.ibm.com>
Date: Tue Jun 18 12:25:06 2013 -0400
gbm: Convert to packed formats
Reviewed-by: Adam Jackson <ajax@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Sandiford <r.sandiford@uk.ibm.com>
commit 53eebdd253e1960a645ea278f31d7ef6a6cf4aeb
Author: Richard Sandiford <r.sandiford@uk.ibm.com>
Date: Tue Jun 18 12:25:06 2013 -0400
tests: Convert to packed formats
Reviewed-by: Adam Jackson <ajax@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Sandiford <r.sandiford@uk.ibm.com>
commit 2f77fe3ee524945eacd546efcac34f7799fb3124
Author: Adam Jackson <ajax@redhat.com>
Date: Tue Jun 18 13:07:37 2013 -0400
gallium: Document packed formats
Signed-off-by: Adam Jackson <ajax@redhat.com>
commit 1f1017159ce951f922210a430de9229f91f62714
Author: Richard Sandiford <r.sandiford@uk.ibm.com>
Date: Tue Jun 18 12:25:06 2013 -0400
gallium: Introduce 32-bit packed format names
These are for interacting with buffers natively described in terms of
bit shifts, like X11 visuals:
uint32_t xyzw8888 = (x << 0) | (y << 8) | (z << 16) | (w << 24);
Define these in terms of (endian-dependent) aliases to the array-style
format names.
Reviewed-by: Adam Jackson <ajax@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Sandiford <r.sandiford@uk.ibm.com>
commit 6cc7ab1ee66ed668da78c1d951dfd7782b4e786a
Author: Adam Jackson <ajax@redhat.com>
Date: Mon Jun 3 12:10:32 2013 -0400
gallium: Document format name conventions
v2:
- Fix a channel name thinko (Michel Dänzer)
- Elaborate on SCALED versus INT
- Add links to DirectX and FOURCC docs
Signed-off-by: Adam Jackson <ajax@redhat.com>
commit df4d269e7fb62051a3c029b84147465001e5776e
Author: Adam Jackson <ajax@redhat.com>
Date: Tue Jun 18 12:25:06 2013 -0400
gallivm: Remove all notion of byte-swapping
Signed-off-by: Adam Jackson <ajax@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Adam Jackson <ajax@redhat.com>
The result isn't always 0 in this case (depends on query type),
so instead of special casing this just use the ordinary path (should result
in correct values thanks to initialization in query_begin/end), just
skipping the fence wait.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This fixes the bytestream parsing of mpeg-1 stream, but still leaves
open a number of issues with the interpretation:
- IDCT mismatch control is not correct for MPEG-1.
- Slices do not have to start and end on the same horizontal row of macroblocks.
- picture_coding_type = 4 (D-pictures) is not handled.
- full_pel_*_vector is not handled.
Signed-off-by: Maarten Lankhorst <maarten.lankhorst@canonical.com>
The results of a bary.f do not appear to be immediatley available, but
there is no explicit sync bit. Instead the compiler must just ensure
that there are a minimum number of instructions following the bary
before use of the result of the bary. We aren't clever enough for that
so just throw in some nop's.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robclark@freedesktop.org>
If we are accumulating result into tmp.x, and need a mov to final
destination, we want to move the .x component into all of the components
enabled from the read dest's writemask, ie. we want:
MOV dst.xyzw tmp.xxxx
rather than:
MOV dst.xyzw tmp.xyzw
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robclark@freedesktop.org>
This code had no relation to ir_to_mesa.cpp, since it was also used by
intel and state_tracker, and most of it was duplicated with the standalone
compiler (which has periodically drifted from the Mesa copy).
v2: Split from the ir_to_mesa to shaderapi.c changes.
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com> (v1)
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
There was nothing ir_to_mesa-specific about this code, but it's not
exactly part of the compiler's core turning-source-into-IR job either.
v2: Split from the ir_to_mesa to glsl/ commit, avoid renaming the sh
variable.
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com> (v1)
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
I noticed this while trying to merge code with the builtin compiler, which
does set it.
Note that this causes two regressions in piglit in
default-precision-sampler.* which try to link without a vertex or fragment
shader, due to being run under the desktop glslparsertest binary (using
ARB_ES3_compatibility) that doesn't know about this requirement.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
We were duplicating this code all over the place, and they all would need
updating for the next set of shader targets.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
We have ir->print() to do the old declaration of a visitor and having the
IR accept the visitor (yuck!). And now you can call _mesa_print_ir()
safely anywhere that you know what an ir_instruction is.
A couple of missing printf("\n")s are added in error paths -- when an
expression is handed to the visitor, it doesn't print '\n' (since it might
be a step in printing a whole expression tree).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
No more forgetting to #include "ir_print_visitor.h" when doing temporary
debug code, or forgetting and leaving it in after removing your temporary
debug code. Also, available from C code so you don't need to move the
caller to C++ just to call it (see also: ir_to_mesa.cpp).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Based from the code from the good old python state tracker.
Extremely handy to diagnose regressions in state trackers.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Not used yet but there's a couple of places in llvmpipe which should use this
(occlusion count is currently very inefficent if there's no cpu popcnt
instruction).
Handle PIPE_QUERY_GPU_FINISHED and PIPE_QUERY_TIMESTAMP_DISJOINT, and
also fill out the ps_invocations and c_primitives from the
PIPE_QUERY_PIPELINE_STATISTICS (the others in there should already
be handled). Note that ps_invocations isn't pixel exact, just 16 pixel
exact but I guess it's better than nothing.
Doesn't really seem to work correctly but there's probably bugs elsewhere.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The driver can do render_condition but wasn't handling the occlusion
and so_overflow predicates (though the latter might not work yet due
to gs support).
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The semantics didn't really make sense, not really matching neither d3d9
(though the docs are all broken there) nor d3d10. So make it match d3d10
semantics, which actually gives meaning to the "disjoint" part.
Drivers are fixed up in a very primitive way, I have no idea what could
actually cause the counter to become unreliable so just always return
FALSE for the disjoint part.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Move some functions from the svga_tgsi_insn.h header into the
svga_tgsi_insn.c file since they're only used there. Plus, add
comments and fix formatting.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The new code makes the shader cache manages all shaders and be able to upload
all of them to a caller-provided bo as a whole.
Previously, we uploaded only the bound shaders. When a different set of
shaders is bound, we had to allocate a new kernel bo to upload if the current
one is busy.
When doing blit using the 3D engine, the rasterizer cso may be NULL.
Ported from nvc0 commit 8aa8b0539.
Signed-off-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
We need to set up a handler for the global_remove event that gets sent
out when a global gets removed. Without the handler we end up calling
a NULL pointer.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=65910
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
When rendering to a texture with BaseLevel set, the miptree may be laid
out such that BaseLevel is in level 0 of the miptree (to avoid wasting
memory on unused levels between 0 and BaseLevel-1). In that case, we
have to shift our render target's level down to the appropriate level of
the smaller miptree.
The WebGL test in combination with a meta code relating to
glGenerateMipmap also triggered a similar failure scenario.
This GPU hang regression was introduced by c754f7a8.
Bugzilla: http://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=65324
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This reverts commit 41966fdb3b.
While it's a lot cleaner it causes regressions because
the draw interface is always called from the draw functions
of the drivers (because the buffers need to be mapped) which
means that the stream output buffers endup being cleared on
every draw rather than on setting.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
honor render_condition for clear_render_target and clear_depth_stencil.
Also add minimal support for occlusion predicate, though it can't be active
at the same time as an occlusion query yet.
While here also switchify some large if-else (actually just mutually
exclusive if-if-if...) constructs.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
For conditional rendering this makes it possible to skip rendering
if either the predicate is true or false, as supported by d3d10
(in fact previously it was sort of implied skip rendering if predicate
is false for occlusion predicate, and true for so_overflow predicate).
There's no cap bit for this as presumably all drivers could do it trivially
(but this patch does not implement it for the drivers using true
hw predicates, nvxx, r600, radeonsi, no change is expected for OpenGL
functionality).
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Add ilo_gpe_init_zs_surface() to construct
3DSTATE_DEPTH_BUFFER
3DSTATE_STENCIL_BUFFER
3DSTATE_HIER_DEPTH_BUFFER
at surface creation time. This allows fast state emission in draw_vbo().
This gets us support for blitting to attachment types other than
textures.
v2: fix up comments from review by Kenneth.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Now any caller (such as glCopyPixels()) can benefit from it, and it only
changes the correct subset of the destination instead of a whole teximage.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Apparently we don't have any piglit tests for this, because it would have
assertion failed in a debug build, or just rendered wrong in a non-debug
build if the destination wasn't covering whole tiles.
v2: Use the new macros.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com> (v1)
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org> (v1)
We're going to add more BCS_SWCTRL setup instances soon, and you have to
be careful to have the set and restore atomic with the rendering that's
done, so that our state doesn't leak out to other rendering processes.
v2: Rewrite the patch to have batch begin/advance macros so that magic
numbers don't get sprinkled around (and so you don't mix up your
do-I-need-to-reset vs what-do-I-reset-to logic, which I nearly did in
the next patch when first writing it)
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Intel had brokenness here, and I'd like to continue moving Mesa toward
hiding 1D_ARRAY's ridiculousness inside of the core, like we did with
MapTextureImage. Fixes copyteximage 1D_ARRAY on intel.
There's still an impedance mismatch in meta when falling back to read and
texsubimage, since texsubimage expects coordinates into 1D_ARRAY as
(width, slice, 0) instead of (width, 0, slice).
v2: Fix offset of scanline reads from the source. (Thanks Brian!), replace
dd.h comment with Paul's text and replace early exit with an assert.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com> (v1)
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org> (v1)
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com> (v1)
I noticed this code didn't work as advertised while doing some passing around
of TGSI shaders and trying to reparse them, and things failing.
This seems to fix it here for at least the small test case I hacked into a
graw test.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Commit 1f82bf12ed inadvertently broke it, checking for __IEEE_FLOAT on all
Alpha machines instead of only on VMS as before.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Andreas Boll <andreas.boll.dev@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Sven Joachim <svenjoac@gmx.de>
Fixes window skew seen while running gnome on a 16-bit screen over vnc.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Sandiford <rsandifo@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Fixes a crash seen while running gnome on a 16-bit screen over vnc.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Sandiford <rsandifo@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
byteswap.h and bswap_32 aren't portable, replace them with calls to
gallium's util_bswap32 as suggested by Mark Kettenis. Lets these files
build on OpenBSD.
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Gray <jsg@jsg.id.au>
Reviewed-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
gl can use elts without setting indices, in which case
our eltMax was set to 0 and always invoking the overflow
condition. So by default set eltMax to maximum, it will
be curbed by draw_set_indexes (if it ever comes) and if
not then it will let gl's glVertexPointer/glDrawArrays
work correctly. Fixes piglit's
triangle-rasterization-overdraw test.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Moves clearing of the draw so target buffers to the draw
module. They had to be cleared in the drivers before
which was quite messy.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Port BLT code in ilo_blit.c to BLT-based blitting methods of ilo_blitter. Add
BLT-based clears. The latter is verifed with util_clear(), but it is not in
use yet.
Primitive restart with an arbitrary cut index was first supported as of
Haswell. It's very doubtful that they'd take that away in future
hardware, so we may as well alter the check now.
The PRM suggests a larger layout, mostly to support having
gl_ClipDistance[] somewhere predictable for the fixed-function clipper
-- but it didn't actually arrive in Gen5.
Just use the same layout for both Gen4 and Gen5.
No Piglit regressions.
Improves performance in CS:S Video Stress Test by ~3%.
V2: - Remove now-useless function for determining the SF URB read offset
- Remove now-unused BRW_VARYING_SLOT_POS_DUPLICATE
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Required by ARB_shading_language_420pack. Note that the 420pack spec
incorrectly specifies their values as (Min, Max) = (-7, 8) when they
should be (-8, 7) as listed in the GLSL 4.30 and ESSL 3.0 specs.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Assert that we do not support user vertex/index/constant buffers. Issue a
warning when a sampler view is created for a resource without
PIPE_BIND_SAMPLER_VIEW.
The temporary texture should have either PIPE_BIND_RENDER_TARGET or
PIPE_BIND_DEPTH_STENCIL set in addition to PIPE_BIND_SAMPLER_VIEW.
Signed-off-by: Chia-I Wu <olvaffe@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
There are strict limits on those registers. Define the maximums
and use them instead of magic numbers. Also allows us to add
some extra sanity checks.
Suggested by Brian.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
We don't need the clamped variable, because we can just
return early. We should also do the regular culling after
the distance culling passes.
All spotted by Brian.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
When a resource is busy and is mapped with
PIPE_TRANSFER_DISCARD_WHOLE_RESOURCE, the underlying bo is replaced. We need
to mark states affected by the resource dirty.
With this change, we no longer have to emit vertex buffers and index buffer
unconditionally.
Even with hardware contexts, since we do not pin resources, we have to re-emit
the states so that the resources are referenced (by cp->bo) and their offsets
are updated in case they are moved. This also allows us to elimiate cp flush
in is_bo_busy().
Problem: The IEEE float optimized version of UNCLAMPED_FLOAT_TO_UBYTE
in macros.h computed incorrect results for inputs in the range
0x3f7f0000 (=0.99609375) to 0x3f7f7f80 (=0.99803924560546875)
inclusive. 0x3f7f7f80 is the IEEE float value that results in 254.5
when multiplied by 255. With rounding mode "round to closest even
integer", this is the largest float in the range 0.0-1.0 that is
converted to 254 by the generic implementation of
UNCLAMPED_FLOAT_TO_UBYTE. The IEEE float optimized version
incorrectly defined the cut-off for mapping to 255 as 0x3f7f0000
(=255.0/256.0). The same bug was present in the function
float_to_ubyte in u_math.h.
Fix: The proposed fix replaces the incorrect cut-off value by
0x3f800000, which is the IEEE float representation of 1.0f. 0x3f7f7f81
(or any value in between) would also work, but 1.0f is probably
cleaner.
The patch does not regress piglit on llvmpipe and on i965 on sandy
bridge.
Tested-by Stéphane Marchesin <marcheu@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by Stéphane Marchesin <marcheu@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Page flipping generates an invalidate event every frame, causing reallocations
of all private resources (MSAA and depth-stencil).
Reusing the resources may improve performance (especially under memory
pressure).
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
We have to use pipe->blit, not resource_copy_region, so that the read buffer
is resolved if it's multisampled. I also removed the CPU-based copying,
which just did format conversion (obsoleted by the blit).
Also, the layer/slice/face of the read buffer is taken into account (this was
ignored).
Last but not least, the format choosing is improved to take float and integer
read buffers into account.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
There were 2 issues with it:
- resource_copy_region doesn't allow different sample counts of both src
and dst, which can occur if we blit between a window and a FBO, and
the window has an MSAA colorbuffer and the FBO doesn't.
(this was the main motivation for using pipe->blit)
- blitting from or to a non-zero layer/slice/face was broken, because
rtt_face and rtt_slice were ignored.
blit_copy_pixels is now used even if the formats and orientation of
framebuffers don't match.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
We did downsample (=resolve) MSAA resources to make ReadPixels work with MSAA
GLX visuals, which was enough for read-only color-only transfers.
This commit makes write color transfers and depth-stencil transfers work
in a similar manner. It does downsampling in transfer_map and upsampling
in transfer_unmap.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
There isn't any difference between 32_FLOAT and 32_*INT in vertex fetching.
Both of them don't do any format conversion.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Previously we would generate uniform locations as (slot << 16) +
array_index. We do this to handle applications that assume the location
of a[2] will be +1 from the location of a[1]. This resulted in every
uniform location being at least 0x10000. The OpenGL 4.3 spec was
amended to require this behavior, but previous versions did not require
locations of array (or structure) members be sequential.
We've now encountered two applications that assume uniform values will
be "small." As far as we can tell, these applications store the GLint
returned by glGetUniformLocation in a int16_t or possibly an int8_t.
THIS BEHAVIOR IS NOT GUARANTEED OR IMPLIED BY ANY VERSION OF OpenGL.
Other implementations happen to have both these behaviors (sequential
array elements and small values) since OpenGL 2.0, so let's just match
their behavior.
Fixes "3D Bowling" on Android.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
This is used by _mesa_uniform_merge_location_offset and
_mesa_uniform_split_location_offset to determine how the base and offset
are packed. Previously, this value was hard coded as (1U<<16) in those
functions via the shift and mask contained therein. The value is still
(1U<<16), but it can be changed in the future.
The next patch dynamically generates this value.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Use new util_fill_box helper for util_clear_render_target.
(Also fix off-by-one map error.)
v2: handle non-zero z correctly in new helper
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This patch adds code to place mcs_state into INTEL_MCS_STATE_RESOLVED
for miptrees that are capable of supporting fast color clears. This
will have no effect on buffers that don't undergo a fast color clear;
however, for buffers that do undergo a fast color clear, an MCS
miptree will be allocated (at the time of the first fast clear), and
will be used thereafter.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
In certain circumstances the memory region underlying a miptree is
shared with other miptrees, or with other code outside Mesa's control.
This happens, for instance, when an extension like GL_OES_EGL_image or
GLX_EXT_texture_from_pixmap extension is used to associate a miptree
with an image existing outside of Mesa.
When this happens, we need to disable fast color clears on the miptree
in question, since there's no good synchronization mechanism to ensure
that deferred clear writes get performed by the time the buffer is
examined from the other miptree, or from outside of Mesa.
Fortunately, this should not be a performance hit for most
applications, since most applications that use these extensions use
them for importing textures into Mesa, rather than for exporting
rendered images out of Mesa. So most of the time the miptrees
involved will never experience a clear.
v2: Rework based on the fact that we have decided not to use an
accessor function to protect access to the region.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Resolve color buffers that have been fast-color cleared:
1. before texturing from the buffer (brw_predraw_resolve_buffers())
2. before using the buffer as the source in a blorp blit
(brw_blorp_blit_miptrees())
3. before mapping the buffer's miptree (intel_miptree_map_raw(),
intel_texsubimage_tiled_memcpy())
4. before accessing the buffer using the hardware blitter
(intel_miptree_blit(), do_blit_bitmap())
v2: Rework based on the fact that we have decided not to use an
accessor function to protect access to the region.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
We already had code in intel_downsample_for_dri2_flush() for
downsampling front and back buffers when multisampling was in use.
This patch extends that function to perform fast color clear resolves
when necessary.
To account for the additional functionality, the function is renamed
to simply intel_resolve_for_dri2_flush().
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This patch implements the "render target resolve" blorp operation.
This will be needed when a buffer that has experienced a fast color
clear is later used for a purpose other than as a render target
(texturing, glReadPixels, or swapped to the screen). It resolves any
remaining deferred clear operation that was not taken care of during
normal rendering.
Fortunately not much work is necessary; all we need to do is scale
down the size of the rectangle primitive being emitted, run the
fragment shader with the "Render Target Resolve Enable" bit set, and
ensure that the fragment shader writes to the render target using the
"replicated color" message. We already have a fragment shader that
does that (the shader that we use for fast color clears), so for
simplicity we re-use it.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The fragment shaders that to do color clears will be re-used to
perform so-called "render target resolves" (the resolves associated
with fast color clears). To prepare for that, this patch expands the
class hierarchy for blorp params by adding
brw_blorp_const_color_params (which will be used for all blorp
operations where the fragment shader outputs a constant color).
Some other data structures and functions were also renamed to use
"const_color" nomenclature where appropriate.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Since we defer allocation of the MCS miptree until the time of the
fast clear operation, this patch also implements creation of the MCS
miptree.
In addition, this patch adds the field
intel_mipmap_tree::fast_clear_color_value, which holds the most recent
fast color clear value, if any. We use it to set the SURFACE_STATE's
clear color for render targets.
v2: Flag BRW_NEW_SURFACES when allocating the MCS miptree. Generate a
perf_debug message if clearing to a color that isn't compatible with
fast color clear. Fix "control reaches end of non-void function"
build warning.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
On Gen7+, MCS buffers are used both for compressed multisampled color
buffers and for "fast clear" of single-sampled color buffers.
Previous to this patch series, we didn't support fast clear, so we
only used MCS with multisampled bolor buffers.
As a first step to implementing fast clears, this patch modifies the
code that sets up SURFACE_STATE so that it configures the MCS buffer
whenever it is present, regardless of whether we are multisampling or
not.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This patch includes code to update the fast color clear state
appropriately when rendering occurs. The state will also need to be
updated when a fast clear or a resolve operation is performed; those
state updates will be added when the fast clear and resolve operations
are added.
v2: Create a new function, intel_miptree_used_for_rendering() to
handle updating the fast color clear state when rendering occurs.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This patch ifdefs out intel_mipmap_tree::mcs_mt when building the i915
(pre-Gen4) driver (MCS buffers aren't supported until Gen7, so there
is no need for this field in the i915 driver). This should make it a
bit easier to implement fast color clears without undue risk to i915.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
When processing a buffer received from the X server,
intel_process_dri2_buffer() examines intel_region::name to determine
whether it's received a brand new buffer, or the same buffer it
received from the X server the last time it made a request.
However, this didn't work properly, because in the call to
intel_miptree_create_for_dri2_buffer(), we create a fresh intel_region
object to represent the buffer, and this was causing us to forget the
buffer's previous name.
This patch fixes things by copying over the region name when creating
the fresh intel_region object.
At the moment, this is just a minor performance optimization.
However, when fast color clears are added, it will be necessary to
ensure that the fast color clear state for a buffer doesn't get
discarded the next time we receive that buffer from the X server.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
There is really nothing in struct intel_bo, and having it alias drm_intel_bo
makes the winsys impose almost zero overhead.
We can make the overhead gone completely by making the functions static
inline, if needed.
The motivation is to kill tiling and pitch in struct intel_bo. That requires
us to make tiling and pitch not queryable, and be passed around as function
parameters.
See two commits ago for the rationale. This allows us to delete the
whole gen7_cc_state.c file.
This does move these commands before the depth stall flushes from
brw_emit_depthbuffer, which may be a problem. The documentation for
3DSTATE_DEPTH_BUFFER mentions that depth stall flushes are required
before changing any depth/stencil buffer state, but explicitly lists
3DSTATE_DEPTH_BUFFER, 3DSTATE_HIER_DEPTH_BUFFER, 3DSTATE_STENCIL_BUFFER,
and 3DSTATE_CLEAR_PARAMS. It does not mention this particular packet
(_3DSTATE_DEPTH_STENCIL_STATE_POINTERS).
No observed Piglit regressions on Sandybridge or Ivybridge.
Together with the last two commits, this makes a cairo-gl benchmark
faster by 0.324552% +/- 0.258355% on Ivybridge. No statistically
significant change on Sandybridge. (Thanks to Eric for the numbers.)
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Previously, we would:
1. Emit the new indirect state.
2. Flag CACHE_NEW_BLEND_STATE.
3. Rely on later state atoms to notice CACHE_NEW_BLEND_STATE and emit a
pointer to the new indirect state.
This is rather cumbersome: it requires two state atoms instead of one,
and there's a strict ordering dependency in the list. Plus, the code
gets spread across two functions (or even files in the case of Gen7+).
Gen7+ has a packet to update just the blend state pointer, so it makes a
lot of sense to simply emit that right away. Gen6 has a combined packet
which updates blending, the color calculator, and depth/stencil state;
however, each can still be modified independently.
This drops the Gen6 micro-optimization where we tried to only emit one
packet that changed all three states. State updates are pretty cheap.
CACHE_NEW_BLEND_STATE is no longer necessary, so drop it.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Works similarly to clip distance. If the cull distance is negative
for all vertices against a specific plane then the primitive
is culled.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
cull distance is analogous to clip distance. If a register is
given this semantic, then the values in it are assumed to be a
float32 distance to a plane. Primitives will be completely
discarded if the plane distance for all of the vertices in
the primitive are < 0.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
We need to figure out the number of invocations of the clipper
before the emit, because in the emit we are after clipping
where the number of primitives will be equal to number of clipper
invocations minus the clipped primitives. So our computations
were always off by the number of clipped primitives.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Draw depended on clip_plane_enable being set in the rasterizer
to use clipdistance registers for clipping. That's really
unfriendly because it requires that rasterizer state to have
variants for every shader out there. Instead of depending on
the rasterizer lets extract the info from the available state:
if a shader writes clipdistance then we need to use it and we
need to clip using a number of planes equal to the number
of writen clipdistance components. This way clipdistances
just work.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
we were always fetching the info from the vertex shader, but if
geometry shader is present it should be used as the source of
that info.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Fixes piglit texture-packed-formats regression. We need to implement
more XBGR formats here eventually, but many are UINT/SINT formats
which swrast doesn't handle yet anyway (integer textures).
Bugzilla https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=64935
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Set env var RADEON_VA=0 to disable VM on Cayman/Trinity.
Useful for debugging.
Note: this is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Signed-off-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Having figured out what was going on with piglit fbo-depth copypixels
GL_DEPTH_COMPONENT32F (falling all the way back to swrast on CopyPixels to
a float depth buffer), I'm not inclined to fix the problem currently but
it seems worth saving someone else the debug time.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
We do a lot of multiplies by 3 or 4 for skinning shaders, and we can avoid
the sequence if we just move them into the right argument of the MUL.
On pre-IVB, this means reliably putting a constant in a position where it
can't be constant folded, but that's still better than MUL/MACH/MOV.
Improves GLB 2.7 trex performance by 0.788648% +/- 0.23865% (n=29/30)
v2: Fix test for pre-sandybridge.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com> (v1)
This is a trivial port of 1d6ead3804 from
the FS.
No significant performance difference on trex (misplaced the data, but it
was about n=20).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This is different from how we do it in the FS - we are using MAD even when
some of the args are constants, because with the relatively unrestrained
ability to schedule a MOV to prepare a temporary with that data, we can
get lower latency for the sequence of instructions.
No significant performance difference on GLB2.7 trex (n=33/34), though it
doesn't have that many MADs. I noticed MAD opportunities while reading
the code for the DOTA2 bug.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
draw_vertex_buffer declared the size field to be a size_t, but the LLVM
code used an int32 instead. This caused problems on big-endian 64-bit
targets, because the first 32-bit chunk of the 64-bit size_t was always 0.
In one sense size_t seems like a good choice for a size, so one fix
would have been to try to get the LLVM code to use the equivalent of
size_t too. However, in practice, the size is taken from things like ~0
or width0, both of which are int-sized, so it seemed simpler to make the
size field int-sized as well.
Reviewed-by: Adam Jackson <ajax@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Sandiford <rsandifo@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Without this, llvmpipe ends up giving a zero size to all uncompressed textures
on non-x86 systems, since align() cannot handle a 0 alignment.
Reviewed-by: Adam Jackson <ajax@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Sandiford <rsandifo@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
lp_build_add and lp_build_sub have fallback code for cases
that cannot be handled by known intrinsics. For UNORM formats,
this code was using modulo rather than saturating arithmetic.
This fixes some rendering issues for a gnome session on System z.
It also fixes various piglit tests on z, such as
spec/ARB_color_buffer_float/GL_RGBA8-render.
The patch deliberately doesn't tackle the more complicated
SNORM case.
Tested against piglit on x86_64 and System z with no regressions.
Reviewed-by: Adam Jackson <ajax@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Sandiford <rsandifo@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Now that Gen6+ relies on hardware contexts, we don't need to record an
occlusion query value at the end of each batch. That means we no longer
need to reserve space for the absurd number of PIPE_CONTROLs required to
do that on Sandybridge.
See commit 4e087de51a, which bumped this
up to 60 bytes. This is not quite a revert, as it uses 24 bytes instead
of 16, and saves the comments. As far as I can tell, the old value of
16 bytes was just wrong, so we shouldn't go back to that.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We always allocate the maximum amount of space and never change it, so
it makes sense to do it once. Programming it on startup also lets us
skip re-programming it from BLORP.
This removes a tiny amount of overhead from our drawing loop.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This removes a tiny bit of code from our drawing loop.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Now that we emit invariant state at startup (and never select the media
pipeline), the 3D pipeline will always already be selected, even if BLORP
is the first operation. So this is unnecessary.
v2: Fix unused variable warning (intel_context is no longer used).
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Now that we have hardware contexts, we can safely initialize our GPU
state once at startup, rather than needing a state atom with the
BRW_NEW_CONTEXT flag set.
This removes a tiny bit of code from our drawing loop.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The existing code already returned a boolean; this just clarifies that.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We already implemented this for ES3, so we just need to turn it on.
Fixes 6 Piglit tests:
spec/glsl-1.50/compiler/built-in-functions/determinant-mat[234].{vert,frag}
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Page 17 of the GLSL 1.50.11 specification states:
"There is a built-in macro definition for each profile the
implementation supports. All implementations provide the following
macro:
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Previously we only supported "#version 150". This patch recognizes
"compatibility" to give the user a more descriptive error message.
Fixes Piglit's version-150-core-profile test.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
If we didn't successfully parse the #version line, there's no point in
continuing with parsing and compiling: it's already failed.
Furthermore, it can actually be harmful: right after handling #version,
we call _mesa_glsl_initialize_types(), which checks state->es_shader and
language_version. If it isn't valid, it hits an assertion failure.
Fixes Piglit's "invalid-version-es." When processing "#version 110 es",
our code set state->es_shader and state->language_version = 110. It
then properly determined that this was invalid and flagged an error.
Since we continued anyway, we hit the assertion mentioned above.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The GPU (at least a3xx, but I think also a2xx) can render directly to
memory, bypassing tiling. Although it can't do this if blend, depth,
and a few other features of the pipeline are enabled. This direct
memory mode can be faster for some sorts of operations, such as simple
blits. In particular, this significantly speeds up XA by avoiding to
pull the entire dest pixmap into GMEM, render tiles, and write it all
back out again. This should also speed up resource copy-region and
blit.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robclark@freedesktop.org>
The adreno a3xx GPU is found in newer snapdragon devices, such as the
nexus4. The a3xx is GLESv3 and OpenCL capable, although that is not
enabled yet in gallium.
Compared to a2xx, it introduces an entirely new unified shader ISA, and
re-shuffles all or nearly all of the registers. The good news is that
(for the most part) the registers are more orthogonal, not combining
unrelated state in a single register. And that there is a lot more
flexibility, so we don't need to patch and re-emit the shader like we
did on a2xx.
The shader compiler is currently quite dumb, there would be a lot of
room for improvement with an optimizing pass. Despite that, with the
a320 in my nexus4 it seems to be ~2-3x faster compared to the a220 in my
HP touchpad.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robclark@freedesktop.org>
Split the parts that are specific to adreno a2xx series GPUs from the
parts that will be in common with a3xx, so that a3xx support can be
added more cleanly.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robclark@freedesktop.org>
We use 128bit vector interleave for untwiddling in the blend code (with
256bit vectors). llvm generates terrible code for this for some reason,
so instead of generating a shuffle for 2 128bit vectors use a
extract/insert shuffle instead (it only seems to matter we're not using
128bit wide vectors for the shuffle). This decreases instruction count of
the blend code generated for a rgba8 render target without blending from
169 to 113 with llvm 3.1 and from 136 to 114 in llvm 3.2/3.3, and I got
a ~8% (llvm 3.1) and ~5% (3.2/3.3) performance improvement in gears.
(The generated code is still not terribly good as we could actually avoid
the interleaving completely but llvm can't know this.)
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Probably due to CRLF endings, the discovery of python import statements
was not working on Windows builds, causing incremental builds to often
fail unless one wiped out the build directory.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
We flush pending rendering before running CopySubBuffer, which
ensures that the right bits get to the screen.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
The coordinates need to be inverted between glX and gallium.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Just like we produce from inside the Intel driver, this can help provide
information quickly about FBO incompatibility problems (particularly when
using apitrace replay).
Currently, in driver-marked incompleteness cases, you'll get both the
driver message and the core message on Intel. Until the other drivers are
fixed to produce output, I think this is better than not putting in a
message for driver-marked incomplete.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
When a fake front buffer is in use, if we request the front buffer
(using screen->dri2.loader->getBuffersWithFormat()), the X server
copies the real front buffer to the fake front buffer and returns the
fake front buffer. We sometimes make redundant requests for the front
buffer (due to using a single counter to track invalidates for both
the front and back buffers), so there's a danger of pending front
buffer rendering getting overwritten when the redundant front buffer
request occurs.
Previous to this patch, intel_update_renderbuffers() worked around
that problem by sometimes doing intel_flush() and intel_flush_front()
before calling intel_query_dri2_buffers(). But it only did the
workaround when the front buffer was bound for drawing; it didn't do
it when the front buffer was bound for reading.
This patch moves the workaround code to intel_query_dri2_buffers(), so
that it happens in exactly the circumstances where it is needed.
This should fix some of the sporadic failures in Piglit tests
fbo-sys-blit and fbo-sys-sub-blit.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
The patch that follows will fix a bug that prevents
intel_flush_front() from being called often enough. In doing so, it
will create a situation where intel_flush_front() is called during the
initial call to glXMakeCurrent(). In this circumstance,
ctx->DrawBuffer hasn't been initialized yet and is NULL. Fortunately,
intel->front_buffer_dirty is false, so intel_flush_front() doesn't
actually need to do anything. To avoid a segfault, swap the order of
terms in intel_flush_front()'s if statement.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
piglit OpenGL ES 3.0/minmax now passes. This was also one of the subcase
failures in OpenGL 3.2/minmax (and still is, because our value is too low
for 3.2, but at least we report what it is).
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Part of fixing piglit OpenGL ES 3.0/minmax.
v2: s/_gles3/_es3/ in extra name, for consistency (review by Matt).
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org> (v1)
Part of fixing piglit OpenGL ES 3.0/minmax.
v2: s/_gles3/_es3/ in extra name, for consistency (review by Matt).
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org> (v1)
These functions must clear all bound layers, not just the first.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Believe it or not but these two are actually the first two functions which
really belong in this file nowadays.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Mostly just make sure the layer parameter gets passed through to the right
places (and get clamped, can do this at setup time), fix up clears to
clear all layers and disable opaque optimization. Luckily don't need to
touch the jitted code.
(Clears invoked via pipe's clear_render_target method will not work however
since the pipe_util_clear function used for it doesn't handle clearing
multiple layers yet.)
v2: per Brian's suggestion, prettify var initialization and add some comments,
add assertion for impossible layer specification for surface.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Transfers always use z/depth for layers no matter if it's a 1d or 2d array
texture, we don't follow OpenGL's crazyness there. Luckily this appears to
only be a doc bug, everyone doing the right thing already.
While here also document z/depth parameter for cube map arrays.
v2: fix typo spotted by Eric Anholt
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Checking if array_size is greater than 1 is not enough for single-layered
array textures.
Signed-off-by: Chia-I Wu <olvaffe@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Moved draw_arrays() to st_draw_feedback.c and removed draw_arrays_instanced().
draw_arrays() was used by nobody else. Now there's just one "draw" entrypoint
into the draw module.
Signed-off-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This change came from the discovery that the STATIC_ASSERT to check that
the number of register file strings didn't actually work.
Similar changes could be made for the other string arrays in tgsi_string.c
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Removes the special-case suppression of gl_ClipVertex in the VUE map.
Also calculate vertex outcodes for user clip planes based on
gl_ClipVertex if written; otherwise gl_Position.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
When clipping triangles against a user clip plane, and gl_ClipVertex
is provided in the vertex, use it instead of hpos.
TODO: A similar change should be made at some point for line clipping.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Introduce ilo_surface_cso and initialize it in create_surface(). With the
change, we can emit SURFACE_STATE directly from the CSO and remove
emit_surf_SURFACE_STATE(). We do not deal with depth/stencil surfaces yet.
Introduce ilo_cbuf_cso and initialize it in set_constant_buffer(). As
ilo_view_surface is embedded in ilo_cbuf_cso, switch to emit_SURFACE_STATE()
for constant buffers and remove emit_cbuf_SURFACE_STATE().
Introduce ilo_view_cso and initialize it in create_sampler_view(). Add
emit_SURFACE_STATE() to GPE, which can emit SURFACE_STATE from
ilo_view_surface.
Moving the work to create time reduces the work at emit time.
Saves time overall as create work is only done once.
Fix compiler warning in gen7_pipeline_sol.
[olv: remember pipe_alpha_state instead of pipe_depth_stencil_alpha_state in
ilo_dsa_state]
Introduce ilo_ve_cso and initialize it in create_vertex_elements_state().
This commit goes a step further by setting up mappings from HW VB to PIPE VB,
which we failed to do previously. That allows us to support instanced
rendering.
Remove hiz and dsa from the parameters. We would know whether HiZ buffer
exists from ilo_texture once it is supported. DSA state should not affect
3DSTATE_DEPTH_BUFFER.
Introduce ilo_sampler_cso and initialize it in create_sampler_state(). This
saves us from having to perform CPU-intensive calculations to construct
hardware sampler states in draw_vbo().
This allows us to memcpy() the state in draw_vbo(). Add ilo_init_states() and
ilo_cleanup_states() that are called when contexts are created and destroyed
respectively, and properly set the initial scissor state in ilo_init_states().
Introduce ilo_viewport_cso and initialize it in set_viewport_states(). This
saves us from having to perform CPU-intensive calculations to construct
hardware viewport states in draw_vbo().
Define and use
struct ilo_sampler_state;
struct ilo_view_state;
struct ilo_cbuf_state;
struct ilo_resource_state;
struct ilo_global_binding;
in ilo_context.
We were counting uniforms located in UBOs against the default uniform
block limit, while not doing any counting against the specific combined
limit.
Note that I couldn't quite find justification for the way I did this, but
I think it's the only sensible thing: The spec talks about components, so
each "float" in a std140 block would count as 1 component and a "vec4"
would count as 4, though they occupy the same amount of space. Since GPU
limits on uniform buffer loads are surely going to be about the size of
the blocks, I just counted them that way.
Fixes link failures in piglit
arb_uniform_buffer_object/maxuniformblocksize when ported to geometry
shaders on Paul's GS branch, since in that case the max block size is
bigger than the default uniform block component limit.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Putting the human readable device names directly in the PCI ID list
consolidates things in one place. It also makes it easy to customize
the name on a per-PCI ID basis without a huge code explosion.
Based on a patch by Kristian Høgsberg.
v2: Fix 830M/845G names and #undef CHIPSET (caught by Emit Velikov).
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This patch unifies mesa's PACKAGE_VERSION on autotools, scons and
Android build systems.
Current behaviour is:
- Autotools uses 9.2.0 as PACKAGE_VERSION
- Scons and Android use 9.2-devel as PACKAGE_VERSION
With this patch all three build systems use 9.2.0-devel as
PACKAGE_VERSION.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
RADEON_GEM_WAIT_IDLE is declared DRM_IOW but mesa
uses it with drmCommandWriteRead instead of drmCommandWrite
which leads to the ioctl being unmatched and returning an
error on at least OpenBSD.
Problem originally noticed in libdrm by Mark Kettenis.
Dave Airlie pointed out that mesa has the same issue.
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Gray <jsg@jsg.id.au>
When building dri-swrast, use gallium_check_st to set HAVE_COMMON_DRI.
Commit 07f2dee7 added setting of HAVE_COMMON_DRI in gallium_check_st.
But the dri-swrast case did not use gallium_check_st.
So dri/common was still not built.
v2: set HAVE_COMMON_DRI=yes instead of using gallium_check_st
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
(Depends on 7de78ce5 and 07f2dee)
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=61821
Signed-off-by: Andreas Boll <andreas.boll.dev@gmail.com>
The main change is to use MCJIT rather than the old JIT, which will never
be supported for System z. The endianness part is by example since the
patch was tested on a glibc system.
Signed-off-by: Richard Sandiford <rsandifo@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This was always doing per-pixel alignment which isn't necessary, except
for the buffer case (due to the per-element offset). The disabled code
for calculating it was incorrect because it assumed that always the full
block would be fetched, which may not be the case, so fix this up.
The original code failed for instance for r10g10b10a2 the alignment would
have been calculated as 4 (block_width) * 4 (bytes) so 16, but the actual
fetch may have only fetched 2 values at a time, hence only alignment 8 -
it is unclear what exactly would happen in this case (alignment larger
than size to fetch).
So just use the (already calculated) fetch size instead and get alignment
from that which should always work, no matter if fetching 1,2 or 4 pixels.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
For rendering to buffers, we cannot have any y alignment.
So make sure that tile clear commands only clear up to the fb width/height,
not more (do this for all resources actually as clearing more seems
pointless for other resources too). For the jit fs function, skip execution
of the lower half of the fragment shader for the 4x4 stamp completely,
for depth/stencil only load/store the values from the first row
(replace other row with undef).
For the blend function, also only load half the values from fs output,
replace the rest with undefs so that everything still operates on the
full 4x4 block to keep code the same between 4x1 and 4x4 (except for
load/store of course which also needs to skip (store) or replace these
values with undefs (load))., at the cost of slightly less optimal code
being produced in some cases.
Also reduce 1d and 1d array alignment too, because they can be handled the
same as buffers so don't need to waste memory.
v2: don't try to run special blend code for 4x1, (very) slightly less
complexity if we just use the same code as for 4x4 which may or may not
make it easier to optimize in the future (as we care a lot more about 4x4
performance than 1d).
v2: don't use undef values for unused fs src outputs with llvm 3.1 as it
apparently can trigger a bug in llvm.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Some parameters were used inconsistently, for instance not using
block_width/block_height/block_size for deferring number of pixels
but rather relying on guesses from the number of fragment shaders etc,
so fix this up (no actual change in behavior since the block size stays
fixed). (Though most of the code would work with different block_height,
with three exceptions, one being the hacked r11g11b10 conversions and
twiddle code which only work with block_height 2 not 1, and the last
one being blend vector type not being 128bit wide.)
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
There's no good reason why it can't handle 2x4f->1x8ub, 1x4f->1x4ub and
1x8f->1x8ub cases, there might be legitimate reasons why we don't have
enough input vectors for a full destination vector, and using pack
intrinsics should still be much better than using generic conversion
(it looks like convert_alpha from the blend code might hit this though
I suspect it could be avoided).
v2: add another test vector format to lp_test_conv so this gets tested.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The code was designed to handle no-op concat but failed (unless the
caller was using same pointer for src and dst).
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
We've never properly supported more than one address register. There
isn't even a field in prog_src_register or prog_dst_register to indicate
which address register to use if RelAddr!=0.
In the state tracker, clamp MaxAddressRegs against MAX_PROGRAM_ADDRESS_REGS
since many gallium drivers do support more.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=65226
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Blorp and the hardware blitter can't be used to implement
CopyTexSubImage when the image type is 1D_ARRAY, because of a
coordinate system mismatch (the Y coordinate in the source image is
supposed to be matched up to the Z coordinate in the destination
texture).
The hardware blitter path (intel_copy_texsubimage) contained a perf
debug warning for this case, but it failed to actually fall back. The
blorp path didn't even check.
Fixes piglit test "copyteximage 1D_ARRAY".
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Commit 045612c (intel: Add an assert for glCopyTexSubImage() being
called on MSAA buffers) added an assertion to intel_copy_texsubimage()
to make sure that multisampling was not in use, based on the
assumption that glCopyTexSubImage() can't legally be used with
multisampling.
However, there is one case where glCopyTexSubImage() can legally be
used with multisampling: when the source buffer is a multisampled
window system buffer. If the source and destination color formats
don't match, the blorp path will fail, so intel_copy_texsubimage()
will be called. In this case, we need intel_copy_texsubimage() to
return false so that we fall back to meta to do the copy. (The
multisampled source buffer won't cause a problem for the meta path,
because it uses glReadPixels, which forces a multisample resolve).
It's still safe to assert that the destination image is
single-sampled, because it's not legal to call glCopyTexSubImage() on
multisampled textures.
Fixes some failures with piglit tests "copyteximage
{1D,2D,CUBE,RECT,2D_ARRAY}" (with "samples=..." argument).
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Okay I now understand why Frank would want to run away, this is
my attempt at fixing the CVE out of bounds access to constants
outside the range. This attempt converts any illegal constants
to constant 0 as per the GL spec, and is undefined behaviour.
A future patch should add some debug for users to find this out,
but this needs to be backported to stable branches.
CVE-2013-1872
v2: drop the last hunk which was a separate fix (now in master).
hopefully fix the indentations.
v3: don't fail piglit, the whole 8/16 dispatch stuff was over
my head, and I spent a while figuring it out, but this one is
definitely safe, one piglit pass extra on my Ironlake.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
We were copying the source stencil data onto the destination depth data.
Fixes piglit copyteximage other than 1D_ARRAY.
v2: Fix unintentional dropping of the "don't double-copy for packed
depth/stencil" check. While blorp is only supported on separate
stencil hardware at the moment, hopefully that will change soon.
Review by Jordan.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
When making v2 of da2880bea0, I carefully
checked all of the calls in that commit to see that I'd updated them, but
forgot to update the new calls in the later commits such as
.e845c5cf7abce55759501a473459aff3bf25c9ca. As a result, we were getting Y
tiled temporaries even though the whole point of the temporary was to
untile!
The steady state of the intro scene of lightsmark goes from 13 to 17 fps.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=65154
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
To trigger the bug, it suffices to have a line-continuation followed by
a newline and then a non-line-continuation backslash.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This loop-control condition with a post-decrement operator would lead to
an underflow of collapsed_newlines. This in turn would cause a subsequent
execution of the loop to labor inordinately trying to return the loop-control
variable to a value of 0 again.
Fix this by dis-intertwining the test and the decrement.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=65112
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
When a gl_client_array is created with glColorPointer,
gl_client_array::Normalized is true. This caused the translation from the
gl_client_array's type to a BRW_SURFACEFORMAT to assertion fail.
Fixes the spinning cube's color in Android 4.2's ApiDemos.apk,
"Graphics > OpenGL ES".
Fixes assertion failure in mesa-demos/src/egl/opengles1/tri_x11 on Haswell
and Ivybridge:
brw_draw_upload.c:287: get_surface_type: Assertion `0' failed.
No Piglit regressions on Haswell.
Note: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=42182
Issue: AXIA-2954
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
It was changed from 0 to allow shader outputs at 0 that are
different from position.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Rather than pointing the surface_state directly at a single
sub-image of the texture for rendering, we now point the
surface_state at the top level of the texture, and configure
the surface_state as needed based on this.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
We were crashing when GL_READ_BUFFER == GL_NONE. Check for NULL
pointers and reorganize the code. The spec doesn't say which error
to generate in this situation, but NVIDIA raises GL_INVALID_OPERATION.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=65173
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Tested-by: Vedran Rodic <vrodic@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Before, on the second call to GenerateMipmap we were enabling two
vertex arrays for the current vertex array object, rather than
the private generate-mipmap vertex array object. This caused
things to blow up elsewhere.
This patch moves the array enables into the block where the
generate-mipmap vertex array object is created, as we do in
the setup_ff_generate_mipmap() function.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=60518
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Tested-by: core13@gmx.net
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Since pipe_surface already has all the necessary fields no interface
changes are necessary except adding a new shader semantic value
(TGSI_SEMANTIC_LAYER).
(Note that what GL knows as "gl_Layer" variable d3d10 is naming
"RENDER_TARGET_ARRAY_INDEX".)
v2: drop cap bit (just tied to geometry shader), add docs.
Surprising this bug survived so long, we were missing a clamp (in the
linear filtering version).
(Valgrind complained a lot about invalid reads with piglit texwrap,
I've also seen spurios failures in this test which might have
happened due to this. Valgrind probably didn't complain before the
alignment reduction in llvmpipe to 4x4 since the test is using tiny
textures so the reads were still always well within allocated area.)
While here, also do an effective clamp (after half subtraction)
of [0,length-0.5] instead of [0, length-1] which saves an instruction
(the filtering weight could be different due to this, but only if
both texels point to the same max texel so it doesn't matter).
(Both changes are borrowed from PIPE_TEX_CLAMP_TO_EDGE case.)
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
One of the assertion made no sense for buffer rendertargets
(due to the union), so drop it. (The same assertion is present already in
the path for texture surfaces later.).
v2: make assertion completely accurate (suggested by Jose).
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
brw->ib.type is reset to -1 at the start of each batch. If there's no
index buffer, it won't get updated to a sensible value, resulting in
_mesa_primitive_restart_index's "Invalid index buffer type" assertion
tripping.
Fixes a regression since 7c87a3b5da.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch (and should be squashed).
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=65195
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The overallocation was very bad especially for things like 1d array
textures which got blown up by a factor of 64. (Even ordinary smallish
2d textures benefit a lot from this, a mipmapped 64x64 rgba8 texture
previously used 7*16kB = 112kB instead of now ~22kB.)
4x4 is chosen because this is the size the jit functions run on, so
making it smaller is going to be a bit more complicated.
It is actually not strictly 4x4 pixel, since we'd want to avoid situations
where different threads are rendering to the same cacheline so we keep
cacheline size alignment in x direction (often 64bytes).
To make this work introduce new task width/height parameters and make
sure clears don't clear the whole tile if it's a partial tile. Likewise,
the rasterizer may produce fragments outside the 4x4 blocks present in a
tile, so don't call the jit function for them.
This does not yet fix rendering to buffers (which cannot have any y
alignment at all), and 1d/1d array textures are still overallocated by a
factor of 4.
v2: replace magic number 4 with LP_RASTER_BLOCK_SIZE, fix size of buffers
allocated (needed in case we render to them).
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
These were mostly just a waste of memory and cache pressure, and were
really only used for debugging.
This change reduces instruction count (as measured by callgrind's Ir
event) of gnome-shell-perf-tool on Ivybridge by 3.5% ± 0.015% (n=20).
Signed-off-by: Adam Jackson <ajax@redhat.com>
This fixes the following build errors on powerpc:
CC glapi_dispatch.lo
In file included from glapi_dispatch.c:90:0:
../../../../../src/mapi/glapi/glapitemp.h:1640:1: error: no previous
prototype for 'glReadBufferNV' [-Werror=missing-prototypes]
../../../../../src/mapi/glapi/glapitemp.h:4198:1: error: no previous
prototype for 'glDrawBuffersNV' [-Werror=missing-prototypes]
../../../../../src/mapi/glapi/glapitemp.h:6377:1: error: no previous
prototype for 'glFlushMappedBufferRangeEXT'
[-Werror=missing-prototypes]
../../../../../src/mapi/glapi/glapitemp.h:6389:1: error: no previous
prototype for 'glMapBufferRangeEXT' [-Werror=missing-prototypes]
../../../../../src/mapi/glapi/glapitemp.h:6401:1: error: no previous
prototype for 'glBindVertexArrayOES' [-Werror=missing-prototypes]
../../../../../src/mapi/glapi/glapitemp.h:6413:1: error: no previous
prototype for 'glDeleteVertexArraysOES' [-Werror=missing-prototypes]
../../../../../src/mapi/glapi/glapitemp.h:6433:1: error: no previous
prototype for 'glGenVertexArraysOES' [-Werror=missing-prototypes]
../../../../../src/mapi/glapi/glapitemp.h:6445:1: error: no previous
prototype for 'glIsVertexArrayOES' [-Werror=missing-prototypes]
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.0 and 9.1 branches.
Reviewed-by: Maarten Lankhorst <maarten.lankhorst@canonical.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
clientDriverNameLength is a CARD32 and needs to be bounds checked before
adding one to it to come up with the total size to allocate, to avoid
integer overflow leading to underallocation and writing data from the
network past the end of the allocated buffer.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Reported-by: Ilja Van Sprundel <ivansprundel@ioactive.com>
Signed-off-by: Alan Coopersmith <alan.coopersmith@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
busIdStringLength is a CARD32 and needs to be bounds checked before adding
one to it to come up with the total size to allocate, to avoid integer
overflow leading to underallocation and writing data from the network past
the end of the allocated buffer.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Reported-by: Ilja Van Sprundel <ivansprundel@ioactive.com>
Signed-off-by: Alan Coopersmith <alan.coopersmith@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
For formats such as GL_COMPRESSED_SRGB_S3TC_DXT1_EXT we need to
have both the GL_EXT_texture_sRGB and GL_EXT_texture_compression_s3tc
extensions. This patch adds the missing check for the later.
Found when checking out https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=65173
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
When we've changed draw_find_shader_output to return -1 instead
of 0 on non found attribs we broke the default behavior of
draw, which was to always redirect those to the first (0th) slot.
To preserve that behavior if draw_emit_vertex_attr notices a
mismatched vertex attrib, it just redirects it to the first slot
(instead of trying to use negative index in an array).
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
In traditional multisampled framebuffer rendering, color samples must be
explicitly resolved via BlitFramebuffer before doing the scaled blitting
of the framebuffer. So, scaled blitting of a multisample framebuffer
takes two separate calls to BlitFramebuffer.
This patch implements the functionality of doing multisampled scaled
resolve using just one BlitFramebuffer call. Important changes involved
in this patch are listed below:
- Use float registers to scale and offset texture coordinates.
- Change offset computation to consider float coordinates.
- Round the scaled coordinates down to nearest integer.
- Modify src texture coordinates clipping to account for scaling..
- Linear filter is not yet implemented in blorp. So, don't use
blorp engine to do single sampled scaled blitting.
V3: Fix nearest filtering issue in scaled blits. Makes failing piglit
fbo-blit-stetch test and framebuffer_blit_functionality_magnifying_blit.test
in gles3 CTS pass.
Observed no piglit, gles3 CTS regressions on sandybridge & ivybridge with
this patch.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
These changes are required to implement scaled blitting in blorp
in my next patch.
No regressions observed in piglit quick-driver.tests with this patch.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This reverts commit 98dfd59a04.
The patch was clearly not Piglit tested, as it caused at least 225
tests to start crashing with assertion failures. That was before my
desktop tanked and the test run died completely.
Remove hash function on shader variants. Nature of variants limits them to a
small number and thus its more efficient to just do a memory compare of the
actual shader structures rather than compute and compare hashes.
This is my attempt at fixing this as the CVE is making RH security team
care enough to make me look at this. (please upstream, security fixes are
more important than whatever else you are doing, if for no other reason than
it saves me having to fix stuff I've no real clue about).
Since Frank's original fix was denied, here is my attempt to just
alias all constants that are out of bounds < 0 or > nr_params to constant 0,
hopefully this provides the undefined behaviour idr requires..
CVE-2013-1872
v2: drop the last hunk which was a separate fix (now in master).
hopefully fix the indentations.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Set fs_visitor::params_remap to NULL in the constructor.
This variable was potentially tested in fs_visitor::remove_dead_constants()
before being set.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Signed-off-by: Frank Henigman <fjhenigman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Viewport index should only be used on a per primitive basis, so
instead of fetching it from each vertex, potentially making each
vertex in a primitive use a different viewport index, which is
obviously broken, make sure that we only fetch from the first
vertex in the primitive making the viewport index the same
for the entire primtive.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca<jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
We need to clamp to make sure invalid shader doesn't crash our
driver. The spec says to return 0-th index for everything that's
out of bounds.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca<jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
If the viewport index is larger than the PIPE_MAX_VIEWPORTS,
then the first (0-th) viewport should be used.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca<jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
draw_find_shader_output like most of the code in draw used to
depend on position always being at output slot 0. which meant
that any other attribute being at 0 could signify an error.
unfortunately position can be at any of the output slots, thus
other attributes can occupy slot 0 and we need to mark the ones
which were not found by something else. This commit changes
draw_find_shader_output so that it returns -1 if it can't
find the given attribute and adjust the code that depended
on it returning >0 whenever it correctly found an attrib.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca<jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Largely related to making sure the rasterizer can correctly
pick out the correct scissor box for the current viewport.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca<jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
This adds support for multiple viewports to the draw module.
Multiple viewports depend on the presence of geometry shaders
which can write the viewport index.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca<jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Gallium supported only a single viewport/scissor combination. This
commit changes the interface to allow us to add support for multiple
viewports/scissors.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca<jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
It's incorrect and isn't used any longer.
v2: Actually flush vertices/flag _NEW_TRANSFORM on RestartIndex change.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
GL_PRIMITIVE_RESTART_FIXED_INDEX is only supposed to apply to
glDrawElements*. This code is for legacy drawing paths and display
lists, so it shouldn't apply.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
The derived _RestartIndex field is an attempt to support both
GL_PRIMITIVE_RESTART and GL_PRIMITIVE_RESTART_FIXED_INDEX (part of ES
3.0). Gallium drivers don't appear to support ES 3.0 yet, so they don't
need to use it. Plus, it's broken and going to go away soon.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Pre-Haswell hardware doesn't support an arbitrary restart index, and
instead compares the index buffer value against 0xFF for byte-size
buffers, 0xFFFF for short-size buffers, or 0xFFFFFFFF for unsigned
integer buffers.
OpenGL allows the restart index to be an arbitrary unsigned integer.
When comparing against byte/short types, the index buffer value should
be promoted to a full 32-bit integer before doing the comparison. The
restart index is /not/ supposed to be masked to byte/short size.
This means that with certain restart indexes, the comparison should
always fail. For example, a restart index of 0xF000FFFF should never
match any byte/short index buffer values due to the extra high bits.
We must not enable hardware primitive restart in such a case. For now,
fall back to software primitive restart as it's the simplest fix. In
the future, we could detect restart indexes that will never match and
skip both hardware and software primitive restart.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
The code that updates the ctx->Array._RestartIndex derived state mashed
it to 0xFFFFFFFF when GL_PRIMITIVE_RESTART_FIXED_INDEX was enabled
regardless of the index buffer type. It's supposed to be 0xFF for byte,
0xFFFF for short, or 0xFFFFFFFF for integer types.
The new _mesa_primitive_restart_index() helper gets this right.
The hardware appears to compare against the full 32-bit value some of
the time, causing primitive restart not to occur when it should. The
fact that it works some of the time is rather frightening.
Fixes sporadic failures in the ES 3 instanced_arrays_primitive_restart
conformance test when run in combination with other tests.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This gets the correct restart index for unsigned byte/short types when
using GL_PRIMITIVE_RESTART_FIXED_INDEX.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
The derived state approach currently used (_RestartIndex) doesn't work:
in the GL_PRIMITIVE_RESTART_FIXED_INDEX case, the restart index depends
on the index buffer's data type, and that isn't known until draw time.
The existing code also fails to obey the GL 4.3 rules which say that
FIXED_INDEX takes precedence over normal primitive restart.
This helper function correctly determines the restart index, and will
replace the derived state.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
The derived _PrimitiveRestart enable flag combines the PrimitiveRestart
and PrimitiveRestartFixedIndex enable flags. However, DrawArrays is not
supposed to do FixedIndex restart:
From the OpenGL 4.3 Core specification, section 10.3.5 (page 302):
"If PRIMITIVE_RESTART_FIXED_INDEX is enabled, primitive restart is not
performed for array elements transferred by any drawing command not
taking a type parameter, including all of the *Draw* commands other
than *DrawElements*."
The OpenGL ES 3.0 specification agrees by omission:
"When DrawElements, DrawElementsInstanced, or DrawRangeElements
transfers a set of generic attribute array elements to the GL..."
Notably, DrawArrays is not included in the list of draw calls that
take PRIMITIVE_RESTART_FIXED_INDEX into consideration.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Previously it would assertion fail in debug builds (though the correct
value was returned in a non-debug build). Marking it as a candidate for
stable even though it has no current consumers in the stable branches, in
case one shows up in a later backport.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=64727
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We were expanding the live range too far, breaking register_coalesce_2()
and compute_to_mrf() on 16-wide shaders. Turning it back on improves
GLB2.7 performance by 0.239355% +/- 0.0850649% (n=398). shader-db stats
are:
total instructions in shared programs: 1627211 -> 1609262 (-1.10%)
instructions in affected programs: 450351 -> 432402 (-3.99%)
While 33 new 16-wide shaders are gained, 70 are lost. Despite that,
tropics (the app that lost the most 16-wide) shows a .41% +/- .16%
(n=7/8, first-run outlier removed) performance improvement on my HSW.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The scheduler didn't know about uniform-type accesses, and if a uniform
access was last in a 16-wide, we'd walk off the end of the array. This
never happened, because we'd never coalesce out all the GRFs, due to a bug
to be fixed in the next commit.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
i965 and radeon use ra_set_node_reg() to force payload registers to
specific registers while exposing those registers to the allocator still.
We were treating those register nodes as unsuccessfully allocated in the
ra_simplify() step, leading to walking the registers again to do
optimistic coloring even if there was nothing left ot do.
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Since the introduction of default-to-SARGB8 window system framebuffers,
non-blorp hardware lost blit acceleration for these two paths between the
window system and ARGB8888 textures. Since we shouldn't be doing any
conversion anyway, just compatibility-check the linear variants of the
formats.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=61954
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Tested-by: Tobias Jakobi <tjakobi@math.uni-bielefeld.de>
r600g needs it too, so add ipo in the common radeon_llvm_check().
radeonsi compiled and linked, but it failed at dynamic link time
with a missing symbol.
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
Eliminate the rest of the no longer needed layout logic.
(It is possible some code could be simplified a bit further still.)
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Since the glBitmap() MRT change, it's unused. There was basically no way
to responsibly use this function since MRT was introduced.
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Any 32-bit format got ARGB8888 handling (including, say, GL_RG1616), and
anything else got 16-bit (including, say, GL_R8), which could potentially
hang the GPU by writing out of bounds.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
We'd only hit color buffer 0 even if multiple draw buffers were bound.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This will ensure that we have resolves if we ever extend this to
glTexSubImage(), and fixes missing image start offset handling.
The texture buffer alloc ended up getting moved up, because we want to
look at the format of the image's actual mt to see if we'll end up
blitting the right thing, in the case of packed depth/stencil uploads.
This is the last caller of intelEmitCopyBlit() on a miptree-wrapped BO.
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
The previous code was missing depth resolves, that had only been prevented
due to no blitting of Y tiling. The pair of flip args in the new blit
function means that we can just drop the pack->Invert fallback.
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
I needed to do this for the PBO blit cases to use intel_miptree_blit().
But this also actually partially fixes a bug in EGLImage handling: We
can't share regions across contexts, because regions have a refcount that
isn't protected by a mutex, and different contexts can be simulataneously
accessed from multiple threads. Now we just need to get regions out of
__DRIImage. There was also a missing use of image->offset in the EGLImage
renderbuffer storage code.
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
In a bit of debug code, we no longer have the inter-slice x/y to print.
But I think the level/slice is more useful in this case for looking at
what's getting mapped, especially given that INTEL_DEBUG=blit will tell
you the other value.
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
While this is a bit more CPU work, it also is less code to handle this
path, and fixes problems with 32k-pitch textures and missing resolves.
v2: Add error checking in new code.
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com> (v1)
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org> (v1)
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
For a blit-uploaded temporary, it's faster on current hardware to memcpy
the data into a linear CPU mapping than to go through the GTT.
v2: Turn the not-fully-supported mask into 3 supported enum values.
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com> (v1)
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org> (v1)
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com> (v2)
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com> (v2)
This is just in case someone else trips over this due to our weird reuse
of this code in glBlitFramebuffer().
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
I think we've measured no performance difference from this in the past,
except that the blorp code can do things like multisample resolves.
Prevents piglit regression in the next commit when a testcase started
trying to do a multisampled resolve through the old glCopyTexSubImage()
path.
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
We were protected for a long time by the fact that depth was Y tiled and
you couldn't blit Y. Now that we can blit Y, we were failing to resolve
depth in glCopyPixels().
Note in the comment about swrast, that the swrast map path does resolves
appropriately already.
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
I had previously asserted that it was hard to write a useful, simpler
blit function, but I think this might be it.
This has the side effect of extending the 32k pitch check to a few more
places that were missing it.
v2: Update comment for being moved inside intel_miptree_blit().
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Right now, the callers in i965 don't expect a nonzero page offset to
actually occur (since that's being handled elsewhere), but it seems
like a trap to leave it this way.
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
It appears that `sizeof(Class::member)` is either non-standard or
merely unsupported in MSVC.
So use `sizeof(instance->member)` instead, which is guaranteed to work
everywhere.
Also promote the assert to a static assert.
Trivial.
The problem is the sampler units are allocated from the same pool for all
shader stages, so if a vertex shader uses 12 samplers (0..11), the fragment
shader samplers start at index 12, leaving only 4 sampler units
for the fragment shader. The main cause is probably the fact that samplers
(texture unit -> sampler unit mapping, etc.) are tracked globally
for an entire program object.
This commit adapts the GLSL linker and core Mesa such that the sampler units
are assigned to sampler uniforms for each shader stage separately
(if a sampler uniform is used in all shader stages, it may occupy a different
sampler unit in each, and vice versa, an i-th sampler unit may refer to
a different sampler uniform in each shader stage), and the sampler-specific
variables are moved from gl_shader_program to gl_shader.
This doesn't require any driver changes, and it fixes piglit/max-samplers
for gallium and classic swrast. It also works with any number of shader
stages.
v2: - converted tabs to spaces
- added an assertion to _mesa_get_sampler_uniform_value
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
to match the size of ctx->Texture.Unit, and it will also fix
piglit/max-samplers with the following commit.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Some Gallium drivers were crashing, because the array was not large enough.
v2: clamp the per-shader maximum in st/mesa, then sum them all up
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Set up CB_SHADER_MASK register according to pixel shader exports, and enable
some minimal state for colour buffer 1 in case dual source blending is used.
TGSI_TEXTURE_BUFFER is one-dimensional. Assert that exec_tex() is never
called with TGSI_TEXTURE_BUFFER.
Signed-off-by: Chia-I Wu <olvaffe@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This patch improves handling of unconditional KILL instructions inside
the conditional blocks, uncovering more opportunities for if-conversion.
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
PRED_SET instructions that update exec mask should be scheduled immediately
prior to the "if-then-else" block, because any instruction that is
inserted after alu clause with PRED_SET and before conditional block is
also conditionally executed by hw (exec mask is already updated at that
moment).
Propbably it's better to make PRED_SET a part of conditional
"if-then-else" block in the IR to handle this more cleanly,
but for now this temporary solution should prevent the problem.
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
For compute shaders we need to let the backend know that
GPRs 0 and 1 are preloaded with some compute-specific input
values, otherwise any use of these regs without previous
definition is considered as undefined value and usually
is simply replaced with 0.
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
This allows GVN rewrite pass to propagate non-const (register)
values to FETCH source operands, helping to eliminate unnecessary
copies in some cases.
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
We have to assume that all GPRs in compute shader can be indirectly
addressed because LLVM backend doesn't provide any indirect array info.
That's why for compute shaders GPR array is created that covers all used
GPRs (0..r600_bytecode::ngpr-1), but this seriously restricts register
allocation in sb.
This patch checks for actual use of indirect access in the shader and
if it's not used then GPR array is not created, so that regalloc is not
unnecessarily restricted.
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
It turns out the MI_LOAD_REGISTER_IMM approach doesn't work on Haswell,
and regressed essentially all the transform feedback Piglit tests.
This morally reverts eaa6fbe6d5. However,
the code is still simpler than it was. On BeginTransformFeedback, we
simply flush the batch and set the SOL reset flag so that the next batch
will start with zeroed offsets. There's still no software counting.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=64887
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Verify that interface blocks match when linking separate shader
stages into a program.
Fixes piglit glsl-1.50 tests:
* linker/interface-blocks-vs-fs-member-count-mismatch.shader_test
* linker/interface-blocks-vs-fs-member-order-mismatch.shader_test
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Verify that interface blocks match when combining compilation
units at the same stage. (For example, when merging all vertex
shaders.)
Fixes piglit glsl-1.50 test:
* linker/interface-blocks-multiple-vs-member-count-mismatch.shader_test
v5 (Ken): Rename to link_interface_blocks.cpp and drop the separate .h
file for consistency with other linker code. Remove "ok" variable.
Fold cross_validate_interface_blocks into its caller.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
With this change we now support interface block arrays.
For example, cases like this:
out block_name {
float f;
} block_instance[2];
This allows Mesa to pass the piglit glsl-1.50 test:
* execution/interface-blocks-complex-vs-fs.shader_test
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Convert interface blocks with instance names into flat
interface blocks without an instance name.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
For interface blocks, there are three separate namespaces for
uniform, input and output blocks.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Previously uniform blocks allowed for the 'uniform' keyword
to be used with members of a uniform blocks. With interface
blocks 'in' can be used on 'in' interface block members and
'out' can be used on 'out' interface block members.
The basic_interface_block rule will verify that the same
qualifier type is used with the block and each member.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
An interface block member may specify the type:
in {
in vec4 in_var_with_qualifier;
};
When specified with the member, it must match the same
type as interface block type.
It can also omit the qualifier:
uniform {
vec4 uniform_var_without_qualifier;
};
When the type is not specified with the member,
it will adopt the same type as the interface block.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Interface blocks in GLSL 150 allow an instance name to be used.
v2:
* use state->check_version
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Previously only 'uniform' was allowed for uniform blocks.
Now, in/out can be parsed, but it will only be allowed for
GLSL >= 150.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Enables guardband clipping when the viewport covers the entire render
target.
No piglit regressions on Ironlake.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Relaxes the validation of
OPTION ARB_precision_hint_{nicest,fastest};
to allow duplicate options. The spec says that both /nicest/ and
/fastest/ cannot be specified together, but could be interpreted
either way for respecification of the same option.
Other drivers (NVIDIA etc) accept this, and at least one Unity3D game
expects it to succeed (Kerbal Space Program).
V2: Add spec quote.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
need_flush was uninitialized if hw3d->new_batch was true.
Fixes "Uninitialized scalar variable" defect reported by Coverity.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Chia-I Wu <olvaffe@gmail.com>
'type' was not fully initialized when calling lp_build_context_init.
Fixes "Uninitialized scalar variable" defect reported by Coverity.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Initially we had NUM_TEX_TILE_ENTRIES of 50, however this was using too much
memory (mostly because the tile cache is operating on fixed max current
sampler views which could be fixed but that's another topic). So it was
decreased to 4. However this is a ridiculously low number which can't
actually really work (the number of tiles needed for as little as
a single quad with linear_mipmap_linear is 2 to 8 for a 2d texture, and
4 to 16 for a 3d texture), as it just about guarantees there will be
cache thrashing sometimes (just about always for 3d textures in fact, since
while there are 4 entries the cache is direct mapped).
So increase that number to 16 (which is still on the low side for direct
mapped cache though I guess using something like 4-way associativity would
be more effective than increasing this further) which has at least some good
chance to avoid thrashing. Since we don't want to increase memory requirements
however in turn decrease the tile size accordingly from 64 to 32 (as a bonus
point this also decreases the cost of texture thrashing which might still
happen sometimes).
I've seen performance improvement in the order of factor ~200 (specifically,
drawing the first frame from the replay from bug 41787 needs "only" ~10s
instead of ~30min, meaning I can actually compare the output with other
drivers...) with this.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This optimization disabled mask checks if the shader is simple enough.
While this should work correctly, the problem is that it can hide real issues
because shaders in practice are usually complex enough (8 instructions or 1
texture is already enough) so this doesn't get used, whereas dumbed-down
tests which should hit all the same code paths suddenly do something quite
different. This was the reason that bug 41787 could not be easily tracked as
stencil test not working correctly (piglit would in fact have failed some
tests without that optimization).
So disable it for now, it's unclear if it's much of a win in any case.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
We actually did early depth/stencil test and late depth/stencil write even
when the shader could kill the fragment (alpha test or discard). Since it
matters for the new stencil value if the fragment is killed by depth/stencil
test or by the shader (in which case it will not reach the depth/stencil
test) this simply cannot work (we also would possibly skip writing the new
stencil value due to mask checks but this is a secondary issue).
So use late depth test / late depth write instead in this case.
(No piglit changes as it doesn't seem to hit such bogus early depth test
/ late depth write path.)
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
We did mask checks between depth/stencil testing and depth/stencil write.
This meant that if the depth/stencil test killed off all fragments we never
actually wrote the new stencil value. This issue affected all early/late
test/write combinations.
So move the mask check after depth/stencil write (for early depth test,
could do the same for late depth test but might not be worth it at that
point so just skip it there).
This addresses https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=41787.
Piglit does not hit this issue because of the simple_shader optimization
in generate_fs_loop() which means we're skipping the mask checks.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This was meant to disable some code which isn't needed when depth/stencil
isn't written. However, there's more code which wouldn't be needed in that
case so having the condition there was just odd (llvm will drop all the code
anyway).
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
* We generate a static library for Haiku
Gallium targets as our port system combines
the compiled rendering code into a modular
ar for each module (for example, our port
system combines llvm libsoftpipe.a libllvmpipe.a
into a single ar for the Haiku build system.
I'd like the Gallium hgl target scons build
system to do this some day, however how is
beyond me at the moment. This is a first step.
Set lod/layer related fields of 3DSTATE_DEPTH_BUFFER. Since we always point
to a single level/layer, those fields are always zero and this commit
effectively makes no change.
While at it, make it easier to disable manual slice offset calculation.
The view extent was set to be the same as the depth while it should be set to
the number of layers. It makes a difference for 3D textures.
Also use this as a chance to clean up the code.
No need to emit 3DSTATE_SO_BUFFER and 3DSTATE_SO_DECL_LIST when SO is
disabled. As the implicit flush done by the commands is also gone, emit an
explicit flush.
Most of the work in BeginTransformFeedback is only necessary on Gen6.
We may as well just skip it on Gen7+.
v2: Add an intel->gen == 6 assert.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Now that we have hardware contexts, we don't need to continually
reprogram the GS_SVBI_INDEX registers. They're automatically saved and
restored with the context, so they can just increment over time. We
only need to reset them when starting transform feedback.
There's also no reason to delay until the next drawing operation; we can
just emit the packet immediately. However, this means we must drop the
initialization in brw_invariant_state, as BeginTransformFeedback may
occur before the first drawing in a context.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
EXT_transform_feedback isn't yet supported on Gen4-5, so none of this
query code is actually used. This also means we can remove some of the
surrounding support code.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Failing to get a hardware context now means failing to load the driver,
so this code will never get hit.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
and add assertions to prevent buffer overflow. This fixes corruption
of the si_shader struct.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
[ Cherry-pick of r600g commit da33f9b919 ]
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
- recent gdb handles DWARF fine (tested both with version
7.1.90.20100730 from mingw-w64 project, and 7.5-1 from mingw project)
- http://people.freedesktop.org/~jrfonseca/bfdhelp/ was updated to
handle DWARF
- stabs requires ugly hacks to prevent compilation failures
- mixing stabs/dwarf prevents proper backtraces (which is inevitable,
given that the MinGW C runtime is pre-built with DWARF)
For example, without this change I get:
(gdb) bt
#0 _wassert (_Message=0xf925060 L"Num < NumOperands && \"Invalid child # of SDNode!\"",
_File=0xf60b488 L"llvm/include/llvm/CodeGen/SelectionDAGNodes.h", _Line=534)
at ../../../../mingw-w64-crt/misc/wassert.c:51
#1 0x0368996b in _assert (_Message=0x39d7ee4 "Num < NumOperands && \"Invalid child # of SDNode!\"",
_File=0x39d7e94 "llvm/include/llvm/CodeGen/SelectionDAGNodes.h", _Line=534)
at ../../../../mingw-w64-crt/misc/wassert.c:44
#2 0x00000004 in ?? ()
#3 0x00000004 in ?? ()
#4 0x0f60b488 in ?? ()
#5 0x00000000 in ?? ()
While with this change I get:
(gdb) bt
#0 _wassert (_Message=0xfb982e8 L"Num < NumOperands && \"Invalid child # of SDNode!\"",
_File=0xefbcb40 L"llvm/include/llvm/CodeGen/SelectionDAGNodes.h", _Line=534)
at ../../../../mingw-w64-crt/misc/wassert.c:51
#1 0x039c996b in _assert (_Message=0x3d17f24 "Num < NumOperands && \"Invalid child # of SDNode!\"",
_File=0x3d17ed4 "llvm/include/llvm/CodeGen/SelectionDAGNodes.h", _Line=534)
at ../../../../mingw-w64-crt/misc/wassert.c:44
#2 0x033111cc in getOperand (Num=4, this=<optimized out>)
at llvm/include/llvm/CodeGen/SelectionDAGNodes.h:534
#3 getOperand (i=4, this=<optimized out>)
at llvm/include/llvm/CodeGen/SelectionDAGNodes.h:779
#4 llvm::SelectionDAG::getNode (this=0xf00cb08, Opcode=79, DL=..., VT=..., N1=..., N2=...)
at llvm/lib/CodeGen/SelectionDAG/SelectionDAG.cpp:2859
#5 0x03377b20 in llvm::SelectionDAGBuilder::visitExtractElement (this=0xfb45028, I=...)
at llvm/lib/CodeGen/SelectionDAG/SelectionDAGBuilder.cpp:2803
[...]
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Emit XY_SRC_COPY_BLT to do the job. Since ETC1 textures cannot be mapped for
reading, as is required by util_copy_resource_region, this fixes copying of
ETC1 textures.
The problem with cp hooks is that when we switch from 3D ring to 2D ring, and
when there are active queries, we will emit 3D commands to 2D ring because
the new-batch hook is called.
This commit introduces the idea of cp owner. When the cp is flushed, or when
another owner takes place, the current owner is notified, giving it a chance
to emit whatever commands there need to be. With this mechanism, we can
resume queries when the 3D pipeline owns the cp, and pause queries when it
loses the cp. Ring switch will just work.
As we still need to know when the cp bo is reallocated, a flush callback is
added.
Now that we have hardware contexts and can use MI_STORE_REGISTER_MEM,
we can use the GPU's pipeline statistics counters rather than going out
of our way to count primitives in software.
Aside from being simpler, this also paves the way for Geometry Shaders,
which can output an arbitrary number of primitives on the GPU. It will
also allow us to use hardware primitive restart when these queries are
in use.
The GL_TRANSFORM_FEEDBACK_PRIMITIVES_WRITTEN query is easy: it
corresponds to the SO_NUM_PRIMS_WRITTEN/SO_NUM_PRIMS_WRITTEN0_IVB
counters.
The GL_PRIMITIVES_GENERATED query is trickier. Gen provides several
statistics registers which /almost/ match the semantics required:
- IA_PRIMITIVES_COUNT
The number of primitives fetched by the VF or IA (input assembler).
This undercounts when GS is enabled, as it can output many primitives.
- GS_PRIMITIVES_COUNT
The number of primitives output by the GS. Unfortunately, this
doesn't increment unless the GS unit is actually enabled, and it
usually isn't.
- SO_PRIM_STORAGE_NEEDED*_IVB
The amount of space needed to write primitives output by transform
feedback. These naturally only work when transform feedback is on.
We'd also have to add the counters for all four streams.
- CL_INVOCATION_COUNT
The number of primitives processed by the clipper. This doesn't work
if the GS or SOL throw away primitives for rasterizer discard.
However, it does increment even if the clipper is in REJECT_ALL mode.
Dynamically switching between counters would be painfully complicated,
especially since GS, rasterizer discard, and transform feedback can all
be switched on and off repeatedly during a single query.
The most usable counter is CL_INVOCATION_COUNT. The previous two
patches reworked rasterizer discard support so that all primitives hit
the clipper, making this work.
v2: Occlusion query bug fixes removed and squashed in earlier patches.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This has more of a negative impact than the previous patch, as on Gen6
passing primitives through to the clipper means we actually have to make
the GS thread write them to the URB.
I don't see another good solution though, and rasterizer discard is not
the most common of cases, so hopefully it won't be too terrible.
v2: Add a perf_debug; resolve rebase conflicts on the brw dirty flags;
remove the rasterizer_discard field from brw_gs_prog_key.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net> [v1]
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
In order to implement the GL_PRIMITIVES_GENERATED query in a sane
fashion on our hardware, we can't discard primitives until the clipper.
The patch after next explains the rationale.
By setting the clipper to REJECT_ALL mode, all primitives get thrown away,
so rendering is still appropriately disabled.
This may negatively impact performance in the rasterizer discard case,
but it's unclear how much and this hasn't been observed to be a
bottleneck in any application we've looked at. The clipper is the very
next stage in the pipeline, so I don't think it will be terrible.
v2: Add a perf_debug; resolve rebase conflicts on the brw dirty flags.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
We don't currently use the clipper statistics, but we'll soon use
CL_INVOCATIONS_COUNT to implement the GL_PRIMITIVES_GENERATED query.
The number of primitives generated is not supposed to be altered during
operations such as glGenerateMipmap.
Prevents spec/EXT_transform_feedback/generatemipmap prims_generated
from breaking when we start using pipeline statistics registers to
implement the GL_PRIMITIVES_GENERATED query in a few commits.
v2: Use the BRW_NEW_META_IN_PROGRESS flag for correct state handling.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net> [v1]
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This will allow us to disable statistics during meta operations.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Hardware contexts greatly simplify the query object code. The pipeline
statistics counters get saved and restored with the context, which means
that we don't need to worry about other workloads polluting them.
This means that we can simply write a single pair of values (one at
BeginQuery and one at EndQuery) rather than a series of pairs. This
also means we don't need to worry about the BO getting full. We also
don't need to delay BO allocation and starting snapshot until the first
draw.
The generation split here is a little off: technically, Ironlake can also
support hardware contexts. However, the kernel currently doesn't, and
even if it were to do so someday, we'd need to wait a while before
bumping the kernel requirement to take advantage of it.
v2: Incorporate Paul's feedback.
- Clarify which functions are Gen4/5-only via assertions and comments.
- Change how driver hook initialization happens.
- Update comments.
- Squash a bug fix from a later commit here where it belongs.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net> [v1]
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
BLORP is used for operations like glClear, glCopyTexImage, and
glBlitFramebuffer which aren't supposed to contribute fragments toward
occlusion queries.
This prevents Piglit tests from breaking in the next commit.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Hardware contexts are necessary to reasonably support OpenGL 3.2.
In particular, we currently maintain software counters for transform
feedback buffer offsets and counters, which relies on knowing the number
of primitives generated. Geometry shaders violate that assumption.
At the time of writing, Debian has moved to Kernel 3.8, which means most
people probably have a newer kernel by now. It's also worth noting that
this patch won't land until Mesa 10 which is currently targeted for
September. By that point, even more people will have a newer kernel.
Also, don't bother trying to allocate contexts on pre-Gen6, as it
currently will always fail, and if this changes in the future, we'll
need to reevaluate our hw_ctx/gen checks.
This patch leaves the code for flagging BRW_NEW_CONTEXT on new
batchbuffers if hw_ctx == NULL since that still occurs pre-Gen6.
Also remove the Gen7+ check for kernel 3.3, since it's now redundant.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Kernel 3.3 introduced the SOL reset execbuf parameter, needed for GL 3.0
on Ivybridge. Bumping the requirement will give an obvious error
message rather than simply reporting GL 2.1.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
brw_link_shader() unconditionally calls lower_vector_insert() with true
as the second parameter. This means that both constant and variable
indexed expressions will get lowered, so we should never see this in the
backend.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
do_vec_index_to_swizzle() should remove any vector extract operations
with a constant index. It's unconditionally called from
do_common_optimization().
do_vec_index_to_cond_assign() should remove the rest, and it is
unconditionally called from brw_link_shader(). This means that we
should never see ir_binop_vector_extract in the backend.
Silences compiler warnings.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Now that we can handle it both for sampling and as depth/stencil enable it.
Passes nearly all additional piglit tests which are now performed, with two
exceptions (one being a framebuffer blit which fails for all other formats
including stencil too as we don't support stencil blits, the other reporting
a unexpected GL error so doesn't look to be llvmpipe's fault).
We need to split up the depth and stencil values in this case, and there's
some new logic required to handle float depth and stencil simultaneously.
Also make sure we get the 64bit zs clear values and masks propagated
correctly.
We do rendering to linear color buffers for quite some time, and since
switching to linear depth buffers all the tiled/linear logic was unused.
So get rid of (most) of it - there's still some LAYOUT_NONE things and
late allocation of resources which probably could be simplified.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The code avoided first_layer parameter in the sampler interface (and needing
to do another calculation at runtime) by fixing up the base texture pointer
instead. Unfortunately, this didn't actually work as we have mip-first
texture layout so fixing up the base ptr by a fixed amount is very wrong if
there are mipmaps present. The wrong offsets caused misrendering and crashes.
Fix this by just adjusting the individual mip level offsets instead.
Spotted by Jose.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Since we can only sample either depth or stencil but not both only load
the required bits which makes things a bit easier (it requires special
handling since the format doesn't fit into 32bit).
The logic for deciding if depth or stencil should be sampled is a bit odd,
but seems to be what other drivers and statetrackers do: if it's a format with
both depth and stencil (or just with depth) then sample depth, for sampling
stencil a sampler view format with only stencil is required.
Also while here fix up stencil sampling for other formats as well, though
this isn't supported by mesa (ARB_stencil_texturing), and while blits would
use it they don't work neither since they'd also need stencil export.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
I don't know what this code was trying to do but whatever it was it couldn't
have worked since negation of integer boolean inputs while not specified as
outright illegal (not yet at least) won't do anything since it doesn't affect
the result of comparison with zero at all. In fact it looks like the whole
instruction can just be omitted.
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Now that the rb has a reference to the teximage, we didn't need anything
else out of the attachment.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We keep having to pass the attachments around with our gl_renderbuffers
because that's the only way to find what the gl_renderbuffer actually
refers to. This is a step toward removing that (though drivers still need
the Zoffset as well).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This is the opportunity that radeon and intel drivers rely on for flushing
render targets that may get reused as textures. Before EGL, that only
happened for GL_TEXTURE attachments.
Fixes piglits:
KHR_gl_renderbuffer_image/renderbuffer-texture
OES_EGL_image/renderbuffer-texture
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This change was meant as a stepping stone to use PMADDUBSW SSSE3
instruction, but actually this refactoring by itself yields a 10%
speedup on texture intensive shaders (e.g, Google Earth's ocean water
w/o S3TC on a Ivy Bridge machine), while giving yielding exactly the
same results, whereas PMADDUBSW only gave an extra 5%, at the expense of
2bits of precision in the interpolation.
I belive that the speedup of this change comes from the reduced register
pressure (as 8.8 fixed point intermediates take twice the space of 8bit
unorm).
Also, not dealing with 8.8 simplifies lp_bld_sample_aos.c code
substantially -- it's no longer necessary to have code duplicated for
low and high register halfs.
Note about lp_build_sample_mipmap(): the path for num_quads > 1 is never
executed (as it is faster on AVX to split the 256bit wide texture
computation into two 128bit chunks, in order to leverage integer
opcodes). This path might be useful in the future, so in order to
verify this change did not break that path I had to apply this change:
@@ -1662,11 +1662,11 @@ lp_build_sample_soa(struct gallivm_state *gallivm,
/*
* we only try 8-wide sampling with soa as it appears to
* be a loss with aos with AVX (but it should work).
* (It should be faster if we'd support avx2)
*/
- if (num_quads == 1 || !use_aos) {
+ if (/* num_quads == 1 || ! */ use_aos) {
if (num_quads > 1) {
if (mip_filter == PIPE_TEX_MIPFILTER_NONE) {
LLVMValueRef index0 = lp_build_const_int32(gallivm, 0);
/*
and then run texfilt mesademo:
LP_NATIVE_VECTOR_WIDTH=256 ./texfilt
Ran whole piglit without regressions.
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
The SROA and function inliner passes are espically important, because
they optimize away unsupported features: functions and indirect
private memory access.
When an application is using PBOs, we attempt to use the BLT engine to
perform ReadPixels. If that fails due to some restrictions, it's useful
to raise a performance warning.
In the non-PBO case, we always use a CPU mapping since getting the data
into client memory requires a CPU-side copy. This is a very common case,
so raising a performance warning is annoying. In particular, apitrace's
image dumping code hits this path, causing it to print hundreds of
thousands of performance warnings via ARB_debug_output. This tends to
obscure actual errors or other important messages.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
When intel_finalize_mipmap_tree() calls intel_miptree_copy_teximage()
to reassemble a depth miptree that has been broken apart into pieces
(to deal with misalignment of levels/layers within the miptree), it
just copies the depth data, not the HiZ data. This is reasonable,
since the alignment restrictions of HiZ are a large part of the reason
why the miptree had to be broken apart in the first place. However,
in order for the depth copy to be sufficient, we need to do a depth
resolve first, to make sure any deferred depth writes that are in the
HiZ buffer get performed.
Fixes https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=64662 and
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=64659.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Whether HiZ is enalbed or not, separate stencil is supported and enforced on
GEN7+. Now that we support separate stencil resources, we know how to emit
3DSTATE_STENCIL_BUFFER.
For allocations, we need to support stencil-only and separate stencil
resources. For mapping, we need to support software tiling and
packing/unpacking for separate stencil resources.
There were 2 issues with it:
1) The texture format which should be used for texturing was only set
in gl_texture_image::TexFormat, which wasn't used for sampler views.
2) Textures are sometimes reallocated under some circumstances
in st_finalize_texture, which is unacceptable if the texture comes
from a window system.
The issues are resolved as follows:
1) If surface_based is true (texture_from_pixmap, etc.), store the format
in a new variable st_texture_object::surface_format.
2) Don't reallocate a surface-based texture in st_finalize_texture.
Also don't use st_ChooseTextureFormat is st_context_teximage, because
the format is dictated by the caller.
This fixes the glx-tfp piglit test.
Reviewed-by: Adam Jackson <ajax@redhat.com>
This fixes and enables texturing with compressed MSAA colorbuffers
on Evergreen and Cayman. For the first time, multisample textures work
on Cayman.
This requires the libdrm flag RADEON_SURF_FMASK.
v2: require libdrm_radeon 2.4.45
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
This should have no change on driver operation, but it means that when you
wonder why some format isn't supported natively, you can just look at the
table above, instead of wondering if maybe there's an appropriate entry in
the surface formats table that is already supported.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Previously we would expand it to RGBA_FLOAT16. This format now comes out
as framebuffer incomplete, but it seems worth the memory savings if that's
what people are asking for (and GL3 does list it under "texture-only"
color formats)
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The next commit introduces what is apparently our first one, which tripped
over this in glReadPixels.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This is a step on the way to removing some of our code for forcing alpha
to 1, but I want easy bisecting so I'll add groups of formats separately.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
All drivers now clamp this to the appropriate range for the bound
stencil buffer when emitting stencil state.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Clamps the stencil reference value to the range representable in the
currently-bound draw framebuffer's stencil attachment.
V2: Add spec quote.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Always check if a bo is busy in choose_transfer_method() since we always need
to map it in either map() or unmap(). Also determine how a bo is mapped in
choose_transfer_method().
The indices are not consecutive when using the geometry shader,
which means we were extracting non existing values. Create
an array of linear indices and always use it instead of the passed
indices. Found by Jose.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Pass in the size of the index buffer, when available, and use it
to handle out of bounds conditions. The behavior in the case of
an overflow needs to be the same as with other overflows in the
vertex processing pipeline meaning that a vertex should still
be generated but all attributes in it set to zero.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
the number of vertices to fetch doesn't necessarily equal the
total number of input vertices, e.g. we might want to fetch
a single vertex but then draw it twice. Lets use the correct
number of input vertices in the statistics.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
We would crash when stride was bigger than the size of the buffer.
The correct behavior is to just fetch zero's in this case.
Unfortunatly with user_buffer's there's no way to validate the size
because currently we're just not getting it. Adjust the draw interface
to pass the size along the mapped buffer, which works perfectly
for buffer backed vertex_buffers and, in future, it will allow
us to plumb user_buffer sizes through the same interface.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
The support is analogous to the way we handle indirect addressing
in temporaries, except that we don't have to worry about storing
(after declarations) and thus we'll able to keep using the old
code when indirect addressing isn't used. In other words we're
still using constants directly, unless the instruction has
immediate register with indirect addressing.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Static initialization of internal libstdc++ data related to iostream
causes segfaults with some apps.
This patch replaces all uses of std::ostream and std::ostringstream in sb
with custom lightweight classes.
Prevents segfaults with ut2004demo and probably some other old apps.
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
Parsing and ir construction is required for optimization only,
it's unnecessary if we only need to print shader dump.
This should make new disassembler more tolerant to any new
features in the bytecode.
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
Resource mapping is distinct from resource allocation, and is going to get
more and more complex. Move the related functions to a new file to make the
separation clear.
Mesa's extension table incorrectly lists this GL_OES_texture_npot as
ES2-only. It's also an ES1 extension. This patch adds ES1 to the
extensions API mask.
From the GL_OES_texture_npot spec:
OpenGL ES 1.0 or OpenGL ES 2.0 is required. This extension is
written against OpenGL ES 1.1.12 and OpenGL ES 2.0.25.
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Now that all the places that used to generate array derefeneces of
vectors have been changed to generate either ir_binop_vector_extract or
ir_triop_vector_insert (or both), remove all support for dealing with
this deprecated construct.
As an added safeguard, modify ir_validate to reject ir_dereference_array
of a vector.
v2: Convert tabs to spaces. Suggested by Eric.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Like with type conversions on out parameters, some extra copies need to
occur to handle these cases. The fundamental problem is that
ir_binop_vector_extract is not an lvalue, but out and inout parameters
must be lvalues. A previous patch delt with a similar problem in the
LHS of ir_assignment.
v2: Convert tabs to spaces. Suggested by Eric.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Variable indexing into vectors using ir_dereference_array is being
removed, so this lowering pass has to generate something different.
v2: Convert tabs to spaces. Suggested by Eric.
v3: Simplify code slightly by assuming that elements of
gl_ClipDistanceMESA will always be vec4. Suggested by Paul.
v4: Fairly substantial rewrite based on the rewrite of "glsl: Convert
lower_clip_distance_visitor to be an ir_rvalue_visitor"
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
ir_call was changed long ago to be a statement rather than an
expression. That makes this comment no longer valid.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Right now the lower_clip_distance_visitor lowers variable indexing into
gl_ClipDistance into variable indexing into both the array
gl_ClipDistanceMESA and the vectors of that array. For example,
gl_ClipDistance[i] = f;
becomes
gl_ClipDistanceMESA[i >> 2][i & 3] = f;
However, variable indexing into vectors using ir_dereference_array is
being removed. Instead, ir_expression with ir_triop_vector_insert will
be used. The above code will become
gl_ClipDistanceMESA[i >> 2] =
vector_insert(gl_ClipDistanceMESA[i >> 2], i & 3, f);
In order to do this, an ir_rvalue_visitor will need to be used. This
commit is really just a refactor to get ready for that.
v4: Split the least amount of refactor from the rest of the code
changes.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Now ir_dereference_array of a vector will never occur in the RHS of an
expression.
v2: Add back the { } around the if-statement body to make it more
readable. Suggested by Eric.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The ast_array_index code can't know whether to generate an
ir_binop_vector_extract or an ir_triop_vector_insert. Instead it will
always generate ir_binop_vector_extract, and the LHS and RHS have to be
re-written.
v2: Convert tabs to spaces. Suggested by Eric.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This will eventually replace do_vec_index_to_cond_assign. This lowering
pass is called in all the places where do_vec_index_to_cond_assign or
do_vec_index_to_swizzle is called.
v2: Use WRITEMASK_* instead of integer literals. Use a more concise
method of generating broadcast_index. Both suggested by Eric.
v3: Use a series of scalar compares instead of a single vector compare.
Suggested by Eric and Ken. It still uses 'if (cond) v.x = y;' instead
of conditional assignments because ir_builder doesn't do conditional
assignments, and I'd rather keep the code simple.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Lower ir_binop_vector_extract with a non-constant index to a series of
conditional moves. This is exactly like ir_dereference_array of a
vector with a non-constant index.
v2: Convert tabs to spaces. Suggested by Eric.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Lower ir_binop_vector_extract with a constant index to a swizzle. This
is exactly like ir_dereference_array of a vector with a constant index.
v2: Convert tabs to spaces. Suggested by Eric.
v3: Correctly call convert_vector_extract_to_swizzle in
ir_vec_index_to_swizzle_visitor::visit_enter(ir_call *ir). Suggested by
Ken.
v4: Use CLAMP instead of MIN2(MAX2()). Suggested by Ken.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Use a first function that extract the vector being indexed and the index
from the deref. Call the second function that does the real work.
Coming patches will add a new ir_expression for variable indexing into a
vector. Having the lowering pass split into two functions will make it
much easier to lower the new ir_expression.
v2: Convert tabs to spaces. Suggested by Eric.
v3: Move some bits from a later patch back to this patch so that it
actually compiles. Suggested by Ken.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The new opcode is used to generate a new vector with a single field from
the source vector replaced. This will eventually replace
ir_dereference_array of vectors in the LHS of assignments.
v2: Convert tabs to spaces. Suggested by Eric.
v3: Add constant expression handling for ir_triop_vector_insert. This
prevents the constant matrix inversion tests from regressing. Duh.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The new opcode is used to get a single field from a vector. The field
index may not be constant. This will eventually replace
ir_dereference_array of vectors. This is similar to the extractelement
instruction in LLVM IR.
http://llvm.org/docs/LangRef.html#extractelement-instruction
v2: Convert tabs to spaces. Suggested by Eric.
v3: Add array index range checking to ir_binop_vector_extract constant
expression handling. Suggested by Ken.
v4: Use CLAMP instead of MIN2(MAX2()). Suggested by Ken.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Commit b765740 (glsl: Pass struct shader_compiler_options into
do_common_optimization.) added a new parameter to
do_common_optimization() but didn't update test_optpass.cpp, causing
"make check" to break.
This patch makes the proper updates to test_optpass.cpp so that the
build succeeds again.
This pass flips (matrix * vector) operations to (vector *
matrixTranspose) for certain built-in matrices (currently
gl_ModelViewProjectionMatrix and gl_TextureMatrix).
This is equivalent, but results in dot products rather than multiplies
and adds. On some hardware, this is more efficient.
This pass is conditionalized on ctx->mvp_with_dp4, the flag drivers set
to indicate they prefer dot products.
Improves performance in Lightsmark by 1.01131% +/- 0.162069% (n = 10)
on a Haswell GT2 system. Passes Piglit on Ivybridge.
v2: Use struct gl_shader_compiler_options instead of plumbing through
another boolean flag for this purpose.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Doing matrix multiplies with DP4s is fewer instructions than MUL/ADD,
especially since we don't support MAD in the vertex shader.
Not observed to improve performance in any fixed function applications,
but is useful for the next patch.
I've left this unset for the fragment shader because the scalar backend
can't use DP4 and does have MAD support.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This flag essentially tells the compiler whether it prefers
dot products or multiply/adds for matrix operations. As such,
ShaderCompilerOptions seems like the right place for it.
This also lets us specify it on a per-stage basis. This patch makes all
existing users set the flag for the Vertex Shader stage only, as it's
currently only used for fixed-function vertex programs. That will
change soon, and I wanted to preserve the existing behavior.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
do_common_optimization may need to make choices about whether to emit
certain kinds of instructions. gl_context::ShaderCompilerOptions
contains exactly that information, so it makes sense to pass it in.
Rather than passing the whole array, pass the structure for the stage
that's currently being worked on.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
We can't include shaderobj.h from the standalone utilities, so we
unfortunately have to copy this function.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Marek added these new formats in commit f9fa725690, but
without comments relating to the packing. Sometimes the naming is
confusing, so these comments are helpful in determining whether two
formats are compatible.
The new comments are based on my reading of format_unpack.c.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
- don't reference a buffer for a local variable
(that's never useful unless it can be the only reference to the buffer)
- check if the buffer is not NULL
- set buffer_size as specified with BindBufferRange
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Reviewed-by: Fredrik Höglund <fredrik@kde.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
v2: move the flagging from intel_bufferobj_data to intel_bufferobj_alloc_buffer
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
If Const.CheckArrayBounds is false, the only code using _MaxElement is
glDrawRangeElements, so I changed it and explained in the code why
_MaxElement is not very useful there.
BTW, the big magic number was copied to the letter
from _mesa_update_array_max_element.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The limits should not be different and OpenGL requires both to be at least 32,
which is also the maximum limit on radeon.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Const.MaxTextureImageUnits -> Const.FragmentProgram.MaxTextureImageUnits
Const.MaxVertexTextureImageUnits -> Const.VertexProgram.MaxTextureImageUnits
etc.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Shaders are unified on most hardware (= same limits in all stages).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
We were not allowed to say the "GT3" name, but we really needed to
have the PCI IDs because too many people had such machines, so we had
to make the GT3 machines work as GT2.
Let's just say that GT2_PLUS was a short for GT2_PLUS_1 :)
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Paulo Zanoni <paulo.r.zanoni@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Haswell's GT3 variant offers 32kB of URB space for push constants, while
GT1 and GT2 match Ivybridge, providing 16kB. Update the code to reserve
the full 32kB on GT3.
v2: Specify push constant size correctly. I thought GT3 reinterpreted
the value as multiples of 2kB, but it doesn't. You simply have to
program an even number.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This is the same change as the previous commit to the FS. A very few VSes
are regressed by 1 or 2 instructions, which look recoverable with a bit
more dead code elimination.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Previously, we would sometimes not consider a write to a register to
extend the end of the interval, nor would we consider a read before a
write to extend the start. This made for a bunch of complicated logic
related to how to treat the results when dead code might be present.
Instead, just extend the interval and fix dead code elimination to know
how to remove it.
Interestingly, this actually results in a tiny bit more optimization:
total instructions in shared programs: 1391220 -> 1390799 (-0.03%)
instructions in affected programs: 14037 -> 13616 (-3.00%)
v2: Fix a theoretical problem with the simd16 workaround if dst == src,
where we would revert the bump of the live range.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com> (v1)
Now tells Gallium that ilo supports primitive restart.
Updated ilo_draw_vbo to be able to check that the indexed
primitive being rendered can actually be supported in HW. If not,
will break up into individual prims similar to what Mesa does.
[olv: a minor fix after rebasing and formatting]
Before, if we failed to allocate the index buffer we'd silently
return from st_draw_vbo() without drawing anything. We should
raise GL_OUT_OF_MEMORY to give some indication that something went
wrong.
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
It helps a bit with vertex shader performance on i915g
(a couple percent faster with openarena).
I have tried most other passes, and they weren't showing
any measurable improvement. Note that my vertex shaders
didn't have loops, so maybe the loop optimizations could
still be useful in the future.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Unfortunately the surface formats table is now splattered across multiple
chapters. All surface format enums from brw_defines.h are present, but
only support for them that is mentioned in the public specs is included
here.
v2 (from Ken): Mark R32G32B32A32_SFIXED as unsupported on Ivybridge.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Do not propagate a copy if source and destination are identical.
Otherwise code like
MOV TEMP[0].xyzw, TEMP[0].wzyx
MOV TEMP[1].xyzw, TEMP[0].xyzw
is changed to
MOV TEMP[0].xyzw, TEMP[0].wzyx
MOV TEMP[1].xyzw, TEMP[0].wzyx
This fixes Piglit test shaders/glsl-copy-propagation-self-2 for drivers that
use Mesa IR.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Fabian Bieler <fabianbieler@fastmail.fm>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Do not propagate a copy if source and destination are identical.
Otherwise code like
MOV TEMP[0].xyzw, TEMP[0].wzyx
MOV TEMP[1].xyzw, TEMP[0].xyzw
is changed to
MOV TEMP[0].xyzw, TEMP[0].wzyx
MOV TEMP[1].xyzw, TEMP[0].wzyx
This fixes Piglit test shaders/glsl-copy-propagation-self-2 for gallium drivers.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Fabian Bieler <fabianbieler@fastmail.fm>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
The constant packets for gen6 are too small for gen7, and while IVB seems
happy with them HSW blows up. Fix it by emitting the correct packets on
gen7, for all stages.
v2: Include the packets instead of just skipping them.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Emit EGL_BAD_CONTEXT if the user passes a context to
eglCreateImageKHR(type=EGL_ANDROID_image_native_buffer).
From the EGL_ANDROID_image_native_buffer spec:
* If <target> is EGL_NATIVE_BUFFER_ANDROID and <ctx> is not
EGL_NO_CONTEXT, the error EGL_BAD_CONTEXT is generated.
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Tapani Pälli <tapani.palli@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
This basically reverts commit
2acc719374.
With the previous change, we're not batchbuffer limited any
longer. So we actually start seeing a performance difference
between X and Y tiling. X tiling is funny because it is
faster for screen-aligned quads but slower in games. So let's
use Y tiling which is 10% faster overall.
Now that we don't throttle at every batchbuffer, we can shrink
the size of batchbuffers to achieve early flushing. This gives
a significant speed boost in a lot of games (on the order of
20%).
It should be TGSI_TYPE_UNSIGNED, not TGSI_TYPE_FLOAT.
Fixed also gallivm not_emit_cpu() to use uint build context.
Signed-off-by: Chia-I Wu <olvaffe@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Move the body of tgsi_opcode_infer_dst_type() to a new helper function,
tgsi_opcode_infer_type(), and call the helper function from
tgsi_opcode_infer_dst_type(). The diff looks complicated simply because the
code is moved around.
A following commit will make tgsi_opcode_infer_src_type() call
tgsi_opcode_infer_type().
Signed-off-by: Chia-I Wu <olvaffe@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Reorder opcodes by their assigned numbers. This makes it easier to see the
differences between tgsi_opcode_infer_src_type() and
tgsi_opcode_infer_dst_type().
Signed-off-by: Chia-I Wu <olvaffe@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Make use of tgsi_util_get_texture_coord_dim() to replace the big switch table.
There is a subtle difference with this change. When TXP is used with an array
texture, the layer is now also projected. This behavior matches the TGSI doc.
Since GLSL does not allow TXP on an array texture, I am not sure which
behavior is correct or preferred.
Signed-off-by: Chia-I Wu <olvaffe@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
This util function returns the dimension of the texture coordinates for a
texture target, and the location of the shadow reference value.
For example, when the texture target is TGSI_TEXTURE_SHADOW2D, the dimension
of the texture coordinates is 2, and the location of the ref value is 2
(that is, the Z channel).
Signed-off-by: Chia-I Wu <olvaffe@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Adds the remaining integer opcodes, and some opcodes are moved to more
appropriate places, along with getting rid of the (already nearly empty)
ps_2_x section. Though the CAP bits for some of these are still a bit in
the air so the documentation isn't quite as watertight as is desirable.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
We can replace CNDxx with MOV (and possibly eliminate after
propagation) in following cases:
If src1 is equal to src2 in CNDxx instruction then the result doesn't
depend on condition and we can replace the instruction with
"MOV dst, src1".
If src0 is const then we can evaluate the condition at compile time and
also replace it with MOV.
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
Use the same limit for kcache constants in alu group on r6xx as on other
chips (two const pairs). Relaxing this will require additional checks to
make sure that all 4 consts in the group come from 2 kcache sets (clause
limit), probably without noticeable improvements of shader performance.
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
Everyone was doing effectively the same thing, except for some funky code
reuse in Intel, and swrast mistakenly recomputing _BaseFormat instead of
using the texture's _BaseFormat. swrast's sRGB handling is left in place,
though it should be done by using _mesa_get_render_format() at render time
instead (as-is, it will miss updates to GL_FRAMEBUFFER_SRGB).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We're looking for the logical width of our level, which is what
image->Width2/Height2 is. The previous code relied on MSAA textures being
only level 0.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
There was some comment about trying to avoid marking resolves in
updownsample, but if the downsample is never actually rendered to, then
the required resolve tracked in the downsample will never be executed, so
who cares?
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
v2: Only lower bitfieldInsert to BFM+BFI (and don't lower
bitfieldExtract at all) since three-source instructions are now
usable in the vertex shader.
v3: Lower bitfield_insert in the same pass with everything else, since
it doesn't produce any instructions to be lowered (the other two
lowering passes that were in a previous iteration of this series
emitted subtractions which needed to be lowered).
Reviewed-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz> [v2]
v2: Rebase on LRP addition.
Use fix_3src_operand() when emitting BFE and BFI2.
Add BFE and BFI2 to is_3src_inst check in
brw_vec4_copy_propagation.cpp.
Subtract result of FBH from 31 (unless an error) to convert
MSB counts to LSB counts
Reviewed-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Don't bother scalarizing ir_binop_bfm, since its results are
identical for all channels.
v2: Subtract result of FBH from 31 (unless an error) to convert
MSB counts to LSB counts.
v3: Use op0->clone() in ir_triop_bfi to prevent (var_ref
channel_expressions) from appearing multiple times in the IR.
Reviewed-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz> [v2]
Specifically
bfe - for bitfieldExtract()
bfi1 and bfi2 - for bitfieldInsert()
bfrev - for bitfieldReverse()
cbit - for bitCount()
fbh - for findMSB()
fbl - for findLSB()
Reviewed-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Also update asserts to allow BFE and BFI2, which take (unsigned)
doubleword arguments.
v2: Allow BRW_REGISTER_TYPE_UD for src1 and src2 as well.
Assert that src2.type (instead of src0.type) matches dest.type since
it's the primary argument and src0 and src1 might correctly have
different types.
Reviewed-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz> [v1]
i965/Gen7+ and Radeon/Evergreen+ have bfm/bfi instructions to implement
bitfieldInsert() from ARB_gpu_shader5.
v2: Add ir_binop_bfm and ir_triop_bfi to st_glsl_to_tgsi.cpp.
Remove spurious temporary assignment and dereference.
Reviewed-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
v2: Order bits from LSB end (31 - count) for ir_unop_find_msb.
v3: Add ir_triop_bitfield_extract as an exception to the op[0]->type ==
op[1]->type assertion in ir_constant_expression.cpp.
Reviewed-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz> [v2]
This library is very small, so there is not much to gain from building
it as a shared library. Also, when linking statically with LLVM, a
shared libradeonllvm exports LLVM symbols and creates problems when
used with other shared objects that also link statically to LLVM.
Reviewed-by: Mathias.Froehlich@web.de
The LLVM C API is considered stable and should never change, so it
is much more desirable to use than the LLVM C++ API, which is constantly in
flux.
v2:
- Split target initialization and lookup into separate functions
Reviewed-by: Mathias.Froehlich@web.de
This does not solve all of the problems with using LLVM in a
multithreaded enivronment, but it should help in some cases.
Reviewed-by: Mathias.Froehlich@web.de
This leads to crashes when multiple threads try to compile compute
shaders in the same time.
Fixes a crash in bfgminer when using more than one thread.
Of the 3 controls in the extension, one was kept in GL core and the other
two were explicitly deprecated and the reasonable default behavior was
encoded in the spec. By not exposing the extension, we avoid shader
recompiles when switching between float and unorm color buffers.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This cleans up some funny-looking code in some unigine shaders I was
looking at. Also slightly helps on planeshift and a few shaders in an
upcoming Valve release.
total instructions in shared programs: 1653715 -> 1653587 (-0.01%)
instructions in affected programs: 16550 -> 16422 (-0.77%)
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
It should be unsigned, not enum pipe_flush_flags.
Fixed a build error:
src/gallium/state_trackers/egl/android/native_android.cpp:426:29: error:
invalid conversion from 'int' to 'pipe_flush_flags' [-fpermissive]
v2: replace all occurrences of enum pipe_flush_flags by unsigned
Signed-off-by: Chia-I Wu <olvaffe@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
[olv: document the parameter now that the type is unsigned]
Improves glb2.7 performance at a misaligned size by 2.3% +/- 0.7% (n=11).
The workaround was to avoid bad primitive/surface sizes, but that's worked
around as of a14dc4f92c. (One might note
that pre-gen7 we don't know that the right half of an 8x4 at the right
edge is actually our pixels, but we're already clobbering those pixels for
depth resolves anyway and more work would be required to avoid that).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
A surprising number of apps and benchmarks have poor code like this:
glBegin(GL_LINE_STRIP);
glVertex(v1);
glVertex(v2);
glEnd();
// Possibly some no-op state changes here
glBegin(GL_LINE_STRIP);
glVertex(v3);
glVertex(v4);
glEnd();
// repeat many, many times.
The above sequence can be converted into:
glBegin(GL_LINES);
glVertex(v1);
glVertex(v2);
glVertex(v3);
glVertex(v4);
glEnd();
Similarly for GL_POINTS, GL_TRIANGLES, etc.
Merging was already implemented for GL_QUADS in the display list code.
Now other prim types are handled and it's also done for immediate mode.
In one case:
before after
-----------------------------------------------
number of st_draw_vbo() calls: 141 45
number of _mesa_prims issued: 7520 632
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
gallium lies. buffer_size is not actually buffer_size but available
size, which is 'buffer_size - buffer_offset' so by adding buffer
offset we'd incorrectly compute overflow.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
In ureg src registers could have an indirect register that was
either a temp or an addr register, while dst registers allowed
only addr. That made moving between them a little difficult so
make them behave the same way and allow temp's and addr registers
as indirect files for both (tgsi supports it, just ureg didn't).
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
A lot of them were missing. Others were moved from the Compute ISA
to a new Integer ISA section as that seemed more appropriate.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Eliminating this we no longer need to copy between linear and swizzled layout.
This is probably not quite ideal since it's a bit more work for now, could do
some optimizations by moving depth testing outside the fragment shader loop
(but tricky for early depth test as we don't have neither the mask nor the
interpolated z in the right order handy).
The large amount of tile/untile code is no longer needed will be deleted
in next commit.
No piglit regressions.
v2: change a forgotten LAYOUT_NONE to LAYOUT_LINEAR.
v3: fix (bogus) uninitialized variable warnings, add comments, fix a bad type
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Assigning a struct only copies the members - any padding is left as is.
Thus this code:
struct foo_t foo;
foo = bar;
leaves the padding of foo intact, ie uninitialized random garbage.
This patch fixes constant shader recompiles by initializing the struct
to zero. For completeness, memcpy is used to copy the key to the shader
struct.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Lauri Kasanen <cand@gmx.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Andreas Boll <andreas.boll.dev@gmail.com>
One build system for linux/unix only drivers should be enough.
Additionally the nouveau target was disabled anyway.
Acked-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
post_scheduler clears interference set for reallocatable values when
the value becomes live first time, and then updates it to take into
account modified order of operations, but this was not handled properly
if the value appears first time as a source in copy operation.
Fixes issues with webgl demo: http://madebyevan.com/webgl-water/
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
New disassembler is not completely isolated yet from further processing
in r600g/sb that is not required for printing the dump, so it has higher
probability to fail in case of any unexpected features in the bytecode.
This patch adds "sbdisasm" flag for R600_DEBUG that allows to use new
disassembler in r600g/sb for shader dumps when shader optimization
is not enabled.
If shader optimization is enabled, new disassembler is used by default.
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
Mesa build is too complex to rely on successful builds. On refactorings
it is always a good idea to use git grep to prevent missing cases:
$ git grep u_assembled_primitive
src/gallium/auxiliary/draw/draw_pt_fetch_shade_pipeline_llvm.c: u_assembled_primitive(in_prim);
The differences from the previous releases that affect st/egl are
- logging macros are prefixed with an 'A'
- dequeueBuffer() and enqueueBuffer() require an additoinal argument for
fence fd, acquired from libsync
Additionally, include gralloc_drm.h with extern "C".
The function returns the number of reduced/tessellated primitives for the
given vertex count.
Signed-off-by: Chia-I Wu <olvaffe@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Switch to '>=' for comparisons, and it becomes obvious that the comparison for
PIPE_PRIM_QUAD_STRIP was wrong.
Add minimum vertex count check for PIPE_PRIM_LINE_LOOP. Return 1 for
PIPE_PRIM_POLYGON with 3 vertices.
Signed-off-by: Chia-I Wu <olvaffe@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
As a side effect, primitives with adjacency are now correctly validated.
Signed-off-by: Chia-I Wu <olvaffe@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Move together (or add) functions to decompose/reduce/assemble a primitive,
give them consistent names, and document them. Add u_prim_vertex_count() so
that the vertex count information can be used elsewhere.
u_assembled_primitive() will be removed in a folow-on commit.
[olv: fix a warning when -Wold-style-declaration is enabled]
Signed-off-by: Chia-I Wu <olvaffe@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
While this is ignorant of dependency control, it's still good for a 0.39%
+/- 0.08% performance improvement on GLBenchmark 2.7 (n=548)
v2: Rewrite as a subclass of the base class for the FS instruction
scheduler, inheriting the same latency information.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
These will get virtualized as we add VS scheduling support.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
I need this so I can look at vec4 and fs registers' files from the same
.cpp file without namespaces. As far as I can tell we never rely on the
particular numerical values of the files, though I thought it sounded like
a good idea when doing the VS (it turns out having 0 be BAD_FILE is nicer).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This will free instruction scheduling to make better choices. No
statistically significant performance difference on GLB2.7 (n=93).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
instead of crashing just fill zeros at the input slots that don't
match, that's the mandated behavior and it avoids debug asserts.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
It's valid because we reuse certain arithmetic operations
for both signed and unsigned types (e.g. uadd, umad, which
have a bit unfortunate naming)
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
The GPU apparently goes looking for constants even though there are no
shader stages enabled, and gets stuck because we haven't told it there are
no constants to collect. If any other user of the 3D pipeline had run
(even the Render accel of the X server!) since power on, then the in-GPU
constant buffers would have been set up with some contents we didn't use,
and we would succeed.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=56416
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Tested-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
We are already emitting a EVENT_TYPE_CACHE_FLUSH_AND_INV_EVENT packet
when this flush flag is set, so flushing the dest caches with a
SURFACE_SYNC should not be necessary.
The motivation for this change is that emitting a SURFACE_SYNC packet with
the CB bits set was causing compute shaders to hang on Cayman.
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Remove all the glDraw* functions from the GLvertexformat structure.
The point of that dispatch struct is to handle all the functions which
dispatch differently depending on whether we're inside glBegin/End.
glDraw* are never allowed inside glBegin/End so we can remove those
entries.
This simplifies the code paths and gets rid of quite a bit of code.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
If the currently compiled primitive state is PRIM_UNKNOWN we should
not return true from _mesa_inside_dlist_begin_end(). This lets us
simplify the calls to that function.
Note, the call to _mesa_inside_dlist_begin_end() in vbo_save_EndList()
should have probably been checking for PRIM_UNKNOWN too, but it wasn't.
So there's no code change change.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This is set during context creation/initialization. We know we're
not inside glBegin/glEnd at this point so use PRIM_OUTSIDE_BEGIN_END.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The old code didn't make sense. The clause in question did the
same thing as the next else-if clause. If we're already executing
a glBegin/End pair and we're starting a new primitive, that's an
error.
Fixes more failures in piglit gl-1.0-beginend-coverage test.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Functions like glDrawArrays, glDrawElements, etc. are illegal between
glBegin/glEnd and should generate GL_INVALID_OPERATION.
Fixes several piglit gl-1.0-beginend-coverage failures.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The _save_OBE_DrawArrays/Elements/RangeElements() functions are
called when building a display list and we know we're outside
glBegin/End.
We shouldn't call the normal _mesa_validate_DrawArrays/Elements()
functions here because those functions only work properly in immediate
mode or during dlist execution. At dlist compile time, we can't call
_mesa_update_state(), etc. and examine the current state since it won't
apply when the list is executed later.
Fixes several failures in piglit's gl-1.0-beginend-coverage test.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
If we're in GL_COMPILE_AND_EXECUTE mode and inside glBegin, calling
glEndList() should generate an error.
Fixes a failure in piglit's gl-1.0-beginend-coverage test.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The old code was hard to understand and not entirely correct.
Note that PRIM_INSIDE_UNKNOWN_PRIM is no longer set anywhere so
we'll be able to remove that next.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
...in terms of new _mesa_is_valid_prim_mode(). We need a mode validater
function that doesn't depend on current state for the display list code.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
These values pertain to display lists, and the new types of geometry
shader primitives can be used in display lists.
And add new PRIM_MAX constant for follow-on changes.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This removes the test for _mesa_inside_dlist_begin_end().
If ctx->Driver.CurrentSavePrimitive==PRIM_UNKNOWN (the initial value),
_mesa_inside_dlist_begin_end() will, confusingly, return TRUE.
So we didn't set the ctx->ListState.Current.ShadeModel value and it
remained in its indeterminate state.
This didn't effect correctness, but it defeated the intended optimization
of dropping redundant glShadeModel() state changes in order to
coalesce sequences of drawing commands.
Verified with new piglit gl-1.0-dlist-shademodel test.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Without this patch, radeon_uvd failed to find the libdrm includes:
In file included from radeon_uvd.c:48:
../../winsys/radeon/drm/radeon_winsys.h:44:35: error:
libdrm/radeon_surface.h: No such file or directory
Signed-off-by: Lauri Kasanen <cand@gmx.com>
When checking framebuffer completeness, we test each attachment.
We verify that all attachments are consistent in terms of layers.
1. They must all be layered, or all non-layered
2. If they are layered, they must match in depth
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
If glFramebufferTexture is used, then the framebuffer attachment is
layered.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
With glFramebufferTexture, a renderbuffer may support
all layers of the texture, so we need the depth of the
renderbuffer to check for consistency which is required
for framebuffer completeness.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This like the fifth attempt to fix the issue.
Also with the new "validating" flag, we can set recalculate_inputs to FALSE
earlier in vbo_bind_arrays, because _mesa_update_state won't change it.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
v2: fixed a typo
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
The shadow comparitor needs to be loaded into the Z component of the
last DWord.
Fixes es3conform's shadow_execution_vert and oglconform's
shadow-grad advanced.textureGrad.1D tests on Haswell.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
According to the Ivybridge PRM, Volume 4 Part 1, page 130, in the
section for the sample_d message: "The r coordinate contains the faceid,
and the r gradients are ignored by hardware."
This doesn't match GLSL, which provides gradients for all of the
coordinates. So we would need to do some math to compute the face ID
before using sample_d. We currently don't have any code to do that.
However, we do have a lowering pass that converts textureGrad to
textureLod, which solves this problem. Since textureGrad on three
components is sufficiently obscure, it's not a performance path.
For now, only handle samplerCubeShadow; we need tests for samplerCube
and samplerCubeArray.
Fixes es3conform's shadow_comparison_frag test on Haswell.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Consider the following shader:
vec4 f(vec4 v) { return v; }
vec4 f(vec4 v);
The prototype exactly matches the signature of the earlier definition,
so there's absolutely no point in it. However, it doesn't appear to
be illegal. The GLSL 4.30 specification offers two relevant quotes:
"If a function name is declared twice with the same parameter types,
then the return types and all qualifiers must also match, and it is the
same function being declared."
"User-defined functions can have multiple declarations, but only one
definition."
In this case the same function was declared twice, and there's only one
definition, which fits both pieces of text. There doesn't appear to be
any text saying late prototypes are illegal, so presumably it's valid.
Unfortunately, it currently triggers an assertion failure:
ir_dereference_variable @ <p1> specifies undeclared variable `v' @ <p2>
When we process the second line, we look for an existing exact match so
we can enforce the one-definition rule. We then leave sig set to that
existing function, and hit sig->replace_parameters(&hir_parameters),
unfortunately nuking our existing definition's parameters (which have
actual dereferences) with the prototype's bogus unused parameters.
Simply bailing out and ignoring such late prototypes is the safest
thing to do.
Fixes Piglit's late-proto.vert as well as 3DMark/Ice Storm for Android.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Tested-by: Tapani Pälli <tapani.palli@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <idr@freedesktop.org>
The three users of GALLIUM_PIPE_LOADER_LIBS (OpenCL, gallium-gbm,
gallium tests) don't appear to need libws_xlib.la.
Tested-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
Tested-by: Aaron Watry <awatry@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
It guarded the function prototype of pipe_loader_sw_probe, whose use (in
pipe_loader.c) and definition (in pipe_loader_sw.c) were not guarded.
Both are built into libpipe_loader.la if HAVE_LOADER_GALLIUM, which is
enable_gallium_loader in configure.ac.
Tested-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
Tested-by: Aaron Watry <awatry@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
The number of samples is already available in the miptree data
structure, so there's no need to pass it in.
I suspect this may fix a subtle bug because in one case
(intel_renderbuffer_update_wrapper) we were always passing zero for
num_samples, even though the buffer in question was not guaranteed to
be single-sampled. But I wasn't able to find a failing test case.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Technically it's legal for geometry shader to not emit any
vertices. It's silly, but perfectly legal, so lets make draw
stop crashing if it happens.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
The upside is less CPU overhead in fiddling with GL error handling, the
ability to use the constant color write message in most cases, and no GLSL
clear shaders appearing in MESA_GLSL=dump output. The downside is more
batch flushing and a total recompute of GL state at the end of blorp.
However, if we're ever going to use the fast color clear feature of CMS
surfaces, we'll need this anyway since it requires very special state
setup.
This increases the fail rate of some the GLES3conform ARB_sync tests,
because of the initial flush at the start of blorp. The tests already
intermittently failed (because it's just a bad testing procedure), and we
can return it to its previous fail rate by fixing the initial flush.
Improves GLB2.7 performance 0.37% +/- 0.11% (n=71/70, outlier removed).
v2: Rename the key member, use the core helper for sRGB, and use
BRW_MASK_* enums, fix comment and indentation (review by Paul).
v3: Rewrite a comment, drop a silly temporary variable (review by Ken)
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
v2: const-qualify ctx, and add a comment about the function (recommended
by Brian and Kenneth).
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org> (v1)
Improves GLB2.7 performance 0.13% +/- 0.09% (n=104/105, outliers removed).
More importantly, once color glClear()s are done through blorp in the next
commit, this reduces regression in GLES3 conformance tests that rely on
queueing up many glClear()s and having the GPU report being still busy in
an ARB_sync query after that.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Collects various statistical information for each shader
and total stats for contexts.
Printed with R600_DEBUG=sb,sbstat
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
In some cases we use value::gvn_source field to link values that
are known to be equal before gvn pass (e.g. results of DOT4 in different
slots of the same alu group), but then source value may become dead later
and this confuses further passes.
This patch resets value::gvn_source to NULL in the dce_cleanup pass
if it points to dead value.
Fixes segfault during shader optimization with ETQW.
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
It's not a complete register pressure tracking, yet it helps to prevent
register allocation problems in some cases where they were observed.
The problems are uncovered by false dependencies between fetch instructions
introduced by some recent changes in TGSI and/or default backend.
Sometimes we have code like this:
...
SAMPLE R5.xyzw, R5.xyzw
... store R5.xyzw somewhere
MOV R5.x, <next x coord>
MOV R5.y, <next y coord>
SAMPLE R5.xyzw, R5.xyzw
... <may be repeated a lot of times>
With 2D resources, z and w in SAMPLE src reg aren't used and can be simply
masked, but shader backend doesn't have this information, so it's
considered as data dependency by optimization algorithms.
This results in more clean shader code and may improve the quality of
optimized code produced by r600-sb due to eliminated false dependencies
in some cases.
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
The remaining bits happen to do nothing that
_swrast_span_render_start()/finish() don't do.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
It's not really span code ever since we stopped using spans for S8.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
In the case of renering to windows in X, we would render to stale buffers
(or not render at all!) if you hit a MapRenderbuffer as the first thing
done to your window after new buffers are ready to be collected in DRI2.
I think this also covers the weird comment about irb->mt being missing
sometimes.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
I always forget how we do this for compressed textures.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Now that everything goes through ImageSlices[], we can rely on the
driver's existing texture mapping function.
A big block of code goes away on Radeon that looks like it was to deal with
the validate that happened at SpanRenderStart, which no longer occurs since we
don't need validation for the MapTextureImage hook.
v2: Rewrite comment about ImageSlices, fix duplicated swImages, touch up
unmap loop.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org> (v1)
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This code is trying to deal with providing a map in the case that
AllocTexImageBuffer was called, which is hooked up to the swrast variant.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
MapTextureImage has the exact same logic, except it can also handle
swrast-allocated buffers.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
For hardware drivers with pitch alignment requirements, a
non-power-of-two-sized texture format won't end up being an integer number
of pixels per row. Also, avoids having to change our units between
MapTextureImage's rowStride and swrast's RowStride.
This doesn't fully convert the compressed texel fetch path, but does make
sure we don't drop any bits (not that we'd expect to).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This is a step toward allowing drivers to use their normal mapping paths,
instead of requiring that all slice mappings come from an aligned offset
from the first slice's map.
This incidentally fixes missing slice handling in FXT1 swrast.
v2: Use slice height helper function.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
v2: Move slice height calculation to a helper function (recommeded by Brian).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org> (v1)
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This function going to get used a lot more in upcoming patches.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Improves GLB2.7 performance on my HSW by 0.671455% +/- 0.225037% (n=62).
v2: Make is_valid_3src() a method of the fs_reg. (recommended by Ken)
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com> (v1)
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org> (v1)
Improves GLB2.7 trex performance 1.01985% +/- 0.721366% on my IVB (n=10)
and by 3.38771% +/- 0.584241% (n=15) on my HSW, due to a 32x32 ARGB8888
cubemap going from untiled to tiled.
Reviewed-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
It appears that Z16 on Intel hardware is in fact slower than Z24, so
people are getting surprisingly hurt when trying to use Z16 as a
performance-versus-precision tradeoff, or when they're targeting GLES2 and
that's all you get.
GL 3.0+ have Z16 on the list of required exact format sizes, but GLES
doesn't, so choose the better-performing layout in that case. Improves
GLB 2.7 trex performance at 1920x1080 by 10.7% +/- 1.1% (n=3) on my IVB
system.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
For this multi-page single statement, my thought the end was to that the
next block was mis-indented, rather than that the dropped indentation
actually indicated the end of the loop.
In almost all of our cases, getters that are turned on for only some API
variants will have an extension listed as one of the things that can
enable it, and thus api_check gets set. For extra_gl30_es3 (used for
NUM_EXTENSIONS, MAJOR_VERSION, MINOR_VERSION) on a GL 2.1 context, though,
we would check twice, not find either one, but never actually throw the
error.
While we may provide the extension, we need to tell applications that they
can't actually use it:
An implementation can either set QUERY_COUNTER_BITS_ARB to the
value 0, or to some number greater than or equal to n. If an
implementation returns 0 for QUERY_COUNTER_BITS_ARB, then the
occlusion queries will always return that zero samples passed the
occlusion test, and so an application should not use occlusion
queries on that implementation.
These are entirely based on the opcode, which is available in
backend_instruction. It makes sense to only implement them in one
place.
This changes the VS implementation of is_tex() slightly, which now
accepts FS_OPCODE_TXB and SHADER_OPCODE_LOD. However, since those
aren't generated in the VS anyway, it should be fine.
This also makes is_control_flow() available in the VS.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
only report overflow for missing targets if they're actually being
used. if the targets are missing but are not being used by any
slot in the stream output declaration we should correctly just
ignore them.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Interpolation modes other than perspective-barycentric-pixel-center (and
their associated coefficients in the WM payload) only exist in Gen6 and
later.
Unfortunately, if a varying was declared as `centroid`, we would blindly
read the nonexistant values, and so produce all manner of bad behavior
-- texture swimming, snow, etc.
Fixes rendering in Counter-Strike Source and Team Fortress 2 on
Ironlake.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Tested-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
We were crashing if one of the buffers wasn't set, we should
just treat it as an overflow. It's useful when using so
statistics because it allows one to figure out how much data
would be generated by so without actually writing any of it.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
we weren't adding the soa offsets when constructing the indices
for the gather functions. That meant that we were always returning
the data in the first vertex/primitive/pixel in the SoA structure
and not correctly fetching from all structures.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
We already hold the variable, just weren't providing access
to it.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
We weren't taking the buffer offset, destination offset or the
stride into consideration so we were frequently writing into
an overflown buffer.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
This was a very serious bug. We were always doing the viewport
transformations on the first output of the vertex shader. That means
that every application that was storing position in anything but
OUT[0] was outputing untransformed vertices and had broken output
for whatever it was storing at OUT[0]. Correctly take into
consideration where the vertex position is actually stored.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
There can be more stream output decls than shader outputs because
individual components from them can be split and distributed
among different so buffers.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Before, we'd incorrectly generate an error if we we tried to
replace a non-4x4 block near the edge of a NPOT compressed texture.
For example, if the dest image was 15 texels wide and xoffset=12
and width=3 we'd incorrectly generate GL_INVALID_OPERATION.
Verified with new tests added to piglit s3tc-errors test.
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
patch fixes a crash that happens if glTexSubImage2D is called with a
negative xoffset.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Tapani Pälli <tapani.palli@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
After more thought/discussion, it seems it is better to handle this sort
of stuff in the state tracker.
So this reverts commit 12096f334b, except the
variant->key -> key shorthands.
This is a simple shader compiler that performs almost zero optimizations. The
generated code is usually much larger comparing to that generated by i965.
The generated code also requires many more registers.
Function-wise, it lacks register spilling and does not support most TGSI
indirections. Other than those, it works alright.
Courtesy of clang:
src/gallium/auxiliary/gallivm/lp_bld_sample.c:1483:10: warning: array index of '2' indexes past the end of an array (that contains 2 elements) [-Warray-bounds]
tmp[2] = lp_build_swizzle_aos(coord_bld, ddx_ddy[1], swizzle02);
^ ~
src/gallium/auxiliary/gallivm/lp_bld_sample.c:1430:10: note: array 'tmp' declared here
LLVMValueRef ddx_ddy[2], tmp[2], rho_vec;
^
src/gallium/auxiliary/gallivm/lp_bld_sample.c:1487:56: warning: array index of '2' indexes past the end of an array (that contains 2 elements) [-Warray-bounds]
rho_vec = lp_build_add(coord_bld, rho_vec, tmp[2]);
^ ~
src/gallium/auxiliary/gallivm/lp_bld_sample.c:1430:10: note: array 'tmp' declared here
LLVMValueRef ddx_ddy[2], tmp[2], rho_vec;
^
src/gallium/auxiliary/gallivm/lp_bld_sample.c:1491:56: warning: array index of '2' indexes past the end of an array (that contains 2 elements) [-Warray-bounds]
rho_vec = lp_build_max(coord_bld, rho_vec, tmp[2]);
^ ~
src/gallium/auxiliary/gallivm/lp_bld_sample.c:1430:10: note: array 'tmp' declared here
LLVMValueRef ddx_ddy[2], tmp[2], rho_vec;
^
Only 13 affected programs in shader-db, but they were all helped.
total instructions in shared programs: 368877 -> 368851 (-0.01%)
instructions in affected programs: 1576 -> 1550 (-1.65%)
Reviewed-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Three-source instructions have a vertical stride overloaded to 4, which
prevents directly using vec4 uniforms as arguments. Instead we need to
insert a MOV instruction to do the replication for the three-source
instruction.
With this in place, we can use three-source instructions in the vertex
shader. While some thought needs to go into deciding whether its better
to use a three-source instruction rather than a sequence of equivalent
instructions (when one or more sources are uniforms or immediates), this
will allow us to skip a lot of ugly lowering code and use the BFE and
BFI2 instructions directly.
Reviewed-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This move the tracing timeout and printing into winsys and add
an debug environement variable for it (R600_DEBUG=trace_cs).
