Assert in each AST constructor that child nodes belong to the program of the parent.
Bug: tint:709
Change-Id: Icc89b69691d099e358ff632a0ca6fd7943cb0193
Reviewed-on: https://dawn-review.googlesource.com/c/tint/+/47623
Kokoro: Kokoro <noreply+kokoro@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Antonio Maiorano <amaiorano@google.com>
Reviewed-by: James Price <jrprice@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Ben Clayton <bclayton@google.com>
This will be used to detect accidental leaks of program objects between programs.
Bug: tint:709
Change-Id: I20f784a2c673d19a04a880b3ec91dfe2eb743bdb
Reviewed-on: https://dawn-review.googlesource.com/c/tint/+/47622
Commit-Queue: Ben Clayton <bclayton@google.com>
Kokoro: Kokoro <noreply+kokoro@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Antonio Maiorano <amaiorano@google.com>
Reviewed-by: James Price <jrprice@google.com>
The readers must not produce invalid ASTs.
If readers cannot produce a valid AST, then they should error instead.
If a reader does produce an invalid AST, this change catches this bad behavior early, significantly helping identify the root of the broken logic.
IsValid() made a bit more sense in the days where the AST was mutable, and was constructed by calling setters on the nodes to build up the tree.
In order to detect bad ASTs, IsValid() would have to perform an entire AST traversal and give a yes / no answer for the entire tree. Not only was this slow, an answer of 'no' didn't tell you *where* the AST was invalid, resulting in a lot of manual debugging.
Now that the AST is fully immutable, all child nodes need to be built before their parents. The AST node constructors now become a perfect place to perform pointer sanity checking.
The argument for attempting to catch and handle invalid ASTs is not a compelling one.
Invalid ASTs are invalid compiler behavior, not something that should ever happen with a correctly functioning compiler.
If this were to happen in production, the user would be utterly clueless to _why_ the program is invalid, or _how_ to fix it.
Attempting to handle invalid ASTs is just masking a much larger problem.
Let's just let the fuzzers do their job to catch any of these cases early.
Fixed: chromium:1185569
Change-Id: I6496426a3a9da9d42627d2c1ca23917bfd04cc5c
Reviewed-on: https://dawn-review.googlesource.com/c/tint/+/44048
Commit-Queue: Ben Clayton <bclayton@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: David Neto <dneto@google.com>
All includes from .cc to .h are preserved, even when transitively included.
It's clear that there are far too many includes in header files, and we should be more aggressive with forward declarations. tint:532 will continue to track this work.
There are, however, plenty of includes that have accumulated over time which are no longer required directly or transitively, so this change starts with a clean slate of *required* includes.
Bug: tint:532
Change-Id: Ie1718dad565f8309fa180ef91bcf3920e76dba18
Reviewed-on: https://dawn-review.googlesource.com/c/tint/+/44042
Commit-Queue: Ben Clayton <bclayton@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Antonio Maiorano <amaiorano@google.com>
to TINT_INSTANTIATE_TYPEINFO()
ClassID isn't a thing any more.
Change-Id: Ie1c0d4a95e58ef7166d3cab5ef733a2dfc702345
Reviewed-on: https://dawn-review.googlesource.com/c/tint/+/42921
Commit-Queue: Ben Clayton <bclayton@google.com>
Reviewed-by: James Price <jrprice@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Antonio Maiorano <amaiorano@google.com>
In C++ argument evaluation order is undefined. MSVC and Clang evaluate these in different orders, leading to hilarity when writing tests that expect a deterministic ordering.
Pull out all the argument expressions to create() in the clone functions so a cloned program is deterministic in its ordering between compilers.
Change-Id: I8e2de31398960c480ce7ee1dfaac4f67652d2dbc
Reviewed-on: https://dawn-review.googlesource.com/c/tint/+/41544
Commit-Queue: Ben Clayton <bclayton@google.com>
Reviewed-by: dan sinclair <dsinclair@chromium.org>
Auto-Submit: Ben Clayton <bclayton@google.com>
Will hold the mutable fields that currently reside in the otherwise immutable-AST.
Change the AST string methods to accept a `const semantic::Info&`. This is required as some nodes include type-resolved information in their output strings.
