commit | 1dcd16239918b50a20fbcea13bf10a2fa0bd948c | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | John Kessenich <cepheus@frii.com> | Mon Apr 09 17:21:30 2018 -0600 |
committer | John Kessenich <cepheus@frii.com> | Mon Apr 09 17:21:30 2018 -0600 |
tree | 7a97d4793505766a65a4ed34ed56ee664c127aeb | |
parent | b92ce60fc7a96e30aae39534e9b3b1efc1677f25 [diff] |
GLSL/SPV: no location on atomic_uint; Fix #1339.
Also see the Khronos landing page for glslang as a reference front end:
https://www.khronos.org/opengles/sdk/tools/Reference-Compiler/
The above page includes where to get binaries, and is kept up to date regarding the feature level of glslang.
An OpenGL and OpenGL ES shader front end and validator.
There are several components:
A GLSL/ESSL front-end for reference validation and translation of GLSL/ESSL into an AST.
An HLSL front-end for translation of a broad generic HLL into the AST. See issue 362 and issue 701 for current status.
A SPIR-V back end for translating the AST to SPIR-V.
A standalone wrapper, glslangValidator
, that can be used as a command-line tool for the above.
How to add a feature protected by a version/extension/stage/profile: See the comment in glslang/MachineIndependent/Versions.cpp
.
Tasks waiting to be done are documented as GitHub issues.
To use the standalone binary form, execute glslangValidator
, and it will print a usage statement. Basic operation is to give it a file containing a shader, and it will print out warnings/errors and optionally an AST.
The applied stage-specific rules are based on the file extension:
.vert
for a vertex shader.tesc
for a tessellation control shader.tese
for a tessellation evaluation shader.geom
for a geometry shader.frag
for a fragment shader.comp
for a compute shaderThere is also a non-shader extension
.conf
for a configuration file of limits, see usage statement for exampleInstead of building manually, you can also download the binaries for your platform directly from the master-tot release on GitHub. Those binaries are automatically uploaded by the buildbots after successful testing and they always reflect the current top of the tree of the master branch.
The following steps assume a Bash shell. On Windows, that could be the Git Bash shell or some other shell of your choosing.
cd <parent of where you want glslang to be> git clone https://github.com/KhronosGroup/glslang.git
cd <the directory glslang was cloned to, "External" will be a subdirectory> git clone https://github.com/google/googletest.git External/googletest
If you wish to assure that SPIR-V generated from HLSL is legal for Vulkan, or wish to invoke -Os to reduce SPIR-V size from HLSL or GLSL, install spirv-tools with this:
./update_glslang_sources.py
Assume the source directory is $SOURCE_DIR
and the build directory is $BUILD_DIR
. First ensure the build directory exists, then navigate to it:
mkdir -p $BUILD_DIR cd $BUILD_DIR
For building on Linux:
cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE={Debug|Release|RelWithDebInfo} \ -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX="$(pwd)/install" $SOURCE_DIR
For building on Windows:
cmake $SOURCE_DIR -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX="$(pwd)/install" # The CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX part is for testing (explained later).
The CMake GUI also works for Windows (version 3.4.1 tested).
# for Linux: make -j4 install # for Windows: cmake --build . --config {Release|Debug|MinSizeRel|RelWithDebInfo} \ --target install
If using MSVC, after running CMake to configure, use the Configuration Manager to check the INSTALL
project.
The grammar in glslang/MachineIndependent/glslang.y
has to be recompiled with bison if it changes, the output files are committed to the repo to avoid every developer needing to have bison configured to compile the project when grammar changes are quite infrequent. For windows you can get binaries from GnuWin32.
The command to rebuild is:
bison --defines=MachineIndependent/glslang_tab.cpp.h -t MachineIndependent/glslang.y -o MachineIndependent/glslang_tab.cpp
The above command is also available in the bash script at glslang/updateGrammar
.
Right now, there are two test harnesses existing in glslang: one is Google Test, one is the runtests
script. The former runs unit tests and single-shader single-threaded integration tests, while the latter runs multiple-shader linking tests and multi-threaded tests.
The runtests
script requires compiled binaries to be installed into $BUILD_DIR/install
. Please make sure you have supplied the correct configuration to CMake (using -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX
) when building; otherwise, you may want to modify the path in the runtests
script.