Lot of file touched because of winsys API changes.
v2: Do not write lockup file if ib uniq id does not match last one
Signed-off-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
There was a lot of code in evergreen_compute_internal.c that was not
being used at all and most of it was duplicating code from other parts
of the driver.
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
We don't support pre-2.6 kernels anyway - the install docs say 2.6.28
for DRI - and apparently this confuses ld.so's sorting when multiple
libGLs are installed. Just remove it.
Note: this is a candidate for the stable branches.
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Adam Jackson <ajax@redhat.com>
New textures or vertex buffers don't always require patching and
re-emitting the shaders. So do a better job of figuring out when we
actually have to patch the shader.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robclark@freedesktop.org>
Removes 75/78 state-dependent recompiles in GLB2.7 (the remaining 3 are
due to FBO-rendering size predictions). We currently expose
GL_ARB_color_buffer_float on GL core, so we may mis-predict there, but I'm
about to send a patch for removing that silly extension in that case.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
If a bug in an app/stater-tacker causes vertex buffer to fetch vertex
elements that are not bound, simply return zeros instead of crashing.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
clang is supports most gcc options / extensions, with a some exceptions.
The biggest advantage of using clang is that compilation times are much
short.
One can tell scons to use clang when building by invoking it as
CC=clang CXX=clang++ scons libgl-xlib
From low to high bits, the sample positions are packed y0,x0,y1,x1...
Fixes arb_texture_multisample-sample-position piglit.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
We were assigning incorrect const register for immediates, and
potentially writing immediate const to the wrong location. This fixes
an incorrect-rendering bug with xonotic.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robclark@freedesktop.org>
Set a few extra registers to make sure we are in proper state for
clearing. And also add some debug options to mark all state dirty in
clear and gmem operations to aid in debugging.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robclark@freedesktop.org>
There is a bit we need to set for 2D vs 3D fetch, to tell the hw whether
there are two or there valid input components.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robclark@freedesktop.org>
The previous approach of using the dst register as an intermediate
temporary doesn't work in a lot of cases. For example, if the dst
register is the same as one of the src registers.
For now, just simplify it and always allocate a new register to use as
an intermediate. In some cases this will result in more registers used
than required. I think the best solution would be to implement an
optimization pass to reduce the number of registers used, which would
also solve the problem we have now of not being able to use GPRs that
are assigned for TGSI_FILE_INPUT.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robclark@freedesktop.org>
Opps, didn't notice that I had left it stubbed out.
Also, make things fail a bit more gracefully when things go wrong.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robclark@freedesktop.org>
Really this should be set based on buffer format, not on color vs
depth/stencil. Probably there should be more formats that set the bit
as we add support for more render target formats.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robclark@freedesktop.org>
Lighter weight then using streamout. Only evergreen
and newer asics support embedded data as src with
CP DMA.
Reviewed-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Unlike GEN6, the bits of entry count are distributed like this
width = (entry_count & 0x0000007f); /* bits [6:0] */
height = (entry_count & 0x001fff80) >> 7; /* bits [20:7] */
depth = (entry_count & 0x7fe00000) >> 21; /* bits [30:21] */
The maximum entry count is still limited to 2^27.
This was noted while going over the PRM. No test is impacted, because
1<<20 (the bit that moved) is much larger than GL_UNIFORM_BLOCK_MAX_SIZE,
GL_MAX_TEXTURE_BUFFER_SIZE, or MAX_*_UNIFORM_COMPONENTS.
v2: Explain more in the commit message (by anholt)
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The inverse repeat count should taks up bits 31:15 and is in U1.16. Fixes
the "Restarting lines within a single Begin/End block" subtest of piglit
linestipple, and gets the other failing subtests much closer to passing.
v2: Rewrite commit message with more detailed piglit info (by anholt)
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Previously, the only kind of ir_jump that would terminate a basic
block was "return". However, the other possible types of ir_jump
("break", "continue", and "discard") should terminate a basic block
too. This patch modifies basic block analysis so that it terminates a
basic block on any type of ir_jump, not just ir_return.
Fixes piglit test dead-code-break-interaction.shader_test.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Running piglit with this was causing all sort of weird stuff happening
to my desktop (Chromium webpages become blank, Qt Creator flickered,
etc). I tracked this down to shared memory segment leakage when GL is
not shutdown properly. The segments can be seen running `ipcs` and
looking for nattch==0.
This changes fixes this by calling shmctl(IPC_RMID) soon after creation
(which does not remove the segment immediately, but simply marks it for
removal when no more processes are attached).
This matches src/mesa/drivers/x11/xm_buffer.c behaviour.
v2:
- move shmctl(IPC_RMID) after XShmAttach() for *BSD, per Chris Wilson
- remove stray debug printfs, spotted by Ian Romanick
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
We need to handle the leading vertex information when
assembling primitives for the geometry shader otherwise
the resulting triangles will have vertices at incorrect
input locations.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The commit below exposed a bug in dri2_add_config.
commit 3998f8c6b5
Author: Ralf Jung <post@ralfj.de>
Date: Tue Apr 9 14:09:50 2013 +0200
egl/x11: Fix initialisation of swap_interval
This little code snippet near the bottom of dri2_add_config,
if (double_buffer) {
...
conf->base.MinSwapInterval = dri2_dpy->min_swap_interval;
conf->base.MaxSwapInterval = dri2_dpy->max_swap_interval;
}
it never did what it claimed to do. The assignment never changed the value
of conf->base.MaxSwapInterval, because dri2_dpy->max_swap_interval was,
until the above exposing commit, unitialized here. That is,
conf->base.MaxSwapInterval was 0 before and after assignment. Ditto for
the min swap interval.
Above the troublesome code snippet, the call to _eglFilterArray rejects
the config as unmatching if its swap interval bounds differ from the base
config's. Before the exposing commit, at the call to _eglFilterArray, the
swap interval bounds were always [0,0], and hence no config was rejected
due to swap interval.
After the exposing commit, _eglFilterArray incorrectly rejected some
configs, which prevented dri2_egl_config::dri_double_config from getting
set for the rejected config, which resulted in a NULL pointer getting
passed into dri2CreateNewDrawable, and then segfault.
The solution: set the swap interval bounds before _eglFilterArray.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=63447
Tested-by: Lu Hua <huax.lu@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
The previous commit introduced extra words, breaking the formatting.
This text transformation was done automatically via the following shell
command:
$ git grep 'THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY' | sed 's/:.*$//' | xargs -I {} sh -c 'vim -e -s {} < vimscript2
where 'vimscript2' is a file containing:
/THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY/;/^ *$/ !fmt -w 78 -p '// '
:wq
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
The previous commit introduced extra words, breaking the formatting.
This text transformation was done automatically via the following shell
command:
$ git grep 'THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY' | sed 's/:.*$//' | xargs -I {} sh -c 'vim -e -s {} < vimscript
where 'vimscript' is a file containing:
/THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY/;/\*\// !fmt -w 78 -p ' * '
:wq
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This brings the license text in line with the MIT License as published
on the Open Source Initiative website:
http://opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php
Generated automatically be the following shell command:
$ git grep 'THE AUTHORS BE LIABLE' | sed 's/:.*$//g' | xargs -I '{}' \
sed -i 's/THE AUTHORS/THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS/' {}
This introduces some wrapping issues, to be fixed in the next commit.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
See previous commit for the rationale. These weren't caught by the
automatic conversion due to the "OR IBM" addition.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Generated automatically be the following shell command:
$ git grep 'BRIAN PAUL BE LIABLE' | sed 's/:.*$//g' | xargs -I '{}' \
sed -i 's/BRIAN PAUL/THE AUTHORS/' {}
The intention here is to protect all authors, not just Brian Paul. I
believe that was already the sensible interpretation, but spelling it
out is probably better.
More practically, it also prevents people from accidentally copy &
pasting the license into a new file which says Brian is not liable when
he isn't even one of the authors.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
There used to be a derived state _ClampReadColor, so setting _NEW_COLOR
made sense. The state is gone now.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
We don't want to set the flag for Gallium.
I think only swrast needs the flag to be set for occlusion queries.
v2: fix stats_wm updates in i965
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The functions don't affect driver state. There is no code that would rely
on vertices being flushed prior to changing the states, and no code that
would check for _NEW_STENCIL before using the states.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
both functions don't change the framebuffer in any way
(if mesa_meta is not used)
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
No driver checks the flag. Nobody uses it.
I also removed the FLUSH_VERTICES calls, because PixelStorei has no effect
on rendering.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
_NEW_TRANSFORM_FEEDBACK is not used by core Mesa, so it can be removed.
Instead, an new private flag is added to i965 to serve the same purpose.
If you're new to this:
* When creating a context. you can set private dirty flags
in gl_context::DriverFlags, eg.:
ctx->DriverFlags.NewStateX = BRW_NEW_STATE_X;
* When StateX is changed, core Mesa does:
ctx->NewDriverState |= ctx->DriverFlags.NewStateX;
* When you have to draw, read and clear ctx->NewDriverState.
* Pros: not touching NewState, the driver decides the mapping between
GL states and hw state groups, unlimited number of flags in core Mesa
(still limited number of flags in the driver though)
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
because the code looks at the visual if there is a depth or stencil buffer
before enabling depth or stencil, respectively.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Squashed commit of the following:
commit 04c5fa2cbb8e89d6f2fa5a75af1cca03b1f6b852
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Tue Apr 23 17:37:18 2013 +0100
gallium: s/lower_left_origin/bottom_edge_rule/
commit 4dff4f64fa83b9737def136fffd161d55e4f1722
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Tue Apr 23 17:35:04 2013 +0100
gallium: Move diagram to docs.
commit 442a63012c8c3c3797f45e03f2ca20ad5f399832
Author: James Benton <jbenton@vmware.com>
Date: Fri May 11 17:50:55 2012 +0100
gallium: Replace gl_rasterization_rules with lower_left_origin and half_pixel_center.
This change is necessary to achieve correct results when using OpenGL
FBOs.
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
This fixes a crash when a resource cannot be mapped to the CPU's address space
because it's too big.
This puts a global pipe_context in r600_screen, which is guarded by a mutex,
so that we can use pipe_context when there isn't one around.
Hopefully our multi-context support is solid.
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Although this might be useful for ARB_clear_buffer_object,
I need it for initializating resources in r600g.
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
v2: comment cleanups
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Number of vertices to fetch doesn't always equal the number of input
vertices. To correctly compute the number if IA primitives we need
to use the total number of input vertices, not only those that
need to be fetched.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
TGSI geometry shader input declerations are of the IN[][2] format
and the dimensions of the array have to be deduced from the input
primitive property.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
We want to be able to reset certain parts of the pipeline,
in particular the input primitive index, but only either with
seperate invocations of the draw_vbo or new instances. In all
other cases (e.g. new invocations due to primitive restart)
that data needs to be preserved. Add a function through which
we can reset instance dependent data.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Same approach as in the llvmpipe, if the geometry shader is
null and we have stream output then attach it to the vertex
shader right before executing the draw pipeline.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The code doesn't set brw->query.obj to NULL, it sets query->bo to NULL.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
TEMP is not the only register file that accept unsigned. OUT too.
Actually, what determines the appropriate type of the destination value is
not the opcode, but rather the register.
Also cleanup/simplify code. Add a few more asserts, but also make
code more robust by handling graceful if assert fails.
This fixes segfault / assertion in the included vert-uadd.sh graw shader.
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
This should be reusable for other non-gallium drivers, so we can make the
extension always be available.
v2: Add a more detailed comment than the old function had (recommended
by Brian).
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com> (v1)
I noticed a fallback in regnum through sysprof, and wanted a nicer way to
get information about it.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
2.7 was a particularly trouble ridden release.
Furthermore, the bug no longer can be reproduced ever since the
first_level state was taken in account.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
They are supported on LLVM 3.1, at least on x86. (I haven't tested on PPC
though.)
Actually lp_build_linear_mip_levels() already has been emitting them for
some time.
This avoids intrinsics, which tend to be an obstacle for certain
optimization passes.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
There will be a new IR for a3xx, which has a very different shader ISA
(more scalar oriented). So rename to avoid conflicts later when I start
adding a3xx support to the gallium driver.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <Rob Clark robdclark@freedesktop.org>
The standalone shader assembler needed some meta-data to know about
attributes/varyings/etc, to do the shader linkage. We don't need these
parts with gallium/tgsi, so just get rid of it.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <Rob Clark robdclark@freedesktop.org>
Should be able to handle all things which make this tricky to implement.
Fallthroughs, including most notably into/out of default, should be handled
correctly but are quite a mess.
If we see largely unoptimized switches in the wild should probably think
about some "real" switch optimization pass, e.g. things like this:
switch
case1
someinst
brk
case2
default
case3
someinst
brk
case4
someinst
endswitch
are legal, but the pointless case2/case3 statements not only cause condition
evaluation but will turn this into a "fake" fallthrough case (because
mask and defaultmask are already updated for case2 when default is
encountered) requiring executing code twice.
If default is at the end though, there's never any code re-execution, and
if that's not the case if there's no fallthrough in (not even a fake one)
and out of default there's no code re-execution neither.
v2: add comments, and use enum for break type instead of magic boolean.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
It seems there was a typo in gallivm breakc handling (I am actually still
not sure it is really needed but otherwise that statement really should go
away). Also fix the wrong src argument type, even though they weren't really
used.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
While initially that opcode probably was meant for something along the
lines of sm3 break_comp it has never worked that way (not even the
argument count was right) and now the opcode has quite different
semantics so just remove it. (Discovered by Jose Fonseca)
This is still not really correct, since at least for sm 4.0
the nesting limit is 64 per subroutine, and subroutine nesting itself
has a limit of 32, so since we have a flat stack we'd need 32*64.
But this should probably be better fixed with per-subroutine stacks,
since otherwise these structures get really big (like 100kB for the
lp_exec_mask).
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Input assembler needs to be able to decompose adjacency primitives
into something that can be understood by the rest of the pipeline.
The specs say that the adjacency primitives are *only* visible
in the geometry shader, for everything else they need to be
decomposed. Which in most of the cases is not an issue, because
the geometry shader always decomposes them for us, but without
geometry shader we were passing unchanged adjacency primitives
to the rest of the pipeline and causing crashes everywhere. This
commit introduces a primitive assembler which, if geometry
shader is missing and the input primitive is one of the
adjacency primitives, decomposes them into something
that the rest of the pipeline can understand.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
pre_clip_pos is a float[4] we just used (*float)[4] to be able to
jump within the array of vertex_headers with it. So if the idx
happened to be anything but 0, we'd actually read from some garbage
in memory. Change it to just be a simple pointer instead of casting
it to something that it's not. As suggested by Jose.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This is the kind of information that would have been present for GLX, if
GLX supported modern GL. This allows these entrypoints to get automatic
asynchronous marshalling code generated for glthread.
This bug is currently benign, since get_called_parameter_string() is
currently only used for functions that return true for
glx_function.has_different_protocol(), and none of those functions
include padding. However, in order to implement marshalling of GL API
functions, we'll need to use get_called_parameter_string() far more
often.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Without this patch, $$.negate, $$.rgba_valid, and $$.xyzw_valid take
on garbage values. At the moment this problem is benign (the garbage
values happen to be zero), but in my experiments executing GL
operations on a background thread, the garbage values change, leading
to piglit failures.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Since stdbool.h's "true" and "false" are #defines, they got expanded when
used as macro arguments, and that expanded value was stored in the
XML string, producing XML that driconf would then fail to parse.
Currently no drivers included stdbool along with driconf, but I keep
accidentally doing so on intel as we move towards using normal C.
v2: rebase on master.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org> (v1)
It's next to useless, since it just allows you to turn off VDPAU and
XvMC with a single switch. Just check whether Gallium drivers are
enabled instead.
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Most test pass, issue are with border color and swizzle.
Based on ircnick<maelcum> patch.
v2: Restaged commit hunk
Signed-off-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
v2: Remove left over code
v3: Restage properly the commit so hunk of first one are not in
second one.
Signed-off-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
Not all are supported as render targets.
The state tracker fallback of using RGBA instead of RGBX currently
fails for blending, we could work around this by clearing their alpha
to 1 and modifying the color mask to disable writing alpha.
This is the only sane solution for nv50 and nvc0 (really, trust me),
but since on other hardware the border colour is tightly coupled with
texture state they'd have to undo the swizzle, so I've added a cap.
The dependency of update_sampler on the texture updates was
introduced to avoid doing the apply_depthmode to the swizzle twice.
v2: Moved swizzling helper to u_format.c, extended the CAP to
provide more accurate information.
Per message on mesa-users list, this wasn't working before.
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Turns out the previous "fix" for handling per-pixel face selection and
derivatives didn't work out that well - the derivatives were wrong by
quite a bit, in theory transformation of the derivatives into cube space
should work, but would be _a lot_ more work than the "simplified" transform
used.
So, for explicit derivatives, I'm just giving up and go back to not honoring
them.
For implicit derivatives (and the fake explicit ones) however we try
something a little different, we just calculate rho as we would for a 3d
texture, that is after scaling the coords by the inverse major axis.
This gives the same results as calculating the derivs after projection of
the coords to the same face as long as all pixels hit the same face (and
only without rho_no_opt, otherwise it should be a bit worse). And when
not all pixels are hitting the same face, the results aren't so hot but
not catastrophically bad (I believe not off by more than a factor of 2 without
no_rho_approx and not more than sqrt(2) with no_rho_approx). I think this is
better than just picking the wrong face but who knows...
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This will calculate rho correctly as
sqrt(max((ds/dx)^2 + (dt/dx)^2 + (dr/dx)^2), (ds/dx)^2 + (dt/dx)^2 + (dr/dx)^2))
instead of max(|ds/dx|,|dt/dx|,|dr/dx|,|ds/dy|,|dt/dy,|dr/dy|)
(for 3 coords - 2 coords work analogous, for 1 coord there's no point doing
the exact version), for both implicit and explicit derivatives.
While such approximation seems to be allowed in OpenGL some APIs may be less
forgiving, and the error can be quite large (sqrt(2) for 2 coords, sqrt(3) for
3 coords so wrong by nearly one mip level in the latter case).
This also helps to single out "real" bugs from "expected" ones, so it is debug
only (though at least combined with no_brilinear I didn't really see much of a
performance difference but only tested with a debug build - at least with
implicit mipmaps the instruction count is almost exactly the same though the
instructions are more complex (1 sqrt and mul/adds instead of and/max mostly).
The code when the option isn't set stays exactly the same.
v2: rename no_rho_opt to no_rho_approx.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Currently the vdpau and xvmc detection code, is enabled for all builds. The
state trackers exist only within gallium. Enable whenever at least one gallium
driver is selected
v2: removed stray '-a'
[mattst88 v3]: Removed stray $.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=63645
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
We were trying to use a destroy method from a deleted context.
This fix is based on what's in the svga driver.
Reviewed-by: Stéphane Marchesin <marcheu@chromium.org>
Fixes issue identified by Klocwork analysis:
'attribute_map' array elements might be used uninitialized in this
function (vec4_visitor::lower_attributes_to_hw_regs).
The attribute_map array contains the mapping from shader input
attributes to the hardware registers they are stored in.
vec4_vs_visitor::setup_attributes() only populates elements of this
array which, according to core Mesa, are actually used by the shader.
Therefore, when vec4_visitor::lower_attributes_to_hw_regs() accesses
the array to lower a register access in the shader, it should in
principle only access elements of attribute_map that contain valid
data. However, if a bug ever caused the driver back-end to access an
input that was not flagged as used by core Mesa, then
lower_attributes_to_hw_regs() would access uninitialized memory, which
could cause illegal instructions to get generated, resulting in a
possible GPU hang.
This patch makes the situation more robust by using memset() to
pre-initialize the attribute_map array to zero, so that if such a bug
ever occurred, lower_attributes_to_hw_regs() would generate a (mostly)
harmless access to r0. In addition, it adds assertions to
lower_attributes_to_hw_regs() so that if we do have such a bug, we're
likely to discover it quickly.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
For some reason I made this happen under indirect rendering,
I think we might have a leak, valgrind gave out, so I said I'd
fix the basic problem.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
No longer pass -a flag to the get_hash_generate.py script to specify
OpenGL, ES1, ES2, etc. This updates the autoconf, scons and android
build files too (so we can bisect).
This is the last of the API-dependent conditional compilation in
core Mesa.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
we were ignoring leading/provoking vertex settings which was
breaking decomposition of some strips.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
we were using the wrong vars, reporting incorrect stream output
statistics.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
We were always treating the vertex index as a scalar but when the
shader is using indirect addressing it will be a vector of indices
for each channel. This was causing some nasty crashes insides
LLVM.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
If a window's minimized we get a zero-size window. Skip the SwapBuffers
in that case to avoid some warning messages with the VMware svga driver.
Internal bug #996695
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The caller of NewTextureObject does the right thing if NULL is returned,
so this function should do the right thing too.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The specification says that the geometry shader should exit if the
number of emitted vertices is bigger or equal to max_output_vertices and
we can't do that because we're running in the SoA mode, which means that
our storing routines will keep getting called on channels that have
overflown (even though they will be masked out, but we just can't skip
them).
So we need some scratch area where we can keep writing the overflown
vertices without overwriting anything important or crashing.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Can happen if we were using stream output without geometry
shader, by returning early we avoid a crash.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This is a basic implementation of the pipeline statistics in the
draw module. The interface is similar to the stream output statistics
and also requires that the callers explicitly enable it.
Included is the implementation of the interface in llvmpipe and
softpipe. Only softpipe enables the pipeline statistics capability
though because llvmpipe is lacking gathering of the fragment shading
and rasterization statistics.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The issue with SOA execution and end_primitive opcode is that it
can be executed both when we haven't emitted any vertices, in
which case we don't want to emit an empty primitive, and when
the execution mask is zero and the execution should be skipped. We
handled only the latter of those conditions. Now we're combining the
execution mask with a mask created from emitted vertices to handle
both cases. As a result we don't need the pending_end_primitive
flag which was broken because it was static and could be affected
by both above mentioned conditions at run-time.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Same as with llvmpipe: we can't be divind/moding by zero and we
need to make sure that dividing/moding by zero produces 0xffffffff.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Add a note to update PACKAGE_VERSION for Android and scons builds
Signed-off-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Handle legacy/obsolete specs as well
List all specs in extensions.html
Mark 'OLD' extensions as obsolete in extensions.html
Update the spec location in old relnotes
Signed-off-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
relnotes-*html > relnotes/*html
RELNOTES-* > relnotes/*
fix links, css and frames
Signed-off-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
TGSI_OPCODE_IF condition had two possible interpretations:
- src.x != 0.0f
- Mesa statetracker when PIPE_SHADER_CAP_INTEGERS was false either for
vertex and fragment shaders
- gallivm/llvmpipe
- postprocess
- vl state tracker
- vega state tracker
- most old drivers
- old internal state trackers
- many graw examples
- src.x != 0U
- Mesa statetracker when PIPE_SHADER_CAP_INTEGERS was true for both
vertex and fragment shaders
- tgsi_exec/softpipe
- r600
- radeonsi
- nv50
And drivers that use draw module also were a mess (because Mesa would
emit float IFs, but draw module supports native integers so it would
interpret IF arg as integers...)
This sort of works if the source argument is limited to float +0.0f or
+1.0f, integer 0, but would fail if source is float -0.0f, or integer in
the float NaN range. It could also fail if source is integer 1, and
hardware flushes denormalized numbers to zero.
But with this change there are now two opcodes, IF and UIF, with clear
meaning.
Drivers that do not support native integers do not need to worry about
UIF. However, for backwards compatibility with old state trackers and
examples, it is advisable that native integer capable drivers also
support the float IF opcode.
I tried to implement this for r600 and radeonsi based on the surrounding
code. I couldn't do this for nouveau, so I just shunted IF/UIF
together, which matches the current behavior.
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
v2:
- Incorporate Roland's feedback.
- Fix r600_shader.c merge conflict.
- Fix typo in radeon, spotted by Michel Dänzer.
- Incorporte Christoph Bumiller's patch to handle TGSI_OPCODE_IF(float)
properly in nv50/ir.
This patch adds PCI IDs for Bay Trail (sometimes called Valley View).
As far as the 3D driver is concerned, it's very similar to Ivybridge,
so the existing code should work just fine.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Assume the maximum pixel size (16 bytes per pixel). In addition to
moving redundant malloc and free calls outside the loop, this fixes a
potential resource leak when a surface is mapped and the malloc fails.
This also makes blit_nearest look a bit more like blit_linear.
v2: Use MAX_PIXEL_BYTES instead of 16. Suggested by Ken.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This was originally discovered by Klocwork analysis:
Possible memory leak. Dynamic memory stored in 'srcBuffer0'
allocated through function 'malloc' at line 566 can be lost at line
746
However, I think the problem is actually much worse. Since the memory
is freed after the first pass through the loop, the released buffer may
be used on the next iteration!
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
There is a hardware bug on Cayman where a BREAK/CONTINUE followed by
LOOP_STARTxxx for nested loops may put the branch stack into a state
such that ALU_PUSH_BEFORE doesn't work as expected. Workaround this
by replacing the ALU_PUSH_BEFORE with a PUSH + ALU
Fixes piglit tests EXT_transform_feedback/order*
v2: Use existing loop count and improve comment
v3: [Vadim Girlin] Set jump address for PUSH instructions
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
Instead of emitting configuration values (e.g. number of gprs used) in a
predefined order, the LLVM backend now emits these values in
register/value pairs. The first dword contains the register address and
the second dword contians the value to write.
Reviewed-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Inserting the value for the second quad in the wrong place for the
following shuffle. This meant the row or image stride was undefined which is
quite catastrophic, can lead to bogus texels fetched or just segfault.
This code is only hit for SoA path currently, still surprising it
didn't crash more or caused more visible issues (I think llvm used a
broadcast shuffle for the undefined parts of the vector, hence the undefined
value for the second quad was just the same as that from the first quad,
so as long as both quads hit the same mip level everything was fine, and since
lower mips always have the same large stride it made it less likely to
hit out-of-bound memory in case of differing lods).
Note: this is a candidate for stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Null platform IDs are OK according to the spec, but some applications have
been reported to get paranoid and assume that our NULL platform is unusable.
As it doesn't hurt to have device enumeration separate from the rest of the
device code (quite the opposite, it makes the code cleaner), make the API use
an actual platform object that keeps track of the available devices instead of
the former NULL pointer.
Reported-and-reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
Signed-off-by: Francisco Jerez <currojerez@riseup.net>
I don't see a sensible value to use in this path, but we shouldn't ever
hit this outside of developer new-texture-target enabling.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
We don't want to store this thing in the class, and we do need the
definition to be at the top of the function and held onto until the end
here, so there's not much to do besides (void) reference it.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This was copy and pasted from can_reswizzle_dst(), and we can just fold it
in instead to avoid the warning.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
I think this actually clarifies what's going on in the asserts a bit,
given how many regions we've got floating around.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
We assert that failure doesn't happen, but it fixes a warning in the
release build and it would at least give working behavior for a user by
falling back to the normal texsubimage path.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This was silly -- checking that we didn't overflow the array by dividing
the array size by 2 and then multiplying it back up by 2.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Asserts don't stop execution in release builds, so we would continue on to
use an uninitialized format value. Just take the failure path, which
appears to continue up the call stack for a while.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
The call has no side effects, and moving it into the assert cleans up a
compile warning in the release build.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
We have this support for firsthalf/sechalf instructions, which would be
called in the !has_compr4 (aka original gen4) 16-wide case. We currently
only support 16-wide for gen5+, so we weren't tripping over this, but it
would have been a problem if we ever try to enable it.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This is a poor substitute for proper global dead code elimination that
could replace both our current paths, but it was very easy to write. It
particularly helps with Valve's shaders that are translated out of DX
assembly, which has been register allocated and thus have a bunch of
unrelated uses of the same variable (some of which get copy-propagated
from and then left for dead).
shader-db results:
total instructions in shared programs: 1735753 -> 1731698 (-0.23%)
instructions in affected programs: 492620 -> 488565 (-0.82%)
v2: Fix comment typo
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This instruction doesn't update its IR destination, it just moves from
payload to f0. This caused the dead code elimination pass I'm adding to
dead-code-eliminate the first step of interpolation.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
These checks were all over, and every time I wrote one I had to try to
decide again what the cases were for partial updates.
v2: Fix inadvertent reladdr check removal.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
The other dispatch tables (Exec and Save) are freed, but BeginEnd is
never freed. This was found by inspection why investigating the leak of
shared state in _mesa_initialize_context.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Back up at line 1017 (not shown in patch), we add a reference to the
shared state. Several places after that may divert to the error
handler, but, as far as I can tell, nothing ever unreferences the shared
state.
Fixes issue identified by Klocwork analysis:
Resource acquired to 'shared->TexMutex' at line 1012 may be lost
here. Also there is one similar error on line 1087.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
dri2_create_surface can fail for a variety of reasons, including bad
input data. Dereferencing the NULL pointer and crashing is not okay.
Fixes issue identified by Klocwork analysis:
Pointer 'surf' returned from call to function 'dri2_create_surface'
at line 285 may be NULL and will be dereferenced at line 291.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Duh.
Fixes issues identified by Klocwork analysis:
Pointer 'table' returned from call to function 'calloc' at line 115
may be NULL and will be dereferenced at line 117.
and
Suspicious dereference of pointer 'table' before NULL check at line
119.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Ensure that process_array_type never returns NULL, and let
process_array_type handle the case where the supplied base type is NULL.
Fixes issues identified by Klocwork analysis:
Pointer 'type' returned from call to function 'get_type' at line
1907 may be NULL and may be dereferenced at line 1912.
and
Pointer 'field_type' checked for NULL at line 4160 will be
dereferenced at line 4165. Also there is one similar error on line
4174.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Fixes issue identified by Klocwork analysis:
Pointer 'field_type' returned from call to function 'glsl_type' at
line 4126 may be NULL and may be dereferenced at line 4139. Also
there are 2 similar errors on line(s) 4165, 4174.
In practice, it should be impossible to actually get NULL in here
because a syntax error would have already caused compilation to halt.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Pointed out by gcc
nve4_compute.c: In function 'nve4_launch_grid':
nve4_compute.c:511:7: warning: 'ret' may be used uninitialized in
this function [-Wmaybe-uninitialized]
if (ret)
^
Signed-off-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
Edit by Christoph Bumiller:
Set it to -1 to indicate failure and only when it's actually required.
As otherwise it is unused - pointed out by gcc
nve4_compute.c:586:20: warning: 'nve4_cache_split_name' defined but not used [-Wunused-function]
static const char *nve4_cache_split_name(unsigned value)
^
Signed-off-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
For debug build we'll hit the assert, for release we are going to emit random data
as subOp is used uninitilised. Spotted by gcc
codegen/nv50_ir_emit_nv50.cpp: In member function 'void nv50_ir::CodeEmitterNV50::emitATOM(const nv50_ir::Instruction*)':
codegen/nv50_ir_emit_nv50.cpp:1554:12: warning: 'subOp' may be used uninitialized in this function [-Wmaybe-uninitialized]
uint8_t subOp;
^
Signed-off-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com>
v2: I rewrote this to use the sample positions properly.
v3: rewrite properly to use bitfield to cast back to signed ints
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
This adds support to the mesa state tracker for ARB_texture_multisample.
hardware doesn't seem to use a different texture instructions, so
I don't think we need to create one for TGSI at this time.
Thanks to Marek for fixes to sample number picking.
v2: idr pointed out a bug in how we picked the max sample counts,
use new internal format chooser interface to pick proper answers.
v3: use st_choose_format directly, it was okay, fix anding of masks.
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
I've no idea when sample_chan would ever be 4 here, but 4 is most
definitely wrong, array textures have it as 3 as well.
Also the cayman code though unused is obviously wrong.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Since the vec4_visitor and vec4_generator classes are going to be
re-used for geometry shaders, we can't enable their debug
functionality based on (INTEL_DEBUG & DEBUG_VS) anymore. Instead, add
a debug_flag boolean to these two classes, so that when they're
instantiated the caller can specify whether debug dumps are needed.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Geometry shader inputs are arrays, but they use an unusual array
layout: instead of all array elements for a given geometry shader
input being stored consecutively, all geometry shader inputs are
interleaved into one giant array. As a result, the array stride we
use to access geometry shader inputs must be equal to the size of the
input VUE, rather than the size of the array element.
This patch introduces a new virtual function,
vec4_visitor::compute_array_stride(), which will allow geometry shader
compilation to specialize the computation of array stride to account
for the unusual layout of geometry shader input arrays. It also
renames the local variable that the ir_dereference_array visitor uses
to store the stride, to avoid confusion.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This patch introduces a new function,
vec4_visitor::lower_attributes_to_hw_regs(), which replaces registers
of type ATTR in the instruction stream with the hardware registers
that store those attributes. This logic will need to be common
between the vertex and geometry shaders.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This patch introduces a new function, vec4_visitor::emit_vertex(),
which contains the code for emitting vertices that will need to be
common between the vertex and geometry shaders.
Geometry shaders will need to use a different message header, and a
different opcode, for their URB writes, so we introduce virtual
functions emit_urb_write_header() and emit_urb_write_opcode() to take
care of the GS-specific behaviours.
Also, since vertex emission happens at the end of the VS, but in the
middle of the GS, we need to be sure to only call
emit_shader_time_end() during VS vertex emission. We accomplish this
by moving the call to emit_shader_time_end() into the VS
implementation of emit_urb_write_opcode().
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Since this function is going to get used for geometry shaders too, it
deserves a more generic name: generate_vec4_instruction.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This patch removes the following field from vec4_generator, since it
is not used:
- struct brw_vs_compile *c
And changes the following field:
- struct gl_vertex_program *vp => struct gl_program *prog
With these changes, vec4_generator no longer refers to any VS-specific
data structures. This will pave the way for re-using it for geometry
shaders.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
v2: Use the name "prog" rather than "p".
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The next patch is going to change the type of vec4_generator::vp from
struct gl_vertex_program * to struct gl_program *, and rename it. The
sensible name to change it to is vec4_generator::prog. However, prog
is already used. Since the existing vec4_generator::prog is of type
struct gl_shader_program, it makes sense to rename it to shader_prog.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This patch moves the following data structures from vec4_visitor to
vec4_vs_visitor, since they contain VS-specific data:
- struct brw_vs_compile *c (renamed to vs_compile)
- struct brw_vs_prog_data *prog_data (renamed to vs_prog_data)
- src_reg *vp_temp_regs
- src_reg vp_addr_reg
Since brw_vs_compile and brw_vs_prog_data also contain vec4-generic
data, the following pointers are added to the base class, to allow it
to access the vec4-generic portions of these data structures:
- struct brw_vec4_compile *c
- struct brw_vec4_prog_key *key
- struct brw_vec4_prog_data *prog_data
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
v2: Use shorter names in the base class and longer names in the
derived class.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This patch moves functions from vec4_visitor to vec4_vs_visitor that
deal with ARB (assembly) vertex programs. There's no point in having
these functions in the base class since we don't intend to support
assembly programs for the GS stage. The following functions are
moved:
- setup_vp_regs
- get_vp_dst_reg
- get_vp_src_reg
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The system values handled by vec4_visitor::visit(ir_variable *) are
VS-specific (vertex ID and instance ID). This patch moves the
handling of those values into a new virtual function,
make_reg_for_system_value(), so that this VS-specific code won't be
inherited by geomtry shaders.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This patch makes the following vec4_visitor functions virtual, since
they will need to be implemented differently for vertex and geometry
shaders. Some of the functions are renamed to reflect their generic
purpose, rather than their VS-specific behaviour:
- setup_attributes
- emit_attribute_fixups (renamed to emit_prolog)
- emit_vertex_program_code (renamed to emit_program_code)
- emit_urb_writes (renamed to emit_thread_end)
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This patch just creates the derived class; later patches will migrate
VS-specific functions and data structures from the base class into the
derived class.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This will allow the generic parts to be re-used for geometry shaders.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
v2: Put urb_read_length and urb_entry_size in the generic struct.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
In patches that follow, we'll be splitting structs brw_vs_prog_data
and brw_vs_compile into a vec4-generic base struct and a VS-specific
derived struct (this will allow the vec4-generic code to be re-used
for geometry shaders). Having brw_vs_compile point to
brw_vs_prog_data makes it difficult to do this cleanly.
Fortunately most of the functions that use brw_vs_compile (those in
the vec4_visitor class) already have access to brw_vs_prog_data
through a separate pointer (vec4_visitor::prog_data). So all we have
to do is use that pointer consistently, and plumb prog_data through
the few remaining functions that need access to it.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This patch modifies the arguments to brw_compute_vue_map() so that
they no longer bake in the assumption that we are generating a VUE map
for vertex shader outputs. It also makes the function non-static so
that we can re-use it for geometry shader outputs.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The vec4_visitor functions don't use any VS specific data from
vec4_visitor::vp. So rename it to "prog" and change its type from
struct gl_vertex_program * to struct gl_program *. This will allow
the code to be re-used for geometry shaders.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
v2: Use the name "prog" rather than "p".
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The next patch is going to change the type of vec4_visitor::vp from
struct gl_vertex_program * to struct gl_program *, and rename it. The
sensible name to change it to is vec4_visitor::prog. However, prog is
already used in backend_visitor (which vec4_visitor derives from).
Since backend_visitor::prog is of type struct gl_shader_program *, it
makes sense to rename it to shader_prog.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The comment above glsl_type::name claimed that it could sometimes be
NULL. This was wrong--it is never NULL. Many error handling paths
would segfault if it were. (Anonymous structs are assigned names like
"#anon_struct_0001"--see the ast_struct_specifier constructor in
glsl_parser_extras.cpp.)
Fix the comment and add assertions to validate that it really is never
NULL.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Just everything you need for UVD with r600g and radeonsi.
v2: move UVD code to radeon subdir, clean up build system additions,
remove an unused SI function, disable tiling on SI for now.
v3: some minor indentation fix and rebased
v4: dpb size calculation fixed
v5: implement proper fall-back in case the kernel doesn't support UVD,
based on patches from Andreas Boll but cleaned up a bit more.
Signed-off-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
The EGLConfig attributes EGL_MIN/MAX_SWAP_INTERVAL were incorrectly set to
0 and 0. This prevented clients from setting the swap interval to a
reasonable value, like 1 or 2.
Swap interval worked correctly in Mesa 9.0. The commit below introduced
the bug.
commit 7e9bd2b2ed
Author: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Date: Tue Sep 25 14:05:30 2012 -0700
egl: Add support for driconf control of swapinterval.
Note: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=63078
[chadv: Wrote commit message]
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
If a region is larger than the estimated aperture size, we map/unmap it
by copying with the BLT engine. Which means we can't use Y-tiling.
Fixes Piglit max-texture-size and tex3d-maxsize, which regressed in my
recent change to use Y-tiling by default on Gen6+. This was due to a
botched merge conflict resolution.
v2: Return a mask of valid tilings from intel_miptree_select_tiling.
This allows us to avoid the X-tiling fallback if Y-tiling is actually
mandatory.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
gen7_blorp_emit_depth_stencil_config() is only called when
params->depth.mt is non-null. Therefore, it's not necessary to do an
"if (params->depth.mt)" test inside it. The presence of this if test
was misleading static analysis tools (and briefly, me) into thinking
that gen7_blorp_emit_depth_stencil_config() might sometimes access
uninitialized data and dereference a null pointer.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
both mov and ucmp can be used to move variables of any type.
correctly note that about ucmp in the tgsi_info and make
sure gallivm can handle that by correctly casting the untyped
moves.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
We were using simple temporaries, without using alloca or phi
nodes which meant that on every iteration of the loop our
temporaries, which were holding the number of vertices and
primitives which were emitted, were being reset to zero. Now
we're using alloca to allocate those variables to preserve
them across conditionals.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
We were missing the implementation of PIPE_QUERY_SO_STATISTICS
query, this change implements it on top of the existing
facilities.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
We want to both make sure we never divide by zero to not generate
sigfpe and that divide by zero is guaranteed to return 0xffffffff.
Based on José idea.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
we break when the mask values are 0 not, 1, plus it's bit comparison
not a floating point comparison. This fixes both.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Enable hiz by setting intel_context::has_hiz. However, to work around
a hardware bug, we selectively enable hiz for only nicely aligned miptree
slices.
No Piglit regressions on Haswell 0x0d26 rev07 when based atop
mesa-master-4ad3601.
Improves the performance of GLB27_TRex_C24Z16_FixedTimeStep by 18.52%
(hsw-0x0d26-rev07; kernel-3.9.0-rc1; GLBenchmark 2.7.0 Release a68901;
samples=3).
v2: Replace the check for IS_HASWELL(devid) in intel_miptree_slice_has_hiz()
with a conditional set of has_hiz. [for anholt]
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
When appropriate, replace each check `hiz_mt != NULL` with either a call
to intel_miptree_slice_has_hiz() or intel_renderbuffer_has_hiz(). No
behavioral change.
This prepares for selectively enabling hiz on individual miptree slices
for Haswell.
This refactoring had several side effects.
1. To prevent new warnings about discarding the const qualifier,
I removed 'const' from some variable declarations in
intel_validate_framebuffer(). The alternative was to add const
qualifiers to multiple function signatures in the
intel_renderbuffer_has_hiz call graph. Since the dominant convention
in the Intel code is to not qualify function parameters as const,
I chose to remove rather than add const qualifiers.
2. I changed the signature of brw_emit_depth_stencil_hiz() by replacing
`struct intel_mipmap_tree *hiz_mt` with `bool hiz`. The function used
hiz_mt mostly as a boolean indicator of the presence of hiz, so the
signature change is consistent with the patch's goal.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Add new parameters `depth_level` and `depth_layer`, which specify depth
miptree's slice of interest. A following patch will pass the new
parameters through to intel_miptree_slice_has_hiz().
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
The new fields define the 2D miptree slice to be used. A following patch
will pass the new fields through to intel_miptree_slice_has_hiz().
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
On Haswell, HiZ will selectively be enabled on individual miptree slices
to workaround a hardware bug. The new field 'has_hiz' indicates if HiZ is
enabled for a given slice.
Also add two new accessor functions for this field.
intel_miptree_slice_has_hiz
intel_renderbuffer_has_hiz
The new field and accessor functions are not yet used. Also, this patch
introduces no behavioral change because, in this patch,
intel_miptree_alloc_hiz() sets has_hiz for all slices.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
The hardware docs and the simulator require that the rectangle primitive
emitted during fast depth clears and hiz resolves must be aligned to 8x4
pixels.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
This allows the computation of the offset to get written directly into the
message source.
shader-db results:
total instructions in shared programs: 3308390 -> 3283025 (-0.77%)
instructions in affected programs: 442998 -> 417633 (-5.73%)
No difference in GLB2.7 low res (n=9).
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
We have several places in our pull constant handling where we make a
temporary src_reg for an int, and then turn it into a dst. In doing so,
we were writing to the dst.xyzw, so we never register coalesced it with a
later mov from dst.x to real_dst.x.
These extra channels written would be removed if we had channel-wise DCE
in the backend, but we don't. Fix it for now by just not writing these
extra channels that won't get used.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
The software-tracked transform feedback offsets (svbi_0_starting_index)
are incorrect in the presence of primitive restart, so we were actually
updating it with a bogus value if the batch wrapped and we emitted the
packet again during a single transform feedback. By reducing state
emission, we avoid the bug.
Fixes piglit OpenGL 3.1/primitive-restart-xfb flush
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
The software-tracked transform feedback offsets (svbi_0_starting_index)
are incorrect in the presence of primitive restart, so we can't reliably
compute offsets for our buffer pointers after a batch flush. Thanks to HW
contexts, our transform feedback offsets are now saved, so we can just
keep using the ones from before the batch wrap.
Fixes piglit OpenGL 3.1/primitive-restart-xfb flush
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
"ctx->DrawBuffer->Visual" might be invalid if (NewState &_NEW_BUFFERS) != 0.
v2: also fix:
- RGBA_INTEGER_MODE_EXT
- RGBA_FLOAT_MODE_ARB (also check API support)
- FRAMEBUFFER_SRGB_CAPABLE_EXT
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Gen7.5 (Haswell) hardware supports primitive restart for all primitive
types. It also handles all possible primitive restart indices.
Rather than specialize both can_cut_index_handle_restart_index() and
the switch statement in can_cut_index_handle_prims() for Haswell, just
return early if the hardware is Haswell because we know it can handle
everything.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
brw_draw.c contains a trim() function which modifies the vertex count
for quads and quad strips in order to discard dangling vertices. In
principle this shouldn't be necessary, since hardware since Gen4 is
capable of discarding dangling vertices by itself. However, it's
necessary because as a hack to speed up rendering on Gen 4-5, we
sometimes convert quads to trifans and quad strips to tristrips. The
trim() function isn't necessary on Gen6 and up.
This patch documents why and when the trim() function is necessary,
and avoids calling it when it's not needed.
This will avoid creating problems when we enable hardware support for
primitive restart of quads and quad strips on Haswell.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The call to emit_shader_time_end() before the second URB write was
conditioned with "if (eot)", but eot is always false in this code
path, so emit_shader_time_end() was never being called for vertex
shaders that performed 2 URB writes.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Drawing subtitles didn't increased the dirty area of the surface.
Reported and tested by freeedrich on irc.
v2: don't clear the surface
Signed-off-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
In the mailing list discussion of "glsl/linker: fix varying packing
for non-flat integer varyings." (commit 7862bde), we concluded that
since the bug only applies to integral variables, it is safer to just
apply the bug fix to integer varyings. I forgot to make the change
before pushing the patch upstream. (Note: we aren't aware of any bugs
in commit 7862bde; it just seems wise to be on the safe side).
This patch makes the change. Assuming commit 7862bde gets
cherry-picked back to 9.1, this commit should be cherry-picked too.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 release branch.
When a varying is consumed by transform feedback, but is not used by
the fragment shader, assign_varying_locations() sets its interpolation
type to "flat" in order to ensure that lower_packed_varyings never has
to deal with non-flat integral varyings (the GLSL spec doesn't require
integral vertex outputs to be flat if they aren't consumed by the
fragment shader).
A similar situation will arise when geometry shader support is added,
since the GLSL spec only requires integral vertex shader outputs to be
flat when they are consumed by the fragment shader. This patch
modifies the linker to handle this situation too.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
To minimize the variety of type conversions that lower_packed_varyings
needs to perform, it assumes that integral varyings are always
qualified as "flat". link_varyings.cpp takes care of ensuring that
this is the case (even in the circumstances where GLSL doesn't require
it).
This patch documents the assumption with an assertion, for ease in
future debugging.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Commit dfb57e7 (glsl: Fix error checking on "flat" keyword to match
GLSL ES 3.00, GLSL 1.50) relaxed the rules for integral varyings: they
only need to be declared as "flat" if they are a fragment shader
inputs. This allowed for the possibility of a vertex shader output
being a non-flat integer, provided that it was not matched to a
fragment shader input. A non-contrived situation where this might
arise is if a vertex shader generates some integral outputs which are
consumed by tranform feedback, but not by the fragment shader.
Unfortunately, lower_packed_varyings assumes that *all* integral
varyings are flat, regardless of whether they are consumed by the
fragment shader. As a result, attempting to create a non-flat
integral vertex output of a size that required packing (i.e. a size
other than ivec4 or uvec4) would cause an assertion failure in
lower_packed_varyings.
This patch prevents the assertion failure by forcing vertex shader
outputs to be "flat" whenever they are not consumed by the fragment
shader. This should have no effect on rendering since the "flat"
keyword only affects the behaviour of fragment shader inputs.
Fixes piglit test "spec/EXT_transform_feedback/nonflat-integral".
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 release branch.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
ir_print_visitor::visit(ir_variable *)'s mode[] array needs to match
the declaration of the enum ir_variable_mode. It's hard to verify
that at compile time, but at least we can use a STATIC_ASSERT to make
sure it's the right size.
This required adding ir_var_mode_count to the enum.
This patch updates the interp[] array to match the enum
glsl_interp_qualifier.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
v2: Add a STATIC_ASSERT to make sure the array is the correct size.
This required adding INTERP_QUALIFIER_COUNT to the enum.
Fixes uninitialized scalar variable defect reported by Coverity.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
The multiplication part of tgsi_umad did not work on Cayman, because it did
not populate the correct vector slots.
This fixed hardlocks in the EXT_transform_feedback/order tests.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
(might not be easy to cherry-pick though)
Signed-off-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
This option can force textures to be untiled. However, on Gen6+, depth
buffers must be Y-tiled. MSAA buffers also must be Y-tiled. So setting
this option on even a trivial application like glxgears causes assertion
failures in a debug build, and likely GPU hangs in a release build.
It's just giving users a license to shoot themselves in the foot.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
In the past, we preferred X-tiling for color buffers because our BLT
code couldn't handle Y-tiling. However, the BLT paths have been largely
replaced by BLORP on Gen6+, which can handle any kind of tiling.
We hadn't measured any performance improvement in the past, but that's
probably because compressed textures were all untiled anyway.
Improves performance in GLB27_TRex_C24Z16_FixedTime by 7.69231%.
v2: Rebase on top of Eric's untiled-for-larger-than-aperture changes.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The code has no rationale for why we would force compressed textures to
be untiled, and it appears to work fine. Git archeology indicates that
it's been that way dating back to when we first started tiling.
Improves performance in GLB27_TRex_C24Z16_FixedTimeStep at 1280x720 by
10.0529% +/- 0.573075% (n=12). Improves performance in Xonotic by
4.56409% +/- 0.27965% (n=3).
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This patch (1) extracts from intel_miptree_create() the spaghetti logic
that selects the tiling format, (2) rewrites that spaghetti into a lucid
form, and (3) moves it to a new function, intel_miptree_choose_tiling().
No behavioral change.
As a bonus, it is now evident that the force_y_tiling parameter to
intel_miptree_create() does not really force Y tiling.
v2 (Ken): Rebase on top of Eric's untiled-for-larger-than-aperture
changes. This required passing in the miptree.
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
When moving the renderbuffer to a new miptree, we neglected to allocate
the hiz buffer for the new miptree. Oops.
Fixes all Piglit depthstencil-render-miplevels tests from crash to pass on
Sandybridge.
Note: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
calim pointed out we were getting mipmap levels for array multisamples,
this didn't make sense. So then I noticed this function takes last_level
so we are passing in a too high value here.
I think this should fix the case he was seeing.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Check the type of the array operand and the index operand before doing
other checks. This simplifies the code a bit now (eliminating the
error_emitted parameter), and enables some later functional changes.
The shader
uniform float x[6];
uniform sampler2D s;
void main() { gl_Position.x = xx[s + 1]; }
still generates (only) the two expected errors:
0:3(33): error: `xx' undeclared
0:3(39): error: Operands to arithmetic operators must be numeric
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Previously the shader
uniform float x[6];
void main() { gl_Position.x = x[1.0]; }
would have generated the errors
0:2(33): error: array index must be integer type
0:2(36): error: array index must be < 6
Now only
0:2(33): error: array index must be integer type
will be generated.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This puts all of the checks togeher for easier reading. It also means
that all the checks are blocked on array->type->is_array. Shortly this
will allow elimination of some is_error check work-arounds in this
function.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Also, document the reason for not checking for type->is_array in some of
the bound-checking cases.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
That last consumer of the return value was changed to not use it by the
previous commit.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The error_emitted flag is used in semantic checking to prevent spurious
cascading errors. For example,
void foo(sampler2D s, float a)
{
float x = a + (1.2 + s);
...
}
should only generate a single error. Without the error_emitted flag for
the first error, "a + ..." would also generate an error.
However, a bunch of cases in _mesa_ast_array_index_to_hir that were
setting error_emitted would mask legitimate errors. For example,
vec4 a[7];
float b = a[3.14];
should generate two error (float index and type mismatch in assignment).
The uses of error_emitted would cause only the first to be emitted.
This patch removes most of the places in _mesa_ast_array_index_to_hir
that would set the error_emitted flag.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
I love 800+ line switch-statements as much as the next guy... Future
commits will make changes to this part of the AST-to-HIR conversion, and
extracting this code will make that a bit easier.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This still fails, since 8192*4bpp == 32768, which is too big to use the
blitter on.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
Now that we require 2.6.39, there's no need to also check for 2.6.29.
Calling drm_intel_bufmgr_gem_enable_fenced_relocs() without checking
should be safe, as it simply sets a flag.
This does remove the check for zero fences available, but that doesn't
seem worth checking.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Chris Wilson's relaxed relocation patch landed in March 2011. Anyone
running pre-3.0 kernels probably isn't going to get the latest Mesa
anyway.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
These were likely used for BRW_NEW_... dirty bit flags at one point, but
they're unused now.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Nobody uses this value, so there's no need to set it.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
When I removed the proj_attrib_mask optimization, I also removed the
last consumer of this bit without realizing it.
Since nobody uses it, there's no point in flagging it.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Clover needs the irreader component of llvm
v2: Check for irreader component
irreader is only available with LLVM 3.3 >= 177971
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
Signed-off-by: Niels Ole Salscheider <niels_ole@salscheider-online.de>
It has 2 dependencies: glClampColor and the framebuffer, we might just as well
do the update where those two are changed.
v2: cosmetic changes from Brian's email
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This should reduce shader recompilations with drivers that emulate fragment
color clamping, because we want the clamping to be enabled only if there is
a signed normalized or floating-point colorbuffer.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reported-by: `per` in #intel-gfx
The size of the cache key varies, so store the actual size as well as
the key blob itself, rather than just assuming it's the same as the size
passed in.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
V2: Don't leave silly holes in structure; use unsigned instead of GLuint.
V3: Fix missing case for `last` match.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This function is a holdover from r600g and is identical to
si_pm4_inval_texture_cache(), so it is not needed.
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com
This target string now contains four values instead of three. The old
processor field (which was really being interpreted as arch) has been split
into two fields: processor and arch. This allows drivers to pass a
more a more detailed description of the hardware to compiler frontends.
v2:
- Adapt to libclc changes
Reviewed-by: Francisco Jerez <currojerez@riseup.net>
Add UTIL_FORMAT_LAYOUT_ETC to util_format_is_compressed. It was missing.
Signed-off-by: Wladimir J. van der Laan <laanwj@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Don't check if there's sampler support for stencil if we're not
going to actually blit/copy stencil values. Fixes the case where
we mistakenly said we can't support a blit of depth values from
S8Z24 to X8Z24.
Also, rename the is_stencil variable to dst_has_stencil to improve
readability.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Switch to use the envytools generated headers for register/bitfield
definitions. This is the first step in preparing to add a3xx support,
since it avoids having conflicting names for a3xx and a2xx registers.
And since I'm using envytools for a3xx it is simpler to just use it for
everything.
This shouldn't cause any functional change, it is really just a lot of
renaming.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robdclark@gmail.com>
Otherwise we will not receive destroy windows events, causing framebuffers
to leak.
This happens particularly with java and jogl.
Tested with java + jogl, MATLAB.
VMware Internal Bug Number: 1013086.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
At least on llvm 3.2 this appears to work fine. Tested on an Athlon XP
2600+, which has sse and 3dnow but not sse2.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Adam Jackson <ajax@redhat.com>
Build time option, set RADEON_CS_DUMP_ON_LOCKUP to 1 in radeon_drm_cs.h to
enable it.
When enabled after each cs submission the code will try to detect lockup by
waiting on one of the buffer of the cs to become idle, after a timeout it
will consider that the cs triggered a lockup and will write a radeon_lockup.c
file in current directory that have all information for replaying the cs.
To build this file :
gcc -O0 -g radeon_lockup.c -ldrm -o radeon_lockup -I/usr/include/libdrm
v2: Add radeon_ctx.h file to mesa git tree
v3: Slightly improve dumped file for easier editing, only dump first faulty cs
Signed-off-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
The default wrap mode (PIPE_TEX_WRAP_REPEAT) is incompatible with
unnormalized texcoords (at least for softpipe).
v2: use PIPE_TEX_WRAP_CLAMP_TO_EDGE
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
GLBenchmark 2.7's shaders contain conditional blocks like:
if (x) {
if (y) {
...
}
}
where the outer conditional's then clause contains exactly one statement
(the nested if) and there are no else clauses. This can easily be
optimized into:
if (x && y) {
...
}
This saves a few instructions in GLBenchmark 2.7:
total instructions in shared programs: 11833 -> 11649 (-1.55%)
instructions in affected programs: 8234 -> 8050 (-2.23%)
It also helps CS:GO slightly (-0.05%/-0.22%). More importantly,
however, it simplifies the control flow graph, which could enable other
optimizations.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This clarifies that the offset of 2 is actually 16 kB / 8kB units.
It also keys both computations off of a single variable, which should
make it easier to change in the future.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
These variables are only used within a single function, so we may as
well make them local variables.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This was only produced by the brw_wm_input_dimensions atom, which was
removed in the previous commit. So there's no need for the dirty bit.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This was only used to compute proj_attrib_mask, which was removed by the
previous commit. That makes this dead code.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The previous commit removed the last user of this field, so there's no
longer any point in setting it. Removing this should eliminate
state-dependent recompiles, and make the precompile more reliable.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This optimization attempts to avoid extra attribute interpolation
instructions for texture coordinates where the W-component is 1.0.
Unfortunately, it requires a lot of complexity: the brw_wm_input_sizes
state atom (all the brw_vs_constval.c code) needs to run on each draw.
It computes the input_size_masks array, then uses that to compute
proj_attrib_mask. Differences in proj_attrib_mask can cause
state-dependent fragment shader recompiles. We also often fail to guess
proj_attrib_mask for the fragment shader precompile, causing us to
needlessly compile it twice.
Furthermore, this optimization only applies to fixed-function programs;
it does not help modern GLSL-based programs at all. Generally, older
fixed-function programs run fine on modern hardware anyway.
The optimization has existed in some form since the initial commit. When
we rewrote the fragment shader backend, we dropped it for a while. Eric
readded it in commit eb30820f26 as part of
an attempt to cure a ~1% performance regression caused by converting the
fixed-function fragment shader generation code from Mesa IR to GLSL IR.
However, no performance data was included in the commit message, so it's
unclear whether or not it was successful.
Time has passed, so I decided to re-measure this. Surprisingly,
Eric's OpenArena timedemo actually runs /faster/ after removing this and
the brw_wm_input_sizes atom. On Ivybridge at 1024x768, I measured a
1.39532% +/- 0.91833% increase in FPS (n = 55). On Ironlake, there was
no statistically significant difference (n = 37).
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This is the same computation as the _WriteEnabled flag, so we may as
well use it.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
ctx->Stencil.WriteMask is a statically sized array of 3 elements.
Checking it against 0 actually is a NULL check, and can never fail,
which meant that we always said stencil writes were enabled.
Use the new core Mesa derived state flag to fix this.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
i965 needs to know whether stencil writes are enabled in several places,
and gets the test wrong sometimes. While we could create a function to
compute this, it seems generally useful enough to warrant a new piece of
derived state. Also, all the plumbing is already in place.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
The ar_ge_as_at variable was just very very confusing since the condition
was actually the other way around (as_at_ge_ar). So change the condition
(and the selects depending on it) to match the variable name.
And also change the chosen major axis in case the coord values are the
same. OpenGL doesn't care one bit which one is chosen in this case but
it looks like dx10 would require z chosen over y, and y chosen over x
(previously did x chosen over y, y chosen over z). Since it's all the
same effort just honor dx10's wishes. (Though actually, for some prefered
orderings, we could save one (or two with derivatives) selects since the
tnewx and tnewz (and the corresponding dmax values) are the same.)
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The way we were allocating registers before, packing into low register
numbers for Ironlake, resulted in an overly-constrained dependency graph
for instruction scheduling. Improves GLBenchmark 2.1 performance by
4.5% +/- 0.7% (n=26). No difference on my old GLSL demo (n=20). No
difference on nexuiz (n=15).
v2: Fix off-by-one bug that made the change only work for 16-wide on i965.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
GCC 4.8 now warns about typedefs that are local to a scope and not
used anywhere within that scope. This produced spurious warnings with
the STATIC_ASSERT() macro (which used a typedef to provoke a compile
error in the event of an assertion failure).
This patch switches to a simpler technique that avoids the warning.
v2: Avoid GCC-specific syntax. Also update p_compiler.h.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The former just checks that the given block is valid by checking
the header and footer.
The later sets the memory block's tag. With extra debug code, we
can use that for monitoring/checking particular allocations.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This is trivial now, though need to make sure we pass all the necessary
derivative values (which is 3 each for ddx/ddy not 2).
Passes piglit arb_shader_texture_lod-texgradcube test.
v2: add the forgotten abs() for all incoming derivatives (discovered
by new piglit arb_shader_texture_lod-texgradcube test, though more by
luck as it was failing only for exactly one pixel...).
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This proved to be tricky, the problem is that after selection/mirroring
we cannot calculate reasonable derivatives (if not all pixels in a quad
end up on the same face the derivatives could get "randomly" exceedingly
large).
However, it is actually quite easy to simply calculate the derivatives
before selection/mirroring and then transform them similar to
the cube coordinates (they only need selection/projection, but not
mirroring as we're not interested in the sign bit, of course). While
there is a tiny bit more work to do (need to calculate derivs for 3
coords instead of 2, and additional selects) it also simplifies things
somewhat for the coord selection itself (as we save some broadcast aos
shuffles, and we don't need to calculate the average vector) - hence if
derivatives aren't needed this should actually be faster.
Also, this has the benefit that this will (trivially) work for explicit
derivatives too, which we completely ignored before that (will be in a
separate commit for better trackability).
Note that while the way for getting rho looks very different, it should
result in "nearly" the same values as before (the "nearly" is only because
before the code would choose the face based on an "average" vector and hence
the derivatives calculated according to this face, where now (for implicit
derivatives) the derivatives are projected on the face selected for the
first (top-left) pixel in a quad, so not necessarly the same face).
The transformation done might not quite be state-of-the-art, calculating
length(dx,dy) as max(dx,dy) certainly isn't neither but this stays the
same as before (that is I think a better transform would _somehow_ take
the "derivative major axis" into account so that derivative changes in
the major axis wouldn't get ignored).
Should solve some accuracy problems with cubemaps (can easily be seen with
the cubemap demo when switching wrapping/filtering), though we still don't
do seamless filtering to fix it completely (so not per-sample but per-pixel
is certainly better than per-quad and already sufficient for accurate
results with nearest tex filter).
As for performance, it seems to be a tiny bit faster too (maybe 3% or so
with cubemap demo). Which I'd have expected with nearest/nearest filtering
where this will be less instructions, but the difference seems to actually
be larger with linear/linear_mipmap_linear where it is slightly more
instructions, probably the code appears less serialized allowing better
scheduling (on a sandy bridge cpu). It actually seems to be now at least
as fast as the old path using a conditional when using 128bit vectors too
(that is probably more a result of testing with a newer cpu though), for now
that old path is still there but unused.
No piglit regressions.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Using a different packing for the single coord case should save a shuffle.
Plus some minor style fixes.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Should be way faster of course on cpus supporting this (includes AMD
Bulldozer and Jaguar cores, Intel Ivy Bridge and up (except budget models)).
Passes piglit fbo-blending-formats GL_ARB_texture_float -auto on Ivy Bridge.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
When geometry shaders are present, one needs to be able to create
an empty geometry shader with stream output that needs to be
resolved later and attached to the currently bound vertex shader.
Lets add support for it to llvmpipe and draw. draw allows attaching
independent stream output info to any vertex shader and llvmpipe
resolves at draw time which vertex shader the given empty geometry
shader should be linked to.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
We need to reset the internal state of the so buffers or we'll
keep appending even though we're not supposed to.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
I think this was there before and got accidently
removed during a merge. Same code as for the GS
context, which is also using an enum instead of
hardcoded numbers.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
It's quite helpful during the rendering when we know
exactly the count of the vertices available in the
buffer.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
We were flushing with incorrect number of primitives. TGSI exec
can only work with a single primitive at a time. Plus the fetching
with multiple primitives on llvm paths wasn't copying the last
element.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The functions are prototyped in u_transfer.h and are related to the
other functions in u_transfer.c.
The next patch will re-use the u_resource.c file for new code.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The fallbacks count is the number of drawing calls that use a "draw"
module fallback, such as polygon stipple.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
NOTE: Changed the semantic index for the drawtex coordinate to
be the texture unit index instead of always 0.
Not sure if this is correct but since the value seems to depend
on the unit it would make sense to use different varying slots.
This still isn't optimal, since the fence will signal a bit late,
but better than checking on the bo, which may never be ready if it
is shared (which is likely).
Also, renamed "pixels-rendered" to "samples-passed" because the
occlusion counter increments even if colour and depth writes are
disabled, or (on some implementations) for killed fragments that
passed the depth test when PS early_fragment_tests is set.
This patch consolidates duplicate code in the brw_depthbuffer and
gen7_depthbuffer state atoms. Previously, these state atoms contained
5 chunks of code for emitting the _3DSTATE_DEPTH_BUFFER packet (3 for
Gen4-6 and 2 for Gen7). Also a lot of logic for determining the
appropriate buffer setup was duplicated between the Gen4-6 and Gen7
functions.
This refactor splits the code into three separate functions:
brw_emit_depthbuffer(), which determines the appropriate buffer setup
in a mostly generation-independent way, brw_emit_depth_stencil_hiz(),
which emits the appropriate state packets for Gen4-6, and
gen7_emit_depth_stencil_hiz(), which emits the appropriate state
packets for Gen7.
Tested using Piglit on Gen5-7 (no regressions).
v2: Re-word some comments. Fix an assertion that incorrectly
prohibited packed depth/stencil formats on Gen6 (these are allowed
provided that HiZ is disabled).
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This reverts commit dbf94d105a, which
was working around a bug in the handling of array indexing when
constant folding built-in functions. Now that the constant folding
bug has been fixed, the workaround is no longer needed.
Mesa constant-folds built-in functions by using a miniature GLSL
interpreter (see
ir_function_signature::constant_expression_evaluate_expression_list()).
This interpreter had a bug in its handling of array indexing, which
caused expressions like "m[i][j]" (where m is a matrix) to be handled
incorrectly. Specifically, it incorrectly treated j as indexing into
the whole matrix (rather than indexing just into the vector m[i]); as
a result the offset computed for m[i] was lost and m[i][j] was treated
as m[j][0].
Fixes piglit tests inverse-mat[234].{vert,frag}.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 and 9.0 branches.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=57436
Conceptually the same as previously done in float_to_half.
Should cut down number of instructions from 14 to 10 or so, but
will promote some NaNs to Infs, so it's disabled.
It gets a bit tricky though handling all the cases correctly...
Passes basic tests either way (though there are no tests testing special
cases, but some manual tests injecting them seemed promising).
v2: style and comment fixes suggested by Jose
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This replaces the existing float-to-half implementation.
There are definitely a couple of differences - the old implementation
had unspecified(?) rounding behavior, and could at least in theory
construct Inf values out of NaNs. NaNs and Infs should now always be
properly propagated, and rounding behavior is now towards zero
(note this means too large but non-Infinity values get propagated to max
representable value, not Infinity).
The implementation will definitely not match util code, however (which
does nearest rounding, which also means too large values will get
propagated to Infinity).
Also fix a bogus round mask probably leading to rounding bugs...
v2: fix a logic bug in handling infs/nans.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reduced stack size allows to run more threads in some cases,
improving performance for the shaders that use stack (that is, for the
shaders with control flow instructions). E.g. with unigine-based apps.
v4: implement exact computation taking into account wavefront size
v5: add cases for RV620, RS880
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
v2: reduce key size, don't copy key around to much.
v3: remove key size reduction
Signed-off-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
A fix for lower_jumps progress reporting, very much like similar in
c1e591eed.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
All the other expression types allowed here have inst->mlen == 0, and this
one has implied MRF writes for all of its payload, so nothing else in the
implementation should need to change.
Reduces SEND messages for loading from pull constants in kwin's Lanczos
shader from 16 to 6. (Due to a deficiency in constant propagation, I
can't use the hack I did in the previous commit to test the performance
change)
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=61554
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
This comes at a minor performance cost at the moment (-3.2% +/- 0.2%, n=14 on
my GM45 forced to load all uniforms through the varying-index path), but we
get a whole vec4 at a time to reuse in the next commit.
v2: Fix comment about channels in the other message.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
We weren't setting needs_dep[i] in the loops, so we'd continue on to
potentially add the same workaround MOVs to the later basic block
boundaries, too. We can either set needs_dep[i] to exit through the
normal path, or we can just return since we know we're done.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
For sampler messages, it depends on the target gen, and on gen4
SIMD16-sampler-on-SIMD8-execution we were returning 4 instead of 8 like we
should.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
I think this makes it much more obvious what's going on here.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This is our first CSE on a regs_written() > 1 instruction, so it takes a
bit of extra fixup. Reduces the number of loads on kwin's Lanczos shader
from 12 to 2.
v2: Fix compiler warning (false positive on possibly-uninitialized variable)
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=61554
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org> (v1)
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Like we have done for the VS and for constant-index uniform loads, we use
the sampler engine to get caching in front of the L3 to avoid tickling the
IVB L3 bug. This is also a bit of a functional change, as we're now
loading a vec4 instead of a single dword, though we're not taking
advantage of the other 3 components of the vec4 (yet).
With the driver hacked to always take the varying-index path for all
uniforms, improves performance of my old GLSL demo by 315% +/- 2% (n=4).
This a major fix for some blur shaders in compositors from the
varying-index uniforms support I introduced in 9.1.
v2: Move old offset computation into the pre-gen7 path.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=61554
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Right now we don't have anything with regs_written() > 1 and !inst->mlen,
but that's about to change.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We want to load vec4s, since loading a vec4 instead of a dword is
basically no increased latency. But for variable indexed access, the
previous requirement of aligned vec4s for a sampler LD was hard to
implement.
Note that this change only affects those messages that use the surface
format, like sampler LDs, but not to the untyped data cache loads we've
used in other cases.
No significant performance difference on my GLSL demo with uniforms forced
to take the varying pull constants path (n=4).
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This puts the rounding-up logic into the function itself instead of all
the callers having to manage it. Also drop an "unused" comment in gen4,
as the stride *is* used for texbos (and will be for uniforms soon).
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
I'm going to want to change the math for gen7 using sampler LD
instructions in a way that gets CSE to occur like we'd hope.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We weren't inserting it into the list, so it did nothing. This line was
replaced by the MOV/MUL block above.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This happens quite a bit with varying-index uniform loads. We could also
do better by avoiding the MACH entirely, but there's no reason not to at
least take this step.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
If the active uniform is an array, then the length of the uniform name should
include the three extra characters for the "[0]" suffix, which is required by
the GL 4.2 spec to be appended to the uniform name in glGetActiveUniform().
This avoids the situation where the output buffer does not have enough space
to hold the "[0]" suffix, resulting in an incomplete array specification like
"foobar[0".
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Change-Id: I41e87ba347a7169eec8c575596cc3416adbe0728
Signed-off-by: Haixia Shi <hshi@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Stéphane Marchesin <marcheu@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This is a more aggressive version of the old brw_optimize() path. Reduces
cycles spent in the vertex shader on minecraft by 18.6% +/- 10.0% (n=15).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We dump shader source in ir_to_mesa.cpp, and we dump linked programs here,
but we had no reference from the linked programs to their source. This
was preventing improvement of shader-db to use linked shader programs
instead of individual shader files (which is bogus, because it means we
optimize out VS outputs, and don't interpolate FS inputs!)
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
If we're drawing to a surface that's 2048 x 2048 pixels or larger there's
danger of fixed-point overflow in the triangle rasterization code. That
leads to various rendering glitches.
Rather than implement some intricate changes to the rasterization code,
simply subdivide triangles into smaller subtriangles to avoid the issue.
Only do this when the drawing surface is larger than 2048 by 2048.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This can be enabled everywhere that ARB_texture_multisample is
supported -- ARB_texture_storage is supported on everything.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
ARB_texture_storage_multisample allows texture parameters to be
queried for TEXTURE_2D_MULTISAMPLE and TEXTURE_2D_MULTISAMPLE_ARRAY
targets.
Some parameters may also be set, with the following exceptions:
- TEXTURE_BASE_LEVEL may not be set to a nonzero value; generates
INVALID_OPERATION
- any state which appears in the `per-sampler` state table may not
be set; generates INVALID_OPERATION
V2: Don't introduce bogus handling of TEXTURE_MAX_LEVEL
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Now that there are 4 variants, just pass the function name into
teximagemultisample rather than reconstructing it.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Adds XML for the extension, dispatch_sanity enabling, and the two new
entrypoints. These are both implemented by calling the shared
teximagemultisample() with immutable=GL_TRUE.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
The new entrypoints will come later, but this adds the actual logic for
supporting immutable multisample textures:
- The immutability flag is set as desired.
- Attempting to modify an immutable multisample texture produces
INVALID_OPERATION.
Note: The extension spec does not mention adding this behavior to
TexImage*Multisample, but it seems like the reasonable thing to do.
V2: - Cover missing error cases (unsized formats; texture object zero)
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
[V1] Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This is about to be used in teximagemultisample() when immutable=true.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
We are intentionally not allocating a slot for gl_ClipVertex. But by
leaving the bit set in the slots_valid, the fragment shader's computation
of where varyings are in urb entry coming out of the SF would be off by
one. Fixes rendering in Freespace 2 SCP, and improves rendering in TF2.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=62830
Tested-by: Joaquín Ignacio Aramendía <samsagax@gmail.com>
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Alessandro Pignotti noted when I added this code in commit
0e723b135b that it's in the else block for
"if (busy)", so this debug print couldn't happen.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
When reading a column from a row-major matrix, we would slot the single
value read into the vector using an ir_dereference_array of the vector
with a constant index. This will (eventually) get optimized to a
masked-write, so just generate the masked write in the first place.
v2: Remove unused variable 'chan'. Suggested by Ken.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Cc: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Search and replace:
][0] -> ].x
][1] -> ].y
][2] -> ].z
][3] -> ].w
Fixes piglit tests inverse-mat[234].{vert,frag}. These tests call the
inverse function with constant parameters and expect proper constant
folding to happen. My suspicion is that this patch papers over some bug
in constant propagation involving array accesses.
Either way, all of these accesses eventually get lowered to swizzles.
This cuts out the middle man (saving a trivial amount of CPU).
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Cc: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Cc: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Since the case was missing bec4->get_scalar_type() would return bvec4,
but vec4->get_scalar_type() would return float.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
"discard" instructions generate HALT instructions which jump to a final
HALT near the end of the shader. Previously, fs_generator created this
final jump target when it saw the first FS_OPCODE_FB_WRITE, causing it
to jump right before the FB write epilogue. This is normally good.
However, INTEL_DEBUG=shader_time also has an epilogue section which
records the final timestamp. The frontend emits IR for this just before
FS_OPCODE_FB_WRITE. Unfortunately, this led to the following ordering:
1. Shader Time Epilogue
2. Final HALT (where discards jump)
3. Framebuffer Write Epilogue
This meant that discarded pixels completely skipped the shader time
epilogue, causing no ending timestamp to be written. This obviously
led to inaccurate results.
This patch adds a new FS_OPCODE_PLACEHOLDER_HALT in the IR stream just
before any epilogue sections. This is where the final HALT should be
generated, and makes it easy to ensure the correct ordering:
1. Final HALT
2. Shader Time Epilogue
3. Framebuffer Write Epilogue
For shaders that don't discard, this opcode compiles away to nothing.
The scheduler adds barrier dependencies to make sure that it doesn't
get moved above any FS_OPCODE_DISCARD_JUMP instructions.
One 8-wide shader in GLBenchmark 2.7 dropped from 2291.67 Gcycles to
a mere 5.13 Gcycles.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
I'd previously added the minimum names to understand my dumps, but this
makes dumps in general much easier to read.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
v2 [mattst88]:
- Rebase.
- #define GL_ARB_texture_query_lod to 1.
- Remove comma after ir_lod in ir.h for MSVC.
- Handled ir_lod in ir_hv_accept.cpp, ir_rvalue_visitor.cpp,
opt_tree_grafting.cpp.
- Rename textureQueryLOD to textureQueryLod, see
https://www.khronos.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=821
- Fix ir_reader of (lod ...).
v3 [mattst88]:
- Rename textureQueryLod to textureQueryLOD, pending resolution of
Khronos 821.
- Add ir_lod case to ir_to_mesa.cpp.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
x before
+ after
+------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| x x + |
| xx ++ x + |
| xx ++ + xx ++ |
|x xxx x+++++ + xxx x*x+*+++ + x +|
| |_____|____________A______A____M____M_|_______| |
+------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
N Min Max Median Avg Stddev
x 23 8083.78 8287.83 8205.55 8162.7461 68.307951
+ 23 8107.56 8358.74 8224.33 8186.1765 71.506301
No difference proven at 95.0% confidence
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Set its latency to what happens to be the default floating-point
instruction latency. One day we may want to handle latency based on
register bank information.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Similar enough that we can try to use shared code.
v2: fix a stupid bug using wrong variable causing mayhem with Inf and NaNs.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com
Previously at least i915 failed to provide an implementation, but
exposed ARB_internalformat_query anyway, leading to crashes when
QueryInternalformativ was called.
Default implementation just returns 1 for everything, so is suitable for
any driver which does not support multisampling.
V2: - Move from intel to core mesa.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
There's more, but this only adds (most) of the counters that are
handled directly by the shader processors.
The other counter domains are not handled on the multiprocessor and
there are no FIFO object methods for configuring them.
Instead, they have to be programmed by the kernel via PCOUNTER, and
the interface for this isn't in place yet.
We can use %-6s%-6s rather than manually counting characters, resulting
in much more readable code.
This necessitates a small secondary change: using "total fs16" and ""
now causes the "" string to be padded out to 6 characters, resulting in
too much whitespace. Splitting it into "total" and "fs16" produces the
same output as before.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This much more accurately reflects the cost of the vertex shader, since
the payload setup is often a significant fraction of the instructions in
the VS.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This incidentally also teaches it a bit about gen6 math -- we now allow
unswizzled, unmodified GRF temps as the sources for math.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Previously, if you just wrote a constant color to the render target, no
time got noted at all. This is convenient for doing single-instruction
timings, but not so much for actual program analysis.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This avoids conflicts between shader_time and FB writes, so we can include
more of the program under our profiling. This does mean hiding more of
the message setup from the optimizer, which doesn't have a way to handle
multi-reg sends from GRFs.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Ken asked me the other day what -1 vs 0 vs 3 vs other meant in our shader
names, and I realized that it was really unclear. I'd like to do even
better, like noting which one is the clear shader, but that would require
exposing the metaops struct to the driver.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We weren't correctly propagating the samplers and sampler views
when they were related to geometry shaders.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
We were allocating the output buffer but using the input
primitives. We need to allocate that buffer using the
maximum number of output, not input, primitives.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
TGSI semantics currently require an implicit endprim at the end
of GS if an ending primitive hasn't been emitted.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This commits implements code generation of the geometry shaders in
the SOA paths. All the code is there but bugs are likely present.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Allows executing gs on up to 4 primitives at a time. Will also be
required by the llvm code because there we definitely don't want
to flush with just a single primitive.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
To be able to add llvm paths later on we need to have some common
interface for them.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The member was never used and we'll need to handle it differently
because gs will also need samplers/textures setup.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Same as on r600, trace cs execution by writting cs offset after each
states, this allow to pin point lockup inside command stream and
narrow down the scope of lockup investigation.
v2: Use WRITE_DATA packet instead of WRITE_MEM
v3: Remove useless nop packet
Signed-off-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
Fixes various test fallout from 90b5a2425a on Pineview, which claims to
support ARB_internalformat_query but doesn't actually provide the
driverfunc.
That driver is still broken [GetInternalformativ will still segfault!]
but it was silly to be going through the sample count logic in the
nonmultisampling case at all.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The pipe query interface is reused. The list of available queries can be
obtained using pipe_screen::get_driver_query_info.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Virtual address is used for PIPE_QUERY_SO* queries in
r600_emit_query_begin, but not in r600_emit_query_end.
This will trigger a GPU fault when one of those queries is
made and virtual address is enabled.
Note: this is a candidate for the 9.1 branch
Signed-off-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Optimize out parts of the render target that are scissored out by taking
into account maximal scissor bounds in fd_gmem_render_tiles().
This is a big win on things like gnome-shell which frequently do partial
screen updates.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robdclark@gmail.com>
target-specific variables are undefined when used as pre-requisites.
instead, use secondary-expansion.
I noticed this when building the patch:
i965: Add a driconf option to disable flush throttling
Signed-off-by: Adrian Marius Negreanu <adrian.m.negreanu@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Since half of ir_validate uses asserts() (the other using printf() then
abort()), there's not much use to calling it in a release build. Cuts
6.3% of the startup time of TF2.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Fixes assign instead of compare defects reported by Coverity.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
This patch changes the arrays in brw_vue_map (which only ever contain
values from -1 to 58) from ints to signed chars. This reduces the
size of the struct from 488 bytes to 136 bytes.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
v2: fix STATIC_ASSERT to use 127 instead of 128.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
With the introduction of geometry shaders, fragment inputs will no
longer come exclusively from the vertex shader; sometimes they come
from the geometry shader. So the name "vp_outputs_written" will
become a misnomer. This patch renames vp_outputs_written to
input_slots_valid, to reflect the true meaning of the bitfield from
the fragment shader's point of view: it indicates which of the
possible input slots contain valid data that was written by the
previous shader stage.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This patch modifies post-GS pipeline stages (transform feedback, clip,
sf, fs) to refer to the VUE map through brw->vue_map_geom_out rather
than brw->vs.prog_data->vue_map. This ensures that when geometry
shader support is added, these pipeline stages will consult the
geometry shader output VUE map when appropriate, rather than the
vertex shader output VUE map.
v2: Fixed some stale "CACHE_NEW_VS_PROG" comments.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Currently, the GPU pipeline has one active VUE map in effect at any
given time--the one representing the layout of vertex data coming from
the vertex shader. However, when geometry shaders are added, they
will have their own independent VUE map. Later pipeline stages (clip,
sf, fs) will need to consult the geometry shader VUE map if a geometry
shader is in use, and the vertex shader VUE map otherwise.
This patch adds a new field to brw_context, vue_map_geom_out, which
contains the VUE map that should be used by later pipeline stages. It
also adds a new state flag, BRW_NEW_VUE_MAP_GEOM_OUT, which is
signalled whenever the contents of the VUE map changes.
Since we don't support geometry shaders yet, vue_map_geom_out is
currently set only by the brw_vs_prog state atom.
v2: Don't set vue_map_geom_out in do_vs_prog--that's redundant and
possibly problematic for precompiles. Only set it in
brw_upload_vs_prog. Also, make a copy instead of using a
pointer--this makes it possible to detect when the VUE map hasn't
changed, so we can avoid redundant state uploads.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Future patches will allow for there to be separate VUE maps when both
a geometry shader and a vertex shader are in use. When this happens,
we will want to have correspondingly separate outputs_written
bitfields. Moving outputs_written into the VUE map will make this
easy.
For consistency with the terminology used in the VUE map, the bitfield
is renamed to "slots_valid" in the process.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Gen7 adds mask bits to the message header for a URB write which allow
the write to apply only to certain channels. We don't use this
functionality, so to ensure that the entire write always occurs, we
emit an OR instruction to set the mask bits.
With the advent of geometry shaders, URB writes won't just happen at
the end of a thread; they will happen in mid-thread too. Thus, we can
no longer rely on channel 0 being enabled, so we need to emit the OR
instruction in WE_all mode to ensure that it is executed.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The new name clarifies that it represents *one more* than the maximum
possible brw_varying_slot value.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This patch removes the terminology "vert_result" from the i965 driver,
replacing it with "varying". The old terminology, "vert_result", was
confusing because (a) it referred to the enum gl_vert_result, which no
longer exists (it was replaced with gl_varying_slot), and (b) it
implied a vertex output, but with the advent of geometry shaders, it
could be either a vertex or a geometry output, depending what shaders
are in use. The generic term "varying" is less confusing.
No functional change.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
v2: Whitespace fixes.
Bump MAX_DEPTH_TEXTURE_SAMPLES to match what GetInternalformativ is
claiming. Since that limit is what is actually enforced now, this
doesn't actually change anything except the queried value.
There's still no piglits verifying that multisample depth textures work,
but this works in the Unigine demos.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Extends _mesa_check_sample_count() to properly support the
TEXTURE_2D_MULTISAMPLE and TEXTURE_2D_MULTISAMPLE_ARRAY targets, which
have subtly different limits than renderbuffers.
This resolves the remaining TODO in the implementation of
TexImage*DMultisample.
V2: - Don't introduce spurious block.
- Do this in multisample.c instead.
- Fix typo in error message.
- Inline spec quotes
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Pulls the checking of the sample count into a helper function, and
extends the existing logic to include the interactions with both
ARB_texture_multisample and ARB_internalformat_query.
_mesa_check_sample_count() checks a desired sample count against a
a combination of target/internalformat, and returns the error enum
to be produced, if any. Unfortunately the conditions are messy and the
errors vary.
V2: - Tidy up spurious block.
- Move _mesa_check_sample_count() to multisample.c instead; It
doesn't really belong in fbobject.c or teximage.c.
- Inlined spec quotes
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Now that we support ARB_texture_multisample, there are multiple targets
accepted for this query, and they may have target-dependent limits, so
pass the target to the driverfunc.
For example, the sampling hardware may not be able to do general
texelFetch() for some format/sample count combination, but the driver
may still be able to implement a reasonable resolve operation, so it can
be supported for renderbuffers.
V2: - Don't break Gallium compile.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
And use this (and the code for r11g11b10 packed float to float conversion)
in the soa texturing code (the generated code looks quite good).
Should be an order of magnitude faster probably than using the fallback
(not measured).
Tested with piglit texwrap GL_EXT_packed_float and
GL_EXT_texture_shared_exponent respectively (didn't find much else using
it).
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The blit-based paths for TexImage, GetTexImage, and ReadPixels aren't very
fast with software rasterizer. Now Gallium drivers have the ability to turn
them off.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Tested-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Initial version contributed by: Martin Andersson <g02maran@gmail.com>
This is only used if the memcpy path cannot be used and if no transfer ops
are needed. It's pretty similar to our TexImage and GetTexImage
implementations.
The motivation behind this is to be able to use ReadPixels every frame and
still have at least 20 fps (or 60 fps with a powerful GPU and CPU)
instead of 0.5 fps.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Tested-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
I'll need the _mesa_readpixels_needs_slow_path function for the blit-based
version, but it's also useful to have this memcpy-based path in one place
and not scattered across several functions.
v2: add "const" to function parameters
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Tested-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
I'll need both new functions for later. For now, it consolidates the code
for determining what the transfer ops should be and makes it a little bit
smarter.
v2: added "const"
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Tested-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
New conversion code to handle conversion from/to r11g11b10 AoS to/from
SoA floats, and also add code for conversion from rgb9e5 AoS to float SoA
(which works pretty much the same as r11g11b10 except for the packing).
(This code should also be used for texture sampling instead of
relying on u_format conversion but it's not yet, so rgb9e5 is unused.)
Unfortunately a crazy amount of hacks is necessary to get the conversion
code running in llvmpipe's generate_unswizzled_blend, which isn't well
suited for formats where the storage representation has nothing to do
with what's needed for blending (moreover, the conversion will convert
from packed AoS values, which is the storage format, to float SoA values,
because this is much more natural for the conversion, and likewise from
SoA values to packed AoS values - but the "blend" (which includes
trivial things like partial mask) works on AoS values, so incoming fs
values will go SoA->AoS, values from destination will go packed
AoS->SoA->AoS, then do blend, then AoS->SoA->packed AoS which probably
isn't the most efficient way though the shuffles are probably bearable).
Passes piglit fbo-blending-formats (with GL_EXT_packed_float parameter),
still need to verify Inf/NaNs (where most of the complexity in the
conversion comes from actually).
v2: drop the (very bogus) rgb9e5 part, and do component extraction
in the helper code for r11g11b10 to float conversion, making the code
slightly more compact (suggested by Jose), now that there are no other
callers left this works quite well. (Could do the same for the
opposite way but it's less than ideal there, final part of packing
needs to be done in caller anyway and there'd be another conditional.)
v3: minor style and comment fixes. Also fix a potential issue with
negative zero being potentially returned by max(src, zero) as we
don't have well-defined min/max behavior (fortunately no additonal cost).
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This helps minimize confusion / effort when moving between branches or
helping others.
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Normally when submitting the first batch buffer after a flush, we
check whether the GPU has completed processing of the first batch
buffer of the previous frame. If it hasn't, we wait for it to finish
before submitting any more batches. This prevents GPU-heavy and
CPU-light applications from racing too far ahead of the current frame,
but at the expense of possibly lower frame rates. Sometimes when
benchmarking we want to disable this mechanism.
This patch adds the driconf option "disable_throttling" to disable the
throttling mechanism.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Fixes piglit's texture-immutable-levels test.
Reported-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
The arithmetic to convert a 3D texture slice to an R coordinate was
incorrect. Found when MSVC warned of a divide by zero.
Note that we don't actually ever hit this path. We don't decompress
slices of 3D textures and we don't support 3D mipmap generation yet.
Fixes random failures with piglit glsl-max-varyings.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
This makes basic built-in functions work in GLSL 1.50. It supports
everything except the new Geometry Shader functions.
The new 150.glsl file is 140.glsl plus ARB_texture_multisample.glsl;
150.frag is identical to 140.frag except for the #version bump.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
GLSL 1.50 includes support for the new sampler types introduced by
the ARB_texture_multisample extension.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Commit 33599433c7 began setting the texture swizzle mode to XYZ1 for
RED, RG, and RGB textures in order to force alpha to 1.0 in case we
actually stored the texture as RGBA.
This had a unforseen performance implication: the shader precompile
assumes that the texture swizzle mode will be XYZW for non-shadow
sampler types. By setting it to XYZ1, this means every shader used with
a RED, RG, or RGB texture has to be recompiled. This is a very common
case.
Unfortunately, there's no way to improve the precompile, since RGBA
textures still need XYZW, and there's no way to know by looking at
the shader source what texture formats might be used.
However, we only need to smash alpha to 1.0 if the texture's memory
format actually has alpha bits. If not, the sampler already returns 1.0
for us without any special swizzling. XRGB8888, for example, is a very
common case where this occurs.
This partially fixes a performance regression since commit 33599433c7.
More work is required to fully fix it in all cases. This at least helps
Warsow.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Reviewed-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
With the old context creation mechanism, an application asked the GL to
give it a context. Failing to produce a context was a fatal error.
Now, with GLX_ARB_create_context, the application can request a specific
version. If it's higher than the maximum version we support, context
creation will fail. But this is a normal error that applications
recover from.
In particular, the new glxinfo tries to create OpenGL 4.3, 4.2, 4.1,
4.0, 3.3, and 3.2 contexts before finally succeeding at creating a 3.1
context. This led to it printing the following message 6 times:
"brwCreateContext: failed to init intel context"
There's no need to alarm users (and developers) with such a message.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
On an INTEL_DEBUG=perf piglit run on IVB, reduces the instances of "HW
workaround: blit" (the printouts from the misaligned-depth workaround
blits) from 725 to 675.
It doesn't totally eliminate the workaround blit, because we still have
problems with Y offsets that we can't fix (since texturing can only align
miplevels up to 2 or 4, not 8).
No regressions on piglit/es3conform on IVB.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This makes it possible to identify gl_TexCoord and gl_PointCoord
for drivers where sprite coordinate replacement is restricted.
The new PIPE_CAP_TGSI_TEXCOORD decides whether these varyings
should be hidden behind the GENERIC semantic or not.
With this patch only nvc0 and nv30 will request that they be used.
v2: introduce a CAP so other drivers don't have to bother with
the new semantic
v3: adapt to introduction gl_varying_slot enum
The commit changed API in a helper library shared by both egl_dri2 and
the gallium egl state tracker, but only egl_dri2 was updated to use the
new interface.
Tested-by: Giulio Camuffo <giuliocamuffo@gmail.com>
Previous to this patch, when using fixed function fragment shading,
bit VARYING_BIT_POS of brw_wm_prog_key::proj_attrib_mask was being set
differently during precompiles and normal usage. During precompiles
it was being set only if the fragment shader reads from window
position (which it never does), so it was always being set to 0.
During normal usage it was being set if the vertex shader writes to
all 4 components of gl_Position (which it usually does), so it was
usually being set to 1. As a result, we were almost always doing an
extra recompile for the fixed function fragment shader.
The recompile was totally unnecessary, though, because
brw_wm_prog_key::proj_attrib_mask is only consulted for
fs_visitor::emit_general_interpolation(), which isn't used for
VARYING_SLOT_POS.
This patch avoids the unnecessary recompile by always setting bit
VARYING_BIT_POS of brw_wm_prog_key::proj_attrib_mask to 1.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Previously, right after calling _mesa_glsl_link_shader(), the fixed
function fragment shader code made several calls with the ostensible
purpose of setting up uniforms for the fragment shader it just
created.
These calls are unnecessary, since _mesa_glsl_link_shader() calls
driver->LinkShader(), which takes care of calling these functions (or
their equivalent). Also, they are dangerous to call after
_mesa_glsl_link_shader() has returned, because on back-ends such as
i965 which do precompilation, _mesa_glsl_link_shader() may have
already cached pointers to the existing uniform structures; attempting
to set up the uniforms again invalidates those cached pointers.
It was only by sheer coincidence that this wasn't manifesting itself
as a bug. It turns out that i965's precompile mechanism was always
setting bit 0 of brw_wm_prog_key::proj_attrib_mask to 0 for fixed
function fragment shaders, but during normal usage this bit usually
gets set to 1. As a result, the precompiled shader (with its invalid
uniform pointers) was not being used.
I'm about to introduce some changes that cause bit 0 of
proj_attrib_mask to be set consistently between precompilation and
normal usage, so to avoid regressions I need to get rid of the
dangerous duplicate uniform setup code first.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Since apps typically begin rendering with a call to glClear(), it is
likely that when brw_workaround_depthstencil_alignment() moves a
miplevel to a temporary buffer, it can avoid doing a blit, since the
contents of the miplevel are about to be erased.
This patch adds the necessary plumbing to determine when
brw_workaround_depthstencil_alignment() is being called as a
consequence of glClear(), and avoids the unnecessary blit when it is
safe to do so.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
v2: Eliminate unnecessary call to _mesa_is_depthstencil_format(). Fix
handling of depth buffer in depth/stencil format.
v3: Use correct bitfields for clear_mask. Fix handling of depth
buffer in depth/stencil format when hardware uses separate stencil.
When invalidating, make sure we still reassociate the image to the new
miptree.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Doesn't exist on the asic and will cause a CS rejection
if VM is disabled.
Note: this is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Signed-off-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Use vmw_printf() just for extra debugging info (off by default).
Use vmw_error() for real errors/failures/etc that we definitely
want to report.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Checks that no functions are exported that are not part of the ABI.
Note that currently we are exporting functions that are aliased to
functions that are part of the ABI. They shouldn't be exported, but the
XML descriptions don't adequately describe this case.
Checks that no functions are exported that are not part of the ABI.
Note that currently we are exporting functions that are aliased to
functions that are part of the ABI. They shouldn't be exported, but the
XML descriptions don't adequately describe this case.
If we're in some conditional or loop we must not return, or the code
after the condition is never executed.
(v2): And, we also can't just continue as nothing happened, since the
mask update code would later check if we actually have a mask, so we
need to remember that there was a return in main where we didn't exit
(to illustrate this, a ret in a if clause would cause a mask update
which is still ok as we're in a conditional, but after the endif the
mask update code would drop the mask hence bringing execution back to
pixels which should have their execution mask set to zero by the ret).
Thanks to Christoph Bumiller for figuring this out.
This fixes https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=62357.
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
To further improve the optimization of source and destination
indirect addressing we need the ability to store a reference
to the declaration of the addressed operands.
Since most of the fields in tgsi_src_register doesn't apply for
an indirect addressing operand replace it with a separate
tgsi_ind_register structure and so make room for extra information.
v2: rename Declaration to ArrayID, put the ArrayID into () instead of []
Signed-off-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Remember which declarations are declared as "arrays" and so
can be indirectly addressed. ArrayIDs start at 1, cause for
compatibility reasons zero is treaded as no array present.
Signed-off-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Instead of allocating everything as temporaries, use the
new array allocation functions.
v2: fix bug in simplify_cmp, declare arrays on demand
Signed-off-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Don't bother with free temporaries, just allocate them at
the end and also emit them in their own declaration.
Signed-off-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Instead of emitting each temporary separately, emit them in a chunk.
v2: keep separate function for emitting temps
Signed-off-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
No functional change here, but this will let us query the image
for an fd handle later.
Reviewed-by: Ander Conselvan de Oliveira <conselvan2@gmail.com>
If ddx does not support swap, don't advertise it. This is a hack to
work around current xservers which advertise this extension even when it
is clearly not supported. When:
http://lists.x.org/archives/xorg-devel/2013-February/035449.html
is merged in upstream xserver and makes it's way into most distros then
this hack can be removed. In the mean time, it is required to allow
gnome-shell/clutter/etc to work properly with a DDX driver which does
not support ScheduleSwap.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robdclark@gmail.com>
This debug flag prints out the native GEN assembly for a blitting
shader produced using BLORP. Hopefully this should be useful in
developing additional BLORP features.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Needs to be set for depth, stencil, and fmask just
like other blocks.
v2: drop additional cayman bits for now
Signed-off-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
On cayman, 128bpp surfaces require non_disp ordering for hw
access to both linear and tiled surfaces. When we use the 3D
engine we can set the non_disp ordering on both the tiled and
linear sides (via CB or texture), but when we use the DMA
engine, we can only set the non_disp ordering on the tiled
side, so after a L2T operation with the DMA engine, the data
ends up in the wrong order on the tiled side.
v2: cayman/TN only
v3: fix comments
Fixes:
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=60802
Note: this is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Signed-off-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
The only format returned by _mesa_get_format_base_format() that
satisfies _mesa_is_depthstencil_format() is GL_DEPTH_STENCIL, so we
can simplify the check.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Fast depth clears have the same depth/stencil alignment requirements
as other drawing operations. Therefore, we need to call
brw_workaround_depthstencil_alignment() from both the clear and
drawing paths.
Without this fix, we get image corruption if the following conditions
hold: (a) the first ever drawing operation to a depth miplevel (or the
first drawing operation after having used the texture for sampling) is
a clear, (b) the depth miplevel has a size that is eligible for fast
depth clears, and (c) the depth miplevel has an offset within the
miptree that isn't 8x8 aligned.
Fixes piglit "depthstencil-render-miplevels" tests with size 273.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This patch makes the following search-and-replace changes:
gl_frag_attrib -> gl_varying_slot
FRAG_ATTRIB_* -> VARYING_SLOT_*
FRAG_BIT_* -> VARYING_BIT_*
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Tested-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Now that there is no difference between the enums that represent
vertex outputs and fragment inputs, there's no need for a conversion
function.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Tested-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Now that there is no difference between the enums that represent
vertex outputs and fragment inputs, there's no need for a conversion
function. But we still need to be able to detect when a given vertex
output has no corresponding fragment input. So it is replaced by a
new function, _mesa_varying_slot_in_fs(), which tells whether the
given varying slot exists as an FS input or not.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Tested-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This patch makes the following search-and-replace changes:
gl_geom_result -> gl_varying_slot
GEOM_RESULT_* -> VARYING_SLOT_*
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Tested-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This patch makes the following search-and-replace changes:
gl_geom_attrib -> gl_varying_slot
GEOM_ATTRIB_* -> VARYING_SLOT_*
GEOM_BIT_* -> VARYING_BIT_*
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Tested-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This patch makes the following search-and-replace changes:
gl_vert_result -> gl_varying_slot
VERT_RESULT_* -> VARYING_SLOT_*
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Tested-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Future patches will make use of the enum. It will eventually take the
place of the existing enums gl_vert_result, gl_geom_attrib,
gl_geom_result, and gl_frag_attrib, all of which represent essentially
the same information but using inconsistent values.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Tested-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This patch updates the bitfields brw_context::wm.input_size_masks,
tracker::size_masks, and brw_wm_prog_key::proj_attrib_mask, all of
which are indexed by gl_frag_attrib, from 32-bit to 64-bit.
This paves the way for supporting geometry shaders, and for merging
the gl_frag_attrib and gl_vert_result enums. The combination of these
two will require at least 55 bits in the bitfields.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Tested-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This involved adding another driOptionCache to dri_screen. The
existing one just held the default values. But now we also need
to have the values from the DRI config file so that we can get at
the always_have_depth_buffer config option, which is per-screen.
This option is needed for some applications that neglect to request
a depth buffer when choosing a visual/fbconfig.
The Linux app Topogun is an example of this problem.
There were two different NUM_ENTRIES #defines for the framebuffer
tile cache and the texture tile cache. Rename the later to fix
the warnings:
In file included from sp_flush.c:40:0:
sp_tex_tile_cache.h:76:0: warning: "NUM_ENTRIES" redefined
sp_tile_cache.h:78:0: note: this is the location of the previous definition
In file included from sp_context.c:50:0:
sp_tex_tile_cache.h:76:0: warning: "NUM_ENTRIES" redefined
sp_tile_cache.h:78:0: note: this is the location of the previous definition
Also, replace occurances of NUM_ENTRIES with Element() macro to
be safer.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Untyped Atomic Operation messages are illegal for non-RAW formats. The
IVB hardware proceeds happily (after all, who cares what the format of the
surface is if you're doing untyped ops on it?), but later hardware
apparently doesn't. The simulator for gen7 does complain, though.
v2: Rebase against updates to previous patches. (by anholt)
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This is basically a copy and paste of gen7_create_constant_surface, but
with the parameters filled in to offer a simpler interface.
It will diverge shortly.
I didn't bother adding it to the vtable for now since shader time is only
exposed on Gen7+.
v2: Replace tabs in the new code (by anholt)
Add back dropped memset() and add a comment about HSW channel selects.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Haswell's "Data Cache" data port is a single unit, but split into two
SFIDs to allow for more message types without adding more bits in the
message descriptor.
Untyped Atomic Operations are now message 0010 in the second data cache
data port, rather than 6 in the first.
v2: Use the #defines from the previous commit. (by anholt)
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net> (v1)
We were sparsely using some of these message types, but I'll just fill
them all in now. It will be used for fixing shader_time on HSW.
v2: Add missing MEDIA_BLOCK_READ.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This avoids some snooping overhead between EUs processing separate shaders
(so VS versus FS).
Improves performance of a minecraft trace with shader_time by 28.9% +/-
18.3% (n=7), and performance of my old GLSL demo by 93.7% +/- 0.8% (n=4).
v2: Add a define for the stride with a comment explaining its units and
why.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
scons/llvm.py defines inline globally to workaround issues with LLVM C
binding headers, so the only way to is to avoid
aggravating xkeycheck.h errors is to set _ALLOW_KEYWORD_MACROS.
This fixes MSVC 2012 build with LLVM.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
- each softpipe_tex_tile_cache 50*64*64*4*4 = 3,276,800 bytes
- each softpipe_context has 3*32 softpipe_tex_tile_cache, i.e, each softpipe
context is 314,572,800 bytes, i.e, 300MB
That is, in a 32bits process (around 3GB virtual memory max), we can
only fit 10 contexts.
This change is a short-term hack to shrink the context size. Longer
term we'll need to change how the texture cache works.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Framebuffer blitting operation should be skipped if any of the
dimensions (width/height) of src/dst rect is zero.
V2: Move the dimension check after error checking in _mesa_BlitFramebuffer.
Fixes: fbblit(negative.nullblit.zeroSize) in Intel oglconform
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=59495
Note: Candidate for all the stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
We can't handle them yet, however we can safely just warn (we will
just render to first layer, which is fine since we can't handle
rendertarget system value neither).
Also make behavior more predictable with buffer surfaces
(it would sometimes hit bogus asserts because of the union in the surface,
instead create the surface but assert when trying to set a buffer
in the framebuffer).
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Just delete unused kernels rather than marking them as internal and
running the GlobalDCE pass.
Also implement this function in C and inline it into
radeon_llvm_get_kernel_module()
Actually use $DEFINES, so we can see if GLX_INDIRECT_RENDERING is defined
If GLX_INDIRECT_RENDERING is defined, _GLAPI_SKIP_PROTO_ENTRY_POINTS will
be defined, and libglapi won't contain the 'protocol entry points', so we
should provide stubs in check_table.cpp
It looks like this has been broken since commit
1a1db1746d "Standardize names of OpenGL
functions."
Signed-off-by: Jon TURNEY <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>
Fixes this build error with make check.
CC collision.o
In file included from ../../../../../src/mesa/main/hash_table.h:34:0,
from collision.c:31:
../../../../../src/mesa/main/compiler.h:51:53: fatal error: c99_compat.h: No such file or directory
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
If geometry shader is present its stream output info should
be used instead of the vs and we shouldn't use the pre-clipped
corrdinates.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
In cases where the vertex element size is smaller than the vertex buffer
stride, the previous calculation could end up 1 too low. This would result
in the GPU using index 0 instead of the maximum index for those elements,
which would be visible as intermittent distorted triangles.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
And remove non-working code for indirect sampler/resource selection.
Will be added back later.
Includes code from "nv50/ir/tgsi: Resource indirect indexing" by
Francisco Jerez (when mixing the R and S handles we can only specify
them via a register, i.e. indirectly, unless we upload all the used
handle combinations to c[] space, which we don't for now).
Squashed and (heavily) modified original patches by Francisco Jerez:
nv50/ir/tgsi: Implement resource LOAD/STORE (wip).
nv50/ir/tgsi: Emit SUST/SULD for surface access, and add CB LOAD/STORE support
nv50/ir/tgsi: Fix/clean up the LOAD/STORE handling code.
Left out for now:
nv50/ir/tgsi: Resource indirect indexing
Treating raw, read-only surfaces as constant buffers (CBs) was removed
because CBs are limited to a size of 64 KiB which isn't desireable, and
because this decision should probably be made by the state tracker.
If we used a number of CB slots for surfaces, it might find that we
cannot accomodate the advertised limit.
OpenGL is nice and makes the user specify a format with an image unit.
OpenCL is evil and doesn't, and what's better than adding a huge load
of functions that we call indirectly to handle the conversion ?
A live range [0, 0) counts as empty. For function inputs this can
be a problem, so insert a nop at the beginning to make it [0, 1).
This is a bit of a hack but also the most simple solution.
Currently works on a220. Others in the a2xx family look pretty similar
and should be pretty straightforward to support with the same driver.
The a3xx has a new shader ISA, and while many registers appear similar,
the register addresses have been completely shuffled around. I am not
sure yet whether it is best to support with the same driver, but
different compiler, or whether it should be split into a different
driver.
v1: original
v2: build file updates from review comments, and remove GPL licensed
header files from msm kernel
v3: smarter temp/pred register assignment, fix clear and depth/stencil
format issues, resource_transfer fixes, scissor fixes
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robdclark@gmail.com>
Previously, the derivatives were calculated and passed in a packed form
to the sample code (for implicit derivatives, explicit derivatives were
packed to the same format).
There's several reasons why this wasn't such a good idea:
1) the derivatives may not even be needed (not as bad as it sounds since
llvm will just throw the calculations needed for them away but still)
2) the special packing format really shouldn't be part of the sampler
interface
3) depending what the sample code actually does the derivatives will
be processed differently, hence there is no "ideal" packing. For cube
maps with explicit derivatives (which we don't do yet) for instance the
packing looked downright useless, and for non-isotropic filtering we'd
need different calculations too.
So, instead just pass the derivatives as is (for explicit derivatives),
or let the rho calculating sample code calculate them itself. This still
does exactly the same packing stuff for implicit derivatives for now,
though explicit ones are handled in a more straightforward manner (quick
estimates show performance should be quite similar, though it is much
easier to follow and also does the rho calculation per-pixel until the
end, which we eventually need for spec compliance anyway).
No piglit changes.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
After the previous fix that almost removes an allocation of 4*n^2
bytes, we can use a bitset to reduce another allocation from n^2 bytes
to n^2/8 bytes.
Between the previous commit and this one, the peak heap size for an
oglconform ARB_fragment_program max instructions test on i965 goes from
4GB to 255MB.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=55825
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We were allocating an adjacency_list entry for every possible
interference that could get created, but that usually doesn't happen.
We can save a lot of memory by resizing the array on demand.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We're already walking the list, and we can easily know when something
has no reason to be in the list any longer, so take a brief extra step
to reduce our worst-case runtime (an oglconform test that emits the
maximum instructions in a fragment program). I don't actually know what
the worst-case runtime was, because it was too long and I got bored.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We can execute way fewer instructions by doing our boolean manipulation
on an "int" of bits at a time, while also reducing our working set size.
Reduces compile time of L4D2's slowest shader from 4s to 1.1s
(-72.4% +/- 0.2%, n=10)
v2: Remove redundant masking (noted by Ken)
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We were handling the the dependency workaround for the first written reg
of a send preceding the one we're fixing up, but didn't consider the other
regs. Thus if you had two sampler calls that got allocated to the same
set of regs, one might, rarely, ovewrite the other. This was occurring in
XBMC's GLSL shaders.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44567
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
When forcing the compiler to always generate pull constants instead of
push constants (in order to have an easy to use testcase), improves
performance of my old GLSL demo 23.3553% +/- 1.42968% (n=7).
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=60866
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The lowering process creates a new vgrf on gen7 that should be represented
in live interval analysis. As-is, it was getting a conflicting allocation
with gl_FragDepth in the dolphin emulator, producing broken rendering.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=61317
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
I was going to fix the code above like the previous commit, but we already
had that covered (otherwise all our uniform access would have been broken,
unlike just pull constants).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We were allowing a compressed instruction to write a register that
contained the last use of a uniform pull constant (either UBO load or push
constant spillover), so it would get half its values smashed.
Since we need to see the actual instruction to decide this, move the
pre-gen6 pixel_x/y logic here, which should improve the performance of
register allocation since virtual_grf_interferes() is called more than
once per instruction.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=61317
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
I was looking at the list to see what might be interesting to document for
application developers, and it turns out some are completely dead.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We were assuming that each emitted primitive had the same
number of vertices. That is incorrect. Emitted primitives
can have arbirtrary number of vertices. Simply increment
index on iteration to fix it.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Whenever we're binding the shaders we're incrementing NumOutputs,
assuming the parser spots an output decleration, but we were never
reseting the variable. That means that each subsequent bind of
a geometry shader would add its number of output to the number
of output bound by all previously ran shaders and our indexes
would get completely messed up.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This is needed for handling the dx10-style sample opcodes.
This also simplifies the logic by getting rid of sampler variants
completely (sampler_views though OTOH have sort of variants because
some of their state is different depending on the shader stage they
are bound to).
No significant performance difference (openarena run:
840 frames in 459.8 seconds vs. 840 frames in 460.5 seconds).
v2: fix reference counting bug spotted by Jose.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Can handle them since the single sampler interface was introduced.
v2: simplify txf/sample_i handling a bit according to Brian's feedback.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Only the disassembler is used to dump shaders. Here's a few examples
how to use R600_DEBUG.
Log compute info:
R600_DEBUG=compute
Dump all shaders:
R600_DEBUG=fs,vs,gs,ps,cs
Dump pixel shaders only:
R600_DEBUG=ps
Disable Hyper-Z:
R600_DEBUG=nohyperz
Disable the LLVM backend:
R600_DEBUG=nollvm
Or use any combination of the above, or print all options:
R600_DEBUG=help
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
Commit 67ef7559 added an || test "x$enable_dri" check in an attempt to
get the DRI common bits built in some necessary cases. That change was
inappropriate as it made these common DRI pieces be built
unconditionally, so some builds were broken.
Subsequently, commit 998d975e3 change the "|| test" to a "-a"
conjunction within the existing test invocation. This made the '-a
"x$enable_dri" = xyes' clause have no effect, (as it was inside an
enclosing test for the same condition). So the new breakage from
commit 67ef7559 was addressed, but the original problems were
regressed.
The immediately preceding commit removed the redundant condition.
Now, finally this commit fixes the original problem as described in
the commit message of 67ef7559: this code should be compiled when
using the DRI state tracker. In order to do so, the HAVE_*_DRI
conditionals must be moved after the last assignment of HAVE_COMMON_DRI.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=61821
Tested-by: Stéphane Marchesin <marcheu@chromium.org>
It fails on 32-bit systems (I only tested on 64-bit). Power of two
size isn't required, so just remove the assertion.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This fixes a crash when a display list is created in one context
but executed from a second one. The vbo_save_context::vertex_store
memeber will be NULL if we never created a display list with the
context. Just check for that before dereferencing the pointer.
Fixes http://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=918661
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
If the sampler object has been deleted on another context, an
alternative context may reference the old sampler. So ensure the sampler
object still exists.
Note: this is a candidate for the stable branch.
Signed-off-by: Alan Hourihane <alanh@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
LICM stands for Loop Invariant Code Motion. Instructions that
does not depend of loop index are moved outside of loop body.
DCE is DeadCodeElimination.
v2: updated commit msg, thx to Vincent.
Signed-off-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Vincent Lejeune <vljn at ovi.com>
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
We can't clip and viewport transform the vertices before we let
the geometry shader process them. Lets make sure the generated
vertex shader has both disabled if geometry shader is present.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The geometry shader code seems to have been originally written with the
assumptions that there are the same number of VS outputs as GS outputs and
that VS outputs are in the same order as their corresponding GS inputs. Since
TGSI uses separate shader objects, these are both wrong assumptions. This
was causing several valid vertex/geometry shader combinations to either render
incorrectly or trigger an assertion.
Conflicts:
src/gallium/auxiliary/draw/draw_gs.c
Reviewed-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This change specifically unbinds a sampler object from the texture unit
if it's bound to a unit. The spec calls for default object when deleting
sampler objects which are currently bound.
Note: this is a candidate for the stable branches
Signed-off-by: Alan Hourihane <alanh@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
We advertise a max texture/surfaces size of 8K x 8K but the old values
for these limits didn't actually allow us to handle that surface size.
For 8K x 8K we'll have 16384 bins. Each bin needs at least one cmd_block
object which was 2192 bytes in size. Since 16384 * 2192 exceeded
LP_SCENE_MAX_SIZE we'd silently fail in lp_scene_new_data_block() and not
draw the complete scene.
By reducing CMD_BLOCK_MAX to 29 we get nice 512-byte cmd_blocks. And
by increasing LP_SCENE_MAX_SIZE to 9 MB we can allocate enough command
blocks for 8K x 8K, plus a few regular data blocks.
Fixes the (improved) piglit fbo-maxsize test.
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This was only necessary because our bounds checking was off by one, and
thus we read an extra pair of values.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
If we've written N pairs of values to the buffer, then last_index = N,
but the values are 0 .. N-1. Thus, we need to use <, not <=.
This worked anyway because we fill the buffer with zeroes, so we just
added an extra (0 - 0) to our results.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
We were allowing things like copying RG1616 to a user's ARGB8888
format, while we were denying anything that wasn't ARGB8888 or
RGB565.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
This is similar code to intel_miptree_copy_slice, but the knobs
are all set differently.
v2: fix whitespace
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
I'm trying to move us away from the region structure, and all the
callers are currently dereferencing a miptree to get the region.
In this change, the map_refcount is dropped. However, the bo->virtual is
itself map refcounted, so that's already dealt with.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
The point of tracking the value was removed in February 2012
(65b096aedd), and this should have
been removed at the same time.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
I don't see any reason for it -- it was introduced with the DRI2
invalidate work by krh in 2010 with no explanation. I suspect it was
something about wanting the same drm_intel_bo struct underneath multiple
openings of the BO within one process, but that's covered by libdrm at
this point. As far as the struct region goes, it is not threadsafe, so
multiple contexts sharing a region could have mixed up the map_count and
assertion failed or worse.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Several commits on master for the 9.1 branch had "NOTE" messages in a
slightly different format.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Now all the per-message enums from mtypes are gone. Now we can extend
unique message IDs into all generators of debug output without having to
update mtypes.h for each one.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
This ends up reusing the dynamic ID support, so a silly enum gets to go
away. We don't assign good IDs to different messages yet, but at least
that's tractable now.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
I was testing the ARB_debug_output code and wrote an obvious sample that
should have hit this, and got confused that my ARB_debug_output was
broken.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
I tried to ensure that performance in the non-debug case doesn't change
(we still just check one condition up front), and I think the impact is
small enough in the debug context case to warrant including all of it.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
This doesn't provide detailed error type information, but it's important
to get these relatively severe but rare error messages out to the
developer through whatever mechanism they are using.
v2: Rebase on new WARN_ONCE additions.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com> (v1)
We can emit messages now without always having to use the same ID for
each, or having a giant table of all possible errors in mtypes.h.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
I want to have dynamic IDs so that we don't need to add to mtypes.h for
every error we might want to add. To do so, I need to get rid of the
static arrays and actually support all the crazy filtering of dynamic IDs
that we already support for application-provided error sources.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
This was apparently not noticed because we don't have any testing of
application-generated debug output. However, as I'm changing the
GL-generated debug output to use the same path as
application/middleware-generated debug output, this obviously became an
issue.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
These will get reused by new ARB_debug_output messages in drivers/core,
instead of having the caller pass GL enums and have us immediately
switch-statement those into enums.
Add source enums will be handled in the next commit, because the way
different sources are handled at the moment is pretty strange.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
The new one doesn't have the same behavior for GL_NO_ERROR, but we don't
produce errors with GL_NO_ERROR as the error type.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
This partly reverts 6ace2e41da.
Apparently with GL_MESA_texture_array fixed-function texturing
with texture arrays is possible, and hence we have to handle TXP.
(Though noone seems to know the semantics, softpipe now does what
it did before, which is to NOT project the array coord, llvmpipe
for instance however indeed does project the array coord. Unlike
before it will project the comparison coord for shadow1d array, as
that clearly was an error.)
This fixes https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=61828.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
X11 is already checked conditionally below.
Fixes OSMesa-only configurations to not require X11.
Note: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This was hit on the glTexStorage2D() path.
Note: this is a candidate for the stable branches
Signed-off-by: Alan Hourihane <alanh@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
The second digit was off by one, which meant we accidentally treated
GTn as GT(n-1). This also meant no support for GT1 at all.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We'll want to reuse this for non-occlusion queries in the future.
Plus, it's a single logical task, so having it as a helper function
clarifies the code somewhat.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Again, eliminating a global variable in favor of a per-query object
variable will help in a future where we have more queries in hardware.
Personally, I find this clearer: there's just the query object's BO,
rather than two variables that usually shadow each other.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The code a few lines above calls brw_emit_query_begin() if !query->bo,
and that creates query->bo. So it should always be non-NULL.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
If we haven't allocated a BO yet, we need to do that. Or, if there
isn't enough room to write another pair of values, we need to gather up
the existing results and start a new one. This is simple enough.
However, the old code was awkwardly split into two blocks, with a
write_depth_count() placed in the middle. The new depth count isn't
relevant to gathering the old BO's data, so that can go after the
reallocation is done. With the two blocks adjacent, we can merge them.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Since we already have an index in the brw_query_object, there's no need
to also keep a global variable that shadows it.
Plus, if we ever add support for more types of queries that still need
the per-batch before/after treatment we do for occlusion queries, we
won't be able to use a single global variable. In contrast, per-query
object variables will work fine.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
brw->query.index is initialized to 0 just a few lines before it's
copied to first_index.
Presumably the idea here was to reuse the query BO for subsequent
queries of the same type, but since that doesn't happen, there's no need
to have the extra code complexity.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This code was really difficult to follow, for a number of reasons:
- Queries were handled in four different ways (TIMESTAMP writes a single
value, TIME_ELAPSED writes a single pair of values, occlusion queries
write pairs of values for the start and end of each batch, and other
queries are done entirely in software. It turns out that there are
very good reasons each query is handled the way it is, but
insufficient comments explaining the rationale.
- It wasn't immediately obvious which functions were driver hooks
and which were helper functions. For example, brw_query_begin() is
a driver hook that implements glBeginQuery() for all query types, but
the similarly named brw_emit_query_begin() is a helper function that's
only relevant for occlusion queries.
Extra explanatory comments should save me and others from constantly
having to ask how this code works and why various query types are
handled differently.
v2: Incorporate Eric's feedback: change "as soon as possible" to "the
results will be present when mapped."
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
For timestamp queries, we just write a single value to a BO. The
natural place to write that is element 0, so we should do that.
Previously, we wrote it into element 1 (the second slot) leaving
element 0 filled with garbage.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
In OpenGL, most queries record statistics about operations performed
between a defined beginning and ending point. However, TIMESTAMP
queries are different: they immediately return a single value, and there
is no start/stop mechanism.
Previously, Mesa implemented TIMESTAMP queries by calling EndQuery
without first calling BeginQuery. Apparently this is DirectX
convention, and Gallium followed suit. I personally find the asymmetry
jarring, however---having BeginQuery and EndQuery handle a different set
of enum values looks like a bug. It's also a bit confusing to mix the
one-shot query with the start/stop model.
So, add a new QueryCounter driver hook for implementing TIMESTAMP. For
now, fall back to EndQuery to support drivers that don't do the new
mechanism.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Something I never got around to implement, but this is the tgsi execution
side for implementing texel offsets (for ordinary texturing) and explicit
derivatives for sampling (though I guess the ordering of the components
for the derivs parameters is debatable).
There is certainly a runtime cost associated with this.
Unless there are different interfaces used depending on the "complexity"
of the texture instructions, this is impossible to avoid.
Offsets are always active (I think checking if they are active or not is
probably not worth it since it should mostly be an add), whereas the
sampler_control is extended for explicit derivatives.
For now softpipe (the only user of this) just drops all those new values
on the floor (which is the part I never implemented...).
Additionally this also fixes (discovered by accident) inconsistent
projective divide for the comparison coord - the code did do the
projection for shadow2d targets, but not shadow1d ones. This also
drops checking for projection modifier on array targets, since they
aren't possible in any extension I know of (hence we don't actually
know if the array layer should also be divided or not).
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Similar fix to what is done for the non-llvm case, we could otherwise still
hit the stages (near certainly with gs) which crash. It is probably a much
better idea to skip trying to draw at that point anyway.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
It seems easiest (and best) if we simply skip all the later stages
(after stream output).
(This is different to the llvm case at least for now where we will
simply try to render garbage, though both behaviors should be correct.)
Fixes piglit glsl-1.40-tf-no-position with softpipe.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
With glsl 1.40 writing position is not required (useful for transform
feedback, though in fact it's still possible to rasterize such geometry
even if the results aren't too well defined).
Prevents crashes in that case. Fixes piglit glsl-1.40-tf-no-position.
Not quite sure this is 100% correct as it also skips clipdistance
clipping which could still work (but not sure if the result would
really be needed?)
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Since c8eb2d0e82 llvmpipe checks if it's
actually legal to create a surface. The opengl state tracker doesn't quite
obey this so for now just warn instead of assert.
Also warn instead of disabled assert when creating sampler views
(same reasoning).
Addresses https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=61647.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
texel offsets should have been the last missing feature for 130, and in
fact 140 as well (last there were texture buffers). In any case we still
don't do OpenGL 3.0 (missing MSAA which will be difficult,
plus EXT_packed_float, ARB_depth_buffer_float and EXT_framebuffer_sRGB).
v2: bump to 140 instead - we have everything except we crash when not writing
to gl_Position (but softpipe crashes as well) so let's just say this is a bug
instead. Also (by Dave Airlie's suggestion) update llvm-todo.txt.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This was previously only handled for texelFetch (much easier).
Depending on the wrap mode this works slightly differently (for somewhat
efficient implementation), hence have to do that separately in all roughly
137 places - it is easy if we use fixed point coords for wrapping, however
some wrapping modes are near impossible with fixed point (the repeat stuff)
hence we have to normalize the offsets if we can't do the wrapping in
unnormalized space (which is a division which is slow but should still be
much better than the alternative, which would be integer modulo for wrapping
which is just unusable). This should still give accurate results in all
cases that really matter, though it might be not quite conformant behavior
for some apis (but we have much worse problems there anyway even without
using offsets).
(Untested, no piglit test.)
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Even when we don't have LLVM since there's other C++ code
in the resulting DRI driver object.
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
The problem is that we mix bo handles and flinked names in the hash
table. Because kms type handles are not flinked they should not be
added to the hash table. If we do that we will sooner or later
get a situation where we will overwrite a correct entry because
the bo handle was the same as a flinked name.
Note: this is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
On Gen6, lower this to `ld` with lod=0 and an extra sample_index
parameter.
On Gen7, use `ld2dms`. We don't support CMS yet for multisample
textures, so we just hardcode MCS=0. This is ignored for IMS and UMS
surfaces.
Note: If we do end up emitting specialized shaders based on the MSAA
layout, we can emit a slightly shorter message here in the UMS case.
Note: According to the PRM, `ld2dms` takes one more parameter, lod.
However, it's always zero, and including it would make the message too
long for SIMD16, so we just omit it.
V2: Reworked completely, added support for Gen7.
V3: - Introduce sample_index parameter rather than reusing lod
- Removed spurious whitespace change
- Clarify commit message
V4: - Fix comment style
- Emit SHADER_OPCODE_TXF_MS on Gen6. This was benignly wrong since
it lowers to `ld` anyway on this gen, but still wrong.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
On Gen6, lower this to `ld` with lod=0 and an extra sample_index
parameter.
On Gen7, use `ld2dms`. This takes an additional MCS parameter to support
compressed multisample surfaces, but we're not enabling them for
multisample textures for now, so it's always ignored and can be safely
omitted.
V2: Reworked completely, added support for Gen7.
V3: - Use new sample_index, sample_index_type rather than reusing lod
- Clarify commit message.
V4: - Fix comment style
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This is very similar to the TXF opcode, but lowers to `ld2dms` rather
than `ld` on Gen7.
V4: - add SHADER_OPCODE_TXF_MS to is_tex() functions, so regalloc thinks
it actually writes the correct number of registers. Otherwise in
nontrivial shaders some of the registers tend to get clobbered,
producing bad results.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Gen7 has an erratum affecting the ld_mcs message, making it unsafe to
use when the surface doesn't have an associated MCS.
From the Ivy Bridge PRM, Vol4 Part1 p77 ("MCS Enable"):
"If this field is disabled and the sampling engine <ld_mcs>
message is issued on this surface, the MCS surface may be
accessed. Software must ensure that the surface is defined
to avoid GTT errors."
To allow the shader to treat all surfaces uniformly, force UMS if the
surface is to be used as a multisample texture, even if CMS would have
been possible.
V3: - Quoted erratum text
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The surface_state setup for renderbuffers already worked; only the
texturing side needed work. BLORP does something similar, but does its
own surface_state setup.
On Gen6, we just need to set the correct sample count.
On Gen7: - set the correct sample count
- set the correct layout mode
- set GEN7_SURFACE_ARYSPC_LOD0 if it's set in the miptree.
V2: - Clarify commit message
- Rebased onto Paul's physical/logical dims cleanup
- Added Gen7 support
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
V2: - Fix for state moving from texobj to image
- Rebased onto Paul's logical/physical cleanup
- Fixed missing quantization of sample count
- Fold in IMS renderbuffer wrapper fixes from later in the series
- Use correct physical slice offset for UMS/CMS surfaces on Gen7
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
V2: - fix formatting issues
- generate GL_OUT_OF_MEMORY if teximage cannot be allocated
- fix for state moving from texobj to image
V3: - remove ridiculous stencil hack
- alter format check to not allow a base format of STENCIL_INDEX
- allow width/height/depth to be zero, to deallocate the texture
- dont forget to call _mesa_update_fbo_texture
V4: - fix indentation
- don't throw errors on proxy texture targets
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
- sample count must be the same on all attachments
- fixedsamplepositions must be the same on all attachments
(renderbuffers have fixedsamplepositions=true implicitly; only
multisample textures can choose to have it false)
V2: - fix wrapping to 80 columns, debug message, fix for state moving
from texobj to image.
- stencil texturing tweaks tidied up and folded in here.
V3: - Removed silly stencil hacks entirely; the extension doesn't
actually make stencil-only textures legal at all.
- Moved sample count / fixed sample locations checks into
existing attachment-type-specific blocks, as suggested by Eric
V4: - Removed stencil hacks which were missed in V3 (thanks Eric)
- Don't move the declaration of texImg; only required pre-V3.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
[V2] Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Moves the definition of the sample positions out of
gen6_emit_3dstate_multisample, and unpacks them in
gen6_get_sample_position.
V2: Be consistent about `sample position` rather than `location`.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
V2: - fix multiline comment style
- stop using ASSERT_OUTSIDE_BEGIN_END_AND_FLUSH since that
doesn't exist anymore.
V3: - check for the extension being enabled
- tidier flagging of _NEW_MULTISAMPLE
- fix weird indentation in get.c
V4: - move flush later in SampleMaski()
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Actual sample locations deferred to a driverfunc since only the driver
really knows where they will be.
V2: - pass the draw buffer to the driverfunc; don't fallback to pixel
center if driverfunc is missing.
- rename GetSampleLocation to GetSamplePosition
- invert y sample position for winsys FBOs, at Paul's suggestion
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
- GL_MAX_COLOR_TEXTURE_SAMPLES
- GL_MAX_DEPTH_TEXTURE_SAMPLES
- GL_MAX_INTEGER_SAMPLES
V2: initialize limits to 1 in _mesa_init_constants as suggested by Brian
and Paul
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
V2: - emit `sample` parameter properly for multisample texelFetch()
- fix spurious whitespace change
- introduce a new opcode ir_txf_ms rather than overloading the
existing ir_txf further. This makes doing the right thing in
the driver somewhat simpler.
V3: - fix weird whitespace
V4: - don't forget to include the new opcode in tex_opcode_strs[]
(thanks Kenneth for spotting this)
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
[V2] Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
[V2] Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Adds the new texture targets, and per-image state for GL_TEXTURE_SAMPLES
and GL_TEXTURE_FIXED_SAMPLE_LOCATIONS.
V2: - Allow multisample texture targets in glInvalidateTexSubImage too.
This was already partly there, but I missed it the first time around
since the interaction is defined in a newer extension. Fixed weird
indentation.
- Allow multisample array textures in glFramebufferTextureLayer.
This was overlooked as the tests originally only used 2d
multisample textures.
V3: - Set min/mag filters sensibly for multisample textures. This
can't actually be changed by the user, so it's more sensible to
initialize it correctly than to hack around it being bogus later.
V4: - Tidy up initial min/mag filter setup. Setup in
_mesa_initialize_texture_object was bogus, but benign since
finish_texture_init() clobbered everything with correct values. For V4,
just do the setup in finish_texture_init().
V5: - Don't break glPopAttrib(GL_TEXTURE_BIT)
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
[V2] Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Adds new enums, dispatch machinery, and stubs for the 4 new entrypoints.
V2: - Drop placeholder
- Align enum values
- Remove explicit exec=mesa; it *is* the dispatch flavor we want,
but it's also the default. I misunderstood how this worked before;
after actually reading the generator it makes good sense.
V3: - Squash in stubs for new entrypoints, and dispatch_sanity tweaks,
so we don't get build breakage between those patches.
V4: - Fix various remaining whitespace issues
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
[1/3 V2] Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
[V3] Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
The GLX extension lets you expose visuals that explicitly guarantee you
that the GL_FRAMEBUFFER_SRGB_CAPABLE flag will be set, but we can set
the flag even while the visual doesn't provide the guarantee. This
appears to be consistent with other implementations, as we've seen
several apps now that don't require an srgb visual and assume sRGB will
work without checking the GL_FRAMEBUFFER_SRGB_CAPABLE flag.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=55783
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=60633
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Now that we have W-tiled S8, we can't just region_map and poke at bits --
there has to be some swizzling. Rely on intel_miptree_map to get that job
done. This should also get the highest performance path we know of for the
mapping (interesting if I get around to finishing movntdqa some day).
v2: Fix stale name of the bit in a comment.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
I want to reuse intel_miptree_map() to replace some region mapping that's
broken for separate stencil, but doing so would result in new demands on
ETC transcode that we actually don't want to happen.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Any driver can implement this simple and efficient optimization.
Team Fortress 2 hits it always. The DISCARD_RANGE codepath is not even used
with TF2 anymore, so we avoid a ton of useless buffer copies.
Tested-by: Andreas Boll <andreas.boll.dev@gmail.com>
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
v2: cosmetic changes based on Brian's review
Tested-by: Andreas Boll <andreas.boll.dev@gmail.com>
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch. (the next patch depends on it)
The states were split because we thought it caused a hardlock. Now we know
the hardlock was caused by something else and has since been fixed.
Tested-by: Andreas Boll <andreas.boll.dev@gmail.com>
This doesn't fix any issue we know of, but there indeed is a week spot
in draw_vbo where streamout can fail. After streamout is enabled,
the need_cs_space call can flush the context, which causes the streamout
to be disabled right after it was enabled and bad things happen.
One way to fix it is to atomize the beginning part, so that no context flush
can happen between streamout enabling and the first drawing.
Tested-by: Andreas Boll <andreas.boll.dev@gmail.com>
Without this set, dri_util.c:dri2CreateContextAttribs
will reject requests to create a context with
__DRI_API_OPENGL_CORE.
This prevents a 3.2 core profile context from being created
even when MESA_GL_OVERRIDE_VERSION=3.2 is used.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
If the override is version is >= 3.1, then update the
max_gl_core_version. Otherwise, update max_gl_compat_version.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This will allow other code to get access to the override
version before a context is available.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Although GLSL 1.50 compiler support is not available,
this change will allow MESA_GLSL_VERSION_OVERRIDE=150 to be
used while 1.50 support is being developed.
Since no drivers claim 1.50 GLSL support, this change should
only impact Mesa when MESA_GLSL_VERSION_OVERRIDE=150 is set.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Immediate operands can only be src2 in 2-source instructions. Fixes
piglit failures since 0a1d145e (oops!).
Spotted-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
The field was equivalent to (etc_format != MESA_FORMAT_NONE), and
therefore duplicate information.
This patch removes field and replaces all references to it with
`etc_format != MESA_FORMAT_NONE`.
No Piglit ETC test regresses on Intel Sandybridge.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
v2 [mattst88]:
- Add BRW_OPCODE_LRP to list of CSE-able expressions.
- Fix op_var[] array size.
- Rename arguments to emit_lrp to (x, y, a) to clear confusion.
- Add LRP function to brw_fs.cpp/.h.
- Corrected comment about LRP instruction arguments in emit_lrp.
v3 [mattst88]:
- Duplicate MAD code for LRP instead of using a function pointer.
- Check for != GRF instead of == IMM in emit_lrp.
- Lower LRP on gen < 6.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
1
Many GPUs have an instruction to do linear interpolation which is more
efficient than simply performing the algebra necessary (two multiplies,
an add, and a subtract).