Bug: tint:390
Change-Id: Iba494a9c5645ce2096da0a8cfe63a4309a9d9c3c
Reviewed-on: https://dawn-review.googlesource.com/c/tint/+/39003
Commit-Queue: Ben Clayton <bclayton@google.com>
Reviewed-by: dan sinclair <dsinclair@chromium.org>
Program is now immutable*, and remains part of the public Tint
interface.
ProgramBuilder is the mutable builder for Programs, and is not part of
the public Tint interface. ast::Builder has been folded into
ProgramBuilder.
Immutable Programs can be cloned into a mutable ProgramBuilder with
Program::CloneAsBuilder().
Mutable ProgramBuilders can be moved into immutable Programs.
* - mostly immutable. It still has a move constructor and move
assignment operator - required for practical usage - and the
semantic information on AST nodes is still mutable.
Bug: tint:390
Change-Id: Ia856c50b1880c2f95c91467a9eef5024cbc380c6
Reviewed-on: https://dawn-review.googlesource.com/c/tint/+/38240
Reviewed-by: dan sinclair <dsinclair@chromium.org>
Enforce all places where Dawn passes in or returns a ast::Module, now takes a `const Program* ` or returns a `Program`.
As the end goal of all this is to have immutable Programs, all Program inputs take a pointer instead of moving the actual object.
As consumers of a Program are now all const, we have to const_cast to work around all the places we've been incorrectly mutating a ast::Module.
These const_casts are temporary, and will be fixed in the next set of changes.
Depends on https://dawn-review.googlesource.com/c/dawn/+/38522
Bug: tint:390
Change-Id: Ie05b112b16134937d1b601e9b713ea4ec4e1c677
Reviewed-on: https://dawn-review.googlesource.com/c/tint/+/38541
Reviewed-by: dan sinclair <dsinclair@chromium.org>
In the future, CloneContext will be operating on `Program`s so a field called `mod` is poorly named.
CloneContext has a `src` member, so rename to `dst` to keep symmetry.
Bug: tint:390
Change-Id: Ic724f8a18b46ef719790394cdc810f7eb3681234
Reviewed-on: https://dawn-review.googlesource.com/c/tint/+/38364
Commit-Queue: David Neto <dneto@google.com>
Auto-Submit: Ben Clayton <bclayton@google.com>
Reviewed-by: David Neto <dneto@google.com>
CloneContext clones the AST, types, symbols and in the future semantic info.
3/4 of these are non-ast, so promote these up to the root.
Bug: tint:390
Change-Id: I49619796e6f81f9ab64f79413a12c87312cb1901
Reviewed-on: https://dawn-review.googlesource.com/c/tint/+/38361
Commit-Queue: Ben Clayton <bclayton@google.com>
Reviewed-by: dan sinclair <dsinclair@chromium.org>
Hopefully the trybot issue is now resolved.
This reverts commit 5792783e72,
unreverting commit 4d28b27935.
Change-Id: I2855bf17c5025a3d349e7fce16fdca342517aad3
Reviewed-on: https://dawn-review.googlesource.com/c/tint/+/34564
Reviewed-by: dan sinclair <dsinclair@chromium.org>
Commit-Queue: dan sinclair <dsinclair@chromium.org>
We're seeing some chrome bots fail unittests in ways that suspiciously
look like dynamic casts are doing Wrong Things.
The ClassID::Of() logic depends on the linker folding away duplicate
compilation unit definitions based on ODR rules. If we were to somehow
end up with different definitions, then we'd have two or more different
ClassIDs for the same T type - leading to issues similar to what we're
seeing.
I'm not entirely sure why/how this could happen - and we've so far been
entirely unable to locally reproduce - but it _might_ have something to
do with the goma cache.
In an attempt to work around this, move the static symbol definition out
of a header-local-static and into the .cc file for each of the types.
Change-Id: If914d3045b9dac6fbe8824dac71153a768cfceb9
Reviewed-on: https://dawn-review.googlesource.com/c/tint/+/34563
Reviewed-by: dan sinclair <dsinclair@chromium.org>
Commit-Queue: Ben Clayton <bclayton@google.com>
This reverts commit 4d28b27935.
Reason for revert: Seeing weird build breakage ...
