glsl: fix interpolateAtXxx(some_vec[idx], ...) with dynamic idx

The dynamic index of a vector (not array!) is lowered to a sequence of
conditional assignments. However, the interpolate_at_* expressions
require that the interpolant is an l-value of a shader input.

So instead of doing conditional assignments of parts of the shader input
and then interpolating that (which is nonsensical), we interpolate the
entire shader input and then do conditional assignments of the interpolated
result.

Reviewed-by: Timothy Arceri <tarceri@itsqueeze.com>
This commit is contained in:
Nicolai Hähnle
2017-08-01 12:44:34 +02:00
parent 4f42450b86
commit ca63a5ed3e

View File

@@ -128,7 +128,36 @@ ir_vec_index_to_cond_assign_visitor::convert_vector_extract_to_cond_assign(ir_rv
{
ir_expression *const expr = ir->as_expression();
if (expr == NULL || expr->operation != ir_binop_vector_extract)
if (expr == NULL)
return ir;
if (expr->operation == ir_unop_interpolate_at_centroid ||
expr->operation == ir_binop_interpolate_at_offset ||
expr->operation == ir_binop_interpolate_at_sample) {
/* Lower interpolateAtXxx(some_vec[idx], ...) to
* interpolateAtXxx(some_vec, ...)[idx] before lowering to conditional
* assignments, to maintain the rule that the interpolant is an l-value
* referring to a (part of a) shader input.
*
* This is required when idx is dynamic (otherwise it gets lowered to
* a swizzle).
*/
ir_expression *const interpolant = expr->operands[0]->as_expression();
if (!interpolant || interpolant->operation != ir_binop_vector_extract)
return ir;
ir_rvalue *vec_input = interpolant->operands[0];
ir_expression *const vec_interpolate =
new(base_ir) ir_expression(expr->operation, vec_input->type,
vec_input, expr->operands[1]);
return convert_vec_index_to_cond_assign(ralloc_parent(ir),
vec_interpolate,
interpolant->operands[1],
ir->type);
}
if (expr->operation != ir_binop_vector_extract)
return ir;
return convert_vec_index_to_cond_assign(ralloc_parent(ir),