Pattern matching or peepholing this is more desirable, but can be
tricky. By using an opcode, we can at least make shaders which use the
mix() built-in get the more efficient behavior.
Currently, all consumers lower ir_triop_lrp. Subsequent patches will
actually generate different code.
v2 [mattst88]:
- Add LRP_TO_ARITH flag to ir_to_mesa.cpp. Will be removed in a
subsequent patch and ir_triop_lrp translated directly.
v3 [mattst88]:
- Move changes from the next patch to opt_algebraic.cpp to accept
3-src operations.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Previously, we had separate constructors for one, two, and four operand
expressions. This patch consolidates them into a single constructor
which uses NULL default parameters.
The unary and binary operator constructors had assertions to verify that
the caller supplied the correct number of operands for the expression,
but the four-operand version did not. Since get_num_operands for
ir_quadop_vector returns the number of vector_elements, we can safely
add that without breaking the semantics of ir_quadop_vector.
This also paves the way for expressions with three operands. Currently,
none can be constructed since get_num_operands() never returns 3.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
total instructions in shared programs: 346873 -> 346847 (-0.01%)
instructions in affected programs: 364 -> 338 (-7.14%)
(All affected shaders are from Lightsmark)
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Gen6 has write-only MRF registers, and for ease of implementation we
paritition off 16 general purposes registers to act as MRFs on Gen7.
Knowing that our Gen7 MRFs are actually GRFs, we can do things we can't
do with real MRFs:
- read from them;
- return values directly to them from a send instruction; and
- compute directly to them with math instructions.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This requirement was added by ARB_fragment_program
When the Steam overlay is enabled, this fixes:
* Menu corruption with the Puddle game
* The screen going black on Rochard when
the Steam overlay is accessed
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.0 and 9.1 branches.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Motivated by wanting to see if GenTextures was called by an
application while debugging another Steam overlay issue.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Now that buffers can be used as textures or render targets
make sure they aren't skipped.
Fix suggested by Jose Fonseca.
v2: added a couple of assertions so we can actually guarantee
we check the resources and don't skip them. Also added some comments
that this is actually a lie due to the way the opengl buffer api works.
Unfortunately not usable from OpenGL, and no cap bit.
Pretty similar to a 1d texture, though allows specifying a start element.
v2: also fix up renderbuffer width (which will get promoted to fb width)
to be the number of elements
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
For PIPE_BUFFER we need coord adjustments for the transfer.
And for pure integer formats util_pack_color just crashes,
need to handle that differently due to clear colors being ints/uints.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Use a single sampler adapter instead of per-sampler-unit samplers,
and just pass along texture unit and sampler unit in the calls.
The reason is that for dx10-style sample opcodes pre-wired
samplers including all the texture state aren't really feasible (and for
sample_i/sviewinfo we don't even have samplers).
Of course right now softpipe doesn't actually do anything more than
just look up all its pre-wired per-texunit/per-samplerunit sampler as
it did before so this doesn't really achieve much except one more
function call, however this is now all softpipe's fault (fixing that in
a way which doesn't suck is still an unsolved problem).
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
glXCreateWindow() and glXCreatePbuffer() always fail when built without
GLX_DIRECT_RENDERING defined since commit 48331047.
Reviewed-by: Adam Jackson <ajax@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Jon TURNEY <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>
Normally the application will own the main event queue and be responsible
for moving events. In case of EGL_DEFAULT_DISPLAY, EGL opens the display
and has to own the main queue so it can move the events itself.
Call wl_display_dispatch_pending() to take ownership.
Previously only the 32-bit X visual would match the 32-bit RGBA8888
configs. This resulted in every config with alpha getting the "magic"
visual whose alpha is used by the compositor. This also resulted in no
multisample visuals being advertised. How many ways could we lose?
This patch inverts the problem... now you can't get the visual with
alpha used by the compositor even if you want it. I think we need to
invent a new value for EGL_TRANSPARENT_TYPE that apps can use to get
this. I'm surprised that there isn't already a choice for
EGL_TRANSPARENT_ALPHA.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Tested-by: Tian Ye <yex.tian@intel.com>
Acked-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=59783
Streamout buffers need to be synchronized on r6xx as
well.
v2: Add DEST flush as well.
v3: drop DEST flush
Signed-off-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Since with llvm execution parts of sampler view and sampler state is baked into
the shader, we need to revalidate otherwise the wrong shader might get used.
(Not completely sure but I think this would not be required for non-llvm case,
along with everything else in these functions.)
This caused bugs in piglit arb_texture_buffer_object-formats, because we never
noticed that the view format changed.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This also fixes not honoring first/last_layer view parameters for array
textures, plus not honoring last_level view parameter for all textures
(neither is really used by OpenGL).
This mostly passes piglit arb_texture_buffer_object tests (it needs, however,
glsl 140 version override, plus GL 3.1 override, the latter only because
mesa does not allow ARB_tbo in non-core contexts).
Most arb_texture_buffer_object tests pass, with the exception of
arb_texture_buffer_object-formats. With "arb" parameter it passes most weirdo
formats before it segfaults in the state tracker, this looks to be some issue
with using legacy formats in core context (fails the same in softpipe).
With "core" parameter it passes with "fs", however fails with "vs" (for most
formats). This will be fixed later (debugging shows we're completely missing
the shader recompile depending on format).
v2: based on Jose's feedback, fix comments, variable/function names.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
When you didn't have a texcoord array bound (or a non-1 current w
attrib), we were telling the fragment shader that it could just use "1"
instead of doing expensive pre-gen6 math to invert it. If you drew the
point with a non-1 W value, then you'd get the right size (since all the
vertex computations worked), but we'd mis-interpolate the coordinate
across the face.
Fixes the mesa pointsprite demo on GM45.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=30232
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
missing case GL_REQUIRED_TEXTURE_IMAGE_UNITS_OES is required
by OES_EGL_image_external extension.
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Tapani Pälli <tapani.palli@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Previously when an input varying was optimized out of the
FS we would still retain it as an output of the VS.
We now build a hash of live FS input varyings rather
than looking in the FS symbol table. (The FS symbol table
will still contain the optimized out varyings.)
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We might want to revisit the normalized_coords semantics, but this is
the current expected behavior.
Fixes fdo bug 61091.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
The llvm pipeline handles regular filled triangle offsets, but it
doesn't handle offsets for triangles drawn in point or line mode.
Fixes failures found with new piglit polygon-mode-offset test.
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
There were several issues. We weren't handling different front/back
polygon fill modes. We weren't checking whether the offset applied to
fill mode vs. line mode vs. point mode.
Fixes problems found with the Visualization Toolkit (VTK) test suite.
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The old logic was kind of twisted, but seemed to work in practice.
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
When we destroy an ARB vp/fp whose ID was gen'd but not otherwise used we
get a pointer to the dummy/placeholder program. We can't destroy that one
so just skip it. This only failed during context tear-down because
glDeleteProgramsARB() was already aware of dummy programs.
Fixes https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38086
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Tested-by: Andreas Boll <andreas.boll.dev@gmail.com>
We sometimes convert GL_QUAD_STRIP prims into GL_TRIANGLE_STRIP, but
that changes the results of the u_trim_pipe_prim() call. We need to
pass the original primitive type to the trim function.
Note that OpenGL's GL_x prim type values match Gallium's PIPE_PRIM_x values.
Fixes a failure in the new piglit degenerate-prims test.
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
So we don't emit it twice if we ever use the flag on
cayman.
Note: this is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Signed-off-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
PS_PARTIAL flushes seems to be required in certain
cases to prevent hangs, especially on r6xx.
Note: this is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Signed-off-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Regardless of what we put in the screen structure, all of the extensions
that compute_version_es2 checks are present and 3.0 will be exposed
anyway.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Commit 86d30dea3c broke building with older
automake versions with this error:
Makefile:769: *** Recursive variable am__v_YACC_ references itself (eventually). Stop.
This patch fixes it. Fix stolen from xorg-macros.
Signed-off-by: Lauri Kasanen <cand@gmx.com>
The recent change for GL core broke the older setup, which broke
gl_PointCoord on pre-gen6 (where gl_PointCoord is undefined if point
sprites are disabled). Fixes the new piglit GLES-2.0/glsl-fs-pointcoord
test.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=32429
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
In a debug build this led to assertion failures, but on a non-debug
build the hardware would just reference the whole vec8 instead of the
same channel 8 times.
Fixes the new piglit glsl-1.40/uniform-buffer/fs-exp2.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=57121
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
- zero temps/outputs instead of copying (otherwise we won't be able to see
the temps/outputs assignments for small shaders where nothing changes
across big areas
- also show the inputs (as it's often impossible to infer from the rest)
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Mesa state tracker recently started using PIPE_FORMAT_X8B8G8R8_UNORM,
causing segfaults in texture-packed-formats, because swizze[chan] was
0xff for padding channel (X).
Signed-off-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Now with buffer formats clarification don't need all that logic any longer.
(Note that it never would have worked in any case, because blockwidth and
blockheight were swapped any allocation with multi-byte format would have
had zero size.)
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This clarifies some things and gets rid of some old stuff.
The most significant one is probably that buffers cannot have formats
(nearly all drivers completely ignored format and used width0 as byte size
already in any case). There seems to be no use case for "structured" buffers.
(Note while d3d11 has new Structured Buffers, these still aren't associated
with a format, rather a byte stride, which we can't do yet either way.)
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Some parts calculated key size by using shader information, others by using
the pipe_vertex_element information. Since it is perfectly valid to have more
vertex_elements set than the vertex shader is using those may not be the same,
so we weren't copying over all vertex_element state - this caused the tgsi dump
to assert (iterates over all vertex elements). More importantly in this
situation it would also break vertex texturing completely (since the sampler
state derived from the key is at a different position than expected).
Fix thix by deriving key->nr_vertex_elements from the shader information
instead of the pipe_vertex_element state (unlike dx10, we can't have "holes"
in pipe_vertex_element state, so this should be safe).
(Note that actual llvm shader generation does not use the pipe_vertex_element
state from the key itself in any case (althogh I guess it could) but uses
the one from draw.pt (which should be the same though contains all elements)
instead.)
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The OMOD value was only being folded to one instruction in cases where
the MUL instruction was reading a value written by more than one
instruction.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Now you can convert assembly strings into a full struct radeon_compiler
object and use it to test individual compiler pases.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
This way make check can report whether or not the tests pass.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
These are all files that I authored, but forgot to add the license
headers.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
This fixes a bug introduced in commit 258453716f and
triggered whenever "rb" is NULL.
Fixes at least one cause bug #59445:
[SNB/IVB/HSW Bisected]Oglc draw-buffers2(advanced.blending.none) segfault
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=59445
(Though segfaults are still possible in that test case, but they have been
present since before commit 258453716f which is what's being fixed here.)
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
It's the reciprocal of the register value.
Fixes piglit fragcoord_w and glsl-fs-fragcoord-zw-perspective.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Requires corresponding LLVM R600 backend fix to work correctly, but even
without that it doesn't hang anymore.
13 more little piglits.
Depends on LLVM: r175193, r175733
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Pre-Gen6, the SF thread requires exact matching between VS output
slots (aka VUE slots) and FS input slots, even when the corresponding
VS output slot is unused due to being overwritten by point coordinate
replacement (glTexEnvi(GL_POINT_SPRITE, GL_COORD_REPLACE, GL_TRUE)).
As a result, we have a special hack in the VS to ensure when any
texture coordinate is subject to point coordinate replacement, it is
always allocated space in the VUE, even if it isn't written to by the
VS.
This hack isn't needed from Gen6 onwards, since SF (Gen7: SBE)
swizzling has the ability to insert the point coordinate into
gl_TexCoord[] without needing a corresponding unused VUE slot.
Note that no modification of SF setup code is required for this
patch--get_attr_override() already does the right thing. However, we
make a slight comment change to clarify why this works.
In addition to eliminating unnecessary VS recompiles and saving
precious URB space on Gen6+, this will save us the trouble of having
to adjust this hack when we implement geometry shaders.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
For constant and temporary register fetches, the bitcasts weren't done
correctly for the indirect case, leading to crashes due to type mismatches.
Simply do the bitcasts after fetching (much simpler than fixing up the load
pointer for the various cases).
This fixes https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=61036
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
We don't need to flush resources for each layer, and since we don't actually
care about layer at all in the flush function just drop the parameter.
Also we can use util_copy_box instead of repeated util_copy_rect.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
These used to be illegal a very long time ago, then for some more time
nothing really emitted these so this code path wasn't hit.
Just trivially iterate over box->depth.
(Might be worth refactoring at some point since nowadays all the code
doesn't really do much except for depth textures.)
This fixes https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=61093
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This patch implements a stub for GL_EXT_discard_framebuffer with
required checks listed by the extension specification. This extension
is required by GLBenchmark 2.5 when compiled with OpenGL ES 2.0
as the rendering backend.
Signed-off-by: Tapani Pälli <tapani.palli@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Only compile tested, but should fix at least some piglit fbo-blending tests.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
That means we can map and read multiple slices with one transfer_map call.
[ Cherry-picked from r600g commit 1aebb6911e ]
11 more little piglits on master, 1 more on the 9.1 branch (Marek's
glTex(Sub)Image improvements on master broke the other 10).
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
GLX_INTEL_swap_event is broken on the server side, where it's
currently unconditionally enabled. This completely breaks
systems running on drivers which don't support that extension.
There's no way to test for its presence on this side, so instead
of disabling it uncondtionally, just disable it for drivers
which are known to not support it. It makes sense because
most drivers do support it right now.
We'll be able to remove this once Xserver properly advertises
GLX_INTEL_swap_event.
Note: This is a candidate for stable branch branches.
Signed-off-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=60052
Reviewed-by: Jesse Barnes <jbarnes@virtuousgeek.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Tested-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Improves on a major performance regression for the dolphin wii emulator
from its move to using UBOs. Performance in the UBO codepath (as
replayed through apitrace) is up 21.1% +/- 2.3% (n=26/29).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We could potentially do some CSE even when the dst types aren't the same
on gen6 where there is no implicit dst type conversion iirc, or in the
case of uniform pull constant loads where the dst type doesn't impact
what's stored. But it's not worth worrying about.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
This should fix the register allocation explosion on the GLES 3.0 test
on gen6. It also gives us an instruction that will fit our CSE handling.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
We were correctly relaying the smear from MOV's src, but if the MOV
didn't do a smear, we don't want to smash the smear value from the
instruction being propagated into. Prevents a regression in the
upcoming UBO change.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
brw_vs_prog_data::userclip hasn't been used since commit f0cecd4
(i965: Move VUE map computation to once at VS compile time).
brw_gs_prog_key::userclip_active hasn't been used since commit 9f3d321
(i965: Make the userclip flag for the VUE map come from VS prog data).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Otherwise, the PBuffer's size was never set. This also initializes
the buffer size for windows, pixmaps, etc.
Fixes http://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=61012
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
A single element in a GLX reply is contained in the header itself.
The number of elements is denoted in the "n" field of the reply.
If "n" is 1, the length of additional data is 0.
The XXX_data_length() function of xcb does not return the length of
the (optional, n>1) data but the number of elements.
Fixes http://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=59876
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Brüns <stefan.bruens@rwth-aachen.de>
Signed-off-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
We weren't mapping the PBO when using the bitmap cache (but we had
the PBO code for the non-cache path.)
Fixes http://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=61026
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
This fixes a regression from ab74fee5e1.
When we use the clip coordinate to compute the screen-space interpolation
factor, we need to first apply the divide-by-W step to the clip
coordinate.
Fixes http://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=60938
Note: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
It has become a bit messy.
Changes:
- finally correct checking for transfer ops depending on the base format
- making sure the base internal format and the texture format match
(we were ignoring it, but it's important for correctness)
- the way-too-strict rule that both src and dst base formats must be the same
was dropped; ensuring the simpler and more permissive rule mentioned above
is enough
- stop using util_blit_pixels; pipe->blit is flexible enough, and now that we
have RGBX and red-alpha formats, pipe->blit can be used for more cases
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
A temporary texture is created such that it matches the format and type
combination and pixels are copied to it using memcpy. Then the blit is used to
copy the temporary texture to the texture image being modified by TexImage or
TexSubImage. The blit takes care of the format and type conversion and
swizzling. The result is a very fast texture upload involving as little CPU
as possible.
This improves performance in apps which upload textures during rendering.
An example is the Wine OpenGL backend for DirectDraw, which I used to test
the game StarCraft. Profiling had shown that TexSubImage was taking 50% of
CPU time without this patch, which was the main motivation for this work, and
now TexSubImage only takes 14% of CPU time. I had to underclock my CPU to see
any difference in the game and this patch does make the game a lot faster
if the CPU is slow (or using the powersave cpufreq profile).
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This is not easy to hit, because we have 3 code paths now
(tried in this order):
- memcpy-based (skips the blit) -> _mesa_tex_getimage
- blit-based
- slow pixel packing -> _mesa_tex_getimage
The main difference later in the code is the parameters of
_mesa_image_address3d.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Based on r600g commit 2b9659c9e6 .
Fixes crashes with 4 piglit tests which are now hitting these formats.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
_mesa_delete_renderbuffer does not call the driver-specific
renderbuffer delete function, so the blorp code was leaking the
Intel-specific bits, including some GEM objects.
Call the renderbuffer's ->Delete() method instead, which does the
right thing.
Fixes Unity rapidly sending the machine into the arms of the OOM-killer
Note: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
We need to encode them as Texture instructions since the NumOffsets field
is encoded there. However, we don't encode the actual target in there, this
is derived from the sampler view src later.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Need to take the type into account. Also, if we want to allow
mov's with modifiers we need to pick a type (assume float).
v2: don't allow all modifiers on all type, in particular don't allow
absolute on non-float types and don't allow negate on unsigned.
Also treat UADD as signed (despite the name) since it is used
for handling both signed and unsigned integer arguments and otherwise
modifiers don't work.
Also add tgsi docs clarifying this.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The emulation of these if there's no rounding instruction available
is a bit more complicated than what the code did.
In particular, doing fp-to-int/int-to-fp will not work if the exponent
is large enough (and with NaNs, Infs). Hence such values need to be filtered
out and the original value returned in this case (which fortunately should
always be exact). This comes at the expense of performance (if your cpu
doesn't support rounding instructions).
Furthermore, floor/ifloor/ceil/iceil were affected by precision issues for
values near negative (for floor) or positive (for ceil) zero, fix that as well
(fixing this issue might not actually be slower except for ceil/iceil if the
type is not signed which is probably rare - note iceil has no callers left
in any case).
Also add some new rounding test values in lp_test_arit to actually test
for that stuff (which previously would have failed without sse41).
This fixes https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=59701.
To help catch mixed up context pointer bugs in the future, add a
trace_context_check() function and some new assertions.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
When a trace_surface object is created in trace_surf_create() we
weren't correctly setting the surface's context pointer. Instead of
it being the trace context, it was the wrapped driver's context.
This caused things to blow up sometimes during surface deallocation.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The GL_ARB_texture_rg spec says that we need to support both texturing
and rendering for the GL_RED and GL_RG formats. So move the format
check up into the rendertarget_mapping[] list. Also, add
PIPE_FORMAT_R8_UNORM to the list of formats required.
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
We'd been ad-hoc inserting instructions in some SEND messages with no
knowledge of when it was required (so extra instructions), but not all SENDs
(so not often enough). This should do much better than that, though it's
still flow-control-ignorant.
v2: Use BRW_MAX_MRF instead of magic numbers.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=58960
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
NOTE: Candidate for the stable branches.
In GLSL, sampler indices are allocated contiguously from 0. But in the
case of ARB_fragment_program (and possibly fixed function), an app that
uses texture 0 and 2 will use sampler indices 0 and 2, so we were only
allocating space for samplers 0 and 1 and setting up sampler 0. We
would read garbage for sampler 2, resulting in flickering textures and
an angry simulator.
Fixes bad rendering in 0 A.D. and ETQW. This was fixed for pre-gen7 by
28f4be9eb9
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=25201
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=58680
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
I should say "fix", but it has never been used until now.
S8Z24 is the format equivalent to the GL_UNSIGNED_INT_24_8 packing,
so we'll start to see it more often with st/mesa now making smart decisions
about formats.
The DB<->CB copy can change the channel ordering for transfers, other than
that, the internal DB format doesn't really matter.
R600-R700 support is possible except shadow mapping.
FMT_24_8 is broken if the SAMPLE_C instruction is used (no idea why).
Also the sampler swizzling was broken in theory and the fact it worked was
a lucky coincidence.
radeonsi might need to port this.
Reviewed-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
The code was rather broken for non-XYZW on 8-wide, but all of our
callers were using XYZW anyway. For my experiments with using writemask
on texturing, I've been using manual header setup in the compiler
backends, since we want to actually know what registers are written for
optimization and register allocation.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Detect a duplicate Shader type as and error instead of silently allowing
it, restrict to ES2 API.
v2: Tapani Pälli <tapani.palli@intel.com>
- make the check run time instead of compile time
v3: chadv
- Quote spec on which error to generate.
Signed-off-by: bma <Bo.Ma@windriver.com>
Signed-off-by: Tapani Pälli <tapani.palli@intel.com>
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
The hardware just doesn't support it. I suspect this was a regression from
the move to fixed MESA_FORMATs for compressed textures and that previously we
were storing uncompressed for this or something.
Fixes GPU hangs in piglit "texwrap GL_EXT_texture_sRGB-s3tc bordercolor
swizzled" on my GM965.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
All of the GLSL specs from GLSL 1.30 (and GLSL ES 3.00) onward contain
language requiring certain integer variables to be declared with the
"flat" keyword, but they differ in exactly *when* the rule is
enforced:
(a) GLSL 1.30 and 1.40 say that vertex shader outputs having integral
type must be declared as "flat". There is no restriction on fragment
shader inputs.
(b) GLSL 1.50 through 4.30 say that fragment shader inputs having
integral type must be declared as "flat". There is no restriction on
vertex shader outputs.
(c) GLSL ES 3.00 says that both vertex shader outputs and fragment
shader inputs having integral type must be declared as "flat".
Previously, Mesa's behaviour was consistent with (a). This patch
makes it consistent with (b) when compiling desktop shaders, and (c)
when compiling ES shaders.
Rationale for desktop shaders: once we add geometry shaders, (b) really
seems like the right choice, because it requires "flat" in just the
situations where it matters. Since we may want to extend geometry
shader support back before GLSL 1.50 (via ARB_geometry_shader4), it
seems sensible to apply this rule to all GLSL versions. Also, this
matches the behaviour of the nVidia proprietary driver for Linux, and
the expectations of Intel's oglconform test suite.
Rationale for ES shaders: since the behaviour specified in GLSL ES
3.00 matches neither pre-GLSL-1.50 nor post-GLSL-1.50 behaviour, it
seems likely that this was a deliberate choice on the part of the GLES
folks to be more restrictive. Also, the argument in favor of (b)
doesn't apply to GLES, since it doesn't support geometry shaders at
all.
Some discussion about this has already happened on the Mesa-dev list.
See:
http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/mesa-dev/2013-February/034199.html
Fixes piglit tests:
- glsl-1.30/compiler/interpolation-qualifiers/nonflat-*.frag
- glsl-1.30/compiler/interpolation-qualifiers/vs-flat-int-0{2,3,4,5}.vert
- glsl-es-3.00/compiler/interpolation-qualifiers/varying-struct-nonflat-{int,uint}.frag
Fixes oglconform tests:
- glsl-q-inperpol negative.fragin.{int,uint,ivec,uvec}
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
In the GLSL 1.30 spec, section 4.3.6 ("Outputs") says:
"If a vertex output is a signed or unsigned integer or integer
vector, then it must be qualified with the interpolation qualifier
flat."
The GLSL ES 3.00 spec further clarifies, in section 4.3.6 ("Output
Variables"):
"Vertex shader outputs that are, *or contain*, signed or unsigned
integers or integer vectors must be qualified with the
interpolation qualifier flat."
(Emphasis mine.)
The language in the GLSL ES 3.00 spec is clearly correct and should be
applied to all shading language versions, since varyings that contain
ints can't be interpolated, regardless of which shading language
version is in use.
(Note that in GLSL 1.50 the restriction is changed to apply to
fragment shader inputs rather than vertex shader outputs, to
accommodate the fact that in the presence of geometry shaders, vertex
shader outputs are not necessarily interpolated. That will be
addressed by a future patch).
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
From GLSL ES 3.00 section 4.5.4 ("Default Precision Qualifiers"):
"The precision statement
precision precision-qualifier type;
can be used to establish a default precision qualifier. The type
field can be either int or float or any of the sampler types, and
the precision-qualifier can be lowp, mediump, or highp."
GLSL ES 1.00 has similar language. GLSL 1.30 doesn't allow precision
qualifiers on sampler types, but this seems like an oversight (since
the intention of including these in GLSL 1.30 is to allow
compatibility with ES shaders).
Previously, Mesa followed GLSL 1.30 and only allowed default precision
qualifiers to be set for float and int. This patch makes it follow
GLSL ES rules in all cases.
Fixes Piglit tests default-precision-sampler.{vert,frag}.
Partially addresses https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=60737.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Otherwise, we fail to correctly handle GL_PRIMITIVE_RESTART_FIXED_INDEX.
Fixes gles3conform's primitive_restart_mode test.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This commit allows using glGetTexImage during rendering and still
maintain interactive framerates.
This improves performance of WarCraft 3 under Wine. The framerate is improved
from 25 fps to 39 fps in the main menu, and from 0.5 fps to 32 fps in the game.
v2: fix choosing the format for decompression
This is for glGetTexImage and it will be used for samplers only (which some
drivers already implement by reading util_format_description).
v2: incorporate Brian's suggestion
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Seems that alpha test being enabled confuse the GPU on the order in
which it should perform the Z testing. So force the order programmed
throught db shader control.
v2: Only force z order when alpha test is enabled
v3: Update db shader when binding new dsa + spelling fix
Signed-off-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
In OpenGL 4.3, new language was added that would require
this check. But, if this check results in broken applications
then perhaps it will be reversed.
For now, remove this check and re-evaluate when
desktop GL 4.3 is closer.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
With the llvm patches, fixing 14 piglit tests in total.
v2: increase the const limit
v3: document the const limit
Signed-off-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
When the user specifies an unsupported GLSL version,
_mesa_glsl_parse_state::process_version_directive() nicely gives them
an error message telling them which GLSL versions are supported.
Previous to this patch, the logic for determining whether a given
language version was supported was independent from the logic to
generate this error message string; as a result, we had a bug where
GLSL 3.00 would never be listed in the error message as an available
language version, even if it was really available.
To make matters worse, the code for generating the error message
string assumed that desktop GL versions were always separated by 0.10,
an assumption that will be wrong as soon as we support GLSL 3.30.
This patch fixes both problems by adding a table of supported GLSL
versions to _mesa_glsl_parse_state; this table is used both to
generate the error message and to check whether a given version is
supported.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Discovered accidentally when changing SAMPLE_L definition.
Turns out the lod arguments were already correct for the new definition
but the compare and derivs were not.
Reviewed-by: Christoph Bumiller <e0425955@student.tuwien.ac.at>
It looks like using coord.w as explicit lod value is a mistake, most likely
because some dx10 docs had it specified that way. Seems this was changed though:
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/hh447229%28v=vs.85%29.aspx
- let's just hope it doesn't depend on runtime build version or something.
Not only would this need translation (so go against the stated goal these
opcodes should be close to dx10 semantics) but it would prevent usage of this
opcode with cube arrays, which is apparently possible:
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/bb509699%28v=vs.85%29.aspx
(Note not only does this show cube arrays using explicit lod, but also the
confusion with this opcode: it lists an explicit lod parameter value, but then
states last component of location is used as lod).
(For "true" hw drivers, only nv50 had code to handle it, and it appears the
code was already right for the new semantics, though fix up the seemingly
wrong c/d arguments while there.)
v2: fix comment, separate out other changes.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
These were, at some point in the past, used to request that Xorg's
compiler.h export a static inline xf86ReadMmio32 instead of a function
pointer. compiler.h only has this option for DEC Alpha.
But Xorg's compiler.h isn't being included by either of these two files
and the radeon driver still works on Alpha, so the definitions are dead
and not needed.
Reviewed-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
link up the fs outputs and blend inputs, and make sure the second blend source
is correctly loaded and converted (which is quite complex).
There's a slight refactoring of the monster generate_unswizzled_blend()
function where it makes sense to factor out alpha conversion (which needs
to run twice for dual source blend).
This passes piglit arb_blend_func_extended tests.
v2: remove new but ultimately not used function...
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
These are more recent additions, and no one remembered to update the
INTEL_DEBUG=state code.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This reorders the "brw_bits" array in brw_state_upload.c to match the
order of the #defines in brw_context.h.
Otherwise, it's really hard to see if any are missing.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
These don't need to be re-disabled on every batch if we're using
hardware contexts. (If we're not, this is equivalent.)
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
If the same context try to flink and open the object, use the
same bo struct instead of opening a new gem handle for the object.
This way we avoid avoid having 2 different handle pointing to the
same kernel object which can latter lead to trouble with virtual
address.
Fix:
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=60200
Signed-off-by: Martin Andersson <g02maran@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
minecraft apparently has its piles of display lists each contain 6
instances of glBegin(GL_QUADS)/verts/glEnd(), which appear in the
compiled list as 6 prims of 4 verts each in one draw call. We can
reduce driver overhead even more by making that one prim of 24 verts.
Improves minecraft performance by 1.6% +/- .25% (n=446)
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
We used to have clip planes optionally included in the push constants,
resulting in a variable amount of data uploaded, but no more. This also
means less wasted space in the batch for our push constants.
v2: Update _NEW_TRANSFORM state bit information.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org> (v1)
It doesn't matter with our current implementation of MapBufferRange,
but it was wrong -- the result pointer is read by intel_upload_data().
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The Mesa format can be RGBA8888_REV, the format/type can be
GL_RGBA/GL_UNSIGNED_BYTE, but the actual texture internal format can be
LUMINANCE_ALPHA, INTENSITY, etc. Therefore we should look at the base
internal format as well.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
_mesa_base_tex_format doesn't accept GL_BGR and GL_ABGR_EXT, etc.
v2: add a (now hopefully complete) helper function to deal with this
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
- swapBytes has no effect on 8-bit single-component formats
- GL_SHORT is in host byte order, so checking for littleEndian is unnecessary,
I decided to make the change for single-component formats only
Based on suggestions from Michel Dänzer.
Reviewed-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
This patch fixes the vertex_header mask bitfield store in big-endian
architectures by bit-swap the fields accordingly.
Reviewed-by: Adam Jackson <ajax@redhat.com>
Older hardware cannot do ARB_texture_rgb10_a2ui, and the translation
code for OES_compressed_ETC1_RGB8_texture was never implemented in the
i915 driver.
NOTE: This is a candidate for all stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This should handle the new lod_zero modifier more correctly.
The runtime-conditional is a bit more complex however we now also do
scalar lod computation when appropriate which should more than make up for it.
The refactoring should also fix an issue with explicit lods
(lod clamp wasn't applied to them).
Also, always pass lod as the 5th element from tgsi executor, which simplifies
things (get rid of annoying conditionals later).
v2: based on Brian's feedback, use switch in a couple of places, fix up
some function parameter names, fix up comments.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
There were several bugs how this was handled, most opcodes wouldn't even
have fetched the right arguments.
Also, the tex "target" is coming from the sampler view, hence it cannot
have information about shadow comparisons - fortunately this is not only
sampler state but also needs to have matching instruction, so just use this
instead to identify shadow comparisons.
Still untested (compiles...).
Note that sample_i and sviewinfo are still busted (just assert).
(The problem is that the interface for doing the opengl-equivalent functions
txf and txq is tied to the specific the sampler itself but these opcodes
have no sampler associated with them. Oops...)
Also, even the other sample instructions will not work correctly since
they always operate on samplers which include the texture state. Fixing
this wouldn't be that difficult but most likely make softpipe quite a bit
slower when using the OpenGL tex opcodes (as the samplers have pre-baked
function calls in the sampler state depending on texture state and that stuff
would need to be evaluated at runtime), so leave it for now.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Need to calculate the number of mip levels (if it would be worthwile could
store it in dynamic state).
While here, the query code also used chan 2 for the lod value.
This worked with mesa state tracker but it seems safer to use chan 0.
Still passes piglit textureSize (with some handwaving), though the non-GL
parts are (largely) untested.
v2: clarify and expect the sviewinfo opcode to return ints, not floats,
just like the OpenGL textureSize (dx10 supports dst modifiers with resinfo).
Also simplify some code.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
They are similar to old-style tex opcodes but with separate sampler and
texture units (and other arguments in different places).
Also adjust the debug tgsi dump code.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Fixes uninitialized scalar field defects reported by Coverity.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
None of the filters used it (why would they). Maybe that param
was just there because some of the lines were considered to be
too short...
Reviewed-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
This optimized filter (when using repeat wrap modes,
linear min/mag/mip filters, pot textures) only applies to 2d textures,
but nothing prevented it from being used for other textures (likely
leading to very bogus sample results).
Note: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The signed case didn't do what the comment indicated. Should increase rounding
precision (at the expense of performance since the former code was effectively
a no-op).
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This adds support of the additional blending factors to the blend function
itself, and also enables testing of it in lp_test_blend (which passes).
Still need to add the glue code of linking fs shader outputs to blend inputs
in llvmpipe, and probably need to add special handling if destination doesn't
include alpha (which lp_test_blend doesn't test).
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
There can be other per-thread data than just vis_counter, so pass a struct
around instead (some of our non-public code uses this already and this
difference is a major cause of merge pain).
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The exa core will already set the pointer to NULL prior calling
the callback function. So don't bail out in the callback if it's
already NULL.
Signed-off-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
At eglSwapBuffer time, we blindly assume we have a back buffer, but the
back buffer only gets allocated when somebody tries to render something.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.0 and 9.1 branches.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=60086
Previous to this patch, there were 13 identical definitions of this
macro in Mesa source. That's ridiculous. This patch consolidates 6
of them to a single definition in src/mesa/main/macros.h.
Unfortunately, I wasn't able to eliminate the remaining definitions,
since they occur in places that don't include src/mesa/main/macros.h:
- include/pci_ids/pci_id_driver_map.h
- src/egl/drivers/dri2/egl_dri2.h
- src/egl/main/egldefines.h
- src/gbm/main/backend.c
- src/gbm/main/gbm.c
- src/glx/glxclient.h
- src/mapi/mapi/stub.c
I'm open to suggestions as to how to deal with the remaining redundancy.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Previously, the i965 driver enabled EXT_framebuffer_multisample even
on pre-gen6 chipsets. However, since we don't support multisampling
on these chips, we set GL_MAX_SAMPLES=1 (the minimum allowed by
EXT_framebuffer_multisample), and if the client ever requested a
multisample buffer, we quietly supplied them with a single-sampled
buffer instead.
After some discussion on the mailing list (see thread
"ext_framebuffer_multisample: check for num_samples<=1"), it's clear
that this was the wrong approach. The correct approach is to only
expose EXT_framebuffer_multisample when we truly support
multisampling; that frees us to set a sensible value of
GL_MAX_SAMPLES=0 on other chipsets, so that we never have to deal with
a client requesting a multisample buffer when multisampling isn't
supported.
This change causes the following piglit tests to be skipped on
chipsets prior to Gen6:
- "ARB_framebuffer_sRGB/blit {renderbuffer,texture}
{linear,linear_to_srgb,srgb,srgb_to_linear}
{downsample,msaa,upsample} {disabled,enabled}"
- EXT_framebuffer_multisample/blit-mismatched-formats
- EXT_framebuffer_multisample/blit-mismatched-sizes
- EXT_framebuffer_multisample/dlist
- EXT_framebuffer_multisample/interpolation 0 *
- EXT_framebuffer_multisample/minmax
- EXT_framebuffer_multisample/negative-copypixels
- EXT_framebuffer_multisample/negative-copyteximage
- EXT_framebuffer_multisample/negative-max-samples
- EXT_framebuffer_multisample/negative-mismatched-samples
- EXT_framebuffer_multisample/negative-readpixels
- EXT_framebuffer_multisample/renderbuffer-samples
- EXT_framebuffer_multisample/renderbufferstorage-samples
- EXT_framebuffer_multisample/samples
This is expected, since the above tests exercise MSAA functionality,
and shouldn't be run on systems prior to Gen6.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Previously the loop_state was allocated in the loop_analysis
constructor, but not freed in the (nonexistent) destructor. Moving
the allocation of the loop_state makes this code appear less sketchy.
Either way, there is no actual leak. The loop_state is freed by the
single caller of analyze_loop_variables.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Cc: Dave Airlie <airlied@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=57753
In the documentation for BindBufferRange, OpenGL specs from 3.0
through 4.1 contain this language:
"The error INVALID_VALUE is generated if size is less than or
equal to zero or if offset + size is greater than the value of
BUFFER_SIZE."
This text was dropped from OpenGL 4.2, and it does not appear in the
GLES 3.0 spec.
Presumably the reason for the change is because come clients change
the size of the buffer after calling BindBufferRange. We don't want
to generate an error at the time of the BindBufferRange call just
because the old size of the buffer was too small, when the buffer is
about to be resized.
Since this is a deliberate relaxation of error conditions in order to
allow clients to work, it seems sensible to apply it to all versions
of GL, not just GL 4.2 and above.
(Note that there is no danger of this change allowing a client to
access data beyond the end of a buffer. We already have code to
ensure that that doesn't happen in the case where the client shrinks
the buffer after calling BindBufferRange).
Eliminates a spurious error message in the gles3 conformance test
"transform_feedback_offset_size".
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This matches the behavior of the Windows driver, but a bspec reference
should would be nice.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.0 and 9.1 branches.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Should have been done in d9948e49 but I missed it because
MAX_VARYING_FLOATS doesn't appear in the ES 3 spec, but is the same
value as MAX_VARYING_COMPONENTS.
NOTE: Candidate for the 9.1 branch
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Append the overloaded vector type used for passing in the addressing
parameters.
Without this, LLVM uses the same function signature for all those types,
which cannot work.
Fixes problems e.g. with FlightGear and Red Eclipse.
Was using the pixel size instead of the number of block for the slice
tile max computation which resulted in dma writing at wrong address.
Signed-off-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
Now that we have support for overriding alpha to 1.0, we can handle
blitting between these formats in either direction.
For now, we only support two XRGB formats: MESA_FORMAT_XRGB8888 and
MESA_FORMAT_RGBX8888_REV. Most places only appear to worry about the
former, so ignore the latter for now. We can always add it later.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Tested-by: Martin Steigerwald <martin@lichtvoll.de>
Currently, Blorp requires the source and destination formats to be
equal. However, we'd really like to be able to blit between XRGB and
ARGB formats; our BLT engine paths have supported this for a long time.
For ARGB -> XRGB, nothing needs to occur: the missing alpha is already
interpreted as 1.0. For XRGB -> ARGB, we need to smash the alpha
channel to 1.0 when writing the destination colors. This is fairly
straightforward with blending.
For now, this code is never used, as the source and destination formats
still must be equal. The next patch will relax that restriction.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Tested-by: Martin Steigerwald <martin@lichtvoll.de>
The BLT engine has many limitations. Currently, it can only blit
X-tiled buffers (since we don't have a kernel API to whack the BLT
tiling mode register), which means all depth/stencil operations get
punted to meta code, which can be very CPU-intensive.
Even if we used the BLT engine, it can't blit between buffers with
different tiling modes, such as an X-tiled non-MSAA ARGB8888 texture
and a Y-tiled CMS ARGB8888 renderbuffer. This is a fundamental
limitation, and the only way around that is to use BLORP.
Previously, BLORP only handled BlitFramebuffer. This patch adds an
additional frontend for doing CopyTexSubImage. It also makes it the
default. This is partly to increase testing and avoid hiding bugs,
and partly because the BLORP path can already handle more cases. With
trivial extensions, it should be able to handle everything the BLT can.
This helps PlaneShift massively, which tries to CopyTexSubImage2D
between depth buffers whenever a player casts a spell. Since these
are Y-tiled, we hit meta and software ReadPixels paths, eating 99% CPU
while delivering ~1 FPS. This is particularly bad in an MMO setting
because people cast spells all the time.
It also helps Xonotic in 4X MSAA mode. At default power management
settings, I measured a 6.35138% +/- 0.672548% performance boost (n=5).
(This data is from v1 of the patch.)
No Piglit regressions on Ivybridge (v3) or Sandybridge (v2).
v2: Create a fake intel_renderbuffer to wrap the destination texture
image and then reuse do_blorp_blit rather than reimplementing most
of it. Remove unnecessary clipping code and conditional rendering
check.
v3: Reuse formats_match() to centralize checks; delete temporary
renderbuffers. Reorganize the code.
v4: Actually copy stencil when dealing with separate stencil buffers but
packed depth/stencil formats. Tested by a new Piglit test.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com> [v4]
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com> [v3]
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org> [v2]
Tested-by: Martin Steigerwald <martin@lichtvoll.de> [v3]
I need to use this from C++ code.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
These formats were added a few months after these tables were committed.
No idea why we have the table though. AFAIK, texstore always takes the slow path
for GL_RGBn.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
The GLSL compiler can simplify clamp(v,0,1) to saturate. The state tracker
doesn't use it yet, but it will.
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
I'd like to test Mesa OpenGL ES along side with NVIDIA libGL drivers. But
without this change, I get a NULL pointer dereference.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Fixes uninitialized pointer field defect reported by Coverity.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
We weren't emitting the SVGA_RS_OUTPUTGAMMA state so sRGB rendering
didn't work properly.
Fixes piglit's framebuffer-srgb test.
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Strangely, the DRIimage interface we have passes the pitch in pixels
instead of bytes, which anholt missed in the change to using bytes for
region pitch.
Signed-off-by: Tapani Pälli <tapani.palli@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Since transform feedback needs to be able to access individual fields
of varying structs, we can no longer match up the arguments to
glTransformFeedbackVaryings() with variables in the vertex shader.
Instead, we build up a hashtable which records information about each
possible name that is a candidate for transform feedback, and then
match up the arguments to glTransformFeedbackVaryings() with the
contents of that hashtable.
Populating the hashtable uses the program_resource_visitor
infrastructure, so the logic is shared with how we handle uniforms.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Previously, transform feedback varyings were parsed in an ad-hoc
fashion that wasn't compatible with structs (or array of structs).
This patch makes it use parse_program_resource_name(), which correctly
handles both.
Note that parse_program_resource_name()'s technique for handling
mal-formed input strings is to simply let them through and rely on the
fact that a future name lookup will fail. Because of this,
tfeedback_decl::init() no longer needs to return a boolean error
code--it always succeeds, and if the input was mal-formed the error
will be detected later.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
There's actually nothing uniform-specific in uniform_field_visitor.
It is potentially useful for all kinds of program resources (in
particular, future patches will use it for transform feedback
varyings).
This patch renames it to program_resource_visitor, and clarifies
several comments, to reflect the fact that it is useful for more than
just uniforms.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
The parsing logic is moved to a new function in the GLSL module,
parse_program_resource_name(). This name was chosen because it should
eventually be useful for handling everything that OpenGL 4.3 calls
"program resources" (e.g. uniforms, vertex inputs, fragment outputs,
and transform feedback varyings).
Future patches will make use of this function for linking transform
feedback varyings.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Previously we were relying on CFLAGS_FOR_BUILD to be the same as CFLAGS
when not cross compiling, but this assumption didn't take into
consideration 32-bit builds on 64-bit systems. More generally, not
honoring CFLAGS is bad.
Automake is evidently too stupid to accept
if CROSS_COMPILING
CC = @CC_FOR_BUILD@
...
else
CC = @CC@
endif
without warning that CC has been already defined. The warnings are
harmless, but I'd prefer to avoid future reports about them, so define
proxy variables, which are assigned inside the conditional and then
unconditionally assigned to CC et al.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=59737
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=60038
The glsl-to-tgsi translater will emit SQRT to implement GLSL's sqrt()
and distance() functions if the PIPE_SHADER_CAP_TGSI_SQRT_SUPPORTED
query says it's supported by the driver.
Otherwise, sqrt(x) is implemented with x*rsq(x). The problem with
this is sqrt(0) must be handled specially because rsq(0) might be
Inf/NaN/undefined (and then 0*rsq(0) is Inf/Nan/undefined). In the
glsl-to-tgsi code we use an extra CMP to check if x is zero and then
replace the result of x*rsq(x) with zero.
In the end, this makes sqrt() generate much more reasonable code for
drivers that can do square roots.
Note that many of piglit's generated shader tests use the GLSL
distance() function.
In particular, the LOD bias and depth comparison values are packed before the
'normal' texture coordinates, and the array slice and LOD values are appended.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
In particular, rework the sRGB/linear format selection code.
There's no reason to mess with the Mesa format.
Just do everything in terms of the gallium pipe_format.
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
The code before was getting a pipe format, then calling
st_pipe_format_to_mesa_format() and then converting back again with
st_mesa_format_to_pipe_format(). This removes one conversion step.
If we call gl[Copy]TexImage2D() with a generic compression format
(e.g. intFormat=GL_COMPRESSED_RGBA) we can't choose a DXT format if
we don't have the external DXT compression library.
We weren't actually enforcing this before since the
pipe_screen::is_format_supported(DXT) query has no dependency on
the DXT compression library.
Now if we're given a generic compressed format and we can't do DXT
compression we'll fall back to a non-compressed format.
v2: use util_format_is_s3tc() function and add more comments about
the allow_dxt parameter.
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
When glCompressedTexImage is called the internalFormat is a specific
format for the incoming image and the the hardware format should be
the same (since we never do format transcoding). So use the simpler
_mesa_glenum_to_compressed_format() function. This change is also
needed for the next patch.
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Ivybridge doesn't appear to have the same errata as Sandybridge; no
corruption was observed by setting it to more than the minimal correct
value. It's possible that we were simply lucky, since the URB entries
are 1024-bit on Ivybridge vs. 512-bit Sandybridge. Or perhaps the
underlying hardware issue is fixed.
Either way, we may as well program the minimum value since it's now
readily available, likely to be more efficient, and possibly more
correct.
v2: Use GEN7_SBE_* defines rather than GEN6_SF_*. (A copy and paste
mistake.) They're the same, but using the right names is better.
NOTE: This is a candidate for all stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
(This commit message was primarily written by Paul Berry, who explained
what's going on far better than I would have.)
Previous to this patch, we thought that the only restrictions on
3DSTATE_SF's URB read length were (a) it needs to be large enough to
read all the VUE data that the SF needs, and (b) it can't be so large
that it tries to read VUE data that doesn't exist. Since the VUE map
already tells us how much VUE data exists, we didn't bother worrying
about restriction (a); we just did the easy thing and programmed the
read length to satisfy restriction (b).
However, we didn't notice this erratum in the hardware docs: "[errata]
Corruption/Hang possible if length programmed larger than recommended".
Judging by the context surrounding this erratum, it's pretty clear that
it means "URB read length must be exactly the size necessary to read all
the VUE data that the SF needs, and no larger". Which means that we
can't program the read length based on restriction (b)--we have to
program it based on restriction (a).
The URB read size needs to precisely match the amount of data that the
SF consumes; it doesn't work to simply base it on the size of the VUE.
Thankfully, the PRM contains the precise formula the hardware expects.
Fixes random UI corruption in Steam's "Big Picture Mode", random terrain
corruption in PlaneShift, and Piglit's fbo-5-varyings test.
NOTE: This is a candidate for all stable branches.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=56920
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=60172
Tested-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com> (v1/Piglit)
Tested-by: Martin Steigerwald <martin@lichtvoll.de> (PlaneShift)
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The maximum SF source attribute is necessary to compute the Vertex URB
read length properly, which will be done in the next commit.
NOTE: This is a candidate for all stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Martin Steigerwald <martin@lichtvoll.de>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The next patch will benefit from easy access to the source attribute
number and whether or not we're swizzling. It doesn't want the final
attr_override DWord form, however.
NOTE: This is a candidate for all stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Martin Steigerwald <martin@lichtvoll.de>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Back when ir_var_in and ir_var_out signified both function parameters
and shader input/outputs, we had trouble distinguishing the two when
looking at a dereference. Now that we have separate ir_var_shader_in
and ir_var_shader_out modes, we can determine this easily.
Removing the hash table saves memory and CPU overhead.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The third argument of AC_ARG_WITH is evaluated for any provided value,
not only on --with-, so it must not force-enable the feature
Also, setting $with_llvm_shared_libs in the opencl check was overriding
the user switch
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=59851
Signed-off-by: Quentin Glidic <sardemff7+git@sardemff7.net>
Save miptree level info to DRIImage:
- Appropriately-aligned base offset pointing to the image
- Additional x/y adjustment offsets from above.
v8: -Bump intelImageExtension version
v9: -Don't use internal _eglError but implement error reporting in new DRI inteface
instead. This fixes Android build problems based on feedback from
Adrian M Negreanu and Chad Versace.
-Move the non-tile-aligned check and error-reporting to intel_set_texture_image_region
v10: -Don't #include "egl/main/eglcurrent.h". [chadv]
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net> (v6)
Acked-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com> (v10)
Signed-off-by: Abdiel Janulgue <abdiel.janulgue@linux.intel.com>
We need to take account the offset from original bo when using glTexSubImage()
and other functions that manipulate the subregion of an exported texture.
Offsets are appended to mapped region address and when blitting from a source
region.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Abdiel Janulgue <abdiel.janulgue@linux.intel.com>
When binding a region to a texture image, re-create the miptree base-level
considering the offset and dimension information exported by DRIImage.
v8: - Move the alignment surface address checks from the image-from-texture
code to the texture-from-image side. This allows the error reporting to conform to
OES_EGL_Image and to prevent mixing up EGL and GL errors. Reported by Chad Versace.
- Addressed an existing issue in renderbuffer case where there is a
a possibility of creating EGL images out of depthstencil textures which isn't
really possible. This was spotted by Eric earlier.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net> (v6)
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com> (v8)
Signed-off-by: Abdiel Janulgue <abdiel.janulgue@linux.intel.com>
If the offsets are present, this lets us specify a particular level and slice
in a shared region using the base level of an exported mip-map tree.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Abdiel Janulgue <abdiel.janulgue@linux.intel.com>
Add create image from texture extension and bump version.
v8: - Add appropriate image errors codes in DRI interface so we don't
have to use internal EGL functions in driver. Suggested by Chad Versace.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net> (v6)
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com> (v8)
Signed-off-by: Abdiel Janulgue <abdiel.janulgue@linux.intel.com>
Was broken since commit bf469f4edc
('gallium: add void *user_buffer in pipe_index_buffer').
Fixes 11 piglit tests and lots of missing geometry e.g. in TORCS.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
The svga device doesn't handle them. Replace with zeros.
Fixes several piglit tests, such as "glsl-const-builtin-inversesqrt".
Reviewed-by: Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
glRasterPos doesn't exist in the core profile.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches (9.0 and 9.1).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This along with the latest drm-fixes branch should help with bad performance
of MSAA. Remember: Nx MSAA can't be more than N times slower (where N=2,4,6).
Anyway, I recommend at least 512 MB of VRAM for Full HD 6x MSAA.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
GLX uses mapi/glapi/libglapi.la, which is only built for OpenGL.
If the user specified --enable-xlib-glx --disable-opengl, error out, as these
cannot be both observed at the same time. If the user just specified
--disable-opengl but not --disable-glx, print a warning and disable GLX as
well.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=59364
Tested-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
R600_DUMP_SHADERS environment var now allows to choose dump method:
0 (default) - no dump
1 - full dump (old dump)
2 - disassemble
3 - both
v2: fix output for burst_count > 1
v3: use more human-readable output for kcache data in CF_ALU_xxx clauses,
improve output for ALU_EXTENDED, other minor fixes
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
v3: added some flags including condition codes for ALU,
fixed issue with CF reverse lookup (overlapping ranges of CF_ALU_xxx
and other CF instructions)
rebased on current master
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
We are now seing cs that can go over the vram+gtt size to avoid
failing flush early cs that goes over 70% (gtt+vram) usage. 70%
is use to allow some fragmentation.
The idea is to compute a gross estimate of memory requirement of
each draw call. After each draw call, memory will be precisely
accounted. So the uncertainty is only on the current draw call.
In practice this gave very good estimate (+/- 10% of the target
memory limit).
v2: Remove left over from testing version, remove useless NULL
checking. Improve commit message.
v3: Add comment to code on memory accounting precision
Signed-off-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
This reverts commit 2906e2034c.
Fixes a regression in the glean depthStencil test.
Reverting this does not affect any tests in es3conform, so a more recent
patch must have also fixed the failure this one was intended to fix.
Reported-by: lu hua <huax.lu@intel.com>
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=59494
v2: Update to handle BufferSize being -1 and return a NULL sampler
view if the specified range would cause out of bounds access.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Acked-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
v2: Record texObj.BufferSize as -1 in TexBuffer(non-Range) instead
of the buffer's current size so we know we always have to use the
full size of the buffer object (i.e. even if it changes without the
user calling TexBuffer again) for the texture.
Clarify invalid offset alignment error message.
v3: Use extra GL_CORE-only section in get_hash_params.py for
TEXTURE_BUFFER_OFFSET_ALIGNMENT.
v4: Remove unnecessary check for profile in _mesa_TexBufferRange.
Add check for extension enable in get_tex_level_parameter_buffer.
v5: Fix position in gl_API.xml.
Add comment about meaning of BufferSize == -1.
v6: Add back checks for core profile and add a note about it.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Check that the return value from xcb_dri2_swap_buffers_reply is
non-NULL before accessing the struct members.
Note: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
S8_UNORM was inadvertedly supported together with Z16_UNORM.
I tried to update the code to accomodate stencil-only -- it seemed a simple
thing to do -- but "fbo-stencil clear GL_STENCIL_INDEX8" still fails,
and it's not worth debugging.
Therefore although this change tries to update for S8_UNORM, it also
disables it completely.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
This special path hadn't been exercised by my earlier testing, and mask
values weren't being properly truncated to match the values.
This change fixes that.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
The struct padding got broken by c789b981b2.
This caused serious performance regression because part of the key was
uninitialized and hence the shader always recompiled (at least on release
builds...).
While here also fix key size calculation when the number of samplers
and the number of sampler views are different.
v2: add comment
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
The swrast fragment program interpreter has trouble computing the
right texture LOD because it doesn't have easy access to input
derivatives. This causes the GLSL-based meta generate mipmap code
to fetch texels from the wrong mipmap level.
One possible fix would be to set the GL_TEXTURE_MIN/MAX_LOD parameters
to limit sampling from the right level. But let's just use the
_mesa_generate_mipmap() fallback since it's a lot faster than using
the fragment shader interpreter.
Fixes http://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=54240
Note: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The gallium docs for pipe_screen::is_format_supported() says that
samples==0 or samples==1 both mean that multisampling is not supported.
Return GL_MAX_SAMPLES==0 instead of 1 for consistency with other drivers.
Note: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Simply by adjusting the vector element width after/before
reading/writing the depth-stencil values.
Ran several GL_DEPTH_COMPONENT16 piglit tests without regressions.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
The maximum number of URB entries come from the 3DSTATE_URB_VS and
3DSTATE_URB_GS state packet documentation; the thread count information
comes from the 3DSTATE_VS and 3DSTATE_PS state packet documentation.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Eugeni Dodonov <eugeni.dodonov@intel.com>
The packet length may change at some point in the future. Specifying it
explicitly (rather than hardcoding it in the command #define) allows us
to change it much more easily in the future.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
I did not list the *_get_program_binary extensions since they're not
useful to anyone with their current implementation (that supports 0
binary formats).
Before, we were keeping a CPU-only buffer to accumulate the batchbuffer in,
which was an improvement over mapping the batch through the GTT directly
(since any readback or other failure to stream through write combining
correctly would hurt). However, on LLC-sharing architectures we can do better
by mapping the batch directly, which reduces the cache footprint of the
application since we no longer have this extra copy of a batchbuffer around.
Improves performance of GLBenchmark 2.1 offscreen on IVB by 3.5% +/- 0.4%
(n=21). Improves Lightsmark performance by 1.1 +/- 0.1% (n=76). Improves
cairo-gl performance by 1.9% +/- 1.4% (n=57).
No statistically significant difference in GLB2.1 on SNB (n=37). Improves
cairo-gl performance by 2.1% +/- 0.1% (n=278).
Fixes side effect in assertion defects reported by Coverity.
Note: This is a candidate for the 9.1 branch.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Currently a gralloc internal structure is exposed to Mesa,
Use a query function instead to maintain ABI compatibility.
Signed-off-by: Tapani Pälli <tapani.palli@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Old kernel do not have dma support, patch pushed were missing some
of the check needed to not use dma.
Signed-off-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
Only drivers supporting DRI2 version >=4 support GLX_INTEL_swap_event.
So lets mark it as such otherwise applications which use this extension
(i.e. everything based on Clutter, e.g. gnome-shell) break horribly on
drivers supporting DRI2 versions only up to 3.
Note: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Get rid of special handling for reserved regs.
Use one intrinsic for all kinds of interpolation.
v2[Vincent Lejeune]: Rebased against current master
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
r600_bytecode::ar_chan stores the register channel for the value that
will be loaded into the AR register.
At the moment, this field is only used by the LLVM backend. The default
backend always sets ar_chan = 0.
We keep track of ring emission order in a stack, whenever we need to
flush we empty the stack in a fifo order. There is few helpers function
for bo mapping and other ring activities that will make sure that
the ring stack is properly flush and submitted.
v2: fix st flush path, and other flush path to properly flush all
rings if necessary
v3: - improve name of ring helpers
- make sure that each time a cs is gona be written it endup at
top of the stack to avoid any issue such as :
STACK[0] = dma (withbo A,B)
STACK[1] = gfx (withbo C,D)
Now if code try to emit a dma command relative to bo C or D
it will start writting cmd stream into the cs and once it
reach the point where it adds relocation it will flush.
At that point the cs will have cmd that don't have proper
relocation into the relocation buffer and kernel will just
refuse to run.
v4: - Drop the stack idea as it turn out there is no way to use it
or benefit from it. Any time the driver start command on other
ring, it always need to flush the previous ring. So make code
simpler by not using a stack.
Signed-off-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
Add ring support, you can create a cs for each ring. DMA ring is
bit special regarding relocation as you must emit as much relocation
as there is use of the buffer.
v2: - Improved comment on relocation changes
- Use a single thread to queue cs submittion this simplify driver
code while not impacting performances. Rational for this is that
you have to wait for all previous submission to have completed
so there was never a case while we could have 2 different thread
submitting a command stream at the same time. This code just
consolidate submission into one single thread per winsys.
v3: - Do not use semaphore for empty queue signaling, instead use
cond var. This is because it's tricky to maintain an even number
of call to semaphore wait and semaphore signal (the number of
cs in the stack would for instance make that number vary).
Signed-off-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
Make it obvious what "unit" this is (no change in functionality).
draw still uses "unit" in places where it changes the shader by adding
texture sampling itself - it seems like this can't work with shaders
using dx10-style sample opcodes (can't mix gl-style and dx10-style
sample instructions in a shader).
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Split the sampler interface to use separate sampler and texture (sampler_view)
state. This is needed to support dx10-style sampling instructions.
This is not quite complete since both draw/llvmpipe don't really track
textures/samplers independently yet, as well as the gallivm code not quite
using the right sampler or texture index respectively (but it should work
for the sampling codes used by opengl).
We are however losing some optimizations in the process, apply_max_lod will
no longer work, and we potentially could end up with more (unnecessary)
recompiles (if switching textures with/without mipmaps only so it shouldn't
be too bad).
v2: don't use different callback structs for sampler/sampler view functions
(which just complicates things), fix up sampling code to actually use the
right texture or sampler index, and similar for llvmpipe/draw actually
distinguish between samplers and sampler views.
v3: fix more of PIPE_MAX_SAMPLER / PIPE_MAX_SHADER_SAMPLER_VIEWS mismatches
(both in draw and llvmpipe), based on feedback from José get rid of unneeded
static sampler derived state.(which also fixes the only 2 piglit regressions
due to a forgotten assignment), fix comments based on Brian's feedback.
v4: remove some accidental unrelated whitespace changes
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
npix_x/y/z is wrong with NPOT textures, since it's always aligned to POT
if the level is non-zero, so we can't use that.
This fixes piglit/spec/EXT_texture_shared_exponent/fbo-generatemipmap-formats.
Fixes a crash when the Redway3D Turbine demo exits. We've made this
change in other places in the past. The root issue is texture objects
are being shared by multiple contexts and sampler views get shared too.
Sampler views have a context pointer and if that context gets deleted
we may try to reference that context when finally deleting the sampler
view.
pipe_sampler_view_release() avoids this problem because it takes
an explicit context.
Reviewed-by: Zack Rusin <zackr@vmware.com>
Check the return value of calls to u_upload_alloc() and
u_upload_data() and return early if needed.
Since we don't have a way to propagate errors all the way up to
Mesa through pipe_context::draw_vbo(), call debug_warn_once() so
the user might have some clue about OOM errors.
Note: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
We weren't properly checking the return value of these calls (and
calls to u_upload_data()) to detect OOM errors.
Note: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Some callers of this function were checking the 'ptr' result to see if
the function failed. But the correct way is to check the regular
return value for PIPE_ERROR_x. Now we initialize all the returned
values at the top of the function in case we do hit an error (like OOM).
Callers are more likely to detect OOM conditions now. But there
are some callers which don't do any error checking...
Note: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
That is, evaluate constant expressions for the following functions:
packSnorm4x8, unpackSnorm4x8
packUnorm4x8, unpackUnorm4x8
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
For each function {pack,unpack}{Snorm,Unorm}4x8, add a corresponding
opcode to enum ir_expression_operation. Validate the new opcodes in
ir_validate.cpp.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
We were using the NEED_RADEON_GALLIUM conditional to decide whether or not
to build llvm_wrapper.cpp, which is required for using the LLVM backend.
llvm_wrapper.cpp needs to be linked against the LLVM IPO libary
and this library is only added to LLVM_LIBS if either opencl or the
r600-llvm-compiler is enabled.
The NEED_RADEON_GALLIUM conditional is set to true when enabling the
radeonsi driver, so if the radeonsi and r600 drivers are enabled without
also enabling opencl or r600-llvm-compiler, llvm_wrapper.cpp will be
built, but the IPO library won't be added to LLVM_LIBS. This was
causing unresolved symbol errors when buiding with this configuration.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=59831
Tested-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Dereffing all the values in the two callers was just pointless, and
the function isn't inlined so there was actual code impact.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The core Mesa code has just one more case than this (GL_BITMAP), so I
don't see any cause to special-case it.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This was added in b93684f5f3, but there's
no need for it -- get_size has to succeed, and it has an assert for us
in debug builds.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
For our current types, the required alignment is actually just 1 byte.
When we get doubles, we have to worry (those have to be aligned to the
natural size), but we don't have doubles yet and they'll just be a
special case.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
v2: A previous patch contained a spurious hunk that removed an
assignment to ir_variable::uniform_block. That hunk was moved to this
patch. Suggested by Carl Worth.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
glGetActiveUniform is not supposed to report block members that are not
active even if they are included in the layout of the block. The block
layout is determined from the GLSL_TYPE_INTERFACE that defines the
block, so eliminating the ir_variables that correspond to the individual
fields is safe.
Fixes gles3conform test
uniform_buffer_object_getuniformindices_for_for_nonexistent_or_not_active_uniform_names.
This also fixes the assertion failures (added in the previous commit) in
gles3conform uniform_buffer_object_index_of_not_active_block,
uniform_buffer_object_inherit_and_override_layouts, and
uniform_buffer_object_repeat_global_scope_layouts.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Use the function added in the previous commit.
This temporarily causes gles3conform
uniform_buffer_object_index_of_not_active_block,
uniform_buffer_object_inherit_and_override_layouts, and
uniform_buffer_object_repeat_global_scope_layouts to assertion fail.
This is fixed in the next commit.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Calculate all of the block member offsets, the IndexNames, and
everything else to do with every UBO.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Pretty much all of the compile-time, per-compilation unit block data is
about to get the axe.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
glGetUniformIndices requires that the block instance index not be
present in the name of queried uniforms. However,
gl_uniform_buffer_variable::Name will include the instance index. The
IndexName field is added to handle this difference.
Note that currently IndexName will always point to the same string as
Name. This will change soon.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
Pretty much all of the compile-time, per-compilation unit block data is
about to get the axe.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
This flavor takes a type and a base name. It will be used to handle
cases where the block name (instead of the instance name) is used for an
interface block.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
v2: Inspite of the spell checker, spell recurse correctly. Suggested by
Carl Worth.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Eventually the gl_uniform_block information won't be calculated until
linking. Block names need to be checked for name clashes during
compiling, so we have to track it differently.
v2: Update the commit message. Suggested by Carl Worth.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Not used yet, but the UBO layout visitor will use this.
v2: Remove a spruious hunk. This is moved to the patch "glsl: Remove
ir_variable::uniform_block". Suggested by Carl Worth.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Not used yet, but the UBO layout visitor will use this.
v2: Add some commentary as to why row_major is always set to false in
process. Suggesed by Paul Berry.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
For the first declaration below, there will be an ir_variable named
"instance" whose type and whose instance_type will be the same
glsl_type. For the second declaration, there will be an ir_variable
named "f" whose type is float and whose instance_type is B2.
"instance" is an interface instance variable, but "f" is not.
uniform B1 {
float f;
} instance;
uniform B2 {
float f;
};
v2: Copy the comment message documentation into the code. Suggested by
Paul Berry.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
For variables that are in an interface block or are an instance of an
interface block, this is the GLSL_TYPE_INTERFACE type for that block.
Convert the ir_variable::is_in_uniform_block method added in the
previous commit to use this field instead of ir_variable::uniform_block.
v2: Fix the place-holder comment on ir_variable::interface_type.
Suggested by Paul Berry.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The way a variable is tested for this property is about to change, and
this makes the code easier to modify.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
If the block has an instance name, add the instance name to the symbol
table instead of the individual fields.
Fixes the piglit test interface-name-access-without-interface-name.vert
for real.
v2: Update the comment before the assertion that interface block
definitions won't generate instructions. Suggested by Paul Berry.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Interfaces are structurally identical to structures from the compiler's
point of view. They have some additional restrictions, and generally
GPUs use different instructions to access them. Using a different base
type should make this a bit easier.
This commit also adds the glsl_type::interface_packing fields. For
GLSL_TYPE_INTERFACE types, this will track the specified packing mode.
It is analogous to gl_uniform_buffer::_Packing.
v2: Add serveral missing GLSL_TYPE_INTERFACE cases in switch-statements.
v3: Add information about glsl_type::interface_packing. Move row_major
checking in glsl_type::record_key_compare from this patch to the
previous patch. Both suggested by Paul Berry.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
For now, this will always be false. In the near future, an "interface"
type will be added that shares a lot of infrastructure with structures.
v2: Move row_major checking in glsl_type::record_key_compare from the
next patch to this patch. Suggested by Paul Berry.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The size is parsed and stored in the AST, but it is not used yet.
Processing of the array size is added in the patch "glsl: Handle
instance array declarations"
v2: Update the commit message (suggested by Carl Worth). Add a comment
to ast_uniform_block::array_size (suggested by Paul Berry).
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
In GLSL ES 3.00 (and GLSL 1.50), uniform blocks can have an associated
"instance name", which essentially namespaces the variables inside.
This patch adds basic parsing for this new feature, but doesn't yet hook
it up to actually do anything yet.
It does not support for arrays of interface blocks; a later commit will
take care of that.
This change temporarily regresses the piglit test
interface-name-access-without-interface-name.vert. This shader failed
to compile before (the expected result), but it failed to compile for
the wrong reason. This is not a real regression.
v2: Add some comments to ast_uniform_block::instance_name. Suggested by
Paul Berry.
Reviewed-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The existing code has a lot of duplication; the only difference between
the two cases is whether we merge in an additional layout qualifier.
Apparently creating a layout_qualifieropt rule that can be empty causes
a lot of conflicts and confusion. However, refactoring out the guts of
the ast_uniform_block creation works fine.
Reviewed-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Also slightly change the compatibility test. Instead of comparing the
offsets of the block variables, compare the packing mode of the blocks.
Ideally we don't want to assign the offsets until a later stage of
linking.
This is put in a new file called link_uniform_blocks.cpp. Some new
functions related to uniform blocks are going to live in that file as
well.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This makes it easier to find switch-statements that need to be updated
after a new GLSL_TYPE_* is added because the compiler will generate a
warning.
Switch-statements that only had a small number of cases (e.g.,
everything in ir_constant_expression.cpp) were not modified. I may
regret that decision when we eventually add support for doubles.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Too much attention was paid to the first paragraphs, and not enough to
the last little note that "oh, by the way, the rendered things
themselves still have to be clipped to just 8192 wide/high".
Fixes GTF's clip.c test with 4096 or higher width on ivb, where one of
the triangles got the upper half of its pixels dropped.
Tested-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Khronos has apparently decided that depth textures with sized formats
(allowed with ARB_internalformat_query or ES 3.0) should be treated as
GL_RED, while unsized formats (an existing feature) should be treated
as GL_INTENSITY for compatibility with ES 2.0.
Ian is proposing changes to ARB_internalformat_query which will make
this actually legal and consistent.
A similar problem exists with GL 4.2, but we're going to ignore that
for the time being.
Tested on Ivybridge: no Piglit regressions; fixes 4 es3conform tests:
- depth_texture_fbo
- depth_texture_fbo_clear
- depth_texture_teximage
- depth_texture_texsubimage
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Since patch "i965: Validate requested GLES context version in
brwCreateContext", we have been able to create ES 3.0 contexts due to the
max version check. So...bump the max version.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
v2: Add ARB_internalformat_query to the list of required extensions.
v3: Add OES_depth_texture_cube_map to the list of required extensions.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
s/src/src_w/
That little typo, which sneaked into v4 of the previous patch, generates
incorrect fs code.
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
FIXME: This patch emits VS code that violates documented hardware
restrictions and then relies on undocumented behavior that results from
that violation. This patch passes all tests, but should be fixed ASAP to
conform to the hardware documentation.
v2: Explain undocumented hardware behavior. Improve comments.
v3: Use ALU1 helper methods F32TO16() and F16TO32(). [for anholt]
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com> (v1)
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
The GLSL ES 3.00 operations packHalf2x16 and unpackHalf2x16 will emit
these opcodes.
- Define the opcodes BRW_OPCODE_{F32TO16,F16TO32}.
- Add the opcodes to the brw_disasm table.
- Define convenience functions brw_{F32TO16,F16TO32}.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
On gen < 7, we fully lower all operations to arithmetic and bitwise
operations.
On gen >= 7, we fully lower the Snorm2x16 and Unorm2x16 operations, and
partially lower the Half2x16 operations.
v2:
- Comment that scalarization is needed only for SOA code [for idr].
- Replace switch-statement with if-statement [for idr].
- Remove misplaced hunk from previous patch [found by idr].
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Tuner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Lower them to arithmetic and bit manipulation expressions.
v2: Rewrite using ir_builder [for idr].
v3: Comment typos. [for mattst88]
v4: Fix arithmetic error in comments.
Factor out a shift instruction.
Don't heap allocate factory.instructions.
[for paul]
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com> (v2)
Reviewed-by: Matt Tuner <mattst88@gmail.com> (v3)
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com> (v4)
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
In ir_expression's constructor, the cases for {bit,logic}_{and,or,xor}
failed to handle the case when both operands were vectors.
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Replace tabs with spaces. According to docs/devinfo.html, Mesa's
indetation style is:
indent -br -i3 -npcs --no-tabs infile.c -o outfile.c
This patch prevents whitespace weirdness in the next patch.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Add two overloaded variants of
ir_if *if_tree()
The new functions allow one to chain together if-trees within a single C++
expression that resembles a real if-statement.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Using this enum improves the readibility of calls to assign(), whose third
argument is a writemask.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Add method ir_factory::constant. This little method constructs an
ir_constant using the factory's mem_ctx.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Add the following functions, each of which construct the similarly named
ir expression:
div, round_even, clamp
equal, less, greater, lequal, gequal
logic_not, logic_and, logic_or
bit_not, bit_or, bit_and, lshift, rshift
f2i, i2f, f2u, u2f, i2u, u2i
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
That is, evaluate constant expressions of the following functions:
packSnorm2x16 unpackSnorm2x16
packUnorm2x16 unpackUnorm2x16
packHalf2x16 unpackHalf2x16
v2: Reuse _mesa_pack_float_to_half and its inverse to evaluate
pack/unpackHalf2x16. [for idr]
v3: Whitespace fixes. [for mattst88]
Don't cast neg floats directly to uint16; use an intermediate cast to
int16. [for paul]
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com> (v2)
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Tuner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Not all float32 values can be exactly represented as a float16.
_mesa_float_to_half() rounded such intermediate float32 values to zero by
truncating unrepresentable bits in the mantissa.
This patch improves _mesa_float_to_half() by rounding intermediate float32
values to the nearest float16; when the float32 is exactly between two
float16 values we round to the one with an even mantissa. This behavior is
preferred over the old behavior because:
- It has reduced bias relative to the old behavior.
- It reproduces the behavior of real hardware: opcode F32TO16 in
Intel's GPU ISA.
- By reproducing the behavior of the GPU (at least on Intel hardware),
compile-time evaluation of constant packHalf2x16 GLSL expressions will
result in the same value as if the expression were executed on the GPU.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Move round_to_even's definition to mesa/main so that _mesa_float_to_half()
can use it in order to eliminate rounding bias.
In additon to moving the fuction definition, prefix its name with "_mesa",
just as all other functions in mesa/main are prefixed.
v2: Fix Android build.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
A subsequent patch will add mesa/main/imports.c as a dependency to the
compiler, which in turn requires that _mesa_warning() be defined.
The real definition of _mesa_warning() is in mesa/main/errors.c, but to
pull that file into the standalone scaffolding would require transitively
pulling in the dispatch tables.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
For each function {pack,unpack}{Snorm,Unorm,Half}2x16, add a corresponding
opcode to enum ir_expression_operation. Validate the new opcodes in
ir_validate.cpp.
Also, add opcodes for scalarized variants of the Half2x16 functions. (The
code generator for the i965 fragment shader requires that all vector
operations be scalarized. A lowering pass, to be added later, will
scalarize the Half2x16 functions).
v2: Fix assertion message in ir_to_mesa [for idr].
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Tuner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
For each of the following functions, add a declaration to
builtins/profiles/300es.glsl and create new file
builtins/ir/${funcname}.ir:
packSnorm2x16 unpackSnorm2x16
packUnorm2x16 unpackUnorm2x16
packHalf2x16 unpackHalf2x16
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Tuner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
s/num_operands()/get_num_operands()/
Discovered because Eclipse failed to resolve the false reference.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
The bug: The printed horizontal stride was the numerical value of the
BRW_HORIZONTAL_$N enum.
The fix: Translate the enum before printing.
Note: This is a candidate for the stable releases.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
When possible, glCopyTexSubImage calls are performed using the
hardware blitter. However, according to the Ivy Bridge PRM, Vol1
Part4, section 1.2.1.2 (Graphics Data Size Limitations):
The BLT engine is capable of transferring very large quantities of
graphics data. Any graphics data read from and written to the
destination is permitted to represent a number of pixels that
occupies up to 65,536 scan lines and up to 32,768 bytes per scan
line at the destination. The maximum number of pixels that may be
represented per scan line’s worth of graphics data depends on the
color depth.
With an RGBA32F color buffer (which has 16 bytes per pixel) this
imposes a maximum width of 2048 pixels. Other pixel formats have
accordingly larger limits.
To make matters worse, if the pitch of the buffer is 32k or greater,
intel_copy_texsubimage's call to intelEmitCopyBlit will overflow
intelEmitCopyBlit's src_pitch and dst_pitch parameters (which are
16-bit signed integers).
We can conveniently avoid both problems by avoiding use of the blitter
when the miptree's pitch is >= 32k.
Fixes gles3conform "framebuffer_blit_functionality_magnifying_blit"
tests when the buffer width is equal to 8192.
Note: this is very similar to the recent patch "intel: Fix ReadPixels
on buffers whose width >= 32kbytes" except that it applies to
glCopyTexSubImage instead of glReadPixels. In a future patch it would
be nice to refactor the code so that (a) overflow is avoided, and (b)
intelEmitCopyBlit is responsible for checking whether the blitter can
handle the width, so that all callers of intelEmitCopyBlit work
properly, rather than just these two.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Previously I thought that varying structs had been added to GLSL ES
3.00 by mistake, because chapter 11 of the GLSL ES 3.00 spec
("Counting of Inputs and Outputs") failed to mention how structs
should be handled. Khronos has clarified
(https://cvs.khronos.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=9828) that varying
structs are indeed required, and that chapter 11 will be modified to
indicate that the minimal reference packing algorithm flattens varying
structs to their individual components.
Mesa doesn't flatten varying structs to their individual components,
but this is ok, since it packs varyings of all kinds with no wasted
space at all (except where this is impossible due to differing
interpolation modes), so it will outperform the minimal reference
packing algorithm in all but the most pathological cases.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
It is not clear from the GLSL ES 3.00 spec how transform feedback is
supposed to apply to varying structs:
- There is no specification for how the structure is to be packed when
it is recorded into the transform feedback buffer.
- There is no reasonable value for GetTransformFeedbackVarying to
return as the "type" of the variable.
We currently have a Khronos bug requesting clarification on how this
feature is supposed to work
(https://cvs.khronos.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=9856).
This patch just disables transform feedback of varying structs for
now; we can implement the proper behaviour once we find out from
Khronos what it is.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This patch adds code to lower_packed_varyings to handle varyings of
type struct. Varying structs are currently packed in the most naive
possible way (in declaration order, with no gaps), so there is a
potential loss of runtime efficiency. In a later patch it would be
nice to replace this with a "flattening" approach (wherein a varying
struct is flattened to individual varyings corresponding to each of
its structure elements), so that the linker can align each structure
element independently. However, that would require a significantly
more complex implementation.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This patch paves the way for allowing varying structs by generalizing
varying_matches::compute_packing_order to handle any type of varying.
Previously, we packed in the order (vec4, vec2, float, vec3), with
matrices being packed according to the size of their columns. Now, we
pack everything according to its number of components mod 4, in the
order (0, 2, 1, 3).
There is no behavioural change for vectors. Matrices are now packed
slightly differently:
- mat2x2 gets assigned PACKING_ORDER_VEC4 instead of
PACKING_ORDER_VEC2. This is slightly better, because it guarantees
that the matrix occupies a single varying slot.
- mat2x3 gets assigned PACKING_ORDER_VEC2 instead of
PACKING_ORDER_VEC3. This is kind of a wash. Previously, mat2x3 had
a 25% chance of having neither of its columns double parked, a 50%
chance of having exactly one of its columns double parked, and a 25%
chance of having both of its columns double parked. Now it always
has exactly one of its columns double parked.
- mat3x3 gets assigned PACKING_ORDER_SCALAR instead of
PACKING_ORDER_VEC3. This doesn't affect much, since in both cases
there is no guarantee of how the matrix will be aligned.
- mat4x2 gets assigned PACKING_ORDER_VEC4 instead of
PACKING_ORDER_VEC2. This is slightly better for the same reason as
in mat2x2.
- mat4x3 gets assigned PACKING_ORDER_VEC4 instead of
PACKING_ORDER_VEC3. This is slightly better for the same reason as
in mat2x2.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Previously, it didn't matter whether structure splitting tried to
split shader ins/outs, because structs were prohibited from being used
for shader ins/outs. However, GLSL 3.00 ES supports varying structs.
In order for varying structs to work, we need to make sure that
structure splitting doesn't get applied to them, because if it does,
then the linker won't be able to match up varyings properly.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This patch replaces the three ir_variable_mode enums:
- ir_var_in
- ir_var_out
- ir_var_inout
with the following five:
- ir_var_shader_in
- ir_var_shader_out
- ir_var_function_in
- ir_var_function_out
- ir_var_function_inout
This eliminates a frustrating ambiguity: it used to be impossible to
tell whether an ir_var_{in,out} variable was a shader in/out or a
function in/out without seeing where the variable was declared in the
IR. This complicated some optimization and lowering passes, and would
have become a problem for implementing varying structs.
In the lisp-style serialization of GLSL IR to strings performed by
ir_print_visitor.cpp and ir_reader.cpp, I've retained the names "in",
"out", and "inout" for function parameters, to avoid introducing code
churn to the src/glsl/builtins/ir/ directory.
Note: a couple of comments in the code seemed to indicate that we were
planning for a possible future in which geometry shaders could have
shader-scope inout variables. Our GLSL grammar rejects shader-scope
inout variables, and I've been unable to find any evidence in the GLSL
standards documents (or extensions) that this will ever be allowed, so
I've eliminated these comments.
Reviewed-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The case statement purported to handle the addition of ir_var_const_in
and ir_var_inout builtin variables. But no such variables exist.
This patch removes the unnecessary cases, and adds a comment
explaining why they're not needed.
Reviewed-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
For texelFetchOffset(), we just add the texel offsets to the coordinate
rather than using the message header's offset fields. So we don't
actually need a header on Gen5+.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
When possible, glReadPixels calls are performed using the hardware
blitter. However, according to the Ivy Bridge PRM, Vol1 Part4,
section 1.2.1.2 (Graphics Data Size Limitations):
The BLT engine is capable of transferring very large quantities of
graphics data. Any graphics data read from and written to the
destination is permitted to represent a number of pixels that
occupies up to 65,536 scan lines and up to 32,768 bytes per scan
line at the destination. The maximum number of pixels that may be
represented per scan line’s worth of graphics data depends on the
color depth.
With an RGBA32F color buffer (which has 16 bytes per pixel) this
imposes a maximum width of 2048 pixels.
To make matters worse, if the pitch of the buffer is 32k or greater,
intel_miptree_map_blit's call to intelEmitCopyBlit will overflow
intelEmitCopyBlit's src_pitch and dst_pitch parameters (which are
16-bit signed integers).
We can conveniently avoid both problems by avoiding the readpixels
blit path when the miptree's pitch is >= 32k.
Fixes gles3conform "half_float" tests when the buffer width is greater
than 2048.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Tested-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This reverts commit 7824ab8070.
Now that we force linking with LLVM shared libs when building clover,
we can link against libgallium.la with no problems.
If we build clover with LLVM static libraries, then clover and also each
pipe_*.so driver that is built will contain their own static copy of
LLVM. The recent automake changes have uncovered a problem where
the pipe_*.so drivers try to use clover's LLVM symbols. This causes
LLVM's static registry objects to be initialized each time
a pipe_*.so driver is loaded by clover. Initializing these objects
multiple times is not allowed and leads to assertion failures in the
LLVM code.
We can avoid all these problems by having clover and all the pipe_*.so
drivers link against the same LLVM shared library.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=59334https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=59534
v2:
- Fix shared library detection when LLVM is built with CMake
In order to determine which static LLVM libraries are needed we pass
a list of components to llvm-config and it generates the list of
library dependencies for us. The advantage of only calling llvm-config
one time is that it can determine if two components depend on the same
library and then add it to the output list only once. The old practice
of having each driver call llvm-config to add its own dependencies to
$(LLVM_LIBS) caused many libraries to be added to this variable multiple
times.
Always enable the use of pre-compressed texture data. The ability to
perform on-line compression still requires the presence of libtxc_dxtn
or an explicit driconf over-ride. Applications that just want to submit
precompessed data when an on-line compressor is not available can look
for the GL_EXT_texture_compression_dxt1 and
GL_ANGLE_texture_compression_dxt[35] extensions.
v2: Only enable the extensions that do not require on-line compression
by default. The previous statement "This should not impact many (if
any) real applications." proved to be false for at least Sauerbraten.
This application mostly submits pre-compressed data, but it also can
submit uncompressed data that it asks the driver to compress.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com> [v1]
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org> [v1]
Acked-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net> [v1]
Acked-by: Lee Salzman <lsalzman@gmail.com>
This is technically outside the ANGLE spec, but it seems unlikely to
cause any harm.
v2: Simplify the extension checks by assuming the ANGLE extension will
always be enabled by any driver that enables the EXT. Suggested by
Eric Anholt.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Acked-by: Lee Salzman <lsalzman@gmail.com>
For non-generic compressed format we assert two things:
1. The format has already been validated against the set of available
extensions.
2. The driver only enables the extension if it supports all of the
formats that are part of that extension.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Similar to the previous commit, we may be using a texture with actual RGBA
storage for the GL_ALPHA format, so force the color values to 0.0.
This commit fixes the following piglit (sub) tests:
EXT_texture_snorm/fbo-blending-formats
GL_ALPHA16_SNORM
GL_ALPHA8_SNORM
GL_ALPHA_SNORM
Note: Haswell bypasses this swizzle code, so may require an independent fix
for this bug.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
We may be using a texture with actual RGBA storage for these formats, so force
the alpha value read to 1.0.
This commit fixes the following piglit (sub) tests:
ARB_texture_float/fb-blending-formats
GL_RGB16F_ARB
EXT_framebuffer_object/fbo-blending-formats
GL_RGB10
GL_RGB12
GL_RGB16
EXT_texture_snorm/fbo-blending-formats
GL_RGB16_SNORM
GL_RGB8_SNORM
GL_RGB_SNORM
These test improvements depend on the previous commit as well. That commit
smashes alpha to 1.0 for the case of ReadPixels (so fixes "FBO testing" as
reported by this test), while this commit smashes alpha to 1.0 for the case of
texturing (fixed the "window testing" as reported by this test).
Note: Haswell bypasses this swizzle code, so may require an independent fix
for this bug.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
When performing a ReadPixels operation, we may be reading from a buffer that
stores alpha values, but that is actually representing a buffer with no alpha
channel. In this case, while rebasing the values, touch up all alpha values
read to 1.0.
This commit fixes the following piglit (sub) tests:
ARB_texture_float/fbo-colormask-formats
GL_RBG16F_ARB
EXT_texture_snorm/fbo-colormask-formats
GL_RGB16_SNORM
GL_RGB8_SNORM
GL_RGB_SNORM
It likely improves the results of other tests as well, but a PASS remains
elusive due to additional bugs.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
The renderbuffer's Format field may have an alpha channel even when the
underlying _BaseFormat does not. This can happen when mesa chooses to use
RGBA16 for an RGB16 format, for example.
So look at _BaseFormat when deciding whether to fixup the blend factors.
This test improves the results of at least the following piglit tests:
EXT_frambebuffer_object/fbo-blending-formats
{GL_RGB10, GL_RGB12, GL_RGB16}
EXT_texture_snorm/fbo-blending-formats
{GL_RGB16_SNORM, GLRGB8_SNORM, GL_RGB_SNORM}
But none of these actually change from FAIL to PASS yet. The R, G, and B probe
values are fixed with this commit, but the tests still fail because the alpha
values are still wrong.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
/ vs \ mismatch was causing .objs to be put in the source tree, causing
breakeage when doing different build types in the same tree (eg., debug
vs release).
Fix this by normalizing everything to / slashes.
It's probably a good idea to purge all .objs from source tree to prevent
issues completely.
Thanks to Fredrik Höglund, all the hard work was already done.
Tested using a modified oglconform (that actually runs these tests on
our driver); it looks like there may be some bugs when using client
arrays. All applicable non-compatibility tests passed.
For now, only enable it in core profiles.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Tested-by: Ian Romanick <idr@freedesktop.org>
Squashed with two reverts:
Revert "android: Update for builtin_stubs.cpp move"
This reverts commit c0def90ede.
Revert "scons: Update for builtin_stubs.cpp"
This reverts commit 8ac4b82699.
Tested-by: Andreas Boll <andreas.boll.dev@gmail.com>
Tested-on-Android-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
I don't see how this could have ever worked right.
The screen-space interpolation code uses the vertex->data[pos_attr]
position which contain window coords. But window coords are only
computed for the unclipped vertices; the clipped vertices have
undefined window coords (see draw_cliptest_tmp.h).
Use the vertex clip coords instead which are always defined.
Fixes http://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=55476
(piglit fbo-blit-stretch failure on softpipe)
Note: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
In debug builds, set clipped vertex window coordinates to NaN values
to help debugging. Otherwise, we're just leaving the coordinate in clip
space and it's invalid to use it later expecting it to be a window coord.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Fixes piglit spec/ARB_sampler_objects/sampler-incomplete and
spec/EXT_texture_swizzle/depth_texture_mode_and_swizzle.
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
Signed-off-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
This error was added in the 3.0.1 update to the OpenGL ES 3.0 spec.
Fixes the updated gles3conform packed_depth_stencil_parameters test.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Fixes gles3conform test CoverageES30. It temporarily regresses some
framebuffer_blit tests, but the failing subcases have been determined to
be invalid for OpenGL ES 3.0.
v2: Fix typo in depth (and stencil) RB checking. Noticed by Ken.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
These were introduced in 2000 during a rework of the TNL module (commit
cab974cf6c), though I'm having a hard time
finding an instance there of one of these Exec functions being changed
at runtime.
Regardless, as far as I can tell now, these functions don't get changed,
by grepping for calls to SET_* to change the dispatch table (we do change
functions in GLvertexformat at runtime, but those don't overlap with
this set of functions). Remove them and just let them be initialized to
the same functions as are in the Exec table.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This cuts out a ton of code to make functions not set to a save_ variant
match.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This will let us copy from the Exec dispatch to deal with our commands that
don't get compiled into display lists.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
I want to drive the Save dispatch table setup from this same function.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
All callers are in Mesa core and all use _gloffset_COUNT, so just rely on
the already baked-in use of _gloffset_COUNT in the function.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
We now have a separate dispatch table for begin/end that prevent these
functions from being entered during that time. The
ASSERT_OUTSIDE_BEGIN_END_WITH_RETVALs are left because I don't want to
change any return values or introduce new error-only stubs at this
point.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This is a step toward getting rid of ASSERT_OUTSIDE_BEGIN_END() in Mesa.
v2: Finish create_beginend_table() comment, move loopback API init into it,
and add a const flag. (suggestions by Brian)
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com> (v1)
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com> (v1)
My change 7ca4f07b5b caused errors to not
be thrown when they should, because the new if statement for ExecuteFlag
made the CurrentSavePrimitive not get set. And on further review, we
shouldn't be validating our primitive in GL_COMPILE mode, since the
command shouldn't be executed yet.
Partially fixes piglit gl-1.0-beginend-coverage.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This reduces jitter slightly in a cleaner way, without desynchronizing mplayer2 as badly
when falling behind.
Signed-off-by: Maarten Lankhorst <maarten.lankhorst@canonical.com>
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
It appears that scons implicit dependency scanners fail to chain
dependencies of generated headers when these are outside the build tree.
This patch ensures generated source files are _always_ put in the build
tree. I'm not 100% this will fix all depency issues, but from my
experiments it does seem to fix this.
NOTE: For this to be effective it is necessary to clean the source tree
from generated header/source files.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
There really isn't any point. There is no resource savings, and we have
to do gymnastics in the driver to make it work.
There are also bad interactions with multisampling and OpenGL ES 3.0.
In ES3, a multisample-to-singlesample blit must have identical source
and destination format. This means a multisample RGBA8 to singlesample
RGB8 (window) blit will generate an error. Also in ES3, RGB8 is not a
renderable format. This means that the application CANNOT make an RGB8
multisample renderbuffer.
As a result, if an application gets an RGB8 window and wants to do
multisample FBO rendering, it will probably break.
"Fixes" gles3conform
framebuffer_blit_functionality_multisampled_to_singlesampled_blit test
on RGB8 visuals.
v2: Fix 'formats' array size. Suggested by Ken.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
[ Squashed port of the following r600g commits: - Michel Dänzer ]
commit 428e37c2da
Author: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Date: Tue Oct 2 22:02:54 2012 +0200
r600g: add in-place DB decompression and texturing with DB tiling
The decompression is done in-place and only the compressed tiles are
decompressed. Note: R6xx-R7xx can do that only with Z16 and Z32F.
The texture unit is programmed to use non-displayable tiling and depth
ordering of samples, so that it can fetch the texture in the native DB format.
The latest version of the libdrm surface allocator is required for stencil
texturing to work. The old one didn't create the mipmap tree correctly.
We need a separate mipmap tree for stencil, because the stencil mipmap
offsets are not really depth offsets/4.
There are still some known bugs, but this should save some memory and it also
improves performance a little bit in Lightsmark (especially with low
resolutions; tested with Radeon HD 5000).
The DB->CB copy is still used for transfers.
commit e2f623f1d6
Author: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Date: Sat Jul 28 13:55:59 2012 +0200
r600g: don't decompress depth or stencil if there isn't any
commit 43e226b6ef
Author: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Date: Wed Jul 18 00:32:50 2012 +0200
r600g: optimize uploading depth textures
Make it only copy the portion of a depth texture being uploaded and
not the whole 2D layer.
There is also a little code cleanup.
commit b242adbe5c
Author: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Date: Wed Jul 18 00:17:46 2012 +0200
r600g: remove needless wrapper r600_texture_depth_flush
commit 611dd52942
Author: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Date: Wed Jul 18 00:05:14 2012 +0200
r600g: init_flushed_depth_texture should be able to report errors
commit 80755ff563
Author: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Date: Sat Jul 14 17:06:27 2012 +0200
r600g: properly track which textures are depth
This fixes the issue with have_depth_texture never being set to false.
commit fe1fd67556
Author: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Date: Sun Jul 8 03:10:37 2012 +0200
r600g: don't flush depth textures set as colorbuffers
The only case a depth buffer can be set as a color buffer is when flushing.
That wasn't always the case, but now this code isn't required anymore.
commit 5a17d8318e
Author: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Date: Sun Jul 8 02:14:18 2012 +0200
r600g: flush depth textures bound to vertex shaders
This was missing/broken. There are also minor code cleanups.
commit dee58f94af
Author: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Date: Sun Jul 8 01:54:24 2012 +0200
r600g: do fine-grained depth texture flushing
- maintain a mask of which mipmap levels are dirty (instead of one big flag)
- only flush what was requested at a given point and not the whole resource
(most often only one level and one layer has to be flushed)
Signed-off-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Use r600_resource_texture::flished_depth_texture for GPU access, and
allocate it in the VRAM. For transfers we'll allocate texture in the GTT
and store it in the r600_transfer::staging.
Improves performance when flushed depth texture is frequently used by the
GPU, e.g. in Lightsmark
[ Ported from r600g commit 3770847960 ]
Signed-off-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
[ Squashed port of the following r600g commits: - Michel Dänzer ]
commit c1e8c845ea
Author: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Date: Sat Jul 7 19:10:00 2012 +0200
r600g: inline r600_hw_copy_region
commit 4891c5dc64
Author: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Date: Mon Jun 25 22:53:21 2012 +0200
r600g: inline r600_blit_push_depth and use resource_copy_region
We are going to have a separate resource for depth texturing and transfers
and this is just a transfer thing.
commit da98bb6fc1
Author: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Date: Mon Jun 25 12:45:32 2012 +0200
r600g: split flushed depth texture creation and flushing
Signed-off-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Allow additional format/type combinations based on the
color render buffer to fix failures with gles3-gtf.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
For GLES2/3 allow reading of pixels with format/type based on:
* GL_IMPLEMENTATION_COLOR_READ_FORMAT
* GL_IMPLEMENTATION_COLOR_READ_TYPE
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
[mattst88] v2: Enable only for ES3 per spec.
[mattst88] v3: Use _mesa_is_gles3 since EXT_color_buffer_float is
ES3-only.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
For now I'm just enabling this on the same subset of hardware that has
OpenGL 3.0 enabled. This same functionality is part of OpenGL 3.0, and
there is no matching desktop extension.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
They're part of GL_OES_depth_texture_cube_map, and we'll always enable
that extension in ES3 contexts.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The vs part hasn't been wired up since tgsi_sse2 was disabled in:
commit 4eb3225b38
Author: José Fonseca <jose.r.fonseca@gmail.com>
Date: Tue Nov 8 00:10:47 2011 +0000
Remove tgsi_sse2.
And it would certainly not work correctly in its current state:
draw/draw_vs_ppc.c: In function ‘draw_create_vs_ppc’:
draw/draw_vs_ppc.c:190:24: warning: assignment from incompatible pointer
type [enabled by default]
As with the sse2 backend, this should be done in llvm anyway.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Adam Jackson <ajax@redhat.com>
configure should warn if libxml2 is not found.
libxml2 is needed by glapi/gen.
Fixes error during build in src/mapi/glapi/gen:
ImportError: No module named libxml2
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31598
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This is required by OpenGL ES 3.0 and desktop OpenGL 4.2. Previous
version were ambiguous. This also matches the behavior of NVIDIA's
closed-source driver (version 304.64).
Fixed gles3conformance test uniform_buffer_object_getactiveuniformsiv
and uniform_buffer_object_structure_and_array_element_names (on my
in-progress branch that fixes a bunch of other stuff...YMMV).
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This is required by OpenGL ES 3.0 and desktop OpenGL 4.2. Previous
version were ambiguous. This also matches the behavior of NVIDIA's
closed-source driver (version 304.64).
Fixed gles3conformance test uniform_buffer_object_getactiveuniform.
Several piglit tests expect glGetActiveUniform to *not* include the [0]
on the end. These tests were already failing on NVIDIA, and this change
regresses them on Mesa. Patches have been sent to the piglit mailing
list to fix the tests.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We currently have a bug in this code, and I don't want to fix it in two
places.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The GLSL 1.40 spec says:
"Uniform block names and variable names declared within uniform
blocks are scoped at the program level."
Track the block name in the symbol table and emit errors when conflicts
exist.
Fixes es3conform's uniform_buffer_object_block_name_conflict test, and
fixes the piglit block-name-clashes-with-{variable,function,struct}.vert
tests.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
v2: Fix bad constructor initialization. Noticed by Topi Pohjolainen.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
About both row_major and column_major layout qualifiers, the GLSL spec
says:
"It only affects the layout of matrices."
However, the OpenGL ES 3.0 conformance tests have taken this to mean it
is an error use it elsewhere. This seems logical given that
'layout(row_major) vec4 foo' is probably not what the programmer meant.
The only catch is dealing with structures that contain matrices. Layout
qualifiers cannot be applied directly to fields of structures, so the
only way to affect the layout of the fields is to apply a qualifier to
the structure declaration itself. There is ongoing debate about this
within Khronos, and it seems to be settling in favor of allowing the
qualifiers on structures. I light of this, I have chosen to allow the
qualifiers on structures but emit a warning since the usage may not be
portable.
Fixes gles3conform test
uniform_buffer_object_layouts_not_for_matrix_type and causes no
regressions.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Between the previous commit and this one, improves GLBenchmark 2.1
offscreen performance by 0.48% +/- 0.24% (n=22, throttling outliers
removed).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This is for GL_ARB_texture_buffer_object_rgb32 support, but it also
causes the format to get used for float32 rgb textures as well on
Ironlake and later. Since that came with some surprises, separate
the change from the enable commit.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We almost never want a stride in pixels -- if you're doing anything with
a stride, you're specifying an offset or incrementing a pointer, and in
both cases you had to multiply by cpp to get the bytes value you wanted.
But worse, on the way to creating a region from a new tiled BO, we
divided by cpp to get pitch in pixels, and for an RGB32 buffer (an
upcoming change) the pitch wouldn't divide exactly, and we'd end up with
a wrong stride in our region.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Vincent Lejeune:
- tgsi to llvm now emits pointers for constants
Tom Stellard:
- Only use texture cache for vtx fetch with compute shaders
- Change address space used for constant loads to match LLVM
backend.
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
According to the OpenGL 3.2 Core Profile specification, section 3.8.12:
"For one-, two-, and three-dimensional and one-and two-dimensional array
textures, a texture is mipmap complete if all of the following
conditions hold true:
- [...]
- levelbase <= levelmax [...]
Using the preceding definitions, a texture is complete unless any of
the following conditions hold true:
- [...]
- The minification filter requires a mipmap (is neither NEAREST nor
LINEAR), and the texture is not mipmap complete."
(This text also appears in all GL >= 3.2 specs and the ES 3.0 spec.)
From this, we see that levelbase <= levelmax should only affect mipmap
completeness, not base-level completeness.
Prior versions of GL did not have the notion of mipmap completeness,
simply calling the texture incomplete in this case. But I don't think
we really care.
Fixes es3conform's sgis_texture_lod_basic_completeness test.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <idr@freedesktop.org>
The sampler appears to ignore writemasks (even when correcting the
WRITEMASK_XYZW in brw_vec4_emit.cpp to the proper writemask) and just
always writes all four values.
To cope with this, just texture into a temporary, then MOV out into a
register that has the proper number of components.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Fixes es3conform's shadow_execution_vert.test.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <idr@freedesktop.org>
Previously it was left undefined, causing us to select a random LOD.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <idr@freedesktop.org>
This is purely a refactor. However, in a moment, we'll want to set
lod_type to float for ir_tex, where ir->lod_info.lod is NULL.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches (for the next patch).
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <idr@freedesktop.org>
Fixes regressions since commit 899017fc54
Author: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Date: Fri Jan 4 07:53:09 2013 -0800
i965: Use Haswell's sample_d_c for textureGrad with shadow samplers.
That patch assumed that all instances were lowered. However, we weren't
lowering textureGrad() with samplerCubeShadow because I couldn't figure
out the LOD calculations. It turns out they're easy: you just have to
use 1 for the depth. This causes it to pass oglconform's four tests.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Tested-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Ian Romanick <idr@freedesktop.org>
Now that things mostly seem to work enable those formats.
Some formats cause crashes (notably RGB8 variants) so switch these off
(these crashes are not specific to INT/UINT variants but the state tracker
doesn't use them for UNORM etc. formats so it went unnoticed so far).
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Cast back the fake floats to ints, and make sure we don't try to do scaling
in format conversion (which only makes sense with normalized values).
Also need to disable blending and alpha test (as per spec) for such buffers.
This makes fbo-blending from the piglit ext_texture_integer tests work for most
formats (some crash, and the luminance and intensity variants have the GB or
GBA channels respectively wrong).
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
We were passing in the rt index however this was always 0 for non-independent
blend case. (The format was only actually used to decide if the color mask
covered all channels so this went unnoticed and was discovered by accident.)
Additionally, there was a second problem because we do fixups in the key based
on color buffer format we cannot use non-independent blend anyway as the fixed
up values would never get used.
So always turn non-independent blending into independent.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Filtering of DEPTH_COMPONENT and DEPTH_STENCIL for TEXTURE_3D is already
done in texture_error_check because these combinations aren't allowed on
desktop GL either.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
1. The loop over dest buffers in blit_linear() needed a null pointer
check. Fixes https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=59499
2. The code to grab the drawRb's format needs to be inside the drawing loop.
3. An equality test was using = instead of == thus messing up a
renderbuffer attachment texture pointer. This lead to memory
corruption and a crash at exit.
Finally, fix a capitalization error NumDrawBuffers -> numDrawBuffers
and change type to unsigned to fix signed/unsigned comparison warnings.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Instead of deriving it from the colour buffer formats only.
Fixes a number of piglit tests which export depth from the pixel shader.
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Signed-off-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Fixes piglit 'spec/ARB_depth_buffer_float/fbo-clear-formats stencil' crash.
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Signed-off-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Enabling it for all resources still seems to cause problems, but depth/stencil
buffers are always accessed with tiling by the DB block.
Also, stick to 1D tiling for now. Getting 2D tiling to work properly will
require substantial changes in libdrm_radeon and possibly the kernel as well.
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Signed-off-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Apart from the obvious cleanup, this makes sure all blocks use the same tiling
mode for accessing the resource.
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Signed-off-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Currently the use of external firmware is required, with kernel and
userspace firmware needed for all Fermi cards except nvd9. Kepler and nvd9
should only require kernel firmware.
1. Loop over multiple destination color buffers. If we set
glDrawBuffers(GL_FRONT_AND_BACK) we need to loop over multiple color
buffers, blitting to each.
2. Add checks for null src/dst surface pointers. This fixes a crash
in the piglit fbo-missing-attachment-blit test.
See bug http://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=59450
Reviewed-by: Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Use os.path.join() rather than hand-rolling it, so path is correct if
sys.argv[0] returns an absolute path.
(According to the python documentation, it's platform dependent whether
sys.argv[0] is a full pathname or not. It probably also depends on how
the process was started...)
Signed-off-by: Jon TURNEY <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
It seems the other code expects surface[0..1] to be the luma field in interlaced case.
See for example vdpau/surface.c vlVdpVideoSurfaceClear and vlVdpVideoSurfacePutBitsYCbCr.
Signed-off-by: Maarten Lankhorst <maarten.lankhorst@canonical.com>
Writemask was XY instead of YZ (thanks to calim for spotting it).
The pixel calculation resulted in the pixel always being off by one.
If y was .5:
y' = round(y) + 0.5 = 1.5
Fixing this also means the LRP function has to swap the pixels it, since
it's now the other way around for top/bottom.
WIth these fixes only chroma for top and bottom pixel rows are wrongly interpolated
in my test program:
--- nvidia
+++ nouveau
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-YCbCr[0] = 00c080
+YCbCr[0] = 00b070
YCbCr[1] = 00b070
YCbCr[2] = 029050
YCbCr[3] = 207050
@@ -61,4 +61,4 @@
YCbCr[60] = 0c5070
YCbCr[61] = c05090
YCbCr[62] = 0e70b0
-YCbCr[63] = e080c0
+YCbCr[63] = e070b0
Signed-off-by: Maarten Lankhorst <maarten.lankhorst@canonical.com>
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Use this method in _mesa_GetInternalformativ for both GL_SAMPLES and
GL_NUM_SAMPLE_COUNTS.
v2: internalFormat may not be color renderable by the driver, so zero
can be returned as a sample count. Require that drivers supporting the
extension provide a QuerySamplesForFormat function. The later was
suggested by Eric Anholt.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Though, I'm tempted to always expose this extension when
GL_ARB_framebuffer_object is exposed. In that case, it would share the same
enable bit.
v2: Correctly sort extension names. Suggested by Eric Anholt.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
This is for the GL_ARB_internalformat_query extension and GLES 3.0.
v2: Generate GL_INVALID_OPERATION if the extension is not supported.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
OpenGL 4.2 specification suggests rounding the float data to nearest
integer when the type of internal state is integer. Out of range floats
should be clamped to {INT_MIN, INT_MAX}. This is not specified anywhere
in gl/gles spec but below test expects this behavior. This patch makes
gles3 conformance sgis_texture_lod_basic_getter.test pass.
A GL spec bug will be raised to include clamping of out of range floats.
V2: Round float to nearest integer for all cases where
_mesa_Texparameterf() converts float param to int. Use the same block of
float to int conversion code for GL_TEXTURE_SWIZZLE_{R,G,B,A}_EXT cases
as well.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This patch fixes a blitting case when drawAttachment->Texture ==
readAttachment->Texture. It was causing an assertion failure in
intel_miptree_attach_map() with gles3 conformance test case:
framebuffer_blit_functionality_minifying_blit
Number of changes in this file look scary. But most of them are caused
by introducing a big for loop to support rendering to multiple color
draw buffers.
V2: Fixed a case when number of draw buffer attachments are zero.
V3: Put a for loop in blit_nearest() and blit_linear() functions in to
support blitting to multiple color draw buffers.
V4: Remove variable declaration in for loop to avoid MSVC compilation
issues.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This patch adds required error checking in _mesa_BlitFramebuffer() when
blitting to multiple color render targets. It also fixes a case when
blitting to a framebuffer with renderbuffer/texture attached to
GL_COLOR_ATTACHMENT{i} (where i!=0). Earlier it skips color blitting if
nothing is found attached to GL_COLOR_ATTACHMENT0.
V2: Fixed a case when number of draw buffer attachments are zero.
V3: Do compatible_color_datatypes() and compatible_resolve_formats()
check for all the draw renderbuffers in fbobject.c. Fix debug code
at bottom of _mesa_BlitFramebuffer() to handle MRTs. Combine error
checking code for linear blits with other color blit error checking.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This allows query on default framebuffer in
glGetFramebufferAttachmentParameteriv() for gles3. Fixes unexpected GL
errors in gles3 conformance test case:
framebuffer_blit_functionality_multisampled_to_singlesampled_blit
V2: Use _mesa_is_gles3() check to restrict allowed attachment types to
specific APIs.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This patch enables blitting to multiple color attachments of a
framebuffer. It also fixes a case when blitting to a framebuffer with
renderbuffer/texture attached to non-zero attachment point
i.e. GL_COLOR_ATTACHMENT{1, 2, ...}. Earlier we were incorrectly
blitting to GL_COLOR_ATTACHMENT0 by default.
V2: Use intel_copy_texsubimage() for blitting only if all the color
attachments can blit using it.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This patch rewrites _mesa_meta_BlitFrameBuffer() function to add support
for blitting with GLSL/GLSL ES shaders. These changes were required to
support glBlitFrameBuffer() in gles3. This patch, along with other
patches in this series, make 16 failing framebuffer_blit test cases in
gles3 conformance pass.
V2: Properly handle flipped blits for source and destination
renderbuffer / textures. Add support for GL_TEXTURE_RECTANGLE in
_mesa_meta_BlitFrameBuffer. Create a temp depth texture to support
depth buffer blitting.
V3: Remove unsupported / redundant shader code. Add an assertion to make
sure that we don't use rectangle texture in ES. Put API guard on
glTexEnvi().
V4: For gles3: Don't use ReadPixels or CopyTexImage2D to blit depth
buffer. gles3 spec says for CopyTexImage2D that "color buffer
components can be dropped during the conversion to internalformat,
but new components cannot be added." So, use the internal format of
read renderbuffer to create texture for color buffer blitting.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <idr@freedesktop.org>
V2:
If mask has GL_STENCIL_BUFFER_BIT set, the depth formats for
readRenderBuffer and drawRenderBuffer must match unless one of the two
buffers doesn't have depth, in which case it's not blitted, so the
format check should be ignored. Same comment goes for stencil formats
in depth renderbuffers if mask has GL_DEPTH_BUFFER_BIT set.
v3 (Kayden): Refactor code to be a bit more readable.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
In ES 3.0, when calling glDrawBuffers() on the window system
framebuffer, the only valid targets are GL_NONE or GL_BACK. Since there
is no stereo rendering in ES 3.0, this is a single buffer, unlike
desktop where it may be two (and thus isn't allowed).
For single-buffered configs, GL_BACK ironically means the front (and
only) buffer. I'm not sure that it matters, however, as ES shouldn't
have front buffer rendering in the first place.
Fixes es3conform framebuffer_blit_coverage_default_draw_buffer_binding.
v2: Update GLES3 spec reference.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com> [v2]
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com> [v1]
I didn't notice this due to a noobed piglit run. It wasn't previously
noticed because the patch was only run on a driver that supported GLES3.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
At process exit DLL_PROCESS_DETACH is signaled to DllMain(), where then
a final cleanup is triggered. In stw_cleanup() code is triggered that
tries to communicate a shutdown to the spawned threads -- however at
that time those threads have already been terminated by the OS and so
the process hangs.
v2: skip stw_cleanup_thread() too
Signed-off-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Fixes error EGL_BAD_ATTRIBUTE in the tests below on Intel Sandybridge:
* piglit egl-create-context-verify-gl-flavor, testcase OpenGL ES 3.0
* gles3conform, revision 19700, when runnning GL3Tests with -fbo
This plumbing is added in order to comply with the EGL_KHR_create_context
spec. According to the EGL_KHR_create_context spec, it is illegal to call
eglCreateContext(EGL_CONTEXT_MAJOR_VERSION_KHR=3) with a config whose
EGL_RENDERABLE_TYPE does not contain the EGL_OPENGL_ES3_BIT_KHR. The
pertinent
portion of the spec is quoted below; the key word is "respectively".
* If <config> is not a valid EGLConfig, or does not support the
requested client API, then an EGL_BAD_CONFIG error is generated
(this includes requesting creation of an OpenGL ES 1.x, 2.0, or
3.0 context when the EGL_RENDERABLE_TYPE attribute of <config>
does not contain EGL_OPENGL_ES_BIT, EGL_OPENGL_ES2_BIT, or
EGL_OPENGL_ES3_BIT_KHR respectively).
To create this patch, I searched for all the ES2 bit plumbing by calling
`git grep "ES2_BIT\|DRI_API_GLES2" src/egl`, and then at each location
added a case for ES3.
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
If the hardware/driver combo supports GLES3, then set the GLES3 bit in
intel_screen's bitmask of supported DRI API's. Neither the EGL nor GLX
layer uses the bit yet.
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This enum corresponds to EGL_OPENGL_ES3_BIT_KHR.
Neither the GLX nor EGL layer use the enum yet.
I don't like the GLES bits. I'd prefer that all GLES APIs be exposed
through a single API bit, as is done in GLX_EXT_create_context_es_profile.
But, we need this GLES3 enum in order to do the plumbing necessary to
correctly support EGL_OPENGL_ES3_BIT_KHR as required by the
EGL_KHR_create_context spec.
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Each driver (i830, i915, i965) used independent but similar code to
validate the requested context version. With the rececnt arrival of GLES3,
that logic has needed an update. Rather than apply identical updates to
each drivers validation code, let's just move the validation into the
shared routine intelInitContext.
This refactor required some incidental changes to functions
i830CreateContext and intelInitContext. For each function, this patch:
- Adds context version parameters to the signature.
- Adds a DRI_CTX_ERROR out param to the signature.
- Sets the DRI_CTX_ERROR at each early return.
Tested against gen6 with piglit egl-create-context-verify-gl-flavor.
Verified that this patch does not change the set of exposed EGL context
flavors.
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Before this patch, intelInitScreen2 set DRIScreen::api_mask with the hacky
heuristic below:
if (gen >= 3)
api_mask = GL | GLES1 | GLES2;
else
api_mask = 0;
This hack was likely broken on gen2 (i830), but I don't care enough to
properly investigate. It appears that every EGLConfig on i830 has
EGL_RENDERABLE_TYPE=0, and thus eglCreateContext will never succeed.
Anyway, moving on to living drivers...
With the arrival of EGL_OPENGL_ES3_BIT_KHR, this heuristic is now
insufficient. We must enable the GLES3 bit if and only if the driver is
capable of creating a GLES3 context. This requires us to determine the
maximum supported context version supported by the hardware/driver for
each api *during initialization of intel_screen*.
Therefore, this patch adds four new fields to intel_screen which indicate
the maximum supported context version for each api:
max_gl_core_version
max_gl_compat_version
max_gl_es1_version
max_gl_es2_version
The api mask is now correctly set as:
api_mask = GL;
if (max_gl_es1_version > 0)
api_mask |= GLES1;
if (max_gl_es2_version > 0)
api_mask |= GLES2;
Tested against gen6 with piglit egl-create-context-verify-gl-flavor.
Verified that this patch does not change the set of exposed EGL context
flavors.
v2:
- Replace the if-tree on gen with a switch, for Ian.
- Unconditionally enable the DRI_API_OPENGL bit, for Ian.
v3:
- Drop max gl version to 1.4 on gen3 if !has_occlusion_query,
because occlusion queries entered core in 1.5. For Ian.
v4:
- Drop ES2 version back to 2.0 due to rebase (Ian).
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick.intel.com>
I'm not sure if this is the correct fix. The
_mesa_es_error_check_format_and_type function (used above in the ES 1
and 2 cases) was originally added for glTexImage checking and allows
GL_DEPTH_STENCIL/GL_UNSIGNED_INT_24_8 combinations. Using it in ES 3
causes other tests to regress.
Fixes es3conform's packed_depth_stencil_error test.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org> (v1)
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
INVALID_ENUM is for when the type is simply not known.
Fixes part of es3conform's packed_depth_stencil_error test.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
ES 3 specifies some formats as texture-only (i.e., not available for
renderbuffers).
See the "Required Texture Formats" section (pg 126) of the ES 3 spec.
v2: Allow RED and RG float rendering in core profiles The check used to
be (version > 30) || (compat profile w/extensions). Just deleting
<version > 30) broke 3.0+ core profiles.
Fixes es3conform's color_buffer_unsupported_format test.
Signed-off-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
According to both the GL 3.0 and ES 3.0 specifications (table 2.7 for GL
and table 2.8 for ES), the default value of BUFFER_ACCESS_FLAGS is
supposed to be zero.
Note that there are two related quantities: the obsolete BUFFER_ACCESS
enum and the new BUFFER_ACCESS_FLAGS bitfield.
BUFFER_ACCESS can only be GL_READ_ONLY, GL_WRITE_ONLY, or GL_READ_WRITE;
BUFFER_ACCESS_FLAGS can easily represent all three via GL_MAP_WRITE_BIT,
GL_MAP_READ_BIT, and their logical or. It also supports more flags.
Thus, Mesa only stores the bitfield, and simply computes the old enum
when queried, via simplified_access_mode(bufObj->AccessFlags).
The tricky part is that, while BUFFER_ACCESS_FLAGS defaults to 0,
BUFFER_ACCESS defaults to GL_READ_WRITE for desktop [GL 3.0, table 2.8]
and GL_WRITE_ONLY_OES for ES [the GL_EXT_map_buffer_range extension].
Mesa tried to implement this by setting the default AccessFlags to
GL_MAP_READ_BIT | GL_MAP_WRITE_BIT on desktop, and GL_MAP_WRITE_BIT on
ES. But in all specifications, it needs to be 0.
This patch moves that logic into simplified_access_mode(): when
AccessFlags == 0, it now returns GL_READ_WRITE for desktop and
GL_WRITE_ONLY for ES 1/2. (BUFFER_ACCESS doesn't exist on ES 3.0,
so it's irrelevant there.)
With that in place, it changes the AccessFlags default to 0.
Fixes three es3conform tsets:
- copy_buffer_defaults
- map_buffer_range_modify_indices
- pixel_buffer_object_default_parameters
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Perhaps most importantly, this patch adds comments quoting the relevant
spec paragraphs above each error condition.
It also makes three changes:
- For FBOs, GL_COLOR_ATTACHMENTm where m >= MaxDrawBuffers is supposed
to generate INVALID_OPERATION (not INVALID_ENUM).
- Constants that refer to multiple buffers (such as FRONT, BACK, LEFT,
RIGHT, and FRONT_AND_BACK) are supposed to generate INVALID_OPERATION,
not INVALID_ENUM.
- In ES 3.0, for FBOs, buffers[i] must be NONE or GL_COLOR_ATTACHMENTi
or else INVALID_OPERATION occurs. (This is a new restriction.)
Fixes es3conform's draw-buffers-api test.
v2: The error path was missing a "return" like all the other error
paths. Also, we may as well call it glDrawBuffers in the error message
since the ARB suffix doesn't exist in ES 3.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
The specification requires that query results are processed in order, (when
one query result is returned, all previous query of the same type must also be
available). The implementation was failing this requirement in the case of
BeginQuery and EndQuery with no intervening drawing, (the result would be made
available immediately without flushing previous queries).
This fixes the following es3conform test:
occlusion_query_query_order
as well as the following piglit test:
occlusion_query_order
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This allows for avoiding the occlusion query erroneously accumulating results
during the meta operation. This functionality is made conditional on a new
MESA_META_OCCLUSION_QUERY bit so that meta-operations which should generate
fragments can continue to get the current behavior.
The implementation of glClear is specifically augmented to request the flag
since glClear is specified to not generate fragments.
This fixes the following es3conform tests:
occlusion_query_draw_occluded.test
occlusion_query_clear
occlusion_query_custom_framebuffer
occlusion_query_stencil_test
occlusion_query_discarded_fragments
As well as the following piglit test:
occlusion_query_meta_no_fragments
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This flag allows for the specified behavior that GenQueries reserves a name,
but does not associate an object with it until BeginQuery. We allocate the
object immediately with the new EverBound flag set to false, and then set the
flag to true at the time of BeginQuery.
This allows us to implement a conformant IsQuery function by checking the
state of the new EverBound flag.
This fixes the following es3conform tests:
occlusion_query_genqueries
occlusion_query_is_query_nonzero
and the following piglit test:
occlusion_query_lifetime
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
The reference to "correct, see spec" was a bit too vague to be useful,
(particularly since the language being referenced here changes between OpenGL
3.1 and OpenGL 4.3).
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
These are optimizations which make MSAA a lot faster.
The MSAA work is complete with this commit. (except for enablement of AA
optimizations for RGBA16F, for which a patch is ready and waiting until
the kernel CS checker fix lands)
MSAA can't be made any faster as far as hw programming is concerned.
The catch is only one process and one colorbuffer can use the optimizations
at a time. There usually is only one MSAA colorbuffer, so it shouldn't be
an issue.
Also, there is a limit on the size of MSAA colorbuffer resolution in terms
of megapixels. If the limit is surpassed, the AA optimizations are disabled.
The limit is:
- 1 Mpix on low-end and some mid-level chipsets (1024x768 and 1280x720)
- 2 Mpix on some mid-level chipsets (1600x1200 and 1920x1080)
- 3 or 4 Mpix on high-end chipsets (2048x1536 or 2560x1600, respectively)
It corresponds to the number of raster pipes (= GB pipes) available, each pipe
can hold 1 Mpix of AA compression data.
If it's enabled, the driver prints to stdout:
radeon: Acquired access to AA optimizations.
This reverts commit 4148a29ed8.
This is a work-around for bug:
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=59334
We really should be linking against libgallium.la instead of
libgallium.a, but until we can figure why linking against libgallium.la
causes runtime failures in clover we will continue to link against
libgallium.a
Acked-by: Andreas Boll <andreas.boll.dev@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Aaron Watry <awatry@gmail.com>
I think the conditional always evaluates to false.
If I understand the code in core Mesa correctly, depthBits or stencilBits
is 0 if the depth or stencil renderbuffer is NULL, respectively.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Since automake changes, softpipe and llvmpipe are mutually exclusive at link
time. This doesn't make much sense to me as we can choose between them at
run-time using GALLIUM_DRIVER.
Creating library file: .libs/libGL.dll.a
.libs/xlib.o: In function `sw_screen_create_named':
/jhbuild/checkout/mesa/mesa/src/gallium/targets/libgl-xlib/../../../../src/gallium/auxiliary/target-helpers/inline_sw_helper.h:35:
undefined reference to `_softpipe_create_screen'
Signed-off-by: Jon TURNEY <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Call Driver.AllocTextureImageBuffer rather than calling
Driver.TexImage with NULL data, format=GL_NONE and type=GL_NONE.
This avoids setting ctx->Unpack, which can lead to incorrectly
trying to upload data.
The GLES3 GTF program's packed_pixels_pbo test was triggering
an error for i965 with the previous code.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This function checks for ES3 compatible
format/type/internalFormat/dimension combinations.
[jordan.l.justen@intel.com: additional tweaks for gles3-gtf]
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Fixes a runtime error:
glxgears: symbol lookup error: /home/brian/mesa/lib/gallium/libGL.so.1: undefined symbol: clock_gettime
v2: use $(CLOCK_LIB) and $(PTHREAD_LIBS) per Andreas Boll.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Andreas Boll <andreas.boll.dev@gmail.com>
The hardware does not support a render target without an alpha channel.
So when the user creates a render buffer with no alpha channel, there actually
is storage available for alpha internally. It requires special care to
avoid these unwanted alpha bits from causing any problems.
Specifically, when blending, and when the blend factors would read the
destination alpha values, this commit coerces the blend factors to instead be
either 0 or 1 as appropriate.
A similar fix was made for pre-gen6 hardware in commit eadd9b8e and this
commit shares the fixup function written by Ian then.
This commit the following es3conform test:
rgb8_rgba8_rgb
As well as the following piglit (sub) tests:
EXT_framebuffer_object/fbo-blending-formats/3
EXT_framebuffer_object/fbo-blending-formats/GL_RGB
EXT_framebuffer_object/fbo-blending-formats/GL_RGB8
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
We used to keep the color buffers in the dri_buffers array and
swap __DRI_BUFFER_BACK_LEFT and __DRI_BUFFER_FRONT_LEFT around there
and swap third_buffer in in case we needed to triple buffer. That
gets a little fidgety with all the swaps, so lets use the
color_buffers pool like the gbm platform does. We track the color buffers,
their corresponding wl_buffer and locked status here and just plug
a free one into dri2_surf->buffers when we need to.
This is a nice clean-up in itself, but it also sets us up to track
buffer age in the color_buffers structs.
Reviewed-by: Ander Conselvan de Oliveira <conselvan2@gmail.com>
RB3D_DEBUG_CTL doesn't help, so I resolve to a tiled temporary texture and
then blitting it to the destination one, which we also do in other situations.
The handling of the CAP is broken in st/mesa anyway. Let's just kill it.
This commit pretty much enables fast Z clear for FBOs with Z24S8.
The driver falls back to clearing with a quad if the fast clear cannot be
used. It can still do fast color clear, for example.
Effectively this path would always assert. Move the break statement to
the (probable) intended place.
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Adam Jackson <ajax@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Include LLVM_LDFLAGS when building with LLVM. Fixes the following build
errors:
CXXLD swrast_dri.la
/usr/bin/ld: cannot find -lLLVMR600CodeGen
/usr/bin/ld: cannot find -lLLVMR600Desc
/usr/bin/ld: cannot find -lLLVMR600Info
/usr/bin/ld: cannot find -lLLVMR600AsmPrinter
Reviewed-by: Andreas Boll <andreas.boll.dev@gmail.com>
According to bug #54524, I regressed oglconform's multicontext test
when I reenabled the fragment shader precompile.
However, these test cases only passed by miraculous coincedence. We
assign each fragment program a unique ID (brw_fragment_program::id which
becomes brw_wm_prog_key::program_string_id) which we obtain by storing a
per-context counter.
The test case uses GLX context sharing to access the same fragment
program from two different contexts. This means that we share a program
cache. Before the precompile, if both contexts happened to use the same
shaders in the same order, we'd obtain the same program_string_ids (by
virtue of doing the same computation twice). However, the more likely
scenario is that they completely disagree on program_string_id.
This meant that we'd have two completely different fragment shaders in
the cache with the same ID, tricking us to think they were the same
(aside from NOS), so we'd render using the wrong program.
This patch implements a simple fix suggested by Eric: it moves the
global counter out of brw_context and into intel_screen, which is shared
across all contexts. A mutex protects it from concurrent access.
This is also the first direct usage of pthreads in the i965 driver.
Fixes 10 subcases of oglconform's multicontext test.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=54524
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Technically, variable sized arrays are a required feature of C99,
redacted to be optional in C11, and not actually part of C++ whatsoever.
Gcc allows using them in C++ unless you specify -pedantic, and Clang
appears to allow them for simple/POD types.
exec_list is arguably POD, since it doesn't have virtual methods, but I
can see why Clang would be like "meh, it's a C++ struct, say no", seeing as
it's meant to support C99.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=58970
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
The simulator gets very angry about our i2b code:
cmp.ne(16) g3<1>D g2<0,1,0>D 0F
We can't mix integer DWord and float types. The only reason to use 0F
here was to share code with f2b. Split it and use 0D instead.
While we don't believe anything bad will actually happen because of
this, it's nice to fix the warnings and easy enough to do.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Often when debugging, I don't want to see SIMD16 shaders. It makes
INTEL_DEBUG=vs/fs output much easier to read, especially when a program
dumps many shaders. Plus, I also want to verify that SIMD8 works before
even considering SIMD16.
v2: Fix the likeliness check (caught by Chris and Eric).
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Choose MESA_FORMAT_ARGB2101010 when storing
GL_RGBA + GL_UNSIGNED_INT_2_10_10_10_REV or
GL_RGB + GL_UNSIGNED_INT_2_10_10_10_REV.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
The ARB_get_program_binary spec says "OpenGL 3.0 is required." The
nearly identical OES_get_program_binary extension is available for
OpenGL ES 2.0, so I don't see how / why OpenGL 3.0 is a requirement for
the ARB version. Let's just enable whenever GL_ARB_shader_objects is
available.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
After recent changes in the XML, the dispatch generators will expect
this function to be named _mesa_ProgramParameteri.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
There were two bugs here. First, this and several other queries were
not available in a desktop GL context with GL_ARB_ES2_compatibility.
Second, GL_NUM_SHADER_BINARY_FORMATS returns zero, but
GL_SHADER_BINARY_FORMATS writes one element of data to the buffer. If
NUM is zero, no data should be written.
Fixes piglit test 'arb_get_program_binary-overrun shader'.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This adds TBO support to r600g, and with GLSL 1.40 enabled,
we now get 3.1 core profiles advertised for r600g.
The r600/700 implementation is a bit different from the evergreen one,
as r6/7 hw lacks vertex fetch swizzles. So we implement it by passing 5
constants per sampler to the shader, the shader uses the first 4 as masks
for each component and the 5th as the alpha value to OR in.
Now TXQ is also broken so we have to pass a constant for the buffer size,
on evergreen we just pass this, on r6/7 we pass it as the 6th element
in the const info buffer.
v1.1: drop return as DDX doesn't use a texture type
v2: add r600/700 support.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
This adds 12 more constant buffers for use as UBOs,
along with adding relative constant fetching for 2D indices.
This with GLSL 1.40 enabled passes all the same tests as softpipe
on my evergreen system.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
First we test that line continuations are honored within a comment, (as
recently changed in glcpp), then we test that line continuations can be
disabled via an option within the context. This is tested via the new support
for a test-specific command-line option passed to glcpp.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Previously, we were only supporting line-continuation backslash characters
within lines of pre-processor directives, (as per the specification). With
OpenGL 4.2 and GLES3, line continuations are now supported anywhere within a
shader.
While changing this, also fix a bug where the preprocessor was ignoring
line continuation characters when a line ended in multiple backslash
characters.
The new code is also more efficient than the old. Previously, we would
perform a ralloc copy at each newline. We now perform copies only at each
occurrence of a line-continuation.
This commit fixes the line-continuation.vert test in piglit.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This will allow testing of disabled line-continuation on a case-by-case basis,
(with the option communicated to the preprocessor via the GL context).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This will allow the test exercising disabled line continuations to arrange
for the --disable-line-continuations argument to be passed to the standalone
glcpp.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
As the preprocessor becomes more sophisticated and gains more optional
behavior, it's easiest to just pass the GL context pointer to it so that
it can examine any fields there that it needs to (such as API version,
or the state of any driconf options, etc.).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This application is known to contain shaders that:
1. Have a stray backslash as the last line of comment lines
2. Have a declaration immediately following that line
Hence, interpreting that backslash as a line continuation causes the
declaration to be hidden and the shader fails to compile. Fortunately, the
shaders also:
3. Do not have any other intentional line-continuation characters
So disabling line continuations entirely for the application fixes this
problem without causing any other breakage.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This is to enable a quirk for Savage2 which includes a shader with a stray '\'
at the end of a comment line. Interpreting that backslash as a line
continuation will break the compilation of the shader, so we need a way to
disable this.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Previously this was happening unconditionally, leading to some excessive
rebuilding/relinking during builds.
Note that the .po files are not automatically updated due to changes to the
t_options.h file. Instead, translators should continue to use "make po"
manually. This is because after new strings are merged into the existing .po
file, manual work is still required by translators to ensure that the
translations are correct.
Previously, the xmlpool directory had a lone Makefile to assist poeple in
manually invoking a deep make in order to update the translations in
options.h. We can observe that this wasn't happening in fact, (new
translations had been added to de.po without being generated into options.h,
and new options had been manually added directly to options.h rather than to
t_options.h).
Prevent both of these problems from occurring in the future by automatically
generating options.h as part of the standard build of mesa.
For this, the generated options.h is now removed from version control, (along
with Makefile in favor of Makefile.am).
[chadv: Port the Autotools changes to Android.]
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
As can be seen, many other translation strings already include a single
apostrophe just fine without any escaping. This strangely-escaped apostrophe
was causing a build failure ("invalid escape sequence") resulting in no "de"
translations in the final options.h file.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The gen_xmlpool.py script would work correctly only when executed from the
directory that contained the script. This shortcoming was due to some
hard-coded paths in the script.
In order to easily invoke the script from the Android build system, we
must be able to execute the script from an arbitrary directory. To enable
that, this patch replaces the two hard-coded paths with new command line
arguments.
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
These translations have existed in the de.po file, but were not in the
generated options.h file. This was fixed by simply running "make options.h".
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
For the last two most-recently-added driconf options, their definition was
manually added to options.h, a file which is intended to be automatically
generated, (as part of support for translated driconf option
descriptions). This means that these options would be eliminated if the
generation step were performed again.
Fix this by correctly adding the definitions of these options to t_options.h,
(the file used as input to the generator), and not the options.h file, which
is generated.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This fixes several duplicate symbol errors.
libllvmradeon is a simple helper library. If it requires symbols in
other libraries, this should be taken care of by the gallium target that
uses it (e.g. libr600.la)
This requires some derived state. The cut vertex used is either the
value specified by glPrimitiveRestartIndex or it's hard-coded to ~0.
The derived state gl_array_attrib::_RestartIndex captures this value.
In addition, the derived state gl_array_attrib::_PrimitiveRestart is set
whenever either gl_array_attrib::PrimitiveRestart or
gl_array_attrib::PrimitiveRestartFixedIndex is set.
v2: Use _mesa_is_gles3.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
The GLSL ES 3.0 spec (Section 12.17) says:
"GLSL ES 1.00 removed token pasting and other functionality."
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
Simply emitting a nicely-formatted error message if any undefined macro is
encountered in a parser context expecting an expression.
With this commit, the following piglit test now passes:
spec/glsl-es-3.00/compiler/undefined-macro.vert
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This can be triggered either by creation of a GLES context (with
api == API_OPENGLES2) or else by a #version directive with version
value 100 or with a string of "es" following the version value.
There's no behavioral change with this commit—just preparation for ES-specific
behavior in the preprocessor in the future.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Fixes the following build error:
CXXLD egl_gallium.la
g++: error: ../../../../src/egl/wayland/wayland-drm/.libs/.libs/libwayland-drm.a: No
such file or directory
Reviewed-by: Andreas Boll <andreas.boll.dev@gmail.com>
We get int/uint clear color value in this case, and util_pack_color can't
handle these formats at all (even if it could, float input color isn't what
we want).
Pass through the color union appropriately and handle the packing ourselves
(as I couldn't think of a good generic util solution).
This gets piglit fbo_integer_precision_clear and
fbo_integer_readpixels_sint_uint from the ext_texture_integer test group from
segfault to pass (which only leaves fbo-blending from that group not working).
v2: fix up comments
Need to bitcast the float border color (luckily we already get
the color as int just disguised as float).
Fixes piglit texwrap GL_EXT_texture_integer bordercolor.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Change the texel type to int/uint instead of float throughout the sampling
code which makes it easier to catch errors (as llvm will complain about wrong
types if we mistakenly treat these values as real floats somewhere).