Original change's description:
> [ast] Remove unused constructors and setters.
>
> This CL removes unused default constructors and various set methods
> from the AST classes where they are not longer required.
>
> Change-Id: Ic437911c62d8c9e4354a1fa6bdc8483ce7511daf
> Reviewed-on: https://dawn-review.googlesource.com/c/tint/+/34641
> Auto-Submit: dan sinclair <dsinclair@chromium.org>
> Reviewed-by: Ben Clayton <bclayton@google.com>
> Commit-Queue: dan sinclair <dsinclair@chromium.org>
TBR=dsinclair@chromium.org,bclayton@google.com
Change-Id: I9d5bf6fd6d47131650c964cad4e17a1cbe86b040
No-Presubmit: true
No-Tree-Checks: true
No-Try: true
Reviewed-on: https://dawn-review.googlesource.com/c/tint/+/34682
Reviewed-by: dan sinclair <dsinclair@chromium.org>
Commit-Queue: dan sinclair <dsinclair@chromium.org>
This CL removes unused default constructors and various set methods
from the AST classes where they are not longer required.
Change-Id: Ic437911c62d8c9e4354a1fa6bdc8483ce7511daf
Reviewed-on: https://dawn-review.googlesource.com/c/tint/+/34641
Auto-Submit: dan sinclair <dsinclair@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Ben Clayton <bclayton@google.com>
Commit-Queue: dan sinclair <dsinclair@chromium.org>
Deep-clones all `Node`s and `Type`s into a new module.
Instead of writing a million standalone tests that'll only ever test the
existing fields of each type, I've opted to write the tests using
wgsl<->ast<->wgsl conversion. This means the tests require the enabling
of TINT_BUILD_WGSL_READER and TINT_BUILD_WGSL_WRITER, but I believe this
is much easier to maintain.
I'm aware there are probably gaps in the tests, and that even full
coverage is likely to rapidly rot, so I've also added
fuzzers/tint_ast_clone_fuzzer.cc - a fuzzer based test that ensures that
all AST modules can be cloned with identical reproduction.
I've run this across 100 cores of a 3990x for 4 hours, fixing the
single issue it detected.
Note: Expressions do not currently clone their `TypeManager` determined
types. This is for two reasons:
(a) This initial CL is mahoosive enough.
(b) I'm uncertain whether we actually want to clone this info, or to
re-run the `TypeDeterminer` after each AST transform. Maybe it should
be optional. Time will tell.
Fixed: tint:307
Change-Id: Id90fab06aaa740c805d12b66f3f11d1f452c6805
Reviewed-on: https://dawn-review.googlesource.com/c/tint/+/33300
Commit-Queue: Ben Clayton <bclayton@google.com>
Reviewed-by: dan sinclair <dsinclair@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: David Neto <dneto@google.com>
The hand-rolled `AsBlah()`, `IsBlah()` methods will be migrated in future changes.
Change-Id: I078c100b561b50018771cc38c1cac4379c393424
Reviewed-on: https://dawn-review.googlesource.com/c/tint/+/34301
Reviewed-by: dan sinclair <dsinclair@chromium.org>
This is a minimal effort to fix up the code. There's substantial code
cleanup which can now be done, which is done in the next change.
Bug: tint:322
Change-Id: Iafcf5e814837d9534889e8c21333de4931a19cfa
Reviewed-on: https://dawn-review.googlesource.com/c/tint/+/32864
Commit-Queue: dan sinclair <dsinclair@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: dan sinclair <dsinclair@chromium.org>
Lots of little style nits needed to be fixed for this work.
BUG=tint:44
Change-Id: Ibb45d9e3f6795ee0c09f5eca994bb28e20979d97
Reviewed-on: https://dawn-review.googlesource.com/c/tint/+/19221
Reviewed-by: dan sinclair <dsinclair@google.com>
This CL adds unit tests for the assignment statement methods.
Change-Id: I4aea8f22b530bf43b7dfdc2b82b5414cf6590fea
Bug: tint:11
Reviewed-on: https://dawn-review.googlesource.com/c/tint/+/16341
Commit-Queue: Sarah Mashayekhi <sarahmashay@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Sarah Mashayekhi <sarahmashay@google.com>