Commit graph

247 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Bill Currie
5b1ce309ef [qfcc] Implement multi-vector reversion
For a change, something that's actually general rather than specific to
PGA.
2023-08-28 11:56:35 +09:00
Bill Currie
717b09f33e [qfcc] Fix vector long tests
And the discovered typos (yes, I double-checked the values) in the PGA
tests.
2023-08-27 18:40:40 +09:00
Bill Currie
55b7547451 [qfcc] Get the rest of the main 2d PGA products working
That was tedious. I can't say I'm looking forward to writing the tests
for 3d. And even though trivector . bivector and bivector . trivector
give the same answer, they're not really commutative when it comes to
the code.
2023-08-27 15:24:35 +09:00
Bill Currie
74b7e0a35b [qfcc] Get some of 2d PGA mostly working
Better yet, some tests :)
2023-08-27 00:24:23 +09:00
Bill Currie
29a57b7128 [qfcc] Correct handling of 64-bit comparisons
While the progs engine itself implements the instructions correctly, the
opcode specs (and thus qfcc) treated the results as 32-bit (which was,
really, a hidden fixme, it seems).
2023-08-26 23:04:34 +09:00
Bill Currie
60ce4ba8fb [qfcc] Give direct access to algebra subtypes
Currently via only the group mask (which is really horrible to work
with: requires too much knowledge of implementation details, but does
the job for testing), but it got some basics working.
2023-08-25 22:13:54 +09:00
Bill Currie
b2301c8bad [qfcc] Implement 3d PGA geometric algebra
No clue whether anything is actually correct. Time to start creating
real tests.
2023-08-25 22:13:54 +09:00
Bill Currie
55bdcbe4c5 [qfcc] Implement 2d PGA geometric product
This is definitely showing the need for better vector instructions
(mostly a 2d wedge and width dependent swizzles).
2023-08-24 22:07:04 +09:00
Bill Currie
5f22fd07d9 [qfcc] Implement 3d PGA dot products
Also, correct the handling of scalars in dot and wedge products: it
turns out s.v and s^v both scale. However, it seems the CSE code loses
things sometimes.
2023-08-24 15:49:52 +09:00
Bill Currie
6d75d91de2 [qfcc] Implement 2d PGA dot (inner) product
This has shown the need for more instructions, such as a 2d wedge
product and narrower swizzles. Also, making dot product produce a vector
instead of a scalar was a big mistake (works nicely in C, but not so
well in Ruamoko).
2023-08-24 00:19:58 +09:00
Bill Currie
469fdea0a1 [qfcc] Implement 2d PGA outer products
The specialization is really just in the layout.
2023-08-23 21:52:33 +09:00
Bill Currie
24c085c1bd [qfcc] Implement 3d-PGA wedge products
Not all possibilities have been tested yet, but the initial code looks
good even if it has a couple of excessive temporary variables.
2023-08-23 15:38:32 +09:00
Bill Currie
cfcacfbf28 [qfcc] Use scatter-gather for multivec expressions
This makes working with them much easier, and the type system reflects
what's in the multi-vector. Unfortunately, that does mean that large
algebras will wind up having a LOT of types, but it allows for efficient
storage of sparse multi-vectors:

    auto v = 4*(e1 + e032 + e123);

results in:

    0005 0213 1:0008<00000008>4:void     0:0000<00000000>?:invalid
              0:0044<00000044>4:void          assign (<void>), v
    0006 0213 1:000c<0000000c>4:void     0:0000<00000000>?:invalid
              0:0048<00000048>4:void          assign (<void>), {v + 4}

Where the two source vectors are:

    44:1 0 .imm float:18e [4, 0, 0, 0]
    48:1 0 .imm float:1aa [4, 0, 0, 4]

They just happen to be adjacent, but don't need to be.
2023-08-23 15:38:32 +09:00
Bill Currie
2e91b29580 [qfcc] Start work on implementing geometric algebra
This gets only some very basics working:
 * Algebra (multi-vector) types: eg @algebra(float(3,0,1)).
 * Algebra scopes (using either the above or @algebra(TYPE_NAME) where
   the above was used in a typedef.
 * Basis blades (eg, e12) done via procedural symbols that evaluate to
   suitable constants based on the basis group for the blade.
 * Addition and subtraction of multi-vectors (only partially tested).
 * Assignment of sub-algebra multi-vectors to full-algebra multi-vectors
   (missing elements zeroed).

There's still much work to be done, but I thought it time to get
something into git.
2023-08-21 17:58:20 +09:00
Bill Currie
cb4b073e47 [qfcc] Support some unicode ops and GA ops
Only · (dot product) and × (cross product for vector, commutator product
for geometric algebra) have been tested so far, but that involved
fighting with cpp to get it to not convert the · to \U000000b7, which
was rather annoying.
2023-08-21 17:47:55 +09:00
Bill Currie
55705dac83 [qfcc] Only compile in the compile-only tests
The source tree is made read-only by `make distcheck`, so writing
temporary files to the source directory is a no-no (really, it's a bit
of a bug in qfcc, as per #51).
2023-07-10 11:04:17 +09:00
Bill Currie
fdeb294c58 [qfcc] Update ptraliasenc test for new format
With the use of the full type for encoding type aliases, ptraliasenc's
simple check became invalid (it's purpose is to ensure the encoding
doesn't have "null" in it, not the exact encoding itself, but this is
good enough).
2023-06-30 02:45:49 +09:00
Bill Currie
dc61d15340 [qfcc] Add failing test for array-typedef interaction
Two variables declared as arrays (same size) of different typedefs to
the same base type have their type encodings both pointing to the same
short alias.