This should also get things like e.g. sampler swizzles (for unused channels)
right.
This fixes piglit texture_integer_glsl130 test.
Border color not working (crashing) yet.
(These formats are not exposed yet in llvmpipe.)
v2: couple cleanups according to José's comments
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
C++ linking (controlled by the nodist_EXTRA idiom) is needed
unconditionally for:
nouveau (uses C++ in the driver)
r300 (since LLVM is always required)
radeonsi (since LLVM is always required)
swrast (if builting LLVM pipe)
and conditionally (depends whether LLVM is enabled) for
i915
r600
vmwgfx
and never needed for swrast (softpipe).
Unfortunately, automake seems to *always* link with C++ if nodist_EXTRA
is specified, even inside a false conditional. Not sure if this is a
bug, but it does seem to be weird behavior.
v2: Johannes Obermayr <johannesobermayr@gmx.de>
- Fix some undefined symbols.
v3: Johannes Obermayr <johannesobermayr@gmx.de>
- Install pipe_* to $(libdir)/gallium-pipe.
v4: Johannes Obermayr <johannesobermayr@gmx.de>
- Build it only once on --enable-gallium-gbm / --enable-opencl.
v2: Andreas Boll <andreas.boll.dev@gmail.com>
- add missing xvmc state tracker to _LIBADD variable
v3: Andreas Boll <andreas.boll.dev@gmail.com>
- Provide compatibility with scripts for the old Mesa build system
v2: Andreas Boll <andreas.boll.dev@gmail.com>
- Add missing xvmc state tracker to _LIBADD variable
v3: Andreas Boll <andreas.boll.dev@gmail.com>
- Provide compatibility with scripts for the old Mesa build system
v2: Andreas Boll <andreas.boll.dev@gmail.com>
- Add missing xvmc state tracker to _LIBADD variable
v3: Andreas Boll <andreas.boll.dev@gmail.com>
- Provide compatibility with scripts for the old Mesa build system
v2: Andreas Boll <andreas.boll.dev@gmail.com>
- Add missing xvmc state tracker to _LIBADD variable
v3: Andreas Boll <andreas.boll.dev@gmail.com>
- Provide compatibility with scripts for the old Mesa build system
v2: Andreas Boll <andreas.boll.dev@gmail.com>
- Add missing vdpau state tracker to _LIBADD variable
v3: Andreas Boll <andreas.boll.dev@gmail.com>
- Provide compatibility with scripts for the old Mesa build system
v2: Andreas Boll <andreas.boll.dev@gmail.com>
- Add missing vdpau state tracker to _LIBADD variable
v3: Andreas Boll <andreas.boll.dev@gmail.com>
- Provide compatibility with scripts for the old Mesa build system
v2: Andreas Boll <andreas.boll.dev@gmail.com>
- Add missing vdpau state tracker to _LIBADD variable
v3: Andreas Boll <andreas.boll.dev@gmail.com>
- Provide compatibility with scripts for the old Mesa build system
v2: Andreas Boll <andreas.boll.dev@gmail.com>
- Add missing vdpau state tracker to _LIBADD variable
v3: Andreas Boll <andreas.boll.dev@gmail.com>
- Provide compatibility with scripts for the old Mesa build system
v2: Andreas Boll <andreas.boll.dev@gmail.com>
- Add missing vdpau state tracker to _LIBADD variable
v3: Andreas Boll <andreas.boll.dev@gmail.com>
- Provide compatibility with scripts for the old Mesa build system
v2: Johannes Obermayr <johannesobermayr@gmx.de>
Fix some undefined symbols.
v3: Johannes Obermayr <johannesobermayr@gmx.de>
Build it -shared to fix egl_gallium.so on r600/radeonsi builds.
The function was named badly and wasn't in the dispatch table,
making it hard to find.
Fixes transform_feedback2_states and gets a few other transform
feedback tests closer to working in es3conform.
Reviewed-by Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
For glGetIntegerv, add support for the following in an OpenGL ES 3.0
context:
GL_MAJOR_VERSION
GL_MINOR_VERSION
GL_NUM_EXTENSIONS
See Table 6.29 of the OpenGL ES 3.0 spec.
Fixes error GL_INVALID_ENUM in piglit egl-create-context-verify-gl-flavor,
testcase for OpenGL ES 3.0.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org> (v1)
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
The ES 3 spec says that the minumum allowable value is 2^24-1, but the
GL 4.3 and ARB_ES3_compatibility specs require 2^32-1, so return 2^32-1.
Fixes es3conform's element_index_uint_constants test.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
From GL/GLES/GL_CORE and GLES2 -> GL/GL_CORE/GLES2.
Yes, we really were exposing ES2_compatibility queries on ES 1.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Fixes the transform_feedback2_init_defaults test from es3conform.
The ES 3 spec lists these as TRANSFORM_FEEDBACK_PAUSED and
TRANSFORM_FEEDBACK_ACTIVE.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
but an MSAA resource is bound. This effectively makes the MSAA disable switch
not affect rasterization, but it still affects the alpha-to-one and
alpha-to-coverage states. This hardware just lacks a proper MSAA disable
switch.
This fixes graphics corruption in sauerbraten.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=59194
In most cases, the width, height, and depth of the physical surface
used by the driver to implement a texture or renderbuffer is equal to
the logical width, height, and depth exposed to the client through
functions such as glTexImage3D(). However, there are two exceptions:
cube maps (which have a physical depth of 6 but a logical depth of 1)
and multisampled renderbuffers (which have larger physical dimensions
than logical dimensions to allow multiple samples per pixel).
Previous to this patch, we accounted for the difference between
physical and logical surface dimensions at inconsistent places in the
call graph (multisampling was accounted for in
intel_miptree_create_for_renderbuffer(), and cubemaps were accounted
for in intel_miptree_create_internal()). As a result, it wasn't
always clear, when calling a miptree creation function, whether
physical or logical dimensions were needed. Also, we weren't
consistent about storing logical dimensions in the intel_mipmap_tree
structure (we only did so in the
intel_miptree_create_for_renderbuffer() code path, and we did not
store depth).
This patch refactors things so that intel_miptree_create_internal() is
responsible for converting logical to physical dimensions and for
storing both the physical and logical dimensions in the
intel_mipmap_tree structure. As a result, all miptree creation
functions interpret their arguments as logical dimensions, and both
physical and logical dimensions are always available to functions that
work with intel_mipmap_trees.
In addition, it renames the fields in intel_mipmap_tree used to store
the dimensions, so that it is clear from the name whether physical or
logical dimensions are being referred to.
This should fix the following bugs:
- When creating a separate stencil surface for a depthstencil cubemap,
we would erroneously try to convert the depth from 1 to 6 twice,
resulting in an assertion failure.
- When creating an MCS buffer for compressed multisampling, we used
physical dimensions instead of logical dimensions, resulting in
wasted memory.
In addition, this should considerably simplify the implementation of
ARB_texture_multisample, because it moves the code to compute the
physical size of multisampled surfaces out of renderbuffer-only code.
Reviewed-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
This allows intel_miptree_alloc_mcs() to force Y tiling for the MCS
buffer. Previously we accomplished this by the hack of passing
INTEL_MSAA_LAYOUT_CMS as the msaa_layout parameter, but that parameter
is going to be going away soon.
Reviewed-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
No functional change. This patch moves the compute_msaa_layout()
function earlier in intel_mipmap_tree.c so that it can be used by
other functions in that file.
Reviewed-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
I erroneously added this back in January 2011 in commit 88421589.
Looking at the commit message, I have no idea why I added it. It only
added non-array structure fields to the symbol table, so array structure
fields are treated correctly.
Fixes piglit tests structure-and-field-have-same-name.vert and
structure-and-field-have-same-name-nested.vert. It should also fix
WebGL conformance tests shader-with-non-reserved-words.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable release branches.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=57622
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
R6xx doesn't work - the issue seems to be with flushing (sometimes
the destination buffer contains garbage). There are no hangs, so we're good.
R7xx doesn't seem to have any alignment restriction despite our initial
thinking. Everything just works.
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
This patch enhances the varying packing code so that flat varyings of
uint, int, and float types can be packed together.
We accomplish this in lower_packed_varyings.cpp by making the type of
all flat varyings ivec4, and then using information-preserving type
conversions (e.g. ir_unop_bitcast_f2i) to convert all other types to
ints.
The varying_matches::compute_packing_class() function is updated to
reflect the fact that varying packing no longer needs to segregate
varyings of different base types.
Fixes piglit test varying-packing-mixed-types.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
v2: Split lower_packed_varyings_visitor::bitwise_assign into
pack/unpack variants.
The GLSL 1.30 spec only allows vertex shader outputs and fragment
shader inputs ("varyings" in pre-GLSL-1.30 parlance) to be of type
int, uint, float, or vectors, matrices, or arrays thereof. Bools,
bvec's, and structs are prohibited. (Integral varyings were
prohibited prior to GLSL 1.30).
Previously, Mesa only performed this check on variables declared with
the "varying" keyword, and it always performed the check according to
the pre-GLSL-1.30 rules. As a result, bools and structs were allowed
to slip through, provided they were declared using the new in/out
syntax.
This patch modifies the error check so that it occurs after "varying"
is converted to "in/out", and corrects it to properly account for GLSL
version.
Fixes piglit tests:
in-bool-prohibited.frag
in-bvec2-prohibited.frag
in-bvec3-prohibited.frag
in-bvec4-prohibited.frag
in-struct-prohibited.frag
out-bool-prohibited.vert
out-bvec2-prohibited.vert
out-bvec3-prohibited.vert
out-bvec4-prohibited.vert
out-struct-prohibited.vert
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This patch adds logic to allow the ast_to_hir function
apply_type_qualifier_to_variable() to tell whether it is acting on a
variable declaration or a function parameter. This will allow it to
correctly interpret the meaning of "out" and "in" keywords (which have
different meanings in those two contexts).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
linker.cpp is getting pretty big, and we're about to add even more
varying packing code, so split out the linker code that concerns
varyings to its own file.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Previously this macro existed in 3 separate places, some inside the
intel driver and some outside of it. It makes more sense to have it
in main/macros.h
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
When analyzing a loop where the loop condition is expressed in the
non-standard order (e.g. "4 > i" instead of "i < 4"), we were
reversing the condition incorrectly, leading to a loop bound that was
off by 1.
Fixes piglit tests {vs,fs}-loop-bounds-unrolled.shader_test.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Haswell and later support the GL_FIXED and 2_10_10_10_rev vertex formats
natively, and don't need shader workarounds.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
* We have a symbol conflict as rtasm in
Mesa collides with rtasm in gallium.
* As us linking gallium and mesa together
is an edge case, lets just omit the rtasm
code from Mesa as we should be going
llvmpipe soon :)
This is not as optimized as r600g - the MSAA compression is missing,
so r300g needs a lot of bandwidth (more than r600g to do the same thing).
However, if the bandwidth is not an issue for you, you can enjoy this
unoptimized MSAA support.
The only other missing optimization for MSAA is the fast color clear.
MSAA is enabled on r500 only, because that's the only GPU family I tested.
That said, MSAA should work on r300 and r400 as well (but you must set
RADEON_MSAA=1 to allow it, then turn MSAA on in your app or set GALLIUM_MSAA=n,
n >= 2, n <= 6)
I will enable the support by default on r300-r400 once someone (other than me)
tests those chipsets with piglit.
The supported modes are 2x, 4x, 6x.
The supported MSAA formats are RGBA8, BGRA8, and RGBA16F (r500 only).
Those 3 formats are used for all GL internal formats.
Tested with piglit. (I have ported all MSAA tests to GL2.1)
Fixes this build error on platforms not using GNU indent.
indent: Command line: ``-T'' requires a parameter
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
v2: Move {RED,RG,RGB,RGBA}_SNORM changes from the previous commit to
this commit. Based on suggestions from Ken.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The OpenGL 3.2 core profile spec says:
"The following base internal formats from table 3.11 are
color-renderable: RED, RG, RGB, and RGBA. The sized internal formats
from table 3.12 that have a color-renderable base internal format
are also color-renderable. No other formats, including compressed
internal formats, are color-renderable."
The OpenGL 3.2 compatibility profile spec says (only ALPHA is added):
"The following base internal formats from table 3.16 are
color-renderable: ALPHA, RED, RG, RGB, and RGBA. The sized internal formats
from table 3.17 that have a color-renderable base internal format
are also color-renderable. No other formats, including compressed
internal formats, are color-renderable."
Table 3.12 in the core profile spec and table 3.17 in the compatibility
profile spec list SNORM formats as having a base internal format of RED,
RG, RGB, or RGBA. From this we infer that they should also be color
renderable.
The OpenGL ES 3.0 spec says:
"An internal format is color-renderable if it is one of the formats
from table 3.12 noted as color-renderable or if it is unsized format
RGBA or RGB. No other formats, including compressed internal
formats, are color-renderable."
In the OpenGL ES 3.0 spec, none of the SNORM formats have "color-
renderable" marked in table 3.12. The RGB I and UI formats also are not
color-renderable in ES3, but we'll save that change for another patch.
Both NVIDIA's closed-source driver (version 304.64) and AMD's
closed-source driver (Catalyst 12.6 on HD 3650) reject *all* SNORM
formats for renderbuffers in OpenGL 3.3 compatibility profiles.
v2: Move {RED,RG,RGB,RGBA}_SNORM changes from the this commit to the
next commit. Based on suggestions from Ken.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This code now lives in an external tree.
For the next Mesa release fetch the code from the master branch
of this LLVM repo:
http://cgit.freedesktop.org/~tstellar/llvm/
For all subsequent Mesa releases, fetch the code from the official LLVM
project:
www.llvm.org
- skip the vertex buffer reallocation in flush and just use
the unsynchronized flag to get new memory.
- remove the cruft needed to get around the issues with the vertex buffer
reallocation in flush
- use pb_buffer instead of pipe_resource
This patch fixes intel_miptree_unmap_etc() (which decompresses ETC
textures to linear) to pay attention to map->x and map->y when writing
to the destination image. Previously these values were ignored,
causing the xoffset and yoffset parameters passed to
glCompressedTexSubImage2D() to be ignored.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
- We should use a 3D transfer of size Width x 1 x NumLayers.
- We should use layer_stride instead of stride.
(even though they are likely to be equal with 1D array textures)
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
There was the fast path based on _mesa_format_matches_format_and_type
for GetTexImage, but it never worked, because the Mesa format we were testing
there was always compressed. Further testing showed that the fast path
had been completely broken.
In this commit, the somewhat limited helper util_create_rgba_texture is
no longer used and instead, custom code for the texture creation is added,
which tries to find the best matching RGBA8 format, so that we can hit
the fast path *always* if the read format is a variant of RGBA8 and supported
by the driver.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Usage with pipe_context:
pipe->flush(pipe, NULL, PIPE_FLUSH_END_OF_FRAME);
Usage with st_context_iface:
st->flush(st, ST_FLUSH_END_OF_FRAME, NULL);
The flag is only a hint for drivers. Radeon will use it for buffer eviction
heuristics in the kernel (e.g. for queries like how many frames have passed
since a buffer was used).
The flag is currently only generated by st/dri on SwapBuffers.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Stéphane Marchesin <marcheu@chromium.org>
Automake 1.13 creates a bunch of new build artefacts:
- bin/test-driver, a script for running tests.
- *.trs files for every "make check" test result.
- *.log files containing the output of every test run by "make check".
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Every generation except Gen7 creates SURFACE_STATE entries via a
uint32_t array. Only Gen7 uses the older bitfield structure, which we
moved away from because it was less efficient. Convert it for
consistency.
This reduces the compiled size of gen7_wm_surface_state.o by 2.86% in a
release build.
v2: Fix accidental use of BRW_SURFACE_WIDTH/HEIGHT in brw_state_dump.c;
switch back to gen7_set_surface_mcs_info setting surf[6] directly
(both per Eric's review comments).
Acked-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Since wl_display_dispatch_queue() returns the number of processed events
or -1 on error, only cancel the roundtrip if an -1 is returned.
This also fixes a potential memory corruption bug happening when the
roundtrip does an early return and the callback later writes to the then
out of scope stack allocated `done' parameter.
Reviewed-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
In Jelly Bean, the interface to ANativeWindow changed. The change included
adding a new parameter the queueBuffer and dequeueBuffer methods,
removing the lockBuffer method, and requiring libsync.
v2:
- s/fence_fd == -1/fence_fd != -1/
- Fix leak. Close the fence_fd.
Reviewed-by: Tapani Pälli <tapani.palli@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Define the following Make variables:
MESA_ANDROID_MAJOR_VERSION
MESA_ANDROID_MINOR_VERSION
MESA_ANDROID_VERSION
These variable will allow us to make version-dependent decisions on
library dependencies. In particular, building Mesa against JellyBean will
require libsync.
Reviewed-by: Tapani Pälli <tapani.palli@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Commit f22d49de added the SamplerParamter* functions but only used
ASSERT_OUTSIDE_BEGIN_END inside the -f and -fv versions.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This patch adds functionality to Mesa to upload compressed
2-dimensional array textures, using the glCompressedTexImage3D and
glCompressedTexSubImage3D calls.
Fixes piglit tests "EXT_texture_array/compressed *" and "!OpenGL ES
3.0/ext_texture_array-compressed_gles3 *". Also partially fixes GLES3
conformance test "CoverageES30.test".
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
The old error reporting was completely bogus, passing _mesa_error() a
format string that didn't even match the remaining arguments. Also,
in many cases the number of dimensions in the TexImage call was not
preserved in the error message (e.g. an error in glTexImage2D was
reported simply as an error in glTexImage).
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
If the call fails, we should return NULL from XMesaCreateVisual().
This was found when Waffle tried to create a visual with depth/stencil
bits = -1. That's an illegal value for glXChooseFBConfig() and we should
return NULL in that situation.
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Dungeon Defenders hits TexImage()'s try_pbo_upload() path where
image->Width == 2, which doesn't meet intelEmitCopyBlit's requirement
that the pitch needs to be a multiple of 4.
Since intelEmitCopyBlit can already fail for a myriad of other reasons,
and it's not clear that other callers are immune to this failure mode,
simply make it return false rather than assert.
Fixes Dungeon Defenders on i965/Ivybridge. Now playable (aside from
having to work around the EXT_bindable_uniform issue).
NOTE: This is probably a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
We don't need them now that our set of parameter pointers points at the
GL core storage for them. This should save memory/bandwidth/overhead in
uniform updates.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
NumParameters used to be an upper bound on the number of vec4s to be
uploaded, which was basically safe (unless your buffer was bound near
the top of address space *and* you array indexed outside the buffer, in
which case I think you might GPU hang). As I migrate the driver away
from ParameterValues[], this is no longer true.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Like in the FS, there's no reason to use an external copy if the
ParameterValues[] relayout of it isn't the layout we need.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
If adding scale parameters during program compile caused a realloc of
ParameterValues, then the driver uniform storage set up by
_mesa_associate_uniform_storage() would point to potentially freed
memory.
Note that this uses TexturesUsed, which may change at runtime for GLSL
when sampler uniforms change. This is a flaw in our handling of texrect
in general, and not one I'm fixing currently.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We don't have native hardware support for these, so they get promoted to
RGBA, in which case we don't have hardware dealing with the channel
swizzling for us.
Fixes piglit EXT_texture_snorm/texwrap formats bordercolor (-swizzled).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
I had left this out for a long time because it regressed some
depthstencil-render-miplevels cases when it was enabled. Now that the
bugs causing those are fixed, there's nothing stopping us.
Improves glbenchmark 2.1 offscreen performance by 7.3% +/- 2.8% (n=10).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This worked out before because the parent was always 4 bytes so it
didn't affect the layout, but now we want to support Z16 too.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Fixing these rendering bugs has been implicated in performance
regressions (which may be unfixable), but at least knowing that it's
happening should help diagnose those regressions.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
The ETC1 changes failed at this, so let's make sure it will be caught in
testing next time.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
This was caught by the assertion in the next commit. It fixes the
remaining piglit depthstencil-render-miplevels cases, probably by
avoiding broken stencil copies in the validation path.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Relayout is expensive, so it's something developers (both us and others)
should know about when it happens.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Rename existing _Used flag to EverBound.
The GL 4.3 and ES 3.0 specs say
These names are marked as used, for the purposes of GenVertexArrays
only, but they do not acquire array state until they are first bound.
This also affects Apple VAOs, which is fine since the
APPLE_vertex_array_object spec says
A vertex array object is created by binding an unused name. This
binding is accomplished by calling BindVertexArrayAPPLE with id set
to the name of the new vertex array object.
Fixes arb_vertex_array_object_isvertexarray.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The GL 4.3 an ES 3.0 specs say
A transform feedback object is created by binding a name returned by
GenTransformFeedbacks with the command
void BindTransformFeedback( enum target, uint id );
Fixes arb_transform_feedback2-istransformfeedback and part of
es3conform's CoverageES30.test.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
i.e. we have to allocate a temporary tiled resource if dst isn't tiled.
This fixes hardlocks on r6xx-r7xx, though using a linear resource is forbidden
on later asics as well.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
No piglit regressions and now passes glsl-uniform-out-of-bounds-2.
validate_uniform_parameters now checks that the array index is
valid. This means if an index is out of bounds, glGetUniform* now
fails with GL_INVALID_OPERATION, as it should.
_mesa_uniform and _mesa_uniform_matrix also call
validate_uniform_parameters so the bounds checks there became
redundant and were removed.
The test in glGetUniformLocation is modified to check array bounds
so it now returns GL_INVALID_INDEX (-1) if you ask for the location
of a non-existent array element, as it should.
Signed-off-by: Frank Henigman <fjhenigman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Stéphane Marchesin <marcheu@chromium.org>
It's a build time option you need to set R600_TRACE_CS to 1 and it
will print to stderr all cs along as cs trace point value which
gave last offset into a cs process by the GPU.
Signed-off-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
htile is used for HiZ and HiS support and fast Z/S clears.
This commit just adds the htile setup and Fast Z clear.
We don't take full advantage of HiS with that patch.
v2 really use fast clear, still random issue with some tiles
need to try more flush combination, fix depth/stencil
texture decompression
v3 fix random issue on r6xx/r7xx
v4 rebase on top of lastest mesa, disable CB export when clearing
htile surface to avoid wasting bandwidth
v5 resummarize htile surface when uploading z value. Fix z/stencil
decompression, the custom blitter with custom dsa is no longer
needed.
v6 Reorganize render control/override update mecanism, fixing more
issues in the process.
v7 Add nop after depth surface base update to work around some htile
flushing issue. For htile to 8x8 on r6xx/r7xx as other combination
have issue. Do not enable hyperz when flushing/uncompressing
depth buffer.
v8 Fix htile surface, preload and prefetch setup. Only set preload
and prefetch on htile surface clear like fglrx. Record depth
clear value per level. Support several level for the htile
surface. First depth clear can't be a fast clear.
v9 Fix comments, properly account new register in emit function,
disable fast zclear if clearing different layer of texture
array to different value
v10 Disable hyperz for texture array making test simpler. Force
db_misc_state update when no depth buffer is bound. Remove
unused variable, rename depth_clearstencil to depth_clear.
Don't allocate htile surface for flushed depth. Something
broken the cliprect change, this need to be investigated.
v11 Rebase on top of newer mesa
v12 Rebase on top of newer mesa
v13 Rebase on top of newer mesa, htile surface need to be initialized
to zero, somehow special casing first clear to not use fast clear
and thus initialize the htile surface with proper value does not
work in all case.
v14 Use resource not texture for htile buffer make the htile buffer
size computation easier and simpler. Disable preload on evergreen
as its still troublesome in some case
v15 Cleanup some comment and remove some left over
v16 Define name for bit 20 of CP_COHER_CNTL
Signed-off-by: Pierre-Eric Pelloux-Prayer <pelloux@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Signed-off-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
This bring r600g allmost inline with closed source driver when
it comes to flushing and synchronization pattern.
v2-v4: history lost somewhere in outer space
v5: Fix compute size of flushing, use define for flags, update
worst case cs size requirement for flush, treat rs780 and
newer as r7xx when it comes to streamout.
v6: Fix num dw computation for framebuffer state, remove dead
code, use define instead of hardcoded value.
v7: Remove dead code
Signed-off-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
Previously, Mesa code assumed that glReadBuffer(GL_NONE) was only
valid for user-created framebuffer objects. However, the spec is
quite clear that is should also be valid for the default framebuffer.
From section 18.2.1 ("Obtaining Pixels from the Framebuffer") of the
GL 4.3 spec:
"When READ_FRAMEBUFFER_BINDING is zero, i.e. the default
framebuffer, src must be one of the values listed in table 17.4,
including NONE."
Similar language exists in the GLES 3.0 spec, and in desktop GL all
the way back to ARB_framebuffer_object.
Partially fixes GLES3 conformance test "CoverageES30.test".
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
It was slightly wrong: we were computing the longest duration of
the query among all the rasterizer tasks.
Regardless, for tile-based implementations such as llvmpipe, time differences
will never be very useful, because rendering before/during/after the query
is all interleaved. And this is expected, see ARB_timer_query spec, issue 10.
In particular, piglit ext_timer_query-time-elapsed still fails, because
it makes assumptions that don't hold true in in tiled architectures. Not
sure how to fix that though.
Reviewed-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
ARB/EXT_timer_query's definition of GL_TIME_ELAPSED match precisely the
subtraction of two GL_TIMESTAMP queries.
And for a lot of drivers, that's precisely how they have to implement
internally -- by emitting two hardware timestamp queries.
So, to simplify driver implementation, simply allow doing so in the state
tracker.
Eventually if no driver implements PIPE_QUERY_TIME_ELAPSED then we could
retire it.
Reviewed-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
The burst was incorrectly used, because ELEM_SIZE was always 0.
I don't know if the burst works, because I don't know of any test
which uses it.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
The old call to tgsi_exec_machine_bind_shader() in
softpipe_delete_fs_state() was never called since the shader's original
tokens are never passed to the tgsi interpreter (only shader _variant_
tokens are). Now, unbind the variant's tokens from the tgsi interpreter
when we free the variant.
This doesn't fix any known bugs but it's the right thing to do.
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
In exec_prepare() we were comparing pointers to see if the fragment
shader variant had changed before calling tgsi_exec_machine_bind_shader().
This didn't work reliably when there was a lot of shader token malloc/
freeing going on because the memory might get reused.
Instead, bind the shader variant during regular state validation.
Fixes http://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=40404
(fixes a couple of piglit's glsl-max-varyings test)
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
This force surface allocated from ddx to be consider as height
aligned on 8 and fix 1D->2D tiling transition that result from
this.
Signed-off-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
brw_emit_vertices contains special case logic to handle the case where
a vertex shader doesn't read any inputs. This special case logic was
incorrectly activating in the case were the only vertex input is
gl_VertexID. As a result, if a shader used gl_VertexID but used no
other inputs, then all vertices got a gl_VertexID of zero.
Fixes oglconform test "ubo-usage advanced.transform_feedback".
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The rather unweildy logic for determining this condition was repeated
in a large number of places. This patch consolidates it to a single
inline function.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This patch implements the following behaviours, which are mandated by
the GL 4.3 and GLES3 specs.
1. Regarding the GL_TRANSFORM_FEEDBACK_BUFFER_SIZE query: "If the
... size was not specified when the buffer object was bound
(e.g. if it was bound with BindBufferBase), ... zero is returned."
(GL 4.3 section 6.7.1 "Indexed Buffer Object Limits and Binding
Queries").
2. "BindBufferBase binds the entire buffer, even when the size of the
buffer is changed after the binding is established. It is
equivalent to calling BindBufferRange with offset zero, while size
is determined by the size of the bound buffer at the time the
binding is used." (GL 4.3 section 6.1.1 "Binding Buffer Objects to
Indexed Targets"). I interpret "at the time the binding is used"
to mean "at the time of the call to glBeginTransformFeedback".
3. "Regardless of the size specified with BindBufferRange, or
indirectly with BindBufferBase, the GL will never read or write
beyond the end of a bound buffer. In some cases this constraint may
result in visibly different behavior when a buffer overflow would
otherwise result, such as described for transform feedback
operations in section 13.2.2." (GL 4.3 section 6.1.1 "Binding
Buffer Objects to Indexed Targets").
Item 1 has been part of the spec all the way back to the inception of
the EXT_transform_feedback extension. Items 2 and 3 were added in GL
4.2 and GLES 3.
Prior to GL 4.2, in place of items 2 and 3, the spec simply said
"BindBufferBase is equivalent to calling BindBufferRange with offset
zero and size equal to the size of buffer." For transform feedback,
Mesa behaved as though this meant "...equal to the size of buffer at
the time of the call to BindBufferBase". However, this was
problematic because it left it ambiguous what to do if the buffer is
shrunk between the call to BindBuffer{Base,Range} and the call to
BeginTransformFeedback. Prior to this patch, Mesa's behaviour was to
try to write beyond the end of the buffer, likely resulting in memory
corruption. In light of this, I'm interpreting the spec change as a
clarification, not an intended behavioural change, so I'm making the
change apply regardless of API version.
Fixes GLES3 conformance test transform_feedback2_pause_resume.test.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
In desktop GL, if a draw call would cause transform feedback buffers
to overflow, the draw call should succeed, and the extra primitives
should simply not be recorded in the transform feedback buffers.
In GLES3, however, if a draw call would cause transform feedback
buffers to overflow, the draw call is supposed to produce an
INVALID_OPERATION error and no drawing should occur.
This patch implements the GLES3-required behaviour.
Fixes GLES3 conformance test "transform_feedback_overflow.test".
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
In GLES3, only glDrawArrays() and glDrawArraysInstanced() calls are
allowed when transform feedback is active.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Previously, the i965 driver contained code to compute the maximum
number of vertices that could be written without overflowing any
transform feedback buffers. This code wasn't driver-specific, and for
GLES3 support we're going to need to use it in core mesa. So this
patch moves the code into a core mesa function,
_mesa_compute_max_transform_feedback_vertices().
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
v2: Eliminate C++-style variable declarations, since these won't work
with MSVC.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
No functional change--this simply paves the way to allow futures
patches to call vbo_count_tessellated_primitives() during error
checking, before the _mesa_prim struct has been constructed.
This will be needed for GLES3, which requires draw calls to fail if
there is not enough space available in transform feedback buffers to
accommodate the primitives to be drawn.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Since the idea is to just expand or shrink the bit width but not otherwise do
conversion we also need to adjust the sign bit according to src, otherwise
the conversion code will incorrectly clamp the values. (Since this only works
for casting to ordinary floats the norm and fixed bits should always be fine.)
This fixes the remaining piglit attribs GL3 failures.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
a460aea3f1 wasn't entirely correct,
since all coords are already ints hence need to skip the iround.
Passes piglit texelFetch with sampler1DArray/sampler2DArray.
Reviewed-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Make sure drivers initialize the version before:
* _mesa_initialize_exec_table is called
* _mesa_initialize_exec_table_vbo is called
* A context is made current
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The driver should call _mesa_initialize_vbo_vtxfmt after
computing the context version.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Drivers must compute the context version, and then call
_mesa_initialize_exec_table themselves.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
In a future patch the exec functions will no longer set up
by _mesa_initialize_context and _vbo_CreateContext.
Therefore we must call _mesa_initialize_exec_table and
_mesa_initialize_exec_table_vbo.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This change forces the context version to be computed before
initilizing the exec dispatch tables.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
In glapi/gl_genexec.py:
* Remove _mesa_alloc_dispatch_table call
In glapi/gl_genexec.py and api_exec.h:
* Rename _mesa_create_exec_table to _mesa_initialize_exec_table
In context.c:
* Call _mesa_alloc_dispatch_table instead of _mesa_create_exec_table
* Call _mesa_initialize_exec_table (this is temporary)
Once all drivers have been modified to call
_mesa_initialize_exec_table, then the call to
_mesa_initialize_context can be removed from context.c.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This is used by st_BlitFramebuffer() / r600_blit(), and ARB_fbo allows
overlapped blits, even though the result is undefined. No piglit regressions
on r600g / CYPRESS.
Signed-off-by: Henri Verbeet <hverbeet@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
struct brw_instruction and the related instruction emitting code won't
be useful on Gen8+, as the instruction encoding changed. However, the
struct brw_reg code is still extremely valuable.
While we're at it, fix up some style points:
- s/GLuint/unsigned/g
- s/GLint/int/g
- s/GLshort/int16_t/g
- s/GLushort/uint16_t/g
- s/INLINE/inline/g
- Replace tabs with spaces
- Put return types on a separate line from the function name/parameters
- Remove trailing whitespace
- Remove extraneous whitespace around function parameters
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This adds the extensions + the tex buffer support for checking
the formats.
There is a piglit test enhancement sent to that list.
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Not sure what was going on here, but running piglit with debug builds
might be a good plan :-)
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
No statistically significant performance difference on glbenchmark 2.7
(n=60). It reduces cycles spent in the vertex shader by 3.3% +/- 0.8%
(n=5), but that's only about .3% of all cycles spent according to the
fixed shader_time.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The way our visitor works, scalar expression/swizzle results that get
stored in channels other than .x will have an intermediate MOV from
their result in the .x channel to the real .y (or whatever) channel, and
similarly for vec2/vec3 results.
By knowing how to adjust DP4-type instructions for optimizing out a
swizzled MOV, we can reduce instructions in common matrix multiplication
cases.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The compute-to-mrf code is really twitchy, and it's hard to construct
GLSL testcases for it. This unit test is also really hard to work with
(for example, if your instruction is removed by dead code elimination,
you end up inspecting something irrelevant), but I did use it for
debugging some of the commits to follow.
I called it test_vec4_register_coalesce because the compute-to-mrf code
is about to morph into that.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The final halt of the fragment shader turns off the remaining channels,
then jumps such that everything is turned back on. So, we can have our
last ENDIF of the shader point at that directly.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
From the Ivybridge PRM, Volume 4, Part 3, section 6.24 (page 172):
"The endif instruction is also used to hop out of nested conditionals by
jumping to the end of the next outer conditional block when all
channels are disabled."
Also:
"Pseudocode:
Evaluate(WrEn);
if ( WrEn == 0 ) { // all channels false
Jump(IP + JIP);
}"
First, ENDIF re-enables any channels that were disabled because they
didn't match the conditional. If any channels are active, it proceeds
to the next instruction (IP + 16). However, if they're all disabled,
there's no point in walking through all of the instructions that have no
effect---it can jump to the next instruction that might re-enable some
channels (an ELSE, ENDIF, or WHILE).
Previously, we always set JIP on ENDIF instructions to 2 (which is
measured in 8-byte units). This made it do Jump(IP + 16), which just
meant it would go to the next instruction even if all channels were off.
It turns out that walking over instructions while all the channels are
disabled like this is worse than just instruction dispatch overhead: if
there are texturing messages, it still costs a couple hundred cycles to
not-actually-read from the texture results.
This patch finds the next instruction that could re-enable channels and
sets JIP accordingly.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
V3: Put enable in an existing block rather than making a new
one for no good reason.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
V2: Moved up into emit(ir_texture *) to avoid duplication and fix
ordering for Gen7; Gen6 math quirks moved into previous patches.
Tested on Gen6 only; passes all the cube_map_array piglits.
V3: Fixed weird whitespace
V4: Use sampler->type; otherwise broken on arrays of samplers.
v5: Minor style fixes (by anholt)
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
V4: Fix various style nits as pointed out by Eric, and expand IMM
operands on both Gen6 and Gen7.
v5: minor style nits (by anholt)
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
V3: Fixed weird whitespace
V4: Use sampler's type rather than variable's type; otherwise broken
with arrays of samplers. (Thanks Eric)
v5: Fix a couple more style nits (by anholt)
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This causes immediate values to get moved to a temp on gen7, which is needed
for an upcoming change but hadn't happened in the visitor until then.
v2: Drop gen > 7 checks (doesn't exist), and style-fix comments (changes by
anholt).
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
v2: Actually switch on the other math instructions mentioned in the
comment.
v3: Add timing data for textureSize(), and clean up some long comment
lines.
Testing shader_time of fs16 shaders on a few frames of various apps:
nexuiz improved by 2.9% +/- 1.5% (n=10)
no difference on GLB2.5 (n=36, outliers removed)
no difference on GLB2.7 (n=25)
etqw improved by 2.6% +/- 2.2% (n=25)
no difference on lightsmark (n=25)
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
I've tested this to be true with various ALU ops on gen7 (with the
exception of MADs, which go at either 3 or 4 cycles per dispatch).
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This gives the instruction scheduler a chance to schedule between the
loads, whereas before it was restricted due to the dependencies between
the MRFs for setting them up.
For one shader in gles3conform, it goes from getting stuck in register
allocation for as long as anybody's bothered to leave it running down
to 23 seconds, thanks to the LIFO scheduling.
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This came from an idea by Ben Segovia. 16-wide pixel shaders are very
important for latency hiding on i965, so we want to try really hard to
get them. If scheduling an instruction makes some set of instructions
available, those are probably the ones that make the instruction's
result dead. By choosing those first, we'll have a tendency to reduce
the amount of live data as opposed to creating more.
Previously, we were sometimes getting this behavior out of the
scheduler, which was what produced the scheduler's original performance
wins on lightsmark. Unfortunately, that was mostly an accident of the
lame instruction latency information that I had, which made it
impossible to fix the actual scheduling for performance. Now that we've
fixed the scheduling for setup for register allocation, we can safely
update the latency parameters for the final schedule.
In shader-db, we lose 37 16-wide shaders, but gain 90 new ones. 4
shaders that were spilling change how many registers spill, for a
reduction of 70/3899 instructions.
v2: Simplify the new loop.
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Sometimes I've got a patch for a performance optimization that's not
showing a statistically significant performance difference on reported
FPS, but still seems like a good idea because it ought to reduce time
spent in the shader. If I can see the total number of cycles spent in
the shader stage being optimized, it may show that the patch is still
worthwhile (or point out that it's actually broken in some way).
Some shaders experience resets more than others, which skews the numbers
reported. Attempt to correct for this by linearly scaling according to
the number of resets that happen.
Note that will not be accurate if invocations of shaders have varying
times and longer invocations are more likely to reset. However, this
should at least be better than the previous situation.
I'm about to emit other kinds of writes besides time deltas, and it
turns out with the frequency of resets, we couldn't really use the old
time delta write() function more than once in a shader.
This patch implements varying packing between varyings.
Previously, each varying occupied components 0 through N-1 of its
assigned varying slot, so there was no way to pack two varyings into
the same slot. For example, if the varyings were a float, a vec2, a
vec3, and another vec2, they would be stored as follows:
<----slot1----> <----slot2----> <----slot3----> <----slot4----> slots
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
flt x x x <vec2-> x x <--vec3---> x <vec2-> x x varyings
(Each * represents a varying component, and the "x"s represent wasted
space).
This change packs the varyings together to eliminate wasted space
between varyings, like so:
<----slot1----> <----slot2----> <----slot3----> <----slot4----> slots
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
<vec2-> <vec2-> flt <--vec3---> x x x x x x x x varyings
Note that we take advantage of the sort order introduced in previous
patches (vec4's first, then vec2's, then scalars, then vec3's) to
minimize how often a varying is "double parked" (split across varying
slots).
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
v2: Skip varying packing if ctx->Const.DisableVaryingPacking is true.
This patch implements varying packing within varyings that are
composed of multiple vectors of size less than 4 (e.g. arrays of
vec2's, or matrices with height less than 4).
Previously, such varyings used up a full 4-wide varying slot for each
constituent vector, meaning that some of the components of each
varying slot went unused. For example, a mat4x3 would be stored as
follows:
<----slot1----> <----slot2----> <----slot3----> <----slot4----> slots
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
<-column1-> x <-column2-> x <-column3-> x <-column4-> x matrix
(Each * represents a varying component, and the "x"s represent wasted
space). In addition to wasting precious varying components, this
layout complicated transform feedback, since the constituents of the
varying are expected to be output to the transform feedback buffer
contiguously (e.g. without gaps between the columns, in the case of a
matrix).
This change packs the constituents of each varying together so that
all wasted space is at the end. For the mat4x3 example, this looks
like so:
<----slot1----> <----slot2----> <----slot3----> <----slot4----> slots
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
<-column1-> <-column2-> <-column3-> <-column4-> x x x x matrix
Note that matrix columns 2 and 3 now cross a boundary between varying
slots (a characteristic I call "double parking" of a varying).
We don't bother trying to eliminate the wasted space at the end of the
varying, since the patch that follows will take care of that.
Since compiler back-ends don't (yet) support this packed layout, the
lower_packed_varyings function is used to rewrite the shader into a
form where each varying occupies a full varying slot. Later, if we
add native back-end support for varying packing, we can make this
lowering pass optional.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
v2: Skip varying packing if ctx->Const.DisableVaryingPacking is true.
On hardware that supports a limited number of texture indirections,
varying packing will comsume an extra texture indirection, since ALU
operations are needed in the fragment shader to unpack the varyings
before any texturing can be done.
This patch introduces a new driver option,
ctx->Const.DisableVaryingPacking, which can be used by a driver to opt
out of varying packing if the extra texture indirection is costly
enough to outweigh the advantages of packing varyings.
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
This lowering pass generates GLSL code that manually packs varyings
into vec4 slots, for the benefit of back-ends that don't support
packed varyings natively.
No functional change--the lowering pass is not yet used.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
v2: Don't use ir_hierarchical_visitor--just loop over instructions
directly. Also, make the names of the packed varyings include the
names of the original varyings that were packed into them.
This patch paves the way for varying packing by adding a sorting step
before varying assignment, which sorts the varyings into an order that
increases the likelihood of being able to find an efficient packing.
First, varyings are sorted into "packing classes" by considering
attributes that can't be mixed during varying packing--at the moment
this includes base type (float/int/uint/bool) and interpolation mode
(smooth/noperspective/flat/centroid), though later we will hopefully
be able to relax some of these restrictions. The number of packing
classes places an upper limit on the amount of space that must be
wasted by varying packing, since in theory a shader might nave 4n+1
components worth of varyings in each of m packing classes, resulting
in 3m components worth of wasted space.
Then, within each packing class, varyings are sorted by vector size,
with vec4's coming first, then vec2's, then scalars, and then finally
vec3's. The motivation for this order is that it ensures that the
only vectors that might be "double parked" (with part of the vector in
one varying slot and the remainder in another) are vec3's.
Note that the varyings aren't actually packed yet, merely placed in an
order that will facilitate packing.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This patch further subdivides the loop that assigns varying locations
into two phases: one phase to match up the varyings between shader
stages, and one phase to assign them varying locations.
In between the two phases the matched varyings are stored in a new
data structure called varying_matches. This will free us to be able
to assign varying locations in any order, which will pave the way for
packing varyings.
Note that the new varying_matches::assign_locations() function returns
the number of varying slots that were used; this return value will be
used in a future patch.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This patch subdivides the loop that assigns varying locations into two
phases: one phase to match up varyings between shader stages (and
assign them varying locations), and a second phase to record the
varying assignments for use by transform feedback.
This paves the way for varying packing, which will require us to
further subdivide the first phase.
In addition, it lets us avoid a clumsy O(n^2) algorithm, since we can
now record the locations of all transform feedback varyings in a
single pass through the tfeedback_decls array, rather than have to
iterate through the array after assigning each varying.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Currently, the location of each varying is recorded in ir_variable as
a multiple of the size of a vec4. In order to pack varyings, we need
to be able to record, e.g. that a vec2 is stored in the second half of
a varying slot rather than the first half.
This patch introduces a field ir_variable::location_frac, which
represents the offset within a vec4 where a varying's value is stored.
Varyings that are not subject to packing will always have a
location_frac value of zero.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Previously, the linker used a value of -1 in ir_variable::location to
denote a generic input or output of the shader that had not yet been
matched up to a variable in another pipeline stage.
This patch introduces a new ir_variable field,
is_unmatched_generic_inout, for that purpose.
In future patches, this will allow us to separate the process of
matching varyings between shader stages from the processes of
assigning locations to those varying. That will in turn pave the way
for packing varyings.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Previously, link_invalidate_variable_locations() was only called
during assign_attribute_or_color_locations() and
assign_varying_locations(). This meant that in the corner case when
there was only a vertex shader, and varyings were being captured by
transform feedback, link_invalidate_variable_locations() wasn't being
called for the varyings.
This patch migrates the calls to link_invalidate_variable_locations()
to link_shaders(), so that they will be called in all circumstances.
In addition, it modifies the call semantics so that
link_invalidate_variable_locations() need only be called once per
shader stage (rather than once for inputs and once for outputs).
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This patch modifies the clip distance lowering pass so that the new
symbol it generates (glClipDistanceMESA) is added to the shader's
symbol table.
This will allow a later patch to modify the linker so that it finds
transform feedback varyings using the symbol table rather than having
to iterate through all the declarations in the shader.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This builds on the previous draw/softpipe patch.
So llvmpipe does streamout calls after clip/viewport stages,
but we have the pre-clip position stored for later use, so
when we are doing transform feedback, and its the position vertex
grab the vertex from the stored pre clip position.
The perfect fix is too probably add a codegen transform feedback
stage in between shader and clip stages, but this is good enough
for now.
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
This adds support to draw for the new features of transform feedback.
a) fix count_from_stream_output, using max_index+1 for now but it looks
like it should be valid as its derived from the vertex elements/vbo.
b) fix striding and dst offsets in output buffers - was just wrong before.
c) fix crash if tfb is suspended (so.num_targets == 0)
This also enables the new features on softpipe. It should be possible
to enable them on llvmpipe as well after this commit, but would need
to schedule piglit runs.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Every call to _cl_program::build() was erasing the binaries and logs for
every device associated with the program. This is incorrect because
it is possible to build a program for only a subset of devices and so
any device not being build should not have this information erased.
Reviewed-by: Francisco Jerez <currojerez@riseup.net>
Override the cross_compiling and ac_tool_prefix variables by reassigning
to them instead of redefining the macros. Redefining them will actually
cause the variable names to be replaced instead of their content.
Furthermore push the definition of CPPFLAGS before running the checks
for the build tools to avoid the host CPPFLAGS from leaking into the
build CPPFLAGS.
While at it drop the redefinition of AC_TRY_COMPILER which hasn't been
used since autoconf 2.50 and make sure that all definitions are properly
popped when done (LDFLAGS, ac_cv_prog_CPP, ac_cv_prog_CXXCPP).
Acked-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thierry Reding <thierry.reding@avionic-design.de>
Since we don't call lp_build_sample_common() in the texel fetch path we missed
the layer fixup code. If someone would have tried to do texelFetch with array
textures it would have crashed for sure.
Not really tested (can't run the piglit test being able to use texelFetch with
array samplers for now with llvmpipe).
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Previously, if the client program didn't specify a stride when setting
up a vertex attribute, we used _mesa_sizeof_type() to compute the size
of the type, and multiplied it by the number of components.
This didn't work for the 2_10_10_10 formats, since _mesa_sizeof_type()
returns -1 for those types, resulting in all kinds of havoc, since it
was causing the hardware to be programmed with a negative stride
value.
This patch adds a new function _mesa_bytes_per_vertex_attrib(), which
is similar to the existing function _mesa_bytes_per_pixel(), but which
computes the size of a vertex attribute based on the type and the
number of formats. For packed formats (currently only the 2_10_10_10
formats), it verifies that the number of components is correct and
returns the size of the packed format. For unpacked formats, it
returns the size of the type times the number of components.
In addition, this patch adds an assertion so that if we ever forget to
update _mesa_bytes_per_vertex_attrib() when adding a new vertex
format, we'll see the problem quickly rather than having to debug a
subtle conformance test failure.
Fixes GLES3 conformance tests
vertex_type_2_10_10_10_rev_{conversion,divisor,stride_pointer}.test.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
The GL 3.1 and ES 3.0 specs say of glGetActiveUniformsiv:
"If an error occurs, nothing will be written to params."
So, make a pass through the indices and check that they're valid before
the pass that actually writes to params. Checking pname happens on the
first iteration of the second loop.
Fixes es3conform's getactiveuniformsiv_for_nonexistent_uniform_indices
test.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Otherwise messages say silly things like
glGetActiveUniformBlockiv(block index -1 >= 0)
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
try_rewrite_rhs_to_dst is a quick optimization to avoid generating new
temporaries (and MOVs from those temporaries to the dest) for every
expression tree we visit. By generating better code in simple cases, we
reduce the burden on later optimization passes like register coalescing.
Previously, we compared inst->regs_written() to lhs->vector_elements
to make sure the instruction generating our value wrote the same number
of components as our destination register.
However, this fails in some cases. One example is texturing (which
produces a vec4) into gl_FragData[i]. Technically, gl_FragData[i] is
also a vec4. However, the destination VGRF actually has size 4n (where
n is the size of the array).
split_virtual_grfs() can't split VGRFs that are used by SEND messages
which require contiguous destination registers (like texturing), and
register allocation needs all VGRFs to have sizes between 1 and 4.
Amnesia: The Dark Descent hits this case: a texturing instruction
(4 components) gets rewritten to the gl_FragData output register
(which was 4*3 = 12 components), causing the register allocator to
hit the "we rely on split_virtual_grfs" assertion.
This makes it possible to play Amnesia.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This is redundant since we're calling draw_bind_fragment_shader()
which already does a flush.
v2: the redundant flush in llvmpipe_set_constant_buffer() has
already been removed by commit 3427466e6d
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Fetch shaders are usually destroyed at the context destruction by the state
tracker, so we can put them all in a large buffer without wasting memory.
This reduces the number of relocations sent to the kernel a little bit.
Tested-by: Aaron Watry <awatry@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Instead of having a 4-byte buffer for each streamout target, we suballocate
each dword from a 4K buffer.
This further reduces the overall number of relocations.
Tested-by: Aaron Watry <awatry@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
u_upload_mgr suballocates memory from a large buffer and maps the allocated
range (unsychronized), which is perfect for short-lived staging buffers.
This reduces the number of relocations sent to the kernel.
Tested-by: Aaron Watry <awatry@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
There are 2 ways. I prefer the former:
GALLIUM_MSAA=n
__GL_FSAA_MODE=n
Tested with ETQW, which doesn't support MSAA on Linux. This is
the only way to get MSAA there.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
There are only 2 possible usages: render target and depth stencil.
Both can be derived from the surface format, so the flag is redundant.
And it's going away...
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This adds seamless sampling for cubemap boundaries if requested.
The corner case averaging is messy but seems like it should be spec
compliant.
The face direction stuff is also a bit messy, I've no idea if that could
or should be simpler, or even if all my directions are fully correct!
v1.1: update comments, drop unneeded seamless calls for nearest, fix
if statement layout.
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
This follow the code from the i965 driver, and emits the structs
and arrays recursively.
This fixes an assert in the two UBO tests
fs-struct-copy-complicated and
vs-struct-copy-complicated
These tests now pass on softpipe, with no regressions.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
This fixes some use-after-free issues. I haven't measured any real
performance difference with a handful of Mesa demos.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Before this we only supported user-based constant buffers.
First, we basically plumb pipe_constant_buffer objects through llvmpipe
rather than pipe_resource objects.
Second, update llvmpipe_set_constant_buffer() and try_update_scene_state()
so they understand both resource- and user-based constant buffers.
The problem with user constant buffers is the potential for use-after-free,
as seen in some WebGL tests. The next patch will flip the switch for
resource-based const buffers.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
I had tried this in the past, but ran into trouble with applications
that sample from undiscarded pixels in the same subspan. To fix that
issue, only jump to the end for an entire subspan at a time.
Improves GLbenchmark 2.7 (1024x768) performance by 7.9 +/- 1.5% (n=8).
v2: Drop the br variable in the jump instruction -- if I ever do jumps
pre-gen6, it'll be a different code block anyway since we don't have
HALT until gen6.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This makes much more sense on gen6+, and will also prove useful for
early exit of shaders on discard.
v2: fix up a stale comment from before converting gen4-5.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We're going to redo discard handling to track discards in the other flag
subregister, saving instructions in the discard and allowing predicated
jumps out to the end of the shader.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This makes our output more consistent with other disasm tools, and
will be necessary when we start using f0.1.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We've been calling it a register number, it's actually the subregister,
and things will get confusing once we start using it if it isn't fixed.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
There's a flag subreg nr field in bits2 next to src0.vertstride, but
there shouldn't be anything in bits3 next to src1.vertstride.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Fixes compiler warning:
drm/native_drm.c: In function ‘native_create_display’:
drm/native_drm.c:180:21: warning: ‘device’ may be used uninitialized in this function [-Wmaybe-uninitialized]
drm/native_drm.c:157:24: note: ‘device’ was declared here
Signed-off-by: Tobias Droste <tdroste@gmx.de>
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
This fixes a number of crashes on r600g due to the fact that
lp_build_mul assumes vector types when optimizing mul to bit shifts.
This bug was uncovered by 0ad1fefd69
Noticed would fail, we were doing two things wrong
a) 1d arrays require the layers in height
b) minifying the layers field.
v2: don't change height code, fixup completely inside txq
as suggested by Roland.
v3: just add minify before texture array size
v1: Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
command mistakenly used vector instead of scalar emit (the more or less
identical code in radeon is already correct).
Seems like it would be broken ever since kms probably.
Should fix bugs 22576, 26809.
I noticed the texelFetch offset test failed on 2D rect samplers
with GLSL 1.40. This is because I wrote the immediate->offset
translation wrong.
Fixed the translation to actually use the ureg info to set the
offsets up.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
This ports over from the dri2 code to the drisw bits. It means 3.1
core contexts now work for softpipe.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
This is needed to compute render_to_fbo. It even has the comment.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This patch does two things:
1. Constant buffer state changes were broken (but happened to work by
dumb luck). The problem is we weren't calling draw_do_flush() in
draw_set_mapped_constant_buffer() when we changed that state. All the
other draw_set_foo() functions were calling draw_do_flush() already.
2. Use a simpler state validation step when we're changing light-weight
parameter state such as constant buffers, viewport dims or clip planes.
There's no need to revalidate the whole pipeline when changing state
like that. The new validation method is called bind_parameters()
and is called instead of the prepare() method. A new
DRAW_FLUSH_PARAMETER_CHANGE flag is used to signal these light-weight
state changes. This results in a modest but measurable increase in
FPS for many Mesa demos.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
When one function is changed, also look at the other.
Presently, there are some differences with respect to geometry
shaders and instanced drawing...
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
this adds UBO support to the state tracker, it works with softpipe
as-is.
It uses UARL + CONST[x][ADDR[0].x] type constructs.
v2: don't disable UBOs if geom shaders don't exist (me)
rename upload to bind (calim)
fix 12 -> 13 comparison as comment (calim + brianp)
fix signed->unsigned (Brian)
remove assert (Brian)
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
This adds the necessary changes to the st to allow texture buffer object
support if the driver advertises it.
v1.1: remove extra blank line and whitespace
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
This patch enables support for ETC2 compressed textures on
all intel hardware. At present, ETC2 texture decoding is not
available on intel hardware. So, compressed ETC2 texture data
is decoded in software and stored in a suitable uncompressed
MESA_FORMAT at the time of glCompressedTexImage2D. Currently,
ETC2 formats are only exposed in OpenGL ES 3.0.
V2: Use single etc_wraps variable for both etc1 and etc2.
V3: Remove redundant code and use just one intel_miptree_map_etc()
and intel_miptree_unmap_etc() function.
Choose MESA_FORMAT_SIGNED_{R16, GR1616} for ETC2 signed-{r11, rg11}
formats
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Data in GL_COMPRESSED_SRGB8_PUNCHTHROUGH_ALPHA1_ETC2 format is decoded and stored
in MESA_FORMAT_SARGB.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Data in GL_COMPRESSED_RGB8_PUNCHTHROUGH_ALPHA1_ETC2 format is decoded and stored
in MESA_FORMAT_RGBA8888_REV.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Data in GL_COMPRESSED_SIGNED_RG11_EAC format is decoded and stored in
MESA_FORMAT_SIGNED_GR1616.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Data in GL_COMPRESSED_SIGNED_R11_EAC format is decoded and stored in
MESA_FORMAT_SIGNED_R16.
v2:
16 bit signed data is converted to 16 bit unsigned data by
adding 2 ^ 15 and stored in an unsigned texture format.
v3:
1. Handle a corner case when base code word value is -128. As per
OpenGL ES 3.0 specification -128 is not an allowed value and should
be truncated to -127.
2. Converting a decoded 16 bit signed data to 16 bit unsigned data by
adding 2 ^ 15 gives us an output which matches the decompressed image
(.ppm) generated by ericsson's etcpack tool. ericsson is also doing this
conversion in their tool because .ppm image files don't support signed
data. But gles 3.0 specification doesn't suggest this conversion. We
need to keep the decoded data in signed format. Both signed format
tests in gles3 conformance pass with these changes.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Data in GL_COMPRESSED_RG11_EAC format is decoded and stored in
MESA_FORMAT_RG1616.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Data in GL_COMPRESSED_R11_EAC format is decoded and stored in
MESA_FORMAT_R16.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Data in GL_COMPRESSED_SRGB8_ALPHA8_ETC2_EAC format is decoded and stored
in MESA_FORMAT_SARGB8.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Data in GL_COMPRESSED_RGBA8_ETC2_EAC format is decoded and stored
in MESA_FORMAT_RGBA8888_REV.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Data in GL_COMPRESSED_SRGB8_ETC2 format is decoded and stored
in MESA_FORMAT_SARGB8.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Data in GL_COMPRESSED_RGB8_ETC2 format is decoded and stored in
MESA_FORMAT_RGBX8888_REV.
v2: Use CLAMP macro and stdbool.h
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This patch changes nonlinear_to_linear() function to non static inline
and makes it available outside format_unpack.c. Also, removes the
duplicate copies in other files.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
It is required by OpenGL ES 3.0 to support ETC2 textures.
This patch adds new MESA_FORMATs for following etc2 texture
formats:
GL_COMPRESSED_RGB8_ETC2
GL_COMPRESSED_SRGB8_ETC2
GL_COMPRESSED_RGBA8_ETC2_EAC
GL_COMPRESSED_SRGB8_ALPHA8_ETC2_EAC
GL_COMPRESSED_R11_EAC
GL_COMPRESSED_RG11_EAC
GL_COMPRESSED_SIGNED_R11_EAC
GL_COMPRESSED_SIGNED_RG11_EAC
MESA_FORMAT_ETC2_RGB8_PUNCHTHROUGH_ALPHA1
MESA_FORMAT_ETC2_SRGB8_PUNCHTHROUGH_ALPHA1
Above formats are currently available in only gles 3.0.
v2: Add entries in texfetch_funcs[] array.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
v3 (Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>): comment out symbols that
are not implemented yet, so that this commit compiles on its own;
future commits will uncomment the symbols as they become available.
Removes a collision of the object file name for main/hash_table
and program/hash_table.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
The ES 3 conformance suite unbinds buffers (by binding buffer 0) and
passes zero for the size and offset, which the spec explicitly
disallows. Otherwise, this seems like a reasonable thing to do.
Khronos will be changing the spec to allow this (bug 9765). Fixes
es3conform's transform_feedback_init_defaults test.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Just enough for draw module to work ok.
This improves "piglit attribs GL3", though something fishy is still
happening with certain unsigned integer values.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
The ADDR file is cumbersome for native integer capable drivers. We
should consider deprecating it eventually, but this just adds support
for indirection from TEMP registers.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Support 16 (defined in LP_MAX_TGSI_CONST_BUFFERS) as opposed to 32 (as
defined by PIPE_MAX_CONSTANT_BUFFERS) because that would make the jit
context become unnecessarily large.
v2: Bump limit from 4 to 16 to cover ARB_uniform_buffer_object needs,
per Dave Airlie.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
All MSAA buffers are allocated privately and resolved into the DRI-provided
back and front buffers.
If an MSAA visual is chosen, the buffers st/mesa receives are all
multi-sample. st/mesa doesn't have access to the single-sample buffers
in that case.
This makes MSAA work in games like Nexuiz.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
- We can use a single loop for adding new configs.
- The useless parameter depth_bits is removed.
- The maximum number of samples is bumped to 32.
- We can support Z16_UNORM and Z32_UNORM unconditionally since the zbuffers
are private.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This disables DRI2 sharing of zbuffers. The window zbuffer is allocated just
like any other texture - through resource_create.
The idea of allocating a zbuffer through DRI2 isn't very useful with MSAA,
where a single-sample zbuffer is useless.
IIRC, the Intel driver does the same thing.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Just use pipe->blit, which can do resolve, flipping, and format conversions.
The util_blit_pixels codepath is still there for the cases where we have to
force alpha to 1.
This also turns on acceleration for copying GL_DEPTH_STENCIL.
This may not be strictly necessary, but every other rule in the grammar ends
with a semicolon. It also appears that this was supposed to be commited with
the original patch that changed this rule, but the wrong version of the patch
was accidentally pushed.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Note that while 'packed' is a reserved word in GLSL ES, row_major is not.
This means that we have to use the string-based matching for that.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Acked-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
Nearly all of the builtin functions in GLSL 3.00 ES are already
implemented in Mesa; this patch enables them.
A few functions are not implemented yet; those have been commented
out, with a FIXME comment to act as a reminder of what still needs to
be implemented. Here is the complete list: packSnorm2x16,
unpackSnorm2x16, packUnorm2x16, unpackUnorm2x16, packHalf2x16,
unpackHalf2x16.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Acked-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
These functions are defined in GLSL 1.50 and GLES 3.00 ES.
The formulas have been extracted from the existing implementation of
inverse().
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Acked-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
This patch also adds assertions so that when we add new GLSL versions,
we'll notice that we need to update the builtin variables.
[v2, idr]: s/Frab/Frag/ Noticed by Eric.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com> [v1]
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Acked-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
This patch implements all of the built-in types for GLSL 3.00 ES.
This is almost exactly the same as the set of built-in types for GLSL
1.30, except ate 1D samplers are skipped, and samplerCubeShadow is
added.
This patch also addes an assertion so that when we add new GLSL
versions, we'll notice that we need to update the types.
In review, Eric noted:
"This change looks correct. The overall interaction of profiles is
getting ugly, though. I'm imagining a restructure of the symbol
table population so that there's a big list of types, and each
#version has a nice list of strings of type names copy and pasted
out of its spec."
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Acked-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
This patch updates the following linker checks to do the right thing
in GLSL 3.00 ES:
- Failing to write to gl_Position is allowed in GLSL 1.40+ as well as
GLSL 3.00 ES.
- It is an error to write to both gl_ClipVertex and gl_ClipDistance in
GLSL 1.30+. This does not apply to GLSL 3.00 ES.
- GLSL 3.00 ES uses the same varying counting rules as GLSL 1.00 ES.
- In GLSL 1.30 and GLSL 3.00 ES, "discard" terminates the shader.
- In GLSL 1.00 ES and GLSL 3.00 ES, both a fragment and a vertex
shader must be present.
[v2, idr]: Fix minro typo in a comment. Noticed by Ken.
[v3, idr]: s/IsEs(Shader|Prog)/IsES/ Suggested by Ken and Eric.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
Previously we recorded just the GLSL version (or the max version, if
GLSL 1.10 and GLSL 1.20 programs were linked together).
[v2, idr]: s/IsEs(Shader|Prog)/IsES/ Suggested by Ken and Eric.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Acked-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
Previously, we prohibited mixing of shading language versions if
min_version == 100 or max_version >= 130. This was technically
correct (since desktop GLSL 1.30 and beyond prohibit mixing of shading
language versions, as does GLSL 1.00 ES), but it was confusing. Also,
we asserted that all shading language versions were between 1.00 and
1.40, which was unnecessary (since the parser already checks shading
language versions) and doesn't work for GLSL 3.00 ES.
This patch changes the code to explicitly check that (a) ES shaders
aren't mixed with desktop shaders, (b) shaders aren't mixed between ES
versions, and (c) shaders aren't mixed between desktop GLSL versions
when at least one shader is GLSL 1.30 or greater. Also, it removes
the unnecessary assertion.
[v2, idr]: Slightly tweak the is_es_prog detection to occur outside the loop
instead of doing something special on the first loop iteration. Suggested by
Ken.
[v3, idr]: s/IsEs(Shader|Prog)/IsES/ Suggested by Ken and Eric.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com> [v1]
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
Previously we recorded just the GLSL version, with the knowledge that
100 means GLSL 1.00 ES. With the advent of GLSL 3.00 ES, this is
going to get more complex, and eventually will probably become
ambiguous (GLSL 4.00 already exists, and GLSL 4.00 ES is likely to be
created some day).
To reduce confusion, this patch simply records whether the shader is
GLSL ES as an explicit boolean.
[v2, idr]: s/IsEs(Shader|Prog)/IsES/ Suggested by Ken and Eric.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com> [v1]
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Acked-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
Note that GLSL 1.00 is selected using "#version 100", so "#version 100
es" is prohibited.
v2: Check for GLES3 before allowing '#version 300 es'
v3: Make sure a correct language_version is set in
_mesa_glsl_parse_state::process_version_directive.
Signed-off-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
Version directive handling is going to have to be used within two
parser rules, one for desktop-style version directives (e.g. "#version
130") and one for the new ES-style version directive (e.g. "#version
300 es"), so this patch moves it to a function that can be called from
both rules.
No functional change.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
Version directive handling is going to have to be used within two
parser rules, one for desktop-style version directives (e.g. "#version
130") and one for the new ES-style version directive (e.g. "#version
300 es"), so this patch moves it to a function that can be called from
both rules.
No functional change.
[mattst88] v2: Use intmax_t instead of int for version argument. Would
otherwise write garbage after #version since PRIiMAX was reading 64-bits
instead of 32.
[idr] v3: A later commit fixes the caller of
_glcpp_parser_handle_version_declaration to pass the correct number of
parameters. Fix it in the patch that changes the interface instead.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
This patch turns on the following features for GLSL ES 3.00:
- Array constructors, whole array assignment, and array comparisons.
- Second and third operands of ?: may be arrays.
- Use of "in" and "out" qualifiers on globals.
- Bitwise and modulus operators.
- Integral vertex shader inputs.
- Range-checking of literal integers.
- array.length method.
- Function calls may be constant expressions.
- Integral varyings must be qualified with "flat".
- Interpolation and centroid qualifiers may not be applied to vertex
shader inputs.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
GLSL ES 3.00 adds the following keywords over GLSL 1.00: uint,
uvec[2-4], matNxM, centroid, flat, smooth, various samplers, layout,
switch, default, and case.
Additionally, it reserves a large number of keywords, some of which
were already reserved in versions of desktop GL that Mesa supports,
some of which are new to Mesa.
A few of the reserved keywords in GLSL ES 3.00 are keywords that are
supported in all other versions of GLSL: attribute, varying,
sampler1D, sampler1DShador, sampler2DRect, and sampler2DRectShadow.
This patch updates the lexer to handle all of the new keywords
correctly when the language being parsed is GLSL 3.00 ES.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
This patch expands the lexer KEYWORD macro to take two additional
arguments: the GLSL ES versions in which the given keyword was first
reserved, and supported, respectively. This will allow us to
trivially add support for GLSL 3.00 ES keywords, even though the set
of GLSL 3.00 ES keywords is neither a subset or a superset of the
keywords corresponding to any desktop GLSL version.
The new KEYWORD macro makes use of the
_mesa_glsl_parse_state::is_version() function, so it accepts 0 as
meaning "unsupported" (rather than 999, which we used previously).
Note that a few keywords ("packed" and "row_major") are supported
*either* when GLSL 1.40 is in use or when ARB_uniform_buffer_obj
support is enabled. Previously, we handled these by cleverly taking
advantage of the fact that the KEYWORD macro didn't parenthesize its
arguments in the usual way. Now they are handled more
straightforwardly, with a new macro, KEYWORD_WITH_ALT.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
Previous to this patch, we were not very consistent about the errors
we generate when a shader tried to use a feature that is prohibited in
the current GLSL version. Some error messages failed to mention the
GLSL version currently in use (or did so inaccurately), and some error
messages failed to mention the first GLSL version in which the given
feature is allowed.
This patch reworks all of the error checks to use the check_version()
function, which produces error messages in a standard form
(approximately "$FEATURE forbidden in $CURRENT_GLSL_VERSION
($REQUIRED_GLSL_VERSION required).").
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
With the advent of GLSL 3.00 ES, the version checks we perform in the
GLSL compiler (to determine which language features are present) will
become more complicated. To reduce the complexity, this patch adds
functions check_version() and is_version() to _mesa_glsl_parse_state.
These functions take two version numbers: a desktop GLSL version and a
GLSL ES version, and return a boolean indicating whether the GLSL
version being compiled is at least the required version. So, for
example, is_version(130, 300) returns true if the GLSL version being
compiled is at least desktop GLSL 1.30 or GLSL 3.00.
The check_version() function additionally produces an error message if
the version check fails, informing the user of which GLSL version(s)
support the given feature.
[v2, idr]: Add PRINTFLIKE annotation to the new method. The numbering of th
parameters is correct because GCC is silly.
[v3, idr]: Fix copy-and-paste error in the comment before
_mesa_glsl_parse_state::is_version. Noticed by Ken.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
Fixes a bug where version_string would be left uninitialized if no
GLSL "#version" directive was used.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
This will be useful in generating more helpful error messages,
especially with the addition of GLSL 3.00 ES support.
[v2, idr]: Rename ctx parameter to mem_ctx
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
Previously, we stored the GLSL language version in the
glsl_symbol_table struct. But this was unnecessary--all
glsl_symbol_table needs to know is whether functions and variables
have separate namespaces (they do in GLSL 1.10 only).
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
Adding this now makes it easier to develop and test GLES3 features, since we
can do initial development and testing using desktop GL. Later GLSL compiler
patches check for either ctx->Extensions.ARB_ES3_compatibility or
_mesa_is_gles3 to allow certain features (i.e., "#version 300 es").
[v2, idr]: Just edits to the commit message.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
Previously, the user could send in a pointer that was not created
by mesa. When we dereferenced that pointer, there would be an
exception.
Now we keep a set of pointers and verify that the pointer
exists in that set before dereferencing it.
Note: This fixes several crashing gles3conform tests.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Note: The GL/GLES3 web man pages don't seem to properly
document glWaitSync's error when the sync object is invalid.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
From: git://people.freedesktop.org/~anholt/hash_table
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
[jordan.l.justen@intel.com: minor rework for mesa]
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
u_rect.h said these should move to a different file, and u_surface seems
a better home.
Leave #include "util/u_surface.h" to avoid having to touch thousand of
files.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
- Re-implement os_time_get in terms of os_time_get_nano() for consistency
- Use CLOCK_MONOTONIC as recommended
- Only use clock_gettime on Linux for now.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Otherwise the driver announces 4096 vertex shader constants and other
way too high limits.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Signed-off-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
GL/gl.h provides some definitions (GL_FALSE, GL_ONE, etc) that have
the same value as other gl headers but are represented differently
(0 vs 0x0 and 1 vs 0x1).
This causes compiler warnings about redefining such definitions when
including GL/gl.h with other gl headers.
Fixes http://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=57802
Signed-off-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Several issues actually:
- Fix a regression in unsigned normalized in the rescaling
[0, 255] to [0, 256]
- Ensure we use signed shifts where appropriate (instead of
unsigned shifts)
- Refactor the code slightly -- move all the logic inside
lp_build_lerp_simple().
This change, plus an adjustment in the tolerance of signed normalized
results in piglit fbo-blending-formats fixes bug 57903
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
They need to be converted to the native integer type to prevent garbage
in higher order bits from being printed.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Remove the draw_vs_set_constants() and draw_gs_set_constants()
functions and the draw->vs.aligned_constants,
draw->vs.aligned_constant_storage and draw->vs.const_storage_size
fields. None of it was used.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Commit 4097308 fixed the build in a questionable way. It worked at the
time, but, as Ian pointed out, the fix would likely fail at a future
commit due to the indeterminism of parallel builds. And that's exactly
what happened; the fix no longer works. `mm -j4` on Fedora 17 fails for
me.
The problem is that there is no rule for program_parse.tab.h. To fix that,
this patch adds a rule that makes program_parse.tab.c depend on
program_parse.tab.h. Technically, the c file does not depend on the
h file. However, because the two files are generated together by a single
invocation of Bison, any rule that forces execution of Bison is
sufficient.
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
I'd written most of this ages ago, but never finished it off.
This passes 115/130 piglit tests so far. I'll look into the
others as time permits.
v1.1: fix calloc return check as suggested by Jose.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
This can be used for two purposes: Using hand-coded shaders to determine
per-instruction timings, or figuring out which shader to optimize in a
whole application.
Note that this doesn't cover the instructions that set up the message to
the URB/FB write -- we'd need to convert the MRF usage in these
instructions to GRFs so that our offsets/times don't overwrite our
shader outputs.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org> (v1)
v2: Check the timestamp reset flag in the VS, which is apparently
getting set fairly regularly in the range we watch, resulting in
negative numbers getting added to our 32-bit counter, and thus large
values added to our uint64_t.
v3: Rebase on reladdr changes, removing a new safety check that proved
impossible to satisfy. Add a comment to the AOP defs from Ken's
review, and put them in a slightly more sensible spot.
v4: Check timestamp reset in the FS as well.
Fixes flat shading for AA lines. demos/src/trivial/line-smooth is a
test case which hits this.
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
x11_screen.c includes xf86drm.h, which comes from libdrm-dev.
This patch fixes this build error.
Compiling src/gallium/state_trackers/egl/x11/x11_screen.c ...
src/gallium/state_trackers/egl/x11/x11_screen.c:30:21: fatal error: xf86drm.h: No such file or directory
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Serious Sam 3 had a shader hitting this path, but it's used rarely so it
didn't show a significant performance difference (n=7). It does reduce
compile time massively, though -- one shader goes from 14s compile time
and 11723 instructions generated to .44s and 499 instructions.
Note that some shaders lose 16-wide mode because we don't support
16-wide and pull constants at the moment (generally, things looping over
a few-element array where the loop isn't getting unrolled). Given that
those shaders are being generated with 15-20% fewer instructions, it
probably outweighs the loss of 16-wide.
The gen7 send-from-GRF path is sufficiently different from the perspective of
IR generation and optimization that I just made it a separate opcode.
v2: fix whitespace, rebase on Ken's recent refactor.
As of gen7, we can skip the header on some messages, and this can make
optimization on those messages much nicer when you've got GRFs instead of MRFs
as the source.
This is a temporary hack. I believe the only way of properly fixing this
is to check buffer overflow just before fetching based on addresses,
instead of number of vertices/instances. This change simply allows tests
that stress buffer overflows to complete without asserting, and should
not affect valid rendering.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
We need to clamp vertex buffer fetch based on its size, not based on the
user specified max index hint.
This matches draw_pt_fetch_run() above.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
A single vertex size is chosen for the whole pipeline. So the number of
geometry shader outputs must also be taken in consideration.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
There is more work necessary to properly support buffers in shaders, but
this gets things a bit further along.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This fixes fdo bug 57755 and most of the failures of piglit fbo-blending-formats
GL_EXT_texture_snorm.
GL_INTENSITY_SNORM is still failing, but problem is probably elsewhere,
as GL_R8_SNORM works fine.
Now that _mesa_BindFramebuffer does the right thing in ES contexts when the
gl_extensions::ARB_framebuffer_object bit is set, the Intel driver doesn't
need this hack.
No piglit or GLES2 conformance regressions observed on IVB, and this
patch (and the previous) fix es3conform's framebuffer_srgb_draw and
transform_feedback_misc tests.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Desktop OpenGL implementations that support either
GL_ARB_framebuffer_object or OpenGL 3.0 must require names from
glGenFramebuffers for glBindFramebuffer. We have enforced this rule for
quite some time. However, OpenGL ES 1.0, 2.0, and 3.0 implementations
are required to allow user-defined names (e.g., not from
glGenFramebuffers{OES,}).
The Intel drivers have hacked around this by not enabling
GL_ARB_framebuffer_object in an ES context. Instead, just pick the
correct behavior in _mesa_BindFramebuffer based on the context API.
Chad pointed out in a review e-mail:
"I'd like to point out, though, that glBindFramebufferEXT and
glBindRenderbufferEXT are still broken on desktop GL because they
don't accept user-genned names. But that fix belongs to a different
series."
Currently glBindFramebufferEXT is an alias for glBindFramebuffer.
Unalising two functions presents some difficulty, so we'll have to
revisit this eventually.
v2: Perform same check in _mesa_BindRenderbuffer too.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org> [v1]
The NV formulation of primitive restart is turned on/off with
glEnableClientState/glDisableClientState. These two functions don't
exist in core contexts, which mean that GL_NV_primitive_restart is
essentially useless...even broken.
However, leaving it on causes oglconform's primitive-restart-nv tests to
run in OpenGL 3.1 contexts, which results in them all failing. This
patch causes 29 subtests to go from "fail" to "not run".
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
I keep accidentally trying to use it. "fs" is a sensible name for
fragment shader debugging, and "wm" is...not. It's also more symmetric
with "vs".
Leave INTEL_DEBUG=wm because old habits die hard.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Also remove the recently added and overloaded LLVM_CXXFLAGS from CXXFLAGS.
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
After walking our IR instructions (Mesa or GLSL), we don't want to also
mark the start of the FB/URB writes or whatever as being that IR. This
can end up being misleading when the end of the IR visit got copy
propagated out to a later instruction in the URB writes.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The VP generation doesn't set up the output reg strings, so if you
didn't happen to get these values as 0 on the stack, you'd lose.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Bison -o parameter expects a .c file.
The corresponding .h filename is obtained
by removing the extension of the initial .c.
This was breaking compilation on Ubuntu 12.04
libmesa_dricore_intermediates/libmesa_dricore.a(program_parse.tab.o): In
function `_mesa_parse_arb_program':
external/mesa/src/mesa/program/program_parse.y:2682: multiple definition
of `_mesa_parse_arb_program'
libmesa_dricore_intermediates/libmesa_dricore.a(lex.yy.o):external/mesa/src/mesa/program/program_parse.y:2682:
first defined here
Signed-off-by: Adrian Marius Negreanu <adrian.m.negreanu@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Tapani Pälli <tapani.palli@intel.com>
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
In my testing I haven't found any cases where we get a null context
pointer, but it might still be possible. Check for null just to be safe.
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Only fail if GLX_SAMPLE_BUFFERS_ARB or GLX_SAMPLES_ARB are non-zero.
We were already doing this in the older swrast/glx code.
This fixes a piglit/waffle problem where we'd always fail to get a
visual/config and report the test as "skip".
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We were warning when there was no current context and we're about
to delete a renderbuffer, but that happens fairly often and isn't
really a problem.
Fixes http://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=57754
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Tested-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This required an update for the query storage in llvmpipe, there
can now be an active query per query type, so an occlusion query
can run at the same time as a time elapsed query.
Based on PIPE_QUERY_TIME_ELAPSED patch from Dave Airlie.
v2: fix up piglits for timers (also from Dave Airlie)
a) if we don't render anything the result is 0, so just
return the current time
b) add missing screen get_timestamp callback.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
we need to rely on util code for fetching those, just like before
9f06061d50.
Fixes bugs 57699 and 57756.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Tell LLVM the exact alignment we can guarantee, based on the fs block
dimensions, pixel format, and the alignment of the resource base pointer
and stride.
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
The fs shader now depends on the color buffer formats. The shader key was
extended to accommodate this, but llvmpipe_update_derived needs to be
updated to check the framebuffer dirty flag.
This fixes bug 57674.
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
I fixed the only known bugs on r500 with 0222b2bd41.
Now there are no piglit regressions with Hyper-Z and all apps I tested seem
to work.
To summarize how it works:
- Only one process can use it at a time. This is a hardware limitation.
- The first process to clear a zbuffer gets the exclusive access to use
Hyper-Z.
- Compositors don't use any zbuffer, so they won't steal it, but some web
browsers do, so make sure there's no web browser running if you want your
game to use Hyper-Z.
- There's no need to restart an app which couldn't get the access to Hyper-Z.
Just quit the app which took it, the driver can turn it on for the other app
in the middle of rendering.
- If an app gets the access to Hyper-Z, it prints "radeon: Acquired Hyper-Z"
to stdout.
r300-r400:
Hyper-Z will be enabled by default on r300-r400 once sufficient testing is
done with piglit and Lightsmark at least.
Be sure to set the env var RADEON_HYPERZ and run piglit with parameters: -c 0
This fixes wrong rendering in Lightsmark and
the piglit/depthstencil-render-miplevels.
I think I fixed Hyper-Z. So far every app seems to work like a charm.
The following commit broke the i965 build:
commit 4a486f8bf2
Author: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Date: Fri Nov 23 18:31:42 2012 +0100
glx/dri2: add and use new driver hook flush_with_flags
That commit added a forward declaration of enum __DRI2throttleReason to
dri_interface.h. C++ 98 does not allow forward declarations of enums.
The fix: Move the enum's definition to earlier in the file.
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
The border clamping code is unnecessary, since we don't care if a wrapped
coord value is -1 or <-1 (same for length vs. >length), in either case the
border handling code will mask out the offset and replace the texel value with
the border color.
Note that technically this is not entirely correct. Omitting clamping on the
float coords means that flt->int conversion may result in undefined values for
values of very large magnitude.
However there's no reason we should honor this here since:
a) we don't care for that for ordinary wrap modes in the aos code when
converting coords and the problem is worse there (as we've got only
effectively 24 instead of 32bits)
b) at least in some cases the clamping was done already in int space hence
doing nothing to fix that problem.
c) with sse2 flt->int conversion with such values results in 0x80000000 which
is just perfect (for clamp to border - not so much for the ordinary clamp to
edge).
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Coverity pointed out this uninitialised class member.
Note: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
coverity pointed out this field was being used uninitialised.
Note: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
all unsigneds are >= 0 :-)
There may be an argument for leaving this in, in case someone
changes min_lod to an integer, so feel free to apply or drop.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Reported by coverity scan.
v2: fix second case
Note: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
I haven't confirmed this is doing the correct thing, but at
least this might make someone review it!
Reported by internal RH coverity scan.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
the critical error would use driverName.
Found by internal RH coverity scan.
Note: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
This reverts commit 962a1c07b4.
Further testing revealed that this commit can cause the pre-processor to enter
infinite loops. For now, simply revert this code until a cleaner,
better-tested version is available.
Previously, we were only supporting line-continuation backslash characters
within lines of pre-processor directives, (as per the specification). With
OpenGL 4.2 and GLES3, line continuations are now supported anywhere within a
shader.
While changing this, also fix a bug where the preprocessor was ignoring
line continuation characters when a line ended in multiple backslash
characters.
The new code is also more efficient than the old. Previously, we would
perform a ralloc copy at each newline. We now perform copies only at each
occurrence of a line-continuation.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
When a client frame callback is executed and the client starts rendering
again, the egl event queue might not have been dispatched so that the
buffer release event for the previous frame hasn't been processed. In
that case a third buffer is allocated, even though it would be possible
to reuse the buffer that was just released.
The wl_display_dispatch_queue_pending() entry point is available from
wayland-client 1.0.2, so require that in configure.ac. Also, just
let the pkg-config macro throw its own error, which will show what version
we were looking for and failed to find.
Note: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Ander Conselvan de Oliveira <ander.conselvan.de.oliveira@intel.com>
Commit ca3ed3e024 fixed the problem where
eglMakeCurrent would trigger a getbuffer callback that then breaks the
following wl_egl_window_resize() call. However, we still need to
invalidate buffers in eglSwapBuffers, since in wayland we always swap
buffers, so the dri driver needs to come out and ask us for the next buffer
after each swapbuffer.
Note: this is a candidate for stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
These helper macros save you from writing nasty expressions like:
if ((inst->src[1].type == BRW_REGISTER_TYPE_F &&
inst->src[1].imm.f == 1.0) ||
((inst->src[1].type == BRW_REGISTER_TYPE_D ||
inst->src[1].type == BRW_REGISTER_TYPE_UD) &&
inst->src[1].imm.u == 1)) {
Instead, you simply get to write inst->src[1].is_one(). Simple.
Also, this makes the FS backend match the VS backend (which has these).
This patch also converts opt_algebraic to use the new helper functions.
As a consequence, it will now also optimize integer-typed expressions.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The use-after-free happened when the renderbuffer was shared by multiple
contexts and we tried to delete the renderbuffer using a context which
was previously deleted.
Note: this is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
To fix a pipe_context::surface_destroy() use-after-free problem.
We previously added pipe_sampler_view_release() for similar reasons.
Note: this is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
We sometimes need a rendering context when deleting renderbuffers.
Pass it explicitly instead of trying to grab a current context
(which might be NULL). The next patch will make use of this.
Note: this is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
We used to invalidate the drawable after a call to eglSwapBuffers(),
so that a wl_egl_window_resize() would take effect for the next frame.
However, that leads to calling dri2_get_buffers() when eglMakeCurrent()
is called with the current context and surface, and a later call to
wl_egl_window_resize() would not take effect until the next buffer
swap.
Instead, add a callback from wl_egl_window_resize() back to the wayland
egl platform, and invalidate the drawable only when it is resized.
This solves a bug on wayland clients when going back to windowed mode
from fullscreen when clicking a pop up menu, where the window size
after this would be the fullscreen size.
Note: this is a candidate for stable branches.
CC: wayland-devel@lists.freedesktop.org
Completely forgot about updating Makefile when removing it. Stephane
already fixed the make build, but there were a few mentions of
lp_tile_soa left in the tree.
The gen4 simd16 workaround looks at ir->type to determine how much
storage to allocate for the simd16 value. In fragment programs,
texturing only ever returns float vec4s (unlike GLSL, which can also
have scalar floats or vector integers), so this is the right type.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=56962
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We need to rebase colors (ex: set G=B=0) when getting GL_LUMINANCE
textures in following cases:
1. If the luminance texture is actually stored as rgba
2. If getting a luminance texture, but returning rgba
3. If getting an rgba texture, but returning luminance
A similar fix was pushed by Brian Paul for uncompressed textures
in commit: f5d0ced.
Fixes https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=47220
Observed no regressions in piglit and ogles2conform due to this fix.
This patch will cause failures in intel oglconform pxconv-gettex,
pxstore-gettex and pxtrans-gettex test cases. The cause of failures
is a bug in test cases. Expected luminance value is calculted
incorrectly in test cases: L = R+G+B.
V2: Set G = 0 when getting a RG texture but returning luminance.
Note: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <idr@freedesktop.org>
Drop these from the known limitations list since support was recently added
for these.
Also, fix a typo while in the area, (and the oddly missing final newline).
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This test file is very similar to test 113-line-and-file-macros but uses token
pasting for cleaner quiz answers (without spaces between the digits). This
test passes thanks to the recent addition of support for pasting INTEGER
tokens, (but would have failed without that).
(Note that this test is distinct from test 059-token-pasting-integer which
pastes integers parsed from the source. Those are parsed to INTEGER_STRING
tokens and are already pasted correctly as verified by that test. The only way
to generate the INTEGER tokens which currently fail to paste is with an
internal define such as __LINE__ that results in an integer.)
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
As recently tested in the additions to the invalid paste test, it is illegal
to paste a non-digit sequence onto the end of an integer.
The 082-invalid-paste test should now pass again.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
The current code lets a few invalid pastes through, such as an string pasted
onto the end of an integer. Extend the invalid-paste test to catch some of
these.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This time creating a new _token_list_create_with_one_integer function
modeled after the existing _token_list_create_with_one_space function
(both implemented with new _token_list_create_with_one_ival).
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This function is getting a little long too read. Simplify it by pulling
up one assignment from every condition.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
These tokens are easy to expand by just looking at the current, tracked
location values, (and no need to look anything up in the hash table).
Add a test which verifies __LINE__ with several values, (and verifies __FILE__
for the single value of 0). Our testing framework isn't sophisticated enough
here to have a test with multiple file inputs.
This commit fixes part of es3conform's preprocess16_frag test.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This should help avoid confusion now that we're using the gl_api enum
to distinguishing between core and compatibility API's. The
corresponding enum value for core API's is API_OPENGL_CORE.
Acked-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Acked-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The current implementation was close by not fully correct: several
operations that should be done in floating point were being done in
integer.
Fixes piglit fbo-clear-formats GL_ARB_texture_float
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
untested (couldn't get the piglit test to run even with version overrides)
but seemed blatantly wrong.
In any case it would only affect an error case which when it would happen
probably all hope is lost anyway.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This adds array (1d,2d) texture support to llvmpipe.
Though probably should do something about 1d array textures requiring gobs
of memory (this issue is not strictly limited to arrays but it is probably
worse there).
Initial code by Jakob Bornecrantz <jakob@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Support 1d and 2d array textures (including shadow samplers),
and (as a side effect mostly) also shadow cube samplers.
Seems to pass the relevant piglit tests both for sampling and rendering
to (though some require version overrides).
Since we don't support render target indices rendering to array textures
is still restricted to a single layer at a time.
Also, the min/max layer in the sampler view (which is unnecessary for GL)
is ignored (always use all layers).
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Now dead code.
Also had to remove the show_tiles/show_subtiles because now the color
buffers are always stored in their native format, so there is no longer
an easy way to paint the tile sizes.
Depth-stencil buffers are still swizzled.
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Update llvmpipe_is_format_supported and llvmpipe_is_format_unswizzled
so that only the formats that we can render without swizzling are
advertised.
We can still render all D3D10 required formats except
PIPE_FORMAT_R11G11B10_FLOAT, which needs to be implemented in a future
opportunity.
Removal of rendertarget swizzling will be done in a subsequent change.
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
It is buggy (it was giving wrong results for some of the formats with
padding), and util_format_description::is_array already does precisely
what's intended.
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
This is what we want in practice.
The only change is in PIPE_FORMAT_R8SG8SB8UX8U_NORM, which no longer is
considered an array format.
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
This patch fixes various format manipulation for big-endian
architectures.
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This patch fixes various format manipulation for big-endian
architectures.
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This patch adds two more functions in type conversions header:
* lp_build_bswap: construct a call to llvm.bswap intrinsic for an
element
* lp_build_bswap_vec: byte swap every element in a vector base on the
input and output types.
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This patch fixes the vector constant generation used for vector shuffle
for big-endian machines.
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This patch enforces the clear of NJ bit in VSCR Altivec register so
denormal numbers are handles as expected by IEEE standards.
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This patch adds Altivec intrinsics for float vector types. It changes
the SSE specific definitions to a platform neutral and adds the calls
to Altivec intrinsic builder.
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This patch add correct vector addition and substraction intrisics when
using Altivec with PPC. Current code uses default path and LLVM backend
ends up issuing carry-out arithmetic instruction while it is expected
saturated ones.
It also includes a fix for PowerPC where char are unsigned by default,
resulting in bogus values for vector shifting.
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This patch adds PPC Altivec support for pack/unpack operations using Altivec
supported vector type (8xi8, 16xi16, 4xi32, 4xf32).
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The brw_compile structure contains the brw_instruction store and the
brw_eu_emit.c state tracking fields. These are only useful for the
final assembly generation pass; the earlier compilation stages doesn't
need them.
This also means that the code generator for future hardware won't have
access to the brw_compile structure, which is extremely desirable
because it prevents accidental generation of Gen4-7 code.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Compiling shaders requires several main steps:
1. Generating VS IR from either GLSL IR or Mesa IR
2. Optimizing the IR
3. Register allocation
4. Generating assembly code
This patch splits out step 4 into a separate class named "vec4_generator."
There are several reasons for doing so:
1. Future hardware has a different instruction encoding. Splitting
this out will allow us to replace vec4_generator (which relies
heavily on the brw_eu_emit.c code and struct brw_instruction) with
a new code generator that writes the new format.
2. It reduces the size of the vec4_visitor monolith. (Arguably, a lot
more should be split out, but that's left for "future work.")
3. Separate namespaces allow us to make helper functions for
generating instructions in both classes: ADD() can exist in
vec4_visitor and create IR, while ADD() in vec4_generator() can
create brw_instructions. (Patches for this upcoming.)
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Final code generation should never fail. This is a bug, and there
should be no user-triggerable cases where this could occur.
Also, we're not going to have a fail() method after the split.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
The brw_compile structure is closely tied to the Gen4-7 hardware
encoding. However, do_vs_prog is very generic: it just calls out to
get a compiled program and then uploads it.
This isn't ultimately where we want it, but it's a step in the right
direction: it's now closer to the code generator.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
During compilation, we allocate a bunch of things: the IR needs to last
at least until code generation...and then the program store needs to
last until after we upload the program.
For simplicity's sake, just keep it all around until we upload the
program. After that, it can all be freed.
This will also save a lot of headaches during the upcoming refactoring.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
We used to steal it out of the brw_compile struct, but that won't be
initialized in time soon (and is eventually going away).
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
We used to steal it out of the brw_compile struct...but vec4_visitor
isn't going to have one of those in the future.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
This leaves only the final code generation stage in brw_vec4_emit.cpp,
moving the payload setup, run(), and brw_vs_emit functions to brw_vec4.cpp.
The fragment shader backend puts these functions in brw_fs.cpp, so this
patch also helps with consistency.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
I ran across this while running a glGenerateMipmap() test.
_meta_GenerateMipmap sets MESA_META_TRANSFORM, which causes
_mesa_meta_begin to try and set a default orthographic projection.
Unfortunately, if the drawbuffer isn't set up, ctx->DrawBuffer->Width
and Height are 0, which just causes an GL_INVALID_VALUE error.
Fixes oglconform's fbo/mipmap.automatic, mipmap.manual, and
mipmap.manualIterateTexTargets.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
The rest of the plumbing was in place already.
I have tested this by turning on all GL 3.1 features.
The drivers not supporting GL 3.1 will fail to create a core profile
as they should.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Add a DEBUG_FREED_MEMORY option to help catch use-after-free errors.
Add debug_memory_check() function which can be periodically called to
check that all known blocks are good.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Will allow formats with padding, e.g. RGBX.
Will now allow swizzled formats as long as the alpha is channel 3.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
And add test cases to ensure that this works
- 110 verifies that glcpp rejects #elif<digits> which glcpp
previously accepted.
- 111 verifies that glcpp accepts #if followed immediately by
(, +, -, !, or ~.
- 112 does the same as 111 but for #elif.
See 17f9beb6 for #if change.
Reviewed-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
radeonsi now supports Z16 and doesn't fail these assertions anymore.
This partially reverts commit 7bba4879bb, but
leaves the error messages in place to allow diagnosing such problems even with
non-debugging builds.
Signed-off-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Fixes this SCons build error on Mac OS X if X11 is found.
NameError: name 'ws_xlib' is not defined:
File "SConstruct", line 144:
duplicate = 0 # http://www.scons.org/doc/0.97/HTML/scons-user/x2261.html
File "scons-2.2.0/SCons/Script/SConscript.py", line 614:
return method(*args, **kw)
File "scons-2.2.0/SCons/Script/SConscript.py", line 551:
return _SConscript(self.fs, *files, **subst_kw)
File "scons-2.2.0/SCons/Script/SConscript.py", line 260:
exec _file_ in call_stack[-1].globals
File "src/SConscript", line 34:
SConscript('gallium/SConscript')
File "scons-2.2.0/SCons/Script/SConscript.py", line 614:
return method(*args, **kw)
File "scons-2.2.0/SCons/Script/SConscript.py", line 551:
return _SConscript(self.fs, *files, **subst_kw)
File "scons-2.2.0/SCons/Script/SConscript.py", line 260:
exec _file_ in call_stack[-1].globals
File "src/gallium/SConscript", line 135:
'targets/libgl-xlib/SConscript',
File "scons-2.2.0/SCons/Script/SConscript.py", line 614:
return method(*args, **kw)
File "scons-2.2.0/SCons/Script/SConscript.py", line 551:
return _SConscript(self.fs, *files, **subst_kw)
File "scons-2.2.0/SCons/Script/SConscript.py", line 260:
exec _file_ in call_stack[-1].globals
File "src/gallium/targets/graw-xlib/SConscript", line 9:
ws_xlib,
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
According to the ARB_vertex_type_2_10_10_10_rev specification:
"The error INVALID_ENUM is generated by VertexP*, NormalP*,
TexCoordP*, MultiTexCoordP*, ColorP*, or SecondaryColorP if <type>
is not UNSIGNED_INT_2_10_10_10_REV or INT_2_10_10_10_REV."
Fixes 7 subcases of oglconform's packed-vertex test.
v2: Add "gl" prefix to error messages (pointed out by Brian).
Also rebase atop the ctx plumbing.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Traditionally, OpenGL has had two separate equations for converting from
signed normalized fixed-point data to floating point data. One was used
primarily for vertex data, while the other was primarily for texturing
and framebuffer data.
However, ES 3.0 and GL 4.2 change this, declaring there's only one
equation to be used in all cases. Unfortunately, it's the other one.
v2: Correctly convert 0b10 to -1.0, as pointed out by Chris Forbes.
Reviewed-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
The rules for converting these values actually depend on the current
context API and version. The next patch will implement those changes.
v2: Mark ctx as const, as suggested by Brian.
Reviewed-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Fixes part of es3conform's transform_feedback_init_defaults test.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branch.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
v2: Perform this count the same way as elsewhere in this file, per
Brian Paul's review.
Fixes part of es3conform's transform_feedback_init_defaults test.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Previously this function would assert if the format didn't fit an expected 4 channel format size.
Now will work with any format type with any amount of channels.
Signed-off-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The brw_compile structure contains the brw_instruction store and the
brw_eu_emit.c state tracking fields. These are only useful for the
final assembly generation pass; the earlier compilation stages doesn't
need them.
This also means that the code generator for future hardware won't have
access to the brw_compile structure, which is extremely desirable
because it prevents accidental generation of Gen4-7 code.
v2: rzalloc p, as suggested by Eric.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Compiling shaders requires several main steps:
1. Generating FS IR from either GLSL IR or Mesa IR
2. Optimizing the IR
3. Register allocation
4. Generating assembly code
This patch splits out step 4 into a separate class named "fs_generator."
There are several reasons for doing so:
1. Future hardware has a different instruction encoding. Splitting
this out will allow us to replace fs_generator (which relies
heavily on the brw_eu_emit.c code and struct brw_instruction) with
a new code generator that writes the new format.
2. It reduces the size of the fs_visitor monolith. (Arguably, a lot
more should be split out, but that's left for "future work.")
3. Separate namespaces allow us to make helper functions for
generating instructions in both classes: ADD() can exist in
fs_visitor and create IR, while ADD() in fs_generator() can
create brw_instructions. (Patches for this upcoming.)
Furthermore, this patch changes the order of operations slightly.
Rather than doing steps 1-4 for SIMD8, then 1-4 for SIMD16, we now:
- Do steps 1-3 for SIMD8, then repeat 1-3 for SIMD16
- Generate final assembly code for both modes together
This is because the frontend work can be done independently, but final
assembly generation needs to pack both into a single program store to
feed the GPU.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Final code generation should never fail. This is a bug, and there
should be no user-triggerable cases where this could occur.
Also, we're not going to have a fail() method in a moment.
v2: Just abort() rather than assert, to cover the NDEBUG case
(suggested by Eric).
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
All we really need is a memory context and the instruction list; passing
a backend_visitor is just convenient at times.
This will be necessary two patches from now.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
The brw_compile structure is closely tied to the Gen4-7 hardware
encoding. However, do_wm_prog is very generic: it just calls out to
get a compiled program and then uploads it.
This isn't ultimately where we want it, but it's a step in the right
direction: it's now closer to the code generator.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
We used to steal it out of the brw_compile struct...but fs_visitor
isn't going to have one of those in the future.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Also change it from a brw_fragment_program to a gl_fragment_program,
since that seems to be what everything wants anyway.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
We can easily recover it from prog, and this makes it clear that we
aren't passing additional information in.
v2: Use an if-statement rather than the ?: operator (suggested by Eric).
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Also, rather than having brw_wm_fs_emit poke at it directly, make it a
parameter to the fs_visitor constructor.
All other changes generated by search and replace (with occasional
whitespace fixup).
v2: Make dispatch_width const (as suggested by Paul); fix doxygen
mistake (pointed out by Eric); update for rebase.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Now that we only have the one backend, there's no real point in keeping
this separate. Moving it should allow some future simplifications.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Everybody determines this by checking if fp's OutputsWritten field
contains the FRAG_RESULT_DEPTH bit. Rather than having payload setup
check this and set the computes_depth flag, we can just do the check in
the only place that actually used it: emit_fb_writes().
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
No longer have to split fetching into quads dynamically if mip levels
are not the same for all quads (aos sampling still always splits due
to performance reasons).
Instead handle multiple mip levels further down, minification etc. takes
this into account.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This also adds some code to handle per-quad lods for more than 4-wide fetches,
because otherwise I'd have to integrate the texelFetch function into
the splitting stuff... (but it is not used yet outside texelFetch).
passes piglit fs-texelFetch-2D, fails fs-texelFetchOffset-2D due to I believe
a test error (results are undefined for out-of-bounds fetches, we return
whatever is at offset 0, whereas the test expects [0,0,0,1]).
Texel offsets are only handled by texelFetch for now, though the interface
can handle it for everything.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
v2 (Kayden): Move the enable into an existing intel->gen >= 4 block
(as suggested by Ian).
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Implements BGRA swizzle, sign recovery, and normalization
as required by ARB_vertex_type_10_10_10_2_rev.
V2: Ported to the new VS backend, since that's all that's left;
fixed normalization.
V3: Moved fixups out of the GLSL-only path, so it works for FF/VP too.
V4 (Kayden): Rework ES3 normalization, don't heap allocate registers;
tidy comments.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Flag the need for various workarounds to be applied by
the vertex shader.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Next few patches build on this to add other workarounds
for packed formats.
V2: rename BRW_ATTRIB_WA_COMPONENTS to BRW_ATTRIB_WA_COMPONENT_MASK;
V3 (Kayden): remove separate bit for ES3 signed normalization
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Always use R10G10B10A2_UINT; Most of the other formats we'd like
don't actually work on the hardware. Will emit w/a for scaling,
sign recovery and BGRA swizzle in the VS.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Until we have proper 'make dist' this is an improvement of the current
situation, because each time some old Makefiles got converted to automake
we had to update the tarballs target.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
Cc: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Acked-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
We can't support IF statements in 16-wide on these. To get back to 16-wide
for these shaders, we need to support predicate on discard instructions in the
backend IR, which is something we've sort of got on the list to do anyway.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=55828
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Commit 774fb90db3 introduced a ralloc context to
each user of struct brw_compile, but for this one a NULL context was used,
causing the later ralloc_free(mem_ctx) to not do anything.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=55175
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
We have a special case where non-shadow comparison with LOD requires using a
SIMD16 vec4 in an 8-wide shader, which appears in the register allocator as a
size 8 vgrf.
Fixes assertions in various piglit tests and webgl conformance.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=56521
Since a signed 2-bit integer can only represent -1, 0, or 1, it is
tempting to simply to convert it directly to a float. This maps it
onto the correct range of [-1.0, 1.0]. However, it gives different
values compared to the usual equation:
(2.0 * 1.0 + 1.0) * (1.0 / 3.0) = +1.0 (same)
(2.0 * 0.0 + 1.0) * (1.0 / 3.0) = +0.33333333... (different)
(2.0 * -1.0 + 1.0) * (1.0 / 3.0) = -0.33333333... (different)
According to the GL_ARB_vertex_type_2_10_10_10_rev extension, signed
normalization is performed using equation 2.2 from the GL 3.2
specification, which is:
f = (2c + 1)/(2^b - 1). (2.2)
Comments below that equation state: "In general, this representation is
used for signed normalized fixed-point parameters in GL commands, such
as vertex attribute values." Which is what we're doing here.
The 3.2 specification goes on to declare an alternate formula:
f = max{c/(2^(b-1) - 1), -1.0} (2.3)
which is closer to the existing code, and maps the end points to exactly
-1.0 and 1.0. Comments below the equation state: "In general, this
representation is used for signed normalized fixed-point texture or
framebuffer values." Which is *not* what we're doing here.
It then states: "Everywhere that signed normalized fixed-point
values are converted, the equation used is specified." This is the real
clincher: the extension explicitly specifies that we must use equation
2.2, not 2.3. So we need to do (2x + 1) / 3.
This matches the behavior expected by oglconform's packed-vertex test,
and is correct for desktop GL (pre-4.2). It's not correct for ES 3.0,
but a future patch will correct that.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Tested-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
For the 10-bit components, the divisor was incorrect. A 10-bit signed
integer can represent -2^9 through 2^9 - 1, which leads to the following
ranges:
(float)value.x -> [ -512, 511]
2.0F * (float)value.x -> [-1024, 1022]
2.0F * (float)value.x + 1.0F -> [-1023, 1023]
So dividing by 511 would incorrectly scale it to approximately:
[-2.001956947, 2.001956947]. To correctly scale to [-1.0, 1.0], we need
to divide by 1023.
This correctly implements the desktop GL rules. ES 3.0 has different
rules, but those will be implemented in a separate patch.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Tested-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
The bug was found by Coverity.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This gives us checking of our arguments (no more passing 1 operand to
BRW_OPCODE_MUL!), at the cost of a couple of extra parens.
v2: Rebase on gen6-if fix.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org> (v1)
This was a regression in the brw_fs_fp.cpp change. We just need to return
something good enough to get the IR generation to the end without crashing,
but ir->type isn't initialized and we wanted something of the coordinate's
type anyway.
Fixes around 30 piglit cases on my ilk system in drawpixels and framebuffer
blit.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=56962
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The theory of the guardband is that you extend the clip volume to avoid
expensive clipping computation, and just let fragments outside the viewport
get clipped by the drawable's bounds. But if a smaller-than-window-size
viewport is set, and we don't also happen to have a scissor set, then
rendering could incorrectly extend outside of the viewport when it should have
been clipped to the viewport.
Fixes the new piglit triangle-guardband-viewport test.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
When you're comparing to the spec, you're trying to immediately see what
numbered dword of the packet your bit ends up in.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
All Intel code is compiled with -std=c99. There is no excuse to not use
designated initializers.
As a nice benefit, the code is now more friendly to grep. Without
designated initializers, psychic prowess is required to find the
initialization of DRI extension function pointers with grep. I have
observed several people, when they first encounter the DRI code, fail at
statically chasing the DRI function pointers due to this problem.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
The dri directory is compiled with -std=c99. There is no excuse to not use
designated initializers.
As a nice benefit, the code is now more friendly to grep. Without
designated initializers, psychic prowess is required to find the
initialization of DRI extension function pointers with grep. I have
observed several people, when they first encounter the DRI code, fail at
statically chasing the DRI function pointers due to this problem.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
For a packed depth/stencil buffer on separate stencil hardware, the
separate depth miptree is set up with alignment of 4,4 and the separate
stencil miptree is setup with alignment of 8,8. We can't just use the
irb->draw_{x,y} offsets for stencil, since that is the offset in the
depth miptree.
Fixes 12 piglit depthstencil testcases on ivb.
Acked-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Given that we have the mask information here (assuming the rebase is to
the same tiling, which is safe), we can just save a set of miptrees and
offsets and the global intra-tile offset in the context and cut out a
bunch of logic. This will also save emitting the next fix I need to do
twice.
Acked-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Fixes a theoretical problem where we had an aligned depth buffer and a
misaligned stencil buffer with a matching tile offset, so we would fail
to rebase depth even after the needed tile offset changed due to the
rebase of stencil.
It should also fix double-rebase of a misaligned packed depth/stencil
renderbuffer, which may have been a performance issue.
Acked-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
We were always passing 0 for one of the two fields, and the code just used
whichever one wasn't 0.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
I noticed these in the next patch where these paths were using the Face
of a teximage but didn't have array handling.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Apparently this was accidentally marked as unimplemented, and thus not
put in the dispatch table.
Fixes 7 es3conform tests:
- copy_buffer_parameters
- copy_buffer_data
- copy_buffer_usage
- pixel_buffer_object_bind
- pixel_buffer_object_parameteriv
- pixel_buffer_object_texture_read
- pixel_buffer_object_usage
v2: Also update the DispatchSanity test for this change.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Only legacy OpenGL allows the use of non-gen'd names. Core profiles
and ES 3 both require the use of glGenQueries().
Note that BeginQuery doesn't exist in ES 1 or ES 2.
Fixes es3conform's occlusion_query_invalid_beginquery test.
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
GL_READ_FRAMEBUFFER and GL_DRAW_FRAMEBUFFER are valid targets in ES 3.
Fixes 23 es3conform framebuffer_blit tests. Two more go from fail to
crash, but that appears to be because they actually run now.
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Calling glTexParameteri() with pname GL_TEXTURE_MAX_LEVEL and either a
target of GL_TEXTURE_RECTANGLE or a negative value previously generated
GL_INVALID_OPERATION. However, GL_INVALID_VALUE seems more appropriate.
Fixes oglconform's api-error/negative.glTexParameter and es3conform's
sgis_texture_lod_basic_error.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
The new brw_reg always had type BRW_REGISTER_TYPE_F, rather than
inheriting the original type of the ATTR file register.
In the past, this hasn't been a problem since we only execute this code
when fixing up GL_FIXED attributes, which always have float types.
However, we'll soon be using it for ARB_vertex_type_10_10_10_2 support,
which uses D and UD types.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
For GLES1 and GLES2, brwCreateContext neglected to validate the requested
context version received from the DRI layer. If DRI requested an OpenGL
ES2 context with version 3.9, we provided it one.
Before this fix, the switch statement that validated the requested GL
context flavor was an ugly #ifdef copy-paste mess. Instead of reproducing
the copy-past-mess for GLES1 and GLES2, I first refactored it. Now the
switch statement is readable.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
It seems that -NDEBUG and other flags might still be leaked through
those variables, so strip those off there as well.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Maarten Lankhorst <maarten.lankhorst@canonical.com>
In addition to registers used by instructions, fs_visitor maintains
direct references to certain "special" values used for inputs/outputs.
When I added VGRF compaction, I overlooked these, believing that these
direct references weren't used once instructions were generated. That
was wrong. For example, pixel_x/y are used in virtual_grf_interferes(),
which is called by optimization passes and register allocation.
This patch treats all of them as used and patches them after compacting.
While it's not strictly necessary to patch all of them (as some aren't
used after emitting code), it seems safer to simply fix them all.
Fixes oglconform's textureswizzle/advanced.shader.targets, piglit's
glsl-fs-lots-of-tex, and glean's texCombine on pre-Gen6 hardware.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=56790
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The goal of that change was to skip counting things that aren't actually
outputs from the VS to the FS. However, explicit_location isn't set in
the case of linker-assigned locations (the common case), so basically
varying component counting got disabled. At this stage of the linker,
we've already ensured that var->location is set, so we can just look at
it without worrying.
Fixes i965 assertion failure with the new
piglit glsl-max-varyings --exceed-limits.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=51545
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
The diff looks funny, but it's moving the integer vs non-integer check
below the _mesa_source_buffer_exists() check that ensures
_ColorReadBuffer is non-null, so we get a GL_INVALID_OPERATION instead
of a segfault. This looks like it had regressed in the
_mesa_error_check_format_and_type() changes, which removed the first of
the two duplicated checks for the source buffer. Fixes segfault in the
new piglit ARB_framebuffer_object/negative-readpixels-no-rb.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45877
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Now that we're using the new backend, we may actually put things into push
constants if you have too many uniform values uploaded. Also, correctly
account for texture rectangle params and drop the old special case for the
0.0/1.0 params from the old backend.
MinGW has snprintf.
The patch fixes these warnings with the MinGW SCons build.
src/gallium/auxiliary/util/u_snprintf.c:459:1: warning: no previous prototype for ‘util_vsnprintf’ [-Wmissing-prototypes]
src/gallium/auxiliary/util/u_snprintf.c:1436:1: warning: no previous prototype for ‘util_snprintf’ [-Wmissing-prototypes]
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Tested-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
If an instruction reads from a constant register that contains
immediates using an invalid swizzle, we can avoid generating MOV
instructions to fix up the swizzle by loading the immediates into a
different constant register that can be read using a valid swizzle.
This only affects r300 and r400 cards.
For example:
CONST[1] = { -3.5000 3.5000 2.5000 1.5000 }
MAD temp[4].xy, const[0].xy__, const[1].xz__, input[0].xy__;
========== Before this change would be lowered to: =========
CONST[1] = { -3.5000 3.5000 2.5000 1.5000 }
MOV temp[0].x, const[1].x___;
MOV temp[0].y, const[1]._z__;
MAD temp[4].xy, const[0].xy__, temp[0].xy__, input[0].xy__;
========== After this change is lowered to: ===============
CONST[1] = { -3.5000 3.5000 2.5000 1.5000 }
CONST[2] = { 0.0000 -3.5000 2.5000 0.0000 }
MAD temp[4].xy, const[0].xy__, const[2].yz__, input[0].xy__;
============================================================
This change reduces one of the Lightsmark shaders from 133 to 91
instructions.
v2:
- Fix crash caused by swizzles with only inline constants.
Use per asic golden values.
Programming this register doesn't seem to be strictly
necessary on SI, but programming it wrong leads to
rendering issues or reduced performance so just
go ahead and program the golden values explicitly
to avoid any potential problems down the road.
Signed-off-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
For precise lts support I had to do some magic with the library names, which works fine
as long as the libraries from pkg-config are used.
The parts with src/gallium/targets/va-*/Makefile will not apply on the master branch,
but do apply to the 9.0 branch.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Maarten Lankhorst <maarten.lankhorst@canonical.com>
Acked-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
fixes regression introduced in 9078441072
Targets for making lex.yy.c program_parse.tab.c and program_parse.tab.h
got moved into its own Makefile
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This was added in version 22 of the GL_ARB_sync spec.
Fixes gles3conform's sync_error_waitsync_timeout test.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
All the other range checks on index already return the proper error,
INVALID_VALUE.
Fixes gles3conform's instanced_arrays_invalid test.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
brw_optimize.c's brw_opcodes table was a copy of brw_disasm.c's
opcode_descs table, but with an additional field: is_arith. Now that
I've deleted that, the two are identical. Keep the one in brw_disasm.c.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
All users of basic block analysis simply create their own local
variables. Nobody uses the visitor-wide field.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The old brw_remove_grf_to_mrf_moves() pass is obsolete and replaced by
fs_visitor::compute_to_mrf().
The old brw_remove_duplicate_mrf_moves() pass is obsolete and replaced
by fs_visitor::remove_duplicate_mrf_writes().
The remaining pass, brw_set_dp4_dependency_control(), is currently
unused, but could be, so I'm leaving it for now.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
At this point, it's just gl_shader_program. Nobody even uses it; even
the program that creates them only returns gl_shader_program pointers.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The passthrough pipeline needs to check index values (which might be passed
through) as they can be invalid (which causes crashes and various assertion
failures if the clip code runs). Obviously, rendering won't be well-defined,
but those bogus indices might come directly from apps.
There were already debug printfs which reported the out-of-bounds indices but
we really ought to not crash.
While checking at that point doesn't seem like the most efficient solution,
it seems there isn't really another appropriate function to do it.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Assert the the CB format is valid and default to
the INVALID hw format rather than ~0U when the format
doesn't match for non-debug builds.
v2: use INVALID hw format rather than ~0U
Signed-off-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Assert that the DB format is valid and default to
the INVALID hw format rather than ~0U when the format
doesn't match for non-debug builds.
v2: use INVALID hw format rather than ~0U
Signed-off-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
This is necessary for backwards compatibility with pre-SI for stencil.
Fixes a number of stencil related piglit tests, and real apps using stencil.
Signed-off-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
On Gen6-7, we don't compact clip planes, and nr_userclip_plane_consts
is the last bit set, so iterating from i = 0..nr_userclip_plane_consts
covers all active clip planes and is the right thing to do.
works and is the right thing to do.
However, that doesn't work at all on Gen4-5. Since we don't compact
clip planes, we skip over ones which aren't active (via the continue
statement). We also set set nr_userclip_plane_consts to the number of
active clip planes, which means that we end the loop after checking that
many bits. If the set of clip planes wasn't contiguous, this means we'd
fail to find the last few.
By changing the iteration to MAX_CLIP_PLANES, we correctly find all of
the active clip planes.
Fixes regressions since 66c8473e02 (replacing the old VS backend) in
Piglit's spec/glsl-1.20/execution/clipping/fixed-clip-enables and
oglconform's mustpass(basic.clip) and userclip(basic.allCases).
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=56791
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
There's no compaction, so we can drop that code and simply use 'i'.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Since Gen4-5 compacts clip planes and Gen6-7 doesn't, it makes sense to
split them into separate code paths. This patch simply copies the code
to both halves; the next commits will simplify it.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The previous 1023-entry chaining hash table never resized, so it was very
inefficient when there were many objects live. While one could have an even
more efficient implementation than this (keep an array for genned names with
packed IDs, or take advantage of the fact that key == hash or key ==
*(uint32_t *)data to store less data), this is fairly fast, and I want a nice
replacement hash table for other parts of Mesa, too.
It improves Minecraft performance 12.3% +/- 1.4% (n=9), dropping hash lookups
from 8% of the profile to 0.5%.
I also tested cairo-gl, which should be a pessimal workload for this hash
table: around 247000 FBOs created and destroyed, only around 65 live at any
time, and few lookups of them between creation and destruction. No
statistically significant performance difference at n=76 (mean 20.3/20.4
seconds, sd 2.8/3.2 seconds). If I remove the >20 seconds outliers that
appear to be due to thermal throttling, there's possibly a .97% +/- 0.31%
performance win (n=61/59). The choice of cutoff for outliers feels a lot like
cooking the data, but I've gone through this process 3 times for minor
iterations of the code with the same conclusion each time.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Acked-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org> (v1)
Mesa's chaining hash table for object names is slow, and this should be much
faster. I namespaced the functions under _mesa_*, to avoid visibility
troubles that we may have had before with hash_table_* functions.
v2: Move .c file to main/, const a few things, clean up loop conditions,
add/extend some comments.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org> (v1)
sparc/clip.c got moved to sparc/sparc-clip.c to avoid doing this workaround in
the parent directory.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org> (v1)
While simplifying mesa/Makefile.am, the more important feature of this commit
is allowing a file with the same name to appear in both main/ and program/.
v2: [chadv] Add changes to Android makefiles.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org> (v1)
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com> (v2)
The pair of files src/mesa/Android.mk and src/mesa/Android.gen.mk are too
long and complex to be easily understood. This patch belongs to a series
that decomposes them into several easily digestible makefiles.
This patch move the rules for libmesa_st_mesa.a from Android.mk to
Android.libmesa_st_mesa.mk.
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
The pair of files src/mesa/Android.mk and src/mesa/Android.gen.mk are too
long and complex to be easily understood. This patch belongs to a series
that decomposes them into several easily digestible makefiles.
This patch move the rules for libmesa_dricore.a from Android.mk to
Android.libmesa_dricore.mk.
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
The pair of files src/mesa/Android.mk and src/mesa/Android.gen.mk are too
long and complex to be easily understood. This patch belongs to a series
that decomposes them into several easily digestible makefiles.
This patch move the rules for host executable mesa_gen_matypes from
Android.mk to Android.mesa_gen_matypes.mk.
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
The pair of files src/mesa/Android.mk and src/mesa/Android.gen.mk are too
long and complex to be easily understood. This patch belongs to a series
that decomposes them into several easily digestible makefiles.
This patch move the rules for the host and target libmesa_glsl_utils.a
from Android.mk to Android.libmesa_glsl_utils.mk.
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
They were always used with the corresponding *_FILES variables now that
automake handles rule generation.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Array textures were broken.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Array textures were broken.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
It was pretty broken with array textures, where the array size (height or
depth depending on the target) shouldn't be magnified.
The guessing also doesn't fail with 1D and cube textures.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
MaxLog2 led to bugs, because it didn't work well with 1D and 3D textures.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
v2: correct the comment at MaxNumlevels
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
This might have a slight overhead but handling mip offsets more like
the width (and image) strides should make some things easier (mip level
being just part of the offset calculation) later.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This is preparation work for using mip level offsets + base_ptr for texture
sampling instead of per-mip pointers.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
I can never remember what "AB" means, and having to constantly consult
the docs is annoying. Just add comments to the top which explain each
of the abbreviations.
Previously, we used these XML annotations to make the code generation
scripts aware of any instances where the Mesa implementation of a
function had a prefix other than "_mesa_". Now that all of the mesa
implementation functions have been renamed to match the XML, we only
need to handle exec="skip", exec="dynamic", and the default case of
exec="mesa".
Acked-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Previously, we used the mesa_name XML attribute to make the code
generation scripts aware of any instances where the Mesa
implementation of a function had a different function name suffix than
the primary name in the XML. Now that all of the Mesa implementation
functions have been renamed to match the XML, this attribute is no
longer necessary.
Acked-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This patch changes the use of const in the type signatures of
_mesa_ShaderSource() and _mesa_TransformFeedbackVaryings(), to match
the type signatures in the GL spec. This avoids warnings when
building the code-generated api_exec.c file.
Note: previously we avoided the build warnings because these functions
were being type-checked against ShaderSourceARB and
TransformFeedbackVaryingsEXT; those functions are semantically
equivalent, but have fewer const qualifiers in their type signatures.
Acked-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Vector indexing on matrixes generates several copy of the
constant matrix, for instance vec=mat4[i][j] generates :
vec=mat4[i].x;
vec=(j==1)?mat4[i].y;
vec=(j==2)?mat4[i].z;
vec=(j==3)?mat4[i].w;
In the case of constant matrixes, the mat4[i] expression generates
copy of the 16 elements of the matrix 4 times ; indirect addressing
also prevents some conservative CSE algorithms (like the one in LLVM)
from factoring the mat4[i] expression.
This patch will make the vec_index_to_cond pass generates :
temp = mat4[i];
vec=temp.x;
vec=(j==1)?temp.y;
vec=(j==2)?temp.z;
vec=(j==3)?temp.w;
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We were accidentally setting bit 14 in DWord 2 (which is Reserved/MBZ)
rather than bit 14 in DWord 3 (which is AA Line Distance Mode).
There's also no reason to ever set it to legacy mode; the bit is only
used when drawing antialiased lines anyway. Set it unconditionally.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The parameters and operation of this function changed, but I didn't
bother to change the prologue comment.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
This reverts commit 0d61f879a1.
Assigning the FS inputs to the 12 bit field is fine since we don't care
about the higher FS inputs. Maybe I'll revisit silencing the compiler
warning another day.
By moving the HASH_LINE rule out of control_line: and into line:, we avoid
adding control_line's additional \n (as seen in the first hunk).
mattst88: Carl and I determined independently of Fabian that the 091
test needed to be modified identically to this, and our patch to fix the
test was more complicated.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=51506
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Previously we were accepting garbage after #else and #endif tokens when
the previous preprocessor conditional evaluated to false (eg, #if 0).
When the preprocessor hits a false conditional, it switches the lexer
into the SKIP state, in which it ignores non-control tokens. The parser
pops the SKIP state off the stack when it reaches the associated #elif,
#else, or #endif. Unfortunately, that meant that it only left the SKIP
state after the lexing the entire line containing the #token and thus
would accept garbage after the #token.
To fix this we use a mid-rule, which is executed immediately after the
#token is parsed.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branch
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=56442
Fixes: preprocess17_frag.test from oglconform
Reviewed-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org> (glcpp-parse.y)
Acked-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Brian reported seeing:
r600_texture.c: In function ‘r600_texture_create_object’:
r600_texture.c:468:12: warning: format ‘%llu’ expects type ‘long long unsigned int’, but argument 3 has type ‘uint64_t’
r600_texture.c:468:12: warning: format ‘%llu’ expects type ‘long long unsigned int’, but argument 4 has type ‘uint64_t’
r600_texture.c:485:12: warning: format ‘%llu’ expects type ‘long long unsigned int’, but argument 3 has type ‘uint64_t’
r600_texture.c:485:12: warning: format ‘%llu’ expects type ‘long long unsigned int’, but argument 4 has type ‘uint64_t’
this should wrap over them fine.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
This contains the evergreen support.
Support is possible on rv670 upwards and the code in here
should work, but it doesn't and I haven't debugged it to
figure out why.
Beyond just adding support for the cube map array sampling,
r600 resinfo isn't conformant with the GL specification,
which states the number of layers should be returned for
the textureSize, so we have to track in an external
constant buffer the layers for each sampler if we need
them in the shader.
v2: only update the sampler constants if the sampler views have changed,
as suggested by Marek.
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
draw_delete_geometry_shader() seems to be the real one.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
util_pack_z_stencil was being unconditionally invoked for all formats,
causing an assertion failure for Z32_FLOAT_S8X24_UINT.
NOTE: Candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Alpha is also 1 for formats like R32G32_FLOAT.
NOTE: Candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
We must multiply the factor against the destination, not the source.
NOTE: Candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
For drivers with native integer / SM4 support this is just an hindrance.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
The GL_POINT_BIT state attribute GL_POINT_SPRITE_COORD_ORIGIN
is only supported on OpenGL-2.0 or later. Prevent glPopAttrib()
from trying to restore it on OpenGL-1.4 implementations which
support GL_ARB_POINT_SPRITE, as otherwise the sequence...
glPushAttrib(GL_POINT_BIT);
glPopAttrib();
throws an GL_INVALID_ENUM error in glPopAttrib().
See also commit f778174ea1
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Mario Kleiner <mario.kleiner@tuebingen.mpg.de>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Since cf438f5375e242, we store actual integers for the attribute data.
We just need to reinterpret the GLfloat array as a GLint/GLuint array
so we can read the proper data.
Fixes oglconform's glsl-vertex-attrib/basic.VertexAttribI[1234][u]i
subtests (after fixing an unrelated bug in those test cases).
v2: Use the COPY_4V macro to be concise.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com> [v1]
This adds support to the softpipe texture sampler and tgsi exec.
In order to handle the extra input to the texture sampling,
I've had to expand the interfaces to take a c1 value for storing
the texture compare value for the TEX2 case.
v1.1: add comments (Brian)
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
This adds mesa state tracker support for the new extension,
along with glsl->tgsi conversion to use the new opcodes
where appropriate.
v2: fix assert found running textureSize tests.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
This just adds the texture target and capability along
with 3 new opcodes required to support this extension.
As this extension requires some texture opcodes with samp + 5 args,
we need to use another src register, this is only required
for TEX, TXL and TXB opcodes to implement this spec.
TEX2 is required for shadow cube map arrays
TXL2 is required for cube map array sampler + explicit lod
TXB2 is required for cube map array sampler + lod bias
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
This adds all the new builtins + the new sampler types,
and hooks them up if the extension is supported.
v2: fix missing signatures for grad/lod
fix missing textureSize clarifications
fix compare vs starts with usage
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
This adds the mesa core + texture + fbo support for the
texture cube map array extension.
v2:
add comment to _mesa_num_tex_faces related to cube map arrays (Brian)
drop wrong comment cut-n-paste (Brian)
fix / 6 maximum check issue (Kenneth)
coalsece some array case statements (Kenneth)
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
While developing cube map array support I found that we didn't
support this properly, also piglit didn't test for it at all.
I've submitted a test to piglit to check for this, and this
fixes explicit lod and lod bias with cube maps.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
For cube map arrays I'll need another driver private constant
buffer, and looking forward to UBOs. So clean up with some
defines, that can be modified when adding cube map array and ubos
later.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
It is common for complicated shaders, particularly code-generated ones, to
have a big array of uniforms or attributes, and a prologue in the shader that
dereferences from the big array to more informatively-named local variables.
Then there will be some small control flow operation (like a ? : statement),
and then use of those informatively-named variables. We were emitting extra
MOVs in these cases, because copy propagation couldn't reach across control
flow.
Instead, implement dataflow analysis on the output of the first copy
propagation pass and re-run it to propagate those extra MOVs out.
On one future Steam release, reduces VS+FS instruction count from 42837 to
41437. No statistically significant performance difference (n=48), though, at
least at the low resolution I'm running it at.
shader-db results:
total instructions in shared programs: 722170 -> 702545 (-2.72%)
instructions in affected programs: 260618 -> 240993 (-7.53%)
Some shaders do get hurt by up to 2 instructions, because a choice to copy
propagate instead of coalesce or something like that results in a dead write
sticking around. Given that we already have instances of those instructions
in the affected programs (particularly unigine), we should just improve dead
code elimination to fix the problem.
I've no idea why there isn't a piglit that triggers this behaviour,
but while enabling TBOs for softpipe and r600g, I noticed all the
integer tests failed. I tracked it back to the TXF returning a float
when it should be returning an int. This fixed it and I haven't
seen any regressions in a full piglit run on softpipe.
http://bugs.freedesktop.org/55010
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
If a frame callback is not destroyed when destroying a surface, its
handler function will be invoked if the surface was destroyed after the
callback was requested but before it was invoked, causing a write on
free:ed memory.
This can happen if eglDestroySurface() is called shortly after
eglSwapBuffers().
Note: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
These were only used for geometry shader support back in the days before
the new GLSL compiler. Future geometry shader support will not use
these.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Fixes a uninitialized pointer read defect reported by Coverity.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
The new code-generated version of _mesa_create_exec_table() populates
the entire dispatch table (except for dynamic functions) by itself; it
no longer calls separate functions to initialize parts of the dispatch
table. This patch removes those no-longer-needed functions.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This patch adjusts makefiles to cause src/mesa/main/api_exec.c to be
generated using src/mapi/glapi/gen/gl_genexec.py. There should be no
functional change.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This script generates the file api_exec.c, which contains just the
function _mesa_create_exec_table(), based on the XML files in
src/mapi/glapi/gen.
The following XML attributes, in particular, are used:
- "es1" indicates functions that should be available in ES1 contexts.
- "es2" indicates functions that should be available in ES2/ES3
contexts.
- "exec" indicates which Mesa function should be dispatched to. E.g.
if the GL function is glFoo(), then:
- exec="mesa" (the default) dispatches to _mesa_Foo().
- exec="check" dispatches to _check_Foo().
- exec="es" dispatches to _es_Foo().
- exec="loopback" dispatches to loopback_Foo().
- exec="skip" or exec="dynamic" causes this function to be skipped;
either it is not yet supported ("skip"), or its dispatch table
entry will be dynamically populated based on GL state ("dynamic").
- "desktop" indicates functions that should be available in desktop GL
(non-ES) contexts.
- "deprecated" indicates functions that should not be available in
core contexts.
- "mesa_name" indicates functions whose implementation in Mesa has a
different suffix than the corresponding GL function name.
The generated code looks roughly like this (showing just a single
statement in each block for brevity):
struct _glapi_table *
_mesa_create_exec_table(struct gl_context *ctx)
{
struct _glapi_table *exec;
exec = _mesa_alloc_dispatch_table(_gloffset_COUNT);
if (exec == NULL)
return NULL;
if (_mesa_is_desktop_gl(ctx)) {
SET_ActiveProgramEXT(exec, _mesa_ActiveProgramEXT);
/* other functions not shown */
}
if (_mesa_is_desktop_gl(ctx) || _mesa_is_gles3(ctx)) {
SET_BeginQueryARB(exec, _mesa_BeginQueryARB);
/* other functions not shown */
}
if (_mesa_is_desktop_gl(ctx) || ctx->API == API_OPENGLES) {
SET_GetPointerv(exec, _mesa_GetPointerv);
/* other functions not shown */
}
if (_mesa_is_desktop_gl(ctx) || ctx->API == API_OPENGLES || ctx->API == API_OPENGLES2) {
SET_ActiveTextureARB(exec, _mesa_ActiveTextureARB);
/* other functions not shown */
}
if (_mesa_is_desktop_gl(ctx) || ctx->API == API_OPENGLES2) {
SET_AttachShader(exec, _mesa_AttachShader);
/* other functions not shown */
}
if (ctx->API == API_OPENGL) {
SET_Accum(exec, _mesa_Accum);
/* other functions not shown */
}
if (ctx->API == API_OPENGL || ctx->API == API_OPENGLES) {
SET_AlphaFunc(exec, _mesa_AlphaFunc);
/* other functions not shown */
}
if (ctx->API == API_OPENGLES) {
SET_AlphaFuncxOES(exec, _es_AlphaFuncx);
/* other functions not shown */
}
return exec;
}
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This patch updates gl_XML.py to parse the new XML attributes "exec",
"desktop", "deprecated", and "mesa_name", which will be needed to code
generate _mesa_create_exec_table().
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
gl_XML.py's gl_function class keeps track of an entry_point_api_map
property that tracks, for each set of aliased functions, which ES1 or
ES2 version the given function name first appeared in.
This patch aggregates that information together across aliased
functions, into an easier-to-use api_map property.
Future patches will use this information when code generating
_mesa_create_exec_table(), to determine which set of dispatch table
entries should be populated based on the API.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Some of the functions that we store in the dispatch table are declared
as non-static in their .c files and are inserted into the dispatch
table directly by _mesa_create_exec_table(). Other functions are
declared as static, and are inserted into the dispatch table by a
dedicated function that lives in the same .c file
(e.g. _mesa_loopback_init_api_table() in api_loopback.c).
This patch makes all of these functions non-static, and creates
appropriate prototypes for them, so that in future patches we can
populate the entire dispatch table using a single code-generated
function.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
When the XML lists one or more GL api functions as aliases for another
GL function, the mesa function that implements the functionality is
usually named after the canonical version of the function (the one
that is the target of the aliases). For example, FogCoordd is listed
as an alias of FogCoorddEXT, and the Mesa function implementing the
functionality is called loopback_FogCoorddEXT.
However, there are exceptions. For example, Enablei is listed as an
alias of EnableIndexedEXT, but the Mesa function implementing the
functionality is called _mesa_EnableIndexed.
To account for these anomalies, this patch annotates the XML with
"mesa_name" attributes, which describe how to adjust the function name
to find the corresponding Mesa function.
For example:
<function name="EnableIndexedEXT" mesa_name="-EXT">...</function>
<function name="IsProgramNV" mesa_name="-NV+ARB">...</function>
means that EnableIndexedEXT is implemented by a Mesa function called
_mesa_EnableIndexed, and IsProgramNV is implemented by a Mesa function
called _mesa_IsProgramARB.
Future patches will use this annotation when code generating
_mesa_create_exec_table(), to determine the name of the Mesa function
that should be stored in each dispatch table entry.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Future patches will use this annotation when code generating
_mesa_create_exec_table(), to determine which functions should be
skipped when the API is desktop GL.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Future patches will use this annotation when code generating
_mesa_create_exec_table(), to determine which functions should be
dispatched to ES-specific implementations. exec="es" indicates that
the ES-specific implementation has a name beginning with "_es_"
(e.g. _es_QueryMatrixxOES), and exec="check" indicates that the
ES-specific implementation has a name beginning with "_check_"
(e.g. _check_GetTexGenxvOES).
