"Not equal" operators on GLSL seem to behave as unordered when we expect
an ordered comparison.
Manually emulate this checking for LGE values (numbers, not-NaNs).
Avoids unnecessary reference count increments where applicable and also
avoids reallocating a vector.
Unlikely to make a huge difference, but given how trivial of an
amendment it is, why not?
Allows reporting more cases where logic errors may exist, such as
implicit fallthrough cases, etc.
We currently ignore unused parameters, since we currently have many
cases where this is intentional (virtual interfaces).
While we're at it, we can also tidy up any existing code that causes
warnings. This also uncovered a few bugs as well.
This reverts commit 05cf270836.
Apparently the first approach using floats instead of bitfieldInert
worked better for Fire Emblem: Three Houses. Reverting to get that
behavior back.
This also fixes Turing issues but it avoids doing more bitcasts. This
should improve the generated code while also avoiding more points where
compilers can flush floats.
Implements a reduction operation. It's an atomic operation that doesn't
return a value.
This commit introduces another primitive because some shading languages
might have a primitive for reduction operations.
Credits go to gdkchan and Ryujinx. The pull request used for this can
be found here: https://github.com/Ryujinx/Ryujinx/pull/1082
yuzu was already using the header for interpolation, but it was missing
the FragCoord.w multiplication described in the linked pull request.
This commit finally removes the FragCoord.w == 1.0f hack from the shader
decompiler.
While we are at it, this commit renames some enumerations to match
Nvidia's documentation (linked below) and fixes component declaration
order in the shader program header (z and w were swapped).
https://github.com/NVIDIA/open-gpu-doc/blob/master/Shader-Program-Header/Shader-Program-Header.html
Legacy varyings are special attributes carried over in hardware from
the OpenGL 1 and OpenGL 2 days. These were generally used instead of the
generic attributes we use today. They are deprecated or removed from
most APIs, but Nvidia still ships them in hardware.
To implement these, this commit maps them 1:1 to OpenGL compatibility.
We sometimes have to slice attributes in different parts. This is needed
for example in instances where the game feedbacks 3 components but
writes 4 from the shader (something that is possible with
GL_NV_transform_feedback).
ATOM operates atomically on global memory. For now only add ATOM.ADD
since that's what was found in commercial games.
This asserts for ATOM.ADD.S32 (handling the others as unimplemented),
although ATOM.ADD.U32 shouldn't be any different.
This change forces us to change the default type on SPIR-V storage
buffers from float to uint. We could also alias the buffers, but it's
simpler for now to just use uint. While we are at it, abstract the code
to avoid repetition.
This commit introduces a mechanism by which shader IR code can be
amended and extended. This useful for track algorithms where certain
information can derived from before the track such as indexes to array
samplers.