Commit Graph

23 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Matt Pharr
c27418da77 Add checks about references to non-lvalues.
Both ReturnStmt and DeclStmt now check the values being associated
with references to make sure that they are legal (e.g. it's illegal
to assign a varying lvalue, or a compile-time constant to a reference
type).  Previously we didn't catch this and would end up hitting
assertions in LLVM when code did this stuff.

Mostly fixes issue #225 (except for adding a FAQ about what this
error message means.)
2012-04-04 05:56:22 -07:00
Matt Pharr
920cf63201 Improve error message about incompatible function types.
When reporting that a function has illegally been overloaded only
by return type, include "task", "export", and "extern "C"", as appropriate
in the error message to make clear what the issue is.

Finishes issue #216.
2012-04-03 05:43:23 -07:00
Matt Pharr
540fc6c2f3 Fix bugs with default parameter values for pointer-typed function parameters.
In particular "void foo(int * ptr = NULL)" and the like work now.

Issue #197.
2012-03-28 11:51:56 -07:00
Matt Pharr
ccd550dc52 __declspec support for function declarations.
safe: indicates that the function can safely be called with an "all off"
execution mask.

costN: (N an integer) overrides the cost estimate for the function with
the given value.
2012-03-21 16:11:50 -07:00
Matt Pharr
db5db5aefd Add native support for (AO)SOA data layout.
There's now a SOA variability class (in addition to uniform,
varying, and unbound variability); the SOA factor must be a
positive power of 2.

When applied to a type, the leaf elements of the type (i.e.
atomic types, pointer types, and enum types) are widened out
into arrays of the given SOA factor.  For example, given

struct Point { float x, y, z; };

Then "soa<8> Point" has a memory layout of "float x[8], y[8],
z[8]".

Furthermore, array indexing syntax has been augmented so that
when indexing into arrays of SOA-variability data, the two-stage
indexing (first into the array of soa<> elements and then into
the leaf arrays of SOA data) is performed automatically.
2012-03-05 09:58:10 -08:00
Matt Pharr
8ef41dfd97 Represent variability with small helper class rather than an enum.
This provides part of the basis for representing SOA width in terms
of variability, but there should be no functional changes in this
checkin.
2012-03-05 09:58:09 -08:00
Matt Pharr
3082ea4765 Require Type::Equal() for all type equality comparisons.
Previously, we uniqued AtomicTypes, so that they could be compared
by pointer equality, but with forthcoming SOA variability changes,
this would become too unwieldy (lacking a more general / ubiquitous
type uniquing implementation.)
2012-03-05 09:58:09 -08:00
Matt Pharr
ff48dd7bfb Remove unused SOAArrayType class and Type::GetSOAType() methods. 2012-03-05 09:58:09 -08:00
Matt Pharr
f81acbfe80 Implement unbound varibility for struct types.
Now, if a struct member has an explicit 'uniform' or 'varying'
qualifier, then that member has that variability, regardless of
the variability of the struct's variability.  Members without
'uniform' or 'varying' have unbound variability, and in turn
inherit the variability of the struct.

As a result of this, now structs can properly be 'varying' by default,
just like all the other types, while still having sensible semantics.
2012-02-21 10:28:31 -08:00
Matt Pharr
15cc812e37 Add notion of "unbound" variability to the type system.
Now, when a type is declared without an explicit "uniform" or "varying"
qualifier, its variability is unbound; depending on the context of the
declaration, the variability is later finalized.

Currently, in almost all cases, types with unbound variability are
resolved to varying types; the one exception is typecasts like:
"(int)1"; in this case, the fact that (int) has unbound variability
carries through to the TypeCastExpr, which in turn notices that the
expression being type cast has uniform type and in turn will resolve
(int) to (uniform int).

Fixes issue #127.
2012-01-06 11:52:58 -08:00
Matt Pharr
975db80ef6 Add support for pointers to the language.
Pointers can be either uniform or varying, and behave correspondingly.
e.g.: "uniform float * varying" is a varying pointer to uniform float
data in memory, and "float * uniform" is a uniform pointer to varying
data in memory.  Like other types, pointers are varying by default.

Pointer-based expressions, & and *, sizeof, ->, pointer arithmetic,
and the array/pointer duality all bahave as in C.  Array arguments
to functions are converted to pointers, also like C.

There is a built-in NULL for a null pointer value; conversion from
compile-time constant 0 values to NULL still needs to be implemented.

Other changes:
- Syntax for references has been updated to be C++ style; a useful
  warning is now issued if the "reference" keyword is used.
- It is now illegal to pass a varying lvalue as a reference parameter
  to a function; references are essentially uniform pointers.
  This case had previously been handled via special case call by value
  return code.  That path has been removed, now that varying pointers
  are available to handle this use case (and much more).
- Some stdlib routines have been updated to take pointers as
  arguments where appropriate (e.g. prefetch and the atomics).
  A number of others still need attention.
- All of the examples have been updated
- Many new tests

TODO: documentation
2011-11-27 13:09:59 -08:00
Matt Pharr
d3e6879223 Improve error checking for unsized arrays.
Added support for resolving dimensions of multi-dimensional unsized arrays
from their initializer exprerssions (previously, only the first dimension
would be resolved.)

Added checks to make sure that no unsized array dimensions remain after
doing this (except for the first dimensision of array parameters to
functions.)
2011-11-21 10:41:23 -08:00
Matt Pharr
7290f7b16b Generalize/improve parsing of pointer declarations.
Substantial improvements and generalizations to the parsing and
declaration handling code to properly parse declarations involving
pointers.  (No change to user-visible functionality, but this
lays groundwork for supporting a more general pointer model.)
2011-11-14 08:45:55 -08:00
Matt Pharr
afcd42028f Add support for function pointers.
Both uniform and varying function pointers are supported; when a function
is called through a varying function pointer, each unique function pointer
value across the running program instances is called once for the set of
active program instances that want to call it.
2011-11-03 16:14:14 -07:00
Matt Pharr
d5a8538192 Move logic for resolving function call overloads.
This code previously lived in FunctionCallExpr but is now part
of FunctionSymbolExpr.  This change doesn't change any current
functionality, but lays groundwork for function pointers in
the language, where we'll want to do function call overload
resolution at other times besides when a function call is
actually being made.
2011-10-30 14:00:11 -07:00
Matt Pharr
bba7211654 Add support for int8/int16 types. Addresses issues #9 and #42. 2011-07-21 06:57:40 +01:00
Matt Pharr
654cfb4b4b Many fixes for recent LLVM dev tree API changes 2011-07-18 15:54:39 +01:00
Matt Pharr
f0f876c3ec Add support for enums. 2011-07-17 16:43:05 +02:00
Matt Pharr
17e5c8b7c2 Fix LLVM 2.9 build. 2011-07-13 09:24:02 +01:00
Andreas Wendleder
646db5aacb Reflect changes in LLVM's type system. 2011-07-13 06:44:44 +01:00
Matt Pharr
214fb3197a Initial plumbing to add CollectionType base-class as common ancestor
to StructTypes, ArrayTypes, and VectorTypes.  Issue #37.
2011-06-29 07:42:09 +01:00
Matt Pharr
cb58c78c1a Pipe through source file locations of structure element declarations; these are now supplied to the llvm::DIBuilder::createMemberType() method rather than giving it the position of the overall struct declaration for each one. Fixes issue #31 2011-06-29 05:38:42 +01:00
Matt Pharr
18af5226ba Initial commit. 2011-06-21 12:48:50 -07:00