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Future patches will use this annotation when code generating
_mesa_create_exec_table(), to determine which functions should be
dispatched to functions in api_loopback.c.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Future patches will use this annotation when code generating
_mesa_create_exec_table(), to determine which functions should be
skipped because Mesa dispatches them differently depending on GL
state.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Future patches will use this annotation when code generating
_mesa_create_exec_table(), to determine which functions should be
skipped because they aren't implemented by Mesa.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Future patches will use this annotation when code generating
_mesa_create_exec_table(), to determine which functions should be
skipped in core contexts.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
We were already doing this for some GLX extensions, but not others.
This patch makes our use of window_system="glX" consistent.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This patch standardizes the category names used in the glapi XML files
to begin each extension name with the prefix "GL_" or "GLX_". There
is no functional change, because these category names are not used in
the generated code.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This allows the GLES1.1 dispatch sanity test to be run on all builds,
even builds that do not include GLES1 support.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
fragprog_inputs_read is a 12-bit bitfield so check the assigned value.
MSVC warns on the assignment. Not easy to fix but let's do a sanity check.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The decompression is done in-place and only the compressed tiles are
decompressed. Note: R6xx-R7xx can do that only with Z16 and Z32F.
The texture unit is programmed to use non-displayable tiling and depth
ordering of samples, so that it can fetch the texture in the native DB format.
The latest version of the libdrm surface allocator is required for stencil
texturing to work. The old one didn't create the mipmap tree correctly.
We need a separate mipmap tree for stencil, because the stencil mipmap
offsets are not really depth offsets/4.
There are still some known bugs, but this should save some memory and it also
improves performance a little bit in Lightsmark (especially with low
resolutions; tested with Radeon HD 5000).
The DB->CB copy is still used for transfers.
Reviewed-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
The functions were broken, because they converted ints to floats.
Now we can finally advertise OpenGL 3.0. ;)
In this commit, the vbo module also tracks the type for each attrib
in addition to the size. It can be one of FLOAT, INT, UNSIGNED_INT.
The little ugliness is the vertex attribs are declared as floats even though
there may be integer values. The code just copies integer values into them
without any conversion.
This implementation passes the glVertexAttribI piglit test which I am going
to commit in piglit soon. The test covers vertex arrays, immediate mode and
display lists.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
v2: cosmetic changes as suggested by Brian
Integer textures generate invalid operation in glGenerateMipmap.
So, the code related to integer textures is now redundant.
Note: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Khronos has reached a conclusion and disallowed following texture formats in
glGenerateMipMap():
(a) ASTC textures
(b) integer internal formats (e.g., RGBA8UI, RG16I)
(c) textures with stencil formats (e.g., STENCIL_INDEX8)
(d) textures with packed depth/stencil formats (e.g, DEPTH24_STENCIL8)
https://cvs.khronos.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=9471
Note: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This is part of fixing gl-3.1/genned-names.
v2: Fix a missing return value.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
It's usually forced to 1 by the surface format, but sometimes we actually have
alpha present because it's the only format available.
Fixes piglit texwrap bordercolor tests for OpenGL 1.1, GL_EXT_texture_sRGB and
GL_ARB_texture_float.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
If the index buffer is full of values like "0 1 2 3", but basevertex is 4, we
need to upload at least vertex data for elements 4 5 6 7. Whether we also
upload 0 1 2 3 is a question of whether there are VBOs present or not -- see
the code setting start_vertex_bias in brw_draw_upload.c.
Fixes piglit draw-elements*base-vertex user_varrays
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Otherwise, if we had a set of prims passed in with a num_instances varying
between them, we wouldn't upload enough (or too much!) from user vertex
arrays.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The brw_draw_upload.c start_vertex_bias code has support for doing the rebase
without rewriting the index buffer by applying a basevertex. It looks like
vbo_rebase_prims() is not equipped to handle basevertex.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We haven't been only tracking raw GRF-GRF moves since the constant propagation
merge, and also the extension for source modifiers and uniforms.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Given that we handle similarly-regioned GRFs registers for our copy
propagation from our UNIFORM file, there's no reason not to allow it.
The shader-db impact is negligible -- +90 instructions total, 2 shaders helped
and 7 hurt (slightly increased register pressure increased spilling), but this
is to prevent regression in other shaders when fixing copy_propagation to
reduce register pressure in the shaders that are hurt here.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
If we put the register coalescing in between the two, then we end up with code
sequences involving dead writes that the dead code elimination doesn't know
how to remove. In place of making dead code elimination smart (which we
should do, too), make it less important for the moment.
shader-db results:
total instructions in shared programs: 722240 -> 721275 (-0.13%)
instructions in affected programs: 50573 -> 49608 (-1.91%)
(no shaders regressed).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
During code generation, we create tons of temporary variables, many of
which get immediately killed and are never used. Later optimization and
analysis passes, such as compute_live_intervals, loop over all the
virtual GRFs. By compacting them, we can save a lot of overhead.
Reduces compilation time in L4D2's largest fragment shader from 10.2
seconds to 5.2 seconds (50%). Drops compute_live_variables() from
10-12% of another game's startup time to 8%.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The function list was generated from glcorearb.h for GL 4.3.
Note that many GL 4.X functions are commented out, and indicate
that they need to be added to Mesa's XML.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
We also no longer call _swrast_CreateContext, _tnl_CreateContext
or _swsetup_CreateContext when creating the context.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
If a GL function was introduced in a later GL version than the
context we are testing, then it is okay if it is set to the
_mesa_generic_nop function.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This will be used by GL CORE contexts to differentiate functions that
can be set to nop from functions that are required for a particular
context version.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This function can be re-added with an actual implementation
when ARB_geometry_shader4 is supported.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This function can be re-added with an actual implementation
when ARB_geometry_shader4 is supported.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
ProgramParameteri will be required for ARB_geometry_shader4
or GLES3. Don't enable this function until either of those
is supported.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
These functions are part in GL 4.3. Moving this will allow
ProgramParameteriARB to alias ProgramParameteri.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
These EXT_separate_shader_objects function will no longer be
enabled for CORE profiles:
* UseShaderProgramEXT
* ActiveProgramEXT
* CreateShaderProgramEXT
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This fixes the Android build after the move of builtin_stubs.cpp into
the builtin_compiler subdirectory. This patch is untested.
Signed-off-by: Thierry Reding <thierry.reding@avionic-design.de>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Note this by itself is not enough to fix scons build -- it will fail
until you remove:
rm -rf build/*/glsl/builtin_compiler
because that node was a filei before, but it will be now a directory.
This also means that bisecting across this change will require wiping
the build directory..
The builtin_compiler binary is used during the build process to generate
code for the builtin GLSL functions. Since this binary needs to be run
on the build host, it must not be cross-compiled.
This patch fixes the build system to compile a second version of the
source files and the builtin_compiler binary itself for the build
system. It does so by defining the CC_FOR_BUILD and CXX_FOR_BUILD
variables, which are searched for by the configure script and point to
the location of native C and C++ compilers.
In order for this to work properly, builtin_function.cpp is removed
from BUILT_SOURCES, otherwise the build system would try to generate it
before having had a chance to descend into the builtin_compiler
subdirectory. With the builtin_compiler and glsl_compiler now being
generated at different stages, the build instructions for glsl_compiler
can be simplified a bit.
Signed-off-by: Thierry Reding <thierry.reding@avionic-design.de>
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Variable indexing of non-uniform arrays only exists in GLSL. Likewise,
OPCODE_CAL/OPCODE_RET only existed to try and support GLSL's function
calls. We don't use Mesa IR for GLSL, and these features are explicitly
disallowed by ARB_vertex_program/ARB_fragment_program and never
generated by ffvertex_prog.c.
Since they'll never happen, there's no need to check for them, which
saves us from walking through all the Mesa IR instructions.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Rather than having two separate backends, just create a small layer that
translates the subset of Mesa IR used for ARB_vertex_program and fixed
function programs to the Vec4 IR. This allows us to use the same
optimization passes, code generator, register allocator as for GLSL.
v2: Incorporate Eric's review comments.
- Fix use of uninitialized src_swiz[] values in the SWIZZLE_ZERO/ONE
case: just initialize it to 0 (.x) since the value doesn't matter
(those channels get writemasked out anyway).
- Properly reswizzle source register's swizzles, rather than overwriting
the swizzle.
- Port the old brw_vs_emit code for computing .x of the EXP2 opcode.
- Update comments, removing mention of NV_vertex_program, etc.
- Delete remaining #warning lines and debug comments.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
v2: Properly use "conditionalmod" pre-Gen6, rather than the incorrectly
copy-and-pasted "BRW_CONDITIONAL_G".
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This will become necessary once we start supporting ARB programs and
fixed function in this backend.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This patch removes the generated files api_exec_es1.c,
api_exec_es1_dispatch.h, and api_exec_es1_remap_helper.h (and the
source files and build rules used to generate them), since they are no
longer used. GLES1 now uses the same dispatch table layout as all the
other APIs.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This patch modifies context creation code for GLES1 to use
_mesa_create_exec_table() (which is used for all other APIs) instead
of the GLES1-specific _mesa_create_exec_table_es1().
There is a slight change in functionality. As a result of a mistake
in the code generation of _mesa_create_exec_table_es1(), it does not
include glFlushMappedBufferRangeEXT or glMapBufferRangeEXT (this is
because when support for those two functions was added in commit
762d9ac, src/mesa/main/APIspec.xml wasn't updated). With this patch,
glFlushMappedBufferRangeEXT and glMapBufferRangeEXT are properly
included in the dispatch table. Accordingly, dispatch_sanity.cpp is
modified to expect these two functions to be present.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
v2: Leave GLES1.1 dispatch sanity test disabled when not building
GLES1 support.
Currently, _mesa_create_exec_table() (in api_exec.c) is used for all
APIs except GLES1. In GLES1, _mesa_create_exec_table_es1() (a code
generated function) is used instead.
In principle, this shouldn't be necessary. It should be possible for
api_exec.c to contain the logic for populating the dispatch table for
all API's.
This patch paves the way for using _mesa_create_exec_table() instead
of _mesa_create_exec_table_es1(), by making _mesa_create_exec_table()
(and the functions it calls) expose the correct subset of desktop GL
functions for GLES1.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This patch creates a header querymatrix.h, to allow functions defined
in querymatrix.c to be used from other .c files. It also switches
from the nonstandard GL_APIENTRY to GLAPIENTRY.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
v2: Don't declare _mesa_Get{Integer,Float}v in querymatrix.c.
Instead, just include main/get.h.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
This patch adds the usual boilerplate (copyright notice and guards
against redundant inclusion) to es1_conversion.h. It also moves the
definition of GL_APIENTRY from es1_conversion.c.
This allows es1_conversion.h to be safely included from other .c files.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
v2: Use copyright notice from src/mesa/main/es_generator.py (the
script that used to generate this file).
Previously dispatch table-related code was generated from gl_API.xml,
so it did not include slots for GLES1-only functions (such as those
taking fixed-point arguments).
This patch generates dispatch table-related code from
gl_and_es_API.xml, so that GLES1-only functions are included. This
paves the way for future patches that will unify the GLES1 dispatch
table with the dispatch tables for the other APIs.
The following generated files are affected:
- glapi_x86.S
- glapi_x86-64.S
- glapi_sparc.S
- glprocs.h
- glapitemp.h
- glapitable.h
- glapi_gentable.c
- dispatch.h
- remap_helper.h
Since this change affects makefiles, a full rebuild is required.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
v2: Adjust dependencies to ensure that generated files will be rebuilt
whenever any ES-related XML source files are changed.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Previously, when code-generating aliased functions in glapitemp.h, we
weren't consistent about which function alias we used to obtain the
parameter names, with the risk that we would generate incorrect code
like this:
KEYWORD1 void KEYWORD2 NAME(Foo)(GLint x)
{
(void) x;
DISPATCH(Foo, (x), (F, "glFoo(%d);\n", x));
}
KEYWORD1 void KEYWORD2 NAME(FooEXT)(GLint y)
{
(void) x;
DISPATCH(Foo, (x), (F, "glFooEXT(%d);\n", x));
}
At the moment there are no aliased functions with mismatched parameter
names, so this isn't the problem. But when we introduce GLES1
functions into the dispatch table, there will be
(MapBufferRange/MapBufferRangeEXT). This patch paves the way for that
by fixing the code generation script to handle the mismatch correctly.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
This ensures that GLES1-only typedefs are available in these files.
In a future patch, this will allow us to expand the dispatch table to
include GLES1-only functions.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
In commits bad96f6 and e7dd2e5 I added the following aliases:
- ClampColor -> ClampColorARB
- VertexAttribDivisor -> VertexAttribDivisorARB
But I neglected to update check_table.cpp, causing "make check" to
fail for non-shared-glapi builds.
This patch removes the functions that are now aliased from
check_table.cpp, so that "make check" works correctly again.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
When copy_array_to_vbo_array encountered an array with src_stride == 0
and dst_stride != 0, we would replicate out the single element to the
whole size (max - min + 1). This is unnecessary: we can simply upload
one copy and set the buffer's stride to 0.
Decreases vertex upload overhead in an upcoming Steam for Linux title.
Prior to this patch, copy_array_to_vbo_array appeared very high in the
profile (Eric quoted 20%). After the patch, it disappeared completely.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This essentially reverts the following:
commit c625aa19cb
Author: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Date: Fri Feb 18 10:37:43 2011 +0000
intel: extend current vertex buffers
While working on optimizing an upcoming Steam title, I broke this code.
Eric expressed his doubts about this optimization, and noted that the
original commit offered no performance data.
I ran before and after benchmarks on Xonotic and Citybench, and found
that this code made no difference. So, remove it to reduce complexity
and make future work simpler.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The problem was we set VRAM|GTT for relocations of STATIC resources.
Setting just VRAM increases the framerate 4 times on my machine.
I rewrote the switch statement and adjusted the domains for window
framebuffers too.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
By removing the array size, the static assertion to check for missing
elements can do its job properly. This will catch cases where a new
Mesa format is added but the swrast texfetch code isn't updated.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
On r6xx/r7xx shader resource management need to make sure that the
shader does not goes over the gpr register limit. Each specific
asic has a maxmimum register that can be split btw shader stage.
For each stage the shader must not use more register than the
limit programmed.
v2: Print an error message when discarding draw. Don't add another
boolean to context structure, but rather propagate the discard
boolean through the call chain.
Signed-off-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
This is a regression since b3921e1f53.
The array stores VS outputs, not FS inputs.
Now llvmpipe can do 32 varyings too.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
For Intel, expose it only if gen >= 4.
For Gallium, expose it only if PIPE_CAP_SM3 is advertised.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
v2: update relnotes-9.1
v3: use align_malloc and align_free for malloced buffers in r300g
v4: document the new CAP in the docs
This allows updating only a subrange of buffer bindings.
set_vertex_buffers(pipe, start_slot, count, NULL) unbinds buffers in that
range. Binding NULL resources unbinds buffers too (both buffer and user_buffer
must be NULL).
The meta ops are adapted to only save, change, and restore the single slot
they use. The cso_context can save and restore only one vertex buffer slot.
The clients can query which one it is using cso_get_aux_vertex_buffer_slot.
It's currently set to 0. (the Draw module breaks if it's set to non-zero)
It should decrease the CPU overhead when using a lot of meta ops, but
the drivers must be able to treat each vertex buffer slot as a separate
state (only r600g does so at the moment).
I can imagine this also being useful for optimizing some OpenGL use cases.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
It was defined as an empty function since Nov 2010 and was ultimately
removed completely.
See xserver commit 1cb0261
Signed-off-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Fixes build error on Cygwin and Solaris. _R, _G, and _B are used in
ctype.h on those platforms.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
With the explit NUM_TEXTURE_TARGETS array size, the assertion that
Elements(targets) == NUM_TEXTURE_TARGETS would pass even if elements
were missing.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Patch adds additional singlesample config with 565 color buffer,
24 bit depth and 8 bit stencil buffer. This makes Quadrant benchmark
work on Android. Tested with Sandybridge and Ivybridge machines.
Signed-off-by: Tapani Pälli <tapani.palli@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
This is instead of the pair of GLenums for format and type that were
previously used. This is necessary for the Intel drivers to expose sRGB
framebuffer formats.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
There is no gl_format in Mesa that corresponds to this arrangement, so I
have a very hard time believing that this works.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Previously, if the server didn't send a GLX_FRAMEBUFFER_SRGB_CAPABLE_EXT
tag, it would still be set to GLX_DONT_CARE (which is -1). Set it to
GL_FALSE instead.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Cc: Maciej Wieczorek <maciej.t.wieczorek@intel.com>
This fixes an issue where glsl_to_tgsi_visior::get_opcode() would emit the
wrong opcode because the register type was GLSL_TYPE_ARRAY/STRUCT instead of
GLSL_TYPE_FLOAT/INT/UINT/BOOL, so the function would use the float opcodes for
operations on integer or boolean values dereferenced from an array or
structure. Assertions have been added to get_opcode() to prevent this bug
from reappearing in the future.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Tested-by: Andreas Boll <andreas.boll.dev@gmail.com>
The 2x and 4x MSAA cases are completely broken. The lfdptr instruction returns
garbage there.
The 8x MSAA case is broken on Cayman, though at least the result looks somewhat
correct.
Only the 8x MSAA case works on Evergreen and is enabled.
llvm-3.2svn r166772 no longer requires RTTI for lib/Support.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
LLVM 3.1+ haven't more "extern unsigned llvm::StackAlignmentOverride"
and friends for configuring code generation options, like stack
alignment.
So I restrict assiging of lvm::StackAlignmentOverride and other
variables to LLVM 3.0 only, and wrote similiar code using
TargetOptions.
This patch fix segfaulting of WINE using llvmpipe built with LLVM 3.1
Signed-off-by: Alexander V. Nikolaev <avn@daemon.hole.ru>
Signed-off-by: José Fonseca <jose.r.fonseca@gmail.com>
This is a leftover from when we had to split those two functions due to
the separate BO validation step.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
"Active" is an already-used term for the query being between
glBeginQuery() and glEndQuery(), while this is tracking whether the
start of the packet pair for emitting state has been inserted into the
current batchbuffer.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Put the back face colour right after the front face colour in the LDS parameter
space.
Fixes 18 piglit tests related to two sided lighting.
Signed-off-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
It's required. The CP uses this to properly allocate new
contexts. Also do a CS partial flush since we are updating
CONFIG regs which are single state.
Signed-off-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
Use printf instead of debug_printf to be consistent with print
statements in rest of unit tests.
This also fixes the lack of print output with the MinGW build of
u_format_compatible_test.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Global initializers using the ?: operator with at least one non-constant
operand generate ir_if statements. For example,
float foo = some_boolean ? 0.0 : 1.0;
becomes:
(declare (temporary) float conditional_tmp)
(if (var_ref some_boolean)
((assign (x) (var_ref conditional_tmp) (constant float (0.0))))
((assign (x) (var_ref conditional_tmp) (constant float (1.0)))))
This pattern is necessary because the second or third arguments could be
function calls, which create statements (not expressions).
The linker moves these global initializers into the main() function.
However, it incorrectly had an assertion that global initializer
statements were only assignments, calls, or temporary variable
declarations. As demonstrated above, they can be if statements too.
Other than the assertion, everything works fine. So remove it.
Fixes new Piglit test condition-08.vert, as well as an upcoming
game that will be released on Steam.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Consider the following code, which reinterprets a register as a
different type:
mov(8) g6<1>F g1.4<0,4,1>.xF
and(8) g5<1>.xUD g6<4,4,1>.xUD 0x7fffffffUD
Copy propagation would notice that we can replace the use of g6 with
g1.4 and eliminate the MOV. Unfortunately, it failed to preserve the UD
type, incorrectly generating:
and(8) g5<1>.xUD g6<4,4,1>.xF 0x7fffffffUD
Found while debugging Ian's uncommitted ARB_vertex_program LOG opcode
test with my new Mesa IR -> Vec4 IR translator.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Consider the following code sequence:
mul(8) g4<1>F g1<0,4,1>.wzwwF g3<4,4,1>.wzwwF
mov.sat(8) m1<1>.xyF g4<4,4,1>F
mul(8) g4<1>F g1<0,4,1>.xxyxF g3<4,4,1>.xxyxF
mov.sat(8) m1<1>.zwF g4<4,4,1>F
The compute-to-MRF pass will discover the first mov.sat and attempt to
replace it by rewriting earlier instructions. Everything works out,
so it replaces scan_inst's destination file, reg, and reg_offset,
resulting in:
mul(8) m1<1>F g1<0,4,1>.wzwwF g3<4,4,1>.wzwwF
mul(8) g4<1>F g1<0,4,1>.xxyxF g3<4,4,1>.xxyxF
mov.sat(8) m1<1>.zwF g4<4,4,1>F
Unfortunately, it loses the .xy writemask on the mov.sat's MRF
destination. While this doesn't pose an immediate problem, it then
proceeds to transform the second mov.sat, resulting in:
mul(8) m1<1>F g1<0,4,1>.wzwwF g3<4,4,1>.wzwwF
mul(8) m1<1>F g1<0,4,1>.xxyxF g3<4,4,1>.xxyxF
Instead of writing both halves of the vector (like the original code),
it overwrites the full vector both times, clobbering the desired .xy
values.
When encountering a MOV, the compute-to-MRF code scans for instructions
which generate channels of the MOV source. It ensures that all
necessary channels are available (possibly written by several
instructions). In this case, *more* channels are available than
necessary, so we want to take the subset that's actually used.
Taking the bitwise and of both writemasks should accomplish that.
This was discovered by analyzing an ARB_vertex_program test
(glean/vertProg1/MUL test (with swizzle and masking)) with my new
Mesa IR -> Vec4 IR translator code. However, it should be possible
with GLSL programs as well.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Previously, we used lookahead patterns to differentiate:
#define FOO(x) function macro
#define FOO (x) object macro
Unfortunately, our rule for function macros:
{HASH}define{HSPACE}+/{IDENTIFIER}"("
relies on infinite lookahead, and apparently triggers a Flex bug where
the generated code overflows a state buffer (see YY_STATE_BUF_SIZE).
There's no need to use infinite lookahead. We can simply change state,
match the identifier, and use a single character lookahead for the '('.
This apparently makes Flex not generate the giant state array, which
avoids the buffer overflow, and should be more efficient anyway.
Fixes piglit test 17000-consecutive-chars-identifier.frag.
NOTE: This is a candidate for every release branch ever.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
While copying the values into the batch space, we advance the param
pointer. The debug code then tries to iterate over all the uploaded
values, starting at param...which is now the end of the uploaded data,
rather than the start.
This patch saves a pointer to the start of push constant space before
it gets altered and switches the debug code to use that.
Tested by uncommenting the code and examining the output of
glsl-vs-clamp-1.shader_test. Previously all values appeared to be zero.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Since ES3.0 is backward compatible with 2.0, we check that all the 2.0
functions and additional 3.0 functions exist.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Previously we just printed the dispatch table index and the user had
to convert it to a function name. That was a pain because when
FEATURE_remap_table is defined, the assignment of functions to
dispatch table entries is done at run time.
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Previously this function was only implemented for non-shared-glapi
builds. Since the function is only intended for debugging purposes we
use a simple O(n) algorithm.
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
When specifying per-target CFLAGS (e.g., ralloc_test_CFLAGS) AM_CFLAGS
are not used. AM_CPPFLAGS should be used for includes anyway.
Fixes a build problem since 41b14d125:
CC ralloc_test-ralloc.o
In file included from ../../../src/glsl/ralloc.c:42:0:
../../../src/glsl/ralloc.h:57:27: fatal error: main/compiler.h: No such file or directory
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Catches problems such as (in the gles3 branch)
glcpp-parse.y: In function '_glcpp_parser_handle_version_declaration':
glcpp-parse.y:1990:39: warning: format '%lli' expects argument of type
'long long int', but argument 4 has type 'int' [-Wformat]
As a side-effect, remove ralloc.c's likely/unlikely macros and just use
the ones from main/compiler.h.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the release branches.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Fixes the problem where configure from the tarball would report missing
files:
$ ./configure
configure: error: cannot find install-sh, install.sh, or shtool in bin
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
4bits and 3bits quantitization values differ significantly for
values other than 0 and 1.
Fixes piglit draw-pixels for softpipe/llvmpipe.
NOTE: Probably a candidate for stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
This fixes an issue where glsl_to_tgsi_visior::get_opcode() would emit the
wrong opcode because the register type was GLSL_TYPE_ARRAY/STRUCT instead of
GLSL_TYPE_FLOAT/INT/UINT/BOOL, so the function would use the float opcodes for
operations on integer or boolean values dereferenced from an array or
structure. Assertions have been added to get_opcode() to prevent this bug
from reappearing in the future.
This silences a zillion GCC warnings like:
../../../src/mesa/main/pack.c: In function '_mesa_pack_rgba_span_from_uints':
../../../src/mesa/main/pack.c:560:13: warning: comparison of unsigned expression < 0 is always false [-Wtype-limits]
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
The layer dimension of array textures is not subject to mipmap minification.
OTOH we were missing an assertion for the depth dimension.
Fixes assertion failures with piglit {f,v}s-textureSize-sampler1DArrayShadow.
For some reason, they only resulted in piglit 'warn' results for me, not
failures.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=56211
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Tested-by: Andreas Boll <andreas.boll.dev@gmail.com>
cuts down the while loop iterations from 4600 to 380 commits at the
moment
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This function is only useful for the ARB_{vertex,fragment}_program
extensions, which we don't expose in core contexts.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
glGetPointerv was de-deprecated in GL 4.3, because GL 4.3 adds
functionality from KHR_debug and ARB_debug_output, which require
glGetPointerv.
This patch modifies _mesa_create_exec_table() to populate
glGetPointerv in the dispatch table for core contexts.
Technically this is not in compliance with the spec--what we really
ought to do for core contexts is expose glGetPointerv only when a GL
4.3 context is in use or one of the two extensions is present.
However, it seems silly to go to that extra work, since the only
client-visible effect would be for glGetPointerv to raise an
INVALID_OPERATION error instead of an INVALID_ENUM error. Besides,
the other functions set up by _mesa_create_exec_table() only depend on
the API in use, not on the GL version or extensions supported.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
There's no reason to have separate slots in the dispatch table for
these two functions, since they are synonymous.
Note: previous to this patch, we never populated the dispatch table
slot for VertexAttribDivisor, which was ok, since it is not required
until 3.3. After this patch, both functions will be usable provided
that the ARB_instanced_arrays extension is present.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
There's no reason to have separate slots in the dispatch table for
these two functions, since they are synonymous.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
With the previous two commits, this fixes piglit
GL_ARB_occlusion_query2/api.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
There's a similar test below, but it's not the same: that one checks whether
this query object is already active (potentially on another target).
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
We should use the later since we're freeing the memory with free(),
not the gallium FREE() macro.
This fixes a mismatch when using the gallium debug memory functions.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
We need to create bos suitable for cursor usage that we can map and
write data into. The kms dumb ioctls is all we need for this, so drop
the dependency on libkms.
Given the usecase we have of trying to measure timestamps across individual
draw calls, flushing will totally mess up what people are trying to measure.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The theory I had when I wrote the code was that you wanted to minimize latency
on your queries because the app was going to ask soon. Only, it turns out
that everybody batches up their queries and asks for the results later (often
after the next SwapBuffers!), so this was a pessimization.
Until now, I had no workload where it mattered enough to benchmark. Recently
I started playing some Minecraft, which uses tons of queries to decide whether
to render chunks of the terrain. For that app, avoiding the flush in the
query-generation loop improves performance 22.7% +/- 4.7% (n=3) on an apitrace
capture of it (confirmed in game by watching the fps meter found by pressing
F3, 15/16 -> 20/21 fps).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
otherwise some compilers will throw error
"error: format not a string literal and no format arguments"
Signed-off-by: Tapani Pälli <tapani.palli@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
If GL_BASE_LEVEL==0 and GL_MAX_LEVEL==0 that's a pretty good hint that
there'll be a single mipmap level in the texture.
Google Earth sets the texture's state this way before the first glTexImage
call. This saves a bit of texture memory.
Fixes piglit tests "unpack-teximage2d --pbo=* --format=GL_BGRA" on
Sandybridge+.
The fastpath was checking an incomplete set of pixel unpack state. This
patch adds checks for all the fields of gl_pixelstore_attrib that affect
2D texture uploads. Also, it begins permitting the case where
GL_UNPACK_ROW_LENGTH is 0.
Ideally, we would just ask a unicorn to JIT this fastpath for us in
a way that safely handles the unpacking state. Until then, it's safer if
only a small set of situations activate the fastpath.
v2: Use _mesa_is_bufferobj(), per Anholt.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
It doesn't provide the cross-process buffer sharing that a window system
pixmap could otherwise support and we don't have anything left that uses
this type of surface.
The 0.99.0 Wayland release changes the event API to provide a thread-safe
mechanism for receiving events specific to a subsystem (such as EGL) and
we need to use it in the EGL platform.
The Wayland protocol now also requires a commit request to make changes
take effect, issue that from eglSwapBuffers.
Now that we've replaced all the variable settings other than reg_width, it's
easy to hang on to this (the expensive part of setting up the allocator).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Improves performance of the Lightsmark penumbra shadows scene by 15.7% +/-
1.0% (n=15), by eliminating register spilling. (tested by smashing the list of
scenes to have all other scenes have 0 duration -- includes additional
rendering of scene description text that normally doesn't appear in that
scene)
v2: Allow allocation of all but g0/g1 of the payload.
v3: Pull count_to_loop_end() out to a helper function.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org> (v2, recommended v3)
Based on split_virtual_grfs(), we choose the same set every time, so set it in
stone. This will help us avoid regenerating the somewhat expensive
class/register set setup every compile.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This is derived from the FS visitor code for the same, but tracks each channel
separately (otherwise, some typical fill-a-channel-at-a-time patterns would
produce excessive live intervals across loops and cause spilling).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=48375
(crash -> failure, can turn into pass by forcing unrolling still)
These messages always have m0 = g0 and m1 = offset, and write has m2 = data.
Avoids regression in opt_compute_to_mrf() with a change to scratch writes to
set up the data as an MRF write in the IR.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Note that BRW_PREDICATE_NONE is 0 and BRW_PREDICATE_NORMAL is 1, so that's a
lot like the true/false we had in the FS before.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
fs_bblock_link -> bblock_link
fs_bblock -> bblock_t (to avoid conflicting with all the fs_bblock *bblock)
fs_cfg -> cfg_t (to avoid conflicting with all the fs_cfg *cfg)
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This fixes confusion by the upcoming live variable analysis which saw e.g. use
of temp.w when only temp.xyz were initialized in the basic block, and
concluded that temp.w must have come from outside of the block (even though it
was never initialized anywhere).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Due to a string mismatch, INTEL_swap_event wasn't listed among GLX
extensions for the connection, even when present on both client and
server. That is, glXQueryServerString and glXGetClientString reported the
extension, but glXQueryExtensionsString did not.
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=56057
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Per commentary and direction in the LLVM community, support for ppc64 is
going into MCJIT rather than the old JIT. There is no existing support
in prior llvm versions, so no need to specify LLVM version numbers.
Signed-off-by: Will Schmidt <will_schmidt@vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The GCC c99 standard on Cygwin sets __STRICT_ANSI__ and symbols such as
strdup are not available.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Note that we are missing the ARB_internalformat_query extension, which
provides the glGetInternalformativ function needed by GL ES 3.0.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
The relevant ES2 code is always in Mesa. Always building the tests
ensures that things aren't accidentally broken when people don't build
with --enable-es2.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This code is twisty, and the comment before most of the blocks was actually
giving me the opposite impression from its intention: We want to apply as much
of our offset as possible through coarse tile-aligned adjustment, since we can
do so independently per buffer, and apply the minimum we can through
fine-grained drawing offset x/y, since it has to agree between all buffers.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
There are a number of places where some obscure piece of the code is not
currently worth fixing, and we have some workaround behavior available. It's
nicer for users to do some lame workaround than to just assert, but without
asserts we never knew when the workaround was at fault.
This should give us a nice compromise: Execute the workaround, but mention
that the obscure workaround was hit.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Note: mapi_abi can consume API information from either XML or a .csv
file. A side effect of this change is that the ES1 and ES2 API
printers can only be used with XML input now. That's ok, since the
.csv input format is only used for the OpenVG API.
Tested-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Previously, the ES1, ES2, and shared GLAPI printers passed a list of
function names to the base class constructor, which was used by the
_override_for_api() function to loop over all the API functions and
adjust their 'hidden' and 'handcode' attributes as appropriate for the
API flavour being code-generated.
This patch lifts the loop from _override_for_api() into its caller,
and makes it into a polymorphic function, so that the derived classes
can customize its behaviour directly. In a future patch, this will
allow us to override the 'hidden' and 'handcode' attributes based on
information from the XML rather than a list of functions.
Tested-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Previously, _get_api_entries() would make a deep copy of each element
in the entries table before modifying the 'hidden' and 'handcode'
attributes. This was unnecessary, since the entries aren't used again
after this function. Removing the copy simplifies the code, because
it is no longer necessary to adjust the alias pointers to point to the
copied entries.
Tested-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Currently mapi_abi.py uses hardcoded lists of function names (in
gles_api.py) to determine which functions need to be included in the
GLES 1 or GLES 2 API. This patch removes a sanity check which
verified that all GLES functions listed in the hardcoded lists were
actually present in the XML.
Later patches in this series will modify mapi_abi.py to determine
which functions need to be included in the GLES 1 or GLES 2 API based
directly on the XML. Once that is done, the sanity check will be
redundant. Removing the sanity check now will simplify the patches to
come.
Tested-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Currently, the set of functions which exist in GLES1 or GLES2 is
determined by hardcoded lists of function names in gles_api.py. This
patch encodes that information into the XML files using new
attributes, es1 and es2.
The es1 attribute denotes the first version of GLES 1 in which the
function exists (e.g. es1="1.1" means the function exists in GLES 1.1
but not GLES 1.0). "none" (the default) means the function is not
available in any version of GLES 1.
The es2 attribute denotes the first version of GLES 2/3 in which the
function exists (e.g. es2="2.0" means the function exists in both GLES
2.0 and GLES 3.0). "none" (the default) means the function is not
available in any version of GLES 2 or GLES 3.
Note that since GLES 3 is a strict superset of GLES 2, there is no
need for a separate attribute for it; instead, 'es2="3.0"' should be
used to denote functions that are present in GLES 3 but not GLES 2.
This patch only adds information about GLES versions 1.0, 1.1, and
2.0.
Later patches will modify the python code generation scripts to use
this information rather than the hardcoded lists in gles_api.py.
Tested-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
An unfortunate quirk of Python 2 is that there are two types of
classes: "classic" classes (which are backward compatible with some
unfortunate design decisions made early in Python's history), and
"new-style" classes. Classic classes have a number of limitations
(for example they don't support super()) and are unavailable in Python
3. There's really no reason to use classic classes, except in
unmaintained legacy code. For more information see
http://www.python.org/download/releases/2.2.3/descrintro/.
This patch upgrades the Python code in src/mapi/glapi/gen to use
exclusively new-style classes.
Tested-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Now that ARB programs and fixed function are routed through the new
backend, shader might be NULL. Don't do INTEL_DEBUG=perf support in
that case, since it relies on shader->compiled_once.
Since INTEL_DEBUG=perf wasn't previously supported, this maintains the
status quo. It might be nice to support it someday, however.
This could be moved to brw_shader_program instead of brw_shader, but
it appears even prog can be NULL in that case.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
MaxIfDepth of 0 means "flatten all the time", not "never flatten".
This is only desirable on hardware that can't support control flow;
software rasterization and most hardware drivers want this.
This alters behavior for swrast as well as i915. Tested on i915.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The previous patch removed the producer of things in this file.
Since there aren't any, we can remove it.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
All flags are now gone, so we can stop storing and passing this around.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Nobody ever set the flag, which makes this dead code.
v2: Leave the ureg_DECL_fs_input_cyl function in place, even though it's
unused, since VMWare uses it for their internal projects.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
GLSL doesn't use the program code anymore. Accordingly, there were no
consumers of these flags, so there's no need to define them.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
These were only part of NV_fragment_program, so we can kill them.
The fact that PROGRAM_NAMED_PARAM appears in r200_vertprog.c is rather
comedic, but also demonstrates that people just spam the various types
of parameters everywhere because they're confusing.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Without NV programs, there's no need for the compatible_program_targets
function. A simple (non-)equality check will do.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Also remove a leftover remnant from NV_vertex_program.
v2: Update for Imre's get changes.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com> [v1]
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net> [v1]
Previously, Mesa used nvprogram.c's _mesa_GetVertexAttribPointervNV()
function to implement this GL call. There was also a second
implementation in varray.c, _mesa_GetVertexAttribPointervARB(), which
was entirely unused.
The varray.c variant has an additional assertion and checks the index
against ctx->Const.VertexProgram.MaxAttribs rather than
MAX_VERTEX_GENERIC_ATTRIBS. However, that variable is defined to the
same value, so it should be fine.
This will allow us to kill the duplicate function.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Also kill the resulting dead code for display list handling.
v2: Also kill dlist's OPCODE_REQUEST_RESIDENT_PROGRAMS_NV.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com> [v1]
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The NamedParameter functions were introduced in NV_fragment_program, and
are not shared with any other extensions.
Although this patch appears to remove the LocalParameter functions, it
does not: the ARB_fragment_program section also set them up. Now we
simply initialize them a single time.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
No hardware drivers support this, it's obsolete, and unlikely to be
useful without NV_vertex_program, which is gone now.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
dri2DrawableGetMSC(), dri2WaitForMSC() and dri2WaitForSBC() were
inadvertently changed to return 0 on success. This resulted in the callers
returning an error to the client.
Restore the previous behavior and also check that the reply pointers are
valid before accessing them.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Note that _mesa_GetVertexAttribPointervNV() is actually
glGetVertexAttribPointerv(), which operates on the generic attributes. The
geometry shader initialization looks like arbitrary cruft to me.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Note that the MAP2 getters were missing from the implementation. Neat.
v2: Rebase on top of get.c changes.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com> (v1)
It wasn't supported in hardware, and the comments in the code indicated no
known uses (similar to my experience on Intel) and a possible intent to remove
it.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
We were holding on to this code because we were aware that NWN 1 had some
support for vertex programs -- no other linux programs I've come across would
use it (since other software also has ARB_vp or GLSL support). Only, it turns
out that NWN doesn't even give us any vertex programs. Given that we have
known issues where the extension has never been fully supported, just give up
on it.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=46795
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
- stopped using util_color
- reformatted to occupy less characters per line.
- used memcpy for the border color
- used pipe_color_union in the state structure
And the clear color too, though that may be an issue only with GL_RGB if it's
actually RGBA in the driver.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
v2: The types of st_translate_color parameters were changed to gl_color_union
and pipe_color_union as per Brian's comment.
configure.ac would previously refuse to complete if libX11 wasn't
installed, even if we'd disabled GLX and weren't building an X11 EGL
platform. Make the check simply set the no_x variable that's used (but
never set) immediately below for what looks like this very case.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Dan Nicholson <dbn.lists@gmail.com>
commit a010215463 removed ES2 specific dispatch
table and remap_helper, since now we are using dispatch.h which is generated
from gl_and_es_API.xml we need to generate a matching remap_helper using the
same xml.
Note: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Tapani Pälli <tapani.palli@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
lp_build_rsqrt initially did not do any newton-raphson step. This meant that
precision was only ~11 bits, but this handled both input 0.0 and +infinity
correctly. It did not however handle input 1.0 accurately, and denormals
always generated infinity result.
Doing a newton-raphson step increased precision significantly (but notably
input 1.0 still doesn't give output 1.0), however this fails for inputs
0.0 and infinity (both result in NaNs).
Try to fix this up by using cmp/select but since this is all quite fishy
(and still doesn't handle denormals) disable for now. Note that even with
workarounds it should still have been faster since the fallback uses sqrt/div
(which both use the usually unpipelined and slow divider hw).
Also add some more test values to lp_test_arit and test lp_build_rcp() too while
there.
v2: based on José's feedback, avoid hacky infinity definition which doesn't
work with msvc (unfortunately using INFINITY won't cut it neither on non-c99
compilers) in lp_build_rsqrt, and while here fix up the input infinity case
too (it's disabled anyway). Only test infinity input case if we have c99,
and use float cast for calculating reference rsqrt value so we really get
what we expect.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
"get_transfer + transfer_map" becomes "transfer_map".
"transfer_unmap + transfer_destroy" becomes "transfer_unmap".
transfer_map must create and return the transfer object and transfer_unmap
must destroy it.
transfer_map is successful if the returned buffer pointer is not NULL.
If transfer_map fails, the pointer to the transfer object remains unchanged
(i.e. doesn't have to be NULL).
Acked-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Only the first 'nr_cbufs' color buffers in the pipe_framebuffer_state are
valid. The rest of the color buffer pointers might be unitialized.
Fixes a regression in the piglit fbo-srgb-blit test since changes in the
gallium blitter code.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch (just to be safe).
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This should improve our ability to register allocate without spilling.
Unfortuantely, due to the live variable analysis being ignorant of loops, we
still have register allocation failures on some programs.
v2: Add more context to the comment explaining the function.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org> (v1)
Before, we'd spill one reg, then continue on without actually register
allocating, then assertion fail when we tried to use a vgrf number as a
register number.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
To validate this code, I ran piglit -t vs quick.tests with the "go spill
everything" debugging code enabled. There was only one regression:
glsl-vs-unroll-explosion simply ran out of registers. This should be
fine in the real world, since no one actually spills every single
register.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch. Even if it proves to have
bugs, it's likely better than simply failing to compile.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
move_grf_array_access_to_scratch() calculates scratch buffer offsets in
bytes. However, emit_scratch_read/write() expects the base_offset
parameter to be measured in OWords.
As a result, a shader using a scratch read/write offset greater than
zero (in practice, a shader containing more than one variable in
scratch) would use too large an offset, frequently exceeding the
available scratch space.
This patch corrects the mismatch by removing spurious conversion from
OWords to bytes in move_grf_array_access_to_scratch().
This is based on a patch by Paul Berry.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Version 12 of the EGL_KHR_create_context spec changed this behavior.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
This brings us into accordance with the official Python style guide
(http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0008/#indentation).
To preserve the indentation of the c code that is generated by these
scripts, I've avoided re-indenting triple-quoted strings (unless those
strings appear to be docstrings).
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Should fix MSVC build, as windows.h also defines CONST.
CONST usage in get.c is not new, so probably this just appeared now due
to changes in the includes.
This got broken by:
7182a1f glapi: rename/move GL_POLYGON_OFFSET_BIAS to its extension
section
Fix it by appending the _EXT suffix to the enum in the test too.
Signed-off-by: Imre Deak <imre.deak@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Oliver McFadden <oliver.mcfadden@linux.intel.com>
This will be needed by the next patch, which will switch to using
the parameter descriptor- and hash tables generated by the script.
The hash algorithm remains the same, the output parameter descriptor
table format changes slightly. There the TYPE_API_MASK entries are
removed and an invalid NULL entry is inserted at the beginning. This is
ok, as get.c:find_value() doesn't rely on TYPE_API_MASK any more to
detect an invalid enum.
Signed-off-by: Imre Deak <imre.deak@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Oliver McFadden <oliver.mcfadden@linux.intel.com>
The following enums used to be extensions but later became part of the
core specification. The _EXT/_ARB versions of these are not present in
in the current XML spec files, only defined in GL/glext.h
Later we'll need to look up these in a python script using the XML spec.
As a preparation for that remove the _EXT,_ARB suffix from these enums
and rename GL_DISTANCE_ATTENUATION_EXT to GL_POINT_DISTANCE_ATTENUATION.
Naturally, all enums keep their numerical values.
Note that similar renames shouldn't be necessary in the future: in case
of a new extension the XML spec is updated with the new _EXT/_ARB etc.
name and this name is added to the enum table in get.c. Later the
extension may become part of the core spec, at which point the name w/o
the _EXT/_ARB suffix is added to the XML spec and the table in get.c
remains the same.
GL_BLEND_DST_ALPHA_EXT
GL_BLEND_DST_RGB_EXT
GL_BLEND_SRC_ALPHA_EXT
GL_BLEND_SRC_RGB_EXT
GL_COLOR_SUM_EXT
GL_COMPRESSED_TEXTURE_FORMATS_ARB
GL_CURRENT_FOG_COORDINATE_EXT
GL_CURRENT_SECONDARY_COLOR_EXT
GL_DISTANCE_ATTENUATION_EXT
GL_FOG_COORDINATE_ARRAY_EXT
GL_FOG_COORDINATE_ARRAY_STRIDE_EXT
GL_FOG_COORDINATE_ARRAY_TYPE_EXT
GL_FOG_COORDINATE_SOURCE_EXT
GL_FRAGMENT_SHADER_DERIVATIVE_HINT_ARB
GL_PACK_IMAGE_HEIGHT_EXT
GL_PACK_SKIP_IMAGES_EXT
GL_SECONDARY_COLOR_ARRAY_EXT
GL_SECONDARY_COLOR_ARRAY_SIZE_EXT
GL_SECONDARY_COLOR_ARRAY_STRIDE_EXT
GL_SECONDARY_COLOR_ARRAY_TYPE_EXT
GL_UNPACK_IMAGE_HEIGHT_EXT
GL_UNPACK_SKIP_IMAGES_EXT
Signed-off-by: Imre Deak <imre.deak@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Oliver McFadden <oliver.mcfadden@linux.intel.com>
When traversing the hash table looking up an enum that is invalid we
eventually reach the first element in the descriptor array. By looking
at the type of that element, which is always TYPE_API_MASK, we know that
we can stop the search and return error. Since this element is always
the first it's enough to check for its index being 0 without looking at
its type.
Later in this patchset, when we generate the hash tables during build
time, this will allow us to remove the TYPE_API_MASK and related flags
completly.
Signed-off-by: Imre Deak <imre.deak@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Oliver McFadden <oliver.mcfadden@linux.intel.com>
The glGet hash was initialized only once for a single GL API, even if
the application later created a context for a different API. This
resulted in glGet failing for otherwise valid parameters in a context
if that parameter was invalid in another context created earlier.
Fix this by using a separate hash table for each API.
Signed-off-by: Imre Deak <imre.deak@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Oliver McFadden <oliver.mcfadden@linux.intel.com>
This should be named GL_POLYGON_OFFSET_BIAS_EXT and listed under the
EXT_polygon_offset section. (Solution by Ian Romanick)
Signed-off-by: Imre Deak <imre.deak@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Oliver McFadden <oliver.mcfadden@linux.intel.com>
POLY_OFFSET_DB_FMT_CNTL is moved to the framebuffer state, because it only
depends on the zbuffer format.
Reviewed-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
This is not so trivial, because we disable blending if the dual src
blending is turned on and the number of color outputs is less than 2.
I decided to create 2 command buffers in the blend state object and just
switch between them when needed, because there are other states unrelated
to blending (like the color mask) and those shouldn't be changed
(the old code had it wrong).
Reviewed-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
r600_command_buffer is not an atom.
The "atoms" have evolved into state slots (or groups of state slots) where
you can bind states. There is a fixed amount of atoms (state slots)
in the context.
The command buffers are nothing like that. They represent states, not state
slots.
We could probably give r600_atom a better name someday.
Reviewed-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
The invalidate event support is a careful dance between driver and loader,
where both have to say they can handle it, and then the loader reports
invalidate events for the driver so the driver can do the optimization.
The EGL code doesn't report __DRIuseInvalidateExtension to the driver, so it
has no responsibility to call the driver's invalidate function, and the driver
is doing the glViewport hack because it assume. This is not
the only time invalidate would need to be called (we need it *any* time an
invalidate event comes down the pipe, but we don't watch for them), so just
stop calling the driver's function.
Acked-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
This behavior mostly matches glx_dri2. It's slightly complicated in
comparison because EGL exposes the implementation limits in the EGL config.
Note that platform_x11 was the only one setting swap_available, so the move of
the MaxSwapInterval into it is appropriate.
Acked-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
It's been in place but never enabled since 2010. Note how one piece called a
DRI2 function, suggesting never being tested.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
dri_interface.h comes from our tree, so why litter our tree with ifdefs for
older versions of it?
Reviewed-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
dri_interface.h comes from our tree, so why litter our tree with ifdefs for
older versions of it?
I left in the DRI_TEX_BUFFER_VERSION ifdefs, which is broken and uncompiled
(the version wasn't bumped from 2 to 3 when the patch was landed), but I don't
know what should be done with it.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
I'm going to transition a bunch of the protocol to using XCB so we can stop
rolling it ourselves.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
The EGLNative* types are all defined to be pointers across all our EGL
implementations, but in the X11 platform they're actually just XIDs (32-bit
integers).
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Commit 006c1a3c65 introduced a call to
clock_gettime, but failed to include <time.h>, breaking the build in
some cases.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Ever since df4a88ac, the check for compressed formats has been
unnecessary. And ever since cb72ec5f, the build has been broken with
FEATURE_ES. Remove it, as it does nothing.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org>
Signed-off-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Use a simple chaining hash table for the ACP. This is not really very good,
because we still do a full walk of the tree per destination write, but it
still reduces fp-long-alu runtime from 5.3 to 3.9s.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This means that we don't get constant prop across into the first block after a
BRW_OPCODE_IF or a BRW_OPCODE_DO, but we have hope for properly doing it
across control flow at some point. More importantly, with the next commit it
will help avoid O(n^2) with instruction count runtime for shaders that have
many constant moves.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This makes a giant pile of code newly dead. It also fixes TXB on newer
chipsets, which has been totally broken (I now have a piglit test for that).
It passes the same set of Ian's ARB_fragment_program tests. It also improves
high-settings ETQW performance by 3.2 +/- 1.9% (n=3), thanks to better
optimization and having 8-wide along with 16-wide shaders.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=24355
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
I don't know of any programs that would need more than this. The larger
programs I've seen have neared 100 instructions. This prevent excessive
runtimes of automatic tests that attempt to test up to the exposed maximums
(like fp-long-alu).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
ARB_fp doesn't go through the GLSL optimizer, and these were things you see
frequently thanks to conditionals being lowered to SLT/SGE and MUL.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This will be reused from the ARB_fp compiler. I touched up the pre-gen6 path
to not overwrite dst in the first instruction, which prevents the need for
aliasing checks (we'll need that in the ARB_fp compiler, but it actually
hasn't been needed in this codebase since the revert of the nasty old
MOV-avoidance code). I also made the conditional_mod between gen6 and
pre-gen6 consistent, which shouldn't matter except for denorm/(+/-)0
comparisons where the choice between left and right hand side of the
comparison changes.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We'll want to reuse this for ARB_fp handling.
v2: Fold the remaining bit of emit_texcoord back into visit(ir_texture).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Applications may destroy HDC at any time. So always get a HDC as needed.
Fixes lack of presents with Solidworks eDrawings when screen resolution is
changed.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
'#extension foo: enable' is harmless. The functionality is only
actually enabled if the extension is supported. The shader won't use
the functionality if it's not supported, so we're fine.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
The diff looks weird, but this moves the code from the first 'if
(ctx->Const.GLSLVersion < 130)' block down into the second block. It
also moves some variable decalarations closer to their use.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
When an occlusion query was active, the derived DB state wasn't changed
for u_blitter even though all the occlusion queries were suspended.
It's fixed by moving the state update into the emit functions, which are
called whenever queries are stopped or suspended.
pipe_resource can be shared between contexts, we shouldn't modify its
description. Instead, let's use the resource "views" (sampler views and
surfaces), where we can freely change almost any property of a resource.
The idea here is to not flag _NEW_VARYING_VP_INPUTS when shaders (either
GLSL or ARB vp/fp) are in use. If either TNL or TexEnv programs are
active, at least one stage is using fixed function.
On Pineview, fixes 20 Piglit, 60 oglconforms, and 7 ES 1.1 conformance
tests, as well as missing textures in Xonotic. These were all
regressions since commit fb4a34e60e.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=49127
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=54807
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
When using u_blitter, the state was being saved from saved_*, but we
don't use that. So after u_blitter resumed we got some corrupted
state in.
So let's just remove the saved_* stuff. I thought it was weird but
harmless, it's actually broken.
This function is only present in GLES1 and in the OpenGL compatibility
profile.
Fixes the following "make check" failure:
[----------] 1 test from DispatchSanity_test
[ RUN ] DispatchSanity_test.GLES2
Mesa warning: couldn't open libtxc_dxtn.so, software DXTn
compression/decompression unavailable
dispatch_sanity.cpp:122: Failure
Value of: table[i]
Actual: 0x4de54e
Expected: (_glapi_proc) _mesa_generic_nop
Which is: 0x41af72
i = 321
[ FAILED ] DispatchSanity_test.GLES2 (4 ms)
[----------] 1 test from DispatchSanity_test (4 ms total)
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Reviewed-by: Oliver McFadden <oliver.mcfadden@linux.intel.com>
Tested-by: Oliver McFadden <oliver.mcfadden@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Since we started doing fixups for different render target formats,
this has been an issue. Instead just don't do anything, when the
program gets emitted later it'll get the correct fixup.
Fixes a bunch of piglit tests.
This simply avoids some failed assertions but there's no reason to
call the driver hooks for storing a tex image if its size is zero.
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
413c49141 added an optimisation to improve the performance of teximage
under a limited set of circumstances. If GL_EXT_unpack_subimage has been
used then we we must also skip this optimisation since the optimised
codepath does not take the packing values into consideration.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
I think libtool should be handling this for us, but the build fails for
Jordan because libdricommon (a static library, which uses expat) appears
before -lexpat on the linker command.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Tested-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Previously, we considered all registers as candidates for spilling.
This was counterproductive--for any registers that have already been
removed from the interference graph, there is no benefit to spilling
them, since they don't contribute to register pressure.
This patch ensures that we will only try to spill registers that are
still in the interference graph after register allocation has failed.
This is consistent with the recommendations of the paper "Retargetable
Graph-Coloring Register Allocation for Irregular Architectures", on
which our register allocator is based.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Wine or a windows app changes fpucw to 0x7f, causing doubles to be equivalent
to floats, which broke the calculation of FPS.
We should be very careful about using doubles in Mesa.
Henri Verbeet adds:
For reference, this is done by for example d3d9 when a D3D device is
created without D3DCREATE_FPU_PRESERVE set. In the general case
applications can do all kinds of terrible things to the FPU control
word of course.
[ RUN ] EnumStrings.LookUpByNumber
enum_strings.cpp:43: Failure
Value of: _mesa_lookup_enum_by_nr(everything[i].value)
Actual: "GL_COMPRESSED_RGBA_S3TC_DXT3_ANGLE"
Expected: everything[i].name
Which is: "GL_COMPRESSED_RGBA_S3TC_DXT3_EXT"
enum_strings.cpp:43: Failure
Value of: _mesa_lookup_enum_by_nr(everything[i].value)
Actual: "GL_COMPRESSED_RGBA_S3TC_DXT5_ANGLE"
Expected: everything[i].name
Which is: "GL_COMPRESSED_RGBA_S3TC_DXT5_EXT"
[ FAILED ] EnumStrings.LookUpByNumber (2 ms)
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=55505
Signed-off-by: Oliver McFadden <oliver.mcfadden@linux.intel.com>
The EGL_NOK_swap_region2 spec states that the rectangles are specified
with a bottom-left origin within a surface coordinate space also with a
bottom left origin, so this patch ensures the rectangles are flipped
before passing them on to dri2_copy_region.
Fixes piglit's egl-nok-swap-region test.
Tested-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
A compressed texture image size doesn't have to be a multiple of the
compressed block size (only sub-images do). Fixes issues when building
compressed mipmaps because we often wind up with non-block-size images
for the higher mipmap levels.
Fixes https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=55445
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Tested-by: Sven Arvidsson <sa@whiz.se>
We were previously using the TGSI input index, which can exceed the number of
parameters passed from the vertex shader via the parameter cache. Now we use
a separate index which only counts those parameters.
Prevents piglit regressions with the following fix.
Signed-off-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Port the 'glcpp: fix abuse of yylex' commit to Android.mk
Also, since the Android.*.mk are sourced in a global namespace,
the local-y-to-c-and-h is prefixed with the LOCAL_MODULE name,
The initial fix commit is 53d46bc787
There's also a bugzilla for this: 54947
Signed-off-by: Negreanu Marius Adrian <adrian.m.negreanu@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Oliver McFadden <oliver.mcfadden@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Commit 8d9778589f added all-targets to the
LLVM_COMPONENTS list, but this component does not exist with LLVM 2.8.
Adding all-targets is not necessary for any drivers, and it seems to be
left over from earlier versions of the commit mentioned above.
Tested-by: Stéphane Marchesin <marcheu@chromium.org>
The items are ordered in the item list by their offsets, with the lowest
offset coming first in the list. The old code was assuming that new
items being added to the list would always have a greater offset than
the first item in the list, however this is not always the case.
This can be used to initialize the CB* registers for buffers without a
radeon_surface.
v2:
- Get correct group_bytes value from r600_screen
- Stop setting unnecessary fields
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
This also fixes a lot tests, especially all the clip-and-scissor-blit MSAA
piglit tests.
Tested-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
The original blit function is extended and the otAher functions reuse it.
Tested-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Fixes this build error on Cygwin.
Explicit dependency `src/glsl/builtins/tools/texture_builtins.py' not
found, needed by target
`build/cygwin-x86-debug/glsl/builtin_function.cpp'.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Often, the original shader IR isn't terribly interesting because a lot
of crucial optimizations haven't been done (such as inlining built-ins).
ir_to_mesa used to print this out for us, but since we don't use it, we
have to do it ourselves.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The anonymous namespace should keep these private classes to file scope,
preventing clashes with other symbols of the same name elsewhere.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
From SandyBridge PRM, volume 2 Part 1, section 12.2.3, BLEND_STATE:
DWord 1, Bit 30 (AlphaToOne Enable):
"If Dual Source Blending is enabled, this bit must be disabled"
Note: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Change the format to MAJOR.MINOR[FC]
For example: 2.1, 3.0FC, 3.1
The FC suffix indicates a forward compatible context, and
is only valid for versions >= 3.0.
Examples:
2.1: GL Legacy/Compatibility context
3.0: GL Legacy/Compatibility context
3.0FC: GL Core Profile context + Forward Compatible
3.1: GL Core Profile context
3.1FC: GL Core Profile context + Forward Compatible
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
intelDestroyContext will eventually be called, and it will clean things
up. The call to brwInitVtbl is moved earlier so that
intelDestroyContext can call the device-specific destructor. This also
makes the code look more like the i915 code.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=54301
_glapi_table is a struct full of named function pointers, while the generated
code just wants to treat it as an array of function pointers. Cast to avoid
the compiler warning.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This test is only built when shared-glapi is used. Because of changes
elsewhere in the tree that were necessary to make shared-glapi work
correct with GLX, it's not feasible to make the test function both ways.
The list of expected functions originally came from the functions set by
api_exec_es2.c. This file no longer exists in Mesa (but api_exec_es1.c
is still generated). It was the generated file that configured the
dispatch table for ES2 contexts. This test verifies that all of the
functions set by the old api_exec_es2.c (with the recent addition of VAO
functions) are set in the dispatch table and everything else is a NOP.
When adding ES2 (or ES3) extensions that add new functions, this test
will need to be modified to expect dispatch functions for the new
extension functions.
v2: Expect VAO functions be non-NOP.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
When building with shared-glapi, we can just use Mesa's _mesa_warning without
problems. stubs.cpp is only used when shared-glapi is not used.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
v2: Allow GL_ARB_shader_objects functions in core profile because we
still expose the extension string there. Don't allow
glBindFragDataLocation in GLES3 because it's not part of that API.
Based (mostly) on review comments from Eric Anholt.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This isn't used by this patch, but it will be necessary for several
follow-on patches. Separating this out will make it easier to reorder
patches later.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This function is not the same as glGetProgramiv.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The most recent commit that touched this function,
commit b1d0fe022d
Author: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Date: Wed Sep 26 11:05:12 2012 -0700
intel: Fix segfault in intel_texsubimage_tiled_memcpy
did fix the segfault, but introduced yet another bug. From Anholt: """You
need to still test format/type, because that's the incoming format (e.g.
GL_RGBA/GL_FLOAT) that you're trying to memcpy."""
This patch re-introduces the checks on the incoming format and type.
Note: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
In commit 091eb15b69, Jordan changed get_temp_image_type() to use
_mesa_get_format_datatype() instead of returning GL_FLOAT. That has
several possible return values: GL_FLOAT, GL_INT, GL_UNSIGNED_INT,
GL_SIGNED_NORMALIZED, and GL_UNSIGNED_NORMALIZED.
We do want to use GL_INT/GL_UNSIGNED_INT for integer formats. However,
we want to continue using GL_FLOAT for the normalized fixed-point types.
There isn't any code in pack.c to handle GL_(UN)SIGNED_NORMALIZED.
Fixes oglconform's fboarb advanced.blit.copypix, which was regressed by
commit 091eb15b69.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=53573
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This patch removes all gl_config's with swapMethod=GLX_SWAP_COPY_OML. When
page flipping, we are unable to comply with swap-copy semantics.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
This failed when all the uploads to occur were uniform-type vertex data (like
glColor4f being active across a DrawArrays), because it would upload 1 element
instead of 1 element per vertex. There was no citation for how this code
helped any particular application, and it breaks ETQW, so just remove it.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=47170
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.0 and 8.0 branches.
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The only symbols that need to be public (those in intel_screen.c that the
loader looks for) are already marked public. Saves 100k of compiled driver
size.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
The function segfaulted when a game called glTexSubImage2D on a texture
with internalformat/format/type = GL_SLUMINANCE8/GL_BGRA/GL_UNSIGNED_BYTE.
The function only supports MESA_FORMAT_ARGB8888 and returns early if it
detects an unsupported format. Clearly, its detection condition was
insufficient. This patch fixes it to explicity check for
MESA_FORMAT_ARGB8888.
Note: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch (fixes 413c491).
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Haswell supports EXT_texture_swizzle and legacy DEPTH_TEXTURE_MODE
swizzling by setting SURFACE_STATE entries. This means we don't have to
bake the swizzle settings into the shader code by emitting MOV
instructions, and thus don't have to recompile shaders whenever the
swizzles change.
Unfortunately, we can't handle GL_ALPHA this way: unlike all the others,
which store the comparison result in the .r channel (and possibly others
as well), GL_ALPHA puts it in the .a channel. The GLSL 1.30+ style
functions which return a float always simply return the .r channel,
which would be zero if we handled this as a surface override. In this
case, fall back to doing it the old way. DEPTH_TEXTURE_MODE = GL_ALPHA
isn't an interesting performance path anyway.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Fixes valgrind errors in piglit test
oes_compressed_etc1_rgb8_texture-miptree: an invalid write in
_mesa_store_compressed_store_texsubimage() at line 4406 and invalid reads
in texcompress_etc_tmp.h:etc1_parse_block().
The calculation of the size of the temporary etc1 buffer allocated by
intel_miptree_map_etc1() was incorrect. Sometimes the allocated buffer was
too small, sometimes too large. This patch corrects the size to that
expected by _mesa_store_compressed_store_texsubimage().
Note: This is candidate for the 9.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Do all error checking of glTexSubImage, glCopyTexSubImage and
glCompressedTexSubImage's xoffset, yoffset, zoffset, width, height, and
depth params in one place.
If a subtexture region isn't aligned to the compressed block size,
return GL_INVALID_OPERATION, not gl_INVALID_VALUE.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Instead of tracking the inferred state changes separately
just check if queued and emitted states are the same.
This patch just reworks the update of the SPI map between
vs and ps, but there are probably more cases like this.
Signed-off-by: Christian König <deathsimple@vodafone.de>
Reviewed-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
GLES 3 supports sRGB functionality, but it does not expose the
GL_FRAMEBUFFER_SRGB enable/disable bit. Instead the implementation
is expected to behave as though that bit is always enabled.
This patch ensures that ctx->Color.sRGBEnabled (the internal variable
tracking GL_FRAMEBUFFER_SRGB) is initially true in GLES 2/3 contexts,
and that it cannot be modified through the GLES 3 API.
This is safe for GLES 2, since ctx->Color.sRGBEnabled has no effect on
non-sRGB formats, and GLES 2 doesn't support any sRGB formats.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Previously, meta logic was saving and restoring the value of
GL_FRAMEBUFFER_SRGB in an ad-hoc fashion. As a result, it was not
properly disabled and/or restored for some meta operations.
This patch causes GL_FRAMEBUFFER_SRGB to be saved/restored in the
conventional way of meta-ops (using _mesa_meta_begin() and
_mesa_meta_end()). It is now reliably saved/restored for
_mesa_meta_BlitFramebuffer, _mesa_meta_GenerateMipmap, and
decompress_texture_image, and preserved for all other meta ops.
Fixes piglit tests "ARB_framebuffer_sRGB/blit renderbuffer
{linear_to_srgb,srgb} scaled {disabled,enabled}".
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
GLES3 supports sRGB formats, but it does not support the
GL_FRAMEBUFFER_SRGB enable/disable flag (instead it behaves as if this
flag is always enabled). Therefore, meta ops that need to disable
GL_FRAMEBUFFER_SRGB will need a backdoor mechanism to do so when the
API is GLES3.
We were already doing a similar thing for GL_MULTISAMPLE, which has
the same constraints.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
This patch reduces the time spent in glTexImage and glTexSubImage by
over 5x on Sandybridge for the workload described below.
It adds a new fast path for glTexImage2D and glTexSubImage2D,
intel_texsubimage_tiled_memcpy, which is optimized for Google Chrome's
paint rectangles. The fast path is implemented only for 2D GL_BGRA
textures for chipsets with a LLC.
=== Performance Analysis ===
Workload description:
Personalize your google.com page with a wallpaper. Start chromium
with flags "--ignore-gpu-blacklist --enable-accelerated-painting
--force-compositing-mode". Start recording with chrome://tracing. Visit
google.com and wait for page to finish rendering. Measure the time spent
by process CrGpuMain in GLES2DecoderImpl::HandleTexImage2D and
HandleTexSubImage2D.
System config:
cpu: Sandybridge Mobile GT2+ (0x0126)
kernel 3.4.9 x86_64
chromium 21.0.1180.89 (154005)
Statistics:
| N Median Avg Stddev
--------------|-------------------------
before (msec) | 8 472.5 463.75 72.6
after (msec) | 8 78.0 79.6 5.7
Arithmetic difference at 95.0% confidence:
-384.1 +/- 55.2 msec
-82.8% +/- 11.9%
Ratio at 95.0% confidence:
5.81 +/- 0.119
v2:
- Replace check for `intel->gen >= 6` with `intel->has_llc`, per
danvet.
- Fix typo in comment, s/throuh/through/.
- Swap 'before' and 'after' rows in stat table.
v3:
- If the current batch references the bo, then flush batch before mapping
the bo. Found by Chris.
- Restrict supported texture images to level 0 of target
GL_TEXTURE_2D. This avoids an arithmetic bug in calculating image
offsets within the miptree, found by Paul. This restriction does not
diminish this patch's benefit to Chrome OS performance.
- Use less instructions for bit6 swizzling, suggested by Paul.
- Remove erroneous comment about Y-tiling, for Paul.
- Print perf_debug messages when flushing and stalling.
- Update stats in commit message; run workload under a release build
rather than a debug build.
Note: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
Acked-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
CC: Stéphane Marchesin <marcheu@chromium.org>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
A game we're working with leaves scissoring enabled, but frequently sets
the scissor rectangle to the size of the whole screen. In that case,
scissoring has no effect, so it's safe to go ahead with a fast clear.
Chad believe this should help with Oliver McFadden's "Dante" as well.
v2/Chad: Use the drawbuffer dimensions rather than the miptree slice
dimensions. The miptree slice may be slightly larger due to alignment
restrictions.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Oliver McFadden <oliver.mcfadden@linux.intel.com>
Fixes an assertion failure when compiling certain shaders that need both
pull constants and register spilling:
brw_eu_emit.c:204: validate_reg: Assertion `execsize >= width' failed.
NOTE: This is a candidate for release branches.
Signed-off-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Commit e2249e8c4d (i965/blorp: Add
support for blits between SRGB and linear formats) changed blorp to
always configure surface states for in linear format (even if the
underlying surface is sRGB). This allowed sRGB-to-linear and
linear-to-sRGB blits to occur without causing the image to be
inappropriately brightened or darkened.
However, it broke sRGB MSAA resolves, since they rely on the
destination buffer format being sRGB in order to ensure that samples
are averaged together in sRGB-correct fashion.
This patch fixes the problem by instead configuring the source buffer
to use the *same* format as the destination buffer. This ensures that
the image won't be brightened or darkened, but preserves proper sRGB
averaging.
Fixes piglit tests "EXT_framebuffer_multisample/accuracy srgb".
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=55265
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
There are a few automake files that reference $(X11_INCLUDES) such as
src/glx/Makefile.am but configure.ac wasn't declaring the variable for
substitution. This would break builds of glx if libxcb, for example, was
installed in its own prefix since AM_CFLAGS wouldn't coincidentally
list the needed include path in that case.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This patch is a band-aid fix for a bug in commit 5fd67fa (i965/blorp:
Reduce alignment restrictions for stencil blits), which causes
multisampled stencil blits to work incorrectly on Sandy Bridge.
When blitting to or from a normal stencil buffer, we have to use a
coordinate transformation that swizzles coordinates to account for the
fact that stencil buffers use W tiling, but the most similar tiling
format available for textures and render targets is Y tiling. The
differences between W and Y tiling cause pixels to be scrambled within
a block of size 8x4 (width x height) as measured relative to a W tile,
or 16x2 as measured relative to a Y tile. So in order to make sure
that pixels at the edges of the blit aren't lost, we need to align the
rendering rectangle (and the buffer sizes) to multiples of the 8x4
block size. This alignment happens in the brw_blorp_blit_params
constructor, whereas the determination of how to swizzle the
coordinates happens during code generation, in the
brw_blorp_blit_program class.
When blitting to or from a multisampled stencil buffer, the coordinate
swizzling is more complex, because it has to account for the
interleaving pattern of samples, which uses 4x4 blocks for 4x MSAA and
8x4 blocks for 8x MSAA. The end result is that if multisampling is in
use, the 16x2 block size (relative so a Y tile) needs to be expanded
to 16x4, and the corresponding size relative to a W tile expands to
8x8.
The problem doesn't affect Ivy Bridge severely enough to crop up in
Piglit tests because on Ivy Bridge we have to disable multisampling
when blitting *to* a multisampled stencil buffer (the blorp compiler
generates code to compensate for the fact that multisampling is
disabled). However I suspect a bug is still present because we don't
disable multisampling when blitting *from* a multisampled stencil
buffer.
This patch fixes the problem by doubling the vertical alignment
requirement when blitting to or from a multisampled stencil buffer,
and multisampling has not been disabled.
In the long run I would like to rework the brw_blorp_blit_params
constructor--it's difficult to follow and has had several subtle bugs
like this one. However this band-aid fix should be suitable for
cherry-picking to release branches.
Fixes Piglit tests "unaligned-blit {2,4} stencil {msaa,upsample}" on
Sandy Bridge.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Recent version of GCC report a warning for the implicit conversion from
int to float:
ff_fragment_shader.cpp:897:3: warning: narrowing conversion of '(1 << ((int)rgb_shift))' from 'int' to 'float' inside { } is ill-formed in C++11 [-Wnarrowing]
This is because floats cannot precisely represent all possible 32-bit
integer values. However, texenv code is all expected to be floating
point, so this should not be a problem.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
From the OpenGL Registry:
"2012/08/13: specs named GL_ARB_debug_group, GL_ARB_debug_label, and
GL_ARB_debug_output2 were published in error during the initial OpenGL 4.3
release. All functionality in these documents was combined into
the extension GL_KHR_debug. They have been withdrawn from the registry,
and a few other extensions were renumbered to avoid holes in the numbering
scheme."
pipe_draw_info::indexed determines if it should be indexed and not
the presence of an index buffer.
This fixes crashes in r300g.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Tested-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
A call to glGenerateMipmap() follows the generation of a relevant
shader program in setup_glsl_generate_mipmap().
To support all texture targets and to avoid compiling shaders
everytime, per target shader programs are compiled on demand
and saved for the next call.
Fixes float-texture(mipmap.manual):
See Comment 6: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=54296
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Blorp has to convert rectangle coordinates from integers to floats in
order to send them down the GPU pipeline. Recent versions of GCC
issue a warning for this, since a float is not capable of precisely
representing all possible 32-bit integer values. Suppress the warning
with an explicit type cast in the case of blorp, since rectangle
coordinates will never be large enough to cause a loss of precision.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Given that it exists between a push/pop of instruction state, this call
can only affect the MOV or ADD instruction generated just below it.
Neither of those instructions are predicated, so it makes no sense to
ask for the inverse predicate.
This fixes grumblings from the simulator debugger, which was
complaining about an invalid predicate.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Commit 42723d88d intended to override an S3TC internalFormat to a
generic compressed format when the application requested online
compression of uncompressed data. Unfortunately, it also broke
pre-compressed textures when libtxc_dxtn isn't installed but the
extensions are forced on.
Both glCompressedTexImage2D() and glTexImage2D() call teximage(), which
calls _mesa_choose_texture_format(), hitting this override code. If we
have actual S3TC source data, we can't treat it as any other format, and
need to avoid the override.
Since glCompressedTexImage2D() passes in a format of GL_NONE (which is
illegal for glTexImage), we can use that to detect the pre-compressed
case and avoid the overrides.
Fixes a regression since 42723d88d3.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Fixes colorspace issues in L4D2 when multisampling is enabled (the
scene was far too dark, but the flashlight area was way too bright).
The nVidia and AMD binary drivers both allow this kind of blit.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
MSAA resolves and other blit-like operations ignore SRGB state anyway,
so we should be able to safely allow resolves between compatible
SRGB/linear formats like SRGBA8 and RGBA8888.
This matches the behavior of the nVidia and AMD binary drivers.
Fixes completely black rendering when using multisampling in L4D2.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
v2: use uint64_t for the total_size variable, per Jose.
Also add two earlier checks for exceeding the max texture size.
For example a 1K^3 RGBA volume would overflow the lpr->image_stride
variable.
Use simple algebra to avoid overflow in intermediate values.
So instead of "x * y > z" use "x > z / y".
This should work if we happen to be on a platform that doesn't have
64-bit types.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This was already (correctly) supported for glGetSamplerParameter paths.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Initializing the regalloc state is expensive, and since it is always
the same for every compile we only need to initialize it once per
context. This should help improve shader compile times for the driver.
Compute shaders fetch data from vertex buffers via the texture cache, so
we need to make sure the texture cache is flushed.
v2:
- Fix rebase mistake
- Fix spelling in comment
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
LOOP_START_DX10 ignores the LOOP_CONFIG* registers, so it is not limited
to 4096 iterations like the other LOOP_* instructions. Compute shaders
need to use this instruction, and since we aren't optimizing loops with
the LOOP_CONFIG* registers for pixel and vertex shaders, it seems like
we should just use it for everything.
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
For buffers (which is what is being used for RATs), the
COLOR*_DIM.WIDTH_MASK field needs to be set to the low 16-bits of the
buffer size, and the COLOR*_DIM.HEIEGHT_MAX needs to be set to the
high bits.
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
- add OpenCL state tracker Clover
- add XvMC state tracker
- remove progs
directory got moved into its own repository mesa/demos
- remove vf
directory removed with abda64efce
Don't cache pointers to elements of reallocatable array.
In some circumstances it caused false cache hits resulting in incorrect
command stream and gpu lockup.
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
If the gallium driver implements the can_create_resource() function, call
it to do proxy texture size checks.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Used to implement proxy textures. If a gallium driver doesn't implement
this function we'll just continue to use the core Mesa fallback code.
Without this hook we really have no good way to implement OpenGL proxy
textures with gallium drivers.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Before, the limit was 8K. For 32-bit RGBA that would be require 1.5 GB
of memory (w/out mipmaps). That's well beyond the LP_MAX_TEXTURE_SIZE
of 1GB.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Simplify the code and make it more like the other glTexImage commands.
Call _mesa_legal_texture_dimensions() to validate width, height, depth.
Call ctx->Driver.TestProxyTexImage() to make sure texture is not too large.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
There are two aspects to texture image size checking:
1. Are the width, height, depth legal values (not negative, not larger
than the max size for the mipmap level, etc)?
2. Is the texture just too large to handle? For example, we might not be
able to really allocate memory for a 3D texture of maxSize x maxSize x
maxSize.
Previously, we did (1) via the ctx->Driver.TestProxyTextureImage() hook
but those tests are really device-independent. Now we do (2) via that
hook since the max texture memory and texture shape are device-dependent.
Also, (1) is now done outside the general texture parameter error checking
functions because of the special interaction with proxy textures. The
recently introduced PROXY_ERROR token is removed.
The teximage() and copyteximage() functions are bit simpler now (less
if-then nesting, etc.)
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Basically, move the body into a new _mesa_legal_texture_dimensions() function.
More refactoring to come.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
I can't see any reason this is global (unless for debugging)
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
This adds basic flow control support for If-Then-Else blocks using
predicates (stored in the EXEC register) and a predicate stack for
nested flow control.
No regressions found in the tests of opencl-example/run_tests.sh.
Signed-off-by: Xinya Zhang <zxy_thf@hotmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
As far as I can see, the intention of the requirement that we do so is to
prevent instruction prefetch from wandering out into either unmapped memory or
memory with a different caching type, and hanging the chip. The kernel makes
sure that the page after your BO has a valid page of the same caching type,
which meets this requirement, so there's no need to waste space between our
programs (and in instruction cache) on this.
Saves another 9kb instructions in l4d2 shaders.
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reduces l4d2 program size from 1195kb to 919kb. Improves performance by 0.22%
+/- 0.11% (n=70).
v2: Rebase on compaction v2, fix up flag reg handling (by anholt).
v3: Fix uncompaction of the flag register number.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This reduces program size by using some smaller encodings for common bit
patterns in the Gen ISA, with the hope of making programs fit in the
instruction cache better.
v2: Use larger bitshifts for the uncompressed field setups, in line with the
way it's described in the spec. Consistently name a brw_compile "p" like
all other code. Add a couple more tests. Consistently call things
"compacted" not "compressed" (which is a different feature). Drop the
explicit check for not compacting SENDs, which is unjustified and already
implied by our lack of support for immediate values.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
The first cut at instruction compaction won't compact things that
would change control flow jump distances, but we do need to still be
able to walk the instruction stream, which involves jumping by 8 or 16
bytes between instructions.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
It's going to get more complicated when we do instruction compaction. This
also introduces putting the program offset in the output.
v2: Use next_insn_offset in brw_get_program(), too.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
To do unit testing of i965, we want to be able to link against the
driver's symbols and prod them. If we don't have a separate lib from
our loadable module, libtool gets super whiny.
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This file is used to provide stubs for the link test in gallium dri drivers.
But the same stubs without the main can be used for making unit tests for code
in a dri driver.
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
I noticed in valgrind that p->single_program_flow was used while
uninitialized. Everything else zeroed out brw_compile, but this is better
API.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This fixes glGetStringi(GL_EXTENSIONS,.. for core contexts. Previously,
all extension names returned would be NULL.
NOTE: This is a candidate for release branches.
Signed-off-by: Chris Forbes <chrisf@ijw.co.nz>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
GL_TEXTURE_1D, GL_TEXTURE_3D, GL_TEXTURE_RECTANGLE, and
GL_TEXTURE_GEN_S/T/R/Q don't exist in ES 1 contexts, so any meta ops
that used _mesa_meta_begin with MESA_META_TEXTURE would trigger GL
errors. One such operation is _mesa_meta_Clear().
On ES 1, we want to disable GL_TEXTURE_GEN_STR_OES instead.
Fixes the ES1 conformance test miplin.c, which was regressed by commit
08be1d288f.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
v2: Also blacklist GL_TEXTURE_3D, per Brian's comment.
v3: Disable GL_TEXTURE_GEN_STR_OES, per Ian's comment.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=54297
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com> [v1]
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Just to make it consistent with the rest of vbo, since it would
be an exported symbol anyways.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
I can't see any external users, and this is a global symbol,
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
The current code is duplicated in two places and relies on `uname` to
detect the flags. This is no good for cross-compiling, and the current
logic uses -m64 for the x32 ABI which breaks things.
Unify the code in one place, avoid `uname` completely, and add support
for the new x32 ABI.
Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
This symbol with dricore escapes into the namespace, its too generic,
we should prefix it with something just to be nice.
Should be applied to stable + 9.0
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
So glcpp tried to workaround yylex its own way, but failed,
do it properly.
This fixes another crash found after fixing the first crash.
this is a candidate for 9.0 and stable branches
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
This avoids us making a global yylex symbol which will interfere will
all sorts of apps.
with libdricore which can't do symbol visibility currently we pollute
the namespace with this.
This is a candidate for 9.0 & stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
In commit 055093e (meta: remove call to _meta_in_progress(), fix
multisample enable/disable), we created a meta_set_enable() function
that could be used by meta ops to enable and disable GL_MULTISAMPLE
even when the GLES API was in use (the GLES API doesn't support
GL_MULTISAMPLE; it behaves as if it is always enabled). This created
some unfortunate code duplication between meta_set_enable() and the
existing _mesa_set_enable() function.
This patch eliminates the duplication by creating a
_mesa_set_multisample() function, which is used by both meta ops and
_mesa_set_enable() to enable/disable GL_MULTISAMPLE.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
glsl version of _mesa_meta_GenerateMipmap() would require separate
shaders for glsl 120 and 130.
V2: Removed the code for integer textures as ARB is planning to
disallow automatic mipmap generation for integer textures.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
glsl path of _mesa_meta_GenerateMipmap() function would require different fragment
shaders depending on the texture target. This patch adds the code to generate
appropriate fragment shader programs at run time.
Fixes https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=54296
V2: Removed the code for integer textures as ARB is planning to
disallow automatic mipmap generation for integer textures.
Now using ralloc_asprintf in setup_glsl_generate_mipmap().
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
v2: Group vgt register together to avoid lockup
v3: Split multi primitive register and index bias register
v4: Bump R600_NUM_ATOMS
Signed-off-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
Update only those sampler states which are changed in a shader stage,
instead of always updating all sampler states in the shader stage.
That requires keeping a bitmask of those states which are enabled, and those
states which are dirty at a given point (subset of enabled states).
This is similar to how sampler views, constant buffers, and vertex buffers
are handled.
Reviewed-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
Based on the patch called "simplify and fix flushing and synchronization"
by Jerome Glisse.
Rebased, removed unneded code, simplified more and cleaned up.
Also, SH_ACTION_ENA is not set when changing shaders (hw doesn't seem
to need it). It's only used to flush constant buffers.
Reviewed-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
Some of the old AMDIL code was hard-coding subreg indices when creating
the VBUILD node, which was making it difficult to match the
vector_insert patterns.
ARB fragment programs use texture unit numbers directly, unlike GLSL
which has an extra indirection. If a fragment program only uses one
texture assigned to GL_TEXTURE1, SamplersUsed will only contain a single
bit, which would make us only upload a single surface/sampler state
entry. However, it needs to be the second entry.
Using _mesa_fls() instead of _mesa_bitcount() solves this. For ARB
programs, this makes num_samplers the ID of the highest texture unit
used. Since GLSL uses consecutive integers assigned by the linker,
_mesa_fls() should give the same result as _mesa_bitcount()..
Fixes a regression since 85e8e9e000,
which caused GPU hangs in ETQW (and probably others), as well as
breaking piglit test fp-fragment-position.
v2: Add a comment, as suggested by Matt.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=54098
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=54179
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Tested-by: meng <mengmeng.meng@intel.com>
ffs() finds the least significant bit set; _mesa_fls() finds the /most/
significant bit.
v2: Make it an inline function in imports.h, per Brian's suggestion.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Fixes piglit test "framebuffer-blit-levels draw stencil".
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Acked-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Previously, we aligned all stencil blit operations to multiples of the
size of a tile, since stencil buffers use W-tiling, and blorp has to
approximate this by configuring the 3D pipeline for Y-tiling and
swizzling coordinates.
However, this was unnecessarily conservative; it turns out that the
differences between W-tiling and Y-tiling are confined to 32-byte
sub-tiles within the 4k tiling pattern; the layout of these 32-byte
sub-tiles within the larger 4k tile is the same (8 sub-tiles across by
16 sub-tiles down, in column-major order). Therefore we only need to
align stencil blit operations to multiples of the sub-tile size.
Note: although the performance improvement of this change is probably
quite small, the fact that W-tiling and Y-tiling formats only differ
within 32-byte sub-tiles will be essential in a future patch to ensure
that stencil blits work correctly between parts of the miptree other
than level/layer 0. Making this change provides handy documentation
(and validation) of this fact.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Acked-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
When blitting to a stencil buffer, we need to align the rectangle we
send down the rendering pipeline, to account for the fact that the
stencil buffer uses a W-tiled layout, but we are configuring its
surface state as Y-tiled.
Previously, when the stencil buffer was multisampled, we assumed that
we could reduce the amount of alignment that was necessary, since each
pixel occupies a block of 2x2 or 4x2 samples in the stencil buffer.
That would have been correct if the coordinates we were adjusting were
measured in pixels. However, the conversion from pixel coordinates to
coordinates within the interleaved buffer has already been done;
therefore the full alignment restriction applies.
Note: the reason this mistake wasn't previously uncovered by piglit
tests is because it is being masked by another mistake: the blorp
engine is using overly conservative alignment restrictions when doing
stencil blits. The overly conservative alignment restrictions will be
removed in the patch that follows. Doing this fix now will prevent
the subsequent patch from introducing regressions.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Acked-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This patch modifies intel_region_get_aligned_offset() to make the
appropriate calculation when the blorp engine sets up a W-tiled
stencil buffer using a Y-tiled SURFACE_STATE.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Acked-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
When the blorp engine is performing a blit from one stencil buffer to
another, it sets up the surface state for these buffers as Y-tiled, so
it needs to be able to force intel_region_get_tile_masks() to return
the appropriate masks for a Y-tiled region.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Acked-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Fixes piglit tests "framebuffer-blit-levels {read,draw} depth".
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Previously, when performing a blit using the blorp engine, we failed
to account for the level and layer of the source and destination. As
a result, all blits would occur between miplevel 0 and layer 0 of the
corresponding textures, regardless of which level/layer was bound to
the framebuffer.
This patch passes the correct level and layer through
brw_blorp_miptrees() into the brw_blorp_blit_params data structure.
Further patches in the series will adapt
gen{6,7}_blorp_emit_surface_state to make use of these parameters.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Currently, gen{6,7}_blorp_emit_surface_state assumes that the src and
dst surfaces are mapped to miplevel 0 and layer 0 (thus no surface
offset is required). This is a bug, since the user might try to blit
to and from levels/layers other than 0.
To fix this bug, it will not be sufficient to have
gen6_{6,7}_blorp_emit_surface_state look up the surface offset at the
time they set up the surface state, since these offsets will need to
be tweaked when blitting stencil buffers (due to the fact that stencil
buffer blits have to swizzle between W and Y tiling formats).
So, to pave the way for the bug fix, this patch causes the x and y
offsets to be computed during blit setup and stored in
brw_blorp_mip_info.
As a result of this change, brw_blorp_mip_info doesn't need to store
the level and layer anymore.
For consistency, this patch makes a similar change to the handling of
depth buffers when doing HiZ operations.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Previously, gen{6,7}_blorp_emit_surface_state would look up the width
and height of the surface at the time they set up the surface state,
and then tweak it if necessary (it's necessary when a W-tiled surface
is being mapped as Y-tiled). With this patch, we look up the width
and height when setting up the blit, and store them in
brw_blorp_mip_info. This allows us to do the necessary tweak in the
brw_blorp_blit_params constructor (where it makes more sense). It
also reduces the need to keep track of level and layer in
brw_blorp_mip_info, so that a future patch can eliminate them
entirely.
For consistency, this patch makes a similar change to the handling of
depth buffers when doing HiZ operations.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This makes it more convenient for blorp functions to get access to
Intel-specific data inside the renderbuffer objects.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Also add a clarifying comment for why the width/height doesn't need
adjustment for Gen7.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Since Gen6+ stencil buffers use W-tiling (a tiling arrangement which
drm and the kernel are not aware of) we need to round up the width and
height of a stencil buffer to multiples of the W-tile size (64x64)
before allocating a stencil buffer. Previously, we rounded up the
size of the base miplevel, and then computed the miptree layout based
on the rounded up size. This was incorrect, because it meant that the
total size of the miptree would not be properly W-tile aligned, and
therefore we would not always allocate enough pages.
(Note: even though the GL API doesn't allow creation of mipmapped
stencil textures, it does allow mipmapping of a combined depth/stencil
texture, and on Gen6+, a combined depth/stencil texture is internally
implemented as a pair of separate depth and stencil buffers.)
For example, on Sandy Bridge, when allocating a mipmapped stencil
texture of size 128x128, we would first round up to the nearest
multiple of 64x64 (causing no change to the size), and then compute
the miptree layout (whose size worked out to 128x196). Then we would
request an allocation of 128*196 bytes (6.125 pages), causing 7 pages
to be allocated to the texture. However, the texture needs 8 pages,
since each W-tile occupies a page, and it takes 2 W-tiles to cover a
width of 128 and 4 W-tiles to cover a height of 196.
This patch changes the order of operations so that the miptree layout
is computed first and then the total size of the miptree is rounded up
to be W-tile aligned.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Fixes piglit shaders/glsl-fs-uniform-sampler-array and many other similar
tests.
In fact, I just completed a piglit quick-driver.tests run without any GPU
lockups or even VM protection faults. Yay!
Signed-off-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
The value was too small by 1 in some cases (non-first of several vertex
elements interleaved in a single buffer).
Fixes intermittent incorrect geometry in many apps, e.g. piglit
spec/EXT_texture_snorm/fbo-generatemipmap-formats.
Signed-off-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
These enums are valid only in ES1 and ES2. So far they were marked valid
incorrectly, depending on the previous API mask in the enum list.
Signed-off-by: Imre Deak <imre.deak@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This is basically a follow-on to 1f5b1f9846.
Basically, generate GL errors for ordinary invalid parameters for proxy
targets the same as for non-proxy targets. Only texture size and OOM
errors should be handled specially for proxies.
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Turns out we weren't doing any format checking before. Now check
the internal format and, in particular, make sure that unsized internal
formats aren't accepted.
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
From the GL 4.3 spec, section 18.3.1 "Blitting Pixel Rectangles":
If SAMPLE_BUFFERS for either the read framebuffer or draw
framebuffer is greater than zero, no copy is performed and an
INVALID_OPERATION error is generated if the dimensions of the
source and destination rectangles provided to BlitFramebuffer are
not identical, or if the formats of the read and draw framebuffers
are not identical.
It is not clear from the spec whether "dimensions" should mean both
sign and magnitude, or just magnitude.
Previously, Mesa interpreted "dimensions" as meaning both sign and
magnitude, so any multisampled blit that attempted to flip the image
in the X and/or Y direction would fail.
However, Y flips are likely to be commonplace in OpenGL applications
that have been ported from DirectX applications, as a result of the
fact that DirectX and OpenGL differ in their orientation of the Y
axis. Furthermore, at least one commercial driver (nVidia) permits Y
filps, and L4D2 relies on them being permitted. So it seems prudent
for Mesa to permit them.
This patch changes Mesa to allow both X and Y flips, since there is no
language in the spec to indicate that X and Y flips should be treated
differently.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
The compiler needs to know which interpolation modes are enabled, so
it knows which values will be preloaded into the VGPRs.
Reviewed-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
At least one interpolation mode must be enable, but the code that checks
this was not checking for perspective center.
Reviewed-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Previous command stream might have set any of the constant buffer
and the previous address might no longer be valid thus GPU might
preload constant from random invalid address and possibly triggering
lockup.
Signed-off-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
* Handle arbitrary border colours.
* Use correct packing format for detecting special border colours.
Fixes piglit tex-border-1 and probably many other tests using border colours.
Signed-off-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
According to the GLSL 4.30 specification, this is a compile time error.
Earlier specifications don't specify a behavior, but since 0 and 1 are
the only valid indices for dual source blending, it makes sense to
generate the error.
Fixes (the fixed version of) piglit's layout-12.frag.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Fixes piglit spec/EXT_texture_snorm/fbo-generatemipmap-formats (except for
what seems like a random fluke).
Signed-off-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Saves 96MB of wasted memory in the l4d2 demo.
v2: Rebase on compare func change, change brace style.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Saves 26.5MB of wasted memory allocation in the l4d2 demo.
v2: Rebase on compare func change, fix comments.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com> (v1)
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Currently, this just avoids comparing all unused parts of param[] and
pull_param[], but it's a step toward getting rid of those giant statically
sized arrays.
v2: Actually use the new function instead of just looking at its
address. This required changing the args to const pointers.
(review by Kenneth)
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We don't fully process the builtin uniforms, but at least
num_uniform_components reflects reality now.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This fixes an issue where the local 'table' variable was hiding the
function parameter name in glGetColorTable(..., void *table).
This should be OK as long as there's never a GL entrypoint that uses
'disp_table' as a parameter name.
Note: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Haswell moved the "Cut Index Enable" bit from the INDEX_BUFFER packet to
a new 3DSTATE_VF packet, so we need to emit that. Also, it requires us
to specify the cut index rather than assuming it's 0xffffffff.
This adds a new Haswell-specific tracked state atom to gen7_atoms.
Normally, we would create a new generation-specific atom list, but since
there's only one difference over Ivybridge so far, I chose to simply
make it return without doing any work on non-Haswell systems.
Fixes five piglit tests:
- general/primitive-restart-DISABLE_VBO
- general/primitive-restart-VBO_COMBINED_VERTEX_AND_INDEX
- general/primitive-restart-VBO_INDEX_ONLY
- general/primitive-restart-VBO_SEPARATE_VERTEX_AND_INDEX
- general/primitive-restart-VBO_VERTEX_ONLY
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
To avoid GPU lockup registers must be emited in a specific order
(no kidding ...). This patch rework atom emission so order in which
atom are emited in respect to each other is always the same. We
don't have any informations on what is the correct order so order
will need to be infered from fglrx command stream.
v2: add comment warning that atom order should not be taken lightly
v3: rebase on top of alphatest atom fix
Signed-off-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
glGetStringi(GL_EXTENSIONS) failed to respect the context's API, and so
returned all internally enabled GLES extensions from a GL context.
Likewise, glGetIntegerv(GL_NUM_EXTENSIONS) also failed to repsect the
context's API.
Note: This is a candidate for the 8.0 and 9.0 branches.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Such as
"llvmpipe (LLVM 3.1, 128 bits)"
or
"llvmpipe (LLVM 3.1, 256 bits)"
when leveraging AVX 8-wide registers.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Should be at least mostly working now (with the corresponding fixes in
libdrm_radeon).
Signed-off-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
We can always use the offset and tiling mode from level 0 and restrict the
first and last mipmap level to be used in the sampler resource.
Signed-off-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Same as earlier commit, except for "FREE"
This patch has been generated by the following Coccinelle semantic
patch:
// Remove useless checks for NULL before freeing
//
// free (NULL) is a no-op, so there is no need to avoid it
@@
expression E;
@@
+ FREE (E);
+ E = NULL;
- if (unlikely (E != NULL)) {
- FREE(E);
(
- E = NULL;
|
- E = 0;
)
...
- }
@@
expression E;
type T;
@@
+ FREE ((T) E);
+ E = NULL;
- if (unlikely (E != NULL)) {
- FREE((T) E);
(
- E = NULL;
|
- E = 0;
)
...
- }
@@
expression E;
@@
+ FREE (E);
- if (unlikely (E != NULL)) {
- FREE (E);
- }
@@
expression E;
type T;
@@
+ FREE ((T) E);
- if (unlikely (E != NULL)) {
- FREE ((T) E);
- }
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This patch has been generated by the following Coccinelle semantic
patch:
@@
expression E;
identifier I;
@@
- I = malloc(E);
+ I = calloc(1, E);
...
- memset(I, 0, sizeof *I);
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This patch has been generated by the following Coccinelle semantic
patch:
// Remove useless checks for NULL before freeing
//
// free (NULL) is a no-op, so there is no need to avoid it
@@
expression E;
@@
+ free (E);
+ E = NULL;
- if (unlikely (E != NULL)) {
- free(E);
(
- E = NULL;
|
- E = 0;
)
...
- }
@@
expression E;
type T;
@@
+ free ((T) E);
+ E = NULL;
- if (unlikely (E != NULL)) {
- free((T) E);
(
- E = NULL;
|
- E = 0;
)
...
- }
@@
expression E;
@@
+ free (E);
- if (unlikely (E != NULL)) {
- free (E);
- }
@@
expression E;
type T;
@@
+ free ((T) E);
- if (unlikely (E != NULL)) {
- free ((T) E);
- }
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This patch has been generated by the following Coccinelle semantic
patch:
// Don't cast the return value of malloc/realloc.
//
// Casting the return value of malloc/realloc only stands to hide
// errors.
@@
type T;
expression E1, E2;
@@
- (T)
(
_mesa_align_calloc(E1, E2)
|
_mesa_align_malloc(E1, E2)
|
calloc(E1, E2)
|
malloc(E1)
|
realloc(E1, E2)
)
These calls allowed Xlib to use a custom memory allocator, but Xlib has
used the standard C library functions since at least its initial import
into git in 2003. It seems unlikely that it will grow a custom memory
allocator. The functions now just add extra overhead. Replacing them
will make future Coccinelle patches simpler.
This patch has been generated by the following Coccinelle semantic
patch:
// Remove Xcalloc/Xmalloc/Xfree calls
@@ expression E1, E2; @@
- Xcalloc (E1, E2)
+ calloc (E1, E2)
@@ expression E; @@
- Xmalloc (E)
+ malloc (E)
@@ expression E; @@
- Xfree (E)
+ free (E)
@@ expression E; @@
- XFree (E)
+ free (E)
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This is a long-standing omission in Mesa's texture image size checking.
We need to take the mipmap level into consideration when checking if the
width, height and depth are too large.
Fixes the new piglit max-texture-size-level test.
Thanks to Stéphane Marchesin for finding this problem.
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
According to Eric, this shouldn't matter since we don't do precompiles
using the old backend. In other words, brw->fragment_program (the
currently active program) should equal c->fp (the program currently
being compiled).
However, it's just not a good idea to access brw->fragment_program
directly in compiler code. It's totally illegal in the new backend, so
let's just not do it here either.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reported-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
The CodeEmitter was not setting the VGPR bit for src0, because the
instruction definition had the VCC register in the src0 slot, instead of
the actual src0 register. This has been fixed by moving the VCC
register to the end of the operand list.
Looks like converting this to a macro, returning bool, caused us to
lose the high (31st) bit result. Fixes piglit fbo-1d test. Strange
that none of the other tests I ran caught this.
Fixes https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=54365
Tested-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
We were already defining sqrtf where we don't have the C99 version.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Use 1/256 for R6xx/7xx, 1/4096 for evergreen, instead of default 1/16.
Helps to pass some piglit tests (fbo, multisample).
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
I wonder if the better solution is to have _mesa_meta_GenerateMipmap not
use MESA_META_ALL for the GLSL path. Even on compatibility profiles
there is no reason to save and restore fog on this path.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Tested-by: Lu Hua <huax.lu@intel.com>
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=54295
Looks like we have an alignment issue with NPOT textures
and mipmaps. So disable NPOT textures until we figure out
what is going wrong here.
Signed-off-by: Christian König <deathsimple@vodafone.de>
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Reading brw->fragment_program is nonsensical in compiler code: it
contains the currently active program (if any), not the one currently
being compiled. Attempting to access it may either lead to crashes
(null pointer dereference if no program is active) or wrong results.
Fixes piglit regressions since 9ef710575b
on pre-Sandybridge hardware. The actual bug was created in commit
7b1fbc6889.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 9.0 and 8.0 branches.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=54183
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
From ARB_sync spec:
If the value of <timeout> is zero, then ClientWaitSync does not
block, but simply tests the current state of <sync>. TIMEOUT_EXPIRED
will be returned in this case if <sync> is not signaled, even though
no actual wait was performed.
Fixes random fails of the arb_sync-timeout-zero piglit test on r600g.
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
As discussed with Kristian on #wayland. Pushes the decision of components into
the dri driver giving it greater freedom to allow t to implement YUV samplers
in hardware, and which mode to use.
This interface will also allow drivers like SVGA to implement YUV surfaces
without the need to sub-allocate and instead send 3 seperate buffers for each
channel, currently not implemented.
I have tested these changes on Gallium Svga. Scott tested them on both intel
and Gallium Radeon. Kristan and Pekka tested them on intel.
v2: Fix typo in dri2_from_planar.
v3: Merge in intel changes.
Tested-by: Scott Moreau <oreaus@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
Reviewed-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
Signed-off-by: Jakob Bornecrantz <jakob@vmware.com>
Immediate operands were previously handled in the CodeEmitter, but that
code was buggy and very confusing. This commit adds a pass that simplifies
the handling of immediate operands by spliting the loading of the
immediate into a sperate insruction that is bundled with the original.
The relevant POINT_SIZE registers are being set using the
pipe_rasterizer_state, so we just need to tell the shader compiler which
export type to use.
This fixes several of the glean glsl tests.
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
On Android we want to add only double buffered configs for visuals.
Earlier implementation set the SurfaceType as 0 for single buffered
configs but driver still exposed these configs that were not compatible
with any egl surface type. This caused Khronos conformance test runs to
fail on Android. This patch fixes the issue by skipping single buffered
configs earlier and not exposing them.
Signed-off-by: Tapani Pälli <tapani.palli@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
The CALLOC() macro only takes one argument so this was being treated
as a comma expression. Simply use calloc() instead.
A follow-on patch will replace all CALLOC() calls with calloc().
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 and 9.0 branches.
_mesa_delete_renderbuffer() should free the mutex (though that may be a
no-op) and then free the renderbuffer object itself. Subclasses of
gl_renderbuffer can use this function too.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Now that OpenGL 3.1 is supported by at least one driver, follow
tradition and bump the major version number.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
The blend state is different and the resolve single-sample buffer must have
FMASK and CMASK enabled. I decided to have one CMASK and one FMASK
per context instead of per resource.
There are new FMASK and CMASK allocation helpers and a new buffer_create
helper for that.
The color resolve on r6xx needs PT_RECTLIST. Using conventional primitive
types (triangles and quads) produces an ugly line between two diagonally
opposite corners. I guess a rectangular point sprite would work too.
This partially reverts d638da23d2.
With gallium the meta code is not always built so the call to
_meta_in_progress() was unresolved. Simply special-case the
GL_MULTISAMPLE case in the meta code. There might be other special
cases in the future given all the differences between legacy GL,
core GL, GLES, etc.
Fixes https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=54234
and https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=54239
v2 (Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>): keep _meta_in_progress
function, since it's needed by the i965 driver, but don't call it from
core mesa.
Signed-off-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Prior to commit 2f1869822, emit_fb_writes() looped from 0 to 3, writing
all four components of a vec4 color output. However, that broke for
smaller output types (float, vec2, or vec3). To fix that, I introduced
a new variable (output_components[]) containing the size of the output
type for each render target.
Unfortunately, I forgot to actually initialize it in the constructor,
which meant that unless a shader wrote to gl_FragColor, or the specific
output for each render target, output_components would contain a garbage
value, and we'd loop for a completely non-deterministic amount of time.
Not actually emitting any color writes seems like the right approach.
We may still need to emit a render target write (to terminate the
thread), but don't have to put in any sensible values (the shader didn't
write anything, after all).
Fixes a regression since 2f18698220.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=54193
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Ian Romanick <idr@freedesktop.org>
It is possible to force S3TC extensions to be enabled. This is
generally done to support applications that will only supply
pre-compressed textures. This accounts for the vast majority of
applications.
However, there is still the possibility of an application asking for
on-line compression. In that case, generate a warning and substitute a
generic compressed format. The driver will either pick an uncompressed
format or a compressed format that Mesa can handle on-line (e.g., FXT1).
This should only cause problems for applications that request on-line
compression and read the compressed texture back. This is likely an
infinitesimal subset of an already infinitesimal subset.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
v2: Fix API_OPENGL_CORE handling when TEXTURE_FLOAT_ENABLED is not
defined. Based on review feedback from Eric Anholt.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This is a purely software extension. The drivers don't need to do any
work to support it.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Page 407 (page 423 of the PDF) of the OpenGL 3.0 spec says (in the list
of deprecated functionality):
"Separate polygon draw mode - PolygonMode face values of FRONT and
BACK; polygons are always drawn in the same mode, no matter which
face is being rasterized."
Also modify meta to not use FRONT or BACK in a core context.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
We were calling through a dispatch table entry that was NULL, since the apple
variant is only on legacy desktop. Just call the function we mean instead of
indirecting through the dispatch.
v2: Use API_OPENGL_CORE.
v3: Only require desktop GL. If a driver can't support TexBOs in a non-core
context, it should not enable them.
Signed-off-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
v2: Fix completely broken condition around ClearColorIiEXT and
ClearColorIuiEXT.
v3: Add special VertexAttrib handling for ES2.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
The comment in the code even says this is the right thing to do.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
All drivers in Mesa do. This allows a lot of extension checking code to be
gutted from the function.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Fixes a bug that glGetMaterial[fx]v in ES1 contexts would (try to) allow
queries of GL_AMBIENT_AND_DIFFUSE. This enum can only be used in glMaterial,
not in the get.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Also handle glDisable, glIsEnabled, glEnableClientState, and
glDisableClientState.
v2: Add proper core-profile and GLES3 filtering.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
v2: Add proper core-profile and GLES3 filtering.
v3: Allow glGetVertexAttribfv(0, GL_CURRENT_VERTEX_ATTRIB_ARB, param) in
OpenGL 3.1, just like OpenGL ES 2.0.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
v2: Add proper core-profile filtering.
v3: Allow GL_SRC_ALPHA_SATURATE as a destination factor in GLES3. Based
on review feedback from Eric Anholt.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
v2: Add proper core-profile and GLES3 filtering.
v3: Allow GL_RGB10_A2UI in GLES3 based on review feedback from Eric
Anholt.
v4: Arg. Reject unsized RED and RG enums on GLES. More feedback from
Eric.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
v2: Add proper core-profile, GLES1, and GLES3 filtering.
v3: Fix the GL_FRAMEBUFFER_ATTACHMENT_OBJECT_NAME query when the
attachment type is GL_NONE on GLES3. Other cleanups. Based on review
feedback from Eric Anholt.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
v2: Add proper core-profile and GLES3 filtering.
v3: Fix a typo in GL_TEXTURE_2D_ARRAY checking.
v4: Change !_mesa_is_desktop_gl tests to _mesa_is_gles test. The test
around GL_TEXTURE_2D_ARRAY got some other changes because that enum is
also available with GLES3 (which uses API_OPENGLES2). Based on review
feedback from Eric Anholt.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
v2: Add proper core-profile and GLES3 filtering.
v3: Change !_mesa_is_desktop_gl tests to _mesa_is_gles test. The test
around GL_TEXTURE_2D_ARRAY got some other changes because that enum is
also available with GLES3 (which uses API_OPENGLES2). Based on review
feedback from Eric Anholt.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
The Common Subexpression Elimination pass will not operate on
instructions with physical register defs, so we end up with
several redundant copies to M0 when using interpolation.
Adding a register class that only contains the M0 register allows
use to use a virtual register to represent M0, and makes it possible
for the Common Subexpression Elimination pass to remove the extra
copies.
This reduces the overhead of using the fixed function internally
in the driver.
V2: Use setup_glsl_generate_mipmap() and setup_ff_generate_mipmap()
functions to avoid code duplication.
Use glsl version when ARB_{vertex, fragmet}_shader are present.
Remove redundant code.
V3: Remove redundant border related code leaving the assertion.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <idr@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
the progs/util directory is now in mesa demos
replace glean with piglit
add ApiTrace
markup: replace the unordered list <ul> with a definition list <dl>
Signed-off-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
I've reviewed the code, and the swrast callsites remaining are all in
drawpixels/copypixels/bitmap/accum, or _swrast_BlitFramebuffer that shouldn't
be hit. A piglit run with the context setup disabled on legacy GL and GLES2
showed regressions only in the copypixels and drawpixels tests.
If the context type is forced, this reduces the shader_runner maximum heap
size for glsl-algebraic-add-add-1.shader_test from 15,137,496b to 4,165,376b.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
The Fallback field of the context struct doesn't work that way on i965, and
it's the only caller of FALLBACK() in the driver.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This code has been in the driver since the first commit. I think it was
trying to stop rendering from happening with a disabled position array. Core
mesa has since had changes to deal with disabled position arrays correctly.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
But cap the size in bytes, to avoid depleting the whole system memory,
with humongus textures.
Tested with max-texture-size piglit test.
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
We want to check whether there are bits set outside of the valid flags.
Fixes piglit test egl-create-context-invalid-flag-gl
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Now that it's on by default, we may as well make it obey the flag,
for consistency's sake if nothing else.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Precompiling the shader at link time often allows us to avoid compiling
it at the first use. This moves the expensive compilation and
optimization process to game or level load time, rather than at draw
time, where we really can't avoid any cycles and don't want to risk
stalling the GPU.
The downside is that we have to guess the non-orthagonal state the
program will have set when it draws with the shader. Previously, we
guessed wrong for nearly every shader, so it wasn't useful. With the
recent SamplerUnits rework and this series, we've either eliminated
state or made smarter guesses, and usually get it right now.
In the L4D2 time demo, I now have 39 fragment shader recompiles and no
vertex shader recompiles. Before this series and the SamplerUnits
rework, I had 206 fragment shader recompiles and 192 vertex shader
recompiles.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This fixes a regression since 76d1301e8e:
I began setting SWIZZLE_XYZW for unused sampler units in the actual
program keys, since this matched the FS precompile behavior. However,
the VS precompile was expecting zero, so that commit made essentially
every vertex shader (even those not using texturing) mismatch and need
to be recompiled.
Setting them in the VS precompile key solves the issue. It also is an
improvement over our old behavior: previously we guessed that vertex
shaders didn't use any textures at all. Now we actually look to see if
the VS had any sampler uniforms and guess based on that.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Eric added support for WM key debugging. This adds it for the VS.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Our previous assumption, SWIZZLE_XYZW, was completely bogus for depth
textures. There are no Y, Z, or W components.
DEPTH_TEXTURE_MODE has three options:
- GL_LUMINANCE: <X, X, X, 1>
- GL_INTENSITY: <X, X, X, X>
- GL_ALPHA: <0, 0, 0, X>
The default value is GL_LUMINANCE, and most applications don't seem to
alter DEPTH_TEXTURE_MODE. Make that our precompile guess.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Now that most things are based on the linker-assigned index, it makes
sense to convert the arrays in the VS/WM program key as well. It seems
silly to leave them indexed by texture unit.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
brw_wm_prog_key's proj_attrib_mask field is designed to enable an
optimization for fixed-function programs, letting us avoid projecting
attributes where the divisor is 1.0.
However, for shaders, this is not useful, and is pretty much impossible
to guess when building the FS precompile key. Turning it off for
shaders should allow the precompile to work and not lose much.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Suggested-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
We probably want to do something more sophisticated here, but this at
least makes it through L4D2 without dumping the program cache.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Do all pre-draw hiz resolves *after* the renderbuffers are resized by
intel_prepare_render. Otherwise, we may resolve buffers that are
immediately discarded afterwards.
Fixes the assertion failure below when resizing windows in KDE and under
some unknown circumstance in Chrome OS:
intel_resolve_map.c:46: intel_resolve_map_set: Assertion
`(*tail)->need == need' failed.
Also, remove the comment that "resolves must occur [...] before setting up
any hardware state". That was true when resolves were implemented with
meta-ops, but no longer with blorp.
v2:
- Keep brw_predraw_resolve_buffers in its current position, which is
before any brw_context bits are modified. Instead, move the call to
intel_prepare_render.
Note: This is a candiate for the 8.0 branch.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=52252
Reported-by: Lu Hua <huax.lu@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
intel_renderbuffer_resolve_hiz checks if rb->mt is null, so there is no
need for the caller to do so.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
This adds the FMASK and CMASK buffers. They share the same resource
with color data.
COMPRESSION and FAST_CLEAR are always enabled if both FMASK and CMASK are
allocated. We initialize the CMASK to a "compressed" state (not "fast cleared"),
so that we can keep FAST_CLEAR enabled all the time.
Both FMASK and CMASK must be present at the moment. If either one is missing,
the other one is not used.
v2: add cayman regs in the list
Reviewed-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
The original samples positions took samples outside of the pixel boundary,
leading to dark pixels on the edge of the colorbuffer, among other things.
Reviewed-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
Drivers need to be able to communicate their actual number of bits populated
in the field in order for applications to be able to properly handle rollover.
There's a small behavior change here: Instead of reporting the
GL_SAMPLES_PASSED bits for GL_ANY_SAMPLES_PASSED (which would also be valid),
just return 1, because more bits don't make any sense.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
When faced with this sequence:
MOV R1, c[1];
MAD R0, R2, R1.x, R1.y;
we were concluding that the MOV of R1 set up our accumulator and so we could
just use the previous result. Only, it's got R1.xyzw in it instead of the
r1.y we're looking for.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=46784
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Support version 3 as well as 2, since that is only the new format query,
which Jesse added support for to st/dri when he added it to dri_inteface.h.
Tested-by: Scott Moreau <oreaus@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakob Bornecrantz <jakob@vmware.com>
Since its not used by anything anymore and no release has gone out
where it was being used.
Tested-by: Scott Moreau <oreaus@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakob Bornecrantz <jakob@vmware.com>
Uses libkms instead of dri image cursor. Since this is the only user of the
DRI cursor and write interface we can remove cursor surfaces entirely from
the DRI interface and as a consequence also from the Gallium interface as
well. Tho to make everybody happy with this it would probably should add a
kms_bo_write function, but that is probably wise in anyways.
The only downside is that it adds a dependancy on libkms, this could how ever
be replaced with the dumb_bo drm ioctl interface.
Tested-by: Scott Moreau <oreaus@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakob Bornecrantz <jakob@vmware.com>
We already changed the actual program key builder to only set these bits
on gen < 6; this patch just brings the precompile state back in line so
it doesn't mismatch every time.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
When dumping differences in program keys, it printed messages of the
format:
[Name of thing that changed] [new]->[old]
This was terribly confusing: the right arrow implies "the value changed
from this to that", when in fact the message conveyed the opposite.
Except that some of the time, it didn't, since we accidentally swapped
the arguments to brw_debug_recompile_sampler_key. With two swaps, it
would often come out in the expected format.
This patch fixes it to properly print:
[Name of thing that changed] [old]->[new]
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Gallium drivers and i965 don't require special notification when
sampler uniforms change. They simply see the _NEW_TEXTURE and adjust
their indirection tables. These drivers don't want ProgramStringNotify:
it simply causes pointless recompiles.
Unfortunately, i915 still requires shader recompiles and needs
ProgramStringNotify. Rather than trying to fix that, simply change the
hook to a new, more specific one: ShaderUniformChange. On i915, this
translates to ProgramStringNotify; others simply ignore it.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
When assigning uniform locations, the linker assigns each sampler
uniform a sequential numerical ID. gl_shader_program::SamplerUnits maps
these sampler variable IDs to the actual texture units they reference
(specified via glUniform1i).
Previously, we encoded this mapping in the SEND instruction encoding:
the "sampler" was the texture unit number, and the binding table index
was SURF_INDEX_TEXTURE(the texture unit number). This unfortunately
meant that whenever the application changed the value of a sampler
uniform, we had to recompile the shader to change the SEND instructions.
This was horrible for the game Cogs, which repeatedly switches between
using texture unit 0 and 1. It also made fragment shader precompiles
useless: we'd do the precompile at glLinkShader() time, before the
application called glUniform1i to set the sampler values. As soon as
it did that, we'd have to recompile, wasting time and space in the
program cache.
This patch encodes the SamplerUnits indirection in the binding table,
sampler state, and sampler default color tables. Instead of baking the
texture unit number into the shader, we bake in the sampler variable ID
assigned by the linker. Since those never change, we don't need to
recompile programs on uniform changes.
This does mean that the tables now depend on the linked shader program
being used for rendering, rather than simply representing all available
texture units. This could cause an increase in state emission.
Another plus is that the sampler state and sampler default color tables
are now compact: we only emit as many entries as there are sampler
uniforms, with no holes in the table since the new sampler IDs are
sequential. Previously we had to emit a full 16 entries every time,
since the tables tracked the state of all active texture units.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This represents the index into the sampler state table or sampler
default color table (the two are identical).
Right now, this is still the texture unit, but that will change shortly.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Currently, we mirror the VS and WM binding tables' texture entries.
That may not continue to be true, so in preparation, pass in the binding
table and surface index as arguments.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The number we're passing around is actually the ID of the texture unit,
as opposed to the numerical value our of sampler uniforms. Calling it
"texunit" clarifies this slightly.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The number we're passing around is actually the ID of the texture unit,
as opposed to the numerical value our of sampler uniforms. Calling it
"texunit" clarifies this slightly.
Don't bother renaming fs_instruction::sampler. Although it's currently
the texture unit, this series will change that. No need for the churn.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Previously, we left the swizzle key field as zero for unused texture
units. The precompile sets all of them to SWIZZLE_NOOP, which meant
that we mismatched almost every time.
Since either works equally well, change it to SWIZZLE_NOOP to match
the precompiles.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
I can't actually understand what these mean, and they seem to
essentially say "we should simplify things", which is a nice goal but
not very specific.
Presumably things got cleaned up at some point.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Fixes brw_shader.cpp:101:9: warning: converting to non-pointer type
'GLboolean {aka unsigned char}' from NULL [-Wconversion-null]
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-with-great-enthusiasm-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
v2: Add proper core-profile and GLES3 filtering.
v3: *Really* add proper core-profile and GLES3 filtering based on review
feedback from Eric Anholt. It looks like previously there was some
rebase / merge fail.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
v2: Add proper core-profile and GLES3 filtering based on review feedback
from Eric Anholt. It looks like previously there was some rebase /
merge fail.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
v2: Fix handling of GL_INT and GL_UNSIGNED_INT types pre-ES3.0, and fix
handling of GL_INT_2_10_10_10_REV and GL_UNSIGNED_INT_2_10_10_10_REV in
ES3.0. Based on review comments by Ken Graunke.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This consolidates the tests and makes the emitted error message
consistent.
v2: Rename _mesa_valid_element_type to valid_elements_type. Log the
enum string instead of the hex value in error messages. Based on review
comments from Brian Paul and Ken Graunke.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
_mesa_generic_compressed_format_to_uncompressed_format() probably wins the
prize for longest function name in Mesa.
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
See comments in the code for details.
Note: we only need to special-case the generic compressed formats since
specific texture formats are error-checked earlier to see if the compression
format is compatible with the texture type.
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
This will let us choose the actual hardware format depending on the
type of texture.
v2: fixup radeon, nouveau, intel and swrast drivers too
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
'target' was used both as a parameter of type st_texture_type and then
re-used for GL_TEXTURE_x targets. Rename the function parameter and
add a new local 'GLenum target'.
And remove an extraneous break statement.
Patches changes mesa to use 'HAVE_DLOPEN' defined by configure and Android.mk
instead of _GNU_SOURCE for detecting dlopen capability. This makes dlopen to
work also on Android where _GNU_SOURCE is not defined.
[mattst88] v2: HAVE_DLOPEN is sufficient for including dlfcn.h, remove
mingw/blrts checks around dlfcn.h inclusion.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Tapani Pälli <tapani.palli@intel.com>
Previously, when performing a fast depth clear, we would also clear
the miptree's resolve map. This destroyed important information,
since the resolve map contains information about needed resolves for
all levels and layers of the miptree, whereas a depth clear only
applies to a single level/layer combination at a time. As a result,
resolves would sometimes fail to occur, leading to incorrect
rendering.
Fixes rendering artifacts with shadow maps in Unigine Heaven and
Unigine Sanctuary.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=50270
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
There are three possible resolve map states for each (level, layer) of
a depth miptree: "needs HiZ resolve", "needs depth resolve", and
"needs neither". When HiZ was first implemented on i965, any attempt
to directly transition between "needs HiZ resolve" and "needs depth
resolve" without passing through the "needs neither" state would have
been a bug indicating that a necessary resolve hadn't been performed.
Accordingly, intel_resolve_map_set() contained an assertion to verify
that no such direct transition happened.
However, now that we support fast depth clears, there is a valid
transition from the "needs HiZ resolve" to the "needs depth resolve"
state. When doing a fast depth clear, the old state of the buffer is
irrelevant, since we are completely replacing it with the clear value,
so it is not necessary to do any resolves before clearing--we can
transition, if necessary, directly from the "needs HiZ resolve" state
to the "needs depth resolve" state.
To avoid spurious assertions in this valid case, this patch just
removes the assertion.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Just use the functionality provided by the surface manager instead.
This fixes just another bunch of piglit tests.
Signed-off-by: Christian König <deathsimple@vodafone.de>
Reviewed-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Previously you could always glGetProgramiv one of the transform feedback
or geometry shader enums even if the extension wasn't supported.
In addtion, this reverts part of bda6ad27. I think the hunks involving
GL_PROGRAM_BINARY_LENGTH_OES were spurious. Mesa has no support for any
other part of GL_OES_get_program_binary.
v2: Remove redundant return in get_programiv based on review feedback
from Matt Turner.
v3: Correctly handle UBO related enums.
v4: Emit the bad enum in the _mesa_error call based on review feedback
from Brian Paul.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Fix API functions for memory objects to accept CL_MEM_READ_WRITE flag.
Signed-off-by: Blaž Tomažič <blaz.tomazic@gmail.com>
[ Francisco Jerez: Drop incorrect change in clCreateSubBuffer. ]
Fix-up the texel fetch functions so that they handle 3D coords (as used for
array textures) and remove the "f_2d" part from their names.
Helps fix swrast crashes in piglit's copyteximage test. More to come.
There was a lot of similar or duplicated code before.
To minimize this patch's size, use a forward declaration for
compressed_texture_error_check(). Move the function in the next patch.
If a proxy texture call generates a regular GL error, we should not
clear the proxy image's width/height/depth/format fields. Use a new
PROXY_ERROR token to distinguish proxy errors from regular GL errors.
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
When calling glTexImage() with a proxy target most error conditions should
generate a GL error. We were erroneously doing the proxy-error behaviour
(where we zeroed-out the image's width/height/depth/format fields) in too
many places.
There's another issue with proxy textures, but that'll be fixed in the
next patch.
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
draw->samplers(_views) now has PIPE_SHADER_TYPES elements, instead of
PIPE_MAX_SAMPLERS as before.
Also, shader_stage must be less than PIPE_SHADER_TYPES to prevent buffer
overflow.
Trivial.
Render Target Write message should include source zero alpha value when
sample-alpha-to-coverage is enabled for an FBO with multiple render targets.
Source zero alpha value is used as fragment coverage for all the render
targets.
This patch makes piglit tests draw-buffers-alpha-to-coverage and
alpha-to-coverage-no-draw-buffer-zero to pass on Sandybridge. No
regressions are observed with piglit all.tests.
V2: Revert all the changes made in emit_color_write() function to
include src0 alpha for targets > 0. Now handling this case in a if
block.
V3: Correctly calculate the instruction length for buffer zero.
Properly handle the case of dual_src_blend when alpha-to-coverage
is enabled.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
When too may uniforms are used, the error will be caught in
check_resources (src/glsl/linker.cpp).
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Stéphane Marchesin <marcheu@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Tested-by: Benoit Jacob <bjacob@mozilla.com>
Also validate glCopyTexImage border. This fixes a bug in the APIspec.
Previously glTexImage3DOES could be passed a non-zero border without error.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
This also adds a missing extension (and API) check around
GL_TEXTURE_CROP_RECT_OES.
v2: Add proper core-profile and GLES3 filtering. GL_TEXTURE_MAX_LEVEL
is (incorrectly) accepted in ES contexts. A future patch will add
GL_APPLE_texture_max_level, and meta really needs this.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
This also adds a missing extension (and API) check around
GL_TEXTURE_CROP_RECT_OES.
v2: Add proper core-profile, GLES1, and GLES3 filtering. GL_TEXTURE_MAX_LEVEL
is (incorrectly) accepted in ES contexts. A future patch will add
GL_APPLE_texture_max_level, and meta really needs this.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Fixed the piglit test arb_texture_buffer_object-negative-unsupported.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
v2: Add proper core-profile and GLES3 filtering.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
This should take care of all the TexImage, TexSubImage, CopyTexImage,
CompressedTexImage3DOES, and CopyTexSubImage type paths.
v2: Add proper core-profile and GLES3 filtering.
v3: Squash the CompressedTexImage3DOES patch per review comment from
Ken.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
This is a bit of a hack. _mesa_meta_GenerateMipmap shouldn't even be
used in contexts where GL_GENERATE_MIPMAP doesn't exist (i.e., core
profile and ES2) because it uses fixed-function, and fixed-function
doesn't exist there either!
A GLSL-based _mesa_meta_GenerateMipmap should be available soon. When
that is available, this patch will be irrelevant and should be reverted.
v2: Change (ctx->API != API_OPENGLES2 && ctx->API != API_OPENGL_CORE) to
(ctx->API == API_OPENGL || ctx->API == API_OPENGLES) based on review
comment from Brian Paul.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Commit 77a3efc6b9 broke android build that
sets its own value for GLSL_SRCDIR before including Makefile.sources.
Patch moves overriding the value after include, this works as GLSL_SRCDIR
variable gets expanded only later.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Tapani Pälli <tapani.palli@intel.com>
The name is taken from the driver_descriptor, so it will be the same as
expected by driconf utility.
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
The segmentation fault occurs when DRI2 is not loaded up and
dri2_setup_screen() function deferences dri2_dpy->dri2 (since it's NULL
at this point).
This patch fixes the segmentation fault by checking if dri2 pointer is
not NULL before deferencing it.
Signed-off-by: Paulo Alcantara <pcacjr@profusion.mobi>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This new operand replaces the MachineOperand flags in LLVM, which
will be deprecated soon. Eventually all instructions should have a flag
operand, but for now this operand has only been added to instructions
that need it.
SRC_DIRS was overwritten (visible in the second hunk).
Also don't require mapi/shared-glapi to be built for GLES.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We need to enable at least one interpolation mode,
otherwise the GPU will hang.
Signed-off-by: Christian König <deathsimple@vodafone.de>
Reviewed-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Disable blending when dual_src_blend is enabled and number of color exports
in the current fragment shader is less than 2.
Fixes lockups with ext_framebuffer_multisample-
alpha-to-coverage-dual-src-blend piglit test.
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
The generic texture formats should be accepted by the <internalformat>
parameter of TexImage1D, TexImage2D, TexImage3D, CopyTexImage1D, and
CopyTexImage2D functions. When the application specifies a generic
format, the driver is free to pick an uncompressed format.
This patch reverts the changes due to following commit:
commit a36581ccc0
mesa: do more teximage error checking for generic compressed formats
This patch fixes compressed texture format failures in intel oglconform
pxconv-gettex test case:
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=47220
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Don't dereference NULL pointers, and if all views are NULL, don't generate an
invalid PM4 packet which locks up the GPU.
Signed-off-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Mesa doesn't check the parameter passed to glMultiTexCoord*. It does,
however, mask the texture value to prevent out-of-bounds writes. This
patch will promote this non-conformant behavior to OpenGL ES 1. I don't
think anyone will care, and the gets some silly code out of a hot path.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This is required to make some of llvm's api calls
thread save. In particular the PassRegistry, which is
implicitly accessed while compiling shader programs.
The PassRegistry uses a mutex that is only active if
the llvm_is_multithreaded() returns true.
Calling llvm_start_multithreading() makes this happen
and by calling this function we try to make sure that
we can savely compile shaders in paralell.
Since there is also a call llvm_stop_multithreading()
in the llvm api, we cannot guarantee that this does
not get switched off while we are relying on this being
set, but for the easier use cases this fixes a race with
the radeon llvm compiler we have as of today.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Froehlich <Mathias.Froehlich@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
In the past, when we called pipe::set_sampler_views(n) the drivers set
samplers [n..MAX] to NULL. We no longer do that. The state tracker
code was already trying to set unused sampler views to NULL to cover
that case, but the logic was broken and unnoticed until now. This patch
fixes it.
Strictly speaking, this patch shouldn't be necessary. Drivers should simply
ignore unused samplers and sampler views. But some drivers like llvmpipe (and
others?) count those things and they figure into state validation. That could
be fixed in the future.
Fixes http://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=53617
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
GL_INVALID_OPERATION is to be raised when querying a non-compressed
image/buffer. Since a buffer object can't have a compressed format this
query always generates an error.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
These are gradually going to get whittled away and eventually folded into the
source files with the native type functions.
v2: Add (speculative) SConscript changes. These may be broken.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
In the old backend, we looked at any FS attribute's proj_attrib_mask bits, not
just texcoords. Now that we have _mesa_vert_result_to_frag_attrib(), we can
fill in the other FS inputs with correct proj_attrib_mask info.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=46644
Signed-off-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The OpenGL 3.1 specification explicitly allows this. Oddly, the
ARB_texture_buffer_object spec's issues section claims this isn't
allowed, but proceeds to explain that the extension simply doesn't edit
the underlying spec to allow it, and thus it didn't appear in the list
of legal texture targets.
Thus, this patch legalizes it only in 3.1+ contexts, but still returns
INVALID_ENUM in earlier contexts that expose ARB_texture_buffer_object.
Unfortunately, the behavior of the call is horrendously undefined.
Fixes oglconform's tbo/negative.textureParams test.
v2: Require desktop OpenGL.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Move the _mesa_GetTexLevelParameter[iv] functions below the helper
function so the prototype is available.
This will be useful in the next commit.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
For cube maps, _mesa_generate_mipmap() calls this with
GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP (the gl_texture_object's Target) rather than one
of the faces. This caused _mesa_max_texture_levels() to return 0, which
resulted in maxLevels == -1 and the next line's assertion to fail.
This function is called from seven places:
- fbobject.c: framebuffer_texture()
- mipmap.c: _mesa_generate_mipmap()
- texgetimage.c:
- getteximage_error_check()
- getcompressedteximage_error_check()
- texparam.c: _mesa_GetTexLevelParameteriv()
- texstorage.c: tex_storage_error_check()
All of these (or their callers) now explicitly check for invalid targets
already, so this shouldn't cause invalid targets to slip through.
(Technically _mesa_generate_mipmap() doesn't check for invalid targets,
but the API-facing _mesa_GenerateMipmapEXT() function does.)
+2 oglconforms (float-texture/mipmap.automatic and mipmap.manual)
In addition to fixing the mipmap bug, it should also cause glTexStorage
to accept GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP, which is explicitly allowed by the spec.
v2: Drop alterations to callers; this is now in a patch series that adds
explicit checking to API functions.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Previously, it relied on _mesa_max_texture_levels() for texture target
error checking. This was somewhat dodgy, as _mesa_max_texture_levels()
is called in seven diferent places, not all of which necessarily accept
the same list of targets.
I copied the list of legal targets from _mesa_max_texture_levels(), so
this patch should not introduce any change in behavior. Future patches
will cause the two to diverge.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Previously, they relied on _mesa_max_texture_levels() for texture target
error checking. This was somewhat dodgy, as _mesa_max_texture_levels()
is called in seven diferent places, not all of which necessarily accept
the same list of targets.
I copied the list of legal targets from _mesa_max_texture_levels() but
removed the proxy targets, as both functions explicitly rejected those
targets. This changes the order in which we check errors, which could
change whether we return INVALID_VALUE or INVALID_ENUM. However, it
shouldn't change the list of accepted targets.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
It's possible for us to have an unused sampler bound when the fragment
shader itself doesn't use any samplers. So the assertion isn't valid.
Fixes http://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=53616
We aligned the dimensions to the blocksize, then divided by it
(in r600_blit.c), then minified, which was wrong.
The minification must be done first, not last.
This fixes piglit/fbo-generatemipmap-formats with S3TC and maybe
a bunch of other tests too. Tested on RV730.
This seems to be expected by the WebGL texture-mips test. The error makes
sense, but I haven't found (yet) any OpenGL documentation specifying this
error condition.
See http://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44912
Note: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
As with other recent changes, put the vertex and fragment sampler state
into arrays indexed by the shader type. This will let us easily add
support for other types of shaders in the future.
PIPE_MAX_SAMPLERS, PIPE_MAX_VERTEX_SAMPLERS and PIPE_MAX_GEOMETRY_SAMPLERS
were all defined to the same value (16).
In various places we're creating arrays such as
sampler_views[PIPE_SHADER_TYPES][PIPE_MAX_SAMPLERS] so we were assuming
the same number of max samplers for all shader stages anyway.
Of course, drivers are still free to advertise different numbers of max
samplers for different shaders.
The previous test for result != NULL was kind of bogus since we dereferenced
the pointer earlier in the code. Now, check for result != NULL first, then
get the result->key info.
Also, remove the useless "offset +=" code at the end.
We'd end up re-using the old one and throwing away the new one anyway, but only
after a roundtrip to the kernel.
Signed-off-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
If a hole exactly matches the allocated size plus alignment, we would fail to
preserve the alignment as a hole. This would result in never being able to use
the alignment area for an allocation again.
Signed-off-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Otherwise we'll likely end up with an ever increasing amount of ever smaller
holes.
Requires keeping the list ordered wrt offsets.
Signed-off-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Otherwise we'd wrap around after 32 bits. The kernel currently limits GPU
virtual address space to 4GB anyway, but that will probably change sooner or
later, and this would result in confusing error messages when running out of
virtual address space even now.
Signed-off-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
This adds support for having libGL pick a different driver for prime support.
DRI_PRIME env var is set to the value retrieved from the server randr
provider calls, by the calling process. (generally DRI_PRIME=1 will be
the right answer).
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
With this we can embed data for the shaders (like resource
descriptors) into the PM4 stream.
Signed-off-by: Christian König <deathsimple@vodafone.de>
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
I was seeing some GPU hangs that seemed to be cause by ALU instructions
writing to the same register used as the source for VTX_READ. Adding
this constraint to the VTX_READ instructions avoids this situation.
The only allowed instructions are TXQ_LZ and TXF.
TXQ_LZ is like TXQ, but without the LOD parameter (which is always zero
with MSAA textures)
The 3rd or the 4th texcoord component in TXF should contain the sample index
for a 2D_MSAA or 2D_ARRAY_MSAA texture, respectively.
