Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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These haven't been used by the mesa state tracker since the
conversion to tgsi_ureg, and it seems that none of the
other state trackers are using it either.
This helps simplify one of the biggest suprises when starting off with
TGSI shaders.
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The only valid usage for LOOP/ENDLOOP instructions
is LOOP[0] as a destination register.
The only valid usage for the remaining instructions
is LOOP[0].x as an indirect register.
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This is a source of ongoing confusion. TGSI has multiple names for
opcodes where the same semantics originate in multiple shader APIs.
For instance, TGSI includes both Mesa/GLSL and DX/SM30 names for
opcodes with the same semantics, but aliases those names to the same
underlying opcode number.
This makes it very difficult to visually inspect two sets of opcodes
(eg in state tracker & driver) and check if they implement the same
functionality.
This patch arbitarily rips out the versions of the opcodes not currently
favoured by the mesa state tracker and leaves us with a single name
for each distinct operation.
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Remove the need to have a pointer in this struct by just including
the immediate data inline. Having a pointer in the struct introduces
complications like needing to alloc/free the data pointed to, uncertainty
about who owns the data, etc. There doesn't seem to be a need for it,
and it is unlikely to make much difference plus or minus to performance.
Added some asserts as we now will trip up on immediates with more
than four elements. There were actually already quite a few such asserts,
but the >4 case could be used in the future to specify indexable immediate
ranges, such as lookup tables.
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Same story as in the tgsi_dump.c code (see prev commit).
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The debug functions depend on several util function for os abstractions, and
these depend on debug functions, so a seperate module is not possible.
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