This required putting Queue::Submit on QueueBase which is something we
would want to do anyway, and removes the need for Queue::ValidateSubmit
being called in the ProcTable.
This removes the need for all the "GeneratedCodeIncludes" files and
leads to a bunch of simplifications in BindGroup as well as the
dawn_native CMakeLists.txt.
Finally this was done in order to simplify the writing of BUILD.gn
files.
Also moves the TerribleCommandBuffer to utils:: because it isn't part of
the implementation of the wire, renames dawn::wire to dawn_wire, moves
src/wire to src/dawn_wire and puts the interface of dawn_wire in
src/include/dawn_wire.
The interface exposed by libdawn_native is declared in the new headers
living in src/include/dawn_native so that they both the users and the
libraries use the DAWN_NATIVE_EXPORT macros.
The dawn.h and dawncpp.h structure definitions references dawnFoo or
dawn::Foo respectively when it should reference dawn_native::FooBase* in
dawn_native. Autogenerate files to declare the dawn_native version of
the structs and change the ProcTable generation to use it instead.
This is important to make libdawn_native a shared library because
currently it was depending on dawncpp's definition of .Get().
This extends our Vulkan handle wrapper to have conversions from uint64_t
as well as the native Vulkan types:
- The dawn_wsi interface uses the uint64_t version.
- The backend interface uses the native Vulkan version
libdawn will be one of the libraries produced but other libraries like
libdawn_native don't need to link against it. However they do need the
Dawn headers so we generate them separately.
This also makes all internal targets depend on the header generation and
have the include directories necessary for those headers.
Also has a small fix for setting compile flags only for C++ files.
This adds DeviceBase::ConsumedError which is a helper method intended to
be the main place where Error.h errors are consumed.
To test this mechanism, object creation using descriptors is changed to
use ConsumedError, which finally gets their validation errors go
somewhere. This mechanism isn't final though because we have yet to
implement WebGPU error handling.
windows.h adds macros such as `#define GetMessage GetMessageA` which
cause conflicts in naming when for example a class definition is before
windows.h and a use is after windows.h
Add a header that can be used both to include windows.h and remove
defines, and to only remove defines (when windows.h is included by)
external dependencies.
This removes the following for both Buffer and Texture:
- The builder's SetInitialUsage
- The object's FreezeUsage and TransitionUsage methods
- The CommandBuffer Transition<Object>Usage methods
All samples and tests are simplified as a result. This also obsoletes
the UsageValidationTest which is removed.
Some validation was dependent on "current usage" and hasn't been
reintroduced for implicit transitions yet:
- Buffers can be used while mapped
- Swapchain textures can be used after they have been presented.
Validation for these will involve collecting all the resources used by a
command buffer and will be done in a follow-up patch.
With this the backend ignores explicit usage transition hints from the
frontent and generates all the barriers automatically based on resource
usage.
The current implementation is very naive and encodes a barrier
immediately just before a resource is used in a new state.
With this commit the Vulkan backend completely ignores the explicit
barrier commands passed from the frontend, and generates its own
pipeline barriers.
Right now it encodes each barrier just before the resources are used,
which is quite bad but will be optimized later.
This commit also makes the frontend command buffer validation perform
the checks necessary for implicit barriers (although they are redundant
with checks for explicit barriers) because the tracking can pre-compute
pass usage information that's useful for the Vulkan backend.
Tests for usage validation inside passes will be added once the concept
of transition is removed from the API.