The problem was that the string matching succeeded e.g. for "2D" when there
was actually "2D_MSAA" and then failed parsing "_MSAA".
To prevent similar failures in the future, let's fix this kind of error
everywhere.
Rename _mesa_pack_rgba_span_int to _mesa_pack_rgba_span_from_uints.
Add _mesa_pack_rgba_span_from_ints.
These separate routines allow the integer clamping to be handled
properly for signed versus unsigned integers.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
We need to downsample before flushing BUFFER_FAKE_FRONT_LEFT to
BUFFER_FRONT_LEFT in intel_flush_front.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Stop repeating ourselves. Replace the 4 instances of
`driContext->driDrawablePriv` with `driDrawable`.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Move it from intel_screen.c to intel_context.c. Redeclare as non-static.
A future commit will use it in multiple files.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Unlike 1.x to 2.0, OpenGL ES 3.0 is backwards compatible with 2.0. Use the
same API flag for both. Applications that specifically want 3.0 will specify
this using the major / minor version attributes.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Just like in GLX, EGL_KHR_create_context requires DRI2 version >= 3, and
EGL_EXT_create_context_robustness requires both DRI2 version >= 3 and the
__DRI2_ROBUSTNESS extension.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The extra block in dri2_create_context is to prevent extra white space noise
in the next patch.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
v2: Add GL_ARB_invalidate_subdata to release notes at Brian's
suggestion.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
These are part of GL_ARB_invalidate_subdata (but not OpenGL ES 3.0).
v2: Add comment explaining why minimum dimensions are set to 1 for some
texture targets. Add default case to switch statement to silence
compiler warnings and detect new texture targets. Both changes
suggested by Brian. Also use _mesa_is_desktop_gl as suggested by Ken.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
These are part of GL_ARB_invalidate_subdata (but not OpenGL ES 3.0).
v2: Use _mesa_bufferobj_mapped instead of testing
gl_buffer_object::Pointer as suggested by Brian. Also use
_mesa_is_desktop_gl as suggested by Ken.
v3: Add a comment by the map subrange / discard range overlap test and
fix an off-by-one error noticed by Ken.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
With this change _mesa_init_bufferobj_dispatch won't set function
pointers that don't exist in OpenGL ES.
v2: Use _mesa_is_desktop_gl and _mesa_is_gles3 as suggested by Ken.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
These are part of GL_ARB_invalidate_subdata and OpenGL ES 3.0.
v2: Reject aux buffers in core context, and use _mesa_is_desktop_gl and
_mesa_is_gles3. Both suggested by Ken.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This is basically cut-and-paste from the swrast implementation, and it
could probably be (slightly) more optimal.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
No driver supports this extension, and it seems unlikely than any driver
ever will. I think r300c may have supported it at one time, but that
driver has already been removed.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
The final step of _mesa_unpack_depth_span is to take the temporary
GLfloat depth values and convert them to the desired format. When
converting to GL_UNSIGNED_INTEGER with depthMax > 0xffffff, we use
double-precision math to avoid overflow and precision problems.
Or at least that's the idea. Unfortunately
GLdouble z = depthValues[i] * (GLfloat) depthMax;
actually causes single-precision multiplication, since both operands are
GLfloats. Casting depthMax to GLdouble causes the scaling to be done
with double-precision math.
Fixes a regression in oglconform's depth-stencil basic.read.ds test
since c60ac7b179, where the expected and
actual values differed slightly. For example, 0xcfa7a6 vs. 0xcfa7a4.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=49772
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
v2: Use base-10 for versions like gl_context::Version. Suggested by Ken.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
v2: Use base-10 for versions like gl_context::Version. Suggested by Ken.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This forces the drivers to do at least some validation of context API
and version before creating the context. In r100 and r200 drivers, this
means that they don't do any post-hoc validation.
v2: Actually reject compatibility profile 3.2+ contexts. Thanks Ken.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
It may be possible to trim the list of extensions futher. These are
just the obvious extensions that add functionality that the core context
explicitly forbids. Apple's core-context extension list is *just* the
extensions on top of the core GL version. I'm not sure we want to go
that far, but removing some things that have been in core since 2.1 may
be okay.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
v2: Add both top_srcdir and top_builddir to mesa asm include dirs.
These require both in-tree and build-time-generated files.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Christopher James Halse Rogers <christopher.halse.rogers@canonical.com>
Like in src/mesa, use GLSL_BUILDDIR/GLSL_SRCDIR to unambiguously
distinguish between in-tree and generated files.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Christopher James Halse Rogers <christopher.halse.rogers@canonical.com>
Also fix include paths for the generated headers.
v2: Switch to using self-explanatory BUILDDIR/SRCDIR defined from
top_builddir/top_srcdir rather than the ambiguous TOP.
v3: Add both top_builddir and top_srcdir to include flags for mesa asm.
These rely on both in-tree and build-time-generated includes.
v4: Rebased on top of 948c8f502a.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Christopher James Halse Rogers <christopher.halse.rogers@canonical.com>
Signed-off-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
After realizing that brw_finish_batch emitted some final PIPE_CONTROLs
to record occlusion queries, Chris noted that we probably hadn't
reserved enough space to actually emit them.
Reserving a full 60 bytes seems a bit harsh, since we only need that
much if occlusion queries are actually active. Plus, 28 bytes would be
sufficient for Gen7, and 24 for Gen4-5.
We could optimize this in the future, but it doesn't seem too critical.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=53311
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
On Gen4+, brw_finish_batch() calls brw_emit_query_end(), which emits
some extra PIPE_CONTROLs to capture the current occlusion query data.
Unfortunately, it was being called *after* _intel_batchbuffer_flush
added the MI_BATCH_BUFFER_END, meaning those PIPE_CONTROLs didn't get
inside the batch.
Not only does this likely cause bogus occlusion query values, it can
also cause crashes: with the recent change to use 64-bit depth count
writes on Gen6+, we started emitting an odd-length PIPE_CONTROL, which
happened after the MI_NOOP padding. This resulted in an odd-length
batch buffer, which resulted in execbuf2 returning -EINVAL and the
application dying with an intel_do_flush_locked failure.
On older generations, finish_batch() doesn't emit any state, so this
change shouldn't have any effect.
Huge thanks to Chris Wilson for helping me figure this out.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=53311
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
I want to introduce some more debug output for performance surprises that
includes fallbacks, but aren't necessarily software rasterization. Leave
INTEL_DEBUG=fall in place for those that have used that flag before.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Avoid INVALID_OPERATION error if decompressing rectangle texture.
Setting mipmap level limits for those textures is error that must not be
hit by meta code to mislead user.
[v3/Kayden]: Resolve conflicts due to Eric picking a subset of Pauli's
original changes.
Signed-off-by: Pauli Nieminen <pauli.nieminen@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Sampler objects are perfect for meta operations.Sampler object
is separate state object that shadows the sampling state in texture
object. With sampler object mipmap can maintain same sampling state for
all subsequent generation requests.
Signed-off-by: Pauli Nieminen <pauli.nieminen@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Sampler queries are so far made only for enabled texture unit. But if
any code would query sampler before checking texture unit state that
would result to NULL deference.
Making the inline helper easier to use with NULL check makes a lot sense
because compiler is likely to combine the checks for the current texture.
Signed-off-by: Pauli Nieminen <pauli.nieminen@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
In tune with previous patches. Again there is duplication of information
in function parameters that is good to remove.
Signed-off-by: Pauli Nieminen <pauli.nieminen@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Size and format information is always stored in gl_texture_image
structure. That makes it preferable to remove duplicate information from
parameters to make interface easier to understand.
Signed-off-by: Pauli Nieminen <pauli.nieminen@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
gl_texture_image structure always holds size and internal format before
TexImage driver hook is called. Those passing same information in
function parameters only duplicates information making the interface
harder to understand.
Signed-off-by: Pauli Nieminen <pauli.nieminen@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Commit 6882381a2e added a dependency on a
newer version of xcb, but the version check wasn't added in all the
necessary places.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This reverts commit 9f5a5d541d.
Fixes the following build error on GCC 4.2.3:
cc1plus: error: unrecognized command line option "-Wno-narrowing"
The GCC Manual incorrectly stated that commit 9f5a5d54 woulde be safe for
old versions of GCC.
Reported-by: Andy Furniss <andyqos@ukfsn.org>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
The var!=softpipe->fs_variant assertion was failing because we weren't
nulling the softpipe->fs_variant pointer when binding a new shader.
Since softpipe->fs_variant depends on the current fs, it's of no use
when a new FS is bound.
Fixes http://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=53318
Note: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
After we attach a new renderbuffer in this function we need to make
sure Mesa's update_framebuffer() gets called.
Fixes crash in WebGL conformance/textures/texture-attachment-formats.html,
but the test still fails for other reasons.
Fixes http://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=53316
Note: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Add -Wno-narrowing to CXXFLAGS for gcc.
It is safe to add this flag even for versions of gcc that don't recognize
it. From the GCC Manual [1]: "[GCC] allows the use of new -Wno- options
with old compilers".
This removes warnings of the form
warning: narrowing conversion of X from 'int' to 'float' inside { } is
ill-formed in C++11 [-Wnarrowing]
in ff_fragment_shader.cpp and gen6_blorp.cpp of the form. When building
i965, I observed no other difference in the build output.
[1] http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Warning-Options.html
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Fixes WebGL conformance/uniforms/uniform-default-values.html crash.
We need to check for the null view pointer before accessing view->texture.
Fixes http://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=53317
Note: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Always downsample before mapping, even if the map mode contains
GL_MAP_INVALIDATE_RANGE_BIT. If we neglect to downsample when only
a subrect is mapped then the upsample in intel_miptree_unmap_multisample
may write garbage to the region outside the subrect.
(Eric gave my patch e88cfbb a conditional reviewed-by with the condition
that it always downsample before mapping. I forgot to make that change
before pushing the patch.)
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Fixes the glsl skinning demo regression since changing to the new GLSL
compiler, and is part of fixing piglit gl-2.0-edgeflag.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=50079
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
If there was an edge flag or a two-side-color pair present, we'd end up
mismatched and read values from earlier in the VUE for later FS inputs.
v2: Fix regression in gles2conform shaders generating point size. (change by
anholt)
Signed-off-by: Olivier Galibert <galibert@pobox.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
If the application has requested reset notification, then
dri2_convert_glx_attribs will initialize this to the correct value.
Otherwise, it's supposed to initialize this to NO_NOTIFICATION, but
doesn't when num_attribs == 0. (The consensus seems to be that we
should make it do so, but that's more invasive, so I'm pushing this for
now.)
Fixes a regression since a8724d85f8
where trying to run OilRush_x86 or apitrace heaven_x64 would result in:
dri_util.c:221: dri2CreateContextAttribs: Assertion `!"Should not get
here."' failed.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=53076
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Patch changes i915 and i965 drivers to use fixed function version of
meta clear when running on ES 1.1. This fixes rendering errors seen with
Google Maps, Angry Birds and Gallery3D on Android platform.
Change 88128516d4 exposes all extensions
internally to be available independent of GL flavour, therefore check
against ARB_fragment_shader does not work.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=50333
Signed-off-by: Tapani Pälli <tapani.palli@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This removes the CS stall on Ivybridge.
On Sandybridge, the depth stall needs to be preceded by a non-zero
post-sync op, which requires a CS stall, which needs a stall at
scoreboard. Emit the full workaround.
Reviewed-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
Cc: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
I don't know if it was possible to trigger this bug -- we don't merge
saturates into the math instruction because we're bad at coalescing currently,
and there's nothing generating these with predicates. Still, let's avoid
future bugs when we do smarter codegen.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This was ridiculous. We were ignoring the inst->header.saturate flag in the
case of math and only math. On gen4, we would leave inst->header.saturate in
place if it happened to be set, which would end up being applied to the
implicit mov and thus trash the first argument. On gen6, we would overwrite
inst->header.saturate with the saturate flag from the argument, which was not
set appropriately in brw_vec4_emit.cpp, and was only not a bug due to our
incompetence at coalescing saturate moves.
By ripping the argument out and making saturate work just like all the other
brw_eu_emit.c code generation, we can avoid both these classes of bugs.
Fixes piglit fog-modes, and the new specific fs-saturate-exp2 case.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=48628
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
There was a chance for brw_wm_emit.c to screw up and pass (1 << 4) instead of
1, which would get converted to 0 when stored. Instead, use stdbool which
converts nonzero to true/1 like we want.
Otherwise, conditional rendering always takes the fallthrough "render it
anyway" case unless the application had itself done a check or wait on the
query.
Fixes intel oglconform's conditional_render advanced.nofbo.readpixels.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
I happened to notice this while looking at a blit pass in l4d2, which had an
optional push/pop around framebuffer srgb setting. It didn't matter in the
end, but the fix is sitting in my tree now.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
You can't practically have desktop OpenGL and OpenGL ES on the same system
without this. The benefits of not having it (e.g., a more compact dispatch
table) are irrelevant.
v2: Don't mark shared-glapi as experimental. Review suggestion by Chad.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
These are largely based on the src/mapi/glapi/tests. However,
shared-glapi provides less external visibility into the dispatch table,
so there is less to test. Also, shared-glapi does not implement
_glapi_get_proc_name, so that test was removed.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
When --enable-shared-glapi is used, all non-ABI entries in the table are
lies. Avoiding the use of glapitable.h avoids the lies. The only
entries used in this code are entries that are ABI. For these, the ABI
offset can be used directly.
Since this code is in src/glx, it can't use src/mesa/main/dispatch.h to
get the pretty names for these offsets.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
When --enable-shared-glapi is used, all non-ABI entries in the table are
lies. There are two completely separate code generation paths used to
assign dispatch offset. Neither has any clue about the other.
Unsurprisingly, the can't agree on what offsets to assign.
This adds a bunch of overhead to __glXNewIndirectAPI, but this function
is called at most once.
The test ExtensionNopDispatch was removed. There was just no way to
make this test work with the information provided in shared-glapi.
Since indirect_glx.c uses _glapi_get_proc_offset now, it was also
impossible to make the tests work without shared-glapi. So much pain.
This fixes indirect rendering with shared-glapi.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This fixes 'make check' on with --enable-shared-glapi. This test cannot work
in that environment.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
The hardware seems to use the length of the PIPE_CONTROL command to
indicate whether the write is 64-bits or 32-bits. Which makes sense
for immediate writes.
Daniel discovered this by writing a pattern into the query object bo
and noticing that the high 32-bits were left intact, even on those
pipe control writes that seemingly worked.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The hardware seems to use the length of the PIPE_CONTROL command to
indicate whether the write is 64-bits or 32-bits. Which makes sense
for immediate writes.
Daniel discovered this by writing a pattern into the query object bo
and noticing that the high 32-bits were left intact, even on those
pipe control writes that seemingly worked.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This consolidates the complexity in one place, which is important
because it's about to get even more complicated.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
PIPE_CONTROL has variable length, depending upon generation and whether
we want to do 32-bit or 64-bit data writes. Make it explicit, rather
than hiding a length of 4 in the #define for _3DSTATE_PIPE_CONTROL.
Generated by s/3DSTATE_PIPE_CONTROL/3DSTATE_PIPE_CONTROL | (4 - 2)/g.
This is equivalent since the #define used to have | 2 in it. A grep
through the sources shows that all instances have been converted, so
it's safe to remove the | 2 from the #define.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Unlike the FS side in the previous commit, this does variable indexing just
fine, using the same code as we used for other variable-indexed pull
constants.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Variable array indexing isn't finished, because the lowering pass
turns it all into conditional moves of constant index accesses so I
can't test it.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
I wanted to add the surface index as a variable value for UBO support,
and a reg seemed like the obvious way to go. This exposes more of the
information to CSE, which we'll probably want to apply to pull
constant loads for UBOs eventually (you might access 4 floats in a
row, each of which would produce an oword block read of the same
block).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Fixes piglit GL_ARB_uniform_buffer_object/dlist.
v2: Use the .ui fields instead of .i for type consistency (review by Brian
Paul)
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The ARB spec lets you get away with the default block counting against the
blocks for combined size limits. The core spec says you need to be able to
support the maximum size of default block *and* the maximum size of each
uniform block. I see no reason that any driver would have a problem with
that.
Fixes gl 3.1/minmax (with an associated fix to the test)
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We were only propagating it to the API when the variable was a matrix type,
but we were still tripping over it in lower_ubo_reference when it was set on a
vector.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We were getting the base offset of a vec2, not of a vec2[2] like the quoted
spec text says we should.
v2: Fix swapped then/else cases.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Previously, we were returning the index into the UniformBlocks of one of the
linked shaders, when it's supposed to be the program global index.
Fixes piglit getactiveuniformsiv-uniform_block_index.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
In between glGenBuffers() and glBindBuffer(), the buffer object points to this
dummy buffer with a name of 0, and a glBindBufferBase() would point to that.
It seems pretty clear, given that glBindBufferBase() only cares about the
current size of the buffer at render time, that it should bind up the buffer
that you passed in instead of pointing it at this useless dummy buffer.
However, what should glBindBufferRange() do? As of this patch, it will
promote the genned buffer to a proper buffer like it had been
glBindBuffer()ed, and then detect that the size is greater than the buffer's
current size of 0 and throw INVALID_VALUE. It seems like the most reasonable
answer here.
Note that this also changes the behavior of these two on non-glGenBuffers() bo
names. We haven't yet set up the error throwing for glBindBuffers() on gl
3.1+, and my assumption is that these two functions should inherit their
behavior on un-genned names from glBindBuffers().
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
v2: Reduce the impenetrable code in emit_ubo_loads() by 23 lines by keeping
the ir_variable as the variable part of the offset from handle_rvalue(),
and track the constant offsets from that with a plain old integer value,
avoiding a bunch of temporary variables in the array and struct handling.
Also, fix file description doxygen.
v3: Fix a row vs col typo, and fix spelling in a comment.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
For the UBO lowering pass, I want to see the whole dereference chain for
replacing, not the innermost ir_dereference_variable.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Drivers will probably want to be able to take UBO references in a
shader like:
uniform ubo1 {
float a;
float b;
float c;
float d;
}
void main() {
gl_FragColor = vec4(a, b, c, d);
}
and generate a single aligned vec4 load out of the UBO. For intel,
this involves recognizing the shared offset of the aligned loads and
CSEing them out. Obviously that involves breaking things down to
loads from an offset from a particular UBO first. Thus, the driver
doesn't want to see
variable_ref(ir_variable("a")),
and even more so does it not want to see
array_ref(record_ref(variable_ref(ir_variable("a")),
"field1"), variable_ref(ir_variable("i"))).
where a.field1[i] is a row_major matrix.
Instead, we're going to make a lowering pass to break UBO references
down to expressions that are obvious to codegen, and amenable to
merging through CSE.
v2: Fix some partial thoughts in the ir_binop comment (review by Kenneth)
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
When converting var->location from pointing at the program's UniformBlocks to
pointing at the linked shader's UniformBlocks, I missed this change. It
usually worked out in the end because the two lists happen to be the same in
many testcases.
Fixes a valgrind complaint on
oglconform ubo-compile.cpp advanced.std140.2stage
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
As we get into supporting GL 3.x core, we come across more and more features
of the API that depend on the version number as opposed to just the extension
list. This will let us more sanely do version checks than "(VersionMajor == 3
&& VersionMinor >= 2) || VersionMajor >= 4".
v2: Fix a bad <= 30 check.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This turns on window system MSAA.
This patch changes the id of many GLX visuals and configs, but that
couldn't be prevented. I attempted to preserve the id's of extant configs
by appending the multisample configs to the end of the extant ones. But
somewhere, perhaps in the X server, the configs are reordered with
multisample configs interspersed among the singlesample ones.
Test results:
Tested with xonotic and `glxgears -samples 1` on Ivybridge.
No piglit regressions on Ivybridge.
On Sandybridge, passes 68/70 of oglconform's
winsys multisample tests. The two failing tests are:
multisample(advanced.pixelmap.depth)
multisample(advanced.pixelmap.depthCopyPixels)
These tests hang the gpu (on kernel 3.4.6) due to
a glDrawPixels/glReadPixels pair on an MSAA depth buffer. I don't expect
realworld apps to do that, so I'm not too concerned about the hang.
On Ivybridge, passes 69/70. The failing case is
multisample(advanced.line.changeWidth).
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
This function felt sloppy, so this patch cleans it up a little bit.
- Rename `color` to `i`. It is not a color value, only an iterator int.
- Move `depth_bits[0] = 0` into the non-accum loop because that is where
it used. The accum loop later overwrites depth_bits[0].
- Rename `depth_factor` to `num_depth_stencil_bits`.
- Redefine `msaa_samples_array` as static const because it is never
modified. Rename to `singlesample_samples`.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
If either argument to driConcatConfigs(a, b) is null or the empty list,
then simply return the other argument as the resultant list.
All callers were accomplishing that same behavior anyway. And each caller
accopmplished it with the same pattern. So this patch moves that external
pattern into the function.
Reviewed-by: <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
DRI2 configs were constructed in intelInitScreen2. That function already
does too much, so move verbatim the code for creating configs to a new
function, intel_screen_make_configs.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Add two new functions: intel_miptree_{map,unmap}_multisample, to which
intel_miptree_{map,unmap} dispatch. Only mapping flat, renderbuffer-like
miptrees are supported.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Move the opencoded construction and destruction of intel_miptree_map into
new functions, intel_miptree_attach_map and intel_miptree_release_map.
This patch prevents code duplication in a future commit that adds support
for mapping multisample miptrees.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Move the body of intel_miptree_map into a new function,
intel_miptree_map_singlesample. Now intel_miptree_map dispatches to the
new function. A future commit adds a multisample variant.
Ditto for intel_miptree_unmap.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Add function intel_renderbuffer_set_needs_downsample. It is a no-op
except on multisample winsys buffers shared with DRI2.
Mark the needed downsamples with the new function at two locations:
- Immediately after drawing is complete.
- After blitting.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Define a function, brw_blorp_blit_miptrees, that simply wraps
brw_blorp_blit_params + brw_blorp_exec with C calling conventions. This
enables intel_miptree.c, in a following commit, to perform blits with
blorp for the purpose of downsampling multisample miptrees.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Immediately after obtaining, with DRI2GetBuffersWithFormat, the DRM buffer
handle for a DRI2 buffer, we wrap that DRM buffer handle with a region and
a miptree. This patch additionally allocates an accompanying multisample
miptree if the DRI2 buffer is multisampled.
Since we do not yet advertise multisample GL configs, the code for
allocating the multisample miptree is currently inactive.
This patch adds the following fields to intel_mipmap_tree:
singlesample_mt
needs_downsample
and the following function stubs:
intel_miptree_downsample
intel_miptree_upsample
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Move the logic for creating the ancillary hiz and mcs miptress for winsys
and non-texture renderbuffers from intel_alloc_renderbuffer_storage to
intel_miptree_create_for_renderbuffer. Let's try to isolate complex
miptree logic to intel_mipmap_tree.c.
Without this refactor, code duplication would be required along the
intel_process_dri2_buffer codepath in order to create the mcs miptree.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Add a new param, num_samples, to intel_create_renderbuffer and
intel_create_private_renderbuffer.
No multisample GL config is yet advertised, so the value of num_samples is
currently 0. For server-owned winsys buffers, gl_renderbuffer::NumSamples
is not yet used.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com> (v1)
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Rename quantize_num_samples to intel_quantize_num_samples and change the
first param from struct intel_context* to struct intel_screen*. The
function will later be used by intelCreateBuffer, which is not bound to
any context but is bound to a screen.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com> (v1)
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
The comment referred to intel_tex_image_map/unmap, but should more
accurately refer to intel_miptree_map/unmap.
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Fixes uninitialized scalar field defect reported by Coverity.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
v2: Note that GLSL 4.3 has not been started, and that
ARB_compute_shader has been started in Gallium drivers.
Signed-off-by: Jason Wood <sandain@hotmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
KHR extension name is reserved for Khronos ratified extensions, and there is
no such thing as EGL_KHR_surfaceless_{gles1,gles2,opengl}. Replace these
three extensions with EGL_KHR_surfaceless_context since that extension
actually exists.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Since support for swrast version 2 was added (f55d027a), it has also been
required. In swrast_driver_extensions, version 2 is set for __DRI_SWRAST
extension. Remove the spurious version checks sprinked through the code.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Cc: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Previously an error would be generated if any attributes were specified when
creating a non-desktop OpenGL context. This was a mistake, and it will
prevent old drivers from working with new EGL libraries that add support for
the createContextAttribs interface. Instead, match the behavior of
EGL_KHR_create_context: allow versions that make sense, reject non-zero flags.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Cc: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Commit f0cecd43d6 moved the VUE map computation to be only once, at
VS compile time. However, it did so in slightly the wrong place: it
made the one call to brw_vue_compute_map happen right before the
allocation of dummy slots for replaced point sprite coordinates, causing
a different VUE map to be generated (at least on Ironlake).
Fixes a regression in Piglit's point-sprite test on Ironlake.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=46489
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Consider a texture call such as:
textureLod(s, coordinate, log2(...))
First, we begin setting up the sampler message by loading the texture
coordinates into MRFs, starting with m2. Then, we realize we need the
LOD, and go to compute it with:
ir->lod_info.lod->accept(this);
On Gen4-5, this will generate a SEND instruction to compute log2(),
loading the operand into m2, and clobbering our texcoord.
Similar issues exist on Gen6+. For example, nested texture calls:
textureLod(s1, c1, texture(s2, c2).x)
Any texturing call where evaluating the subexpression trees for LOD or
shadow comparitor would generate SEND instructions could potentially
break. In some cases (like register spilling), we get lucky and avoid
the issue by using non-overlapping MRF regions. But we shouldn't count
on that.
Fixes four Piglit test regressions on Gen4-5:
- glsl-fs-shadow2DGradARB-{01,04,07,cumulative}
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=52129
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
With the textureRect support and GL_CLAMP workarounds, it's grown
sufficiently that it deserves its own function. Separating it out
makes the original function much more readable.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Setting the texture offset bits in the message header involves very
specific hardware register descriptions. As such, I feel it's better
suited for the lower level "generate" layer that has direct access to
the weird register layouts, rather than at the fs_inst abstraction layer.
This also parallels the approach I took in the VS backend.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Use atom for sampler state. Does not provide new functionality
or fix any bug. Just a step toward full atom base r600g.
v2: Split seamless on r6xx/r7xx into it's own atom. Make sure it's
emited after sampler and with a pipeline flush before otherwise
it does not take effect.
Signed-off-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
...to look like update_fragment_samplers() code, as with the previous
commit. The next step would be to merge the two functions.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Less code. And as with softpipe, if/when we consolidate the pipe_context
functions for binding sampler state, this will make the llvmpipe changes
trivial.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The functions for setting samplers and sampler views for vertex,
fragment and geometry shaders were nearly identical. Now they
use shared code.
In the future, if the pipe_context functions for setting samplers
and sampler views for vert/frag/geom/compute are combined, this
will make updating the softpipe driver a snap.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Combine separate arrays for vertex/fragment/geometry samplers, etc into
one array indexed by PIPE_SHADER_x.
This allows us to collapse separate code for vertex/fragment/geometry
state into loops over the shader stage. More to come.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Fixes dereference before null check defect reported by Coverity.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Fixes uninitialized pointer read defect reported by Coverity.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Fixes dereference before null check defect reported by Coverity.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Merge the vertex/fragment versions of the cso_set/save/restore_samplers()
functions. Now we pass the shader stage (PIPE_SHADER_x) to the function
to indicate vertex/fragment/geometry samplers. For example:
cso_single_sampler(cso, PIPE_SHADER_FRAGMENT, unit, sampler);
This results in quite a bit of code reduction, fewer CSO functions and
support for geometry shaders.
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Fixes uninitialized scalar variable defect reported by Coverity.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
The GL_OES_mapbuffer extension is supported by OpenGL ES 1 and ES 2 so return
GL_MAP_WRITE_BIT for both ES versions, not just ES 1.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Before, the GLSL parser was getting rebuilt every time that scons was
run. The problem was scons was expecting a glsl_parser.hpp file but
we were generating a glsl_parser.h file.
Signed-off-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Windowed speed is of course way to slow, but fullscreen
works like a charm now.
Signed-off-by: Christian König <deathsimple@vodafone.de>
Reviewed-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Using the writemask in the sampler results in packet
VGPRS. For now just sample all components and let
llvm chose the right one.
Signed-off-by: Christian König <deathsimple@vodafone.de>
Reviewed-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
The backend is multiplying the offset by the numbers of
elements anyway, so doing it twice just makes everything
crash.
Signed-off-by: Christian König <deathsimple@vodafone.de>
Reviewed-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
The patch makes the SCons build with Intel Compiler successful.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Framebuffer blit needs to setup texture sampling with no reference to the
user's texturing state, and a sampler object lets us avoid a bunch of changes
to the user's state setup.
We don't bother caching the sampler object since we're changing parameters in
it based on the filtering option to glBlitFramebuffer().
Fixes piglit GL_ARB_sampler_objects/framebufferblit and rendering in l4d2 (our
setting of srgb decode wasn't being respected due to the user's sampler object
being active).
Signed-off-by: Pauli Nieminen <pauli.nieminen@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Sampler objects can be used to shadow texture object state without
modifying original application state. Decompression path feels a bit
like path where caching shouldn't happen. But as everything else is
cached already I decided to cache sampler state too.
Signed-off-by: Pauli Nieminen <pauli.nieminen@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
To allow meta module to use sample objects mesa GL functions need to be
visible and linkable for meta module.
Signed-off-by: Pauli Nieminen <pauli.nieminen@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
swrast needs to pass sampler object into all texture fetching functions
to use correct sampling state when sampler object is bound to the unit.
The changes were made using half manual regular expression replace.
v2: Fix NULL deref in _swrast_choose_triangle(), because the _Current
values aren't set yet, so we need to look at our texObj2D. (anholt)
Signed-off-by: Pauli Nieminen <pauli.nieminen@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
To allow meta acceleration operations to use sampler objects the
ARB_sampler_objects extension needs to be mandatory for all drivers.
Because the extension doesn't have any hardware dependencies it is
trivial to implement.
Signed-off-by: Pauli Nieminen <pauli.nieminen@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
CompareFailValue is part of Sampler state that needs to be read from
bound sampler object if present.
Signed-off-by: Pauli Nieminen <pauli.nieminen@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Fixed function fragment shader generator was incorrectly read texture
sampling state directly from texture object. To make sure that
ARB_sampler_object works correctly shader generator has to use the
bound sampler if one exist.
Signed-off-by: Pauli Nieminen <pauli.nieminen@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Preparation for the mandatory support of ARB_sampler_objects. I have tested
this patch with rv280 only.
Signed-off-by: Pauli Nieminen <pauli.nieminen@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
When I build tested radeon changes I noticed two warnings about format
size missmatch in 64bit. I decided to clean them to make relevant
compiler warnings easier to spot.
Signed-off-by: Pauli Nieminen <pauli.nieminen@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
ARB_sampler_objects is very simple software only extension to support. I want
to make it a mandatory extension for Mesa drivers to allow the meta module to
use it.
This patch add support for the extension to nouveau. It is completely untested
search and replace patch, except for flagging the texture state as needing to
be recomputed when a sampler object is present.
Signed-off-by: Pauli Nieminen <pauli.nieminen@linux.intel.com>
sRGBDecode state is part of sampler object state but mesa was missing
handlers to access the state. This patch adds the support for required
state changes and queries.
GL_EXT_texture_sRGB_decode issue 4:
"4) Should we add forward-looking support for ARB_sampler_objects?
RESOLVED: YES
If ARB_sampler_objects exists in the implementation, the sampler
objects should also include this parameter per sampler."
Fixes piglit GL_ARB_sampler_objects/GL_EXT_texture_sRGB_decode.
Signed-off-by: Pauli Nieminen <pauli.nieminen@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
GL_DEPTH_TEXTURE_MODE isn't meant to be part of sampler state based on
compatibility profile specifications.
OpenGL specification 4.1 compatibility 20100725 3.9.2:
"... The values accepted in the pname parameter
are TEXTURE_WRAP_S, TEXTURE_WRAP_T, TEXTURE_WRAP_R, TEXTURE_MIN_-
FILTER, TEXTURE_MAG_FILTER, TEXTURE_BORDER_COLOR, TEXTURE_MIN_-
LOD, TEXTURE_MAX_LOD, TEXTURE_LOD_BIAS, TEXTURE_COMPARE_MODE, and
TEXTURE_COMPARE_FUNC. Texture state listed in table 6.25 but not listed here and
in the sampler state in table 6.26 is not part of the sampler state, and remains in the
texture object."
The list of states is in Table 6.24 "Textures (state per texture
object)" instead of 6.25 mentioned in the specification text.
Same can be found from 3.3 compatibility specification.
Signed-off-by: Pauli Nieminen <pauli.nieminen@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This patch allows GL_SAMPLES to be set to either 0 or 1 on i965
platforms that don't support MSAA (those prior to Gen6). Setting
GL_SAMPLES=1 has the same effect as setting it to 0 on these platforms
(because MSAA is unsupported), but is distinguishable via the GL API.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=50165
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
EXT_framebuffer_multisample is a required subpart of
ARB_framebuffer_object, which means that we must support it even on
platforms that don't support MSAA. Fortunately
EXT_framebuffer_multisample allows for this by allowing GL_MAX_SAMPLES
to be set to 1.
This leads to a tricky quirk in the GL spec: since
GlRenderbufferStorageMultisamples() accepts any value for its
"samples" parameter up to and including GL_MAX_SAMPLES, that means
that on platforms that don't support MSAA, GL_SAMPLES is allowed to be
set to either 0 or 1. On platforms that do support MSAA, GL_SAMPLES=1
is not used; 0 means no MSAA, and 2 or higher means MSAA.
In other words, GL_SAMPLES needs to be interpreted as follows:
=0 no MSAA (possible on all platforms)
=1 no MSAA (only possible on platforms where MSAA unsupported)
>1 MSAA (only possible on platforms where MSAA supported)
This patch modifies all MSAA-related code to choose between
multisampling and single-sampling based on the condition (GL_SAMPLES >
1) instead of (GL_SAMPLES > 0) so that GL_SAMPLES=1 will be treated as
"no MSAA".
Note that since GL_SAMPLES=1 implies GL_SAMPLE_BUFFERS=1, we can no
longer use GL_SAMPLE_BUFFERS to distinguish between MSAA and non-MSAA
rendering.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Nearly the whole function body was contained in the 'else' branch. The
'if' branch did one thing: return early with an error. Clean things up by
moving all the code out of the 'else' branch. Decreases max nesting level
from 4 to 3.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
After commit "intel: Convert to using private depth/stencil buffers", we
request from DRI2GetBuffersWithFormat only the front left and back left
buffers. We no longer request depth and stencil buffers.
Assert that in intelAllocateBuffer and remove the related dead code.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
These assignments caused CFLAGS specified on the configure line to
appear twice in the final CFLAGS. Removing them makes the behavior
reasonable -- USER_CFLAGS are appended at the end of CFLAGS, allowing
the builder to override flags added by configure.ac like
-fno-strict-aliasing.
Reviewed-by: Adam Jackson <ajax@redhat.com>
Even on s390{,x} where there's no video card, you still want this so GLX
protocol works.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Adam Jackson <ajax@redhat.com>
This reverts commit 5d5af7d359.
It turns out the issue this was supposed to fix merely counter-acted
a bug in the hardware driver that I wasn't aware of.
The resource_resolve is not supposed to do sRGB conversion, period.
(This would violate the requirement that source and destination must
be of the same format).
no point in emitting aux scissor values if we
a) never enable them
b) never set the actual values
plus it is enough to have that aux scissor enable reg (which we never set to
enable) in one place not two.
There were several problems with these functions (which are a remnant
of dri1 hyperz mostly - should bring it back somehow someday).
First, it would always do a swrast clear if the buffer to clear was a fbo.
Second, for buffers we wouldn't handle the clear (I guess aux/accum?) we
would actually still have tried to clear that later even when we already
cleared it with swrast.
This addresses one issue raised in bug #51658 discovered by Eugene St Leger.
The assert is bogus since there's no problem with texture width/height being
2048 (the width/height programmed is width/height minus one).
OTOH though the programmed size for scissor rect should be width/height
minus one too otherwise bad things may happen (as it is inclusive, and there's
not enough bits for more than a value of 2047).
SI does not support 64-bit immediates natively, but llvm will generate
i64 immediates when indexing loads and stores (since SI has 64-bit
pointers). The i64 indices will always be small enough to fit into
32-bits (i.e. the high 32 bits will always be all zeros), so we can
treat these index values as 32-bits.
In tablegen, if two patterns match, the one that comes first in the file
is given preference. We want the SMRD IMM pattern to be given
preference, because it encodes the pointer offset in its immediate
field, which saves us an add instruction.
I ended up having to add rallocing of the ast_type_qualifier in order
to avoid pulling in ast.h for glsl_parser_extras.h, because I wanted
to track an ast_type_qualifier in the state.
Fixes piglit ARB_uniform_buffer_object/row-major.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Yes, you get to say things like "layout(row_major, column_major)" and
get column major.
Part of fixing piglit ARB_uniform_buffer_object/row_major.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This is like a stripped-down version of glGetActiveUniform that just
returns the name, since the other return values (type and size) of
that function are now meant to be handled with
glGetActiveUniformsiv().
Fixes piglit ARB_uniform_buffer_object/getactiveuniformname
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
The previous implementation required a flag in _mesa_glsl_parse_state
and line of code to initialize it for every version of the shading
language we intend to support. As we look to add 150, 330, 400, 410,
420, and beyond, this gets rather unwieldy.
This patch retains the switch statement (to reject, say, #version 111),
but removes all the bits. Code to check for ctx->API == API_OPENGL_CORE
could easily be added to the 110 and 120 cases to reject those.
v2: Use _mesa_is_desktop_gl to preserve the existing behavior in the
presence of the new API_OPENGL_CORE enumeration.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net> [v1]
Fixes some failures in getteximage-formats.
v2: Remove stray include, and drop extra test for encoding == GL_SRGB --
_mesa_get_srgb_format_linear() returns the same format if it wasn't SRGB.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=48120
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org> (v1)
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
It was using state->Const.GLSL_100ES, which is set if the driver
supports ARB_ES2_compatibility or we're in ES2 mode. Instead, it should
use state->language_version, as that represents the actual GLSL version
of the shader being compiled.
Since the correct logic is < 120 && !100, just make it == 110.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This will need to get refactored when we add support for core profiles
or forward-compatible contexts, but we may as well have it in the
meantime. This allows us to override the GLSL version and experiment.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Move installing osmesa.pc to drivers/osmesa, where it belongs better
This also restores the installation of gl.pc if we are building osmesa at the
same time as libGL, which was broken in commit 39785488 when the .pc
installation was converted to automake
v2:
Remove HAVE_OSMESA_DRIVER automake conditional, it's now pointless as we
will only be building in the drivers/osmesa directory if the condition it
checked was true.
Signed-off-by: Jon TURNEY <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This patch fixes this build failure with Intel Compiler.
src/gallium/auxiliary/util/u_format_tests.c(903): error: floating-point operation result is out of range
{PIPE_FORMAT_R16_FLOAT, PACKED_1x16(0xffff), PACKED_1x16(0x7c01), UNPACKED_1x1( NAN, 0.0, 0.0, 1.0)},
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Now that ir_quadop_vector exists, ir_last_binop and ir_last_opcode are
no longer the same. Only one place currently uses this enumeration, and
already handles ir_quadop_vector correctly.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Olivier Galibert <galibert@pobox.com>
It's more convenient to use shortcuts like glsl_type::bvec2_type than
the longwinded glsl_type::get_instance(GLSL_TYPE_BOOL, 2, 1).
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Olivier Galibert <galibert@pobox.com>
The hardware supports this format with no known quirks, so we may as
well enable it.
Alpha blending is not supported until Sandybridge, but as far as I can
tell, OpenGL doesn't require alpha blending on SNORM formats. Plus, we
already expose R8G8B8A8_SNORM which has a similar restriction.
Fixes 6 piglit texwrap-2D-*SNORM* cases,
gl-3.1/required-sized-texture-formats, and 10 oglconform snorm-textures
subcases
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
v2: fix tiling for small pitches, that finally makes
glxgears and readPixSanity work
Signed-off-by: Christian König <deathsimple@vodafone.de>
Reviewed-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
The format member of pipe_surface may differ from that of the
pipe_resource, which is used to communicate, for instance, whether
sRGB encode should be enabled in the resolve operation or not.
Fixes resolve to sRGB surfaces in mesa/st when GL_FRAMEBUFFER_SRGB
is disabled.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
sRGBEnabled should affect both textures and renderbuffers, so we need
to check/update the pipe_surface format for both.
Fixes, for instance, rendering appearing too bright in wine applications
using sRGB multisample renderbuffers.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Remove the check for pixel transfer ops. If any RGB/depth scale/bias
is in effect, it'll be applied in the glTexImage step.
If drawing stencil pixels we need to disable pixel transfer so that
alpha scale/bias are not applied to the stencil data.
These issues were spotted by Roland.
Fixes Blender performance issues reported in
http://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=47375
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Tested-by: Barto <mister.freeman@laposte.net>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
No functional change. This patch modifies intel_miptree_alloc_mcs to
allocate the 4x MCS buffer using MESA_FORMAT_R8 instead of
MESA_FORMAT_A8. In principle it doesn't matter, since we only access
the buffer using MCS-specific hardware mechanisms, so all that's
important is to use a format with the correct size. However,
MESA_FORMAT_A8 has enough unusual behaviours that it seems prudent to
avoid it.
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
It seems reset is not required for setting the max_wm_threads to 80
on gen6 GT2.
Increases performance in the Counter-Strike: Source video stress test
by 7.18% (n=5).
Signed-off-by: Zou Nan hai <nanhai.zou@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Tested-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The VCC register is tricky because the SALU views it as 64-bit, but the
VALU views it as 1-bit. In order to deal with this we've added some
special bitcast and binary operations to help convert from the 64-bit
SALU view to the 1-bit VALU view and vice versa.
If you want to change your compiler arguments, just set CFLAGS/CXXFLAGS.
Having Mesa have this separate variable is a great way to have your arguments
not thoroughly propagated to all compiler invocations.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
In all current uses, it was appended to CFLAGS, which already had -m32. If
you want to do some other flag supplied to compiler invocations, there's
CFLAGS/CXXFLAGS.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
No functional change. This patch modifies brw_blorp_blit.cpp to use
the ROUND_DOWN_TO macro instead of open-coded bit manipulations, for
clarity.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The emit->key.fkey info is only valid if we're generating a fragment shader.
We should not look at it if we're generating a vertex shader.
When generating a vertex shader, the value of emit->key.fkey.num_textures was
garbage and the loop over num_textures would read invalid data. At best
this would cause us to emit an unused constant. At worse, we could segfault.
Just by dumb luck, fkey.num_textures was usually a smallish integer.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Recently more files were removed from control to be auto-generated
in the dricore library. Android build was not able to locate the
new files if they were not created beforehand.
LOCAL_SRC_FILES includes some of those files and Android.gen.mk
re-defines this variable by filtering out the auto-generated files.
Unfortunately for this variable it is not the same to have the SRCDIR
variable defined as the current directory.
By re-defining SRCDIR for the autotools build the Android build system
is happy again and the new files were actually removed from the sources
to use the auto generated versions.
Also patch d5c1801a01 was partially reverted as the files
can not be compiled to the LOCAL_PATH, instead they should live on the
intermediates folder so that a clean can wipe them out.
v3: [chad] Fix the definition of SRCDIR in libdricore/Makefile.am.
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Charles <daniel.charles@intel.com>
XGetImage() will generate a BadMatch error if the source window isn't
visible. When that happens, create a new XImage. Fixes piglit 'select'
test failures with swrast/xlib driver.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Always allocate space for the inverse matrix in _math_matrix_ctr()
since we were always calling _math_matrix_alloc_inv() anyway.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
When computing a matrix inverse, if the determinant is too small we could hit
a divide by zero. There's a check to prevent this (we basically give up on
computing the inverse and return the identity matrix.) This patch loosens
this test to fix a lighting bug reported by Lars Henning Wendt.
v2: use abs(det) to handle negative values
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Tested-by: Lars Henning Wendt <lars.henning.wendt@gris.tu-darmstadt.de>
The sendc instruction causes the fragment shader thread to wait for
any dependent threads (i.e. threads rendering to overlapping pixels)
to complete before sending the message. We need to use sendc on the
first render target write in order to guarantee that fragment shader
outputs are written to the render target in the correct order.
Previously, we only used the "sendc" instruction when writing to
binding table index 0. This did the right thing for fragment shaders,
because our fragment shader back-ends always issue their first render
target write to binding table index 0. However, it did the wrong
thing for blorp, which performs its render target writes to binding
table index 1.
A more robust solution is to use sendc for all render target writes.
This should not produce any performance penalty, since after the first
sendc, all of the dependent threads will have completed.
For more information about sendc, see the Ivy Bridge PRM, Vol4 Part3
p218 (sendc - Conditional Send Message), and p54 (TDR Registers).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
A lot of code was still differentiating between between winsys and
user fbos by testing the fbo's name against zero. This converts
everything in the i915 and 965 drivers over to use _mesa_is_user_fbo()
and _mesa_is_winsys_fbo().
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
A lot of code was still differentiating between between winsys and
user fbos by testing the fbo's name against zero. This converts
everything in core mesa, the state tracker, and src/mesa/program over
to use _mesa_is_user_fbo() and _mesa_is_winsys_fbo().
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The OpenGL(R) ES Shading Language
Version 1.00 Revision 17 (12 May, 2009)
> 4.6.1 The Invariant Qualifier
> ... To force all output variables to be invariant, use the pragma
> #pragma STDGL invariant(all)
Signed-off-by: Oliver McFadden <oliver.mcfadden@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
We already provided these files on 'make install', but only created a
'libglapi.so' in the top-level lib/ convenience folder. We used to
create all three, but at some point in the build system churn, it broke.
Various applications (like the ES2 conformance suite) seem to link
against libglapi.so.0, so without these links, setting LD_LIBRARY_PATH
and LIBGL_DRIVERS_PATH can lead to using /usr/lib/libglapi.so.0 with
/home/whatever/libGL.so, which leads to API calls getting routed
incorrectly (i.e. glCompileShader -> _mesa_LinkProgramARB), which leads
to rage problems.
Preserve developer sanity...install links.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Ever since ctx->NativeIntegers was set, the conversion flag has been
PARAM_NO_CONVERT.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Since osmesa now has been converted to Makefile.am, an appropriate install: rule
is generated to install the shared libary, so we no longer need to do that in
src/mesa/Makefile.old
This leaves nothing in src/mesa/Makefile.old but the tags: rule, so move that to
Makefile.am and remove Makefile.old
Also, nothing now uses OSMESA_LIB_GLOB anymore, so remove it
Signed-off-by: Jon TURNEY <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Commit 6c6803f28d removed xm_image.[ch], and removed
xm_image.c, but not xm_image.h from the Makefile, this was subsequently carried over
into Makefile.am
Remove xm_image.h from Makfile.am. This allows 'make dist' to succeed, even if it
doesn't do anything useful
Signed-off-by: Jon TURNEY <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
"Use -no-undefined to assure libtool that the library has no
unresolved symbols at link time, so that libtool will build a shared
library on platforms require that all symbols are resolved when the
library is linked."
Signed-off-by: Jon TURNEY <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
"Use -no-undefined to assure libtool that the library has no
unresolved symbols at link time, so that libtool will build a shared
library on platforms require that all symbols are resolved when the
library is linked."
Signed-off-by: Jon TURNEY <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
MCS buffers use 32 bits per pixel in 8x MSAA, and 8 bits per pixel in
4x MSAA. This patch adjusts the format we use to allocate the buffer
so that enough memory is set aside for 8x MSAA.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The code to emit 3DSTATE_SAMPLE_MASK was already correct for 8x
MSAA--this patch just removes an assertion that would have prevented
it from being used for 8x MSAA.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This patch updates the blorp functions encode_msaa() and decode_msaa()
to properly handle the encoding of IMS MSAA buffers when
num_samples=8.
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
When operating in persample dispatch mode, the blorp engine would
previously assume that subspan N always represented sample N (this is
correct assuming 4x MSAA and a 16-wide dispatch). In order to support
8x MSAA, we must compute which sample is associated with each subspan,
using the "Starting Sample Pair Index" field in the thread payload.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
When rendering to an IMS MSAA surface on Gen7, blorp sets up the
rendering pipeline as though it were rendering to a single-sampled
surface; accordingly it must adjust the size of the primitive it sends
down the pipeline to account for the interleaving of samples in an IMS
surface.
This patch modifies the size adjustment code to properly handle 8x
MSAA, which makes room for the extra samples by using an interleaving
pattern that is twice as wide as 4x MSAA.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This patch adds a num_samples argument to the blorp function
manual_blend(), allowing it to be told how many samples need to be
blended together. Previously it assumed 4x MSAA, since that was all
we supported.
We also bump up LOG2_MAX_BLEND_SAMPLES from 2 to 3, so that
manual_blend() will be able to handle 8x MSAA.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
When the client program uses glDrawBuffer() or glDrawBuffers() to
select more than one color buffer for drawing into, and then performs
a blit, we need to blit into every single enabled draw buffer.
+2 oglconforms.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=50407
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
This patch rearranges the order of steps performed by a blorp blit
from this:
- Sync up state of window system buffers.
- Find buffers.
- Find miptrees.
- Make sure buffer formats match.
- Handle mirroring.
- Make sure width and height match.
- Handle clipping/scissoring.
- Account for window system origin conventions.
- Do depth resolves, if applicable.
- Do the blit.
- Record the need for a future HiZ resolve, if applicable.
To this:
- Sync up state of window system buffers.
- Handle mirroring.
- Make sure width and height match.
- Handle clipping/scissoring.
- Account for window system origin conventions.
- Find buffers.
- Make sure buffer formats match.
- Find miptrees.
- Do depth resolves, if applicable.
- Do the blit.
- Record the need for a future HiZ resolve, if applicable.
The steps are the same, but they are now performed in an order that
will make it possible to implement correct DrawBuffers support. Note
that the last four steps are now in a separate function
(do_blorp_blit), since they will need to be executed repeatedly when
DrawBuffers support is added.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Previously, the blorp engine would fall back to swrast if the source
or destination of a blit had no associated miptree. This was
unnecessary, since _mesa_BlitFramebufferEXT() already takes care of
making the blit silently succeed if there are no buffers bound, so the
fallback paths could never actually happen in practice.
Removing these fallback paths will simplify the implementation of
correct DrawBuffers support in blorp.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
This patch modifies the order of operations in the blorp engine so
that clipping and scissoring are performed before adjusting the
coordinates to account for the difference in origin convention between
window system buffers and framebuffer objects. Previously, we would
do clipping and scissoring after adjusting for origin conventions, so
we would get scissoring wrong in window system buffers.
Fixes Piglit test "fbo-scissor-blit window".
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
When checking that the source and destination dimensions match, we
don't need to store the width and height in variables; doing so just
risks confusion since right after the check, we do clipping and
scissoring, which may alter the width and height.
No functional change.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
On Gen6, multisampled null render targets don't seem to work
properly--they cause the GPU to hang. So, as a workaround, we render
into a dummy color buffer.
Fortunately this situation (multisampled rendering without a color
buffer) is rare, and we don't have to waste too much memory, because
we can give the workaround buffer a very small pitch.
Fixes piglit test "EXT_framebuffer_multisample/no-color {2,4}
depth-computed *" on Gen6.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
The HW docs say that the width and height of null render targets need
to match the width and height of the corresponding depth and/or
stencil buffers, and that they need to be marked as Y-tiled. Although
leaving these values at 0 doesn't seem to cause any ill effects, it
seems wise to follow the documented requirements.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Previously, we used the number of samples in draw buffer 0 to
determine whether to set up the 3D pipeline for multisampling. Using
the visual is cleaner, and has the benefit of working properly when
there is no color buffer.
Fixes all piglit tests "EXT_framebuffer_multisample/no-color" on Gen7.
On Gen6, the "depth-computed" variants of these tests still fail; this
will be addresed in a later patch.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
This patch ensures that Visual.samples and Visual.sampleBuffers are
set correctly even in the case where there is no color buffer.
Previously, these values would retain their default value of 0 in this
circumstance, even if the depth or stencil buffer was multisampled.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Mesa misses a few checks when compiling on a uclibc system
which cause it to fall back on glibc-ism. This patch
addresses those issues.
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Anthony G. Basile <blueness@gentoo.org>
The kernel streamout support was supposed to get into 3.3 along
the tiling change and thus use the same kernel version bump of
2.13 to report userspace that streamout register were supported.
This is not what happen. So as streamout kernel support did not
bump the kernel driver version, rely on kernel 2.14 version bump
to know if streamout is enabled or not. Which means you need at
least 3.4 kernel.
Signed-off-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
The error was being set on the non-error path, rather
than the error path.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
For 'non-legacy' contexts we will want to generate an error
if an uninstalled function is called.
The effect of this change will be that we can avoid installing
legacy functions, and they will then generate an error as
needed for deprecated functions in GL >= 3.1.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Commit 2d4b77c7 (automake: Convert src/mesa/drivers/x11/Makefile to
automake, 2012-06-12) dropped the old Makefile, which used GL_LIB, and
replaced it with a Makefile.am hard-coding the name "GL". This broke
handling of --enable-mangling and --with-gl-lib-name options which
depend on GL_LIB to specify the GL library name.
Use "@GL_LIB@" in src/mesa/drivers/x11/Makefile.am to configure the
library name. Also use this approach to simplify src/glx/Makefile.am
and drop the HAVE_MANGLED_GL conditional. While at it, fix the
compatibility link we create in "lib" for the software-only driver to
use version GL_MAJOR instead of hard-coding "1".
Reviewed-by: Dan Nicholson <dbn.lists@gmail.com>
This fixes the piglit EXT_framebuffer_multisample/bitmap tests.
Note that we must not rely on ctx->DrawBuffer when flushing the cache, because
that's already updated with a new framebuffer. We want to draw into the old
framebuffer where glBitmap was called.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Testing shows that the standard JIT engine retrofited with AVX support is quite
stable and as capable to handle AVX instructions as MC-JIT is.
And the old JIT is much more memory efficient, as we don't need to
allocate one engine instance per shader, as we do for MC-JIT due to its
incompleteness.
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
When X is running it is neccesary for pipe_loader to authenticate with
DRM, in order to be able to use the device.
This makes it possible to run OpenCL programs while X is running.
v2:
- Fix C++ style comments
- Drop Xlib-xcb dependency
- Close the X connection when done
- Split auth code into separate function
Reviewed-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Francisco Jerez <currojerez@riseup.net>
Calling glDeleteShader() should mark shaders as pending for deletion,
but shouldn't decrement the refcount every time. Otherwise, repeated
glDeleteShader() is not safe.
This is particularly bad since glDeleteProgram() frees shaders: if you
first call glDeleteShader() on the shaders attached to the program (thus
decrementing the refcount), then called glDeleteProgram(), it would try
to free them again (decrementing the refcount another time), causing
a refcount > 0 assertion to fail.
Similar to commit d950a778.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
If the pack type is not supported, use _mesa_problem
rather than asserting.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
_mesa_is_integer_format is moved to formats.c and renamed
as _mesa_is_enum_format_integer.
_mesa_is_format_unsigned, _mesa_is_type_integer,
_mesa_is_type_unsigned, and _mesa_is_enum_format_or_type_integer
are added.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
llvm-3.2svn r160587 moved createBoundsCheckingPass from
lib/Transforms/Scalar to lib/Transforms/Instrumentation.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Except for a couple of explicit uses, _mesa_inv_sqrtf was disabled since
its addition in 2003 (see f9b1e524).
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Temporarily disabled since 2003 (see 386578c5b).
This saves us from calling sqrt() 128 times to generate the sqrttab in
one_time_init().
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Found by compiler warning:
i830_texstate.c:131:28: warning: argument to 'sizeof' in 'memset' call
is the same expression as the destination; did you mean to
dereference it? [-Wsizeof-pointer-memaccess]
memset(state, 0, sizeof(state));
~~~~~ ^~~~~
On 64-bit systems, memset here would write an extra 4 bytes.
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
This can potentially cut shader program size by a factor of 4 for 4-wide
execution respectively 2 for 8-wide execution and while this ratios aren't
quite reached for more complex shaders it can be close.
Could not really measure a performance difference so far except for trivial
shaders (glxgears).
There seems to be a fair amount of unnecessary move's generated especially
at the beginning it might be possible to optimize those away somehow.
Things aren't quite as clean, some additional stuff needs to be done for
keeping both paths working (though llvm might be able to optimize this away).
glxgears seems to lose about 5-10% of performance, looking at the generated
shaders this is actually less than I'd think it would be - both 4 and 8-wide
shaders, despite containing a loop actually have about 10% more instructions
in total, and will have roughly 50% more executed instructions (though mostly
cheap ones). Need to figure out how to reduce overhead...
v2: keep complex interpolation for 4-wide mode, adapt to interface changes.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This thread count is only supposed to be enabled when "WIZ Hashing Disable in
GT_MODE register enabled." I've always been confused whether that means the
bit in the register should be 1 or 0. For my IVB GT2's register 0x7008 value
of 0x0, this appears to work fine.
Improves l4d2 performance at 640x480 by 0.88 +/- 0.11% (n=88). Improves
performance with rasterization at 1280x1024 by 1.45% +/- 0.36% (n=6).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Now that we finally have a list of uniform blocks in the linked shader
program, we can tell what their indices are.
Fixes piglit GL_ARB_uniform_buffer_object/getuniformblockindex.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
At this point in the linking, we've totally lost track of the struct
gl_uniform_buffer that this pointed to in the original unlinked
shader, so we do a nasty n^2 walk to find it the new one based on the
variable name.
Note that these point into the shader's list of gl_uniform_buffers,
not the linked program's.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
We'll need to propagate the UBO fields to the uniform storage records
before we can handle the other pnames.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This is a single entrypoint that maps from a series of names to the
indices of those names within the active uniforms list. Each index is
like glGetUniformLocation()'s return value, except that it doesn't
encode an array offset.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
With the upcoming GL_ARB_uniform_buffer_object changes, the only
other caller that will want the cooked value is state_tracker.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
We're going to need this structure to cross-validate the uniform
blocks between shader stages, since unused ir_variables might get
dropped. It's also the place we store the RowMajor qualifier, which
is not part of the GLSL type (since that would cause a bunch of type
equality checks to fail).
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Someone tried to be clever and "optimized" add_vertex_data2() to just use
two points for the texture coordinates and then reuse individual
components. Sadly this is not how matrix multiplication works.
Fixes rendercheck -t tmcoords
Signed-off-by: Lucas Stach <dev@lynxeye.de>
Previously, on Gen7, when texturing from a depth or stencil surface,
the blorp engine would configure the 3D pipeline as though the input
surface was non-multisampled, and perform the necessary coordinate
transformations in the fragment shader to account for the IMS layout.
This meant outputting a lot of extra fragment shader code, and it
raised some uncertainty about how to deal with very large surfaces.
This patch modifies blorp to configure the 3D pipeline properly for
IMS layout when reading from depth and stencil surfaces.
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Previously, on Gen7, compute_msaa_layout_for_pipeline() would verify
that IMS layout is not used. However, now that we configure
SURFACE_STATE correctly for IMS surfaces, IMS layout is available.
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
This patch modifies gen7_set_surface_num_multisamples() to set up the
SURFACE_STATE appropriately for texturing from IMS format MSAA
surfaces (which are only used on Gen7 for depth and stencil buffers).
Since the function now sets more than just the number of multisamples,
it's been renamed to gen7_set_surface_msaa().
This will make it possible to remove some kludginess from the blorp
engine.
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
When downsampling a compressed multisampled surface, we can take a
shortcut to downsample any pixels that were completely covered by a
single primitive. In this case, the first color value we fetch is the
correct final color for the downsampled pixel, so we can skip the rest
of the blending operation.
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
When downsampling an integer-format buffer on Gen7, we need to use the
"avg" instruction rather than the "add" instruction, to ensure that we
don't overflow the range of 32-bit integers. Also, we need to use the
proper register type (BRW_REGISTER_TYPE_D or BRW_REGISTER_TYPE_UD) for
intermediate color data and for writing to the render target.
Note: this patch causes blorp to use the proper register type for all
operations (downsampling, upsampling, and ordinary blits). Strictly
speaking, this is only necessary for downsampling, because the other
operations exclusively use MOV instructions on the color data. But
it's simpler to use the proper register type in all cases.
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
When downsampling from an MSAA image to a single-sampled image, it is
inevitable that some loss of numerical precision will occur, since we
have to use 32-bit floating point registers to hold the intermediate
results while blending. However, it seems reasonable to expect that
when all samples corresponding to a given pixel have the exact same
color value, there will be no loss of precision.
Previously, we averaged samples as follows:
blend = (((sample[0] + sample[1]) + sample[2]) + sample[3]) / 4
This had the potential to lose numerical precision when all samples
have the same color value, since ((sample[0] + sample[1]) + sample[2])
may not be precisely representable as a 32-bit float, even if the
individual samples are.
This patch changes the formula to:
blend = ((sample[0] + sample[1]) + (sample[2] + sample[3])) / 4
This avoids any loss of precision in the event that all samples are
the same, by ensuring that each addition operation adds two equal
values.
As a side benefit, this puts the formula in the form we will need in
order to implement correct blending of integer formats.
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
From the Ivy Bridge PRM, Vol4 Part3 p152:
"The avg instruction performs component-wise integer average of
src0 and src1 and stores the results in dst. An integer average
uses integer upward rounding. It is equivalent to increment one to
the addition of src0 and src1 and then apply an arithmetic right
shift to this intermediate value."
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
The kill_emitted variable was duplicating the functionality of
gl_fragment_program::UsesKill. There's no need for both.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Previously, the code for setting this flag for GLSL programs was
duplicated in three places: brw_link_shader(), glsl_to_tgsi_visitor,
and ir_to_mesa_visitor. In addition to the unnecessary duplication,
there was a performance problem on i965: brw_link_shader() set the
flag before doing its final round of optimizations, which meant that
if the optimizations managed to eliminate all the discard operations,
the flag would still be set, resulting (at least in theory) in slower
performance.
This patch consolidates all of the code that sets UsesKill for GLSL
programs into do_set_program_inouts(), which already is doing a
similar job for UsesDFdy, and which occurs after i965's final round of
optimizations.
Non-GLSL programs (ARB programs and the state tracker's glBitmap
program) are unaffected.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Move it to native_wayland_drm_bufmgr_helper.c which only gets compiled when
wayland is enabled and which already includes the right headers.
Signed-off-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
The cube sampler generates two-dimensional texture coordinates and
hence passes NULL for the array for the third one. The actual 2D
sampler, lower in the pipe, knew not to used that array since it
didn't need it. But the samplers have become single-texel and the
coordinate array dereference has been moved up one step, to a level
where the code does not know only two coordinates are used. Hence the
segfault.
The simplest fix by far is to add a third dummy coordinate array in
the call to the next pipe step, which will be dereferenced to an
harmless 0 which then will be happily ignored by the sampler.
Fixes https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=52250
Signed-off-by: Olivier Galibert <galibert@pobox.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
We also reuse EGL_TEXTURE_RGBA and EGL_TEXTURE_RGB, adding only the new
planar YUV texture formats: EGL_TEXTURE_Y_U_V_WL, EGL_TEXTURE_Y_UV_WL and
EGL_TEXTURE_Y_XUXV_WL.
Signed-off-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
The i965 back-end needs to compile dFdy() differently for FBOs and
window system framebuffers, because Y coordinates are flipped between
the two (see commit 82d2596: i965: Compute dFdy() correctly for FBOs).
This patch avoids unnecessarily recompiling shaders that don't use
dFdy(), by only setting render_to_fbo in the wm program key if the
shader actually uses dFdy().
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This patch updates the ir_set_program_inouts_visitor so that it also
sets gl_fragment_program::UsesDFdy.
This is a bit of a hack (since dFdy() isn't an input or an output),
but there's no other obvious visitor to squeeze this functionality
into, and it would be silly to create a brand new visitor just for
this purpose.
v2: use local 'fprog' var to avoid repeated casting.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
The i965 back-end needs to compile dFdy() differently for FBOs and
window system framebuffers, because Y coordinates are flipped between
the two (see commit 82d2596: i965: Compute dFdy() correctly for FBOs).
This boolean will allow it to avoid unnecessarily recompiling shaders
that don't use dFdy().
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Unigine Heaven (at least) has a bug where it incorrectly uses the
GL_ARB_blend_func_extended extension.
Dual source blending allows two color outputs per render target;
individual shader outputs can be assigned to be either the first or
second blending input by setting the 'index' via one of two methods:
- An API call: glBindFragDataLocationIndexed()
- The GLSL 'layout' qualifier provided by GL_ARB_explicit_attrib_location
Both of these only work on user defined fragment shader outputs; it's an
error to use either on built-in outputs like gl_FragData.
Unigine uses gl_FragData and gl_FragColor exclusively, and doesn't even
attempt to use either method to set index == 1. However, it does set
the blending function to SRC1 enums, which requires a fragment shader
output with index == 1 or else rendering is undefined.
In other words, enabling ARB_blend_func_extended causes Unigine to
render incorrectly, resulting in an apparent regression, even though our
driver code (as far as I can tell) is perfectly fine.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=50291
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Previously, if we were spilling the result of a texture call, we would store
all 4 regs, then for each use of one of those regs as the source of an
instruction, we would unspill all 4 regs even though only one was needed.
In both lightsmark and l4d2 with my current graphics config, the shaders that
produce spilling do so on split GRFs, so this doesn't help them out. However,
in a capture of the l4d2 shaders with a different snapshot and playing the
game instead of using a demo, it reduced one shader from 2817 instructions to
2179, due to choosing a now-cheaper texture result to spill instead of piles
of texcoords.
v2: Fix comment noted by Ken, and fix the if condition associated with it for
the current state of what constitutes a partial write of the destination.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org> (v1)
There's one instance of a potential behavior change: propagate_constants may
now propagate into a part of a vgrf after a different part of it was
overwritten by a send that returns multiple registers. I don't think we ever
generate IR that meets that condition, but it's something to note if we bisect
behavior change to this.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
In these places, we care about any sort of send that hits more than one reg,
not just textures. We don't yet have anything else returning more than one
reg, so there's no change.
v2: Use mlen instead of is_tex() for the is-it-a-send check.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
"count" is a more useful name, since most of the time we're using it for
looping over the variables.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
OpenGL specification 3.3 (page 196), section 4.1.3 says:
If drawbuffer zero is not NONE and the buffer it references has an
integer format, the SAMPLE_ALPHA_TO_COVERAGE and SAMPLE_ALPHA_TO_ONE
operations are skipped."
This should work properly even if there are other draw buffers that
are not in integer format.
This patch makes following piglit tests pass on mesa:
int-draw-buffers-alpha-to-coverage
int-draw-buffers-alpha-to-one
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
This patch churns a lot because it needs to change 4-wide filters into
single pixel filters, since each fragment may use a different filter.
The only case not entirely supported is the anisotropic filtering.
Not sure what we want to do there, since a full quad is required by
that filter.
Signed-off-by: Olivier Galibert <galibert@pobox.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
From the GL 3.0 spec, section 4.3.3, in the documentation for
CopyPixels():
"An INVALID_OPERATION error will be generated if the object bound
to READ_FRAMEBUFFER_BINDING is framebuffer complete and the value
of SAMPLE_BUFFERS is greater than zero."
The same applies to CopyTexImage...() and CopyTexSubImage...()
functions, since they are defined in terms of CopyPixels().
Previously we were generating an INVALID_FRAMEBUFFER_OPERATION error
in these cases.
Fixes piglit tests
"EXT_framebuffer_multisample/negative-{copypixels,copyteximage}".
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Issues fixed:
- set_vs_sampler_views for evergreen is now properly implemented.
- Added the missing inval_texture_cache call for evergreen.
- have_depth_texture was sometimes incorrectly set to false on evergreen even
if there were depth textures in other shader stages. To fix this, set it
to true once and never set it to false again. It's stupid, but it matches
the r600 code. The proper fix is left to another patch.
- Optimizaton: The sampler views which aren't changed aren't updated.
This is a leftover from:
commit fe1fd67556
Author: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Date: Sun Jul 8 03:10:37 2012 +0200
r600g: don't flush depth textures set as colorbuffers
If only some buffers are changed, the other ones don't have to re-emitted.
This uses bitmasks of enabled and dirty buffers just like
emit_constant_buffers does.
* Also add mcjit in the non-OpenCL case.
* Replace hardcoded llvm-config with $LLVM_CONFIG everywhere.
Signed-off-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellad <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
Helps spotting and removing the obsolete generated files, which otherwise break
the build.
Signed-off-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This is neccessary for linking the llvmpipe tests. It appears this
dependency was introduced by the "wider native register" changes.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
It's been broken (using NULL getBuffersWithFormat() instead of
getBuffers()) due to a copy and paste error for a year now.
GetBuffersWithFormat has been around since 2009, so I don't feel any
guilt in not supporting it.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This means that GLX buffer sharing of these no longer works. On the
other hand, just *look* at this code reduction.
v2:
- [chad] Fix intelCreateBuffer for gen < 6. When the branch for
!screen->hw_has_separate_stencil was taken,
intel_create_private_renderbuffer was incorrectly not used.
- [chad] Remove all code in intel_process_dri2_buffer for processing
depth, stencil, and hiz buffers. That code is now dead.
CC: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
commit '7250cd506baa0bd4649b30d87509cdd0cbc06a57'
changes struct gbm_bo, renaming it's 'pitch' to 'stride'.
This applies to Gallium.
Signed-off-by: Elvis Lee <kwangwoong.lee@lge.com>
Previously, if you ran make followed by make check it would work, but
if you just ran make check the test program would fail to compile.
Reviewed-by: Jon TURNEY <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>
Squashed commit of the following:
commit 7acb7b4f60dc505af3dd00dcff744f80315d5b0e
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Mon Jul 9 17:46:31 2012 +0100
draw: Don't use dynamically sized arrays.
Not supported by MSVC.
commit 5810c28c83647612cb372d1e763fd9d7780df3cb
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Mon Jul 9 17:44:16 2012 +0100
gallivm,llvmpipe: Don't use expressions with PIPE_ALIGN_VAR().
MSVC doesn't accept exceptions in _declspec(align(...)). Use a
define instead.
commit 8aafd1457ba572a02b289b3f3411e99a3c056072
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Mon Jul 9 17:41:56 2012 +0100
gallium/util: Make u_cpu_detect.h header C++ safe.
commit 5795248350771f899cfbfc1a3a58f1835eb2671d
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Mon Jul 2 12:08:01 2012 +0100
gallium/util: Add ULL suffix to large constants.
As suggested by Andy Furniss: it looks like some old gcc versions
require it.
commit 4c66c22727eff92226544c7d43c4eb94de359e10
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Fri Jun 29 13:39:07 2012 +0100
gallium/util: Truly disable INF/NAN tests on MSVC.
Thanks to Brian for spotting this.
commit 8bce274c7fad578d7eb656d9a1413f5c0844c94e
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Fri Jun 29 13:39:07 2012 +0100
gallium/util: Disable INF/NAN tests on MSVC.
Somehow they are not recognized as constants.
commit 6868649cff8d7fd2e2579c28d0b74ef6dd4f9716
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Thu Jul 5 15:05:24 2012 +0200
gallivm: Cleanup the 2 x 8 float -> 16 ub special path in lp_build_conv.
No behaviour change intended, like 7b98455fb40c2df84cfd3cdb1eb7650f67c8a751.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
commit 5147a0949c4407e8bce9e41d9859314b4a9ccf77
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Thu Jul 5 14:28:19 2012 +0200
gallivm: (trivial) fix issues with multiple-of-4 texture fetch
Some formats can't handle non-multiple of 4 fetches I believe, but
everything must support length 1 and multiples of 4.
So avoid going to scalar fetch (which is very costly) just because length
isn't 4.
Also extend the hack to not use shift with variable count for yuv formats to
arbitrary length (larger than 1) - doesn't matter how many elements we
have we always want to avoid it unless we have variable shift count
instruction (which we should get with avx2).
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
commit 87ebcb1bd71fa4c739451ec8ca89a7f29b168c08
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Wed Jul 4 02:09:55 2012 +0200
gallivm: (trivial) fix typo for wrap repeat mode in linear filtering aos code
This would lead to bogus coordinates at the edges.
(undetected by piglit because this path is only taken for block-based
formats).
Signed-off-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
commit 3a42717101b1619874c8932a580c0b9e6896b557
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Tue Jul 3 19:42:49 2012 +0100
gallivm: Fix TGSI integer translation with AVX.
commit d71ff104085c196b16426081098fb0bde128ce4f
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Fri Jun 29 15:17:41 2012 +0100
llvmpipe: Fix LLVM JIT linear path.
It was not working properly because it was looking at the JIT function
before it was actually compiled.
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
commit a94df0386213e1f5f9a6ed470c535f9688ec0a1b
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Thu Jun 28 18:07:10 2012 +0100
gallivm: Refactor lp_build_broadcast(_scalar) to share code.
Doesn't really change the generated assembly, but produces more compact IR,
and of course, makes code more consistent.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
commit 66712ba2731fc029fa246d4fc477d61ab785edb5
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Wed Jun 27 17:30:13 2012 +0100
gallivm: Make LLVMContextRef a singleton.
There are any places inside LLVM that depend on it. Too many to attempt
to fix.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
commit ff5fb7897495ac263f0b069370fab701b70dccef
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Thu Jun 28 18:15:27 2012 +0200
gallivm: don't use 8-wide texture fetch in aos path
This appears to be a slight loss usually.
There are probably several reasons for that:
- fetching itself is scalar
- filtering is pure int code hence needs splitting anyway, same
for the final texel offset calculations
- texture wrap related code, which can be done 8-wide, is slightly more
complex with floats (with clamp_to_edge) and float operations generally
more costly hence probably not much faster overall
- the code needed to split when encountering different mip levels for the
quads, adding complexity
So, just split always for aos path (but leave it 8-wide for soa, since we
do 8-wide filtering there when possible).
This should certainly be revisited if we'd have avx2 support.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
commit ce8032b43dcd8e8d816cbab6428f54b0798f945d
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Wed Jun 27 18:41:19 2012 +0200
gallivm: (trivial) don't extract fparts variable if not needed
Did not have any consequences but unnecessary.
commit aaa9aaed8f80dc282492f62aa583a7ee23a4c6d5
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Wed Jun 27 18:09:06 2012 +0200
gallivm: fix precision issue in aos linear int wrap code
now not just passes at a quick glance but also with piglit...
If we do the wrapping with floats, we also need to set the
weights accordingly. We can potentially end up with different
(integer) coordinates than what the integer calculations would
have chosen, which means the integer weights calculated previously
in this case are completely wrong. Well at least that's what I think
happens, at least recalculating the weights helps.
(Some day really should refactor all the wrapping, so we do whatever is
fastest independent of 16bit int aos or 32bit float soa filtering.)
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
commit fd6f18588ced7ac8e081892f3bab2916623ad7a2
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Wed Jun 27 11:15:53 2012 +0100
gallium/util: Fix parsing of options with underscore.
For example
GALLIVM_DEBUG=no_brilinear
which was being parsed as two options, "no" and "brilinear".
commit 09a8f809088178a03e49e409fa18f1ac89561837
Author: James Benton <jbenton@vmware.com>
Date: Tue Jun 26 15:00:14 2012 +0100
gallivm: Added a generic lp_build_print_value which prints a LLVMValueRef.
Updated lp_build_printf to share common code.
Removed specific lp_build_print_vecX.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
commit e59bdcc2c075931bfba2a84967a5ecd1dedd6eb0
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Wed May 16 15:00:23 2012 +0100
draw,llvmpipe: Avoid named struct types on LLVM 3.0 and later.
Starting with LLVM 3.0, named structures are meant not for debugging, but
for recursive data types, previously also known as opaque types.
The recursive nature of these types leads to several memory management
difficulties. Given that we don't actually need recursive types, avoid
them altogether.
This is an attempt to address fdo bugs 41791 and 44466. The issue is
somewhat random so there's no easy way to check how effective this is.
Cherry-picked from 9af1ba565d
commit df6070f618a203c7a876d984c847cde4cbc26bdb
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Wed Jun 27 14:42:53 2012 +0200
gallivm: (trivial) fix typo in faster aos linear int wrap code
no longer crashes, now REALLY tested.
commit d8f98dce452c867214e6782e86dc08562643c862
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Tue Jun 26 18:20:58 2012 +0200
llvmpipe: (trivial) remove bogus optimization for float aos repeat wrap
This optimization for nearest filtering on the linear path generated
likely bogus results, and the int path didn't have any optimizations
there since the only shader using force_nearest apparently uses
clamp_to_edge not repeat wrap anyway.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
commit c4e271a0631087c795e756a5bb6b046043b5099d
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Tue Jun 26 23:01:52 2012 +0200
gallivm: faster repeat wrap for linear aos path too
Even if we already have scaled integer coords, it's way faster to use
the original float coord (plus some conversions) rather than use URem.
The choice of what to do for texture wrapping is not really tied to int
aos or float soa filtering though for some modes there can be some gains
(because of easier weight calculations).
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
commit 1174a75b1806e92aee4264ffe0ffe7e70abbbfa3
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Tue Jun 26 14:39:22 2012 +0200
gallivm: improve npot tex wrap repeat in linear soa path
URem gets translated into series of scalar divisions so
just about anything else is faster.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
commit f849ffaa499ed96fa0efd3594fce255c7f22891b
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Tue Jun 26 00:40:35 2012 +0100
gallivm: (trivial) fix near-invisible shift-space typo
I blame the keyboard.
commit 5298a0b19fe672aebeb70964c0797d5921b51cf0
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Mon Jun 25 16:24:28 2012 +0200
gallivm: add new intrinsic helper to deal with arbitrary vector length
This helper will split vectors which are too large for the hw, or expand
them if they are too small, so a caller of a function using intrinsics which
uses such sizes need not split (or expand) the vectors manually and the
function will still use the intrinsic instead of dropping back to generic
llvm code. It can also accept scalars for use with pseudo-vector intrinsics
(only useful for float arguments, all x86 scalar simd float intrinsics use
4vf32).
Only used for lp_build_min/max() for now (also added the scalar float case
for these while there). (Other basic binary functions could use it easily,
whereas functions with a different interface would need different helpers.)
Expanding vectors isn't widely used, because we always try to use
build contexts with native hw vector sizes. But it might (or not) be nicer
if this wouldn't need to be done, the generated code should in theory stay
the same (it does get hit by lp_build_rho though already since we
didn't have a intrinsic for the scalar lp_build_max case before).
v2: incorporated Brian's feedback, and also made the scalar min/max case work
instead of crash (all scalar simd float intrinsics take 4vf32 as argument,
probably the reason why it wasn't used before).
Moved to lp_bld_intr based on José's request, and passing intrinsic size
instead of length.
Ideally we'd derive the source type info from the passed in llvm value refs
and process some llvmtype return type so we could handle intrinsics where
the source and destination type isn't the same (like float/int conversions,
packing instructions) but that's a bit too complicated for now.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
commit 01aa760b99ec0b2dc8ce57a43650e83f8c1becdf
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Mon Jun 25 16:19:18 2012 +0200
gallivm: (trivial) increase max code size for shader disassembly
64kB was just short of what I needed (which caused a crash) hence
increase to 96kB (should probably be smarter about that).
commit 74aa739138d981311ce13076388382b5e89c6562
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Mon Jun 25 11:53:29 2012 +0100
gallivm: simplify aos float tex wrap repeat nearest
just handle pot and npot the same. The previous pot handling
ended up with exactly the same instructions plus 2 more (leave it
in the soa path though since it is probably still cheaper there).
While here also fix a issue which would cause a crash after an assert.
commit 0e1e755645e9e49cfaa2025191e3245ccd723564
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Mon Jun 25 11:29:24 2012 +0100
gallivm: (trivial) skip floor rounding in ifloor when not signed
This was only done for the non-sse41 case before, but even with
sse41 this is obviously unnecessary (some callers already call
itrunc in this case anyway but some might not).
commit 7f01a62f27dcb1d52597b24825931e88bae76f33
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Mon Jun 25 11:23:12 2012 +0100
gallivm: (trivial) fix bogus comments
commit 5c85be25fd82e28490274c468ce7f3e6e8c1d416
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Wed Jun 20 11:51:57 2012 +0100
translate: Free elt8_func/elt16_func too.
These were leaking.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
commit 0ad498f36fb6f7458c7cffa73b6598adceee0a6c
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Tue Jun 19 15:55:34 2012 +0200
gallivm: fix bug for tex wrap repeat with linear sampling in aos float path
The comparison needs to be against length not length_minus_one, otherwise
the max texel is never chosen (for the second coordinate).
Fixes piglit texwrap-1D-npot-proj (and 2D/3D versions).
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
commit d1ad65937c5b76407dc2499b7b774ab59341209e
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Tue Jun 19 16:13:43 2012 +0200
gallivm: simplify soa tex wrap repeat with npot textures and no mip filtering
Similar to what is already done in aos sampling for the float path (but not
the int path since we don't get normalized float coordinates there).
URem is expensive and the calculation is done trivially with
normalized floats instead (at least with sse41-capable cpus).
(Some day should probably do the same for the mip filter path but it's much
more complicated there hence the gain is smaller.)
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
commit e1e23f57ba9b910295c306d148f15643acc3fc83
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Mon Jun 18 20:38:56 2012 +0200
llvmpipe: (trivial) remove duplicated function declaration
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
commit 07ca57eb09e04c48a157733255427ef5de620861
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Mon Jun 18 20:37:34 2012 +0200
llvmpipe: destroy setup variants on context destruction
lp_delete_setup_variants() used to be called in garbage collection,
but this no longer exists hence the setup shaders never got freed.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
commit ed0003c633859a45f9963a479f4c15ae0ef1dca3
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Mon Jun 18 16:25:29 2012 +0100
gallivm: handle different ilod parts for multiple quad sampling
This fixes filtering when the integer part of the lod is not the same
for all quads. I'm not fully convinced of that solution yet as it just
splits the vector if the levels to be sampled from are different.
But otherwise we'd need to do things like some minify steps, and getting
mip level base address separately anyway hence it wouldn't really look
like much of a win (and making the code even more complex).
This should now give identical results to single quad sampling.
commit 8580ac4cfc43a64df55e84ac71ce1a774d33c0d2
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Thu Jun 14 18:14:47 2012 +0200
gallivm: de-duplicate sample code common to soa and aos sampling
There doesn't seem to be any reason why this code dealing with cube face
selection, lod and mip level calculation is separate in aos and
soa sampling, and I am sick of having it to change in both places.
commit fb541e5f957408ce305b272100196f1e12e5b1e8
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Thu Jun 14 18:15:41 2012 +0200
gallivm: do mip filtering with per quad lod_fpart
This gives better results for mip filtering, though the generated code might
not be optimal. For now it also creates some artifacts if the lod_ipart isn't
the same for all quads, since instead of using the same mip weight for all
quads as previously (which just caused non-smooth gradients) this now will
use the right weights but with the wrong mip level in this case (can easily
be seen with things like texfilt, mipmap_tunnel).
v2: use logic helper suggested by José, and fix issue with negative lod_fpart
values
commit f1cc84eef7d826a20fab6cd8ccef9a275ff78967
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Wed Jun 13 18:35:25 2012 +0200
gallivm: (trivial) fix bogus assert in lp_build_unpack_broadcast_aos_scalars
commit 7c17dbae8ae290df9ce0f50781a09e8ed640c044
Author: James Benton <jbenton@vmware.com>
Date: Tue Jun 12 12:11:14 2012 +0100
util: Reimplement half <-> float conversions.
Removed u_half.py used to generate the table for previous method.
Previous implementation of float to half conversion was faulty for
denormalised and NaNs and would require extra logic to fix,
thus making the speedup of using tables irrelevant.
commit 7762f59274070e1dd4b546f5cb431c2eb71ae5c3
Author: James Benton <jbenton@vmware.com>
Date: Tue Jun 12 12:12:16 2012 +0100
tests: Updated tests to properly handle NaN for half floats.
commit fa94c135aea5911fd93d5dfb6e6f157fb40dce5e
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Mon Jun 11 18:33:10 2012 +0200
gallivm: do mip level calculations per quad
This is the final piece which shouldn't change the rendering output yet.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
commit 23cbeaddfe03c09ca18c45d28955515317ffcf4c
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Sat Jun 9 00:54:21 2012 +0200
gallivm: do per-quad cube face selection
Doesn't quite fix the piglit cubemap test (not sure why actually)
but doing per-quad face selection is doing the right thing and
definitely an improvement.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
commit abfb372b3702ac97ac8b5aa80ad1b94a2cc39d33
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Mon Jun 11 18:22:59 2012 +0200
gallivm: do all lod calculations per quad
Still no functional change but lod is now converted to scalar after
lod calculations.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
commit 519368632747ae03feb5bca9c655eccbc5b751b4
Author: James Benton <jbenton@vmware.com>
Date: Tue May 22 16:46:10 2012 +0100
gallivm: Added support for half-float to float conversion in lp_build_conv.
Updated various utility functions to support this change.
commit 135b4d683a4c95f7577ba27b9bffa4a6fbd2c2e7
Author: James Benton <jbenton@vmware.com>
Date: Tue May 22 16:02:46 2012 +0100
gallivm: Added function for half-float to float conversion.
Updated lp_build_format_aos_array to support half-float source.
commit 37d648827406a20c5007abeb177698723ed86673
Author: James Benton <jbenton@vmware.com>
Date: Tue May 22 14:55:18 2012 +0100
util: Updated u_format_tests to rigidly test half-float boundary values.
commit 2ad18165d96e578aa9046df7c93cb1c3284d8c6b
Author: James Benton <jbenton@vmware.com>
Date: Tue May 22 14:54:16 2012 +0100
llvmpipe: Updated lp_test_format to properly handle Inf/NaN results.
commit 78740acf25aeba8a7d146493dd5c966e22c27b73
Author: James Benton <jbenton@vmware.com>
Date: Tue May 22 14:53:30 2012 +0100
util: Added functions for checking NaN / Inf for double and half-floats.
commit 35e9f640ae01241f9e0d67fe893bbbf564c05809
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Thu May 24 21:05:13 2012 +0200
gallivm: Fix calculating rho for 3d textures for the single-quad case
Discovered by accident, this looks like a very old typo bug.
commit fc1220c636326536fd0541913154e62afa7cd1d8
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Thu May 24 21:04:59 2012 +0200
gallivm: do calcs per-quad in lp_build_rho
Still convert to scalar at the end of the function.
commit 50a887ffc550bf310a6988fa2cea5c24d38c1a41
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Mon May 21 23:21:50 2012 +0200
gallivm: (trivial) return scalar in lp_build_extract_range for length 1 vectors
Our type system on top of llvm's one doesn't generally support vectors of
length 1, instead using scalars. So we should return a scalar from this
function instead of having to bitcast the vector with length 1 later elsewhere.
commit 80c71c621f9391f0f9230460198d861643324876
Author: James Benton <jbenton@vmware.com>
Date: Tue May 22 17:49:15 2012 +0100
draw: Fixed bad merge error
commit c47401cfad0c9167de20ff560654f533579f452c
Author: James Benton <jbenton@vmware.com>
Date: Tue May 22 15:29:30 2012 +0100
draw: Updated store_clip to store whole vectors instead of individual elements.
commit 2d9c1ad74b0b0b41861fffcecde39f09cc27f1cf
Author: James Benton <jbenton@vmware.com>
Date: Tue May 22 15:28:32 2012 +0100
gallivm: Added lp_build_fetch_rgba_aos_array.
A version of lp_build_fetch_rgba_aos which is targeted at simple array formats.
Reads the whole vector from memory in one, instead of reading each element
individually.
Tested with mesa tests and demos.
commit ff7805dc2b6ef6d8b11ec4e54aab1633aef29ac8
Author: James Benton <jbenton@vmware.com>
Date: Tue May 22 15:27:40 2012 +0100
gallivm: Added lp_build_pad_vector.
This function pads a vector with undef to a desired length.
commit 701f50acef24a2791dabf4730e5b5687d6eb875d
Author: James Benton <jbenton@vmware.com>
Date: Fri May 18 17:27:19 2012 +0100
util: Added util_format_is_array.
This function checks whether a format description is in a simple array format.
commit 5e0a7fa543dcd009de26f34a7926674190fa6246
Author: James Benton <jbenton@vmware.com>
Date: Fri May 18 19:13:47 2012 +0100
draw: Removed draw_llvm_translate_from and draw/draw_llvm_translate.c.
This is "replaced" by adding an optimised path in lp_build_fetch_rgba_aos
in an upcoming patch.
commit 8c886d6a7dd3fb464ecf031de6f747cb33e5361d
Author: James Benton <jbenton@vmware.com>
Date: Wed May 16 15:02:31 2012 +0100
draw: Modified store_aos to write the vector as one, not individual elements.
commit 37337f3d657e21dfd662c7b26d61cb0f8cfa6f17
Author: James Benton <jbenton@vmware.com>
Date: Wed May 16 14:16:23 2012 +0100
draw: Changed aos_to_soa to use lp_build_transpose_aos.
commit bd2b69ce5d5c94b067944d1dcd5df9f8e84548f1
Author: James Benton <jbenton@vmware.com>
Date: Fri May 18 19:14:27 2012 +0100
draw: Changed soa_to_aos to use lp_build_transpose_aos.
commit 0b98a950d29a116e82ce31dfe7b82cdadb632f2b
Author: James Benton <jbenton@vmware.com>
Date: Fri May 18 18:57:45 2012 +0100
gallivm: Added lp_build_transpose_aos which converts between aos and soa.
commit 69ea84531ad46fd145eb619ed1cedbe97dde7cb5
Author: James Benton <jbenton@vmware.com>
Date: Fri May 18 18:57:01 2012 +0100
gallivm: Added lp_build_interleave2_half aimed at AVX unpack instructions.
commit 7a4cb1349dd35c18144ad5934525cfb9436792f9
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Tue May 22 11:54:14 2012 +0100
gallivm: Fix build on Windows.
MC-JIT not yet supported there.
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
commit afd105fc16bb75d874e418046b80d9cc578818a1
Author: James Benton <jbenton@vmware.com>
Date: Fri May 18 16:17:26 2012 +0100
llvmpipe: Added a error counter to lp_test_conv.
Useful for keeping track of progress when fixing errors!
Signed-off-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
commit b644907d08c10a805657841330fc23db3963d59c
Author: James Benton <jbenton@vmware.com>
Date: Fri May 18 16:16:46 2012 +0100
llvmpipe: Changed known failures in lp_test_conv.
To comply with the recent fixes to lp_bld_conv.
Signed-off-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
commit d7061507bd94f6468581e218e61261b79c760d4f
Author: James Benton <jbenton@vmware.com>
Date: Fri May 18 16:14:38 2012 +0100
llvmpipe: Added fixed point types tests to lp_test_conv.
Signed-off-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
commit 146b3ea39b4726dbe125ac666bd8902ea3d6ca8c
Author: James Benton <jbenton@vmware.com>
Date: Fri May 18 16:26:35 2012 +0100
llvmpipe: Changed lp_test_conv src/dst alignment to be correct.
Now based on the define rather than a fixed number.
Signed-off-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
commit f3b57441f834833a4b142a951eb98df0aa874536
Author: James Benton <jbenton@vmware.com>
Date: Fri May 18 16:06:44 2012 +0100
gallivm: Fixed erroneous optimisation in lp_build_min/max.
Previously assumed normalised was 0 to 1, but it can be -1 to 1
if type is signed.
Tested with lp_test_conv and lp_test_format, reduced errors.
Signed-off-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
commit a0613382e5a215cd146bb277646a6b394d376ae4
Author: James Benton <jbenton@vmware.com>
Date: Fri May 18 16:04:49 2012 +0100
gallivm: Compensate for lp_const_offset in lp_build_conv.
Fixing a /*FIXME*/ to remove errors in integer conversion in lp_build_conv.
Tested using lp_test_conv and lp_test_format, reduced errors.
Signed-off-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
commit a3d2bf15ea345bc8a0664f8f441276fd566566f3
Author: James Benton <jbenton@vmware.com>
Date: Fri May 18 16:01:25 2012 +0100
gallivm: Fixed overflow in lp_build_clamped_float_to_unsigned_norm.
Tested with lp_test_conv and lp_test_format, reduced errors.
Signed-off-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
commit e7b1e76fe237613731fa6003b5e1601a2e506207
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Mon May 21 20:07:51 2012 +0100
gallivm: Fix build with LLVM 2.6
Trivial, and useful.
commit d3c6bbe5c7f5ba1976710831281ab1b6a631082d
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Tue May 15 17:15:59 2012 +0100
gallivm: Enable MCJIT/AVX with vanilla LLVM 3.1.
Add the necessary C++ glue, so that we don't need any modifications
to the soon to be released LLVM 3.1.
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
commit 724a019a14d40fdbed21759a204a2bec8a315636
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Mon May 14 22:04:06 2012 +0100
gallivm: Use HAVE_LLVM 0x0301 consistently.
commit af6991e2a3868e40ad599b46278551b794839748
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Mon May 14 21:49:06 2012 +0100
gallivm: Add MCRegisterInfo.h to silence benign warnings about missing implementation.
Trivial.
commit 6f8a1d75458daae2503a86c6b030ecc4bb494e23
Author: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Date: Mon Apr 2 22:14:15 2012 -0700
gallivm: Pass in a MCInstrInfo to createMCInstPrinter on llvm-3.1.
llvm-3.1svn r153860 makes MCInstrInfo available to the MCInstPrinter.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
commit 62555b6ed8760545794f83064e27cddcb3ce5284
Author: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Date: Tue Mar 27 21:51:17 2012 -0700
gallivm: Fix method overriding in raw_debug_ostream.
Use matching type qualifers to avoid method hiding.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
commit 6a9bd784f4ac68ad0a731dcd39e5a3c39989f2be
Author: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Date: Tue Mar 13 22:40:52 2012 -0700
gallivm: Fix createOProfileJITEventListener namespace with llvm-3.1.
llvm-3.1svn r152620 refactored the OProfile profiling code.
createOProfileJITEventListener was moved from the llvm namespace to the
llvm::JITEventListener namespace.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
commit b674955d39adae272a779be85aa1bd665de24e3e
Author: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Date: Mon Mar 5 22:00:40 2012 -0800
gallivm: Pass in a MCRegisterInfo to MCInstPrinter on llvm-3.1.
llvm-3.1svn r152043 changes createMCInstPrinter to take an additional
MCRegisterInfo argument.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
commit 11ab69971a8a31c62f6de74905dbf8c02884599f
Author: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Date: Wed Feb 29 21:20:53 2012 -0800
Revert "gallivm: Change getExtent and readByte to non-const with llvm-3.1."
This reverts commit d5a6c17254.
llvm-3.1svn r151687 makes MemoryObject accessor members const again.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
commit 339960c82d2a9f5c928ee9035ed31dadb7f45537
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Mon May 14 16:19:56 2012 +0200
gallivm: (trivial) fix assertion failure for mipmapped 1d textures
In lp_build_rho, we may end up with a 1-element vector (for mipmapped 1d
textures), but in this case we require the type to be a non-vector type,
so need a cast.
commit 9d73edb727bd6d196030dc3026b7bf0c574b3e19
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Thu May 10 18:12:07 2012 +0200
gallivm: prepare for per-quad lod calculations for large vectors
to be able to handle multiple quads at once in texture sampling and still
do lod calculations per quad, it is necessary to get the per-quad derivatives
into the lp_build_rho function.
Until now these derivative values were just scalars, which isn't going to work.
So we now use vectors, and since the interface needs to change we also do some
different (slightly more efficient) packing of the values.
For 8-wide vectors the packed derivative values for 3 coords would look like
this, this scales to a arbitrary (multiple of 4) vector size:
ds1dx ds1dy dt1dx dt1dy ds2dx ds2dy dt2dx dt2dy
dr1dx dr1dy _____ _____ dr2dx dr2dy _____ _____
The second vector will be unused for 1d and 2d textures.
To facilitate future changes the derivative values are put into a struct, since
quite some functions just pass these values through.
The generated code seems to be very slightly better for 2d textures (with
4-wide vectors) than before with sse2 (if you have a cpu with physical 128bit
simd units - otherwise it's probably not a win).
v2: suggestions from José, rename variables, add comments, use swizzle helper
commit 0aa21de0d31466dac77b05c97005722e902517b8
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Thu May 10 18:10:31 2012 +0200
gallivm: add undefined swizzle handling to lp_build_swizzle_aos
This is useful for vectors with "holes", it lets llvm choose the most
efficient shuffle instructions if some elements aren't needed without having to
worry what elements to manually pick otherwise.
commit 00faf3f370e7ce92f5ef51002b0ea42ef856e181
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Fri May 4 17:25:16 2012 +0100
gallivm: Get the LLVM IR optimization passes before JIT compilation.
MC-JIT engine compiles the module immediately on creation, so the optimization
passes were being run too late.
So now we create a target data layout from a string, that matches the
ABI parameters reported by the compiler.
The backend optimization passes were always been run, so the performance
improvement is modest (3% on multiarb mesa demo).
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
commit 40a43f4e2ce3074b5ce9027179d657ebba68800a
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Wed May 2 16:03:54 2012 +0200
gallivm: (trivial) fix wrong define used in lp_build_pack2
should fix stack-smashing crashes.
commit e6371d0f4dffad4eb3b7a9d906c23f1c88a2ab9e
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Mon Apr 30 21:25:29 2012 +0200
gallivm: add perf warnings when not using intrinsics with 256bit vectors
Helper functions using integer sse2 intrinsics could split the vectors with AVX
instead of using generic fallback (which should be faster).
We don't actually expect to hit these paths (hence don't fix them up to actually
do the vector splitting) so just emit warnings (for those functions where it's
obvious doing split/intrinsic is faster than using generic path).
Only emit warnings for 256bit vectors since we _really_ don't expect to hit
arbitrary large vectors which would affect a lot more functions.
The warnings do not actually depend on avx since the same logic applies to
plain sse2 too (but of course again there's _really_ no reason we should hit
these functions with 256bit vectors without avx).
commit 8a9ea701ea7295181e846c6383bf66a5f5e47637
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Tue May 1 20:37:07 2012 +0200
gallivm: split vectors manually for avx in lp_build_pack2 (v2)
There's 2 reasons for this:
First, there's a llvm bug (fixed in 3.1) which generates tons of byte
inserts/extracts otherwise, and second, more importantly, we want to use
pack intrinsics instead of shuffles.
We do this in lp_build_pack2 and not the calling code (aos sample path)
because potentially other callers might find that useful too, even if
for larger sequences of code using non-native vector sizes it might be
better to manually split vectors.
This should boost texture performance in the aos path considerably.
v2: fix issues with intrinsics types with old llvm
commit 27ac5b48fa1f2ea3efeb5248e2ce32264aba466e
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Tue May 1 20:26:22 2012 +0200
llvmpipe: refactor lp_build_pack2 (v2)
prettify, and it's unnecessary to assert when there's no intrinsic due to
unsupported bit width - the shuffle path will work regardless.
In contrast lp_build_packs2, should only rely on lp_build_pack2 doing the
clamping for element sizes for which there is a sse2 intrinsic.
v2: fix bug spotted by Jose regarding the intrinsic type for packusdw
on old llvm versions.
commit ddf279031f0111de4b18eaf783bdc0a1e47813c8
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Tue May 1 20:13:59 2012 +0200
gallivm: add src width check in lp_build_packs2()
not doing so would skip clamping even if no sse2 pack instruction is
available, which is incorrect (in theory only, such widths would also always
hit a (unnecessary) assertion in lp_build_pack2().
commit e7f0ad7fe079975eae7712a6e0c54be4fae0114b
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Fri Apr 27 15:57:00 2012 +0200
gallivm: (trivial) fix crash-causing typo for npot textures with avx
commit 28a9d7f6f655b6ec508c8a3aa6ffefc1e79793a0
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Wed Apr 25 19:38:45 2012 +0200
gallivm: (trivial) remove code mistakenly added twice.
commit d5926537316f8ff67ad0a52e7242f7c5478d919b
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Tue Apr 24 21:16:15 2012 +0200
gallivm: add a new avx aos sample path (v2)
Try to avoid mixing float and int address calculations. This does texture wrap
modes with floats, and then the offset calculations still with ints (because
of lack of precision with floats, though we could do some effort to make it work
with not too large (16MB) textures).
This also handles wrap repeat mode with npot-sized textures differently than
either the old soa or aos int path (likely way faster but untested).
Otherwise the actual address wrap code is largely similar to the soa path (not
quite the same as this one also has some int code), it should get used by avx
soa sampling later as well but doesn't handle more complex address modes yet
(this will also have the benefit that we can use aos sampling path for all
texture address modes).
Generated code for that looks reasonable, but still does not split vectors
explicitly for fetch/filter which means still get hit by llvm (fixed upstream)
which generates hundreds of pinsrb/pextrb instead of two shuffles.
It is not obvious though if it's much of a win over just doing address calcs
4-wide but with ints, even if it is definitely much less instructions on avx.
piglit's texwrap seems to look exactly the same but doesn't test
neither the non-normalized nor the npot cases.
v2: fix comments, prettify based on Brian's and Jose's feedback.
commit bffecd22dea66fb416ecff8cffd10dd4bdb73fce
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Thu Apr 19 01:58:29 2012 +0200
gallivm: refactor aos lp_build_sample_image_nearest/linear
split them up to separate address calculations and fetching/filtering.
Need this for being able to do 8-wide float address calcs and 4-wide
fetch/filter later (for avx). Plus the functions were very big scary monsters
anyway (in particular lp_build_sample_image_linear).
commit a80b325c57529adddcfa367f96f03557725c4773
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Mon Apr 16 17:17:18 2012 +0200
gallivm: fix lp_build_resize when truncating width but expanding vector size
Missed this case which I thought was impossible - the assertion for it was
right after the division by zero...
(AoS) texture sampling may ask us to do this, for things like 8 4x32int
vectors to 1 32x8int vector conversion (eventually, we probably don't want
this to happen).
commit f9c8337caa3eb185830d18bce8b95676a065b1d7
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Sat Apr 14 18:00:59 2012 +0200
gallivm: fix cube maps with larger vectors
This makes the branchless cube face selection code work with larger vectors.
Because the complexity is quite high (cannot really be improved it seems,
per-face selection would reduce complexity a lot but this leads to errors
unless the derivatives are calculated all from the same face which almost
doubles the work to be done) it is still slower than the branching version,
hence only enable this with large vectors.
It doesn't actually do per-quad face selection yet (only makes sense with
matching lod selection, in fact it will select the same face for all pixels
based on the average of the first four pixels for now) but only different
shuffles are required to make it work (the branching version actually should
work with larger vectors too now thanks to the improved horizontal add but of
course it cannot be extended to really select the face per-quad unless doing
branching per quad).
commit 7780c58869fc9a00af4f23209902db7e058e8a66
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Fri Mar 30 21:11:12 2012 +0100
llvmpipe: (trivial) fix compiler warning
and also clarify comment regarding availability of popcnt instruction.
commit a266dccf477df6d29a611154e988e8895892277e
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Fri Mar 30 14:21:07 2012 +0100
gallivm: remove unneeded members in lp_build_sample_context
Minor cleanup, the texture width, height, depth aren't accessed in their
scalar form anywhere. Makes it more obvious those values should probably be
fetched already vectorized (but this requires more invasive changes)...
commit b678c57fb474e14f05e25658c829fc04d2792fff
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Thu Mar 29 15:53:55 2012 +0100
gallivm: add a helper for concatenating vectors
Similar to the extract_range helper intended to get around slow code generated
by llvm for 128bit insertelements.
Concatenating two 128bit vectors this way will result in a single vinsertf128
operation rather than two 64bit stores plus one 128bit load, though it might be
mildly useful for other purposes as well.
commit 415ff228bcd0cf5e44a4c15350a661f0f5520029
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Wed Mar 28 19:41:15 2012 +0100
gallivm: add a custom 2x8f->1x16ub avx conversion path
Similar to the existing 4x4f->1x16ub sse2 path, shaves off a couple
instructions (min/max mostly) because it relies on pack intrinsics clamping.
commit 78c08fc89f8fbcc6dba09779981b1e873e2a0299
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Wed Mar 28 18:44:07 2012 +0100
gallivm: add avx arithmetic intrinsics
Add all avx intrinsics for arithmetic functions (with the exception
of the horizontal add function which needs another look).
Seems to pass basic tests.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
commit a586caa2800aa5ce54c173f7c0d4fc48153dbc4e
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Wed Mar 28 15:31:35 2012 +0100
gallivm: add avx logic intrinsics
Add the blend intrinsics for 8-wide float and 4-wide double vectors.
Since we lack 256bit int instructions these are used for int vectors as well,
though obviously not for byte or word element values.
The comparison intrinsics aren't extended for avx since these are only used
for pre-2.7 llvm versions.
commit 70275e4c13c89315fc2560a4c488c0e6935d5caf
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Wed Mar 28 00:40:53 2012 +0100
gallivm: new helper function for extract shuffles.
Based on José's idea as we can need that in a couple places.
Note that such shuffles should not be used lightly, since data layout
of <4 x i8> is different to <16 x i8> for instance, hence might cause
data rearrangement.
commit 4d586dbae1b0c55915dda1759d2faea631c0a1c2
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Tue Mar 27 18:27:25 2012 +0100
gallivm: (trivial) don't overallocate shuffle variable
using wrong define meant huge array...
commit 06b0ec1f6d665d98c135f9573ddf4ba04b2121ad
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Tue Mar 27 17:54:20 2012 +0100
gallivm: don't do per-element extract/insert for vector element resize
Instead of doing per-element extract/insert if the src vectors
and dst vector differ in total size (which generates atrocious code)
first change the src vectors size by using shuffles to destination
vector size.
We can still do better than that on AVX for packing to color buffer
(by exploiting pack intrinsics characteristics hence eleminating the
need for some clamps) but this already generates much better code.
v2: incorporate feedback from José, Keith and use shuffle instead of
bitcasts/extracts. Due to llvm deficiencies the latter cause all data
to get moved to GPRs and back in pieces (even though the data in the
regs actually stays the same...).
commit c9970d70e05f95d3f52fe7d2cd794176a52693aa
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Fri Mar 23 19:33:19 2012 +0000
gallivm: fix bug in simple position interpolation
Accidental use of position attribute instead of just pixel coordinates.
Caused failures in piglit glsl-fs-ceil and glsl-fs-floor.
commit d0b6fcdb008d04d7f73d3d725615321544da5a7e
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Fri Mar 23 15:31:14 2012 +0000
gallivm: fix emission of ceil opcode
lp_build_ceil seems more appropriate than lp_build_trunc.
This seems to be never hit though someone performs some ceil
to floor magic.
commit d97fafed7e62ffa6bf76560a92ea246a1a26d256
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Thu Mar 22 11:46:52 2012 +0000
gallivm: new vectorized path for cubemap calculations
should be faster when adapted to multiple quads as only selection masks need to be different.
The code is more or less a per-pixel version adapted to only do it per quad.
A per pixel version would be much simpler (could drop 2 selects, 6 broadcasts and the messy
horizontal add of 3 vectors at the expense of only 2 more absolute value instructions -
would also just work for arbitary large vectors).
This version doesn't yet work with larger vectors because the horizontal add isn't adjusted
to be able to work with 2x4 vectors (and also because face selection wouldn't be done per
quad just per block though that would be only a correctness issue just as with lod selection).
The downside is this code is quite a bit slower. On a Core2 it can be sped up by disabling the
hw blend instructions for selection and using logicop fallbacks instead, but it is still slower
than the old code, hence leave that in for now. Probably will chose one or the other version
based on vector length in the end.
commit b375fbb18a3fd46859b7fdd42f3e9908ea4ff9a3
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Wed Mar 21 14:42:29 2012 +0000
gallivm: fix optimized occlusion query intrinsic name
commit a9ba0a3b611e48efbb0e79eb09caa85033dbe9a2
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Wed Mar 21 16:19:43 2012 +0000
draw,gallivm,llvmpipe: Call gallivm_verify_function everywhere.
commit f94c2238d2bc7383e088b8845b7410439a602071
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Tue Mar 20 18:54:10 2012 +0000
gallivm: optimize calculations for cube maps a bit
this does some more vectorized calculations and uses horizontal adds if possible.
A definite win with sse3 otherwise it doesn't seem to make much of a difference.
In any case this is arithmetically identical, cannot handle larger vectors.
Should be useful as a reference point against larger vector version later...
commit 21a2c1cf3c8e1ac648ff49e59fdc0e3be77e2ebb
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Tue Mar 20 15:16:27 2012 +0000
llvmpipe: slight optimization of occlusion queries
using movmskps when available.
While this is slightly better for cpus without popcnt we should
really sum the vectors ourselves (it is also possible to cast to i4 before
doing the popcnt but that doesn't help that much neither since llvm
is using some optimized popcnt version for i32)
commit 5ab5a35f216619bcdf55eed52b0db275c4a06c1b
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Tue Mar 20 13:32:11 2012 +0000
llvmpipe: fix occlusion queries with larger vectors
need to adjust casts etc.
commit ff95e6fdf5f16d4ef999ffcf05ea6e8c7160b0d5
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Mon Mar 19 20:15:25 2012 +0000
gallivm: Restore optimization passes.
commit 57b05b4b36451e351659e98946dae27be0959832
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Mon Mar 19 19:34:22 2012 +0000
llvmpipe: use existing min2 macro
commit bc9a20e19b4f600a439f45679451f2e87cd4b299
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Mon Mar 19 19:07:27 2012 +0000
llvmpipe: add some safeguards against really large vectors
As per José's suggestion, prevent things from blowing up if some cpu
would have 1024bit or larger vectors.
commit 0e2b525e5ca1c5bbaa63158bde52ad1c1564a3a9
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Mon Mar 19 18:31:08 2012 +0000
llvmpipe: fix mask generation for uberwide vectors
this was the only piece preventing 16-wide vectors from working
(apart from the LP_MAX_VECTOR_WIDTH define that is), which is the maximum
as we don't get more pixels in the fragment shader at once.
Hence adjust that so things could be tested properly with that size
even though there seems to be no practical value.
commit 3c8334162211c97f3a11c7f64e9e5a2a91ad9656
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Mon Mar 19 18:19:41 2012 +0000
llvmpipe: fix the simple interpolation method with larger vectors
so both methods actually _really_ work now. Makes textures look
nice with larger vectors...
commit 1cb0464ef8871be1778d43b0c56adf9c06843e2d
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Mon Mar 19 17:26:35 2012 +0000
llvmpipe: fix mask generation and position interpolation with 8-wide vectors
trivial bugs, with these things start to look somewhat reasonable.
Textures though have some swizzling issues it seems.
commit 168277a63ef5b72542cf063c337f2d701053ff4b
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Mon Mar 19 16:04:03 2012 +0000
llvmpipe: don't overallocate variables
we never have more than 16 (stamp size) / 4 (minimum possible vector size).
(With larger vectors those variables are still overallocated a bit.)
commit 409b54b30f81ed0aa9ed0b01affe15c72de9abd2
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Mon Mar 19 15:56:48 2012 +0000
llvmpipe: add some 32f8 formats to lp_test_conv
Also add the ability to handle different sized vectors.
commit 55dcd3af8366ebdac0af3cdb22c2588f24aa18ce
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Mon Mar 19 15:47:27 2012 +0000
gallivm: handle different sized vectors in conversion / pack
only fully generic path for now (extract/insert per element).
commit 9c040f78c54575fcd94a8808216cf415fe8868f6
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Sun Mar 18 00:58:28 2012 +0100
llvmpipe: fix harmless use of unitialized values
commit 551e9d5468b92fc7d5aa2265db9a52bb1e368a36
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Fri Mar 16 23:31:21 2012 +0100
gallivm: drop special path in extract_broadcast with different sized vectors
Not needed, llvm can handle shuffles with different sized result vector just
fine. Should hopefully generate the same code in the end, but simpler IR.
commit 44da531119ffa07a421eaa041f63607cec88f6f8
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Fri Mar 16 23:28:49 2012 +0100
llvmpipe: adapt interpolation for handling multiple quads at once
this is still WIP there are actually two methods possible not quite
sure what makes the most sense, so there's code for both for now:
1) the iterative method as used before (compute attrib values at upper left
corner of stamp and upper left corner of each quad initially).
It is improved to handle more than one quad at once, and also do some more vectorized
calculations initially for slightly better code - newer cpus have full throughput with
4 wide float vectors, hence don't try to code up a path which might be faster if there's
just one channel active per attribute.
2) just do straight interpolation for each pixel.
Method 2) is more work per quad, but less initially - if all quads are executed
significantly more overall though. But this might change with larger vector lengths.
This method would also be needed if we'd do some kind of active quad merging when
operating on multiple quads at once.
This path contains some hack to force llvm to generate better code, it is still far
from ideal though, still generates far too many unnecessary register spills/reloads.
Both methods should work with different sized vectors.
Not very well tested yet, still seems to work with four-wide vectors, need changes
elsewhere to be able to test with wider vectors.
commit be5d3e82e2fe14ad0a46529ab79f65bf2276cd28
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Fri Mar 16 20:59:37 2012 +0000
draw: Cleanup.
commit f85bc12c7fbacb3de2a94e88c6cd2d5ee0ec0e8d
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Fri Mar 16 20:43:30 2012 +0000
gallivm: More module compilation refactoring.
commit d76f093198f2a06a93b2204857e6fea5fd0b3ece
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Thu Mar 15 21:29:11 2012 +0000
llvmpipe: Use gallivm_compile/free_function() in linear code.
Should had been done before.
commit 122e1adb613ce083ad739b153ced1cde61dfc8c0
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Tue Mar 13 14:47:10 2012 +0100
llvmpipe: generate partial pixel mask for multiple quads
still works with one quad, cannot be tested yet with more
At least for now always fixed order with multiple quads.
commit 4c4f15081d75ed585a01392cd2dcce0ad10e0ea8
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Thu Mar 8 22:09:24 2012 +0100
llvmpipe: refactor state setup a bit
Refactor to make it easier to emit (and potentially later fetch in fs)
coefficients for multiple attributes at once.
Need to think more about how to make this actually happen however, the
problem is different attributes can have different interpolation modes,
requiring different handling in both setup and fs (though linear and
perspective handling is close).
commit 9363e49722ff47094d688a4be6f015a03fba9c79
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Thu Mar 8 19:23:23 2012 +0100
llvmpipe: vectorize tri offset calc
cuts number of instructions in quad-offset-factor from 107 to 75.
This code actually duplicated the (scalar) code calculating the determinant
except it used different vertex order (leading to different sign but it doesn't
matter) hence llvm could not have figured out it's the same (of course with
determinant vectorized in the other place that wouldn't have worked any longer
neither).
Note this particular piece doesn't actually vectorize well, not many arithmetic
instructions left but tons of shuffle instructions...
Probably would need to work on n tris at a time for better vectorization.
commit 63169dcb9dd445c94605625bf86d85306e2b4297
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Thu Mar 8 03:11:37 2012 +0100
llvmpipe: vectorize some scalar code in setup
reduces number of arithmetic instructions, and avoids loading
vector x,y values twice (once as scalars once as vectors).
Results in a reduction of instructions from 76 to 64 in fs setup for glxgears
(16%) on a cpu with sse41.
Since this code uses vec2 disguised as vec4, on old cpus which had physical
64bit sse units (pre-Core2) it probably is less of a win in practice (and if
you have no vectors you can only hope llvm eliminates the arithmetic for
unneeded elements).
commit 732ecb877f951ab89bf503ac5e35ab8d838b58a1
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Wed Mar 7 00:32:24 2012 +0100
draw: fix clipping
bug introduced by 4822fea3f0440b5205e957cd303838c3b128419c broke
clipping pretty badly (verified with lineclip test)
commit ef5d90b86d624c152d200c7c4056f47c3c6d2688
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Tue Mar 6 23:38:59 2012 +0100
draw: don't store vertex header per attribute
storing the vertex header once per attribute is totally unnecessary.
Some quick look at the generated assembly says llvm in fact cannot optimize
away the additional stores (maybe due to potentially aliasing pointers
somewhere).
Plus, this makes the code cleaner and also allows using a vector "or"
instead of scalar ones.
commit 6b3a5a57b0b9850854cfbd7b586e4e50102dda71
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Tue Mar 6 19:11:01 2012 +0100
draw: do the per-vertex "boolean" clipmask "or" with vectors
no point extracting the values and doing it per component.
Doesn't help that much since we still extract the values elsewhere anyway.
commit 36519caf1af40e4480251cc79a2d527350b7c61f
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Fri Mar 2 22:27:01 2012 +0100
gallivm: fix lp_build_extract_broadcast with different sized vectors
Fix the obviously wrong argument, so it doesn't blow up.
commit 76d0ac3ad85066d6058486638013afd02b069c58
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Fri Mar 2 12:16:23 2012 +0000
draw: Compile per module and not per function (WIP).
Enough to get gears w/ LLVM draw + softpipe to work on AVX doing:
GALLIUM_DRIVER=softpipe SOFTPIPE_USE_LLVM=yes glxgears
But still hackish -- will need to rethink and refactor this.
commit 78e32b247d2a7a771be9a1a07eb000d1e54ea8bd
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Wed Feb 29 12:01:05 2012 +0000
llvmpipe: Remove lp_state_setup_fallback.
Never used.
commit 6895d5e40d19b4972c361e8b83fdb7eecda3c225
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Mon Feb 27 19:14:27 2012 +0000
llvmpipe: Don't emit EMMS on x86
We already take precautions to ensure that LLVM never emits MMX code.
commit 4822fea3f0440b5205e957cd303838c3b128419c
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Wed Feb 29 15:58:19 2012 +0100
draw: modifications for larger vector sizes
We want to be able to use larger vectors especially for running the vertex
shader. With this patch we build soa vectors which might have a different
length than 4.
Note that aos structures really remain the same, only when aos structures
are converted to soa potentially different sized vectors are used.
Samplers probably don't work yet, didn't look at them.
Testing done:
glxgears works with both 128bit and 256bit vectors.
commit f4950fc1ea784680ab767d3dd0dce589f4e70603
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Wed Feb 29 15:51:57 2012 +0100
gallivm: override native vector width with LP_NATIVE_VECTOR_WIDTH env var for debug
commit 6ad6dbf0c92f3bf68ae54e5f2aca035d19b76e53
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Wed Feb 29 15:51:24 2012 +0100
draw: allocate storage with alignment according to native vector width
commit 7bf0e3e7c9bd2469ae7279cabf4c5229ae9880c1
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Fri Feb 24 19:06:08 2012 +0000
gallivm: Fix comment grammar.
Was missing several words. Spotted by Roland.
commit b20f1b28eb890b2fa2de44a0399b9b6a0d453c52
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Thu Feb 23 19:22:09 2012 +0000
gallivm: Use MC-JIT on LLVM 3.1 + (i.e, SVN)
MC-JIT
Note: MC-JIT is still WIP. For this to work correctly it requires
LLVM changes which are not yet upstream.
commit b1af4dfcadfc241fd4023f4c3f823a1286d452c0
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Thu Feb 23 20:03:15 2012 +0100
llvmpipe: use new lp_type_width() helper in lp_test_blend
commit 04e0a37e888237d4db2298f31973af459ef9c95f
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Thu Feb 23 19:50:34 2012 +0100
llvmpipe: clean up lp_test_blend a little
Using variables just sized and aligned right makes it a bit more obvious
what's going on.
The test still only tests vector length 4.
For AoS anything else probably isn't going to work.
For SoA other lengths should work (at least with floats).
commit e61c393d3ec392ddee0a3da170e985fda885a823
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Thu Feb 23 17:48:30 2012 +0000
gallivm: Ensure vector width consistency.
Instead of assuming that everything is the max native size.
commit 330081ac7bc41c5754a92825e51456d231bf84dd
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Thu Feb 23 17:44:14 2012 +0000
draw: More simd vector width consistency fixes.
commit d90ca002753596269e37297e2e6c139b19f29f03
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Thu Feb 23 17:43:00 2012 +0000
gallivm: Remove unused lp_build_int32_vec4_type() helper.
commit cae23417824d75869c202aaf897808d73a2c1db0
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Thu Feb 23 17:32:16 2012 +0100
gallivm: use global variable for native vector width instead of define
We do not know the simd extensions (and hence the simd width we should use)
available at compile time.
At least for now keep a define for maximum vector width, since a global
variable obviously can't be used to adjust alignment of automatic stack
variables.
Leave the runtime-determined value at 128 for now in all cases.
commit 51270ace6349acc2c294fc6f34c025c707be538a
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Thu Feb 23 15:41:02 2012 +0000
gallivm: Add a hunk inadvertedly lost when rebasing.
commit bf256df9cfdd0236637a455cbaece949b1253e98
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Thu Feb 23 14:24:23 2012 +0000
llvmpipe: Use consistent vector width in depth/stencil test.
commit 5543b0901677146662c44be2cfba655fd55da94b
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Thu Feb 23 14:19:59 2012 +0000
draw: Use a consistent the vector register width.
Instead of 4x32 sometimes, LP_NATIVE_VECTOR_WIDTH other times.
commit eada8bbd22a3a61f549f32fe2a7e408222e5c824
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Thu Feb 23 12:08:04 2012 +0000
gallivm: Remove garbagge collection.
MC-JIT will require one compilation per module (as opposed to one
compilation per function), therefore no state will be shared,
eliminating the need to do garbagge collection.
commit 556697ea0ed72e0641851e4fbbbb862c470fd7eb
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Thu Feb 23 10:33:41 2012 +0000
gallivm: Move all native target initialization to lp_set_target_options().
commit c518e8f3f2649d5dc265403511fab4bcbe2cc5c8
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Thu Feb 23 09:52:32 2012 +0000
llvmpipe: Create one gallivm instance for each test.
commit 90f10af8920ec6be6f2b1e7365cfc477a0cb111d
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Thu Feb 23 09:48:08 2012 +0000
gallivm: Avoid LLVMAddGlobalMapping() in lp_bld_assert().
Brittle, complex, and unecesary. Just use function pointer constant.
commit 98fde550b33401e3fe006af59db4db628bcbf476
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Thu Feb 23 09:21:26 2012 +0000
gallivm: Add a lp_build_const_func_pointer() helper.
To be reused in all places where we want to call C code.
commit 6cfedadb62c2ce5af8d75969bc95a607f3ece118
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Thu Feb 23 09:44:41 2012 +0000
gallivm: Cleanup/simplify lp_build_const_string_variable.
- Move to lp_bld_const where it belongs
- Rename to lp_build_const_string
- take the length from the argument (and don't count the zero terminator twice)
- bitcast the constant to generic i8 *
commit db1d4018c0f1fa682a9da93c032977659adfb68c
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Thu Feb 23 11:52:17 2012 +0000
gallivm: Set NoFramePointerElimNonLeaf to true where supported.
commit 088614164aa915baaa5044fede728aa898483183
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Wed Feb 22 19:38:47 2012 +0100
llvmpipe: pass in/out pointers rather scalar floats in lp_bld_arit
we don't want llvm to potentially optimize away the vectors (though it doesn't
seem to currently), plus we want to be able to handle in/out vectors of arbitrary
length.
commit 3f5c4e04af8a7592fdffa54938a277c34ae76b51
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Tue Feb 21 23:22:55 2012 +0100
gallivm: fix lp_build_sqrt() for vector length 1
since we optimize away vectors with length 1 need to emit intrinsic
without vector type.
commit 79d94e5f93ed8ba6757b97e2026722ea31d32c06
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Wed Feb 22 17:00:46 2012 +0000
llvmpipe: Remove lp_test_round.
commit 81f41b5aeb3f4126e06453cfc78990086b85b78d
Author: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Date: Tue Feb 21 23:56:24 2012 +0100
llvmpipe: subsume lp_test_round into lp_test_arit
Much simpler, and since the arguments aren't passed as 128bit values can run
on any arch.
This also uses the float instead of the double versions of the c functions
(which probably was the intention anyway).
In contrast to lp_test_round the output is much less verbose however.
Tested vector width of 32 to 512 bits - all pass except 32 (length 1) which
crashes in lp_build_sqrt() due to wrong type.
Signed-off-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
commit 945b338b421defbd274481d8c4f7e0910fd0e7eb
Author: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Date: Wed Feb 22 09:55:03 2012 +0000
gallivm: Centralize the function compilation logic.
This simplifies a lot of code.
Also doing this in a central place will make it easier to carry out the
changes necessary to use MC-JIT in the future.
gallivm: Fix typo in explicit derivative shuffle.
Trivial.
draw: make DEBUG_STORE work again
adapt to lp_build_printf() interface changes
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
draw: get rid of vecnf_from_scalar()
just use lp_build_broadcast directly (cannot assign a name but don't really
need it, vecnf_from_scalar() was producing much uglier IR due to using
repeated insertelement instead of insertelement+shuffle).
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
llvmpipe: fix typo in complex interpolation code
Fixes position interpolation when using complex mode
(piglit fp-fragment-position and similar)
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
draw: fix clipvertex/position storing again
This appears to be the result of a bad merge.
Fixes piglit tests relying on clipping, like a lot of the interpolation tests.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
gallivm: Fix explicit derivative manipulation.
Same counter variable was being used in two nested loops. Use more
meanigful variable names for the counter to fix and avoid this.
gallivm: Prevent buffer overflow in repeat wrap mode for NPOT.
Based on Roland's patch, discussion, and review .
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
gallivm: Fix dims for TGSI_TEXTURE_1D in emit_tex.
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
gallivm: Fix explicit volume texture derivatives.
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
gallivm: fix 1d shadow texture sampling
Always r coordinate is used, hence need 3 coords not two
(the second one is unused).
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
gallivm: Enable AVX support without MCJIT, where available.
For now, this just enables AVX on Windows for testing. If the code is
stable then we might consider prefering the old JIT wherever possible.
No change elsewhere.
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
The vertex element state isn't in registers any more, so
remove that old code. That fixes a memory corruption with
the blend state and gets eglgears partially working.
Signed-off-by: Christian König <deathsimple@vodafone.de>
Reviewed-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Some application calls eglCreateWindowSurface with
EGLNativeWindowType parameter having zero value. It causes SEGV
and disturbs error handling like EGL_NO_SURFACE.
Signed-off-by: Elvis Lee <kwangwoong.lee@lge.com>
Signed-off-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
a112ca5d rather crassly smashed all the compiler flags together into AM_CFLAGS.
Separate them out the way they were before, putting pre-processor flags into
AM_CPPFLAGS, so assembly source gets preprocessed with the correct pre-processor
flags as well.
Also, remove unneeded CFLAGS from AM_CFLAGS, and CXXFLAGS from AM_CXXFLAGS
Signed-off-by: Jon TURNEY <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>
Tested-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
I suck at resolving merge conflicts and broke the build in a5a34b1.
This patch adds the missing field intel_mipmap_tree::wraps_etc1.
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Enable it for all hardware.
No current hardware supports ETC1, so this patch implements it by
translating the ETC1 data to RGBX data during the call to
glCompressedTexImage2D(). For details, see the doxygen for
intel_mipmap_tree::wraps_etc1.
Passes the Piglit test spec/OES_compressed_ETC1_RGB8_texture/miptree and
the ETC1 test in the GLES2 conformance suite.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Add function _mesa_etc1_unpack_rgba8888. It is intended to be used by
glCompressedTexSubImage2D to decode ETC1 textures into RGBA.
CC: Chia-I <olv@lunarg.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Move the body of util_etc1_rgb8_unpack_rgba_unorm8 into a new function
that can be shared between gallium and dri drivers,
texcompress_etc_tmp.h:etc1_unpack_rgba8888.
CC: Chia-I <olv@lunarg.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
lp_delete_setup_variants() used to be called in garbage collection,
but this no longer exists hence the setup shaders never got freed.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
When we don't intend to texture from or render to a __DRIimage we
use __DRI_IMAGE_FORMAT_NONE. In that case, we just create the __DRIimage
to reference the underlying buffer, and will create usable __DRIimages
from it using createSubImage later.
If we try to use _mesa_get_format_bytes() on MESA_FORMAT_NONE in
a debug build, we hit an assertion, so let's not do that.
Commit 68e04cc6 was tested using automake-1.11. Unfortunately, automake-1.12
made a "slightly backward-incompatible change" in the use of yacc with C++, and
for a .yy file, the generated header file is now named .hh, not .h
To work with both, write our own rule for running yacc, which generates a
header file named .h, rather than using automake's rule.
Also, remove things from BUILD_SOURCES which don't need to be there
Also, update EXCLUDE rules in doxygen/glsl.doxy, for change of generated files
from .cpp -> .cc, and glsl_lexer.h has never existed.
Signed-off-by: Jon TURNEY <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>
Commit defadf2b1 erroneously tries to make gallium drivers link with libdricore
as a static library, not a shared library
Also, change uses of DRI_LIB_DEPS in gallium driver Makefiles to
GALLIUM_DRI_LIB_DEPS, so the libraries added are used in the linking the gallium
driver
Also, fix the path to the libdricore.so symlink, it's made in LIB_DIR, not in
the libdricore directory
Also repair quoting of dricore settings of DRI_LIB_DEPS and GALLIUM_DRI_LIB_DEPS
variables so VERSION is interpolated in configure but TOP and LIB_DIR are
interpolated later (where they are known, but VERSION isn't)
Signed-off-by: Jon TURNEY <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
- Use LLVM limits when LLVM is being used, instead of TGSI limits
- Provide draw_get_shader_param_no_llvm for when llvm is never used (softpipe)
- Eliminate several of the hacks around draw shader caps in several drivers
Unfortunately the hack for PIPE_MAX_VERTEX_SAMPLERS is still necessary.
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
The libmesa convenience library is linked with the libglsl convenience
library. libOsmesa is linked with libmesa, and also directly with libglsl.
When using libtool, this gives rise to duplicate symbol errors.
Signed-off-by: Jon TURNEY <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Tested-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
* "configure substitutions are not allowed in _SOURCES variables" in automake,
so remove the AC_SUBST'ed GLAPI_ASM_SOURCES and instead use some AM_CONDITIONALS
to choose which asm sources are used
* Change GLAPI_LIB to point to the .la file in other Makefile.am files, and make a link
to the .a file for the convenience of other Makefiles which have not yet been converted
to automake
v2:
- Use AM_CPPFLAGS for cleaner build output
- EXTRA_SOURCES is not needed
- Remove libglapi.a compatibility link on clean
Signed-off-by: Jon TURNEY <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Tested-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Now mesa/drivers/dri is converted to automake, we want to update DRI_LIB_DEPS
so that we link with the libmesa or libdricore libtool library, as appropriate.
However, this is complicated by the fact that gallium/targets is not (yet)
converted, so we can't share the DRI_LIB_DEPS autoconf variable with that anymore.
Add an additional autoconf variable GALLIUM_DRI_LIB_DEPS, which is now used in
gallium/targets/Makefile.dri, to link with the libdircore or libmesa native library.
v2: libdricore$VERSION.a needs to be libdricore$(VERSION).a
Signed-off-by: Jon TURNEY <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Tested-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
* "configure substitutions are not allowed in _SOURCES variables" in automake, so instead of
MESA_ASM_FILES, use some AM_CONDITIONALS to choose which architecture's asm sources are used
in libmesa_la_SOURCES. (Can't remove MESA_ASM_FILES autoconf variable as it's still used in
sources.mak)
* Update to link with the .la file in other Makefile.am files, and make a link to the
.a file for the convenience of other Makefiles which have not yet been converted to automake
v2: Remove stray -static from LDFLAGS
v3: Remove .a compatibility link on clean
Signed-off-by: Jon TURNEY <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Tested-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Automake can't handle having both clip.S and clip.c, even though they have different paths
"src/mesa/Makefile.am: object `clip.lo' created by `$(SRCDIR)/sparc/clip.S' and `$(SRCDIR)/main/clip.c'"
Signed-off-by: Jon TURNEY <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Tested-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
v2: Use AM_V_GEN to silence generated code rules. Add BUILT_SOURCES to CLEANFILES
v3:
- Fix an accidental // in a path
- Use automake make rules for lex/yacc rather than writing our own
- Update .gitignore appropriately
- Build a libglcpp convenience library rather than awkwardly including
the files in libglsl and delegating the generation
- Remove libglsl.a compatibility link on clean
v4:
- Automake's rules for lex/yacc make .cc if source is .ll or .yy, and apparently we
must use those extensions "because of scons", so update everywhere glsl_parser.cpp
-> glsl_parser.cc and glsl_lexer.cpp -> glsl_lexer.cc. This fixes 'make tarballs'
and building with dricore enabled.
Signed-off-by: Jon TURNEY <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Tested-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This also currently fix the installation of libOSmesa.
v2: Remove old Makefile, libOSmesa is now versioned, fix typos
v3: Keep config substitution alphabetized
v4: Update .gitignore
v5: Libraries will be in the builddir, not the srcdir.
Reviewed-by: Jon TURNEY <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Tested-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
This was not implemented, because the spec was changed just recently.
Everything has been in place already.
Gallium has PIPE_FORMAT_B5G6R5_UNORM, while Mesa has MESA_FORMAT_RGB565.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The whole reason I avoided this was because it might operate on a
brw_vertex_program or a brw_fragment_program. However, that isn't a
problem: all we need is the gl_program base type.
This avoids awkwardly passing the loop counter 'i' as a parameter,
simplifies both callers, and also plumbs prog in place for future use.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
If alpha-testing is enabled, we need to send alpha down the pipeline
even if nr_color_buffers == 0. However, tracking whether alpha-testing
is enabled in the WM program key is expensive: it causes us to compile
multiple specializations of the same shader, using program cache space.
This patch removes the check for alpha-testing, and simply emits alpha
whenever nr_color_buffers == 0. We believe this will also be necessary
for alpha-to-coverage, and it should add minimal overhead to an uncommon
case. Saving the recompiles should more than make up the difference.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Previously we only did this pre-Gen6, and used pwrite on Gen6+.
In one workload, this cuts significant amount of overhead.
v2: Simplify the function based on Eric's suggestions.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We rely on proper IEEE 754 behavior in too many places for this.
See also commit 2fdbbeca43 with equivalent
change for autoconf.
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Without that, people with buggy apps that looked at just the server
string for GLX_ARB_create_context would call this function that just
threw an error when you tried to make a context. Google shows plenty
of complaints about this.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This function assumes that lp_build_context::type is a vector type,
which is not true for r600 or radeonsi.