Running Google Test-backed tests:
cd $BUILD_DIR # for Linux: ctest # for Windows: ctest -C {Debug|Release|RelWithDebInfo|MinSizeRel} # or, run the test binary directly # (which gives more fine-grained control like filtering): <dir-to-glslangtests-in-build-dir>/glslangtests
Running runtests
script-backed tests:
cd $SOURCE_DIR/Test && ./runtests
Test results should always be included with a pull request that modifies functionality.
If you are writing unit tests, please use the Google Test framework and place the tests under the gtests/
directory.
Integration tests are placed in the Test/
directory. It contains test input and a subdirectory baseResults/
that contains the expected results of the tests. Both the tests and baseResults/
are under source-code control.
Google Test runs those integration tests by reading the test input, compiling them, and then compare against the expected results in baseResults/
. The integration tests to run via Google Test is registered in various gtests/*.FromFile.cpp
source files. glslangtests
provides a command-line option --update-mode
, which, if supplied, will overwrite the golden files under the baseResults/
directory with real output from that invocation. For more information, please check gtests/
directory's README.
For the runtests
script, it will generate current results in the localResults/
directory and diff
them against the baseResults/
. When you want to update the tracked test results, they need to be copied from localResults/
to baseResults/
. This can be done by the bump
shell script.
You can add your own private list of tests, not tracked publicly, by using localtestlist
to list non-tracked tests. This is automatically read by runtests
and included in the diff
and bump
process.
Another piece of software can programmatically translate shaders to an AST using one of two different interfaces:
The main()
in StandAlone/StandAlone.cpp
shows examples using both styles.
This interface is in roughly the last 1/3 of ShaderLang.h
. It is in the glslang namespace and contains the following.
const char* GetEsslVersionString(); const char* GetGlslVersionString(); bool InitializeProcess(); void FinalizeProcess(); class TShader setStrings(...); setEnvInput(EShSourceHlsl or EShSourceGlsl, stage, EShClientVulkan or EShClientOpenGL, 100); setEnvClient(EShClientVulkan or EShClientOpenGL, EShTargetVulkan_1_0 or EShTargetVulkan_1_1 or EShTargetOpenGL_450); setEnvTarget(EShTargetSpv, EShTargetSpv_1_0 or EShTargetSpv_1_3); bool parse(...); const char* getInfoLog(); class TProgram void addShader(...); bool link(...); const char* getInfoLog(); Reflection queries
See ShaderLang.h
and the usage of it in StandAlone/StandAlone.cpp
for more details.
This interface is in roughly the first 2/3 of ShaderLang.h
, and referred to as the Sh*()
interface, as all the entry points start Sh
.
The Sh*()
interface takes a "compiler" call-back object, which it calls after building call back that is passed the AST and can then execute a backend on it.
The following is a simplified resulting run-time call stack:
ShCompile(shader, compiler) -> compiler(AST) -> <back end>
In practice, ShCompile()
takes shader strings, default version, and warning/error and other options for controlling compilation.
Initial lexical analysis is done by the preprocessor in MachineIndependent/Preprocessor
, and then refined by a GLSL scanner in MachineIndependent/Scan.cpp
. There is currently no use of flex.
Code is parsed using bison on MachineIndependent/glslang.y
with the aid of a symbol table and an AST. The symbol table is not passed on to the back-end; the intermediate representation stands on its own. The tree is built by the grammar productions, many of which are offloaded into ParseHelper.cpp
, and by Intermediate.cpp
.
The intermediate representation is very high-level, and represented as an in-memory tree. This serves to lose no information from the original program, and to have efficient transfer of the result from parsing to the back-end. In the AST, constants are propogated and folded, and a very small amount of dead code is eliminated.
To aid linking and reflection, the last top-level branch in the AST lists all global symbols.
The primary algorithm of the back-end compiler is to traverse the tree (high-level intermediate representation), and create an internal object code representation. There is an example of how to do this in MachineIndependent/intermOut.cpp
.
Reduction of the tree to a linear byte-code style low-level intermediate representation is likely a good way to generate fully optimized code.
There is currently some dead old-style linker-type code still lying around.
Memory pool: parsing uses types derived from C++ std
types, using a custom allocator that puts them in a memory pool. This makes allocation of individual container/contents just few cycles and deallocation free. This pool is popped after the AST is made and processed.
The use is simple: if you are going to call new
, there are three cases:
the object comes from the pool (its base class has the macro POOL_ALLOCATOR_NEW_DELETE
in it) and you do not have to call delete
it is a TString
, in which case call NewPoolTString()
, which gets it from the pool, and there is no corresponding delete
the object does not come from the pool, and you have to do normal C++ memory management of what you new