This fixes an assertion failure using glamor 2D accel.
It had many problems:
- The shadow comparison was done post-filtering.
- It required state-dependent recompiles whenever the comparison
function changed.
- It didn't even work: many cases hit assertion failures.
- I never implemented it for the VS.
The new lowering pass which converts textureGrad to textureLod by
computing the LOD value works much better.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Intel hardware doesn't natively support textureGrad with shadow
comparisons. So we need to generate code to handle it somehow.
Based on the equations of page 205 of the OpenGL 3.0 specification,
it's possible to compute the LOD value that would be selected given the
gradient values. Then, we can simply convert the TXD to a TXL.
Currently, this passes 34/46 of oglconform's shadow-grad subtests;
four cubemap tests are regressed. We should investigate this in the
future.
v2: Apply abs() to the scalar case (thanks to Eric).
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This swizzles away unwanted components, while preserving the order of
the ones that remain.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
I needed to compute logs and square roots in a patch I was working on,
and wanted to use the convenient interface. We already have a similar
constructor for binops; adding one for unops seems reasonable.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
I ran into this while trying to create a TXS query, which doesn't have a
coordinate. Since it didn't get initialized to NULL, a bunch of
visitors tried to access it and crashed.
Most of the time, this won't be a problem, but it's just a good idea.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The only case a depth buffer can be set as a color buffer is when flushing.
That wasn't always the case, but now this code isn't required anymore.
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
- maintain a mask of which mipmap levels are dirty (instead of one big flag)
- only flush what was requested at a given point and not the whole resource
(most often only one level and one layer has to be flushed)
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
we can just update the state when decompressing, there's no need to add
additional info into the DSA state
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
to remove some overhead from draw_vbo. This is a derived state.
BTW, I've got no idea how compute interacts with 3D here, but it should
use cb_misc_state, so that 3D and compute don't conflict.
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
Because u_blit couldn't sample a 1D, 3D, CUBE and ARRAY texture, we created
a 2D texture holding a copy of one slice of the source texture (even for 1D).
Let's just do it right.
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
This patch updates the blorp engine to properly handle the case where
the surface being textured from uses Gen7's CMS MSAA layout. The
following changes were necessary:
- Before reading color values from the surface, we need to read from
the MCS buffer using the ld_mcs sampler message. This is done by
the mcs_fetch() function, and the result is stored in the mcs_data
register. This only needs to be done once per pixel, since the MCS
value is shared between all samples belonging to a pixel.
- When reading color values from the surface, we need to use the
ld2dms sampler message instead of the ld2dss message, and we need to
provide the value read from the MCS buffer as an argument.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
When a buffer using Gen7's CMS MSAA layout is bound to a texture or a
render target, the SURFACE_STATE structure needs to point to the MCS
buffer and to indicate its pitch. This patch updates the functions
that emit SURFACE_STATE to handle CMS layout properly.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Previously the DWORD used to control the CMS MSAA layout was just a
pad value, because we didn't use it.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
To implement Gen7's CMS MSAA layout, we need an extra buffer, the MCS
(Multisample Control Surface) buffer. This patch introduces code for
allocating and deallocating the buffer, and storing a pointer to it in
the intel_mipmap_tree struct.
No functional change, since the CMS layout is not enabled yet.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
From the Ivy Bridge PRM, Vol 1 Part 1, p112:
There are three types of multisampled surface layouts designated
as follows:
- IMS Interleaved Multisampled Surface
- CMS Compressed Mulitsampled Surface
- UMS Uncompressed Multisampled Surface
Previously, the i965 driver only used IMS and UMS formats, and
distinguished beetween them using the boolean
intel_mipmap_tree::msaa_is_interleaved. To facilitate adding support
for the CMS format, this patch replaces that boolean (and other
booleans derived from it) with an enum
INTEL_MSAA_LAYOUT_{IMS,CMS,UMS}. It also updates the terminology used
in comments throughout the driver to match the IMS/CMS/UMS terminology
used in the PRM. CMS layout is not yet used.
The enum has a fourth possible value, INTEL_MSAA_LAYOUT_NONE, which is
used for non-multisampled surfaces.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
On Gen6, MSAA buffers always use an interleaved layout and non-MSAA
buffers always use a non-interleaved layout, so it is not strictly
necessary to keep track of the layout of the texture and render target
surfaces in the blorp program key. However, it is cleaner to do so,
since (a) it makes the blorp compiler less dependent on implicit
knowledge about how the GPU pipeline is configured, and (b) it paves
the way for implementing compressed multisampled surfaces in Gen7.
This patch won't cause any redundant compiles, because the layout of
the texture and render target surfaces depends on other parameters
that are already in the blorp program key.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
We don't generate public entrypoints for GLES extensions, so move the
GL_NV_draw_buffers definition from ARB_draw_buffers.xml to es_EXT.xml.
When the extension is defined in ARB_draw_buffers.xml, we end up with a
public entry point for it, but no prototype, which gives an error when
compiled with --disable-asm and --disable-shared-glapi.
Instead, just move the GLES extension to es_EXT.xml so this doesn't happen.
Signed-off-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
This lets us specify an offset into the bo where the miptree starts,
which will let us set up a texture for a single plane in a planar buffer.
Signed-off-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The additions in version 5 enables creating EGLImages for different planes
of a YUV buffer. createImageFromName is still used to create the containing
__DRIimage, and createSubImage can then be used no that __DRIimage to create
__DRIimages that correspond to the y, u, and v planes (__DRI_IMAGE_FORMAT_R8)
or the uv planes (__DRI_IMAGE_FORMAT_RG88) for formats such as NV12 where
the u and v components are interleaved. Packed formats such as YUYV etc
doesn't require any special treatment, we just sample those as a regular
ARGB texture.
Signed-off-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
The code for growing the memory pool (which is used for storing all of
the global buffers) wasn't working. There seem to be two separate issues
with the memory pool code. The first was the way it was growing the pool.
When the memory pool needed more space, it would:
1. Copy the data from the memory pool's backing texture to system memory.
2. Delete the memory pool's texture
3. Create a bigger backing texture for the memory pool.
4. Copy the data from system memory into the bigger texture.
The copy operations didn't seem to be working, and I suspect that since
they were using fragment shaders to do the copy, that there might have
been a problem with the mixing of compute and 3D state.
The other issue is that the size of 1D textures is limited, and I was
having trouble getting 2D textures to work.
I think these problems will be easier to solve once more code is shared
between 3D and compute, which is why I decided to disable it for now
rather than continue searching for a fix.
The original strategy for handling floating point loads, which was to
lower (f32 load) to (f32 bitcast (i32 load)) wasn't really working. The
main problem was that the DAG legalizer couldn't handle replacing a node
with two results (load) with a node with only one result (bitcast).
It didn't change performance on Lightsmark or Nexuiz, which both used
DYNAMIC_DRAW buffers, but it was killing performance (40% CPU wasted pwriting
buffers) on a closed-source app we're looking at.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Add the infrastructure required for this extension. There is no
xserver support and no driver support yet. Drivers can enable this be
advertising DRI2 version 4 and accepting the
__DRI_CTX_FLAG_ROBUST_BUFFER_ACCESS flag and the
__DRI_CTX_ATTRIB_RESET_STRATEGY attribute in create context.
Some additional Mesa infrastructure is needed before drivers can do
this. The GL_ARB_robustness spec, which all Mesa drivers already
advertise, requires:
"If the behavior is LOSE_CONTEXT_ON_RESET_ARB, a graphics reset
will result in the loss of all context state, requiring the
recreation of all associated objects."
It is necessary to land this infrastructure now so that the related
infrastructure can land in the xserver. The xserver has very long
release schedules, and the remaining Mesa parts should land long, long
before the next xserver merge window opens.
v2: Expose robustness as a DRI2 extension rather than bumping
__DRI_DRI2_VERSION.
v3: Add a comment explaining why dri2->base.version >= 3 is also
required for GLX_ARB_create_context_robustness.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This allows revising the dri_interface.h separately from adding driver
support.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We neglected to list the deprecation model/forward compatible context
support.
inverse() has been done for a while.
None of us know what "highp change" means; GLSL 1.30 already added the
ability to recognize precision keywords, and it doesn't look like 1.40
has any new requirements there (precision keywords still have no meaning).
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Use r600_resource_texture::flished_depth_texture for GPU access, and
allocate it in the VRAM. For transfers we'll allocate texture in the GTT
and store it in the r600_transfer::staging.
Improves performance when flushed depth texture is frequently used by the
GPU, e.g. in Lightsmark (~30%)
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
With fixes and updates from Ben Widawsky and comments from Paul Berry.
v2: Use drm_intel_gem_context_destroy to destroy hardware context;
remove useless initialization of hw_ctx, both suggested by Eric.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
This doesn't do anything with the uniform block declarations yet, so
usage of those uniforms finds them to be undeclared.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
I've been trying to derive from this for UBO support, and the slightly
obfuscated types were putting me over the edge.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
The got_one variable was set iff one of the bits in flags.i was set.
v2: Fix incorrect dropping of the ARB_conservative_depth warning.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org> (v1)
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This function is used when dispatching compute shader in order to avoid
mixing compute and 3D registers in the context's dirty list. This
allows the compute code to resuse 3D functions like evergreen_cb, which
return a struct r600_pipe_state and still have control over when and how
the register writes are emitted.
The start_compute_cs atom initializes some config and context registers
to the values needed for running compute shaders. When a compute shader
is dispatched, this atom is emitted after the start_cs_cmd atom, which
initializes registers that are common to both 3D and compute.
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Some packets require the shader type bit (bit 1) to be set when
used for compute shaders. The pkt_flag will be initialized to
RADEON_CP_PACKET3_COMPUTE_MODE for any struct r600_command_buffer used
for dispatching compute shaders and it will be or'd against the result of
the PKT3 macro when adding a new packet to a struct r600_command buffer.
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
For copy propgation, we've dropped the use of a GRF in favor of a
(probably later) use of a different GRF. This definitely requires
invalidating intervals.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Since live intervals are based on ip, removing an instruction trashes
the intervals unless we were to go do some surgery. These happen to
usually remove a use of a grf, so it's time to recalculate, anyway.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 release branch.
This has less impact than for the FS (4k savings), because it was partially
done already, but makes things more consistent.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We factor out all the EGL book-keeping into dri2_create_image() and
simplify the wayland case by using dupImage.
Signed-off-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
We have the same switch and allocation code in two places.
Signed-off-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This reverts commit cbffaf20e9.
Use the PRIx64 macro in the fprintf() call instead, as suggested
by Dylan Noblesmith.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
ROUND and TRUNC are implemented with one function to reduce code duplication.
Note: ROUND isn't actually used yet, but probably will be soon.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Converting CMP to SLT+LRP didn't work when src2 or src3 was Inf/NaN.
That's the case for GLSL sqrt(0). sqrt(0) actually happens in many
piglit auto-generated tests that use the distance() function.
v2: remove debug/devel code, per Jose
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Was previously implemented with FLOOR.
Fixes quite a few piglit tests of float->int conversion, integer
division, etc.
v2: clean up left over debug/devel code, per Jose
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
If the 'dst' register is the same as the 'pass' register we'll generate
invalid code. Use a temporary register in that case.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Redo this commit, and remove the inclusion of gl2ext.h
from src/mapi/glapi/glapi_priv.h. The include was added in
8f3be33985 to fix a missing prototype for
glDrawBuffersNV and others, but it's not possible to include both
glext.h and gl2ext.h from the same file.
I don't see the missing prototype here (with or without shared glapi)
so I'm just removing the offending #include.
Also, since we're redoing this, update to the most recent gl2ext.2.
Signed-off-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
That old bug was hidden but the clipper always interpolating in 3d space
no matter what it should have been doing. Now that the interpolation
has been fixed, the bug shows up.
Fixes fdo 51364.
Signed-off-by: Olivier Galibert <galibert@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Calling glGenerateMipmap could overwrite vertex buffer state, leading
to incorrect rendering or crashes depending on the Gallium driver.
This was happening on WebGL Conformance test texture-size.
Before 784dd51198 this was covered up
by redundant vertex buffer validation.
Reviewed-by: Stéphane Marchesin <marcheu@chromium.org>
Signed-off-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
This reverts commit 8818b88748.
I get a lot of errors like this one:
In file included from ../../../src/mapi/glapi/glapi_priv.h:49:0,
from glapi_dispatch.c:40:
../../../include/GLES2/gl2ext.h:1074:28: error: redefinition of typedef ‘PFNGLRENDERBUFFERSTORAGEMULTISAMPLEEXTPROC’
../../../include/GL/glext.h:10237:25: note: previous declaration of ‘PFNGLRENDERBUFFERSTORAGEMULTISAMPLEEXTPROC’ was here
This with a clean build (with git clean -fdX).
I don't get the errors on my other machine. I didn't investigate why,
a wild guess is that this depends on the version of gcc.
This is a big win for savage2, hon and yofrankie. 62 new programs for
savage2/hon get 16-wide mode, along with one for humus demos and two
for tropics. Even a few shaders from tropics see reductions of 15% or
more.
total instructions in shared programs: 216536 -> 207353 (-4.24%)
instructions in affected programs: 123941 -> 114758 (-7.41%)
In benchmarking Tropics, only a .040% +/- 034% performance improvement
was observed (n=90). Rather disappointing, but I was primarily
motivated to do this patch by a regression in the number of 16-wide
shaders compiled after a GRF texturing on IVB patch I'm working on.
Hopefully this helps avoid that regression.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This shaves a few instructions off of a ton of programs. For 12
shaders from tropics and sanctuary, it's enough reduction in register
pressure to get 16-wide mode. 7 shaders from heroes of newerth and
savage2 are hurt by about 1.1%, where copy propagation of negates ends
up preventing coalescing, but we could regain that by doing dataflow
analysis in our copy propagation.
No significant performance difference in tropics (n=11)
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The meta-ops _mesa_meta_Clear() and _mesa_meta_glsl_Clear() need to
ignore the state of GL_SAMPLE_ALPHA_TO_COVERAGE,
GL_SAMPLE_ALPHA_TO_ONE, GL_SAMPLE_COVERAGE, GL_SAMPLE_COVERAGE_VALUE,
and GL_SAMPLE_COVERAGE_INVERT when clearing multisampled buffers. The
easiest way to accomplish this is to disable GL_MULTISAMPLE during the
clear meta-ops.
Note: this patch also causes GL_MULTISAMPLE to be disabled during
_mesa_meta_GenerateMipmap() and _mesa_meta_GetTexImage() (since those
two meta-ops use MESA_META_ALL). Arguably this isn't strictly
necessary, since those meta-ops use their own non-MSAA fbo's, but it
shouldn't do any harm.
Fixes Piglit tests "EXT_framebuffer_multisample/clear {2,4}
{color,stencil}" on i965.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
From the Ivy Bridge PRM, Vol 2 Part 1 p280-281 (3DSTATE_WM:
Barycentric Interpolation Mode):
"Errata: When Centroid Barycentric mode is required, HW may
produce incorrect interpolation results when a 2X2 pixels have
unlit pixels."
To work around this problem, after doing centroid interpolation, we
replace the centroid-interpolated values for unlit pixels with
non-centroid-interpolated values (which are interpolated at pixel
centers). This produces correct rendering at the expense of a slight
increase in shader execution time.
I've conditioned the workaround with a runtime flag
(brw->needs_unlit_centroid_workaround) in the hopes that we won't need
it in future chip generations.
Fixes piglit tests "EXT_framebuffer_multisample/interpolation {2,4}
{centroid-deriv,centroid-deriv-disabled}". All MSAA interpolation
tests pass now.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
In order to compute centroid varyings correctly, the fragment shader
needs to be able to load the current pixel/sample mask into a flag
register. This patch adds an opcode to the fragment shader back-end
to do this; the opcode gets translated into the instruction
mov(1) f0<1>UW g1.14<0,1,0>UW { align1 WE_all }
Since this instruction clobbers f0, instruction scheduling has to
treat it the same as instructions that have a conditional modifier.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
When querying GL_PRIMITIVES_GENERATED, if primitive restart
is also used, then take the software primitive restart
path so GL_PRIMITIVES_GENERATED is returned correctly.
GL_TRANSFORM_FEEDBACK_PRIMITIVES_WRITTEN is also updated
since it will also affected by the same issue.
As noted in brw_primitive_restart.c, with further work we
should be able to move this situation back to a hardware
handled path.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Commit d73f6375f5 fixed the cause of the Piglit failure with
ARB_color_buffer_float fragment clamp modes. Now that it's fixed,
there's no reason to leave snorm format rendering disabled.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Commit 0c005bd7 intended to make ir_loop_jump::mode public, but also
accidentally added a new pointer to the enclosing loop. Furthermore, it
tried to initialize the new field by adding "this->loop = loop;" to the
constructor, but since there is no loop parameter, this only initialized
the field to itself---so it will likely be a garbage pointer.
A lot of code, such as lower_jumps, allocates new loop jumps without
setting this field appropriately, so any uses would probably just crash.
Thankfully, there were none, so we can just delete the field.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=51574
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
DrawPixels uses the MESA_META_CLAMP_FRAGMENT_COLOR flag to save/restore
the fragment color clamp mode. This is unnecessary since it never
alters it. It's also harmful: when the clamp mode is GL_FIXED_ONLY,
setting this flag causes _mesa_meta_begin to force it to GL_FALSE,
breaking clamping on SNORM formats.
DrawPixels should use the user-specified clamp mode and not change it.
Fixes Piglit's spec/ARB_color_buffer_float/GL_RGBA8_SNORM-drawpixels
test on i965/Sandybridge (with SNORM render targets re-enabled).
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Add "-f $(srcdir)/gl_API.xml" to the arguments of all
the scripts that by default look for gl_API.xml in the
working directory when run with no arguments, and prepend
$(srcdir) to those scripts that are already using an
explicit -f argument.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
tgsi_ureg was recently enhanced to support local temporaries, and as result
temps are declared individually.
This change avoids many TEMP register declarations on common shaders.
(And fixes performance regression due to mismatches against performance
sensitive shaders.)
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
The templated copy constructor doesn't prevent the compiler from
emitting a default copy constructor, which leads to inconsistent
memory handling and was reported to cause segfaults when doing event
manipulation.
Reported-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
The function internalizer pass marks non-kernel functions as internal,
which enables optimizations like function inlining and global dead-code
elimination.
v2:
- Pass vector arguments by const reference
Removed u_half.py used to generate the table for previous method.
Previous implementation of float to half conversion was faulty for
denormalised and NaNs and would require extra logic to fix,
thus making the speedup of using tables irrelevant.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Some parameters need to be checked only once.
check_valid_to_render needs to be called only once.
The validate function is based on the one for DrawElements.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This is a cleanup for ARB_transform_feedback3, where
GL_MAX_TRANSFORM_FEEDBACK_BUFFERS is introduced for interleaved attribs and
has the same meaning as GL_MAX_.._SEPARATE_ATTRIBS for separate attribs.
Also, the maximum number of TFB buffers is reduced from 32 to 4, which makes
this patch useful even without the extension.
I don't know of any hardware which can do more than 4.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Doesn't really change the generated assembly, but produces more compact IR,
and of course, makes code more consistent.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
For some reason regular gcc on Linux didn't catch these but the mingw
compiler did (generated errors, not warnings).
v2: include the changes in src/mapi/ too
Fixes the es2 build with gcc.
Note: in glext.h the prototypes for glShaderSource() and glShaderSourceARB()
disagree: only the former has the extra const qualifier.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Set the step_rate value when drawing to implement
ARB_instanced_arrays for gen >= 4.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Previously, we were counting gl_FrontFacing, gl_FragCoord and gl_PointCoord
against the limit of varying variables. This prevented some valid shaders
from linking.
The other potential solution to this is to have the driver advertise
more varying vars or set the GLSLSkipStrictMaxVaryingLimitCheck flag.
But the above-mentioned variables aren't conventional varying attributes
so it doesn't seem right to count them.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Updated lp_build_printf to share common code.
Removed specific lp_build_print_vecX.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Since we don't have them in hw we emulate them in the shader. Although not
recommended by the spec it is legit.
As a side effect we also get GL 2.1. I think this is as far as we can take
the i915.
The most recent commit adds support for comments and macro expansion
on #line directives. Add testing to verify the new features.
Signed-off-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The GLSL specification requires that #line directives be interpreted
after macro expansion. Our existing implementation of #line macros in
the lexer prevents conformance on this point.
Moving the handling of #line from the lexer to the parser gives us the
macro expansion we need. An additional benefit is that the
preprocessor also now supports comments on the same line as #line
directives.
Finally, the preprocessor now emits the (fully-macro-expanded) #line
directives into the output. This allows the full GLSL compiler to also
see and interpret these directives so it can also generate correct
line numbers in error messages.
Signed-off-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This function is currently used only in the expansion of #if lines,
but we will soon be using it more generally (for the expansion of
(_glcpp_parser_expand_and_lex_from) and some more documentation.
Signed-off-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Commit b823b99ec0 switched from using
functions such as ralloc_asprintf and ralloc_strcat to
ralloc_asprintf_rewrite_tail. This change maintains the string's
length as a aparamter that is updated by the ralloc functions (rather
than recomputing it with strlen over and over).
However, the change failed to updated two locations (glcpp_error and
glcpp_warning), with the result that the string's length wasn't
updated by these calls. Then, subsequent calls to other
ralloc_asprintf_rewrite_tail would overwrite the text appended by
glcpp_error.
This commit fixes the two missing updates, and restores line numbers
to the output of glcpp error messages, (as noticed by a glcpp unit
test case that has been failing since the above-mentioned commit).
Signed-off-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
A strict reading of the GLSL specification would have this be an
error, but we've received reports from users who expect the
preprocessor to interepret undefined macros as 0. This is the standard
behavior of the rpeprocessor for C, and according to these user
reports is also the behavior of other OpenGL implementations.
So here's one of those cases where we can make our users happier by
ignoring the specification. And it's hard to imagine users who really,
really want to see an error for this case.
The two affected tests cases are updated to reflect the new behavior.
Signed-off-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
DUAL_EXPORT can be enabled on r6xx/r7xx when all CBs use 16-bit export
and there is no depth/stencil export.
Signed-off-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
It seems DUAL_EXPORT on evergreen may be enabled when all CBs use 16-bit export
mode (EXPORT_4C_16BPC), also there should be at least one CB, and the PS
shouldn't export depth/stencil.
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
In some cases TGSI shader has more color outputs than the number of CBs,
so it seems we need to limit the number of color exports. This requires
different shader variants depending on the nr_cbufs, but on the other hand
we are doing less exports, which are very costly.
v2: fix various piglit regressions
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
Shader variants are stored in the list, the key for lookup is based on the
states that require different hw shaders - currently it's rctx->two_side (all
gpus) and rctx->nr_cbufs (evergreen/cayman, when writes_all property is set).
v2:
- use simple list instead of keymap as suggested by Marek on irc
- call r600_adjust_gprs from r600_bind_vs_shader for r6xx/r7xx
(r600_shader_select isn't used for vertex shaders currently)
v3:
- fix call to r600_adjust_gprs - do it after updating current shader
Improves performance for some apps, e.g. FlightGear -
see https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=50360
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
As with the previous commit for softpipe.
v2: remove 'default' case to get compile-time warning
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
These all return zero. Add a debug_printf() to catch the default case so
we don't accidently mishandle something important in the future.
v2: remove 'default' case to get compile-time warning
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This is actually required for GL_ARB_framebuffer_object, but the state
tracker doesn't currently check it.
Direct3D 9 allows mixed format color buffers with some restrictions.
Setting this allows Unigine Heaven 2.5 and 3.0 to run. Tested both on
GL and D3D hosts.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jakob Bornecrantz <jakob@vmware.com>
The type is the destination type (i.e. float vector) and not the
source type. Fixes piglit fs-{in,de}crement-uint.
Signed-off-by: Olivier Galibert <galibert@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
i965 hardware needs to be informed of situations in which it's
possible for pixels (or samples) to be discarded for reasons other
than depth/stencil testing (e.g. due to an explicit "discard" in the
fragment shader). One of these situations is when
GL_ALPHA_TO_COVERAGE is enabled, since that can cause samples to be
discarded by the color calculator when the pixel's alpha value is less
than 1.0.
Without this patch, GL_ALPHA_TO_COVERAGE does not take effect on depth
buffers.
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
This patch enables the multisampling parameters
GL_SAMPLE_ALPHA_TO_COVERAGE and GL_SAMPLE_ALPHA_TO_ONE, which allow
the fragment shader's alpha output to be converted into a sample
coverage mask and ignored for blending. i965 supports these
parameters through the BLEND_STATE structure.
The GL spec allows, but does not require, the implementation to dither
the conversion from alpha to a sample coverage mask, so that alpha
values that aren't a multiple of 1/num_samples result in the correct
proportion of samples being lit. A bit exists in the BLEND_STATE
structure to enable this functionality, but according to the hardware
docs it must be disabled on Sandy Bridge (see the Sandy Bridge PRM,
Vol2, Part1, p379: AlphaToCoverage Dither Enable). So it is enabled
for Gen7 only.
Fixes piglit tests
"EXT_framebuffer_multisample/sample-alpha-to-{coverage,one} {2,4}".
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
This patch enables glSampleCoverage() functionality, which allows the
client program to specify that only a portion of the samples be lit up
when performing multisampled rendering. i965 supports
glSampleCoverage() through the 3DSTATE_SAMPLE_MASK command packet,
which allows the driver to specify a bitfield indicating which samples
to light up.
Fixes piglit tests "EXT_framebuffer_multisample/sample-coverage {2,4}
{inverted,non-inverted}".
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Fixes gles2conform GL.equal.equal_bvec2_frag.
This fixes brw_fs_visitor's translation of ir_unop_f2b. It used CMP to
convert the float to one of 0 or ~0. However, the convention in the
compiler is that true is represented by 1, not ~0. This patch adds an AND
to convert ~0 to 1.
By inspection, a similar problem existed with ir_unop_i2b, with a similar
fix.
[v2 kayden]: eliminate extra temporary register.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=49621
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
This patch causes the fragment shader to be configured correctly (and
the correct code to be generated) for centroid interpolation. This
required two changes: brw_compute_barycentric_interp_modes() needs to
determine when centroid barycentric coordinates need to be included in
the pixel shader thread payload, and
fs_visitor::emit_general_interpolation() needs to interpolate using
the correct set of barycentric coordinates.
Fixes piglit tests "EXT_framebuffer_multisample/interpolation {2,4}
centroid-edges" on i965.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
To save time, we only instruct the clip stage of the pipeline to
compute noperspective barycentric coordinates if those coordinates are
needed by the fragment shader. Previously, we would determine whether
the coordinates were needed by seeing whether the fragment shader used
the BRW_WM_NONPERSPECTIVE_PIXEL_BARYCENTRIC interpolation mode.
However, with MSAA, it's possible that the fragment shader might use
BRW_WM_NONPERSPECTIVE_CENTROID_BARYCENTRIC instead. In the future,
when we support ARB_sample_shading, it might use
BRW_WM_NONPERSPECTIVE_SAMPLE_BARYCENTRIC.
This patch modifies the upload_clip_state() functions to check for all
three possible noperspective interpolation modes.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This bitfield tells the back-ends which of a fragment shader's inputs
require centroid interpolation. It is only set for GLSL fragment
shaders, since assembly fragment shaders don't support centroid
interpolation.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
It was only no-oping the clear() function, not actual triangle
rasterization. Move the no_rast field from lp_context down into
lp_rasterizer so it's accessible where it's needed.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Fixes this build failure on Solaris.
Compiling build/sunos-debug/glsl/glcpp/glcpp-lex.c ...
"src/glsl/glcpp/glcpp-lex.l", line 30: cannot find include file: "glcpp-parse.h"
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
$CLANG_RESOURCE_DIR is the directory that contains all resources
needed by clang to compile programs. When clover uses clang to
compile kernels it needs to specify a resource dir, so that clang
can find its internal headers (e.g. stddef.h).
clang defines $CLANG_RESOURCE_DIR as $CLANG_LIBDIR/clang/$CLANG_VERSION
This patch adds the --with-clang-libdir option in order to accommodate
clang intalls to non-standard locations, and it also adds a check
to the configure script to verify that $CLANG_RESOURCE_DIR/include
contains the necessary header files.
On i965, dFdx() and dFdy() are computed by taking advantage of the
fact that each consecutive set of 4 pixels dispatched to the fragment
shader always constitutes a contiguous 2x2 block of pixels in a fixed
arrangement known as a "sub-span". So we calculate dFdx() by taking
the difference between the values computed for the left and right
halves of the sub-span, and we calculate dFdy() by taking the
difference between the values computed for the top and bottom halves
of the sub-span.
However, there's a subtlety when FBOs are in use: since FBOs use a
coordinate system where the origin is at the upper left, and window
system framebuffers use a coordinate system where the origin is at the
lower left, the computation of dFdy() needs to be negated for FBOs.
This patch modifies the fragment shader back-ends to negate the value
of dFdy() when an FBO is in use. It also modifies the code that
populates the program key (brw_wm_populate_key() and
brw_fs_precompile()) so that they always record in the program key
whether we are rendering to an FBO or to a window system framebuffer;
this ensures that the fragment shader will get recompiled when
switching between FBO and non-FBO use.
This will result in unnecessary recompiles of fragment shaders that
don't use dFdy(). To fix that, we will need to adapt the GLSL and
NV_fragment_program front-ends to record whether or not a given shader
uses dFdy(). I plan to implement this in a future patch series; I've
left FIXME comments in the code as a reminder.
Fixes Piglit test "fbo-deriv".
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
It's not optimal, but it's better than the register pressure scheduler
that was previously being used. The VLIW scheduler currently ignores
all the complicated instruction groups restrictions and just tries to
fill the instruction groups with as many instructions as possible.
Though, it does know enough not to put two trans only instructions in
the same group.
We are able to ignore the instruction group restrictions in the LLVM
backend, because the finalizer in r600_asm.c will fix any illegal
instruction groups the backend generates.
Enabling the VLIW scheduler improved the run time for a sha1 compute
shader by about 50%. I'm not sure what the impact will be for graphics
shaders. I tested Lightsmark with the VLIW scheduler enabled and the
framerate was about the same, but it might help apps that use really
big shaders.
The rest of the TFB implementation remains in transformfeedback.c, and
this will be shared with UBOs.
v2: Move the size/offset checks shared with UBOs to common code as
well. (Kenneth's review)
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com> (v1)
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
v2: Fix a typo spotted by Eric Anholt.
v3: Fix missing "GL" on types, fix style, fix Studly_Caps extension name,
drop commented code duplicated with GL3x.xml [anholt]
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Our intention is still that it's not abi stable, so make the package
version number get included in the library name. Now you can parallel
install dricore-using drivers from multiple mesa versions. We can put
it into lib now that we're following library versioning rules
(assuming that ABIs don't change within a single Mesa point release).
LD_LIBRARY_PATH still doesn't work with a non-/, non-/usr prefix
because libtool uses rpath instead of runpath for nonstandard
prefixes.
The weird versioning of the libGL where the package version was sort
of expressed as a big integer is dropped. libtool didn't like the 0
prefix, and it didn't really make sense anyway -- if you interpret it
as an integer version number, old Mesa 071200 was bigger than current
Mesa 08100. Instead, just bump the minor version and drop the
patchlevel.
Except for the deleted linux-cell target, these were just the target
cc/cflags. The only usage was for gen_matypes, which wants the
target's structure packing, not the host, anyway.
Every place that uses ASM_FLAGS already uses DEFINES. Not including
it in DEFINES is just a way to screw up potential users, as I've done
several times while working on the build system.
Even pre-automake, we rely on gmake features for pattern
substitutions, and replacing those with reams more make code is not
interesting. This will let us turn the old Makefiles using pattern
substitutions into automake without spewing warnings.
Reviewed-by: Dan Nicholson <dbn.lists@gmail.com>
1) We need to insert a barrier between consecutive transform feedback calls.
2) VBO cache needs to be flushed when TFB output is used as VBO draw input.
Fixes Piglit test EXT_transform_feedback/immediate-reuse.
Thanks to Christoph Bumiller for pointing out bugs in previous versions
of this patch.
gl_ClipDistance needs special treatment in form of lowering pass
which transforms gl_ClipDistance representation from float[] to
vec4[]. There are 2 implementations - at glsl linker level (enabled
by LowerClipDistance option) and at glsl_to_tgsi level (enabled
unconditionally for gallium drivers). Second implementation is
incomplete - it does not take into account transform feedback (see
commit 642e5b413e "mesa: Fix transform
feedback of unsubscripted gl_ClipDistance array" for details).
There are 2 possible fixes:
- adding transform feedback support into glsl_to_tgsi version
- ripping gl_ClipDistance support from glsl_to_tgsi and enabling
gl_ClipDistance lowering on glsl linker side
This patch implements 2nd option. All it does is:
- reverts most of the commit 59be691638
"st/mesa: add support for gl_ClipDistance"
- changes LowerClipDistance to true
Fixes Piglit tests "EXT_transform_feedback/builtin-varyings
gl_ClipDistance[{2,3,4,5,6,7,8}]-no-subscript" at least on nv50
and evergreen cards.
From the GL 3.0 spec (p.116):
"Multisample rasterization is enabled or disabled by calling
Enable or Disable with the symbolic constant MULTISAMPLE."
Elsewhere in the spec, where multisample rasterization is described
(sections 3.4.3, 3.5.4, and 3.6.6), the following text is consistently
used:
"If MULTISAMPLE is enabled, and the value of SAMPLE_BUFFERS is
one, then..."
So, in other words, disabling GL_MULTISAMPLE should prevent
multisample rasterization from occurring, even if the draw framebuffer
is multisampled. This patch implements that behaviour by setting the
WM and SF stage's "multisample rasterization mode" to
MSRAST_ON_PATTERN only when the draw framebuffer is multisampled *and*
GL_MULTISAMPLE is enabled.
Fixes piglit test spec/EXT_framebuffer_multisample/enable-flag.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Due to hardware limitations, MSAA is unsupported on Gen6 for formats
containing >64 bits of data per pixel. From the Sandy Bridge PRM,
vol4 part1, p72 ("Surface Format"):
If Number of Multisamples is set to a value other than
MULTISAMPLECOUNT_1, this field cannot be set to the following
formats:
- any format with greater than 64 bits per element
- any compressed texture format (BC*)
- any YCRCB* format
Gen7 has a similar, but less stringent limitation: formats with >64
bits of data per pixel only support 4x MSAA.
This patch causes the unsupported formats to report
GL_FRAMEBUFFER_UNSUPPORTED.
Fixes piglit "multisample-formats" tests on Gen6.
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Sandy Bridge and later don't use this field, so there's no point in
setting it. It can only cause harmful state-based recompiles.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The system array values concept doesn't really because it expects the
system values to be fixed per call, which is wrong for gl_VertexID and
iffy for gl_SampleID. So this patch does two things:
- kill the array, have emit_fetch_system_value directly pick the
values it needs (only gl_InstanceID for now, as the previous code)
- correctly handle the expected type in emit_fetch_system_value
Signed-off-by: Olivier Galibert <galibert@pobox.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This includes:
- picking up correctly which attributes are flatshaded and which are
noperspective
- copying the flatshaded attributes when needed, including the
non-built-in ones
- correctly interpolating the noperspective attributes in screen-space
instead than in a 3d-correct fashion.
Signed-off-by: Olivier Galibert <galibert@pobox.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
z or stencil texture should not be created with the z/stencil
flags for surface creation as they are intended to be bound
as texture.
v2: remove broken code
Signed-off-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
Solaris Studio C compiler does not support anonymous structs and
anonymous unions.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
The idea here is to rewrite comparisons like 2 >= x with x <= 2; we want
to simply exchange arguments, not negate the condition. If equality was
part of the original comparison, it should remain part of the swapped
version.
This is the true cause of bug #50298. It didn't manifest itself on
Sandybridge because we embed the conditional modifier in the IF
instruction rather than emitting a CMP. All other platforms use CMP.
It also didn't manifest itself on the master branch because commit
be5f27a84d ("glsl: Refine the loop instruction counting.") papered over
the problem.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=50298
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Fixes build error on Cygwin and Solaris. _R, _G, and _B are used in
ctype.h on those platforms.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This fixes a bug where a sampler view was using stale texture/resource
data when the texture was modified through a surface (render to texture).
Bumping the texture and layer ages triggers sampler view revalidation.
Fixes piglit fbo-blit failure.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This lets us select the front buffer for reading under GLES2.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This extra condition checks the API not the version of the API, so rename
to reflect that.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This is failing sometimes, probably because TargetData keeps a structure layout
cache, which can becomes bogus, ever since the InvalidateStructLayoutInfo API
was removed in LLVM r135245.
This change merely makes the problem easier to diagnose (an assertion
failure instead of a random crash).
instead of failing to allocate a renderbuffer.
This also fixes piglit/get-renderbuffer-internalformat with non-renderable
formats.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This allows drivers not to do any allocation in AllocStorage if the storage
cannot be allocated because of an unsupported internalformat + samples combo.
The little ugliness is that AllocStorage is expected to return TRUE in this
case.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This requires the latest streamout kernel patches.
Streamout is disabled by default on r7xx, so this patch is safe for regular
users.
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Note: for the moment TGSI_OPCODE_F2U is implemented using
lp_build_itrunc() (the same function used to implement
TGSI_OPCODE_F2I). In the long run, we should create an
lp_build_utrunc() function to do the proper conversion. But this
should allow us to limp along with mostly correct behaviour for now.
Previously, we performed conversions from float->uint by a two step
process: float->int->uint. However, on platforms that use saturating
conversions (e.g. i965), this didn't work, because if the source value
was larger than the maximum representable int (0x7fffffff), then
converting it to an int would clamp it to 0x7fffffff.
This patch just adds the new opcode; further patches will adapt
optimization passes and back-ends to use it, and then finally the
ast_to_hir logic will be modified to emit the new opcode.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This patch modifies blorp blits (which are used for MSAA) to properly
account for clipping of source coordinates. Previously, if we
detected the possibility of source clipping, we would fall back to the
blit meta-op, which doesn't support MSAA and is very slow for depth
and stencil buffers.
Fixes piglit tests
"EXT_framebuffer_multisample/clip-and-scissor-blit" on i965/Gen6+.
Also substantially speeds up the Humble Bundle V game "Psychonauts" on
Gen6+ (without this patch, the game's depth buffer blits use the slow
blit meta-op).
Reviewed-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
This allows to submit things to the compute only
rings on cayman+
v2: rebased on current master and actually make use
of the new flag in evergreen_compute.c
Signed-off-by: Christian König <deathsimple@vodafone.de>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
When drawing a depth image the fragment shader also needs to emit the
current raster color.
The new piglit drawpix-z test exercises this.
NOTE: This is a candiate for the 8.0 branch.
This patch updates .gitignore files to account for the new build
artifacts introduced by the following commits:
ae376f0 glx/tests: Rename test as glx-test
8fecdcc mesa/tests: Add tests for _mesa_lookup_enum_by_{name,nr} functions
a29ad2b mesa/tests: Add tests for the generated dispatch table
Haiku targets the Pentium or higher processor.
To ensure compatibility we can do march 586 and
mtune 686. Mesa will still use sse however if
the cpu supports it (and the stack is properly
aligned). These flags only effect the internal
compiler optimizations.
Previously, rbug_*.c would fail to compile with incomplete prototype
errors when make was run from the command line on my machine. My IDE
always built fine, and still does after this patch (Netbeans 7.1.2).
Most of the includes from files in gallium/auxiliary/rbug/* were
assuming an rbug/ subdirectory, while the headers are actually in the
same directory as the .c files.
The build error was also previously a problem for me on Ubuntu 11.10
and Mint 12.
Fixes build for the following configuration: ./autogen.sh
--enable-debug --enable-texture-float --with-gallium-drivers=r600
--with-dri-drivers=radeon --enable-r600-llvm-compiler
Signed-off-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
In single precision, 1.5707963 becomes 1.5707962513 which is too
small. However, 1.5707964 becomes 1.5707963705 which is just right.
The value 1.5707964 is already used in asin.ir.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Olivier Galibert <galibert@pobox.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
There is no GLX protocol for these functions. Open-source Linux
driver have not supported this extension for many years, and it seems
unlikely at this point that this support will return. There's no
reason to have slots for these functions in the dispatch table.
The unit tests (GetProcAddress::TableDidntShrink and others) are also updated.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
There is no GLX protocol for these functions. No open-source Linux
driver has ever supported this extension, and it seems unlikely at
this point that one ever will. There's no reason to have slots for
these functions in the dispatch table.
The unit tests (GetProcAddress::TableDidntShrink and others) are also updated.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
There is no GLX protocol for these functions. No open-source Linux
driver has ever supported this extension, and it seems unlikely at
this point that one ever will. There's no reason to have slots for
these functions in the dispatch table.
The unit tests (GetProcAddress::TableDidntShrink and others) are also updated.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
There is no GLX protocol for these functions, and no Linux driver has
ever supported this extension. There's no reason to have slots for
these functions in the dispatch table.
The unit tests (GetProcAddress::TableDidntShrink and others) are also updated.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
There is no GLX protocol for this function. Open-source Linux driver
have not supported this extension for many years, and it seems
unlikely at this point that this support will return. There's no
reason to have slots for this function in the dispatch table.
The unit tests (GetProcAddress::TableDidntShrink and others) are also updated.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
There is no GLX protocol for these functions, and no Linux driver has
ever supported this extension. There's no reason to have slots for
these functions in the dispatch table.
The unit tests (GetProcAddress::TableDidntShrink and others) are also updated.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
These are from OpenGL 3.1 and ARB_uniform_buffer_object. I only added
them to 3.1 because that required the least work.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
These are from OpenGL 3.3, ARB_texture_swizzle, and
EXT_texture_swizzle (with different names). I only added them to 3.3
because that required the least work.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Determines whether it's a basis vector, i.e., a vector with one element
equal to 1 and all other elements equal to 0.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
When a value was replaced, the new key was strdup'd and leaked.
To fix this, we modify the hash table implementation to return
whether the value was replaced and free() the (now useless)
duplicate string.
When we have multiple shared contexts, and one of them is
long-running, this will lead to never freeing those resources
since they are shared. Instead, free them right away on context
destruction since we know the other context isn't using them.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
From the GL_NV_primitive_restart spec:
"PrimitiveRestartIndexNV is not compiled into display lists, but is
executed immediately."
Prior to this patch, calls to glPrimitiveRestartIndex would hit the noop
dispatch stub.
+2 oglconforms.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
From the GL_ARB_copy_buffer spec:
"An INVALID_VALUE error is generated if any of readoffset, writeoffset,
or size are negative [...]"
Fixes oglconform's copybuffer/negative.CNNegativeValues test.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
The warnings appear to occur with newer automake (probably 1.12).
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
These allow one to mangle the library names, without also mangling the
symbol names, to make them distinct from other GL libraries on the
system.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Because these classes are used entirely from their own source files
and not from separate DSOs, the linker gets to produce massively less
code. This cuts about 13k of text in the libdricore case. In the
non-libdricore case, the additional linkage information allows the
compiler to inline some code, so libglsl.a size actually increases by
about 300 bytes.
For a dricore build, improves shader_runner runtime on
glsl-fs-copy-propagation-texcoords-1 by 0.21% +/- 0.03% (n=353574,
outliers removed). No statistically significant difference with n=322
on glslparsertest on a yofrankie shader intended to test compiler
performance.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Now we have just one library of "all of Mesa core" instead of both
libdricore and libglsl that drivers link against.
I did this change in a sort of nonrecursive make fashion: the
generated files are still produced in the non-automake build, like the
rest of dricore, but the GLSL files are stuffed into libdricore
without building a convenience library in src/glsl (even though we
could now). This would make a bit more sense if glsl was just another
dir under src/mesa, because right now I had to contort the prefix
variable name to look another ../ level up.
This is part of a series to fix our build issues in the automake case
by hooking up the automatic Makefile regeneration support. The
extract_git_sha1 is moved into src/mesa/Makefile so that we get
correct dependency generation.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
I tried to update all the old Makefiles that included the default
config to be sure they had a default target if they didn't previously
have one, since this new all target will always point at it. Almost
everything had one.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Some more of the files are now autogenerated, this caused build breakage,
patch adds generation of these missing files. Patch also changes existing
make so that the files are created to be part of the local source
(not intermediate directory, this causes several problems).
Signed-off-by: Tapani Pälli <tapani.palli@intel.com>
This patch fixes a copy/paste error and masking of depth/stencil (stencil
is in the top 8 bits), and makes glean/readPixSanity happy.
Both the stencil and the depth buffer piglit test also pass if
glClear(DEPTH | STENCIL) is executed instead of
glClear(DEPTH)/glClear(STENCIL).
Reviewed-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
Tested-by: Christopher Egert <cme3000@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
remove archaic .cvsignore
*.pyo is already in toplevel .gitignore
*.pyc is already in toplevel .gitignore
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Previously, blits using the "blorp" mechanism only worked for 8-bit
RGBA color buffers, 24-bit depth buffers, and 8 bit stencil buffers.
This was not enough, because the blorp mechanism must be used for
blitting whenever MSAA is in use. This patch allows all formats to be
used, provided the source and destination formats match.
So far I have confirmed that the following formats work properly with
MSAA:
- GL_RGB
- GL_RGBA
- GL_ALPHA
- GL_ALPHA4
- GL_ALPHA8
- GL_R3_G3_B2
- GL_RGB4
- GL_RGB5
- GL_RGB8
- GL_RGB10
- GL_RGB12
- GL_RGB16
- GL_RGBA2
- GL_RGBA4
- GL_RGB5_A1
- GL_RGBA8
- GL_RGB10_A2
- GL_RGBA12
- GL_RGBA16
Fixes piglit tests "EXT_framebuffer_multisample/formats {2,4}" on
Sandy Bridge and Ivy Bridge.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Previously the blorp engine only supported RGBA8 color buffers and
24-bit depth buffers. This patch adds support for any color buffer
format that is supported as a render target, and for 16-bit and 32-bit
depth buffers.
This required threading the brw_context struct through into
brw_blorp_surface_info::set() so that it can consult the
brw->render_target_format array.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Even though brw_blorp_surface_info is derived from brw_blorp_mip_info,
this function doesn't need to be virtual, because it is never accessed
through a base class pointer. Making the function non-virtual will
allow it to take additional parameters in the brw_blorp_surface_info
case.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This patch moves the responsibility for deciding on the format of the
source and destination surfaces from the
gen{6,7}_blorp_emit_surface_state() functions to
brw_blorp_surface_info::set(), which is shared between Gen6 and Gen7.
This will make it possible to add support for more surface formats
without code duplication.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
TGSI doesn't need an opcode, since registers are untyped (but beware
once doubles come into the scene). Mesa IR doesn't handle native
integers, so trying to handle them there is worthless, the case
entries are only added for warning reasons.
It was only tested with softpipe, since llvmpipe doesn't support glsl
1.3 yet.
Signed-off-by: Olivier Galibert <galibert@pobox.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
That adds support for activating the extension. It doesn't actually
*do* anything yet, of course.
Signed-off-by: Olivier Galibert <galibert@pobox.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
From the issues section of the GL_ARB_texture_compression_rgtc extension:
15) What should glGetTexLevelParameter return for
GL_TEXTURE_GREEN_SIZE and GL_TEXTURE_BLUE_SIZE for the RGTC1
formats? What should glGetTexLevelParameter return for
GL_TEXTURE_BLUE_SIZE for the RGTC2 formats?
RESOLVED: Zero bits.
These formats always return 0.0 for these respective components
and have no bits devoted to these components.
Returning 8 bits for red size of RGTC1 and the red and green
sizes of RGTC2 makes sense because that's the maximum potential
precision for the uncompressed texels.
Thus, we need to return 8 bits for GL_TEXTURE_RED_SIZE on all RGTC formats
and 8 bits for GL_TEXTURE_GREEN_SIZE on RGTC2 formats. BLUE should be 0.
Fixes oglconform/rgtc/advanced.texture_fetch.tex_param.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
While ~loop_state() is already freeing the loop_variable_state objects
via ralloc_free(this->mem_ctx), the ~loop_variable_state() destructor
was never getting called, so the hash table inside loop_variable_state
was never getting destroyed.
Fixes a memory leak in any shader with loops.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The functions for handling 1D, 2D and 3D texture images were nearly
identical. This folds them all together.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We can't remove this pass yet, because we need it to convert AMDIL
registers in BRANCH* instructions, but we don't need it for
instruction conversion any more.
OpenGL allows you to declare user-defined fragment shader outputs with
less than four components:
out ivec2 color;
This makes sense if you're rendering to an RG format render target.
Previously, we assumed that all color outputs had four components (like
the built-in gl_FragColor/gl_FragData variables). This caused us to
call emit_color_write for invalid indices, incrementing the output
virtual GRF's reg_offset beyond the size of the register.
This caused cascading failures: split_virtual_grfs would allocate new
size-1 registers based on the virtual GRF size, but then proceed to
rewrite the out-of-bounds accesses assuming that it had allocated enough
new (contiguously numbered) registers. This resulted in instructions
that accessed size-1 GRFs which register numbers beyond
virtual_grf_next (i.e. registers that were never allocated).
Finally, this manifested as live variable analysis and instruction
scheduling accessing their temporary array with an out of bounds index
(as they're all sized based on virtual_grf_next), and the program would
segfault.
It looks like the hardware's Render Target Write message requires you to
send four components, even for RT formats such as RG or RGB. This patch
continues to use all four MRFs, but doesn't bother to fill any data for
the last few, which should be unused.
+2 oglconforms.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Commit 4650aea7a5 fixed texelFetchOffset()
on Ivybridge, but didn't update the Ironlake/Sandybridge code.
+18 piglits on Sandybridge.
NOTE: This and 4650aea7a5 are both candidates for stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Commit f41ecade7b fixed texelFetchOffset()
on Ivybridge, but didn't update the Ironlake/Sandybridge code.
+15 piglits on Sandybridge.
NOTE: This and f41ecade7b are both candidates for stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This isn't saved/restored by _mesa_meta_begin, so we need to do it
manually (like we do for the read/draw framebuffers). Additionally,
we neglected to re-bind before the glRenderbufferStorage call.
+13 oglconforms.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
DeleteBuffer needs to unbind from these binding points as well, based on
the same rationale as the previous patch.
+51 oglconforms (together with the last patch).
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
_mesa_lookup_bufferobj returns NULL for 0, which caused us to say
"there's no such buffer object" and raise an error, rather than
correctly binding the shared NullBufferObj.
Now you can unbind your buffers.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
According to the GL 3.1 spec, section 2.9 ("Buffer Objects"):
"If a buffer object is deleted while it is bound, all bindings to that
object in the current context (i.e. in the thread that called
DeleteBuffers) are reset to zero."
The code already checked for a number of cases, but neglected these
newer binding points.
+21 oglconforms.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
We were incorrectly assuming that the coordinate's dimensionality is
equal to the gradient's dimensionality. For array types, the coordinate
has one more component.
Fixes 12 subcases of oglconform's glsl-bif-tex-grad test.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Currently, if you pass --with-egl-platforms=x11 but xcb-dri2 isn't available
we just silently fail and disables building the EGL DRI2 driver.
This commit cleans up the EGL platfrom checking and fails if a selected
platform can't find its required dependencies.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Commit a07cf3397e added support for TBOs
on Gen7, but missed Gen6.
Passes piglit -t texture_buffer and oglconform's buffermapping
basic.read.texture tests.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
According to Table 6.17 in the GL 2.1 specification, DEPTH_TEXTURE_MODE,
TEXTURE_COMPARE_MODE, and TEXTURE_COMPARE_FUNC need to be restored on
glPopAttrib(GL_TEXTURE_BIT).
Makes a number of oglconform tests happier.
v2: Make restoration conditional on the ARB_shadow and ARB_depth_texture
extensions, as suggested by Brian. I'm not sure that any
implementations still remain that don't support those, but why not?
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
this fixes libdricore directory build with --enable-32-bit on a x86_64 system
Signed-off-by: Tapani Pälli <tapani.palli@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The VTX_READ instructions were using the ADDRParam ComplexPattern which
allows a load instruction's offset to be a register, but VTX_READ
instructions can only handle an immediate offset.
Also, the load_param pattern fragment had an erroneous return true;
statement that was causing it to match the wrong load instructions.
Tungsten Graphics has not existed for several years, and the majority of
ongoing development and support is done by Intel. I chose to include
"Open Source Technology Center" to distinguish it from, say, the closed
source Windows OpenGL driver.
The one downside to this patch is that applications that pattern match
against "Intel" may start applying workarounds meant for the Windows
driver. However, it does seem like the right thing to do.
This does change oglconform behavior.
Acked-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Acked-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Acked-by: Eugeni Dodonov <eugeni.dodonov@intel.com>
Acked-by: Keith Packard <keithp@keithp.com>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
These look like debug messages from the switch-statement development.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 release branch.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Tom Stellard:
- Updated for gallium interface changes
- Fixed a few bugs:
+ Set the loop counter
+ Calculate the correct number of pipes
- Added hooks into the LLVM compiler
v2:
-Separate IR type and LLVM triple
-Do the OpenCL C->LLVM IR and linking steps for all PIPE_SHADER_IR
types.
v3:
- Coding style fixes
- Removed compatibility code for LLVM < 3.1
- Split build_module_llvm() into three functions:
compile(), link(), and build_module_llvm()
v4:
- Use struct pipe_compute_program
v5:
- Don't malloc memory for struct pipe_llvm_program
v6:
- Fix serialization of llvm bytecode
Reviewed-by: Francisco Jerez <currojerez@riseup.net>
This structure is used as a header that precedes LLVM bytecode programs
that are passed to the drivers.
v2:
- s/pipe_compute_program/pipe_llvm_program/
v3:
- Rename to struct pipe_llvm_program_header
- Drop the char * prog member
Reviewed-by: Francisco Jerez <currojerez@riseup.net>
This is for the llvm code that can't use extended initializers.
v2:
- Use const references for vector arguments
- Move constructor defs before data members
- Initialize all values in the default constructors
v3:
- Fix typo
A device now has two function for getting information about the IR
it needs to return.
ir_format() => returns the preferred IR
ir_target() => returns the triple for the target that is understood by
clang/llvm.
v2:
- renamed ir_target() to ir_format()
- renamed llvm_triple() to ir_target()
v3:
- Remove unnecessary include
- Do proper conversion from std::vector<char> to std::string
Reviewed-by: Francisco Jerez <currojerez@riseup.net>
v2: Tom Stellard
- Update CAP description
v3: Tom Stellard
- TGSI targets should pass an empty string for this CAP.
v4: Tom Stellard
- TGSI targets can ignore this CAP.
Reviewed-by: Francisco Jerez <currojerez@riseup.net>
TEX instructions can't do saturation. Do the TEX into a temp reg w/out
saturation, then do a MOV_SAT.
Reviewed-by: Jakob Bornecrantz <jakob@vmware.com>
Some distributions (like Arch Linux) make /usr/bin/python Python 3,
rather than Python 2. Since compare_ir uses /usr/bin/env python,
such systems will fail to run optimization-test, causing 'make check' to
always fail.
Automake's TESTS_ENVIRONMENT variable provides a mechanism to run
programs or set environment variables in the test environment.
Ideally, I think we would want to use AM_TESTS_ENVIRONMENT, since
TESTS_ENVIRONMENT is supposed to be user-overridable. However, it isn't
supported using the default/serial test runner.
Fixes 'make check' on Arch Linux and Gentoo.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
I started writing unit tests for a new piece of code, and discovered
they all failed due to a bug in ralloc. Clearly it needs a test suite.
v2: Rename to 'ralloc-test' and fix copyright date. (idr review)
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
If an object is allocated out of the NULL context, info->parent will be
NULL. Using the PTR_FROM_HEADER macro would be incorrect: it would say
that ralloc_parent(ralloc_context(NULL)) == sizeof(ralloc_header).
Fixes the new "null_parent" unit test.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 7.9, 7.10, 7.11, and 8.0 branches.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Discovered while running the Khronos conformance test suite and
receiving "implementation error: meta program compile failed."
This bug was recently introduced by the i965 clear patch set and would
only be detected while using the ES2 API and only on gen6+ hardware.
Signed-off-by: Oliver McFadden <oliver.mcfadden@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This is performed in a subdirectory to avoid needing to convert all of
src/mesa/Makefile in one go.
I can now cherry-pick a commit containing glapi XML changes, do "(cd
src/mapi/glapi/gen && make) && make", and get a working driver.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
In order to do the minimal change for libdricore conversion to
automake, I need to put its Makefile.am in a subdirectory. Automake
gets whiny/broken if you use GNU make features like "addprefix" or
"$(FILES:%=../%)" to munge your *_SOURCES. So, use a plain old
variable to be able to substitute in that "../"
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
*_SOURCES is reserved for files lists for particular automake targets.
Also, "-" in the variable names is not allowed.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This variable won't be set when called from non-automake makefiles,
but it cleans up shared-glapi's output.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Mesa already always depends on python to build. The checked in
changes are not reviewed (because any trivial change rewrites the
world). We also have been pushing commits between xml change and
regen where at-build-time xml-generated code disagrees with committed
xml-generated code. And worst of all, sometimes we ("I") check in
*stale* xml-generated code.
Acked-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
commit 87f12bb2d9 tried to fix rb->mt
being NULL, but change this case wrong.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Kurt Roeckx <kurt@roeckx.be>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We now model loading uses sgpr values with LLVM IR load instructions that
use the USER_SGPR address space.
The definition of the sgpr parameter to the use_sgpr() helper function
in radeonsi_shader.c has changed so that you can pass raw sgpr values
rather than having to divide the sgpr value you want to use by the dword
width of the type you want to load.
This function was causing compile errors in the tablegen'd code for
some intrinsic definitions. I don't think we really need this function,
so I'm removing the function body just as a temporary solution. I'll
look into removing the entire AMDILIntrinsicInfo class later.
v2: use a define for the maximum sample count
v3: also test odd sample counts (r300 supports MS3)
While multisample renderbuffers are supported by mesa, MS visuals
are not, so we need a way to tell dri/st not to advertise them even
if the gallium driver does support multisampled surfaces.
Otherwise applications selecting these non-functional visuals would
run into trouble ...
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
The code which scans the index buffer for restart indexes wasn't adding
the index buffer offset so we were always starting at offset=0. The
offset is usually zero so it wasn't noticed before.
Fixes a failure in the piglit primitive-restart test when testing
vertex data + index data in a single VBO.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Basic 4x MSAA support now works on Gen7. This patch enables it.
As with Gen6, MSAA support is still fairly preliminary. In
particular, the following are not yet supported:
- 8x oversampling (Gen7 has hardware support for this, but we do not
yet expose it).
- Fully general blits between MSAA and non-MSAA buffers.
- Formats other than RGBA8, DEPTH24, and STENCIL8.
- Centrold interpolation.
- Coverage parameters (glSampleCoverage, GL_SAMPLE_ALPHA_TO_COVERAGE,
GL_SAMPLE_ALPHA_TO_ONE, GL_SAMPLE_COVERAGE, GL_SAMPLE_COVERAGE_VALUE,
GL_SAMPLE_COVERAGE_INVERT).
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
On Gen6, the blending necessary to blit an MSAA surface to a non-MSAA
surface could be accomplished with a single texturing operation. On
Gen7, the WM program must fetch each sample and blend them together
manually. From the Bspec (Shared Functions/Messages/Initiating
Message/Message Types/sample):
[DevIVB+]:Number of Multisamples on the associated surface must be
MULTISAMPLECOUNT_1.
This patch implements the manual blend operation.
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Since blorp uses color textures and render targets to do all its work
(even when blitting stencil and depth data), it always has to
configure the Gen7 GPU to use the new "sliced" MSAA layout. However,
when blitting stencil or depth data, the actual MSAA layout is
interleaved (as in Gen6). Therefore, blorp has to do extra coordinate
transformation work to account for the interleaving manually.
This patch causes blorp to perform the necessary extra coordinate
transformations.
It also modifies the blorp SURFACE_STATE setup code for Gen7, so that
it does not try to correct the surface width and height to account for
MSAA, since "sliced" MSAA layout doesn't affect the surface width or
height.
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
When a Gen7 SURFACE_STATE is configured for MSAA, a number of
additional constaints come in to play. This patch adds a function
gen7_check_surface_setup() which verifies that all of those
constraints are met.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Starting in Gen7, there are two possible layouts for MSAA surfaces:
- Interleaved, in which additional samples are accommodated by scaling
up the width and height of the surface. This is the only layout
available in Gen6. On Gen7 it is used for depth and stencil
surfaces only.
- Sliced, in which the surface is stored as a 2D array, with array
slice n containing all pixel data for sample n. On Gen7 this layout
is used for color surfaces.
The "Sliced" layout has an additional requirement: it must be used in
ARYSPC_LOD0 mode, which means that the surface doesn't leave any extra
room between array slices for miplevels other than 0.
This patch modifies the surface allocation functions to use the
correct layout when allocating MSAA surfaces in Gen7, and to set the
array offsets properly when using ARYSPC_LOD0 mode. It also modifies
the code that populates SURFACE_STATE structures to ensure that
ARYSPC_LOD0 mode is selected in the appropriate circumstances.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Gen7 support for blorp (blits using the render bath) now works for
non-MSAA purposes. This patch enables it.
Since blorp operations re-use the logic for HiZ ops, this required
adding a case to the switch statement in gen7_blorp_emit_wm_config(),
to allow for the case where no HiZ op is being performed.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
On Gen6, texel fetch is always accomplished using the SAMPLE_LD
message, which accepts arguments (u, v, r, lod, si). On Gen7, there
are two* texel fetch messages: SAMPLE_LD for non-MSAA surfaces, taking
arguments (u, lod, v), and SAMPLE_LD2DSS for MSAA surfaces, taking
arguments (si, u, v).
*Technically, there are other texel fetch messages, but they are used
for "compressed" MSAA surfaces, which we don't yet support.
This patch adds the proper message types and argument orderings for
Gen7.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Gen7 hardware requires us to enable at least one WM dispatch mode,
even if there is no program being dispatched to. When this code was
only used for HiZ operations (which don't use a WM program), we used
32-pixel dispatch, because it didn't matter. But blit programs are
compiled for 16-pixel dispatch. So just enable 16-wide dispatch
unconditionally.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
v2: Enable 16-wide dispatch unconditionally rather than add the
unnecessary complication of using 32-wide dispatch when there is no WM
program.
On Gen7, push constants for shader programs are stored in the URB, so
blorp code needs to set aside space for them. This was previously
unnecessary because blorp code was based on HiZ operations, which
don't require any shaders.
This patch adds a call from gen7_blorp_exec() to
gen7_allocate_push_constants(), to ensure that push constants are
assigned the correct location in the URB. It also extracts a new
function gen7_emit_urb_state() from gen7_upload_urb(), which is
re-used by gen7_blorp_emit_urb_config() to ensure that the URB regions
used by all the pipeline stages leave room for the push constants.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We know from previous bug fixes (commits
c25e5300cb and
b2ace06cbb) that texture border color
doesn't work if the dynamic state upper bound is set to 0. Although
the blorp engine doesn't make use of texture borders, it seems like we
ought to err on the safe side and set this value properly.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This patch separates out the portions of gen6_blorp_emit_batch_head()
that emit 3DSTATE_MULTISAMPLE, 3DSTATE_SAMPLE_MASK, and
STATE_BASE_ADDRESS. This paves the way for making the blorp code work
on Gen7, where additional command packets
(3DSTATE_PUSH_CONSTANT_ALLOC_VS and 3DSTATE_PUSH_CONSTANT_ALLOC_PS)
need to be emitted before 3DSTATE_MULTISAMPLE.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This patch modifies the "blorp" WM program so that it can be run in
MSDISPMODE_PERSAMPLE (which means that every single sample of a
multisampled render target is dispatched to the WM program, not just
every pixel).
Previously we were using the ugly hack of configuring multisampled
destination surfaces as single-sampled, and generating sample indices
other than zero by swizzling the pixel coordinates in the WM program.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This patch modifies the function brw_blorp_blit_program::texel_fetch()
to emit the SI (sample index) argument to the SAMPLE_LD message when
reading from a sample index other than zero.
Previously we were using the ugly hack of configuring multisampled
source surfaces as single-sampled, and accessing sample indices other
than zero by swizzling the texture coordinates in the WM program.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This patch generalizes the function
brw_blorp_blit_program::texture_lookup() so that it prepares the
arguments to the sampler message based on a caller-provided array
rather than assuming the argument order is always (u, v).
This paves the way for the messages we will need to use in Gen7, which
use argument orders (u, lod, v) and (si, u, v) (si=sample index).
It will also will allow us to read from arbitrary sample indices on
Gen6, by supplying the arguments (u, v, r, lod, si) to the SAMPLE_LD
message instead of just (u, v).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Gen6 MSAA buffers (and Gen7 MSAA depth/stencil buffers) interleave
MSAA samples in a complex pattern that repeats every 2x2 pixel block.
Therefore, when allocating an MSAA buffer, we need to make sure to
allocate an integer number of 2x2 blocks; if we don't, then some of
the samples in the last row and column will be cut off.
Fixes piglit tests "EXT_framebuffer_multisample/unaligned-blit {2,4}
color msaa" on i965/Gen6.
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Without passing the -ldflags parameter before $(LDFLAGS) in some cases
flags will be passed to MKLIB which it does not understand.
This might be -m64, -m32 or similar.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Gstädtner <thomas@gstaedtner.net>
Signed-off-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This patch gets the FreeBSD SCons build working again. The build still
fails though.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
We need to return immediately after inserting instructions that require
S_WAITCNT so that the parent class' custom inserter won't try to insert
them again.
Fix uninitialized scalar variable defects report by Coverity.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
We should just set the bits of functionality that we support; the
GL/ES1/ES2 flags in extensions.c will take care of advertising the
appropriate extensions for the current API.
This enables the GL_EXT_texture_compression_dxt1 extension on ES1/ES2
when libtxc_dxtn is installed or the force_s3tc driconf option is set.
The main extension code set this up properly, but the ES-specific code
failed to do so.
Otherwise, the extension strings reported by es1_info, es2_info, and
glxinfo all remain the same.
This patch manually disables the ARB_framebuffer_object bit on ES
to preserve the behavior of 1c0f5d8324.
v2: Rebase, fix the i915 Makefile, and unconditionally set the
OES_draw_texture bit as core Mesa will only apply it to ES1 now.
Tested-by: Daniel Charles <daniel.charles@intel.com> [v1]
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com> [v1]
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
If the primitive restart index and the primitive type can
be handled by the cut index feature, then use the hardware
to handle the primitive restart feature.
The VBO module's software handling of primitive restart is
used as a fall back.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
For newer hardware we disable the VBO module's software handling
of primitive restart. We now handle primitive restarts in
brw_handle_primitive_restart.
The initial version of brw_handle_primitive_restart simply calls
vbo_sw_primitive_restart, and therefore still uses the VBO
module software primitive restart support.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
When considering which components of a variable were killed by an
assignment, constant propagation would previously just use the write
mask of the assignment. This worked if the LHS of the assignment was
simple, e.g.:
v.xy = ...; // (assign (xy) (var_ref v) ...)
But it did the wrong thing if the LHS of the assignment involved an
array indexing operator, since in this case the write mask is always
(x):
v[i] = ...; // (assign (x) (deref_array (var_ref v) (var_ref i)) ...)
In general, we can't predict which vector component will be selected
by array indexing, so the only safe thing to do in this case is to
kill the entire variable.
Fixes piglit tests {fs,vs}-vector-indexing-kills-all-channels.shader_test.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Now that the linker handles initializers of samplers just like any
other uniform, a bunch of this annoying code is unnecessary.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The linker may have set initial values for uniforms. Propagate these
values to the driver's backing storage when it is first associated.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
v2: Fix handling of arrays-of-structure. Thanks to Eric Anholt for
pointing this out.
v3: Minor comment change based on feedback from Ken.
Fixes piglit glsl-1.20/execution/uniform-initializer/fs-structure-array
and glsl-1.20/execution/uniform-initializer/vs-structure-array.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
v2: Add support for gen6, and don't turn it on if blending is
disabled. (fixes GPU hang), and note it in docs/GL3.txt
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The i965 driver needed this as well for hardware setup, so instead of
duplicating the logic, just save it off.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
While it doesn't have the same warning in the simulator as in gen7,
let's emit it out of paranoia. We wouldn't want our resolves of some
previous clear to get clamped to some current clamping value.
Suggested-by: pretty much everyone
When doing fast clears, a fulsim warning said that the batch was being
emitted without the viewport set up. While the fast clear pass I was
looking at doesn't use the clear value, the later resolves which also
didn't set up the vieport would trigger the same. It's not obvious
from the error message whether it meant "fast clear value gets clamped
to something you haven't defined" or "fast clear value doesn't get
clamped, and I saw it was out of the current (uninitialized) range,
and you probably wanted it clamped to that (uninitialized) range". Be
paranoid and assume the first case.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Having this enum separate caused us to need a bunch of helper
functions to translate to the op to be executed.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
The GLSL clear path doesn't need any buffer presence checks, since
those are already handled in the normal drawing path code.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Our understanding is that the 3D engine is supposed to be faster
anyway. We used to have more overhead in our tri clear path than we
do today, which would have led to this choice. But given that we
almost always see a depth clear along with a color clear, the path was
hardly exercised anyway.
Also, the color mask logic was broken in the presence of
GL_EXT_draw_buffers2's per-buffer colormask.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Previously, when the environment variable INTEL_DEBUG=aub was set,
mesa would simply instruct DRM to start dumping data to an .aub file,
but we would not provide DRM with any information about the format of
the data in various buffers. As a result, a lot of the data in the
generate .aub file would be unannotated, making further data analysis
difficult.
This patch causes the entire contents of each batch buffer to be
annotated using the data in brw->state_batch_list (which was
previously used only to annotate the output of INTEL_DEBUG=bat). This
includes data that was allocated by brw_state_batch, such as binding
tables, surface and sampler states, depth/stencil state, and so on.
The new annotation mechanism requires DRM version 2.4.34.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
When we are generating an AUB dump, we make a final call to
aub_dump_bmp() as the context is being destroyed, to ensure that any
rendering performed before the application exits can be seen during a
simulation run. However, we were doing this before flushing the batch
buffer; as a result simulation runs would not always see the effect of
all rendering commands.
This patch flushes the batch buffer just before making the final call
to aub_dump_bmp(), to ensure that all rendering is properly captured
in the final bitmap.
This is a long standing problem, that recently surfaced with the change
to enable perspective correct color interpolation.
A fix for all possible formats is left to the future.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Previously assumed normalised was 0 to 1, but it can be -1 to 1
if type is signed.
Tested with lp_test_conv and lp_test_format, reduced errors.
Signed-off-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Fixing a /*FIXME*/ to remove errors in integer conversion in lp_build_conv.
Tested using lp_test_conv and lp_test_format, reduced errors.
Signed-off-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This patch removes two Clang warnings in GLU:
The first one seems to be an actual bug in mapdesc.cc: Clang complains
that sizeof(dest) will return the size of REAL*[MAXCOORDS], instead of
the intended REAL[MAXCOORDS][MAXCOORDS]. The second one is just
cosmetic because Clang doesn't like extra parentheses.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Fixes another case of sampler views being created by one context,
shared by another, then deleted by the first, leaving a dangling
pipe context pointer.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Use it where performance matters more and the exact method of float->int
conversion/rounding isn't terribly important. There should no net change
here since F_TO_I() is the new name of the old IROUND() function.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The different implementations of IROUND() behaved differently and in
the case of fistp, depended on the current x86 FPU rounding mode.
This caused some tests like piglit roundmode-pixelstore and
roundmode-getintegerv to fail on 32-bit x86 but pass on 64-bit x86.
Now IROUND() always rounds to the nearest integer (away from zero).
The new F_TO_I function converts a float to an int by whatever means
is fastest. We'll use this where we're more concerned with performance
and not too worried to how the conversion is done.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The IROUND converted all arguments to 0 or 1. That's not what we wanted.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
For zero-stride vertex arrays, the svga driver copies the value into
the constant value and uses that value in the shader. The recent
gallium-userbuf changes caused a regression in this. An example
symptom was per-primitive glColor3f() calls getting ignored.
Where we copied the vertex value from the vertex buffer to the
constant buffer we neglected to take into account the
pipe_vertex_buffer::buffer_offset field. Adding that value to the
source offset fixes the problem. Actually, it looks like we should
have been doing this all along, but it never was an issue before for
some reason.
If the MESA_GLSL env var contains "errors", GLSL compilation and
link errors will be reported to stderr.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Fix uninitialized scalar variable defect reported by Coverity.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Piglits test for fragment shaders pass, vertex shaders fail. The
actual failure seems to be in the interpolators, and not the
textureSize query.
Signed-off-by: Olivier Galibert <galibert@pobox.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jose.r.fonseca@gmail.com>
Fixes a bunch of piglit tests related to flat interpolation of floats.
Signed-off-by: Olivier Galibert <galibert@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: José Fonseca <jose.r.fonseca@gmail.com>
The VBO module now can handle primitive restart in software
if required. Therefore this support is no londer required.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
If the PIPE_CAP_PRIMITIVE_RESTART screen param is not set, then enable
PrimitiveRestartInSoftware to enable software primitive restart
support in the VBO module.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
When PrimitiveRestartInSoftware is set, the VBO module will handle
primitive restart scenarios before calling the vbo->draw_prims
drawing function.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
If set, then the VBO module will handle all primitive
restart scenarios before calling the driver draw_prims.
Software primitive restart support is disabled by default.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
vbo_sw_primitive_restart implements primitive restart in software
by splitting primitive draws apart.
This is based on similar support in mesa/state_tracker/st_draw.c.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
It's an implied argument, and I don't think being explicit about it
helps.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
The comment quotes spec saying that only scalar integers are allowed,
but we only checked for integer.
Fixes piglit switch-expression-const-ivec2.vert
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Total instructions: 261582 -> 261316
135/2147 programs affected (6.3%)
36752 -> 36486 instructions in affected programs (0.7% reduction)
This excludes a tropics shader that now gets 16-wide mode and throws
off the numbers. 5 shaders are hurt: two extra MOVs in 4 tropics
shaders it looks like because we don't split register names according
to independent webs, and one gstreamer shader where it looks like
try_rewrite_rhs_to_dst() is falling on its face.
This should also help avoid a regression in VSes from idr's ARB
programs to GLSL work.
By using the live variables code for determining interference, we can
handle coalescing in the presence of control flow, which the other
register coalescing path couldn't.
Total instructions: 207184 -> 206990
74/1246 programs affected (5.9%)
33993 -> 33799 instructions in affected programs (0.6% reduction)
There is a newerth shader that loses out, because of some extra MOVs
that now get their dead-code nature obscured by coalescing. This
should be fixed by doing better at dead code elimination.
Starting with LLVM 3.0, named structures are meant not for debugging, but
for recursive data types, previously also known as opaque types.
The recursive nature of these types leads to several memory management
difficulties. Given that we don't actually need recursive types, avoid
them altogether.
This is an attempt to address fdo bugs 41791 and 44466. The issue is
somewhat random so there's no easy way to check how effective this is.
No functional change. This patch replaces the
brw_blorp_params::exec() method with a global function
brw_blorp_exec() that performs the operation described by the params
data structure.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This patch enables MSAA for Gen6, by modifying intel_mipmap_tree to
understand multisampled buffers, adapting the rendering pipeline setup
to enable multisampled rendering, and adding multisample resolve
operations to brw_blorp_blit.cpp. Some preparation work is also
included for Gen7, but it is not yet enabled.
MSAA support is still fairly preliminary. In particular, the
following are not yet supported:
- Fully general blits between MSAA and non-MSAA buffers.
- Formats other than RGBA8, DEPTH24, and STENCIL8.
- Centroid interpolation.
- Coverage parameters (glSampleCoverage, GL_SAMPLE_ALPHA_TO_COVERAGE,
GL_SAMPLE_ALPHA_TO_ONE, GL_SAMPLE_COVERAGE, GL_SAMPLE_COVERAGE_VALUE,
GL_SAMPLE_COVERAGE_INVERT).
Fixes piglit tests "EXT_framebuffer_multisample/accuracy" on
i965/Gen6.
v2:
- In intel_alloc_renderbuffer_storage(), quantize the requested number
of samples to the next higher sample count supported by the
hardware. This ensures that a query of GL_SAMPLES will return the
correct value. It also ensures that MSAA is fully disabled on Gen7
for now (since Gen7 MSAA support doesn't work yet).
- When reading from a non-MSAA surface, ensure that s_is_zero is true
so that we won't try to read from a nonexistent sample.
This patch expands the "blorp" component to be able to perform blits
as well as HiZ resolves. The new blitting code is located in
brw_blorp_blit.cpp. This includes the necessary fragment shader code
to look up pixels in the source buffer (which is configured as a
texture) and output them to the destination buffer (which is
configured as the render target).
Most of the time the fragment shader code is simple and
straightforward, since it merely has to apply a coordinate offset,
read from the texture, and write to the render target. However, in
the case of blitting stencil buffers, things are more complicated,
since the GPU stores stencil data using W tiling, and W tiling is not
supported for textures or render targets. So, we set up the stencil
buffers as Y tiled, and emit fragment shader code that adjusts the
coordinates to account for the difference between W and Y tiling.
Furthermore, since a rectangular region in W tiling does not
necessarily correspond to a rectangular region in Y tiling, we widen
the rectangle primitive to the nearest tile boundary and have the
fragment shader "kill" any pixels that don't fall inside the actual
desired destination rectangle.
All of this is a necessary prerequisite for implementing MSAA, since
we'll need to be able to blit between multisample color, depth, and
stencil buffers and their non-multisampled counterparts, and none of
the existing blitting mechanisms support multisampling.
In addition, the new blitting code should speed up operations where we
previously fell back to software rasterization, such as blitting of
stencil buffers. The current fallback sequence is: first we try to do
a blit using the hardware blitting engine. If that fails we try to do
a blit using the render path. If that also fails then we do the blit
using a meta-op (which may or may not fall back to software
rasterization).
Note that blitting using the render path has some limitations at the
moment: it only supports a few formats, and it doesn't support
clipping or scissoring. These limitations will be addressed in future
patch series.
v2:
- Add the code that configures the WM program to
gen{6,7}_emit_wm_config() and gen7_emit_ps_config() rather than
creating separate ...enable() functions.
- Call intel_prepare_render before determining which miptrees we are
blitting from/to, because it may cause miptrees to be reallocated.
- Allow the blit to mirror X and/or Y coordinates.
- Disable blorp blits on Gen7 for now, since they aren't working yet.
This patch exposes the functions brw_get_surface_tiling_bits and
gen7_set_surface_tiling, so that they can be re-used when setting up
surface states in gen6_blorp.cpp and gen7_blorp.cpp.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
This patch splits up the gen6_blorp_exec and gen7_blorp_exec
functions, which were very long, into simple component functions.
With a few exceptions, there is one function per state packet.
This will allow blit functionality to be added without significantly
complicating the code.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
v2: Rename the functions gen{6,7}_emit_wm_disable() to
gen{6,7}_emit_wm_config() (since the WM is not actually disabled
during HiZ ops; it simply doesn't have a program). Also, on gen7,
split out the configration of 3DSTATE_PS to a separate function
gen7_emit_ps_config().
This patch groups together the parameters used by the HiZ functions
into a new data structure, brw_hiz_resolve_params, rather than passing
each parameter individually between the HiZ functions. This data
structure is a subclass of brw_blorp_params, which represents the
parameters of a general-purpose blit or resolve operation. A future
patch will add another subclass for blits.
In addition, this patch generalizes the (width, height) parameters to
a full rect (x0, y0, x1, y1), since blitting operations will need to
be able to operate on arbitrary rectangles. Also, it renames several
of the HiZ functions to reflect the expanded role they will serve.
v2: Rename brw_hiz_resolve_params to brw_hiz_op_params. Move
gen{6,7}_blorp_exec() functions back into gen{6,7}_blorp.h.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
When drawing to a FBO, the viewport wasn't always set correctly. It
was fine in the usual case of the viewport dims matching the surface
dims but broken otherwise. In particular, this was happening because
the viewport scale is negative for FBO rendering.
The piglit fbo-viewport test exercises this.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
We can save one instruction by lowering it to:
SUB_INT tmp, 0, src
MAX_INT dst, src, tmp
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
This patch adds .gitignore files to ignore the makefiles generated by
the gallium pipe loader and the clover OpenCL state tracker.
Reviewed-by: Francisco Jerez <currojerez@riseup.net>
Previously, I tried implementing this in the i965 driver, but did so
in a way that violated the intent of the spec, and broke Tropics.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This will be convenient when I want to comment out optimization code
to see the raw program being optimized, but more importantly will let
the interference check be used during optimization.
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We could do more by handling abs/negate and non-GRF sources, but this is
a good start. Improves tropics performance 0.30% +/- .17% (n=43).
shader-db results:
Total instructions: 208032 -> 207184
60/1246 programs affected (4.8%)
23286 -> 22438 instructions in affected programs (3.6% reduction)
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
When I had a bug causing the backend to never finish optimizing, it
also sent me deep into swap. This avoids extra memory allocation per
trip through optimization, and thus may reduce the peak memory
allocation of the driver even in the success case.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Total instructions: 18210 -> 17836
49/163 programs affected (30.1%)
12888 -> 12514 instructions in affected programs (2.9% reduction)
This reduces Lightsmark's "Scale down filter" shader from 395
instructions to 283, a whopping 28%. It also reduces register pressure
significantly: the SIMD8 program now uses 29 registers instead of 101,
giving us more than enough room for a SIMD16 program.
v2: Add && !inst->conditional_mod to the "skip some instructions" check.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This lets you omit some ampersands and is more idiomatic C++. Using
const also marks the function as not altering either register (which
was obvious, but nice to enforce).
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This allows us to calculate the triangle's area using fixed point,
previously it was cacluated in floating point space. It was possible
that a triangle which had negative area in floating point space had
a positive area in fixed point space.
Fixes fdo 40920.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
As pointed out by Marek, if we have only one cb, we may as well add this
single register write here rather than adding it in the draw loop.
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Vertex and index buffers are never used by hardware, only by Draw.
SWTCL chipsets usually have very little memory, so this might help
with stability and reliability.
Instead of having to hack the code to enable these debugging options,
set them through the MESA_DEBUG env var.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This flag has been around for a while but it wasn't actually used anywhere.
Now, setting this flag causes a glFlush() to be issued after each
drawing call (including glBegin/End, glDrawElements, glDrawArrays,
glDrawPixels, glCopyPixels and glBitmap).
This was being done in the _mesa_Flush/Finish() calls but if there
was an internal call to _mesa_flush/finish() the FLUSH_VERTICES()
wouldn't happen. Looks like only the intel and radeon drivers made
such calls in MakeCurrent().
When glColorMaterial() is used to latch glColor commands to a material
attribute, glMaterial calls to change that material should become no-ops.
This failed to work properly when the glMaterial call was inside a
display list.
This removes the Material function from the vbo_attrib_tmp.h template
file. We have separate/different implementations for the "save" and
"exec" cases now.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
_mesa_material_bitmask() will record a GL error and return 0 if
face or mode are illegal. Return early in that case.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Some code relies on the existing of an invalid texture target. It seems
safer to bring it back than to deal with unintended consequences.
This partially reverts commit a4ebb04214.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Contains the following patches squashed in:
commit 9fff1dc0875f7c9591550fa3ebbe1ba7a18483fa
Author: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
Date: Tue Mar 20 23:20:03 2012 +0100
configure.ac: Build gallium loader when OpenCL is enabled
commit 542111cb02957418c6a285cb6ef2924e49adc66e
Author: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
Date: Tue Mar 20 23:30:29 2012 +0100
configure.ac: Add sw/null to GALLIUM_WINSYS_DIRS for gallium loader
commit 876f8de46062dde76b6075be3b6628f969b16648
Author: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
Date: Thu Feb 9 11:26:05 2012 -0500
configure.ac: Require gcc > 4.6.0 for clover
commit 99049d50fa3d9a23297ae658189c19c89dca1766
Author: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
Date: Tue Mar 20 23:32:06 2012 +0100
configure.ac: Require Gallium drm loader when gallium loader is enabled
No longer silently exclude this when building OpenCL drivers
for nouveau and r600.
Add a test program that tries to exercise some of the language
features commonly used by compute programs at the Gallium API level:
- Correctness of the values returned by the grid parameters.
- Proper functioning of resource LOADs and STOREs.
- Subroutine calls.
- Argument passing to the compute parameter through the INPUT
memory space.
- Mapping of buffer objects to the GLOBAL memory space.
- Proper functioning of the PRIVATE and LOCAL memory spaces.
- Texture sampling and constant buffers.
- Support for multiple kernels in the same program.
- Indirect resource indexing.
- Formatted resource loads and stores (i.e. with channel conversion
and scaling) using several different formats.
- Proper functioning of work-group barriers.
- Atomicity and semantics of the atomic opcodes.
As of now all of them seem to pass on my nvA8.
It simplifies things slightly, and besides, it makes possible to
execute the trivial tests on a hardware device instead of being
limited to software rendering.
Reviewed-by: Jakob Bornecrantz <jakob@vmware.com>
This target generates pipe driver modules intended to be consumed by
auxiliary/pipe-loader. Most of it was taken from the "gbm" target --
the duplicated code will be replaced with references to this target in
a future commit.
Reviewed-by: Jakob Bornecrantz <jakob@vmware.com>
The goal is to have a uniform interface to create winsys and
pipe_screen instances for any driver, exposing the device enumeration
capabilities that might be supported by the operating system (for now
there's a "drm" back-end using udev and a "sw" back-end that always
returns the same built-in devices).
The typical use case of this library will be:
>
> struct pipe_loader_device devs[n];
> struct pipe_screen *screen;
>
> pipe_loader_probe(&devs, n);
>[pick some device from the array...]
>
> screen = pipe_loader_create_screen(dev, library_search_path);
>[do something with screen...]
>
> screen->destroy(screen);
> pipe_loader_release(&devs, N);
>
A part of the code was taken from targets/gbm/pipe_loader.c, which
will be removed and replaced with calls into this library by a future
commit.
Add a shader cap for specifying the preferred shader representation.
Right now the only supported value is TGSI, other enum values will be
added as they are needed.
This is mainly to accommodate AMD's LLVM compiler back-end by letting
it bypass the TGSI representation for compute programs. Other drivers
will keep using the common TGSI instruction set.
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
This change will be useful to implement function parameter passing on
top of TGSI. As we don't have a proper stack, a register-based
calling convention will be used instead, which isn't necessarily a bad
thing given that GPUs often have plenty of registers to spare.
Using the same register space for local temporaries and
inter-procedural communication caused some inefficiencies, because in
some cases the register allocator would lose the freedom to merge
temporary values together into the same physical register, leading to
suboptimal register (and sometimes, as a side effect, instruction)
usage.
The LOCAL declaration modifier specifies that the value isn't intended
for parameter passing and as a result the compiler doesn't have to
give any guarantees of it being preserved across function boundaries.
Ignoring the LOCAL flag doesn't change the semantics of a valid
program in any way, because local variables are just supposed to get a
more relaxed treatment. IOW, this should be a backwards-compatible
change.
Normal resource access (e.g. the LOAD TGSI opcode) is supposed to
perform a series of conversions to turn the texture data as it's found
in memory into the target data type.
In compute programs it's often the case that we only want to access
the raw bits as they're stored in some buffer object, and any kind of
channel conversion and scaling is harmful or inefficient, especially
in implementations that lack proper hardware support to take care of
it -- in those cases the conversion has to be implemented in software
and it's likely to result in a performance hit even if the pipe_buffer
and declaration data types are set up in a way that would just pass
the data through.
Add a declaration flag that marks a resource as typeless. No channel
conversion will be performed in that case, and the X coordinate of the
address vector will be interpreted in byte units instead of elements
for obvious reasons.
This is similar to D3D11's ByteAddressBuffer, and will be used to
implement OpenCL's constant arguments. The remaining four compute
memory spaces can also be understood as raw resources.
This texture type was already referred to by the documentation but it
was never defined. Define it as 0 to match the pipe_texture_target
enumeration values.
Move Interpolate, Centroid and CylindricalWrap from tgsi_declaration
to a separate token -- they only make sense for FS inputs and we need
room for other flags in the top-level declaration token.
This commit splits the current concept of resource into "sampler
views" and "shader resources":
"Sampler views" are textures or buffers that are bound to a given
shader stage and can be read from in conjunction with a sampler
object. They are analogous to OpenGL texture objects or Direct3D
SRVs.
"Shader resources" are textures or buffers that can be read and
written from a shader. There's no support for floating point
coordinates, address wrap modes or filtering, and, unlike sampler
views, shader resources are global for the whole graphics pipeline.
They are analogous to OpenGL image objects (as in
ARB_shader_image_load_store) or Direct3D UAVs.
Most hardware is likely to implement shader resources and sampler
views as separate objects, so, having the distinction at the API level
simplifies things slightly for the driver.
This patch introduces the SVIEW register file with a declaration token
and syntax analogous to the already existing RES register file. After
this change, the SAMPLE_* opcodes no longer accept a resource as
input, but rather a SVIEW object. To preserve the functionality of
reading from a sampler view with integer coordinates, the
SAMPLE_I(_MS) opcodes are introduced which are similar to LOAD(_MS)
but take a SVIEW register instead of a RES register as argument.
Define an interface that exposes the minimal functionality required to
implement some of the popular compute APIs. This commit adds entry
points to set the grid layout and other state required to keep track
of the usual address spaces employed in compute APIs, to bind a
compute program, and execute it on the device.
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
This patch renames the gen6_hiz.h and gen7_hiz.h files to correspond
to the renames of the corresponding .cpp files (see previous commit).
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
This patch converts the files gen6_hiz.c and gen7_hiz.c to C++, in
preparation for expanding the HiZ code to support arbitrary blits.
The new files are called gen6_blorp.cpp and gen7_blorp.cpp to reflect
the expanded role that this code will serve--"blorp" stands for "BLit
Or Resolve Pass".
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Previous to this patch, gen6_hiz.c contained two implicit type casts
from void * to a a non-void pointer type. This is allowed in C but
not in C++. This patch makes the type casts explicit, so that
gen6_hiz.c can be converted into a C++ file.
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
In C++, if a struct is defined inside another struct, or its name is
first seen inside a struct or function, the struct is nested inside
the namespace of the struct or function it appears in. In C, all
structs are visible from toplevel.
This patch explicitly moves the decalartions of intel_batchbuffer to
toplevel, so that it does not get nested inside a namespace when
header files are included from C++.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
These declarations are necessary to allow C++ code to call C code
without causing unresolved symbols (which would make the driver fail
to load).
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Fix wrong cube/3D texture layout for the tailing levels whose width or
height is smaller than the align unit.
From 965 B-spec http://intellinuxgraphics.org/VOL_1_graphics_core.pdf at
page 135:
All of the LOD=0 q-planes are stacked vertically, then below that,
the LOD=1 qplanes are stacked two-wide, then the LOD=2 qplanes are
stacked four-wide below that, and so on.
Thus we should always inrease pack_x_nr, which results to the pitch of LODn
may greater than the pitch of LOD0. So we should refactor mt->total_width
when needed.
This would fix the following webgl test case on all gen4 platforms:
conformance/textures/texture-size-cube-maps.html
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Signed-off-by: Yuanhan Liu <yuanhan.liu@linux.intel.com>
This points to the object with the function body, allowing us to map
from a built-in prototype to the actual body with IR code to execute.
Signed-off-by: Olivier Galibert <galibert@pobox.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
- copy_masked_offset copies part of a constant into another,
assign-like.
- copy_offset copies a constant into (a subset of) another,
funcall-return like.
These methods are to be used to trace through assignments and function
calls when computing a constant expression.
Signed-off-by: Olivier Galibert <galibert@pobox.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net> [v1]
The method is used to get a reference to an ir_constant * within the
context of evaluating an assignment when calculating a
constant_expression_value.
Signed-off-by: Olivier Galibert <galibert@pobox.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net> [v1]
We were looping over all the vector components, but only dealing with
the first one. This was masked by the fact that constant expression
handling on built-ins went through custom code for the lessThan()
/function/ rather than the ir_binop_less expression operator.
NOTE: This is a candidate for all release branches.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Olivier Galibert <galibert@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The vbo module recomputes its states if _NEW_ARRAY is set, so it shouldn't use
the same flag to notify the driver. Since we've run out of bits in NewState
and NewState is for core Mesa anyway, we need to find another way.
This patch is the first to start decoupling the state flags meant only
for core Mesa and those only for drivers.
The idea is to have two flag sets:
- gl_context::NewState - used by core Mesa only
- gl_context::NewDriverState - used by drivers only (the flags are defined
by the driver and opaque to core Mesa)
It makes perfect sense to use NewState|=_NEW_ARRAY to notify the vbo module
that the user changed vertex arrays, and the vbo module in turn sets
a driver-specific flag to notify the driver that it should update its vertex
array bindings.
The driver decides which bits of NewDriverState should be set and stores them
in gl_context::DriverFlags. Then, Core Mesa can do this:
ctx->NewDriverState |= ctx->DriverFlags.NewArray;
This patch implements this behavior and adapts st/mesa.
DriverFlags.NewArray is set to ST_NEW_VERTEX_ARRAYS.
Core Mesa only sets NewDriverState. It's the driver's responsibility to read
it whenever it wants and reset it to 0.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
In the future we'd like to treat vertex arrays as a state and
not as a parameter to the draw function. This is the first step
towards that goal. Part of the goal is to avoid array re-validation
for every draw call.
This commit adds:
const struct gl_client_array **gl_context::Array::_DrawArrays.
The pointer is changed in:
* vbo_draw_method
* vbo_rebase_prims - unused by gallium
* vbo_split_prims - unused by gallium
* st_RasterPos
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Replacing "float equal to 1.0f" with "int not equal to 0".
This should help for further optimization of boolean computations.
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
We're using float as default type, so basically for every instruction that
wants other types for dst/src operands we need to perform the bitcast
to/from default float. Currently bitcast produces no-op MOV instruction,
will be eliminated later.
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
In i965 Gen7, Mesa has for a long time used the "depth coordinate
offset X/Y" settings (in 3DSTATE_DEPTH_BUFFER) to cause the GPU to
render to miplevels other than 0. Unfortunately, this doesn't work,
because these offsets must be aligned to multiples of 8, and miplevels
in the depth buffer are only guaranteed to be aligned to multiples of
4. When the offsets aren't aligned to a multiple of 8, the GPU
sometimes hangs.
As a temporary measure, to avoid GPU hangs, this patch smashes the 3
LSB's of "depth coordinate offset X/Y" to 0. This results in
incorrect rendering to mipmapped depth textures, but that seems like a
reasonable stopgap while we figure out a better solution.
Avoids GPU hangs in piglit test "depthstencil-render-miplevels" at
texture sizes that are not powers of 2.
Reviewed-by: Chad Verace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
In i965 Gen6, Mesa has for a long time used the "depth coordinate
offset X/Y" settings (in 3DSTATE_DEPTH_BUFFER) to cause the GPU to
render to miplevels other than 0. Unfortunately, this doesn't work,
because these offsets must be aligned to multiples of 8, and miplevels
in the depth buffer are only guaranteed to be aligned to multiples of
4. When the offsets aren't aligned to a multiple of 8, the GPU
sometimes hangs.
As a temporary measure, to avoid GPU hangs, this patch smashes the 3
LSB's of "depth coordinate offset X/Y" to 0. This results in
incorrect rendering to mipmapped depth textures, but that seems like a
reasonable stopgap while we figure out a better solution.
(Note that we have only ever observed this GPU hang on Gen6 when HiZ
is enabled, so another possible stopgap would be to disable HiZ).
Avoids GPU hangs in piglit test "depthstencil-render-miplevels" at
texture sizes that are not powers of 2.
Reviewed-by: Chad Verace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
When the user attaches a texture to one of the depth/stencil
attachment points (GL_STENCIL_ATTACHMENT or GL_DEPTH_ATTACHMENT), we
check to see if the same texture is also attached to the other
attachment point, and if so, we re-use the existing texture
attachment. This is necessary to ensure that if the user later
queries what is attached to GL_DEPTH_STENCIL_ATTACHMENT, they will not
receive an error.
If, however, the user attaches buffers to the two different attachment
points using different parameters (e.g. a different miplevel), then we
can't re-use the existing texture attachment, because it is pointing
to the wrong part of the texture. This might occur as a transitory
condition if, for example, if the user attached miplevel zero of a
texture to GL_STENCIL_ATTACHMENT and GL_DEPTH_ATTACHMENT, rendered to
it, and then later attempted to attach miplevel one of the same
texture to GL_STENCIL_ATTACHMENT and GL_DEPTH_ATTACHMENT.
This patch causes Mesa to check that GL_STENCIL_ATTACHMENT and
GL_DEPTH_ATTACHMENT use the same attachment parameters before
attempting to share the texture attachment.
On i965 Gen6, fixes piglit tests
"texturing/depthstencil-render-miplevels 1024 depth_stencil_shared"
and "texturing/depthstencil-render-miplevels 1024
stencil_depth_shared".
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
When rendering to a miplevel other than 0 within a color, depth,
stencil, or HiZ buffer, we need to tell the GPU to render to an offset
within the buffer, so that the data is written into the correct
miplevel. We do this using a coarse offset (in pages), and a fine
adjustment (the so-called "tile_x" and "tile_y" values, which are
measured in pixels).
We have always computed the coarse offset and fine adjustment using
intel_renderbuffer_tile_offsets() function. This worked fine for
color and combined depth/stencil buffers, but failed to work properly
when HiZ and separate stencil were in use. It failed to work because
there is only one set of fine adjustment controls shared by the HiZ,
depth, and stencil buffers, so we need to choose tile_x and tile_y
values that are compatible with the tiling of all three buffers, and
then compute separate coarse offsets for each buffer.
This patch fixes the HiZ and separate stencil case by replacing the
call to intel_renderbuffer_tile_offsets() with calls to two functions:
intel_region_get_tile_masks(), which determines how much of the
adjustment can be performed using offsets and how much can be
performed using tile_x and tile_y, and
intel_region_get_aligned_offset(), which computes the coarse offset.
intel_region_get_tile_offsets() is still used for color renderbuffers,
so to avoid code duplication, I've re-worked it to use
intel_region_get_tile_masks() and intel_region_get_aligned_offset().
On i965 Gen6, fixes piglit tests
"texturing/depthstencil-render-miplevels 1024 X" where X is one of
(depth, depth_and_stencil, depth_stencil_single_binding, depth_x,
depth_x_and_stencil, stencil, stencil_and_depth, stencil_and_depth_x).
On i965 Gen7, the variants of
"texturing/depthstencil-render-miplevels" that contain a stencil
buffer still fail, due to another problem: Gen7 seems to ignore the 3
LSB's of the tile_y adjustment (and possibly also tile_x).
v2: Removed spurious comments. Added assertions to check
preconditions of intel_region_get_aligned_offset().
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This patch removes ARB_framebuffer_object from the GLES1 and GLES2
extension lists in intel_extensions_es.c.
Fixes a crash in the Android browser on Ice Cream Sandwich.
The Android browser crashed because it did the following, which is legal
in GLES2 but not in ARB_framebuffer_object.
glGenFramebuffers(1, &fb);
glBindFramebuffer(GL_FRAMEBUFFER, fb);
// render render render...
glDeleteFramebuffers(1, &fb);
// go do other stuff...
glBindFramebuffer(GL_FRAMEBUFFER, fb);
// This bind unexpectedly failed, and the app panics.
The semantics of glBindFramebuffer specified by ARB_framebuffer_object (a
desktop GL extension) and GLES2 specs are incompatible. The ideal solution
to fix this is to create separate API entry points for glBindFramebuffer,
one for GL and the other for GLES2. But, until that work is complete,
disabling ARB_framebuffer_object in GLES2 contexts safely fixes the problem.
Likewise, the semantics of glBindFramebuffer in ARB_framebuffer_object and
of glBindFramebufferOES in OES_framebuffer_object (a GLES1 extension) are
incompatible. Even though the functions have different names, the semantic
difference still results in a bug because both API calls are implemented
by a single function, _mesa_BindFramebufferEXT, which handles the semantic
difference incorrectly. Again, disabling ARB_framebuffer_object in GLES1
contexts safely fixes this problem.
According to the ARB_framebuffer_object spec, the extension is an
amalgamation of
EXT_framebuffer_object
EXT_framebuffer_blit
EXT_packed_depth_stencil
EXT_framebuffer_multisample
By disabling this extension, however, no functionality is removed from
GLES1 and GLES2 contexts because 1) the first three extensions are
explicitly enabled in Intel's ES extension lists and 2) no functionality
of the last extension is exposed in an ES context.
Note: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
See-also: http://www.mail-archive.com/mesa-dev@lists.freedesktop.org/msg21006.html
CC: Charles Johnson <charles.f.johnson@intel.com>
CC: Sean Kelley <sean.v.kelley@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <idr@freedesktop.org>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
When primitive restart is enabled, and glArrayElement is called
with the restart index value, then call glPrimitiveRestartNV.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul<brianp@vmware.com>
The signal.h include was missed in the commit
bc16c73407 which leads to broken
compilations under Linux.
Signed-off-by: José Fonseca <jose.r.fonseca@gmail.com>
When doing the var->assigned change in
f2475ca424, I overzealously indented the
second block of code into the "if (var)" test. Revert these blocks to
the way they were before, just taking advantage of "var" to avoid
re-calling variable_referenced().
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=49066
I only considered var->assigned for FragColor and FragData, but
ignored when it was false for out vars. Fixes piglit
write-gl_FragColor-and-not-user-output.frag
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=49068
It seems silly that GL lets you allocate these given that they're
framebuffer attachment incomplete, but the webgl conformance tests
actually go looking to see if the getters on 0-width/height
depth/stencil renderbuffers return good values. By failing out here,
they all got smashed to 0, which turned out to be correct for all the
getters they tested except for GL_RENDERBUFFER_INTERNAL_FORMAT. Now,
by succeeding but not making a miptree, that one also returns the
expected value.
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The index is also used for GL_ARB_blend_func_extended. Cloning in
i965 was dropping a non-ARB_explicit_attrib_location index.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
When glTexImage or glCopyTexImage is called with internalFormat being a
generic compressed format (like GL_COMPRESSED_RGB) we need to do the same
error checks as for specific compressed formats. In particular, check if
the texture target is compatible with the format. None of the texture
compression formats we support so far work with GL_TEXTURE_1D, for example.
See also https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=49124
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Otherwise it fails like so:
CC egl_dri2.lo
In file included from egl_dri2.h:40:0,
from egl_dri2.c:42:
../../../../../../src/egl/wayland/wayland-drm/wayland-drm.h:8:41:
fatal error: wayland-drm-server-protocol.h: No such file or directory
compilation terminated.
This new gbm entry point allows writing data into a gbm bo. The bo has
to be created with the GBM_BO_USE_WRITE flag, and it's only required to
work for GBM_BO_USE_CURSOR_64X64 bos.
The gbm API is designed to be the glue layer between EGL and KMS, but there
was never a mechanism initialize a buffer suitable for use with KMS
hw cursors. The hw cursor bo is typically not compatible with anything EGL
can render to, and thus there's no way to get data into such a bo.
gbm_bo_write() fills that gap while staying out of the efficient
cpu->gpu pixel transfer business.
Reviewed-by: Ander Conselvan de Oliveira <conselvan2@gmail.com>
At this point, in order for OpenCL to work correctly with r600g, OpenCL
specific intrinsics need to be defined in the LLVM tree. So, we need
to check for these intrinsics in the LLVM include directory to make sure
not to re-define them.
This is a pseudo instruction that enables the LLVM backend to encode
instructions and pass it through r600_bytecode_build()
Signed-off-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
This moves the alpha test control to derived state and disables alpha
testing for integer fbs.
fbo-blending test in piglit gets further when we do this (not a pass
but less fail).
v2: drop the fb_sx_alpha_test_control
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
- Move to lp_bld_const where it belongs
- Rename to lp_build_const_string
- take the length from the argument (and don't count the zero terminator twice)
- bitcast the constant to generic i8 *
Allows the creation of const aos masks which have the mask swizzled
to match the correct format.
Updated existing mask creation code to use the swizzled version where
necessary (tgsi register masks and llvmpipe aos blending).
Signed-off-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
With this feature enabled, the LLVM backend will dump the MachineIntrs
prior to emitting code. The mesa env variable R600_DUMP_SHADERS will enable
this feature in the backend.
Fix uninitialized scalar field defect reported by Coverity.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
We can't delete MASK_WRITE instructions from the program, because this
will cause instructions being masked by MASK_WRITE to be marked dead and
then deleted in the dce pass.
Enabled MESA_FORMAT_RGBX8888_REV for RGBX. Android software
requires RGBX8888 format to be supported for software rendering.
That requires EGL to be capable of generating images from this
format.
Signed-off-by: Sean V Kelley <sean.v.kelley@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Add new format __DRI_IMAGE_FORMAT_XBGR8888 to __DRI_IMAGE.
HAL_PIXEL_FORMAT_RGBX_8888 now maps to __DRI_IMAGE_FORMAT_XBGR8888.
Signed-off-by: Sean V Kelley <sean.v.kelley@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Only images created with intel_create_image() had the field properly
set. Set it also on intel_dup_image(), intel_create_image_from_name()
and intel_create_image_from_renderbuffer().
GL_ARB_texture_storage says:
The commands eglBindTexImage, wglBindTexImageARB, glXBindTexImageEXT or
EGLImageTargetTexture2DOES are not permitted on an immutable-format
texture.
They will generate the following errors:
- EGLImageTargetTexture2DOES: INVALID_OPERATION
- eglBindTexImage: EGL_BAD_MATCH
- wglBindTexImage: ERROR_INVALID_OPERATION
- glXBindTexImageEXT: BadMatch
Fixing the EGL and GLX cases requires extending the DRI interface,
since setTexBuffer2 doesn't currently return any error information.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Adapted drivers: i915, llvmpipe, r300, r600, radeonsi, softpipe.
User index buffers have been disabled in nv30, nv50, nvc0 and svga to keep
things working.
This reduces CPU overhead in st_draw_vbo and removes a lot of unnecessary code
in that function which was required only to comply with the gallium interface,
but wasn't any useful really.
Adapted drivers: i915, llvmpipe, r300, softpipe.
No changes required in: r600, radeonsi.
User vertex buffers have been disabled in nv30, nv50, nvc0 and svga to keep
things working.
This is required for any serious constant buffer support.
Constant buffer offsets on ATI and NVIDIA DX10 and DX11 GPUs must be
a multiple of 256.
In OpenGL, this can be queried via GL_UNIFORM_BUFFER_OFFSET_ALIGNMENT.
As noted in commit be4e46b21a,
this was missing before.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
A little analysis shows that the worst-case value for "nr" is 17:
- base_mrf = 2 ... 2
- header present (say gen == 5) ... 4
- aa_dest_stencil_reg (stencil test) ... 5
- SIMD16 mode: += 4 * reg_width ... 13
- source_depth_to_render_target ... 15
- dest_depth_reg ... 17
This resulted in us setting base_mrf to 2 and mlen to 15. In other
words, we'd try to use m2..m16. But m16 doesn't exist pre-Gen6. Also,
the instruction scheduler data structures use arrays of size 16, so this
would cause us to access them out of bounds.
While the debugger system routine may need m0 and m1, we don't use it
today, so the simplest solution is just to move base_mrf back to 1.
That way, our worst case message fits in m1..m15, which is legal.
An alternative would be to fail on SIMD16 in this case, but that seems
a bit unfortunate if there's no real need to reserve m0 and m1.
Fixes new piglit test shaders/depth-test-and-write on Ironlake.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=48218
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
To ensure that the alloca is at the top of the function body, otherwise
LLVM will not eliminate them, causing stack misalignment on 32bits.
Reviewed-by: James Benton <jbenton@vmware.com>
This is taken from the ogl-math project, with Inverse renamed to adj
(since it's not actually the inverse), transposed, and our types
plugged in. There are potential CSE opportunities in this code
(particularly for hardware with RCP but not DIV), but we should be
doing CSE anyway, so don't hand-optimize.
Fixes piglit inverse tests.
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This takes advantage of the builtin compiler to generate IR into a
string, the same way we read GLSL for function prototypes for our
profiles.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
I keep getting lost in the Makefile trying to figure out what to edit
to work on builtin_compiler or glsl_compiler.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
It appears that when using 'ld' with the offset bits, address bounds
checking happens before the offset is applied, so parts of the drawing
in piglit texelFetchOffset() with a negative texcoord go black.
It appears that when using 'ld' with the offset bits, address bounds
checking happens before the offset is applied, so parts of the drawing
in piglit texelFetchOffset() with a negative texcoord go black.
This couldn't be split because it would break bisecting.
Summary:
* r300g,r600g: stop using u_vbuf
* r300g,r600g: also report that the FIXED vertex type is unsupported
* u_vbuf: refactor for use in the state tracker
* cso: wire up u_vbuf with cso_context
* st/mesa: conditionally install u_vbuf
This adds the ability to initialize u_vbuf_caps before creating u_vbuf itself.
It will be useful for determining if u_vbuf should be used or not.
Also adapt r300g and r600g.
This fixes an assertion failure since:
commit 81afdd20f3
vbo: don't check twice whether it's valid to render
FLUSH_CURRENT may set _NEW_CURRENT_ATTRIB.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
If the source region for a glCopyPixels is completely outside the
source buffer bounds, no-op the copy. Fixes a failed assertion.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The LLVM backend can now be enabled for r600g by using the
--enable-r600-llvm-compiler configure flag. If you configure with this
flag, you can still use the default compiler by setting the envrionment
variable R600_USE_LLVM=0
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Otherwise HAVE_LLVM won't be included in the $(DEFINES) variable for
Automake generated Makefiles.
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
This shaves 2k off the final dri.so, and removes lots of pointless
NULL, 0 passing.
most like pointless - but it looked nicer to me.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
The __glapi_gentable_set_remaining_noop() routine treats the _glapi_struct
as an array of _glapi_get_dispatch_table_size() pointers, so we have to
allocate _glapi_get_dispatch_table_size()*sizeof(void*) bytes rather
than sizeof(struct _glapi_struct) bytes.
Reviewed-by: Jeremy Huddleston <jeremyhu@apple.com>
Alexandre Demers sent me some cayman results with no major problems.
I'll rip out the env var in a week or so.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Full piglit run on my rv610 with no regressions.
This only leaves cayman, however my cayman is resisting my attempt
to get through a full piglit run.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
I've done a piglit run on rv740 and confirmed no regressions.
We don't get GL3 on r700 due to transform feedback being busted still.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
This cap is used by u_blitter to decide if it can use integers
in vertex data.
fixes some crashes with glsl130 in piglit
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
I've done a piglit run on my SUMO machine and I see no regressions.
Lots of things to fix (skip->fail), but hey maybe we can fix them
if we can see them.
I'll try and work my way across r600,700,cayman sometime if nobody
else gets to them.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
The field wasn't actually used before and it's not used now either.
But this is a more logical place for it and will hopefully allow
doing smarter draw/array validation (per array object) in the future.
Reviewed-by: Mathias Fröhlich <Mathias.Froehlich@web.de>
Our previous live interval analysis just said that anything in a loop
was live for the whole loop. If you had to spill a reg in a loop,
then we would consider the unspilled value live across the loop too,
so you never made progress by spilling. Eventually it would consider
everything in the loop unspillable and fail out.
With the new analysis, things completely deffed and used inside the
loop won't be marked live across the loop, so even if you
spill/unspill something that used to be live across the loop, you
reduce register pressure. But you usually don't even have to spill
any more, since our intervals are smaller than before.
This fixes assertion failure trying to compile the shader for the
"glyphy" text rasterier and piglit glsl-fs-unroll-explosion.
Improves Unigine Tropics performance 1.3% +/- 0.2% (n=5), by allowing
more shaders to be compiled in 16-wide mode.
This takes the fs_inst list generated by the visitor, and generates a
list of basic blocks with edges between them. This is a building
block for data-flow analysis.
We were checking for these at link time previously, which is not as
early as mandated, and would actually fail to detect conflicting
writes if dead code removal removed some writes.
Fixes failures in piglit
glsl-*/compiler/fragment-outputs/write-gl_Frag*
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This will be used for some compile-and-link-time error checking, where
currently we've been doing error checking only at link time.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This runs optimization-test and produces the usual automake test
output, which may be interesting to automated build systems.
This doesn't convert the tests to be individually exposed to the
automake runner, because automake doesn't like wildcards (due to being
nonportable in make, not that we care).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This is the reason the declaration member existed in the reference
visitor, but I didn't copy the code from structure splitting that
avoided setting it.
This wasn't currently a problem, because we don't allow splitting of
in/out variables. But that would be nice to change some day.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This was carried over from structure splitting, without thinking about
whether the name still made sense in this context.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Fixes encoding of VOP3 shader instructions.
The shift was wrong for source registers 2 and 3, and the resulting value was
only 32 bits, so the shift in SICodeEmitter::VOPPostEncode() didn't work as
intended.
If a non-default array object was bound at context destruction time
we'd try to unreference the array object after it was already deleted
in _mesa_free_varray_data(). Now do the unref first.
Fixes a regression from commit 86f53e6d6b.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
It's not nice when you have several variables pointing to the same array
and you wanna ask your editor "where is this used" and you only get an answer
for one of the four currval, legacy_currval, generic_currval, mat_currval,
which is quite useless, because you never see the whole picture.
Let's get rid of the additional pointers.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Mathias Fröhlich <Mathias.Froehlich@web.de>
It's already done in _mesa_validate_Draw* and it's not needed to do it again
unless I am missing something.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Mathias Fröhlich <Mathias.Froehlich@web.de>
This is a frequently-updated state and _NEW_ARRAY already causes revalidation
of the vbo module. It's kinda counter-productive to recompute arrays
in the vbo module if _NEW_ARRAY is set and then set _NEW_ARRAY again.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Mathias Fröhlich <Mathias.Froehlich@web.de>
This moves the RebindArrays flag into the vbo module, consolidates the code,
and adds missing vbo_draw_method calls.
Also with this change, the vertex arrays are not needlessly recalculated twice.
The issue with the old code was:
- If recalculate_input_bindings updates vp_varying_inputs, _NEW_ARRAY is set.
- _mesa_update_state is called and the vp_varying_inputs change causes
regeneration of the fixed-function shaders, which also sets _NEW_PROGRAM.
- The occurence of either _NEW_ARRAY or _NEW_PROGRAM sets
the recalculate_inputs flag to TRUE again.
- The new code sets the flag to FALSE after the second _mesa_update_state,
because there can't possibly be any change which would require recalculating
the arrays.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Mathias Fröhlich <Mathias.Froehlich@web.de>
Vinson reported that we failed to initialize this, which would lead to
all kinds of crashes if we actually used it. Since we don't use it,
we may as well just delete the broken code.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Now that we use separate binding tables for WM, VS, and GS, and have
BRW_MAX_VS_SURFACES and BRW_MAX_GS_SURFACES macros, we really shouldn't
have an unqualified BRW_MAX_SURFACES macro. It's confusing.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
They had a number of issues:
- A paragraph states that we use a single binding table, but we don't.
- We labelled the WM binding table diagram as SOL/WM.
- The WM diagram had an "Only relevant to the WM" comment. Duh.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This change uses the array object factory for gl_array_objects. This
prevents crashes when deriving from gl_array_object.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Mathias Froehlich <Mathias.Froehlich@web.de>
We don't normally clear immediately after drawing something. But as it
was, the drawing would incorrectly appear after the clear.
Fixes piglit clear-varray-2.0 failure.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Deletes a lot of pointless duplication, as well as some run-time effort.
Conveniently, GLSL 1.40 no longer needs a .vert variant, since it
doesn't define any built-ins specific to the vertex shader stage.
ARB_texture_rectangle and OES_EGL_image_external also only need a single
profile, since the .vert and .frag variants were identical.
I didn't bother with EXT_texture_array and OES_texture_3D because
they're so tiny that the savings would be miniscule.
Cuts the generated builtin_function.cpp from 1.7MB to 1.0MB (41%).
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Acked-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
The built-in subsystem uses "profiles," or GLSL shaders containing
prototypes for all built-ins supported within a particular language
version (or extension) and shader stage.
Since profiles were stage-specific, we had to cut and paste almost all
the prototypes between (e.g.) 110.vert and 110.frag. Naturally, this
led to sundry cut and paste bugs, where someone fixed an issue in .frag
but neglected to update .vert, or vice-versa. Geometry shaders would
have only made this worse.
This patch introduces support for a new '.glsl' profile suffix which
contains prototypes common to all shader stages. The existing '.frag'
and '.vert' profiles need only contain the few stage-specific built-ins.
Not only does this remove duplication, it makes built-in setup slightly
faster: we don't need to re-read the common prototypes and function
bodies for both the vertex and fragment shader stage.
Internally, this was trivial. We already create a list of gl_shader
objects to search through for built-ins: one for the core language
version/stage, and additional shaders for any extensions in use. This
patch simply adds another shader to the list: core/common, core/stage,
and extensions.
The next patch will update the profiles to remove the duplication.
It's separated out purely to make review easier.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Acked-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Accelerates a few glReadPixels cases for WebGL.
See https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=48545
v2: Per Jose, use bit twiddling for the swizzle case instead of ubyte
arrays (it's about 44% faster).
Note: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The GLSL 1.30 -> 4.10 specs all erroneously say "vec2" for a few
overloads of textureProjGradOffset, while most overloads and all other
texturing functions use ivec types.
The GLSL 4.20 specification corrects these to "ivec2", but doesn't
mention this as being a conscious change in behavior. Nor does the
ARB_shading_language_420pack extension. So presumably it was a typo.
At any rate, our builtin functions all use ivec already, so the fact
that these prototypes use plain vecs will only lead to applications
dying in a fire when trying to use them.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This reverts commit 4ec449a6ed.
I meant to not push this one. Review found that a link error is not
mandated: it should link, but you get undefined rendering if you rely
on a missing stage.
page 42/55 section 2.11 "Vertex Shaders":
"If the program object has no vertex shader, or no program object
is currently in use, the results of vertex shader execution are
undefined."
(and similar for page 160/173 section 3.9 "Fragment Shaders" for FS,
and page 45/58 section 2.11.2 "Program Objects" for program being 0)
It turns out the commit was broken anyway, because it was missing a
"goto done", so linkstatus got smashed back to true later and the
error just showed up as a warning in the infolog.
All I know of that needs finishing in Mesa is to enable the extension
in a GL3.1 core context on i965 -- we're not going to expose it in
non-3.1 core contexts.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Fixes the new piglit texelFetch() tests on these. Note that the rest
of the new functions are not tested (same as the non-2DRect versions
of most of them).
The non-integer versions were already reserved in 1.30, but apparently
these were forgotten.
Fixes piglit glsl-1.40/compiler/reserved/
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Prevents this error with Automake 1.9:
src/gallium/drivers/Makefile.am: C objects in subdir but
`AM_PROG_CC_C_O' not in `configure.ac'
autoreconf: automake failed with exit status: 1
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
radeonsi and r600 have duplicate symbols, so it's not possible to
statically link both. Remove the newcomer, radeonsi, until duplicate
symbols are fixed.
Most things that work on Fermi should work on Kepler too.
There are a few performance optimizations left to do, like better
placement of texture barriers and adding scheduling data to the
shader instructions (without them, a thread group will be masked
for 32 cycles after each single instruction issue).
Edit: Don't do it for the main function of (graphics) shaders,
its inputs and outputs always go through TGSI_FILE_INPUT/OUTPUT.
This prevents all TEMPs from counting as live out and reduces
register pressure.
The point is to keep an independent dictionary for each function.
The array that was being used as dictionary has been converted into a
"bimap" for two different reasons: first, because having an almost
empty instance of an array with as many entries as registers there are
in the program, once for every function, would be wasteful, and
second, because we want to be able to map Value pointers back to
locations at some point.
The reason is that several passes (regalloc, function argument
binding, inlining) are going to require the callees of a function to
be processed before the caller.
Instruction attributes like WriteALUResult and ALUResultCompare
were being discarded during the some of the local transformations.
This fixes the following piglit tests:
glsl1-inequality (vec2, pass)
loopfunc
fs-any-bvec2-using-if
fs-op-ne-bvec2-bvec2-using-if
fs-op-ne-ivec2-ivec2-using-if
fs-op-ne-mat2-mat2-using-if
fs-op-ne-vec2-vec2-using-if
fs-op-ne-mat2x3-mat2x3-using-if
fs-op-ne-mat2x4-mat2x4-using-if
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45921
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
The loop registers weren't being cleared, so any shader that was
executed after a shader containing loops was at risk of having a loop
randomly inserted into it.
This fixes over one hundred piglit tests, although these test
only failed during full piglit runs and would pass if
run individually. The exact number of piglit tests that this patch
fixes will vary depending on the version of piglit and the order the
tests are run.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
This lets us significantly shorten p->instructions->push_tail(ir), and
will be used in a few more places.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Now we can fold a bunch of our expression setup in ff_fragment_shader
into single-line, parseable commits.
v2: Make it actually work. I wasn't setting num_components in the
mask structure, and not setting up a mask structure is way easier.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Having to explicitly dereference is irritating and bloats the code,
when the compiler can detect and do the right thing.
v2: Use a little shim class to produce the automatic dereference
generation at compile time as opposed to runtime, while also
allowing compile-time type checking.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The C++ constructors with placement new, while functional, are
extremely verbose, leading to generation of simple GLSL IR expressions
like (a * b + c * d) expanding to many lines of code and using lots of
temporary variables. By creating a new ir_builder.h that puts simple
generators in our namespace and taking advantage of ralloc_parent(),
we can generate much more compact code, at a minor runtime cost.
v2: Replace ir_instruction usage with just ir_rvalue.
v3: Drop remaining missed as_rvalue() in v2.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The primary motivation for this rewrite was to have a maintainable driver
going forward, as nvfx was quite horrible in a lot of ways.
The driver is heavily based on the design of the nv50/nvc0 3d drivers we
already have, and uses the same common buffer/fence code. It also passes
a HEAP more piglit tests than nvfx did, supports a couple more features,
and a few more to come still probably.
The CPU footprint of this driver is far far less than nvfx, and translates
into far greater framerates in a lot of applications (unless you're using
a CPU that's way way newer than the GPUs of these generations....)
Basically, we once again have a maintained driver for these chipsets \o/
Feel free to report bugs now!
This driver hasn't been maintained properly for a very long time, and for
many very good reasons. It's horrible.
A new driver supporting these chipsets will appear with the commits that
port vieux/nv50/nvc0 to libdrm_nouveau-2.0.
Signed-off-by: Ben Skeggs <bskeggs@redhat.com>
TEXTURED_TRIANGLE and MULTITEX_TRIANGLE are both a bit special in that if
you use any other graph object in the meantime they'll forget their state
and spew a lovely METHOD_CNT error at you when you try to draw.
The pre-newlib driver has a flush_notify() hook which does this state
re-emit, and a number of random workarounds like extra flushes and state
dirtying after various operations to solve this issue.
I'm taking a slightly different approach to things instead, which has the
nice side-effect of removing the divergent code-paths for ttri/mtri, the
flush/dirty workarounds and the need for flush_notify. Also gives a few
FPS boost in OA, yay.
This is just a function to tell if a certain blend mode requires dual sources.
v2: move to inlines as per Brian's suggestion
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
This adds the blend mode mapping, it also uses the var->index in the
glsl to tgsi convertor - this is the other half of my using 4 in the GLSL
compiler.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
This adds index support to the GLSL compiler.
I'm not 100% sure of my approach here, esp without how output ordering
happens wrt location, index pairs, in the "mark" function.
Since current hw doesn't ever have a location > 0 with an index > 0,
we don't have to work out if the output ordering the hw requires is
location, index, location, index or location, location, index, index.
But we have no hw to know, so punt on it for now.
v2: index requires layout - catch and error
setup explicit index properly.
v3: drop idx_offset stuff, assume index follow location
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Add implementations of the two API functions,
Add a new strings to uint mapping for index bindings
Add the blending mode validation for SRC1 + SRC_ALPHA_SATURATE
Add get for MAX_DUAL_SOURCE_DRAW_BUFFERS
v2:
Add check in valid_to_render to address case in spec ERRORS.
v3:
Add index to ir.h so this patch compiles on its own
fixup comment
v4: fixup Brian's comments
The GLSL patch will setup the indices.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
This commit adds initial support for acceleration
on SI chips. egltri is starting to work.
The SI/R600 llvm backend is currently included in mesa
but that may change in the future.
The plan is to write a single gallium driver and
use gallium to support X acceleration.
This commit contains patches from:
Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
The following commits were squashed in:
======================================================================
radeonsi: Remove unused winsys pointer
This was removed from r600g in commit:
commit 96d882939d
Author: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Date: Fri Feb 17 01:49:49 2012 +0100
gallium: remove unused winsys pointers in pipe_screen and pipe_context
A winsys is already a private object of a driver.
======================================================================
radeonsi: Copy color clamping CAPs from r600
Not sure if the values of these CAPS are correct for radeonsi, but the
same changed were made to r600g in commit:
commit bc1c836938
Author: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Date: Mon Jan 23 03:11:17 2012 +0100
st/mesa: do vertex and fragment color clamping in shaders
For ARB_color_buffer_float. Most hardware can't do it and st/mesa is
the perfect place for a fallback.
The exceptions are:
- r500 (vertex clamp only)
- nv50 (both)
- nvc0 (both)
- softpipe (both)
We also have to take into account that r300 can do CLAMPED vertex colors only,
while r600 can do UNCLAMPED vertex colors only. The difference can be expressed
with the two new CAPs.
======================================================================
radeonsi: Remove PIPE_CAP_OUTPUT_READ
This CAP was dropped in commit:
commit 04e3240087
Author: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Date: Thu Feb 23 23:44:36 2012 +0100
gallium: remove PIPE_SHADER_CAP_OUTPUT_READ
r600g is the only driver which has made use of it. The reason the CAP was
added was to fix some piglit tests when the GLSL pass lower_output_reads
didn't exist.
However, not removing output reads breaks the fallback for glClampColorARB,
which assumes outputs are not readable. The fix would be non-trivial
and my personal preference is to remove the CAP, considering that reading
outputs is uncommon and that we can now use lower_output_reads to fix
the issue that the CAP was supposed to workaround in the first place.
======================================================================
radeonsi: Add missing parameters to rws->buffer_get_tiling() call
This was changed in commit:
commit c0c979eebc
Author: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
Date: Mon Jan 30 17:22:13 2012 -0500
r600g: add support for common surface allocator for tiling v13
Tiled surface have all kind of alignment constraint that needs to
be met. Instead of having all this code duplicated btw ddx and
mesa use common code in libdrm_radeon this also ensure that both
ddx and mesa compute those alignment in the same way.
v2 fix evergreen
v3 fix compressed texture and workaround cube texture issue by
disabling 2D array mode for cubemap (need to check if r7xx and
newer are also affected by the issue)
v4 fix texture array
v5 fix evergreen and newer, split surface values computation from
mipmap tree generation so that we can get them directly from the
ddx
v6 final fix to evergreen tile split value
v7 fix mipmap offset to avoid to use random value, use color view
depth view to address different layer as hardware is doing some
magic rotation depending on the layer
v8 fix COLOR_VIEW on r6xx for linear array mode, use COLOR_VIEW on
evergreen, align bytes per pixel to a multiple of a dword
v9 fix handling of stencil on evergreen, half fix for compressed
texture
v10 fix evergreen compressed texture proper support for stencil
tile split. Fix stencil issue when array mode was clear by
the kernel, always program stencil bo. On evergreen depth
buffer bo need to be big enough to hold depth buffer + stencil
buffer as even with stencil disabled things get written there.
v11 rebase on top of mesa, fix pitch issue with 1d surface on evergreen,
old ddx overestimate those. Fix linear case when pitch*height < 64.
Fix r300g.
v12 Fix linear case when pitch*height < 64 for old path, adapt to
libdrm API change
v13 add libdrm check
Signed-off-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
======================================================================
radeonsi: Remove PIPE_TRANSFER_MAP_PERMANENTLY
This was removed in commit:
commit 62f44f670b
Author: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Date: Mon Mar 5 13:45:00 2012 +0100
Revert "gallium: add flag PIPE_TRANSFER_MAP_PERMANENTLY"
This reverts commit 0950086376.
It was decided to refactor the transfer API instead of adding workarounds
to address the performance issues.
======================================================================
radeonsi: Handle PIPE_VIDEO_CAP_PREFERED_FORMAT.
Reintroduced in commit 9d9afcb5ba.
======================================================================
radeonsi: nuke the fallback for vertex and fragment color clamping
Ported from r600g commit c2b800cf38.
======================================================================
radeonsi: don't expose transform_feedback2 without kernel support
Ported from r600g commit 15146fd1bc.
======================================================================
radeonsi: Handle PIPE_CAP_GLSL_FEATURE_LEVEL.
Ported from r600g part of commit 171be75522.
======================================================================
radeonsi: set minimum point size to 1.0 for non-sprite non-aa points.
Ported from r600g commit f183cc9ce3.
======================================================================
radeonsi: rework and consolidate stencilref state setting.
Ported from r600g commit a2361946e7.
======================================================================
radeonsi: cleanup setting DB_SHADER_CONTROL.
Ported from r600g commit 3d061caaed.
======================================================================
radeonsi: Get rid of register masks.
Ported from r600g commits
3d061caaed13b646ff40754f8ebe73f3d4983c5b..9344ab382a1765c1a7c2560e771485edf4954fe2.
======================================================================
radeonsi: get rid of r600_context_reg.
Ported from r600g commits
9344ab382a1765c1a7c2560e771485edf4954fe2..bed20f02a771f43e1c5092254705701c228cfa7f.
======================================================================
radeonsi: Fix regression from 'Get rid of register masks'.
======================================================================
radeonsi: optimize r600_resource_va.
Ported from r600g commit 669d8766ff.
======================================================================
radeonsi: remove u8,u16,u32,u64 types.
Ported from r600g commit 78293b99b2.
======================================================================
radeonsi: merge r600_context with r600_pipe_context.
Ported from r600g commit e4340c1908.
======================================================================
radeonsi: Miscellaneous context cleanups.
Ported from r600g commits
e4340c1908a6a3b09e1a15d5195f6da7d00494d0..621e0db71c5ddcb379171064a4f720c9cf01e888.
======================================================================
radeonsi: add a new simple API for state emission.
Ported from r600g commits
621e0db71c5ddcb379171064a4f720c9cf01e888..f661405637bba32c2cfbeecf6e2e56e414e9521e.
======================================================================
radeonsi: Also remove sbu_flags member of struct r600_reg.
Requires using sid.h instead of r600d.h for the new CP_COHER_CNTL definitions,
so some code needs to be disabled for now.
======================================================================
radeonsi: Miscellaneous simplifications.
Ported from r600g commits 38bf276348 and
b0337b679a.
======================================================================
radeonsi: Handle PIPE_CAP_QUADS_FOLLOW_PROVOKING_VERTEX_CONVENTION.
Ported from commit 8b4f7b0672.
======================================================================
radeonsi: Use a fake reloc to sleep for fences.
Ported from r600g commit 8cd03b933c.
======================================================================
radeonsi: adapt to get_query_result interface change.
Ported from r600g commit 4445e170be.
clang warns on these:
stroker.c:626:19: warning: implicit conversion from enumeration
type 'VGPathCommand' to different enumeration type 'VGPathSegment'
[-Wconversion]
No change in the underlying value.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Noticed by clang:
brw_wm_surface_state.c:330:30: warning: initializer overrides prior
initialization of this subobject [-Winitializer-overrides]
[MESA_FORMAT_Z24_S8] = 0,
^
brw_wm_surface_state.c:326:30: note: previous initialization is here
[MESA_FORMAT_Z24_S8] = 0,
^
No functionality change, since the array is declared static so
it was zero-initialized by default.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Silences a clang warning:
format_pack.c:2546:30: warning: implicit conversion from 'int' to
'GLubyte' (aka 'unsigned char') changes value from 65535 to 255
[-Wconstant-conversion]
d[i] = d[i] ? 0xffff : 0x0;
~ ^~~~~~
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Noticed by clang:
egl_st.c:57:50: warning: field precision should have type 'int',
but argument has type 'size_t' (aka 'unsigned long') [-Wformat]
ret = util_snprintf(path, sizeof(path), "%.*s/%s" UTIL_DL_EXT,
~~^~
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
C still treats array arguments exactly like pointer arguments.
By sheer coincidence, this still worked fine on 64-bit
machines where 2 * sizeof(float) == sizeof(void*), but not
on 32-bit.
Noticed by clang:
text.c:76:51: warning: sizeof on array function parameter will
return size of 'const VGfloat *' (aka 'const float *') instead of
'const VGfloat [2]' [-Wsizeof-array-argument]
memcpy(glyph->glyph_origin, glyphOrigin, sizeof(glyphOrigin));
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Noticed by clang:
eglimage.c:48:28: warning: argument to 'sizeof' in 'memset' call is
the same expression as the destination; did you mean to dereference
it? [-Wsizeof-pointer-memaccess]
memset(attrs, 0, sizeof(attrs));
~~~~~ ^~~~~
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Most of the 256 values in the 'generic_to_slot' table were supposed to
be initialized with the default value 0xff, but were left at zero
(from CALLOC_STRUCT()) instead.
Noticed by clang:
u_linkage.h:60:31: warning: argument to 'sizeof' in 'memset' call is the same expression as the destination;
did you mean to provide an explicit length? [-Wsizeof-pointer-memaccess]
memset(table, 0xff, sizeof(table));
~~~~~ ^~~~~
Also fix a signed/unsigned comparison and a comment typo here.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
container_of() can legally return anything, even invalid addresses
that cause segfaults, when 'sample' is an uninitialized pointer.
Bug exposed by clang.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Fix uninitialized scalar field defect reported by Coverity.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Commit 272bc48976 removed the damage implementation for the
wl_buffer_interface because that has been removed from git master of
Wayland. However this breaks building with the 0.85 branch of Wayland
because it would end up initialising the struct incorrectly.
For the time being it's quite convenient for some compositors to track
the 0.85 branch of Wayland because the protocol is stable but they
will also want to track the master branch of Mesa so that they can use
the gbm surface changes.
This patch adds a compile-time check for the version of Wayland so
that it can work with either Wayland master or the 0.85 branch.
krh: Edited to also account for API changes in 6802eaa68, which
removes the timestamp argument from wl_resource_destroy().
The upstream of gtest has decided that the intended usage model is for
projects to import the source and use it, which is reflected in their
recent removal of the gtest-config tool.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
By making a bool fs_reg only have a defined low bit (matching CMP
output), instead of being a full 0 or 1 value, we reduce the ANDs
generated in logic chains like:
if (v_texcoord.x < 0.0 || v_texcoord.x > texwidth ||
v_texcoord.y < 0.0 || v_texcoord.y > 1.0)
discard;
My concern originally when writing this code was that we would end up
generating unnecessary ANDs on bool uniforms, so I put the ANDs right
at the point of doing the CMPs that otherwise set only the low bit.
However, in order to use a bool, we're generating some instruction
anyway (e.g. moving it so as to produce a condition code update), and
those instructions can often be turned into an AND at that point. It
turns out in the shaders I have on hand, none of them regress in
instruction count:
Total instructions: 262649 -> 262545
39/2148 programs affected (1.8%)
14253 -> 14149 instructions in affected programs (0.7% reduction)
This change (before the previous two) produced a .23% +/- .11%
performance improvement in Unigine Tropics at 1024x768 on IVB.
Total instructions: 269270 -> 262649
614/2148 programs affected (28.6%)
179386 -> 172765 instructions in affected programs (3.7% reduction)
v2: Move some of the logic of finding the instruction that produced
the result of an expression tree to a helper.
This should fit in well with our lower_mat_op_to_vec code: now, in
addition to having expressions on each column of a matrix, we also
split the columns to separate variables so they can be tracked
individually by the copy propagation, dead code, and other passes.
This optimizes out some more code generation in unigine and gstreamer
shaders.
Total instructions: 269342 -> 269270
14/2148 programs affected (0.7%)
2226 -> 2154 instructions in affected programs (3.2% reduction)
I've had this code laying around almost done for a long time. The
idea is like opt_structure_splitting, that we've got a bunch of
transforms at the GLSL IR level that only understand scalars and
vectors, which just skip complicated dereferences. While driver
backends may manage some optimization after they split matrices up
themselves, it would be better to bring all of our optimization to
bear on the problem.
While I wasn't expecting changes quite yet, a few programs end up
winning: a gstreamer convolution shader, and the Humus dynamic
branching demo:
Total instructions: 269430 -> 269342
3/2148 programs affected (0.1%)
1498 -> 1410 instructions in affected programs (5.9% reduction)
The Android build was broken by
commit ca760181b4
Author: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
Date: Fri Mar 16 12:55:40 2012 -0400
shared-glapi: Convert to automake
The offending change was that it redefined the filepaths in sources.mak
like this:
- FOO_FILES := bar.c
+ FOO_FILES := $(TOP)/src/mapi/mapi/bar.c
This broke the build because source filepaths in Android makefiles must be
relative to the makefile.
Ideally, this could be fixed by reverting the change in sources.mak and
making shared-glapi's Makefile.am use $(addprefix $(TOP)/src/mapi/mapi,
$(FOO_FILES)). However, automake doesn't understand builtin GNU make
functions, such as addprefix. So, it seems that automake and Android can
no longer share sources.mak.
Fix the build by duplicating the source lists from sources.mak into
Android.mk.
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Keep a reference to any newly allocated aux buffers to avoid
re-allocating for every st_framebuffer_validate() (i.e. leaking).
Signed-off-by: Mandeep Singh Baines <msb@chromium.org>
Signed-off-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
When using a separate stencil buffer, i965 requires that the pitch of
the buffer (in the 3DSTATE_STENCIL_BUFFER command) be specified as 2x
the actual pitch.
Previously this was accomplished by doubling the "cpp" and "pitch"
values stored in the intel_region data structure, and halving the
height. However, this was confusing, and it led to a subtle (but
benign) bug: since a stencil buffer is W-tiled, its true height must
be aligned to a multiple of 64; we were accidentally aligning its faux
height to a multiple of 64, causing memory to be wasted.
Note that for window system stencil buffers, the DDX also doubles the
cpp and pitch values. To facilitate fixing this DDX server bug in the
future, we fix the cpp and pitch values we receive from the X server
only if cpp has the "incorrect" value of 2.
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
v2: Clarify comments about the DDX.
This is a related fix for the Wayland change:
commit 83685c506e76212ae4e5cb722205d98d3b0603b9
Author: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
Date: Mon Mar 26 16:33:24 2012 -0400
Remove wl_buffer.damage and simplify shm implementation
Apparently, this should also fix a memory leak. When wl_buffer.damage
was removed from Wayland and Mesa was not fixed, wl_buffer.destroy ended
up in the (empty) damage function instead of calling
wl_resource_destroy().
Spotted during build as:
CC wayland-drm-protocol.lo
wayland-drm.c:80:2: warning: initialization from incompatible pointer type
wayland-drm.c:82:1: warning: excess elements in struct initializer
wayland-drm.c:82:1: warning: (near initialization for 'drm_buffer_interface')
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
Fixes uninitialized member defects reported by Coverity.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This was hacked in in one place for EGL image stuff, but the right
thing to do was just to provide the mapping from the mesa format to
the native hardware format, which includes render target support.
This turns out to be required for GL_ARB_texture_buffer_object, which
sees data in this layout.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
It turns out this field *is* used, and it's the stride between samples
from the buffer. Discovered during TBO debugging.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
There was a function full of unused mappings from the GLenum to
datatype/comps, but that wasn't all the information a driver would
want, which includes the other fields that a gl_format has. Given
that all the texture buffer formats were represented in gl_format,
just use that as our description.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We have to skip some work that wants to look at texture images, since
buffer textures don't have any of that complexity.
Reviewed-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
All that should be needed is that it exists. Fixes segfaults on first
_mesa_update_context() with a samplerBuffer-using shader active but
without a particular buffer texture enabled.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Fix texelFetch(sampler2DRect) and textureSize(samplerBuffer)
generation to not reference a LOD at the same time because it's easier
than not fixing it.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The samplerBuffer type will be undefined in !glsl 1.40, and the
keyword is marked as reserved. The [iu]samplerBuffer types are not
marked as reserved pre-1.40, so they don't have separate tokens and
fall through to normal type handling.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We're supposed to just immediately call it. Fixes piglit
GL_ARB_texture_buffer_object/dlist
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This is set correctly in gl.spec, but was missed in Mesa. As a
result, only one of the two was hooked up in Mesa.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We have lexer recognition of a bunch of our types based on the
handling. This code was mapping those recognized tokens to an enum
and then to a string of their name. Just drop the enums and provide
the string directly in the parser.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Nothing actually relied on them being mutable, and there was at least
one cast which discarded const qualifiers. The next patch would have
introduced many more.
Casting away const qualifiers should be avoided if at all possible.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
In "release" builds, Mesa would print this message if the MESA_DEBUG
variable was set. Make it so for debug builds as well.
I build debug builds all the time, but I'm not debugging this.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
While ir_to_mesa contains code that attempts to support functions, I
honestly doubt it's been tested and have little confidence that it
works.
The comment in visit(ir_function *ir) doesn't inspire confidence:
/* Ignore function bodies other than main() -- we shouldn't see calls to
* them since they should all be inlined before we get to ir_to_mesa.
*/
Furthermore, hardware drivers such as i915, i965, and (AFAICT) r200
don't support the BGNSUB/ENDSUB/CAL opcodes anyway. Only swrast does.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This never worked. brwProgramStringNotify also explicitly rejects
programs that use CAL and RET. So there's no need for this to exist.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
When SPRITE_POINT_ENABLE bit is set, the texture coord would be
replaced, and this is only needed when we called something like
glTexEnvi(GL_POINT_SPRITE, GL_COORD_REPLACE, GL_TRUE).
And more, we currently handle varying inputs as texture coord,
we would be careful when setting this bit and set it just when
needed, or you will find the value of varying input is not right
and changed.
Thus we do set SPRITE_POINT_ENABLE bit only when all enabled tex
coord units need do CoordReplace. Or fallback is needed to make
sure the rendering is right.
With handling the bit setup at i915_update_sprite_point_enable(),
we don't need the relative code at i915Enable then.
This patch would _really_ fix the webglc point-size.html test case and
of course, not regress piglit point-sprite and glean-pointSprite
testcase.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
v2: fallback just when all enabled tex coord units need do
CoordReplace (Eric)
v3: move the sprite point validate code at I915InvalidateState (Eric)
v4: sprite point enable bit update based on _NEW_PROGRAM, too
add relative _NEW-state comments to show what state is being used(Eric)
Signed-off-by: Yuanhan Liu <yuanhan.liu@linux.intel.com>
Fix 'set but not used' warnings; gl_version, gl_versions_profiles and
glx_extensions variables are used just only HAVE_XCB_GLX_CREATE_CONTEXT
is defined. Thus those warnings are shown when that macro isn't defined.
Signed-off-by: Yuanhan Liu <yuanhan.liu@linux.intel.com>
Fixes clang error:
tgsi/tgsi_dump.c:72:12: error: no member named '__printf_chk' in 'struct dump_ctx'
ctx->printf( ctx, "%u", e );
~~~ ^
/usr/include/bits/stdio2.h:109:3: note: expanded from macro 'printf'
__printf_chk (__USE_FORTIFY_LEVEL - 1, __VA_ARGS__)
^
Idea stolen from:
http://www.mail-archive.com/pld-cvs-commit@lists.pld-linux.org/msg210998.html
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Add the maximum base vertex offset to max_index for computing the
buffer size. Fixes a failed assertion in the u_upload_mgr.c code with
the VMware svga driver.
Fixes https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=48141
v2: incorporate Marek's suggestions.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Return 0 for features we don't support. Added debug_printf()
warnings when we fail to handle a new PIPE_CAP_x case. That will
alert us to interfaces changes in the future. We don't want to
just ignore new PIPE_CAPs and possibly miss something important.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Before, we weren't clamping the vertex colors produced by ARB vertex
programs. This could result in some rendering being too bright (in
ETQW, for example).
Also add cases for PIPE_CAP_VERTEX_COLOR_CLAMPED and
PIPE_CAP_FRAGMENT_COLOR_CLAMPED with comments to be complete.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
We already program all the sampler state correctly, we just didn't give
the GPU a pointer to it for the VS stage. Thus, any texturing other
than texelFetch() wouldn't work.
Fixes piglit test vs-textureLod-miplevels and 99 of oglconform's
glsl-bif-tex subtests.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Tested with lp_test_arit with 100% passes and piglit tests with 100%
pass for log but some tests still fail for pow.
Signed-off-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This reduces a little of CPU overhead.
The idea is to translate pipe vertex buffers directly into the CS
and not using any intermediate representations.
Framerate in Torcs:
before: 32.2
after: 34.6
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
st/mesa doesn't allow src_offset to be greater than stride and the maximum
stride r600 supports is 2047.
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
llvm-3.1svn r153860 makes MCInstrInfo available to the MCInstPrinter.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Limits maximum loop iterations in a TGSI shader to prevent infinite
loops from occurring, any iteration in any loop counts towards this
limit
Signed-off-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Fixes Coverity resource leak defects.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Variables have types, expression trees have types, but statements don't.
Rather than have a nonsensical field that stays NULL in the base class,
just move it to where it makes sense.
Fix up a few places that lazily used ir_instruction even though they
actually knew the particular subclass.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Previously, set_callee() performed some assertions about the type of the
ir_call; protecting the bare pointer ensured these checks would be run.
However, ir_call no longer has a type, so the getter and setter methods
don't actually do anything useful. Remove them in favor of accessing
callee directly, as is done with most other fields in our IR.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Aside from ir_call, our IR is cleanly split into two classes:
- Statements (typeless; used for side effects, control flow)
- Values (deeply nestable, pure, typed expression trees)
Unfortunately, ir_call confused all this:
- For void functions, we placed ir_call directly in the instruction
stream, treating it as an untyped statement. Yet, it was a subclass
of ir_rvalue, and no other ir_rvalue could be used in this way.
- For functions with a return value, ir_call could be placed in
arbitrary expression trees. While this fit naturally with the source
language, it meant that expressions might not be pure, making it
difficult to transform and optimize them. To combat this, we always
emitted ir_call directly in the RHS of an ir_assignment, only using
a temporary variable in expression trees. Many passes relied on this
assumption; the acos and atan built-ins violated it.
This patch makes ir_call a statement (ir_instruction) rather than a
value (ir_rvalue). Non-void calls now take a ir_dereference of a
variable, and store the return value there---effectively a call and
assignment rolled into one. They cannot be embedded in expressions.
All expression trees are now pure, without exception.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Most of the time, we just want to read an ir_dereference, so there's no
need to have these in separate functions. However, the next patch will
want to read an ir_dereference_variable directly.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
When translating a call from AST to HIR, we need to decide whether it
can be evaluated to a constant before emitting any code (namely, the
temporary declaration, assignment, and call.)
Soon, ir_call will become a statement taking a dereference of where to
store the return value, rather than an rvalue to be used on the RHS of
an assignment. It will be more convenient to try evaluation before
creating a call. ir_function_signature seems like a reasonable place.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Currently, ir_call can be used as either a statement (for void
functions) or a value (for non-void functions). This is rather awkward,
as it's the only class that can be used in both forms.
A number of places use ir_call::get_error_instruction() to construct a
generic value of error_type. If ir_call is to become a statement, it
can no longer serve this purpose.
Unfortunately, none of our classes are particularly well suited for
this, and creating a new one would be rather aggrandizing. So, this
patch introduces ir_rvalue::error_value(), a static method that creates
an instance of the base class, ir_rvalue. This has the nice property
that you can't accidentally try and access uninitialized fields (as it
doesn't have any). The downside is that the base class is no longer
abstract.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
generate_call() and ast_function_expression::hir() both tried to verify
that 'out' and 'inout' parameters used l-values. Irritatingly, it
turned out that this was not redundant; both checks caught -some- cases.
This patch combines the two into a single "complete" function that does
all the parameter mode checking. It also adds a comment clarifying why
AST-level checking is necessary in the first place.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
We used to have one big function, match_signature_by_name, which found
a matching signature, performed out-parameter conversions, and generated
the ir_call. As the code for matching against built-in functions became
more complicated, I split it internally, creating generate_call().
However, I left the same awkward interface. This patch splits it into
three functions:
1. match_signature_by_name()
This now takes a name, a list of parameters, the symbol table, and
returns an ir_function_signature. Simple and one purpose: matching.
2. no_matching_function_error()
Generate the "no matching function" error and list of prototypes.
This was complex enough that I felt it deserved its own function.
3. generate_call()
Do the out-parameter conversion and generate the ir_call. This
could probably use more splitting.
The caller now has a more natural workflow: find a matching signature,
then either generate an error or a call.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Function calls may have side effects that alter variables used inside
the loop. In the fragment shader, they may even terminate the shader.
This means our analysis about loop-constant or induction variables may
be completely wrong.
In general it's impossible to determine whether they actually do or not
(due to the halting problem), so we'd need to perform conservative
static analysis. For now, it's not worth the complexity: most functions
will be inlined, at which point we can unroll them successfully.
Fixes Piglit tests:
- shaders/glsl-fs-unroll-out-param
- shaders/glsl-fs-unroll-side-effect
NOTE: This is a candidate for release branches.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Certain applications don't call SwapBuffers before exiting. Yet, we'd
really like to see a bitmap containing the final rendered image even if
they choose never to present it.
In particular, Piglit tests (at least with -auto -fbo) fall into this
category. Many of them failed to dump any images at all.
Dumping one final image at context destruction time seems to work.
We may wish to pursue a more elegant solution later.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Fixes a Coverity resource leak defect.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
These can be used to implement EXT_texture_swizzle without baking
state-dependent swizzle instructions into the shader and forcing
recompiles.
For now, just set them to pass-through mode, so everything continues to
work as it did on Ivybridge. We can optimize this later.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
We only need one sample, since we don't support multisampling yet.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Apparently this needs to be the same as in 3DSTATE_WM.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Getting HiZ working means updating all the state packets for resolves
and clears. It's not worth doing until we get the basics working.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
For now, these all return 0, as I don't yet want to enable Haswell
support. Eventually they will be filled in with proper PCI IDs.
Also add an is_haswell field similar to is_g4x to make it easy to
distinguish Gen7 and Gen7.5.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
According to the BSpec ISA volume's "Accumulator Register" section:
"[DevIVB] SIMD16 execution on dwords is not allowed when accumulator is
explicit source or destination operand."
Fixes piglit tests:
- fs-multiply-const-ivec4
- fs-multiply-const-uvec4
- fs-multiply-ivec4-const
- fs-multiply-uvec4-const
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This replaces the cryptic void* parameter with a union.
(based on union r600_query_result)
Users of this can still pass uint64* in it, but that cannot work for every
query type, obviously. Most importantly, the code now documents what should
be expected from get_query_result.
This also adds pipe_query_data_pipeline_statistics as per the D3D11 docs.
v2: fix indentation, add comments and use the doxygen style
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This option allows targets to link against the LLVM shared library
instead of the static libs. With LLVM 2.9, his saves ~11 MB for each of
the r300 target libraries.
Pass a dri2_loader extension to the dri driver when gbm creates the dri
screen. The implementation jumps through pointers in the gbm device
so that an EGL on GBM implementation can provide the real implementations.
The idea here is to be able to create an egl window surface from a
gbm_surface. This avoids the need for the surfaceless extension and
lets the EGL platform handle buffer allocation, while keeping the user
in charge of somehow presenting the buffers (using kms page flipping,
for example).
gbm_surface_lock_front_buffer() locks a surface's front buffer and
returns a gbm bo representing it. This bo should later be returned
to the gbm surface using gbm_surface_release_buffer().
The function that counts the number of TGSI immediates also needs to
emit the immediates. This fixes assorted failures when using polygon
stipple with fragment shaders that have their own immediates.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
They aren't winsys of their own,
just help dealing with them.
v2: add some more comments in vl_winsys.h
Signed-off-by: Christian König <deathsimple@vodafone.de>
"Use -no-undefined to assure libtool that the library has no unresolved
symbols at link time, so that libtool will build a shared library on
platforms that require that all symbols are resolved when the library is linked."
Signed-off-by: Jon TURNEY <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>
This is a regression introduced by commit cdcfd5, which forget to
increase the map_refcount for successfully-mapped region. Thus caused a
wrong non-blanced map_refcount.
This would fix the regression found in the two following webglc testcase
on Pineview platform:
texture-npot.html
gl-max-texture-dimensions.html
Cc: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Yuanhan Liu <yuanhan.liu@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
createDrawable may return NULL value, we should check it, or it will
make a segment failed.
[minor-indent-issue-fixed-by: Yuanhan Liu]
Signed-off-by: Wang YanQing <udknight@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Yuanhan Liu <yuanhan.liu@linux.intel.com>
This extension just permits GL_UNPACK_ROW_LENGTH, GL_UNPACK_SKIP_ROWS
and GL_UNPACK_SKIP_PIXELS to be passed to glPixelStore on GLES2 so it
is trivial to implement.
Also fixes the usage of GL_IMPLEMENTATION_COLOR_READ_FORMAT_OES,
which may be set to a BGRA format e.g. for a MESA_FORMAT_ARGB8888 fb.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The extension is already exposed for GLES1, but the APIspec
doesnt allow the usage of GL_BGRA_EXT in glTex(Sub)Image2D.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Noticed this was missing when writing the "glapi: sort ARB extensions
by number" commit, which at least shows it was effective.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Noticed it was missing based on the lack of a descriptive enum
name from this bug's error message:
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44039
This moves two enums out of GL3x.xml. Though since this and
GL_ARB_texture_compression_rgtc are both strict subsets of GL3,
both extensions should have had all their enums in that file
to begin with, not just two of them.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
And add comments to fill in for extensions that aren't there.
Noticed the comment about "ARB extensions sorted by extension number"
didn't extend to the <xi:include> directives when it became clear
GL_ARB_texture_rg was missing, going by the error message seen here:
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44039
This makes it easier to notice in the future if an extension is missing
when it shouldn't be.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
A later error prints this properly, fix this case to do the same.
v2: remove attribute as per Ian's suggestion
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This adds the xml file covering ARB_blend_func_extended.
v2: fix SRC1_ALPHA
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
This also seems like a bad idea. There were too many instances for me
to thoroughly scan the code as I did with the last two patches, but a
quick scan indicated that most callers newly allocate a variable,
dereference it, or NULL-check. In some cases, it wasn't clear that the
value would be non-NULL, but they didn't check for error_type either.
At any rate, not checking for this is a bug, and assertions will trigger
it earlier and more reliably than returning error_type.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The constructor currently returns a ir_dereference_variable of error
type when provided NULL, but that's about to change in the next commit.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Providing a NULL pointer to the ir_dereference_record() constructor
seems like a bad idea. Currently, if provided NULL, it returns a
partially constructed value of error type. However, none of the callers
are prepared to handle that scenario.
Code inspection shows that all callers do one of the following:
- Already NULL-check the argument prior to creating the dereference
- Already deference the argument (and thus would crash if it were NULL)
- Newly allocate the argument.
Thus, it should be safe to simply assert the value passed is not NULL.
This should also catch issues right away, rather than dying later.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Providing a NULL pointer to the ir_dereference_array() constructor seems
like a bad idea. Currently, if provided NULL, it returns a partially
constructed value of error type. However, none of the callers are
prepared to handle that scenario.
Code inspection shows that all callers do one of the following:
- Already NULL-check the argument prior to creating the dereference
- Already deference the argument (and thus would crash if it were NULL)
- Newly allocate the argument.
Thus, it should be safe to simply assert the value passed is not NULL.
This should also catch issues right away, rather than dying later.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
So if anything goes wrong we won't display a random image.
v2: flush before using the surface with the decoder.
Signed-off-by: Christian König <deathsimple@vodafone.de>
If you ran g-s in 16-bpp we'd do a bunch of memory corruption.
now it just misrenders for some other reasons.
applies to stable.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
ir_validate.cpp: In member function ‘virtual ir_visitor_status ir_validate::visit_leave(ir_swizzle*)’:
ir_validate.cpp:458:66: warning: narrowing conversion of ‘ir->ir_swizzle::mask.ir_swizzle_mask::x’ from ‘unsigned int’ to ‘int’ inside { } is ill-formed in C++11 [-Wnarrowing]
ir_validate.cpp:458:66: warning: narrowing conversion of ‘ir->ir_swizzle::mask.ir_swizzle_mask::y’ from ‘unsigned int’ to ‘int’ inside { } is ill-formed in C++11 [-Wnarrowing]
ir_validate.cpp:458:66: warning: narrowing conversion of ‘ir->ir_swizzle::mask.ir_swizzle_mask::z’ from ‘unsigned int’ to ‘int’ inside { } is ill-formed in C++11 [-Wnarrowing]
ir_validate.cpp:458:66: warning: narrowing conversion of ‘ir->ir_swizzle::mask.ir_swizzle_mask::w’ from ‘unsigned int’ to ‘int’ inside { } is ill-formed in C++11 [-Wnarrowing]
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
valgrind complained about an uninitialised value being used in
glsl_parser_extras.cpp, and this was the one it was giving out about.
Just initialise the value in the fakectx.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
for some reason when I configure --with-dri-drivers="" the src/mesa/drivers/dri
Makefile tries to call the am--refresh target in the toplevel Makefile,
we don't have one, and I'm not sure what it should look like.
This makes things continue on.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
piglit glx-tfp segfaults on llvmpipe when run vs a 16-bit radeon screen,
it now fails instead of segfaulting, much prettier.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
When a GL LD_PRELOAD library like apitrace was used,
glXGetProcAddress() would return the preload's symbols instead of
libGL's symbol, leading to infinite recursion when the returned
function was called. This didn't hit apitrace on most apps because
who calls glXGetProcAddress() on the global functions.
The -Bsymbolic, which was present in mklib before automake conversion,
causes the glxcmds.c:GLX_functions table to be resolved at link time,
so that LD_PRELOADs don't affect it any more.
Fixes crashes when running wine under apitrace.
Tested-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
The default was 32 for the EmitNoLoops=0 case. This allows the oZone3D
soft shadows test to work properly with the vmware driver. Jose reported
that SM3 supports up to 255 loop iterations.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Instead of the hard-coded value of 32. Note that MaxUnrollIterations
defaults to 32 so there's no net change. But the gallium state tracker
can override this.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Improves Unigine Tropics performance at 1024x768 by 2.06236% +/-
0.50272% (n=11).
Reviewed-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Unigine Tropics uses INVALIDATE_BUFFER and not UNSYNCHRONIZED to reset
the buffer object when its streaming wraps. Don't penalize it by
flushing the batch at the wrap point, just allocate a new BO and get
to using it.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Use -no-undefined to assure libtool that the library has no unresolved
symbols at link time, so that libtool will build a shared library on
platforms that require that all symbols are resolved when the library
is linked.
Signed-off-by: Jon TURNEY <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>
The force-enable option is dropped, now that the hardware we were
concerned about has HiZ on by default. Now, instead of doing
INTEL_HIZ=0 to test disabling hiz, you can set hiz=false.
v2: Disable separate stencil on gen6 when HIZ is turned off.
(previously, this had to be done manually in addition).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org> (v1)
This was a debug option during gen6 transform feedback bringup (and a
similar one existed during gen4 bringup). However, it looks like
we're done with that, and we don't anticipate it being used again,
either for geometry shaders or transform feedback.
Suggested by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This was added in the i915/i965 merge from the i915 driver, but I
don't recall it ever being used since then.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
If you want to test the graphics driver, you want to test it under the
conditions that users will see, not some set of additional fallbacks.
If you want to test swrast, run the swrast driver (or no_rast=true)
instead.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
To avoid redundancies, this patch also removes .deps, .libs, and *.la
from .gitignore files in subdirectories.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
As Eric pointed out, we know the cube faces are square at this point
so we only need to test the texture widths for consistency.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The max size was 16Kx16K so a 4 byte/pixel, six-sided cube would require
6 GBytes of memory. If mipmapped, 8 GB. Reduce the max size to 4K to
make the total size more reasonable.
Fixes a crash with the new piglit max-texture-size test.
Reviewed-by: Yuanhan Liu <yuanhan.liu@linux.intel.com>
Per the spec, only nearest filtering is supported for integer textures.
Otherwise, the texture is incomplete.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Instead of gl_texture_object::_Complete there are now two fields:
_BaseComplete and _MipmapComplete. The former indicates whether the base
texture level is valid. The later indicates whether the whole mipmap is
valid.
With sampler objects, a single texture can appear to be both complete and
incomplete at the same time. See the GL_ARB_sampler_objects spec for more
details. To implement this we now check if the texture is complete with
respect to a sampler state.
Another benefit of this is we no longer need to invalidate a texture's
completeness state when we change the minification/magnification filters
with glTexParameter().
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Merge the mipmap level checking code that was separate cases for 1D,
2D, 3D and CUBE before.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Move the simple MaxLevel < BaseLevel test earlier to be closer to where
we error-check BaseLevel. Also, use the local baseLevel var in more places.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
To make the no-change case faster, as we do for the other object-reference
functions.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
We want to start emitting an INVALID_OPERATION from here for transform
feedback. Note that this forced dlist.c to almost not use this
function, since it wants different behavior during dlist compile.
Just pull the non-TF, non-GS test out for compile, because:
1) TF doesn't matter in that case because there's no drawing.
2) I don't think we're going to see GSes and display lists in the same
context, if we don't do GL_ARB_compatibility.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This fixes a build problem where EGL links to libgbm.la, which encodes
a relative path to it's libglapi.so dependency. The relative path
breaks when the linker tries to resolve it from src/egl/main instead
of src/gbm. Typically we silently fall back to the system
libglapi.so, which is wrong and breaks when there isn't one.
Morale of the story: don't mix mklib and libtool.
Although some hardware support NPOT cubemap, but it seems we don't know
the right layout for NPOT cubemap. Thus seems we need do fallback for
other platforms as well.
See comments inline the code for more detailed info.
v2: give a more detailed info about why we need fallback for other
platfroms as well.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=46666
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Signed-off-by: Yuanhan Liu <yuanhan.liu@linux.intel.com>
If we failed to allocate a memory resource for the texture we'd crash
when we tried to map it. Now we propogate the NULL back up to the
texstore code and generate GL_OUT_OF_MEMORY.
Fixes a crash with the upcoming piglit max-texture-size test.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
From the GLSL 1.30 spec:
The discard keyword is only allowed within fragment shaders. It
can be used within a fragment shader to abandon the operation on
the current fragment. This keyword causes the fragment to be
discarded and no updates to any buffers will occur. Control flow
exits the shader, and subsequent implicit or explicit derivatives
are undefined when this control flow is non-uniform (meaning
different fragments within the primitive take different control
paths).
v2: Don't emit the final HALT if no other HALTs were emitted.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org> (v1)
By setting lod to 0 in the builtin function implementation, we avoid
needing to update all the visitors to ignore LOD in this case, when
the hardware drivers actually want to ask for LOD 0 for rectangular
textures.
Fixes piglit spec/GLSL-1.40/textureSize-*Rect.
v2: Change style of looking for substrings.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This is the one builtin function claimed to be dropped due to the
ARB_compatibility split.
Fixes piglit spec/GLSL-1.40/compiler/ftransform.vert
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This makes the process slightly more debuggable, though it would be
nice if the build just failed immediately instead.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Mostly this is a matter of removing variables that have been moved to
the compatibility profile. There's one addition: gl_InstanceID is
present in the core now.
This fixes the new piglit tests for GLSL 1.40 builtin variables.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
llvm-3.1svn r152620 refactored the OProfile profiling code.
createOProfileJITEventListener was moved from the llvm namespace to the
llvm::JITEventListener namespace.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This avoids extra if statements in the common case of just comparing
two expressions that don't involve assignments or function calls,
along with simplifying the handling of constant expressions. Reduces
i965 instructions generated in unigine tropics and sanctuary,
yofrankie, warsow, gstreamer shaders, and the weston compositor.
shader-db results:
Total instructions: 213052 -> 212752
38/1246 programs affected (3.0%)
14309 -> 14009 instructions in affected programs (2.1% reduction)
The error was removed in:
commit 719909698c
Author: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Date: Tue Oct 18 16:01:49 2011 -0700
mesa: Rewrite the way uniforms are tracked and handled
The GL_ARB_robustness spec doesn't say the implementation
should truncate the output, so just return after setting
the required error like it did before the above commit.
Also fixup an old comment and add an assert.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Handle the special case of glFramebufferTextureLayer() for which we pass
teximage = 0 internally in framebuffer_texture(). This patch makes failing
piglit test fbo-array, fbo-depth-array to pass.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=47126
V4: Removed the duplicated code.
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This will replace the soon-to-be-removed _DD_NEW_SEPARATE_SPECULAR flag.
Note: there's a similar composite _MESA_NEW_NEED_EYE_COORDS flag set already.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Just use the corresponding _NEW_x flags intead. The _DD_NEW_x flags
will be removed in a following patch.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The computed stencil.clear and depth.clear values aren't used anywhere.
Those fields have been removed too.
Reviewed-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Set the close on exec flag when opening dri character devices, so they
will be closed and free any resouces allocated in exec.
Signed-off-by: David Fries <David@Fries.net>
Reviewed-by: Adam Jackson <ajax@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
This issue might recur on other OSes. If so then it might be better
to remove the C-preprocessor magic, and use fully qualified defines
instead.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
This state is needed for deciding whether or not to log
application messages with IDs that haven't been specifically
passed to glDebugMessageControlARB yet.
State for each individual ID number ever passed to
glDebugMessageControlARB (per-context) still needs to be added.
Unfortunately, Unigine Heaven 3.0 still needs this.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
min_index/max_index are merely conservative guesses, so we can't
make buffer overflow detection based on their values.
Tested-by: Jakob Bornecrantz <jakob@vmware.com>
There are several cases in which we need to explicity "rebase" colors
(ex: set G=B=0) when getting GL_LUMINANCE textures:
1. If the luminance texture is actually stored as rgba
2. If getting a luminance texture, but returning rgba
3. If getting an rgba texture, but returning luminance
Fixes https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=46679
Also fixes the new piglit getteximage-luminance test.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Based on a patch submitted by Vic Lee. The other part of his patch
which checked the fs pointer wasn't needed.
This fixes a crash when clear() is called before any VS or FS is set.
But this can only happen when the driver is used without the Mesa
state tracker.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This gets xine working with VDPAU.
v2: some minor bugfixes.
v3: create the resource with the subsampled
format to avoid tilling problems
Signed-off-by: Christian König <deathsimple@vodafone.de>
These will be used by glReadPixels() and glGetTexImage() to fix issues
with reading GL_LUMINANCE and other formats.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Before, we were only counting top-level instructions. But if we have
an assignment of a giant expression tree (such as the ones eventually
generated by glsl-fs-unroll), we were counting the same as an
assignment of a variable deref.
glsl-fs-unroll-explosion now fails in a reasonable amount of time on
i965 because the unrolling didn't go ridiculously far.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
I will use SX_MISC instead.
This reverts commit 734792e83f.
Conflicts:
src/gallium/drivers/r600/evergreen_hw_context.c
src/gallium/drivers/r600/evergreen_state.c
src/gallium/drivers/r600/r600_hw_context.c
src/gallium/drivers/r600/r600_pipe.h
draw module calls back into the driver and sets certain parts
of the state to whatever it needs, unfortunately unless you
get the ordering of calls to draw just right you'll end up
reseting your own driver state. That's what was happening to us
draw module would under certain conditions reset our own driver
state.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This fixes the libGLU.so.* build when a system libGL.so is not present
since it is relying on the lib/ to build against until it gets
converted to automake.
Tested-by: Stéphane Marchesin <marcheu@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Stéphane Marchesin <marcheu@chromium.org>
That is by making the dri extension variables static in gbm_dri.c.
The image_lookup_extension is provided by egl_dri2 when using x11 or wayland
platforms, when using the drm platform, gbm_dri has a wrapper for it.
Both use the same variables name image_lookup_extension.
Since -fvisibility=hidden was (probably by mistake) removed when converting to
automake, the "image_lookup_extension" symbol from egl_dri2.c became exported
in libEGL.so, so "image_lookup_extension" from gbm_dri.c was ignored.
This resulted in calling incorrect callbacks.
We cant make the image_lookup_extension static in egl_dri2.c right now,
since its used across multiple files.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/attachment.cgi?id=58099
Reviewed-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
If the texture is a 1D array, don't remove the border pixel from the
height. Similarly for 2D array textures and the depth direction.
Simplify the function by assuming the border is always one pixel.
Reviewed-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
This patch add the support of gl_PointCoord gl builtin variable for
platform gen4 and gen5(ILK).
Unlike gen6+, we don't have a hardware support of gl_PointCoord, means
hardware will not calculate the interpolation coefficient for you.
Instead, you should handle it yourself in sf shader stage.
But badly, gl_PointCoord is a FS instead of VS builtin variable, thus
it's not included in c.vue_map generated in VS stage. Thus the current
code doesn't aware of this attribute. And to handle it correctly, we
need add it to c.vue_map manually to let SF shader generate the needed
interpolation coefficient for FS shader. SF stage has it's own copy of
vue_map, thus I think it's safe to do it manually.
Since handling gl_PointCoord for gen4 and gen5 platforms is somehow a
little special, I added a lot of comments and hope I didn't overdo it ;)
v2: add a /* _NEW_BUFFERS */ comment to note the state flag dependency
and also add the _NEW_BUFFERS dirty mask (Eric).
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45975
Piglit: glsl-fs-pointcoord and fbo-gl_pointcoord
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Signed-off-by: Yuanhan Liu <yuanhan.liu@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
llvm-3.1svn r152043 changes createMCInstPrinter to take an additional
MCRegisterInfo argument.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This add clipdistance support like the non-llvm draw paths,
if we have a clip distance we compare with it instead of doing
the dot4.
We also have to put the have_clipvertex bit into the emitted
vertex header.
Fixes vs-clip-distance-all-planes-enabled, vs-clip-distance-const-reject,
vs-clip-distance-enables, vs-clip-distance-implicitly-sized,
vs-clip-distance-in-param, vs-clip-distance-uint-index.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This fixes the rest of the piglit clipvertex tests.
v2: fixup comments.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
We incorrectly setup clipmask for gl_ClipVertex, this fixes the clipmask
setup.
v2: fix comment
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
fix comment
This is just a simple text file containing a list of goals for gallivm/llvmpipe
and some info on what is required to get there along with some info on who
is looking at things.
v2: add EXT_texture_array.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
_mesa_max_texture_levels() is also used to test valid texture target
in _mesa_GetTexLevelParameteriv(). GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP is not allowed
as texture target in glGetTexLevelParameter(). So, this should throw
GL_INVALID_ENUM error.
Few other functions which use _mesa_max_texture_levels() like
getcompressedteximage_error_check() and getteximage_error_check()
also don't accept GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP.
Above fix makes piglit fbo-cubemap test to fail. This is because of
incorrect texture target passed to _mesa_max_texture_levels() in
framebuffer_texture(). Fixing that as well
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
"Use -no-undefined to assure libtool that the library has no
unresolved symbols at link time, so that libtool will build a shared
library on platforms require that all symbols are resolved when the
library is linked."
If I had a dollar for every time I wrote this patch, I'd have about
$10 :-)
Signed-off-by: Jon TURNEY <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
There's even a comment in the code containing the right swizzling
computations!
Previously this has not been noticed because we need to manually
enabled swizzling on snb/ivb (kernel 3.4 will do that) and we
don't use the separate stencil on ilk (where the bios enables
swizzling). This fixes
piglit ./bin/fbo-stencil readpixels GL_DEPTH32F_STENCIL8 -auto
on recent drm-intel-next kernels.
Also remove the comment about ivb, it's stale now.
Swizzling detection is done by allocating a temporary x-tiled
buffer object. Unfortunately kernels before v3.2 lie on snb/ivb
because they claim that swizzling is enable, but it isn't. The
kernel commit that fixes this for backport to pre-v3.2 is
commit acc83eb5a1e0ae7dbbf89ca2a1a943ade224bb84
Author: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
Date: Mon Sep 12 20:49:16 2011 +0200
drm/i915: fix swizzling on gen6+
But if the kernel doesn't lie, this now works on swizzling and
not swizzling machines.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This replaces the previously used wl_display_destroy.
wl_display_destroy was povided by wayland-client.so and
wayland-server.so, to resolve that conflict its renamed client-side.
Otherwise streamout with rasterizer discard will make the kernel upset
if the state tracker doesn't set a depth-stencil-alpha state.
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Unused by the current stack and APIs, therefore untestable.
It was used to facilitate the transition to integers.
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
For polygons, we have been using face culling with success, but that doesn't
work for points and lines.
Setting the point size and line width to 0 fixes it.
Also improve it even more by setting SCREEN_SCISSOR to a zero area.
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Implement it right using STRMOUT_CONFIG.RAST_STREAM. This fixes rasterizer
discard with points and lines.
This also adds another derived state. It's a combination of rasterizer discard
and streamout enable.
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
We must use VPORT_SCISSOR, because that's the only one we can use for multiple
scissor rectangles in ARB_viewport_array.
R700 can use the VPORT_SCISSOR_ENABLE bit, but R600 doesn't have that and must
emit a 8192x8192 rectangle if scissor is disabled.
This commit also cleanups magic numbers in create_rs_state.
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
VPORT_SCISSOR is the OpenGL scissor. How do I know? Because there are
16 of them just like GL4.1 has multiple scissor rectangles.
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Also use XXX in the other ones, because it's the most used word for that
purpose in Mesa.
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Timer queries should be able to measure the time spent in u_blitter as well.
Queries are split into two groups: the timer ones and the others (streamout,
occlusion), because we should only suspend non-timer queries for u_blitter,
and later if the non-timer queries are suspended, the context flush should
only suspend and resume the timer queries.
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
And rename or inline functions where appropriate.
There is no reason to keep this stuff in r600_hw_context.c.
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
The current code would ignore the point size specified by gl_PointSize
builtin variable in vertex shader on Pineview. This patch servers as
fixing that.
This patch fixes the following issues on Pineview:
webglc: https://cvs.khronos.org/svn/repos/registry/trunk/public/webgl/sdk/tests/conformance/rendering/point-size.html
piglit: glsl-vs-point-size
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
v2: pick Eric's nice tip for fixing this issue in hardware rendering.
v3: the last arg of EMIT_ATTR specify the size in _byte_. (Eric)
Signed-off-by: Yuanhan Liu <yuanhan.liu@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This fixes the egl_gallium.so driver build when no system libEGL.so is
present, since it's relying on the lib/ to build against until it gets
converted to automake.
We were looking at the size of batch.map for how big the batchbuffer
was, but on 865 we just use a single-page batchbuffer due to hardware
limits.
v2: Removed check for sizeof map < bo->size, since that's always false.
[change by anholt]
NOTE: This is a candidate for release branches.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=41495
In order to prevent an overflow of the batch buffer when emitting
triangles, we need to limit the initial primitive to fit within the
current batch. To do we need to measure the remaining space and thence
compute the maximum number of vertices that fit into that space.
Reported-by: Kurt Roeckx <kurt@roeckx.be>
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=41495
Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
NOTE: This is a candidate for release branches.
The hardware, like i915, uses an inclusive bounds on min and max for
the drawing rectangle, but we were providing a number for exclusive.
The number of bits used by the hardware only covers this value going
up to the maximum size, so when we programmed 2048 as the maximum
inclusive X, it saw a maximum X of 0 and clipped all rendering. This
caused rendering failures in gnome-shell.
Fixes piglit fbo-maxsize.
v2: dropped changes to the blitter, which does use an exclusive x2, y2.
[change by anholt]
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45558
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
NOTE: This is a candidate for release branches.
Michel pointed out that my assumption of a global
index namespace is incorrect and breaks r300g.
Signed-off-by: Christian König <deathsimple@vodafone.de>
This reverts commit d5a6c17254.
llvm-3.1svn r151687 makes MemoryObject accessor members const again.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This should speed things up a bit, but also shows
some bugs with the kernel implementation.
v2: require xcb-dri2 version 1.8
Signed-off-by: Christian König <deathsimple@vodafone.de>
While the ARB_map_buffer_range extension spec says nothing about these
queries -- they were added in GL 3.0 --, it seems like this could be an
error in the extension spec. This is one of the extensions, like
ARB_framebuffer_object, that "back ports" OpenGL 3.0 functionality to
previous versions. These extensions are supposed to provide identical
functionality to OpenGL 3.0. The other cases of mismatches have been
determined to be bugs in the extension specs.
And tools like apitrace rely on such queries to function properly.
Signed-off-by: Yuanhan Liu <yuanhan.liu@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Acked-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Acked-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
We currently don't support gl_PrimitiveID, and I believe asking the
hardware to generate it results in vertex cache invalidations.
This could result in slowdowns for applications that use gl_InstanceID,
which would be counter-productive. Just turn it off for now.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
visit(ir_variable *) sets dst_reg::writemask to the appropriate channel
for system values. Unfortunately, visit(ir_dereference_variable *) then
calls swizzle_for_size, which for a float, sets the swizzle to .x.
This works for gl_VertexID, since we store it in the .x component (see
brw_draw_upload.c:732 - VID), but fails for gl_InstanceID (IID) since we
store it in the .y channel.
To fix this, avoid calling swizzle_for_size on ir_var_system_values.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Originally ARB_draw_instanced only specified that ARB decorated name.
Since no vendor actually implemented that behavior and some apps use
the undecorated name, the extension now specifies that both names are
available.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
When you called them in a display list compile before, you would just
end up calling through NULL.
Fixes piglit GL_ARB_draw_instanced/dlist.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Kernels prior to 271d81b84171d84723357ae6d172ec16b0d8139c (March 2011)
don't support relocations outside of the target buffer object. Rather
than guarding this with a I915_PARAM_HAS_RELAXED_DELTA check, just
smash the bound to 0xfffff001 like we do on Ironlake.
This effectively gives us no upper bound check, just like we did prior
to commit 271d81b84171d84723357ae6d172ec16b0d8139c.
Daniel Vetter would also like to mention that this relies on the guard
page at the end of the GTT.
NOTE: This is a candidate for release branches.
Fixes a regression since 271d81b84171d84723357ae6d172ec16b0d8139c.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=46766
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
The drivers/ walk-through-subdirs makefile is converted as well so I
didn't need to keep EGL_DRIVERS_DIRS along with the per-driver
HAVE_EGL_DRIVER_WHATEVER.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The default case code was set up in a separate way, while this makes
it more normal. I wanted to add code to the explicit x11 platform and
default x11 platform cases in the next commit.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
All users of the shine table outside of the tnl module
are gone. Move the implementation into the tnl module and
prefix the public functions with _tnl.
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexdeucher@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Mathias Froehlich <Mathias.Froehlich@web.de>
Since the shine tables are now only used in the tnl lighting stage, where
they are validated through the tnl driver function NotifyMaterialChange
called in tnl/t_vb_light.c, we can not omit calling
_mesa_validate_all_lighting_tables (which only validates the shine tables)
in main/light.c.
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexdeucher@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Mathias Froehlich <Mathias.Froehlich@web.de>
Use direct computation of pow for computing the shininess
in _tnl_RasterPos. Since the _tnl_RasterPos function is still
used by plenty drivers that do only need the shine table for
_tnl_RasterPos but do not make use of swtnl computations, this
enables pushing down the shine table computation and validation
into the tnl module, which will happen in a followup change.
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexdeucher@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Mathias Froehlich <Mathias.Froehlich@web.de>
Since the shine tables are implicitly invalidated by having
a different shininess value than the current one, we can
omit the explicit invalidation of the shine table.
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexdeucher@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Mathias Froehlich <Mathias.Froehlich@web.de>
This lets us use the resource_copy_region() path when blitting from
R8G8B8A8 to R8G8B8x8, for example.
v2: be smarter when src_format==dst_format
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Assertions of the form assert(a && b) should be written as separate assertions
so that you can actually tell which part is false when there's a failure.
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <maraeo@gmail.com>
Move structs, enums, etc so they're in more logical order. In particular,
the shader and transform feedback-related structs/enums were pretty
scattered around.
After biasing we need to clamp to be sure we don't exceed the number of
levels in the mipmap. This fixes an assertion at svga_sampler_view.c:70
v2: simplify the biasing, clamping code per Jose's suggestion.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
We need to allocate new space every time to avoid blocking on the last
HiZ op completing. There are two easy ways to do this:
brw_state_batch() and intel_upload_data(). brw_state_batch() is
simpler and avoids another buffer allocation.
Improves Unigine Tropics performance 0.376416% +/- 0.148722% (n=7).
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The ralloc string appending functions were originally intended for
simple, non-hot-path uses like printing to an info log.
Cuts Unigine Tropics load time by around 20% (6 seconds).
v2: Avoid strlen() on every newline, too.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com> [v1]
Acked-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com> [v1]
Both callers of rewrite_tail immediately compute the new total string
length by adding the (known) length of the existing string plus the
length of the newly appended text. Unfortunately, callers generally
won't know the length of the new text, as it's printf-formatted.
Since ralloc already computes this length, it makes sense to add it in
and save the caller the effort. This simplifies both existing callers,
but more importantly, will allow for cheap-appending in the next commit.
v2: The link_uniforms code needs both the old and new length.
Apply the obvious fix (which sadly makes it less of a cleanup).
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com> [v1]
Acked-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com> [v1]
This adds support for all the opcodes needed for native integer
support with GLSL 1.20 enabled, and some of the ones for GLSL1.30
support.
I've split them between non-cpu and cpu along the same lines
Tom's code did for the other ones I think, but I'm open to review
on which ones should go where.
With instance ids fixed I get no regressions on my box here
with LLVM 2.8, will test with later LLVMs as well.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Backends usually advertise a SVGA3D_DEVCAP_MAX_POINT_SIZE between 63 and
256, so an hardcoded max point size of 80 is often incorrect.
This limitation does not apply for anti-aliased points (as they are done
via draw module) but we still advertise the same limit for both, because
all others pipe drivers do.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Mesa has a fast path for the generic fallback when using glReadPixels
for RGBA data which uses memcpy. However it was really difficult to
hit this case because it would not be used if any transferOps are
enabled. Any type apart from floating point or non-normalized integer
types (so any of the common types) would force enabling clamping so
the fast path could not be used. This patch makes it ignore clamping
when determining whether to use the fast path if the data type of the
buffer is an unsigned normalized type because in that case clamping
will not have any effect anyway.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=46631
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
postpone unreferences until end of function, as the ones in use will
get naturally dereferenced.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Can't see any reason this wouldn't be better off as an inline.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Some backends may advertise more temps than SVGA3D_TEMPREG_MAX, but the
driver is hardwired to only support up to the value defined by
SVGA3D_TEMPREG_MAX, so clamp to it.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
r600g is the only driver which has made use of it. The reason the CAP was
added was to fix some piglit tests when the GLSL pass lower_output_reads
didn't exist.
However, not removing output reads breaks the fallback for glClampColorARB,
which assumes outputs are not readable. The fix would be non-trivial
and my personal preference is to remove the CAP, considering that reading
outputs is uncommon and that we can now use lower_output_reads to fix
the issue that the CAP was supposed to workaround in the first place.
KILP instruction inside IF blocks were being lowered to an unconditional
KIL. Since r300 doesn't support branching, when the IF's were lowered
to conditional moves, the KIL would always be executed. This is not a
problem with the mesa state tracker, because the GLSL compiler handles
lowering IF's, but this bug was appearing in the VDPAU state tracker,
which does not use the GLSL compiler.
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
The xvmc state tracker is completely seperate and
doesn't shares code or anything else with the
xorg state tracker.
Signed-off-by: Christian König <deathsimple@vodafone.de>
This patch allows the Mac OS X SCons build to complete. The assembly
sources contain psuedo-ops that not are supported on Mac OS X.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
We were inverting the meaning of the stencil op flags: in svga/d3d
the normal incr/decr wraps and the SAT ops clamp.
This fixes piglit failures (at least stencil-twoside and stencil-wrap).
We should backport this everywhere we can.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Two of the switch cases used PIPE_FORMAT_ tokens instead of SVGA3D_ tokens.
As it happens, the token values are equal for these formats so there's no
net change.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jakob Bornecrantz <jakob@vmware.com>
We always mapped the query buffer in begin_query, causing stalls
if the buffer was busy.
This commit reworks it such that the query buffer is only mapped
in get_query_result as it's supposed to be.
The query buffer is no longer treated as a ring buffer. Instead, the results
are just appended and when the buffer is full, we create a new one. One query
can have more than one query buffer, though that's a very rare case.
Begin_query releases all query buffers.
Reviewed-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
From http://www.opengl.org/registry/specs/ARB/seamless_cube_map.txt:
Accepted by the <cap> parameter of Enable, Disable and IsEnabled,
and by the <pname> parameter of GetBooleanv, GetIntegerv, GetFloatv
and GetDoublev:
TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_SEAMLESS 0x884F
This caused a change in enums.c, which is manually built from the .xml
files.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
The linked list of memory allocations was not protected by a mutex.
This lead to sporadic failures with multi-threaded apps.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This fixes another case of faulting when freeing a pipe_sampler_view
that belongs to a previously destroyed context.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Basically, instead of immediately freeing deleted surfaces, hang onto
them in a cache to do quick re-allocation. This helps when surfaces
are frequently destroyed and then reallocated a bit later.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
There was a SVGA_HOST_SURFACE_CACHE_BYTES symbol, but it was never
used.
Now when we go to add a newly deleted surface to the cache we check
if the cache size would be exceeded. If so, try to free the least
recently "unused" surfaces until the cache is smaller. If we can't
do that, simply don't cache the newly deleted surface. The alternative
involves flushing and waiting and we don't want to do that.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Before, if shader translation failed for any reason we'd keep trying
to translate the shader over and over again during state validation.
The dummy fragment shader emits solid red so that might be visual
clue that translation is failing.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The assertion recently added in dst_register() was invalid because that
function is also (suprisingly) used to declare constant registers.
Move the assertion to the callers where we're really creating temp
registers and add some code to prevent emitting invalid temp register
indexes for release builds.
Also, update the comment for get_temp(). It didn't return -1 if it
ran out of registers and none of the callers checked for that.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
And assert on the register index in dst_register(). The dest can
only be an output or temp reg and there's more of the later.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Commit 980f6f1 (mesa: move gl_texture_image::Width/Height/DepthScale
fields to swrast) moved the initialization of the Width, Height, and
DepthScale fields to _swrast_alloc_texture_image_buffer(). However,
i915 doesn't call this function because it performs its own buffer
allocation. As a result, the Width, Height, and DepthScale fields
weren't getting initialized properly, and some operations requiring
swrast would fail.
This patch ensures that Width, Height, and DepthScale are properly
initialized by separating the code that sets them into a new function,
_swrast_init_texture_image(), which is called by
intel_alloc_texture_image_buffer() as well as
_swrast_alloc_texture_image_buffer(). It also moves the
initialization of _IsPowerOfTwo into this function.
Fixes piglit test fbo/fbo-cubemap on i915.
Partially fixes https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=41216
This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
GBM needs the buffer format in order to communicate with DRM and clients
for things like scanout.
So track the DRI format requested in the various back ends and use it to
return the DRI format back to GBM when requested. GBM will then map
this into the GBM surface type (which is in turn based on the DRM fb
format list).
Signed-off-by: Jesse Barnes <jbarnes@virtuousgeek.org>
These were rotting in an internal branch, but contain nothing confidential,
and would be much more useful if kept up-to-date with latest gallium
interface changes.
Several authors including Keith Whitwell, Zack Rusin, and Brian Paul.
In the gen6 GS case, we were under-counting and so other state would
get smashed. In the VS case, we were over-counting, so everything was
fine.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Tested-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This was copy and paste from the VS where I had similar code. We're
only looking at things derived from BRW_NEW_VERTEX_PROGRAM in this
block.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Tested-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This is a state which is derived from other states and is actually the first
state which doesn't correspond to any gallium state.
There are two state flags:
bool occlusion_query_enabled
bool flush_depthstencil_enabled
Additional flags can be added later if needed, e.g. bool hiz_enabled.
The emit function will have to figure out the register values by itself.
It basically just emits the registers when the state changes.
This commit also adds a few helper functions for writing registers directly
into a command stream.
This is the first pure command buffer. It contains CS initialization
packets and emits invariant state (i.e. the registers which never or rarely
change).
The affected registers are removed from *_hw_context.c, so that both ways
of emitting commands can co-exist.
v2: emit context_control in cayman's start_cs too
Suggested by José.
We don't provide shader caching in CSO. Most of the time the api provides
object semantics for shaders anyway, and the cases where it doesn't
(eg mesa's internall-generated texenv programs), it will be up to
the state tracker to implement their own specialized caching.
Improves VS state change microbenchmark performance by 7.08729% +/-
1.22289% (n=10) on gen7, because we don't upload the 64 dwords of
unused binding table any more.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This is a step toward making the samplers/binding tables reflect
sampler uniform mappings instead of embedding those in the programs.
No significant performance difference on the microbenchmark (n=10).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We always say no. Improves VS state change microbenchmark performance
7.68747% +/- 1.40826% (n=10).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
With this and the previous patch, 640x480 nexuiz is running 0.169118%
+/- 0.0863696% faster (n=121). On a VS state change microbenchmark,
performance is increased 8.28645% +/- 0.460478% (n=52).
v2: Fix CACHE_NEW_VS comment.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This reduces recomputation of state based on non-clipping-related
transform changes, and is a step toward removing VUE map
recomputation.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
For a 1D texture array, the border only applies to the width. For a 2D
texture array the border applies to the width and height but not the depth.
Sucha cases were not handled correctly in _mesa_init_teximage_fields().
Note: This is a candidate for stable branches
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Tracing function entry/exits is a bit pointless
when VDPAU_TRACE=1 does the same thing.
v2: use WARN instead of ERR for application problems
Signed-off-by: Christian König <deathsimple@vodafone.de>
Like TGSI_OPCODE_ARL, destination should be an integer.
This fixes invalid LLVM IR on an internal state tracker (currently Mesa
never emits this opcode).
In the future consider making ADDR register also a integer-as-float array,
like all other register kinds, or simply replace ADDR & ARR/ARL with
integer temp and instructions.
Reviewed-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Fixes this GCC warning.
native_drm.c:153:1: warning: ‘drm_display_authenticate’ defined but not
used [-Wunused-function]
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Avoid setting dirty state flags when enabling or disabling a vertex
attribute arrays when there's no change.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
If you're resorting to the dummy shader, you've probably already turned
off SIMD16 mode. But if you didn't, it would die in a fire.
We could either fail to compile in SIMD16 mode...or just fix it.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
The dummy FB write failed to specify EOT and a message length, causing
the GPU to hang. Now we can enjoy "everyone's favorite color" again.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Fixes this GCC warning.
mask.c: In function ‘mask_layer_fill’:
mask.c:387:12: warning: variable ‘alpha_color’ set but not used
[-Wunused-but-set-variable]
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Fixes these GCC warnings.
glx_api.c: In function ‘choose_visual’:
glx_api.c:678:8: warning: variable ‘trans_value’ set but not used
[-Wunused-but-set-variable]
glx_api.c:677:8: warning: variable ‘trans_type’ set but not used
[-Wunused-but-set-variable]
glx_api.c:663:8: warning: variable ‘min_ci’ set but not used
[-Wunused-but-set-variable]
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Now that we have a index_range_invalid flag, we can just use that rather
than calling vbo_validated_drawrangeelements directly and returning.
NOTE: This is a candidate for release branches.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This failed to take basevertex into account:
If basevertex < 0:
(end + basevertex) might actually be in-bounds while 'end' is not.
We would have clamped in this case when we probably shouldn't.
This could break application drawing.
If basevertex > 0:
'end' might be in-bounds while (end + basevertex) might not.
We would have failed to clamp in this place. There's a comment
indicating the TNL module depends on max_index being in-bounds;
if so, it would likely break horribly.
Rather than trying to clamp correctly in the face of basevertex, simply
delete the clamping code and indicate that we don't have a valid range.
This causes _tnl_vbo_draw_prims to use vbo_get_minmax_indices() to
compute the actual bounds, which is much safer.
NOTE: This is a candidate for release branches.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
The application supplied [start, end] range is merely a conservative
hint of the ranges of index values inside the index buffer. There is no
requirement that all vertices in the range [start, end] be referenced.
Passing an 'end' value larger than the maximum legal index is perfectly
acceptible; applications can legally pass 0xffffffff when they don't
have a tighter bound readily available.
Thus, the warning doesn't indicate a correctness issue; it could only
indicate a performance issue. However, it does not even do that.
glDrawRangeElements is designed to optimize non-VBO vertex data uploads
by providing an upper bound on the size of buffers a driver would need
to allocate. With VBOs, the data is already in an uploaded buffer, so
the range doesn't help.
The clincher is: we only know _MaxElement for VBOs. For user-space
arrays, we just set it to 2,000,000,000 (see mesa/main/varray.h:63.)
So we can only check this in the case where it is not useful.
Many applications, including the Unigine demos, currently trigger this
warning, which suggests the applications are buggy when they're actually
fine. Eliminating the warning should confuse users less while not
actually losing any benefit to application developers.
NOTE: This is a candidate for release branches.
Suggested-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
There's a serious trap for drivers: RenderTexture() does not indicate
that the texture is currently bound to the draw buffer, despite
FinishRenderTexture() signaling that the texture is just now being
unbound from the draw buffer.
We were acting as if RenderTexture() *was* the start of rendering and
that we could make texturing incoherent with the current contents of
the renderbuffer. This caused intel oglconform sRGB
Mipmap.1D_textures to fail, because we got a call to TexImage() and
thus RenderTexture() on a texture bound to a framebuffer that wasn't
the draw buffer, so we skipped validating the new image into the
texture object used for rendering.
We can't (easily) make RenderTexture() indicate the start of drawing,
because both our driver and gallium are using it as the moment to set
up the renderbuffer wrapper used for things like MapRenderbuffer().
Instead, postpone the setup of the workaround render target miptree
until update_renderbuffer time, so that we no longer need to skip
validation of miptrees used as render targets. As a bonus, this
should make GL_NV_texture_barrier possible.
(This also fixes a regression in the gen4 small-mipmap rendering since
3b38b33c16, which switched
set_draw_offset from image->mt to irb->mt but didn't move the irb->mt
replacement up before set_draw_offset).
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44961
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Infer from the operand the type of value to store.
MOV is untyped but we use the float store path.
v2: make MOV use float store path.
I've had to squash merge the ARL fix to be stored
as an integer in here to avoid regressions in a number
of piglit tests.
From now on ARL stores to an integer just like HW does.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
The infers the type of data required using the opcode,
and casts the input to the appropriate type.
So far this only handles non-indirect constant and temporaries.
v2: as per Jose suggestion, fetch immediates via floats
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
These are used inside the action handlers for the integer opcodes.
v2: use uint_bld/int_bld, drop higher level uint_bld.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
For now just pass the current context, but when we want to
store int or unsigned we need to pass those later.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
These two functions produce the src/dst types for an opcode.
MOV is special since it can be used to mov float->float and int->int,
so just return VOID.
v2: use a new enum for the opcode type as per Jose's suggestion.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
If the texture format is integer, the incoming user data must also be
integer (and similarly for non-integer textures).
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: Yuanhan Liu <yuanhan.liu@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
I recently discovered this text in the BSpec. It seems wise to comply,
though I haven't observed it to fix anything yet.
Fixes a regression in glean/fbo since 28cfa1fa21.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45221
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Fixes (with the previous commit) piglit GL_ARB_multisample/pushpop.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
In the table of of push/pop attributes, this one doesn't fall under
the enable group.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This fixes build errors like
In file included from glapi_dispatch.c:91:
../../../src/mapi/glapi/glapitemp.h:4641: error: no previous prototype for
'glDrawBuffersNV'
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Tested-by: Lucas Stach <dev@lynxeye.de>
Similar to the previous commit. Also fix incorrect setting of the
sampler view's state after it's created. We need to specify the
first/last_level fields in the template instead.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Rather than the one in st_texture_object. This sampler view really has
no connection to the one used for rendering.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
And remove needless & 0xff in _mesa_pack_uint_24_8_depth_stencil_row().
As suggested by José.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Previously, this function only handled 2D textures.
The fallback texture is used when we try to sample from an incomplete
texture object. GLSL says sampling an incomplete texture should return
(0,0,0,1).
v2: use a 1-texel texture image, per José.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Added in _mesa_pack_uint_24_8_depth_stencil_row(). This could be hit
by something like glDrawPixels(GL_DEPTH_STENCIL, GL_UNSIGNED_INT_24_8)
into a MESA_FORMAT_Z32_FLOAT_X24S8 buffer.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The st_renderbuffer_alloc_storage() function is used to allocate both
window-system buffers and user-created renderbuffers. The later kind
are never directly displayed so don't set PIPE_BIND_DISPLAY_TARGET for
those surfaces.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Commit dc7f449d1a introduced a new method
for avoiding MOVs: try to rewrite the destination of the instruction
that produced the RHS so it writes into the LHS.
Unfortunately, this is not safe for swizzled texturing operations, as
they return a set of four contiguous registers. Consider the following:
(assign (x)
(var_ref vec_ctor_x)
(swiz x (tex vec4 (var_ref m_sampY) (var_ref m_cordY) 0 1 ())))
In this case, the source and destination registers are equal, since
reg_offset is 0 for both. Yet, this is only a partial move: the texture
operation generates four registers, and the LHS only covers one.
Fixes color distortion in XBMC when using GLSL shaders.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch (with the previous commit).
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44333
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Certain instructions write more than one register. Texturing, for
example, returns 4 registers. (We set rlen to 4 even for TXS and float
shadow sampling.) Some math functions return 2. Most return 1.
The next commit introduces a use of this function.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch (dependency of a fix).
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reallocate/resize decompress FBO only if texture image width/height is
greater than existing decompress FBO width/height.
This is a candidate for stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
A filter strength of zero or one doesn't make any
sense. Thanks to Andy Furniss for pointing this out.
Signed-off-by: Christian König <deathsimple@vodafone.de>
The virtual address but follow the alignment requirement of the
tiled surface. The bo from handle case is not properly fix. Need
bigger change for a proper fix. Work around that by enforcing 1M
alignment for those bo.
Signed-off-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
Commit 2e5a1a2 (intel: Convert from GLboolean to 'bool' from
stdbool.h.) converted the "specoffset" local variable (in
intel_tris.c) from a GLboolean to a bool. However, GLboolean was the
wrong type for specoffset--it should have been a GLuint (to match the
declaration of specoffset in struct intel_context).
This patch changes specoffset to the proper type.
Fixes piglit test general/two-sided-lighting-separate-specular.
This is a candidate for stable branches.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45917
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
It turns out the same messages work on gen7, we were just being paranoid.
Fixes the penumbra shadows mode of Lightsmark since the register
allocation fix.
NOTE: This is a candidate for release branches.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
We just abort later, but at least this should result in more
informative bug reports.
NOTE: This is a candidate for release branches.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
r300g is able to sleep until a fence completes rather than busywait because
it creates a special buffer object and relocation that stays busy until the
CS containing the fence is finished.
Copy the idea into r600g, and use it to sleep if the user asked for an
infinite wait, falling back to busywaiting if the user provided a timeout.
Note: this is a candidate for the stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Simon Farnsworth <simon.farnsworth@onelan.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
This patch adds the pixel store operations in decompress_texture_image().
decompress_texture_image() is used in glGetTexImage() for compressed
textures with unsigned, normalized values.
It also fixes the failures in intel oglconform pxstore-gettex due to
following sub test cases:
- Test all mipmaps with byte swapping enabled
- Test all small mipmaps with all allowable alignment values
- Test subimage packing for all mipmap levels
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=40864
Note: This is a candidate for stable branches
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
X86Target is a variable, and therefore isn't defined at compile time. So
LLVM_NATIVE_ARCH == X86Target
is translated into
0 == 0
and since X86 is first, we always pick it.
Therefore we replace the logic with PIPE_ARCH_*.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45420
Fixes a regression from commit 660ed923de.
The basic idea is to look at the format of the dest renderbuffer and
choose either GLubyte or GLfloat for colors. The previous code used
_mesa_format_to_type_and_comps() which could return a bunch types other
than ubyte/float.
Determine the datatype at renderbuffer mapping time to avoid frequent
calls to the format query functions.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45578
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45577
Fix build with llvm-3.1svn.
llvm-3.1svn r149918 changed BufferMemoryObject::getExtent and
BufferMemoryObject::readByte from const member functions to non-const
member functions in include/llvm/Support/MemoryObject.h.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Ironlake appears to check our pointer against the General State Base
Address upper bound, rather than ignoring the zero bound as it ought.
Unfortunately, since we leave GSBA set to zero, there is no logical
upper bound. Set it to the maximum possible value, which should work
since our virtual addresses only go up to 2GB.
+94 piglits.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=28924
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Improves nexuiz performance 0.65% +/- .10% (n=5) on my gen6, and .39%
+/- .11% (n=10) on gen7. No statistically significant performance
difference on warsow (n=5, but only one shader has MADs).
v2: Add support for MADs in 16-wide by using compression control.
v3: Don't generate MADs when it will force an immediate to be moved to a temp.
(it's not clear whether this is a win or not, but it should result in less
questionable change to codegen compared to v2).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org> (v2)
Our only instruction with a 3rd source so far was linterp, and that
value was never register-allocated.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
WGL_ARB_pixel_format establishes the existence of pixel formats which
are invisible to GDI.
However we still need to pass a valid pixelformat to GDI, so that
context creation/binding works.
The actual WGL_TYPE_RGBA_FLOAT_ARB implementation is from Brian Paul.
The mapping from TEXTURE_x_INDEX to GL_TEXTURE_x was broken in
alloc_proxy_textures() because the elements in the targets[] array
were in the wrong order.
This didn't actually cause any failures since we never really use the
proxy texture's Target field. But let's get it right.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Use the float tables instead. Pixel maps are seldom used so this
shouldn't be a big deal. Next, we can get rid of the gl_pixelmap::Map8
array.
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
There's a mismatch in row strides for compressed textures between
what Driver.MapTextureImage() returns and what the software fetch-texel
functions use. Move it down a layer. The next step would be to fix
this in the fetch-texel functions.
Just use pow() instead. Spot lights aren't too common and fixed-function
lighting isn't as important as it used to me.
This saves 32KB per context. Each table was 4KB and there's 8 lights.
This is a shader based median filter, generally
used for noise reduction, it could still need some
improvements, but should usually work out of the box.
Signed-off-by: Christian König <deathsimple@vodafone.de>
The wm max threads is in the same dword as the dispatch enable. The
hardware gets super angry if you set max threads to 0, even if you
aren't dispatching threads.
Avoid unrollong loops that are either nested loops or
where the loop body times the unroll count is huge.
The change is far from being perfect but it extends the
loop unrolling decision heuristic by some additional
safeguard. In particular this cuts down compilation of
a shader precomputing atmospheric scattering integral
tables containing two nesting levels in a loop from
something way beyond some minutes (I never waited for
it to finish) to some fractions of a second.
This fixes piglit tests glsl-fs-unroll-explosion and
glsl-vs-unroll-explosion on r600g.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Mathias Fröhlich <Mathias.Froehlich@web.de>
width, height parameter in glTexImage2D() includes: texture image
width + 2 * border (if any). So when doing the texture size check
in _mesa_test_proxy_teximage() width and height should not exceed
maximum supported size for target texture type + 2 * border.
i.e. 1 << (ctx->Const.MaxTextureLevels - 1) + 2 * border
Texture border is anyway stripped out before it is given to intel
or gallium drivers.
This patch fixes Intel oglconform test case:
max_values negative.textureSize.textureCube
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44970
Note: This is a candidate for mesa 8.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <idr@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
If we have no more enabled samplers and we've reset all the previously
used ones, no need to keep going around this loop.
(just moved some stuff around to clean it up a bit).
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
From what I can see we were taking the debug path all the time,
when we probably only want it for enable debug path.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
We don't want our VBOs mapped when we're drawing. This change checks
if the vertex store VBO is mapped before we execute a list, unmaps it,
then remaps it after drawing. This situation pops up when building a
nested display list in GL_COMPILE_AND_EXECUTE mode.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Something has gone wrong if swrast is requested but cannot be
loaded. The user really should be made aware of this, (and instructed
to set LIBGL_DEBUG for more details).
The wording of this error message is updated from "reverting to
indirect rendering" to the more objectively descriptive "failed to
load driver: swrast". The former wording makes assumptions about what
the calling code will decide to do next, rather than simply describing
what went wrong within the current function. The new wording is
consistent with the critical errors recently added for hardware
drivers that fail to load.
Reviewed-by: Eugeni Dodonov <eugeni.dodonov@intel.com>
Something has gone wrong if we were asked to load a driver of a
specific name, but it failed to load for some reason. The user really
should be made aware of this, (and instructed to set LIBGL_DEBUG for
more details).
Reviewed-by: Eugeni Dodonov <eugeni.dodonov@intel.com>
Sometimes an error is so sever that we want to print it even when the
user hasn't specifically requested debugging by setting LIBGL_DEBUG.
Add a CriticalErrorMessageF macro to be used for this case. (The error
message can still be slienced with the existing LIBGL_DEBUG=quiet).
For critical error messages we also direct the user to set the
LIBGL_DEBUG environment variable for more details.
Reviewed-by: Eugeni Dodonov <eugeni.dodonov@intel.com>
The description of ErrorMessageF was misleading in the case of
LIBGL_DEBUG being unset, (the previous comment could be understood to
mean the error should be printed, but the code does not print in this
case).
InfoMessageF previously had no comment at all.
Reviewed-by: Eugeni Dodonov <eugeni.dodonov@intel.com>
The build was broken by the line below, added in commit 4f82fed4.
s_expression.cpp:26: #include <limits>
Mesa's half of the fix is to add 'external/astl/include' to the include
path. The other half of the fix requires implementing
numeric_limits<float>::infinity() in astl, for which I have patches
submitted upstream for review.
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Outputs should be treated in the same way as
inputs and temporaries here.
Signed-off-by: Christian König <deathsimple@vodafone.de>
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexdeucher@gmail.com>
If we had no vertex textures or samplers previously and we have none now,
don't bother doing the enables dance.
I was profiling nexuiz on noop and noticed these two functions in the
profile, this drops their usage from 0.86% to 0.03% and 0.23% to 0.03%
for texture and samplers.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
We were doing saturate-based clamping on the [0,width] or [0,height]
coordinate, which meant only the first pixel was addressable.
Fixes piglit ARB_texture_rectangle/texwrap-RECT-bordercolor
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 release branch.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
We should be able to merge self-move instruction into the MRF move
anyway, and this simplifies things for the next commit.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 release branch.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
The HiZ op was implemented as a meta-op. This patch reimplements it by
emitting a special HiZ batch. This fixes several known bugs, and likely
a lot of undiscovered ones too.
==== Why the HiZ meta-op needed to die ====
The HiZ op was implemented as a meta-op, which caused lots of trouble. All
other meta-ops occur as a result of some GL call (for example, glClear and
glGenerateMipmap), but the HiZ meta-op was special. It was called in
places that Mesa (in particular, the vbo and swrast modules) did not
expect---and were not prepared for---state changes to occur (for example:
glDraw; glCallList; within glBegin/End blocks; and within
swrast_prepare_render as a result of intel_miptree_map).
In an attempt to work around these unexpected state changes, I added two
hooks in i965:
- A hook for glDraw, located in brw_predraw_resolve_buffers (which is
called in the glDraw path). This hook detected if a predraw resolve
meta-op had occurred, and would hackishly repropagate some GL state
if necessary. This ensured that the meta-op state changes would not
intefere with the vbo module's subsequent execution of glDraw.
- A hook for glBegin, implemented by brwPrepareExecBegin. This hook
resolved all buffers before entering
a glBegin/End block, thus preventing an infinitely recurring call to
vbo_exec_FlushVertices. The vbo module calls vbo_exec_FlushVertices to
flush its vertex queue in response to GL state changes.
Unfortunately, these hooks were not sufficient. The meta-op state changes
still interacted badly with glPopAttrib (as discovered in bug 44927) and
with swrast rendering (as discovered by debugging gen6's swrast fallback
for glBitmap). I expect there are more undiscovered bugs. Rather than play
whack-a-mole in a minefield, the sane approach is to replace the HiZ
meta-op with something safer.
==== How it was killed ====
This patch consists of several logical components:
1. Rewrite the HiZ op by replacing function gen6_resolve_slice with
gen6_hiz_exec and gen7_hiz_exec. The new functions do not call
a meta-op, but instead manually construct and emit a batch to "draw"
the HiZ op's rectangle primitive. The new functions alter no GL
state.
2. Add fields to brw_context::hiz for the new HiZ op.
3. Emit a workaround flush when toggling 3DSTATE_VS.VsFunctionEnable.
4. Kill all dead HiZ code:
- the function gen6_resolve_slice
- the dirty flag BRW_NEW_HIZ
- the dead fields in brw_context::hiz
- the state packet manipulation triggered by the now removed
brw_context::hiz::op
- the meta-op workaround in brw_predraw_resolve_buffers (discussed
above)
- the meta-op workaround brwPrepareExecBegin (discussed above)
Note: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Acked-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=43327
Reported-by: xunx.fang@intel.com
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44927
Reported-by: chao.a.chen@intel.com
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
If size is small (such as 1),
pitch = ROUND_DOWN_TO(MIN2(size, (1 << 15) - 1), 4);
makes pitch = 0. Then
height = size / pitch;
causes a division-by-zero exception. If pitch is zero, set height to
1 and avoid the division.
This fixes piglit's bin/getteximage-formats test and glean's
bufferObject test.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 release branch.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44971
There are cases where a buffer can be mapped while another buffer is
flushed. This can happen in the CopyPixels meta-op path for piglit's
fbo-mipmap-copypix. After some discussion with Eric, it seems this
assertion is no longer necessary, and it has always been too strict.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=43328
Cc: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
This was only used by glReadPixels and glDrawPixels. Now those
functions do the corresponding error checks.
Signed-off-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Basically the same story as the previous commit. But we were
already calling _mesa_source_buffer_exists() in ReadPixels().
Yeah, we were calling it twice.
Signed-off-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
The _mesa_error_check_format_type() function does two things: check
that format/type is legal and check that the destination (or source
buffer for glReadPixels) actually exists. Just move the relevant
parts of that into _mesa_DrawPixels().
We'll do a similar change in glReadPixels then get rid of the function
altogether.
Signed-off-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This replaces the _mesa_is_legal_format_and_type() function.
According to the spec, some invalid format/type combinations to
glDrawPixels, ReadPixels and glTexImage should generate
GL_INVALID_ENUM but others should generate GL_INVALID_OPERATION.
With the old function we didn't make that distinction and generated
GL_INVALID_ENUM errors instead of GL_INVALID_OPERATION. The new
function returns one of those errors or GL_NO_ERROR.
This will also let us remove some redundant format/type checks in
follow-on commit.
v2: add more checks for ARB_texture_rgb10_a2ui at the top of
_mesa_error_check_format_and_type() per Ian.
Signed-off-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Tiled surface have all kind of alignment constraint that needs to
be met. Instead of having all this code duplicated btw ddx and
mesa use common code in libdrm_radeon this also ensure that both
ddx and mesa compute those alignment in the same way.
v2 fix evergreen
v3 fix compressed texture and workaround cube texture issue by
disabling 2D array mode for cubemap (need to check if r7xx and
newer are also affected by the issue)
v4 fix texture array
v5 fix evergreen and newer, split surface values computation from
mipmap tree generation so that we can get them directly from the
ddx
v6 final fix to evergreen tile split value
v7 fix mipmap offset to avoid to use random value, use color view
depth view to address different layer as hardware is doing some
magic rotation depending on the layer
v8 fix COLOR_VIEW on r6xx for linear array mode, use COLOR_VIEW on
evergreen, align bytes per pixel to a multiple of a dword
v9 fix handling of stencil on evergreen, half fix for compressed
texture
v10 fix evergreen compressed texture proper support for stencil
tile split. Fix stencil issue when array mode was clear by
the kernel, always program stencil bo. On evergreen depth
buffer bo need to be big enough to hold depth buffer + stencil
buffer as even with stencil disabled things get written there.
v11 rebase on top of mesa, fix pitch issue with 1d surface on evergreen,
old ddx overestimate those. Fix linear case when pitch*height < 64.
Fix r300g.
v12 Fix linear case when pitch*height < 64 for old path, adapt to
libdrm API change
v13 add libdrm check
Signed-off-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
Refine 80aa78142d "dri: make sure to build libdricommon.la"
so we don't build libdricommon if we aren't building a dri driver which needs it (i.e.
if we are just building swrast)
In particular, this restores the ability to build the swrast dri driver without having to
have a xf86drm.h
Signed-off-by: Jon TURNEY <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>
in check_index_bounds the comparison needs to be "greater equal" since
contrary to the name _MaxElement is the count of the array (this matches
similar code in vbo_exec_DrawRangeElementsBaseVertex).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Fixes the build of builtin_compiler on my 32-bit build where xcb-dri2
is in a custom prefix but the custom prefix flags weren't available.
It shouldn't have been in LIBS anyway.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This checks for advertised LLC support by the GPU instead of relying on
the GPU generation for detection.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Eugeni Dodonov <eugeni.dodonov@intel.com>
Rely on libdrm HAS_LLC parameter to verify if hardware supports it. In
case the libdrm version does not supports this check, fallback to older
way of detecting it which assumed that GPUs newer than GEN6 have it.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Eugeni Dodonov <eugeni.dodonov@intel.com>
Was previously being done in a state-tracker, but in a way which was
difficult for some drivers to optimize. Push down to this level and
make it the individual drivers responsibility.
FBOs differ from textures in a significant way. With textures, we can
strip the border and get correct rendering except when the application
fetches texels outside [0,1].
With an FBO, the pixel at (0,0) is in the border. The
ARB_framebuffer_object spec says:
"If the attached image is a texture image, then the window
coordinates (x[w], y[w]) correspond to the texel (i, j, k), from
figure 3.10 as follows:
i = (x[w] - b)
j = (y[w] - b)
k = (layer - b)
where <b> is the texture image's border width..."
Since the border doesn't exist, we can never render any pixels in the
correct location. Just mark these FBOs FRAMEBUFFER_UNSUPPORTED.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=42336
Ever since xserver commit 531869448d07e00ae241120b59f3aaaa5709d59c,
the server no longer sends invalidate events to clients, unless they
have performed a GetBuffers request since the drawable was last
invalidated.
If the drawable gets invalidated immediately after the GetBuffers
request was processed by the X server, it's possible that Xlib
will process the invalidate event while waiting for the GetBuffers
reply. So the server, thinking the client knows that the buffers
are invalid, is waiting for another GetBuffers request before
sending any more invalidate events. The client, on the other hand,
believes the buffers to be valid, and thus is expecting to receive
another invalidate event before it has to send another GetBuffers
request. The end result is that the client never again sends
a GetBuffers request.
To avoid this problem, take a snapshot of the lastStamp before
doing GetBuffers, and retry if the snapshot and the current
lastStamp no longer match after the GetBuffers reply has been
processed.
Signed-off-by: Ville Syrjälä <syrjala@sci.fi>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
The error message I chose matches gcc's error. Fixes piglit
switch-case-duplicated.vert.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Otherwise, the upcoming error messages said the location was 0:0(0).
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
It's not quite spelled out in the spec text, but the grammar indicates
that only constant values are allowed as switch() case labels (and
only constant values make sense, anyway).
Fixes piglit glsl-1.30/compiler/switch-statement/switch-case-uniform-int.vert.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This stuffs them all in a struct for sanity. Fixes piglit
glsl-1.30/execution/switch/fs-uniform-nested.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
For all the extension entrypoints using the get_buffer() helper, they
wanted the same error handling. In some cases, the error was doing
the same error return whether target was a bad enum, or a user buffer
wasn't bound.
(Actually, GL_ARB_map_buffer_range doesn't specify the error for a zero
buffer being bound for MapBufferRange, though it does for
FlushMappedBufferRange. This appears to be an oversight).
Fixes piglit GL_ARB_copy_buffer/negative-bound-zero.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Even though it should be safe to use them for one frame, better be sure.
Suggested by Michael Dänzer.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 stable branch.
Signed-off-by: Lauri Kasanen <cand@gmx.com>
This prevents a possible lapse of the depth buffer - the situation where
the app and pp have different depth buffers.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 stable branch.
Signed-off-by: Lauri Kasanen <cand@gmx.com>
In commit 6ecee54a9a a call to
talloc_reference was replaced with a call to talloc_steal. This was in
preparation for moving to ralloc which doesn't support reference
counting.
The justification for talloc_steal within token_list_append in that
commit is that the tokens are being copied already. But the copies are
shallow, so this does not work.
Fortunately, the lifetime of these tokens is easy to understand. A
token list for "replacements" is created and stored in a hash table
when a function-like macro is defined. This list will live until the
macro is #undefed (if ever).
Meanwhile, a shallow copy of the list is created when the macro is
used and the list expanded. This copy is short-lived, so is unsuitable
as a new parent.
So we can just let the original, longer-lived owner continue to own
the underlying objects and things will work.
This fixes bug #45082:
"ralloc.c:78: get_header: Assertion `info->canary == 0x5A1106'
failed." when using a macro in GLSL
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45082
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
This test cases exposes a bug as described in this bug report:
"ralloc.c:78: get_header: Assertion `info->canary == 0x5A1106'
failed." when using a macro in GLSL
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45082
Clearly, some memory is getting (incorrectly) freed on the first macro
invocation, leading to problems with the second macro invocation.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The trick here is that flex always chooses the rule that matches the most
text. So with a input text of "two:" which we want to be lexed as an
IDENTIFIER token "two" followed by an OTHER token ":" the previous OTHER
rule would match longer as a single token of "two:" which we don't want.
We prevent this by forcing the OTHER pattern to never match any
characters that appear in other constructs, (no letters, numbers, #,
_, whitespace, nor any punctuation that appear in CPP operators).
Fixes bug #44764:
GLSL preprocessor doesn't replace defines ending with ":"
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44764
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
GL_RG_INTEGER only has two components, not three. I'll be surprised
if anyone ever tries to glReadPixels(..., GL_SHORT, GL_RG_INTEGER,
...). This was found by inspection.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
With 0963990 the flag was only set when Bind created the object. In
all cases where ::ARBsemantics could be true, this path never
happened. Instead, add a _Used flag to track whether a VAO has ever
been bound. On the first Bind, set the _Used flag, and set the
ARBsemantics flag to the correct value.
NOTE: This is a candidate for release branches.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45423
This is a hack, and it will result in incorrect rendering. However,
it does eliminate spurious warnings in several piglit CopyPixels tests
that involve floating-point depth buffers.
The real solution is to add a zf field to SWspan to store float Z
values. When a float depth buffer is involved, swrast should also
populate the zf field. I'll consider this post-8.0 work.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Now that the draw module avoids flushing, it may flush precisely when
binding a NULL shader, so care must be taken when restoring the original
fragment shader.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
When GLAPIENTRY is __stdcall (ie Windows), the stack is popped by the
callee making the number/type of arguments significant, therefore
using a generic no-op causes stack corruption for many entry-points.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
width, height parameter in glTexImage2D() includes: texture image
width + 2 * border (if any). So when doing the texture size check
in _mesa_test_proxy_teximage() width and height should not exceed
maximum supported size for target texture type.
i.e. 1 << (ctx->Const.MaxTextureLevels - 1)
Texture border is anyway stripped out before it is given to intel
or gallium drivers.
This patch fixes Intel oglconform test case: max_values
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44970
Note: This is a candidate for mesa 8.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <idr@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
In certain situations API's will call pipe->clear which doesn't
require fragment shader, but then we'd try to verify the pipeline
and assume fragment shader was always set. This was leading to
crash when API would just call simple clear's before anything else.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The node_attrsz[] array is initially copied from the node->attrsz[]
array but some values get rewritten. Thereafter, we need to use the
node_attrsz[] values.
Fixes a bug when replaying a display list that uses generic vertex
array[16] (at least).
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
The warnings were:
nv50_pc_regalloc.c: In function ‘pass_generate_phi_movs’:
nv50_pc_regalloc.c:423:41: warning: array subscript is above array bounds
codegen/nv50_ir_peephole.cpp: In member function ‘bool nv50_ir::MemoryOpt::replaceStFromSt(nv50_ir::Instruction*, nv50_ir::MemoryOpt::Record*)’:
codegen/nv50_ir_peephole.cpp:1475:18: warning: array subscript is above array bounds
codegen/nv50_ir_peephole.cpp:1475:18: warning: array subscript is above array bounds
codegen/nv50_ir_peephole.cpp:1475:18: warning: array subscript is above array bounds
codegen/nv50_ir_peephole.cpp:1475:18: warning: array subscript is above array bounds
And add some assertions to catch this sooner in debug builds.
This fixes a dangling texture object pointer bug hit via wglShareLists().
When we push the GL_TEXTURE_BIT state we may push references to the default
texture objects which are owned by the gl_shared_state object. We don't
want to accidentally delete that shared state while the attribute stack
references shared objects. So keep a reference to it.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This cleans up the reference counting of shared context state.
The next patch will use this to fix an actual bug.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This also significantly improves the RV670 flush by using the CB1 flush
*always* and also DEST_BASE_0_ENA, which appears to magically fix some tests.
I am not entirely sure, but it's possible that RV670 flushing is fixed
completely.
v2: fix cayman by flushing texture cache instead of vertex cache
Thanks to Dave Airlie for testing Cayman.
Commit 99476561 (automake: src/glsl and src/glsl/glcpp) changed the
build system so that src/glsl/glsl_test is not built by default. This
inadvertently broke "make check", since the tests in
src/glsl/tests/lower_jumps (which are run by "make check") rely on
glsl_test.
This patch ensures that "make check" builds glsl_test before running
any tests.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Fixes these GCC warnings.
osmesa.c: In function ‘osmesa_renderbuffer_storage’:
osmesa.c:417: warning: comparison is always false due to limited range of data type
osmesa.c:423: warning: comparison is always false due to limited range of data type
osmesa.c:431: warning: comparison is always false due to limited range of data type
osmesa.c:437: warning: comparison is always false due to limited range of data type
osmesa.c:447: warning: comparison is always false due to limited range of data type
osmesa.c:453: warning: comparison is always false due to limited range of data type
osmesa.c:463: warning: comparison is always false due to limited range of data type
osmesa.c:466: warning: comparison is always false due to limited range of data type
osmesa.c:476: warning: comparison is always false due to limited range of data type
osmesa.c:479: warning: comparison is always false due to limited range of data type
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Signed-off-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Success was (tests-passed AND valgrind-tests-passed) but this meant that
if the valgrind tests weren't run it would be considered a failure.
The logic is now (tests-passed AND (!valgrind OR valgrind-tests-passed))
which lets us return success if the valgrind tests aren't run.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Tested-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Needed for automake. Using AC_PROG_PATH(bison/flex) causes automake to
fail to build .y and .l files.
It is up to the builder to use bison/flex instead of yacc/lex.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Tested-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Exporting a publicly visible class with a generic name like
"variable_entry" via ir_variable_refcount.h is kind of mean.
Many IR transformers would like to define their own "variable_entry"
class. If they accidentally include this header, the compiler/linker
may get confused and try to instantiate the wrong variable_entry class,
leading to bizarre runtime crashes.
The hope is that renaming this one will allow .cpp files to safely
declare and use their own file-scope "variable_entry" classes.
This avoids crashes caused by converting src/glsl to automake.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This uses point size clamping to force point size to a particular value,
making the vertex shader output irrelevant.
Reviewed-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
We don't set the other bits anywhere else except the other DSA states,
which are mutually-exclusive with this one.
Reviewed-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
This fixes the gl_PointSize transform feedback test.
Point size clamping should happen at the rasterizer stage,
i.e. after the vertex and geometry shaders and transform feedback.
Drivers are expected to do this by themselves.
Simplifies the general case code in the ubyte-valued texture format
functions. More consolidation to come in subsequent commits.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Specifially, this being present works around a bug in Unigine
Sanctuary on i965 which previously resulted in bad rendering.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This can be used to work around broken application behavior, like in
Unigine where it attempts to use texture arrays without declaring
either "#extension GL_EXT_texture_array : enable" or "#version 130".
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
While typing out the new decode, I added a fallback mode for dumping
when we fail to re-map the BO after execution. This should get us a
minimal dump when trying to dump a batch that results in a GPU hang.
We were allocating registers into the MRF hack region, resulting in
sparkly renering in a few of the scenes. We could do better
allocation by making an MRF class, having MRFs conflict with the
corresponding GRFs, and tracking the live intervals of the "MRF"s and
setting up the conflicts. But this is way easier for the moment.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
After the removal of the dri driver link test, this should help avoid
the original problem that it was designed to catch: The warning about
a missing prototype due to typoing a function name scrolling by in the
Mesa build spew, and you not noticing until you try to run an
application and it falls back to swrast.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
The envvar works for R100 and R200 too, and the classic R300 driver
doesn't even exist anymore.
"RADEON_NO_TCL" is already mentioned in the code and is the same envvar
used for the R300g driver.
lp_bld_tgsi_soa.c has been adapted to use this new interface, but
lp_bld_tgsi_aos.c has only been partially adapted, since nothing in
gallium currently uses it.
v2:
- Rename lp_bld_tgsi_action.[ch] => lp_bld_tgsi_action.[ch]
- Initialize tgsi_info in lp_bld_tgsi_aos.c
- Fix copyright dates
Prior commit 576161289d,
the parameter format was bpp, thus both 24bit and 32bit formats were
requested with format set to 32. Handle 24bit seperately now.
Fixes RGBX formats in wayland platform for egl_dri2 (EGL_ALPHA_SIZE=0).
Note: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
This just copies what the LUMINANCE_ALPHA bits do.
Fixes piglit tests on softpipe complaining about missing unpack.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Cayman needs some of the MUL instructions spread across a full slot
of vectors.
It also no longer has RECIP_UINT, the recommendation is to replace it
with a U2F + RECIP_IEEE + MUL + F2U.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
The warning is absolutely useless. It doesn't actually say that there are
uninitialized variables. It points out the fact that there are missing
initializers and that variables are initialized to zero implicitly, which is
exactly what we want and what we commonly make use of.
C90 and C99 require all unspecified variables in the initializer list to be set
to zero.
The check for ctx->API was unnecessary, because OES extensions are not exposed
in desktop GL.
Also require renderbuffer support for ARB_texture_rgb10_a2ui,
as per the spec.
Tested by comparing old and new glxinfo with softpipe and r600g.
v2: fix bugs
v3: rename need_only_one -> need_at_least_one
rename num_elements -> num_mappings
add comments
use const when appropriate
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This change is not exactly equivalent (sometimes we checked for non-zero,
sometimes if >0 or >1), but the behavior shouldn't change, because all drivers
report 0 for unsupported CAPs.
Exposing CAP_STREAM_OUTPUT_PAUSE_RESUME without CAP_MAX_STREAM_OUTPUT_BUFFERS
is a driver bug and st/mesa does no checking if the latter is supported as
well. Drivers must report CAPs consistently.
v2: make the array const
v2: handle the cap in r300 and r600 as well
Additional info for r600g:
The env var R600_GLSL130=1 enables GLSL 1.3.
Along with R600_STREAMOUT=1, it enables full GL 3.
Fix an access to uninitialized memory pointed out by valgrind in
glsl_to_tgsi_visitor::simplify_cmp(void).
Note: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Fröhlich <Mathias.Froehlich@web.de>
Fix this GCC warning.
draw_pipe_clip.c: In function ‘interp’:
draw_pipe_clip.c:122:13: warning: variable ‘clip_dist’ set but not used
[-Wunused-but-set-variable]
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
When rendering to FBO, rendering is inverted. At the same time, we would
also make sure the point sprite origin is inverted. Or, we will get an
inverted result correspoinding to rendering to the default winsys FBO.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44613
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
v2: add the simliar logic to ivb, too (comments from Ian)
simplify the logic operation (comments from Brian)
v3: pick a better comment from Eric
use != for the logic instead of ^ (comments from Ian)
Signed-off-by: Yuanhan Liu <yuanhan.liu@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This simplifies the code quite a bit, consolidates some cases and
possibly catches more cases for the memcpy path.
More such changes will follow. Do just a few at a time to help bisect
any possible regressions.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This will let us use memcpy in more situations. We can also remove
the checks for byte spapping that happen before the calls to
_mesa_format_matches_format_and_type().
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
In a recent commit,
commit 1c0f1dd42a
Author: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
swrast: Fix fixed-function fragment processing
I defined a new function,_swrast_fragment_program, but neglected
to #include s_fragprog.h for clients of that function.
Note: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reported-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
The evergreen+ CB no longer supports the following formats
compared to 6xx/7xx:
- COLOR_4_4
- COLOR_3_3_2
- COLOR_6_5_5
- COLOR_8_24_FLOAT
- COLOR_24_8_FLOAT
- COLOR_11_11_10
- COLOR_11_11_10_FLOAT
Signed-off-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
On i965, _mesa_ir_link_shader is never called. As a consequence, the
current fragment program (ctx->FragmentProgram->_Current) exists but is
invalid because it has no instructions. Yet swrast continued to attempt to
use the empty program.
To avoid using the empty program, this patch 1) defines a new function,
_swrast_use_fragment_program, which checks if the current fragment program
exists and differs from the fixed function fragment program, and, when
appropriate, 2) replaces checks of the form
if (ctx->FragmentProgram->_Current == NULL)
with
if (_swrast_use_fragment_program(ctx))
Fixes the following oglconform regressions on i965/gen6:
api-fogcoord(basic.allCases.log)
api-mtexcoord(basic.allCases.log)
api-seccolor(basic.allCases.log)
api-texcoord(basic.allCases.log)
blend-separate(basic.allCases)
colorsum(basic.allCases.log)
The tests were ran with the GLXFBConfig:
visual x bf lv rg d st colorbuffer sr ax dp st accumbuffer ms cav
id dep cl sp sz l ci b ro r g b a F gb bf th cl r g b a ns b eat
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
0x021 24 tc 0 32 0 r y . 8 8 8 8 . . 0 24 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 None
(Note: I originally believed that the hunk in
_swrast_update_fragment_program was unnecessary. But it is required to fix
blend-separate.)
Note: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=43327
Reveiwed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <idr@freedesktop.org>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Color clamping should be enabled in glGetTexImage if texture dataType is
GL_UNSIGNED_NORMALIZED and format is GL_LUMINANCE or GL_LUMINANCE_ALPHA
Fixes 2 Intel oglconform test cases: pxconv-gettex and pxtrans-gettex
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=40864
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This was losing bits of precision. Fixes (with the previous commits):
piglit EXT_texture_integer/getteximage-clamping
piglit EXT_texture_integer/getteximage-clamping GL_ARB_texture_rg
oglc advanced.mipmap.upload
Regresses oglc negative.typeFormatMismatch.teximage from fail to
abort, because it's been hitting texstore for a format/type combo that
shouldn't happen.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
In the core, we always treat spans of int/uint data as uint, so this
extract function was truncating storage of integer pixel data to a n
int texture to (0, max_int) instead of (min_int, max_int). There is
probably missing code for handling truncation on conversion between
pixel formats, still, but this does improve things.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Mostly fixes piglit EXT_texture_integer/getteximage-clamping. The
remaining failure involves precision loss on storing of int32 texture
data (something I knew was an issue, but wasn't trying to test).
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This cut and paste is pretty awful. I'm tempted to do a lot of this
using preprocessor tricks for customizing the parameter type from a
template function, but that's just a different sort of hideous.
Fixes 8 Intel oglconform int-textures cases.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
v2: Add alpha formats, too.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Otherwise, when you asked for the _BaseFormat of an rb wrapping a
GL_RGB texture, you got GL_RGBA because that's what we were storing
the texture data as.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Most of this function was just calling
intel_renderbuffer_update_wrapper(), which was called immediately
afterwards in the only caller.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Fixes piglit ARB_copy_buffer-overlap, on swrast, which previously
assertion failed.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
A pure swrast-allocated buffer gets an irb of NULL, so we segfaulted
in the clear-accum test. Just look at the swrast renderbuffer pointer
for handling swrast rbs.
From the extension spec:
Added to section 5.4, as part of the discussion of which commands
are not compiled into display lists:
"Certain commands, when called while compiling a display list, are
not compiled into the display list but are executed immediately.
These are: ..., RenderbufferStorageMultisampleEXT..."
Fixes piglit EXT_framebuffer_multisample/dlist.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Noticed when handling a similar problem in EXT_framebuffer_multisample.
From the EXT_framebuffer_object spec:
Added to section 5.4, as part of the discussion of which commands
are not compiled into display lists:
"Certain commands, when called while compiling a display list, are
not compiled into the display list but are executed immediately.
These are: ..., GenFramebuffersEXT, BindFramebufferEXT,
DeleteFramebuffersEXT, CheckFramebufferStatusEXT,
GenRenderbuffersEXT, BindRenderbufferEXT, DeleteRenderbuffersEXT,
RenderbufferStorageEXT, FramebufferTexture1DEXT,
FramebufferTexture2DEXT, FramebufferTexture3DEXT,
FramebufferRenderbufferEXT, GenerateMipmapEXT..."
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Constants array is always assumed to be RGBA, which means we need to
swizzle the constant elements into place to match the AoS ordering
(e.g., BGRA) that was passed to lp_build_tgsi_aos().
Signed-off-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Should avoid dangling pointer derreference with
glean --run results --overwrite --quick --tests texSwizzle
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
We just prefix the $CLANG environment variable in configure.ac with acv_mesa_
Found by: tinderbox
Signed-off-by: Jeremy Huddleston <jeremyhu@apple.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
This was horribly broken and has cost everyone more time than we were
ever going to save using it. It might have been fixable, but the
problem it was originally trying to solve can be better solved with
-Werror=missing-prototypes and -Werror=implicit-function-declaration.
Also, it was always producing a big scary warning about how the link
test was non-portable.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44928
Substantially increases performance in GLBenchmark PRO:
- 320x240 => 3.28x
- 1920x1080 => 1.47x
- 2560x1440 => 1.27x
The LD message ignores the sampler unit index and SAMPLER_STATE pointer,
instead relying on hard-wired default state. Thus, there's no need to
worry about running out of sampler units or providing SAMPLER_STATE;
this small patch should be all that's required.
NOTE: This is a candidate for release branches.
(It requires the preceding commit to compile.)
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
brw_SAMPLE is full of complex workarounds for original Broadwater
hardware, and I'd rather avoid all that for my next Ivybridge patch.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
This function releases the buffer that contains user-space vertex data.
The buffer_offset field points into that buffer. So reset the
buffer_offset to zero when we release the buffer so that subsequent
draws don't inadvertantly get a bad offset.
Fixes error messages / failed assertions (in the draw module's bounds/size
checking code) when running piglit's polygon-mode test.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
-fvisibility=hidden was preventing them from being exported, which
combined with shared-glapi was causing undefined symbol errors at
runtime.
We don't want to make these functions part of the ABI, and given
how simple they are, we simply inline them.
From c998f732d42da5e962fe5da294493132c3e8dc5f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Lucas Stach <dev@lynxeye.de>
Date: Tue, 24 Jan 2012 09:46:32 +0100
Subject: [PATCH] nvfx: fix nv3x fallout from state validation changes
Apparently nv3x needs some curde hacks to work properly. This
is clearly not the right fix, but it's the behaviour of the old
code and fixes regressions seen by users.
This has the drawback that when creating configure for
distribution, wayland needs to be available for the packager.
Also the the macros has the wayland prefix hardcoded, so
we cant copy it in mesa right now.
In bad applications like ipers which does a lot of draw calls with
no state changes this helps to greatly reduce time spent in prepare.
In ipers around 7% of CPU was spent in various prepare functions,
after this commit no prepare function show on the profile.
This commit also has the added benefit of now grouping all pipelined
drawing into a single draw call if the driver uses vbuf_render.
Reviewed-by: Stéphane Marchesin <marcheu@chromium.org>
Tested-by: Stéphane Marchesin <marcheu@chromium.org>
Previously, max_vs_entries was set to 128 for GT1, and 256 for GT2,
based on the PRM (see Vol2, part1, p28). However, Bspec section 1.6.5
indicates that the maximum number of VS entries is 256 for GT1.
No piglit regressions on GT1.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
When storing data in a buffer of type DYNAMIC_DRAW, we don't create a
drm_intel_bo for it; instead we store the data in system memory and
defer allocation of the GPU buffer until it is needed. Therefore, in
brw_update_sol_surface(), we can't just consult the "buffer" field of
the intel_buffer_object structure; we need to call
intel_bufferobj_buffer() to ensure that the deferred allocation
occurs.
This parallels a similar fix for gen7 (see commit ba6f4c9).
Fixes piglit test EXT_transform_feedback/buffer-usage on gen6.
This is a candidate for the 8.0 release branch.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
It always had the same value as ctx->Extensions.EXT_framebuffer_sRGB.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Strictly speaking, it's not legal to expose EXT_texture_integer without
EXT_gpu_shader4. It might be even dangerous (apps can assume EXT_gpu_shader4
is available without checking for it).
The check in compute_version is removed as well, because that's already
covered by GLSLVersion >= 130.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
- use OR to combine bind flags
- combine both conditionals into one
- move the ARB_fbo enable where it belongs
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
For ARB_color_buffer_float. Most hardware can't do it and st/mesa is
the perfect place for a fallback.
The exceptions are:
- r500 (vertex clamp only)
- nv50 (both)
- nvc0 (both)
- softpipe (both)
We also have to take into account that r300 can do CLAMPED vertex colors only,
while r600 can do UNCLAMPED vertex colors only. The difference can be expressed
with the two new CAPs.
A current incomplete framebuffer was incorrectly used as a
st_framebuffer. When accessing st_framebuffer childs bad things happen:
e.g. st_framebuffer::iface was used to check whether its an incomplete
fb, instead we need to compare st_framebuffer::Base against
mesa_get_incomplete_framebuffer.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44919
Note: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Fixes Intel oglconform negative.typeFormatMismatch.copyteximage.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This is part of fixing Intel oglconform
negative.typeFormatMismatch.copyteximage.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This code is unprepared for handling integer (particularly, the
baseFormat of the TexFormat comes out as GL_RGBA, not GL_RGBA_INTEGER,
so the direct call of Driver.ReadPixels crashes due to the int vs
non-int error checking not having happened). I'm frankly tempted to
convert this code to MapRenderbuffer/MapTexImage rather than doing it
as meta ops, now that we have that support.
Improves the remaining crash in Intel oglconform for int-textures to
just a rendering failure.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This aborts and crashes in intel oglconform's int-textures into being
just rendering failures. Clamping isn't handled yet.
v2: Add missing "break".
v3: Drop the int/uint distinction, since they don't need different clamping.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com> (v2)
Similarly to how we handle this in texstore, we have to remap height
to depth so that we MapTextureImage each image layer individually.
Fixes part of Intel oglconform's int-textures advanced.fbo.rtt
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This is a step toward fixing Intel oglconform's
int-textures advanced.fbo.rtt.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This doesn't result in correct rendering -- GL requires that logic ops
work, while the hardware specs say it doesn't do them. I'm not sure
how we would want to handle this.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
When we're actually rendering into a texture, map the texture image
instead of the corresponding renderbuffer. Before, we just copied
a pointer from the texture image to the renderbuffer. This change
will make the code usable by hardware drivers.
ctx->Driver.MapTexture() always points to _swrast_map_texture().
We're already reaching into swrast from t_vb_program.c anyway.
This will let us remove the ctx->Driver.Map/UnmapTexture() functions.
These are temporary, actually, but they'll make follow-on work easier to
implement in a step-by-step manner. Eventually the Map and RowStrideBytes
fields will go into a new swrast_renderbuffer type, but adding that type
now would involve touching a _lot_ of code that'll eventually be removed.
The fields marked as obsolete will go away completely at some point.
That field is only used by swrast code so there's no reason to mess
with it in the gallium state tracker.
This also lets us remove the unused st_format_data() type function and
related code.
When ARB VAOs are used, glPopClientAttrib does not resurrect a deleted
VAO or VBO. This difference between the two spec is, unfortunately,
not very well spelled out in the specs.
Fixes oglc vao(advanced.pushPop.deleteVAO) and
vao(advanced.pushPop.deleteVBO) tests.
NOTE: This is a candidate for release branches.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
There are more differences between Apple and ARB than just requiring
that all arrays be stored in VBOs. Additional uses will be added in
following commits.
Also, set the flag at Bind time instead of Gen time. The ARB_vao spec
specifies that behavior.
NOTE: This is a candidate for release branches.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This is a hack to work around drivers such as i965 that:
- Set _MaintainTexEnvProgram to generate GLSL IR for
fixed-function fragment processing.
- Don't call _mesa_ir_link_shader to generate Mesa IR from the
GLSL IR.
- May use swrast to handle glDrawPixels.
Since _mesa_ir_link_shader is never called, there is no Mesa IR to
execute. Instead do regular fixed-function processing.
Even on platforms that don't need this, the software fixed-function
code is much faster than the software shader code.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44749
At least one place, the _mesa_need_secondary_color function in
state.h, uses this to make decisions. The next patch in this series
will add another dependency. Ideally, this field would go away and be
replace by a flag or something.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
When rowstride was negatie, unsigned promotion caused a segfault here:
299│ if (rb->Format == MESA_FORMAT_S8) {
300│ const GLuint rowStride = rb->RowStride;
301│ for (i = 0; i < count; i++) {
302│ if (x[i] >= 0 && y[i] >= 0 && x[i] < w && y[i] < h) {
303├> stencil[i] = *(map + y[i] * rowStride + x[i]);
304│ }
305│ }
306│ }
Fixes segfault in oglconform
separatestencil-neu(NonPolygon.BothFacesBitmapCoreAPI),
though test still fails.
Note: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=43327
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
i965 processes assignments of whole structures using
vec4_visitor::emit_block_move, a recursive function which visits each
element of a structure or array (to arbitrary nesting depth) and
copies it from the source to the destination. Then it increments the
source and destination register numbers so that further recursive
invocations will copy the rest of the structure. In addition, it sets
the swizzle field for the source register to an appropriate value of
swizzle_for_size(...) for the size of each element being copied, so
that later optimization passes won't be fooled into thinking that
unused vector elements are live.
This all works fine. However, emit_block_move also contains an
assertion to verify, before setting the swizzle field for the source
register, that the source register doesn't already contain a
nontrivial swizzle. The intention is to make sure that the caller of
emit_block_move hasn't already done some swizzling of the data before
the call, which emit_block_move would then counteract when it
overwrites the swizzle field. But the assertion is at the lowest
level of nesting of emit_block_move, which means that after the first
element is copied, instead of checking the swizzle field set by the
caller, it checks the swizzle field used when moving the previous
element. That means that if the structure contains elements of
different vector sizes (which therefore require different swizzles),
the assertion will erroneously fire.
This patch moves the assertion from emit_block_move to the calling
function, vec4_visitor::visit(ir_assignment *). Since the caller is
non-recursive, the assertion will only happen once, and won't be
fooled by emit_block_move's modification of the swizzle field.
This patch also reverts commit fe006a7 (i965/vs: Fix swizzle related
assertion), which attempted to fix the bug by making the assertion
more lenient, but only worked properly for structures, arrays, and
matrices in which each constituent vector is the same size.
This fixes the problem described in comment 9 of
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=40865. Unfortunately, it
doesn't fix the whole bug, since the test in question is also failing
due to lack of register spilling support in the VS.
Fixes piglit test vs-assign-varied-struct. No piglit regressions on
Sandy Bridge.
This is a candidate for the 8.0 release branch.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=40865#c9
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
This is similar to a commit that did the same for the FS.
Shaves several more instructions off of the VS in Lightsmark, but no
statistically significant performance difference (n=5).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Shaves a few instructions off of the VS in Lightsmark, but no
statistically significant performance difference on gen7 (n=5).
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
AC_CHECK_LIB has this nasty behavior, like the cflags tests, of
automatically putting the tested value into the global LIBS on
success. This caused -lexpat to end up in LIBS, but without the
--with-expat dir, so my 32-bit build on a 64 system using expat from a
custom prefix could only find the system expat and fail to link on the
one current consumer of the LIBS variable: the dri driver test link.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
While reading through the simulator, I found some interesting code that
looks like it checks the sampler default color pointer against the bound
set in STATE_BASE_ADDRESS. On failure, it appears to program it to the
base address itself.
So I decided to try programming a legitimate bound, and lo and behold,
border color worked.
+92 piglits on Sandybridge. Also fixes Lightsmark on Ivybridge.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=28924
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38868
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Yuanhan Liu <yuanhan.liu@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Since we now always build shared glapi, this exposes the fact that libOSMesa was
underlinked when glapi was built shared.
Fix this by doing the same thing as drivers/X11/Makefile already does, ensuring
that the library is linked with the shared glapi library.
(I'm not clear why we link with both glapi.a and glapi.so, so this may be all wrong)
Signed-off-by: Jon TURNEY <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>
Refine "always build shared dricore" so we don't build it if we don't need
it because we aren't actually building any dri drivers because of --disable-driglx-direct
Signed-off-by: Jon TURNEY <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Looks insane, but it does appear we need a full slot per input/output.
This fixes another 180 or so piglit tests.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Adds all the easier lowhanging opcodes.
Fixes ~3000 piglit tests with GLSL1.30 enabled on cayman.
This just leaves the mul/div/mod ops to fix up.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
"If set, forces degamma on XYZ if format is
FMT_8_8_8_8, FMT_BC1, FMT_BC2, or FMT_BC3"
Don't claim support for sRGB on any other formts.
This fixes glean texture_srgb.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
It doesn't pass the piglit test, but it seems to be a lot closer
than it was before. I need to track down if there is another problem.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Due to the changes for multiple kcache banks support, now we are assigning
final SRCx_SEL values for kcache access at the later stage, when building the
bytecode. So we need to take into account kcache banks to distinguish
the constants with the same address but different bank index.
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Same fix as previously done by Dave Airlie for r600/r700
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Clip planes are uploaded as a constant buffer and used by the vertex
shader to produce corresponding clip distances for hw clipping.
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Add support for multiple kcache banks (constant buffers).
Lock the required lines only.
Allow up to 4 kcache line sets in the alu clause by using ALU_EXTENDED on eg+.
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Fix this GCC warning on non-debug builds.
glsl_types.cpp: In member function 'gl_texture_index
glsl_type::sampler_index() const':
glsl_types.cpp:157: warning: control reaches end of non-void function
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Enable it in the evergreen_context_draw if needed.
Same as already done in the r600_context_draw for r6xx/r7xx.
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
BURST_COUNT is clipped with ARRAY_SIZE, so set it to the max value
to avoid clipping.
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
libglapi.so, libGL.so, libGLESv2.so, libGLESv1_CM.so must all
come from the same version of Mesa or bad things may happen.
Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
When the framebuffer has separate depth and stencil buffers, and HiZ is
not enabled on the depth buffer, mark the framebuffer as unsupported. This
happens when trying to create a framebuffer with Z16/S8 because we haven't
enabled HiZ on Z16 yet.
Fixes gles2conform test stencil8.
Note: This is a candiate for the 8.0 branch.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44948
Reviewed-and-tested-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed--by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
This loosens the format validation in glBlitFramebuffer. When blitting
depth bits, don't require an exact match between the depth formats; only
require that the two formats have the same number of depth bits and the
same depth datatype (float vs uint). Ditto for stencil.
Between S8_Z24 buffers, the EXT_framebuffer_blit spec allows
glBlitFramebuffer to blit the depth and stencil bits separately. So I see
no reason to prevent blitting the depth bits between X8_Z24 and S8_Z24 or
the stencil bits between S8 and S8_Z24. However, we of course don't want
to allow blitting from Z32 to Z32_FLOAT.
Fixes Piglit fbo/fbo-blit-d24s8 on Intel drivers with separate stencil
enabled.
The problem was that, on Intel drivers with separate stencil, the default
framebuffer has separate depth and stencil buffers with formats X8_Z24 and
S8. The test attempts to blit the depth bits from a S8_Z24 buffer into the
default framebuffer.
v2: Check that depth datatypes match.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44665
Note: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reported-by: Xunx Fang <xunx.fang@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
The nvc0 gallium driver is advertising 128 MAX_INTERLEAVED_COMPS
which made it always assert in the linker when TFB was used since
the Outputs array was smaller than that maximum.
v2: added assertions
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Paul Berry <stereotype441@gmail.com>
So it appears R600s (except rv670) do AR handling different using a different
opcode. This patch fixes up r600g to work properly on r600.
This fixes ~100 piglit tests here (in GLSL1.30 mode) on rv610.
v3: add index_mode as per the docs.
This still fails any dst relative tests for some reason I can't quite see yet,
but it passes a lot more tests than without.
v4: add a nop after dst.rel this could be improved using a second pass,
where we only insert nops if two instructions are sure to collide.
The docs say r600, rv610, rv630 needs this, and not rv670, rs780, rs880,
need AMD to confirm rv620, rv635.
v5: add is_nop_inst.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Use a bitmask approach to compute gl_array_object::_MaxElement.
To make this work correctly depending on the shader type actually used,
make use of the newly introduced typed bitmask getters.
With this change I gain about 5% draw time on some osgviewer examples.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Fröhlich <Mathias.Froehlich@web.de>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Depending on the installed shader type, different arrays are used
from gl_array_object. Provide helper functions that compute
the bitmask of these arrays that are finally enabled for a given
shader type. The will be used in a followup change.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Fröhlich <Mathias.Froehlich@web.de>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Commit ede60bc467 (glsl: Add isinf() and
isnan() builtins) uses "+INF" in the .ir file to represent infinity.
This worked on C99-compliant compilers, since the s-expression reader
uses strtod() to read numbers, and C99 requires strtod() to understand
"+INF". However, it didn't work on non-C99-compliant compilers such
as MSVC.
This patch modifies the s-expression reader to explicitly check for
"+INF" rather than relying on strtod() to support it.
This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44767
Tested-by: Morgan Armand <morgan.devel@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
To fix failed assertions when calling glCopyBufferSubData().
svga_texture() asserts that the resource is a texture. Simply move the
calls to svga_texture() after the code that handles non-texture copies
so that we don't call it with non-texture resources.
Fixes glean bufferObject failure.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Two assignments to num_immediates were missing in
get_pixel_transfer_visitor() and get_bitmap_visitor().
The uninitialized value led to valgrind errors and crashes in some
cases.
Added new assertions to catch future problems in this area. Also
changed num_immediates to unsigned to avoid signed/unsigned
comparison warnings.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The default access flags for OpenGL ES (via GL_OES_map_buffer) and
desktop OpenGL are different. The code previously tried to handle
this, but the decision was made at compile time. Since the same
driver binary can be used for both OpenGL ES and desktop OpenGL, the
decision must be made at run-time.
This should fix bug #44433. It appears that the test case does
various map and unmap operations and inspects the state of the buffer
object around each. When it sees that GL_BUFFER_ACCESS does not match
its expectations, it fails.
NOTE: This is a candidate for release branches.
Signed-off-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44433
If we don't find an exact PIPE_FORMAT_x for a GL_(COMPRESSED)_RED/RG format,
try uncompressed formats. We were already doing this for the RGB(A) formats.
Fixes piglit arb_texture_compression-internal-format-query test.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the stable branches.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
msg_type moved by a bit, so the message type was being disassembled
incorrectly. In particular, render target writes were showing up as
"OWORD block write".
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Compared to sampler_gen5, simd_mode shifted by a bit and msg_type grew
by a bit. So we were printing slightly incorrect numbers.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Both the VF and VS share space in the URB. First, the VF stores
attributes (shader inputs) there. The VS then reads the attributes,
executes, and reuses the space to store varyings (shader outputs).
Thus, we need to calculate the amount of URB space necessary for inputs,
outputs, and pick whichever is greater.
The old VS backend correctly did this (brw_vs_emit.c:408), but the new
VS backend only considered outputs.
Fixes vertex scrambling in GLBenchmark PRO on Ivybridge.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=41318
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
In the following scenario:
- CreateContext C1
- MakeCurrent C1
- DestroyContext C1 (does not actually destroy the first context, postponed
until the next MakeCurrent)
- CreateContext C2
- MakeCurrent C2
MakeCurrent will call flush on a half destroyed context, leading to crashes.
Since the other paths (destroy and makecurrent) already flush the context,
there is no need to flush here, so we remove this useless flush front call.
This fixes GPU crashes with Chrome and gallium drivers.
v2: Don't flag the format as being HiZ ready (there's DRI2 handshake
pain to go through).
Fixes piglit gl-3.0-required-sized-texture-formats
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
This is required for Z16 support for texturing, which is the first
thing to have a horizontal alignment of 8. Renderbuffers don't need
it, since they're always set up as the only mip level, but do it for
completeness anyway.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
This field is actually set up above.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch, to avoid conflicts.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
I copy-and-pasted the thing I was allocating for as the context, so
the first time it would be NULL (root of a ralloc context) and they'd
chain off each other from then on.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
The legal range for the device is apparently [-16.0, +15.0].
Limiting the range to [-15, +15] fixes piglit's lodbias test.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The interaction between the mipmap lod min/max limits and the texture
base/max level limits is kind of tricky. Changing the base level
didn't work as expected before.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
This makes lod clamping more consistent with other drivers.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Update the dd.h docs to indicate that GL_MAP_INVALIDATE_RANGE_BIT
can be used with GL_MAP_WRITE_BIT when mapping renderbuffers and
texture images.
Pass the flag when mapping texture images for glTexImage, glTexSubImage,
etc. It's up to drivers whether to actually make use of the flag.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
To try to use less tex memory and maybe get better performance.
Spotted by Roland Scheidegger.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 and 7.11 branches.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The i965 driver advertises GL_ARB_texture_float and GL_ARB_texture_rg
support but the ctx->TextureFormatSupported[] table entries for
MESA_FORMAT_R_FLOAT32 and MESA_FORMAT_RGBA_FLOAT32 are false on gen 4
hardware. So the case for GL_R32F would fail and we'd print an
implementation error.
This patch adds more Mesa tex format options for GL_R32F and other R/G
formats so we fall back to 16-bit formats when 32-bit formats aren't
available.
Eric made the same fix in commit 6216a5b4 for the non R/G formats.
v2: try 16-bit formats before 32-bit formats and try RG formats before
RGBA where possible.
This should fix https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44039
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 and 7.11 branches.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
This enables linear gradients if we need a linear,
it also sets the flat shade flag for color/constant interpolations.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
When I originally implemented the hack to use GRFs 111+ as fake MRFs, I
did so purely to avoid rewriting all the code that dealt with MRFs.
However, it turns out that a similar hack is actually required.
Newly discovered language in the BSpec indicates that SEND instructions
with EOT set "should" use g112-g127 as their source registers. Based on
assertions in the simulator, this is actually a requirement on certain
platforms.
Since we're faking MRFs already, we may as well use the officially
sanctioned range. My guess is that we avoided this issue because we
seldom use m0: URB writes in the new VS backend start at m1, and RT
writes in the new FS backend start at m2.
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable release branches.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Now that we no longer generate Mesa IR from GLSL IR, it's impossible to
use the old vertex shader backend for GLSL programs. There's simply no
Mesa IR to codegen from.
Any attempt to do so would result in immediate GPU hangs, presumably due
to the driver uploading an empty program with no EOT message.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Eugeni Dodonov <eugeni.dodonov@intel.com>
According to Table 6.8 (Page 348) in the OpenGL 3.0 specification,
glGetVertexAttribiv supports GL_VERTEX_ATTRIB_ARRAY_INTEGER.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Fixes the following OGLConform tests on gen5:
depth-stencil(misc.state_on.depth_int)
fbo_db_ARBfp(basic.OnlyDepthBuffDrawBufferRender)
The problem was that, if the depth buffer's Mesa format was X8_Z24, then
we emitted the hardware format D24_UNORM_X8. But, on gen5, D24_UNORM_S8
must be emitted.
This bug was introduced by:
commit d84a180417
Author: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
i965: Base HW depth format setup based on MESA_FORMAT, not bpp.
v2: Deref 'intel' directly. Move the branch for newer chipset to top.
Quote the PRM. As requested by Ken.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=43408
Note: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reported-by: Xunx Fang <xunx.fang@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
The original R600 requires the UNCACHED_FIRST_INST bit
to be set in the PS.
Signed-off-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Note: this is candidate for the stable branches.
With the conversion to automake in commit
e326480e4e, several additional build
artifacts are created:
src/mesa/drivers/dri/i965/.deps/
src/mesa/drivers/dri/i965/.libs/
src/mesa/drivers/dri/i965/Makefile
src/mesa/drivers/dri/i965/Makefile.in
src/mesa/drivers/dri/i965/i965_dri.la
src/mesa/drivers/dri/i965/i965_symbols_test
This patch adds all of these files to .gitignore.
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
TestMipMaps() function in src/OGLconform/textureNPOT.c calls glTexImage2D()
with width = 0. Texture with zero size skips miptree allocation due to a
condition in function _mesa_store_teximage3d(). While calling glGetTexImage()
it results in assertion failure in intel_map_texture_image() due to null mt
pointer.
This patch fixes the issue by detecting the zero size texture early in
glGetTexImage and glGetCompressedTexImage functions. In such a case function
simply returns doing nothing.
Verified that below mentioned bug is fixed by this patch.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=42334
NOTE: This is a candidate for stable branches
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
This does introduce a warning by the automake build system, that the
missing-symbols test build is non-portable. That's true -- Mac OS X
can't take something built as a loadable module and just link it as a
library. Of course, we aren't building this on OS X at all, so it
would be nice to be able to suppress it, but I haven't found a way.
Still, the build is going to be much quieter than we have ever had
before, so I think this is a fair tradeoff until we find a way to shut
that warning up.
v2: Put a link in /lib to avoid transition pains for people.
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com> (v1)
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com> (v1)
Nothing works if HiZ is enabled and the DDX is incapable of HiZ (that is,
the DDX version is < 2.16).
The problem is that the refactoring that eliminated
intel_renderbuffer::stencil_rb broke the recovery path in
intel_verify_dri2_has_hiz(). Specifically, it broke line
intel_context.c:1445, which allocates the region for
DRI_BUFFER_DEPTH_STENCIL. That allocation was creating a separate stencil
miptree, despite the buffer being a packed depthstencil buffer. Havoc
ensued.
This patch introduces a bool flag that prevents allocation of that stencil
miptree.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44103
Tested-by: Ian Romanick <idr@freedesktop.org>
Note: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
Fix this GCC warning with non-LLVM builds.
sp_screen.c: In function ‘softpipe_get_shader_param’:
sp_screen.c:141:28: warning: unused variable ‘sp_screen’ [-Wunused-variable]
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
Calling glXSwapBuffers with no bound context causes segmentation
fault in function intelDRI2Flush. All the gl calls should be
ignored after setting the current context to null. So the contents
of framebuffer stay unchanged. But the driver should not seg fault.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44614
Reported-by: Yi Sun <yi.sun@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Anuj Phogat <anuj.phogat@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Tested-by: Yi Sun <yi.sun@intel.com>
Fix this GCC warning.
lp_test_round.c: In function ‘test_round’:
lp_test_round.c:126:13: warning: variable ‘packed’ set but not used
[-Wunused-but-set-variable]
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
Fix this GCC 4.6 warning with 64-bit builds.
u_debug_stack.c: In function ‘debug_backtrace_capture’:
u_debug_stack.c:45:17: warning: variable ‘frame_pointer’ set but not
used [-Wunused-but-set-variable]
Signed-off-by: Vinson Lee <vlee@freedesktop.org>
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
The i915 GPU can't do A8 dst, so we abuse GREEN8 buffers for that
purpose. However, things get hairy as we start to do blending,
because then GL_DST_*_ALPHA should be replaced with GL_DST_*_COLOR.
This is what we do here.
Fixes piglt fbo-alpha.
v2: select the colors in the pixel shader
v3: fix rs state creation for pre-evergreen
Signed-off-by: Vadim Girlin <vadimgirlin@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Create the video buffers in the format the driver preffers.
This temporary creates problems with decoder less VDPAU video playback.
Signed-off-by: Christian König <deathsimple@vodafone.de>
Add a second extened constructor that takes plane
textures for the video buffer. Also provide a
function for texture templates.
Signed-off-by: Christian König <deathsimple@vodafone.de>
This requires GLSL 1.30 enabled, which requires integer types enabled,
so don't bother doing an INT to FLT conversion on it.
We should probably remove the instance id flt->int conversion when
turning on native integers.
this passes the three piglit tests with GLSL 1.30 forced on.
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
This commit rewrites a lot of the state_fb code to support
rendering to targets not aligned to 64 byte.
This allows us to drop the render temporaries as unaligned
targets are the only use-case where they are really needed. The
temporaries code was used for a lot of things more, but apparently
those also work without temps.
There is one regression in piglit fbo-clear-formats, but this will
be fixed with the use of real hardware clears and doesn't matter in
practice as no real application tries to scissor clear a 2x2 pixel
render target.
Signed-off-by: Lucas Stach <dev@lynxeye.de>
There are 3 changes:
1) stride is specified for each buffer, not just one, so that drivers don't
have to derive it from the outputs
2) new per-output property dst_offset, which specifies the offset
into the buffer in dwords where the output should be stored,
so that drivers don't have to compute the offsets manually;
this will also be useful for gl_SkipComponents
from ARB_transform_feedback3
3) register_mask is removed, instead, there is start_component
and num_components; register_mask with non-consecutive 1s
doesn't make much sense (some hardware cannot do packing of components)
Christoph Bumiller: fixed nvc0.
v2: resolve merge conflicts in Draw and clean it up
Virtual address space put the userspace in charge of their GPU
address space. It's up to userspace to bind bo into the virtual
address space. Command stream can them be executed using the
IB_VM chunck.
This patch add support for this configuration. It doesn't remove
the 64K ib size limit thought this limit can be extanded up to
1M for IB_VM chunk.
v2: fix rendering
v3: fix rendering when using index buffer
v4: make vm conditional on kernel support add basic va management
v5: catch the case when we already have va for a bo
v6: agd5f: update on top of ioctl changes
v7: agd5f: further ioctl updates
v8: indentation cleanup + fix non cayman
v9: rebase against lastest mesa + improvement from Marek & Michel
v10: fix cut/paste bug
v11: don't rely on updated radeon_drm.h
Signed-off-by: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
Make the comments precise. Explain why each branch is needed and correct.
Document the potential pitfall in the true-branch.
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
When using Mesa with a GLES API, calling _mesa_FramebufferRenderbuffer
with GL_DRAW_FRAMEBUFFER will report a 'user error' because
get_framebuffer_target validates that this enum from the framebuffer
blit extension is only used on GL. To work around it this patch makes
it use the GL_FRAMEBUFFER enum instead in that case.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=43418
Note: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Signed-off-by: Chad Versace <chad.versace@linux.intel.com>
The gl_renderbuffer::Format field wasn't always set properly. This
didn't matter much in the past but with the recent swrast/renderbuffer
mapping changes, core Mesa will be directly touching OSMesa colorbuffers
so using the right MESA_FORMAT_x value is important.
Unfortunately, there aren't MESA_FORMATs for all the possible OSmesa
format/type combinations, such as GL_FLOAT / OSMESA_ARGB. If anyone
runs into these we can add new Mesa formats.
v2: add warnings for unsupported formats, fix ARGB_REV mix-up.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
We always access pull constant buffers using the message types "OWord
Block Read" or "OWord Dual Block Read". According to the Sandy Bridge
PRM, Vol 4 Part 1, pages 214 and 218, when using these messages:
"the surface pitch is ignored, the surface is treated as a
1-dimensional surface. An element size (pitch) of 16 bytes is
used to determine the size of the buffer for out-of-bounds
checking if using the surface state model."
Previously we were setting the pitch for pull constant buffers to the
size of the whole constant buffer--this made no sense and would have
led to incorrect behavior if it were not for the fact that the pitch
is ignored.
For clarity, this patch sets the pitch for pull constant buffers to 16
bytes, consistent with the hardware's behavior.
v2: Clarify the meaning of the ignored values by writing them as (16 - 1).
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Commit 9bdc44a528 (i965: Replace struct
with bit shifting for WM pull constant surfaces) accidentally
introduced off-by-one errors into the calculation of the surface
width, height, and depth. This patch restores the correct
computation.
The reason this wasn't noticed by Piglit tests is that the size of our
constant surfaces is always less than 2^20, therefore the off-by-one
error was causing the "depth" field of the surface to be set to all
1's. The hardware interpreted this as an extremely large surface, so
overflow checking was effectively disabled.
No Piglit regressions on Sandy Bridge.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 7.11 and 8.0 branches.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Flat SHADE_MODEL still overrides any non-flat interpolation
qualifier, but pulling that state out of the rasterizer cso
isn't really worth the effort, is it ?
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
This fixes accum buffer operations. The accumulation buffer is the
only malloc-based renderbuffer for the intel drivers.
v2: apply x/y offset to returned pointer
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
Fixes piglit EXT_framebuffer_multisample/negative-copypixels.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Fixes piglit EXT_framebuffer_multisample/negative-copyteximage.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Fixes piglit EXT_framebuffer_multisample-negative-readpixels.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Fixes piglit EXT_framebuffer_multisample/renderbuffer-samples.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Previously, we were saying that everything from the starting tile to
region width+height was part of the limits of our depthbuffer, even if
the tile was near the bottom of the depthbuffer. This mean that our
range was not clipping to buffer buonds if the start tile was anything
but the start of the buffer.
In bebc91f0f3, this was changed to
saying that we're just rendering to a region of the size of the
renderbuffer. This is great -- we get a range that should actually
match what we want. However, the hardware's range checking occurs
after the X/Y offset addition, so we were clipping out rendering to
small depth mip levels when an X/Y offset was present. Just add
tile_x/y to the width in that case -- the WM won't produce negative
x/y values pre-offset, so we just need to get the left/bottom sides of
the region to cover our buffer.
Fixes the following Piglit regressions on gen7:
spec/ARB_depth_buffer_float/fbo-clear-formats
spec/ARB_depth_texture/fbo-clear-formats
spec/EXT_packed_depth_stencil/fbo-clear-formats
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
The array holds GLuint values so remove the float cast.
Note, however, that to compute the average of four GLuints we really
want to do (a+b+c+d)/4 but that could overflow. This change doesn't
address that for now.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
In the first case, the newImage[] array contains GLuint values.
In the second case, the parameter type is GLuint, but the maxDepth
value is never used in this case (GL_FLOAT_32_UNSIGNED_INT_24_8_REV).
Pass ~OU just to be safe.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 8.0 branch.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
We include both imports.h and u_math.h in the state tracker. This
leads to multiple, conflicting definitions of ffs() with MSVC.
Use FFS_DEFINED to skip the ffs() in u_math.h.
Reviewed-by: José Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
include mesa headers before gallium headers to avoid problem with
ffs() being defined in u_math.h and then again in imports.h
The next commit will add some #ifdefs to prevent multiple definitions
of ffs().
Call ffs() and ffsll() everywhere. Define our own ffs(), ffsll()
functions when the platform doesn't have them.
v2: remove #ifdef _WIN32, __IBMC__, __IBMCPP_ tests inside ffs()
implementation. The #else clause was recursive.
Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Tested-by: Alexander von Gluck <kallisti5@unixzen.com>
Introduce vbo_get_minmax_indices() function to handle the min/max index
computation for nr_prims(>= 1). The old code just compute the first
prim's min/max index; this would results an error rendering if user
called functions like glMultiDrawElements(). This patch servers as
fixing this issue.
As when nr_prims = 1, we can pass 1 to paramter nr_prims, thus I made
vbo_get_minmax_index() static.
v2: per Roland's suggestion, put the indices address compuation into
vbo_get_minmax_index() instead.
Also do comination if possible to reduce map/unmap count
v3: per Brian's suggestion, use a pointer for start_prim to avoid
structure copy per loop.
Signed-off-by: Yuanhan Liu <yuanhan.liu@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Roland Scheidegger <sroland@vmware.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <brianp@vmware.com>
# Configuration for Linux for 64-bit X86 (Opteron), static libs
include $(TOP)/configs/linux-x86-64
CONFIG_NAME = linux-x86-64-static
MKLIB_OPTIONS = -static
PIC_FLAGS =
# Library names (actual file names)
GL_LIB_NAME = libGL.a
GLU_LIB_NAME = libGLU.a
GLW_LIB_NAME = libGLw.a
OSMESA_LIB_NAME = libOSMesa.a
# Library/program dependencies (static libs don't have dependencies)
GL_LIB_DEPS =
OSMESA_LIB_DEPS =
GLU_LIB_DEPS =
GLW_LIB_DEPS =
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