From vkgen:

    51d3  ty_array  [4={int32_t>i}]      207f  0 4
    51d9  ty_array  [4=i]                1035  0 4
    51df  ty_alias  {>[4=i]}              16  51d9  51e6
    51e6  ty_array  [4={uint32_t>i}]     2063  0 4
    51ec  ty_union  {tag VkClearColorValue-} tag VkClearColorValue
	    4ca0     0 float32
	    51df     0 int32
	    51df     0 uint32

uint32 should use 51e6 and int32 should use 513d,
2023-06-30 02:39:51 +09:00
Bill Currie
a5ed154cfe [qfcc] Add a second failing array lifetime test
This one covers regular array references across function call.
2023-06-05 10:58:02 +09:00
Bill Currie
ce6b27cfae [qfcc] Add failing test for array life
It seems that the optimizer keeps array assignments live when passing
the array as a pointer, but not when passing the address of an element.
Found when testing the following code:

    BasisBlade *pga_blades[16] = {
        blades[1],  blades[2],  blades[3],  blades[4],
        blades[7],  blades[6],  blades[5],  blades[0],
        blades[8],  blades[9],  blades[10], blades[15],
        blades[14], blades[13], blades[12], blades[11],
    };
    BasisGroup *pga_groups[4] = {
        [BasisGroup new:4 basis:&pga_blades[ 0]],
        [BasisGroup new:4 basis:&pga_blades[ 4]],
        [BasisGroup new:4 basis:&pga_blades[ 8]],
        [BasisGroup new:4 basis:&pga_blades[12]],
    };

Only the first element of pga_blades is being assigned in the optimized
code, but everything is correct when not optimizing.
2023-05-14 12:45:08 +09:00
Bill Currie
549ffcd534 [qfcc] Add failing test for function/array pointers
It turns out I broke the type system when it comes to pointers to
functions and arrays. This test checks basic function and array pointers
and passes with qfcc from before the type system rework.
2023-03-07 13:17:46 +09:00
Bill Currie
b103709bfd [qfcc] Fix incorrect build error in dealloc-warn2
It was dying due to an undefined symbol rather than the warning.
2023-02-26 20:09:21 +09:00
Bill Currie
e07f25e10f [qfcc] Add failing test for super dealloc
While working on vkgen, I found a dealloc that wasn't calling [super
dealloc] but qfcc hadn't noticed it.
2023-02-26 20:08:56 +09:00
Bill Currie
fc7c96d208 [qfcc] Support C's full type system
Along with QuakeC's, of course. This fixes type typeredef2 test (a lot
of work for one little syntax error). Unfortunately, it came at the cost
of requiring `>>` in front of state expressions on C-style functions
(QuakeC-style functions are unaffected). Also, there are now two
shift/reduce conflicts with structs and unions (but these same conflicts
are in gcc 3.4).

This has highlighted the need for having the equivalent of the
expression tree for the declaration system as there are now several
hacks to deal with the separation of types and declarators. But that's a
job for another week.

The grammar constructs for declarations come from gcc 3.4's parser (I
think it's the last version of gcc that used bison. Also, 3.4 is still
GPL 2, so no chance of an issue there).
2023-02-14 12:45:04 +09:00
Bill Currie
e974e9d758 [qfcc] Add some failing typedef redef tests
typeredef1 parses properly but fails due to it erroneously complaining
that foo is redeclared as a different kind of object (it's the same
kind).

typeredef2 is the real problem in that it's a syntax error when it
should not be. This has proven to be a show-stopper for development on
my laptop as it has very recent vulkan headers which have such a
duplicate typedef.
2023-02-14 12:45:04 +09:00
Bill Currie
de2cc21c7e [qfcc] Add basic support for (u)long expressions
It's woefully incomplete, but sufficient to test initializing
non-scalars from ivec constants.

Fixes #36
2022-11-16 20:48:58 +09:00
Bill Currie
ce64baa92d [qfcc] Add failing test for vector constant init
Raw 'x y z' style vector constants that look like ints (no fractional
parts) used to initialize vector globals/constants don't get converted
to float vectors, resulting in nans for negative values and denormals
for positive values. This tends to make game physics... interesting.
2022-11-16 11:25:27 +09:00
Bill Currie
bfda4e776f [qfcc] Add a failing test case for if-super calls
The common idiom for self init (below) causes a double-call when
compiling with --advanced, resulting in an incorrect retain count.

    if (!(self = [super init])) {
	return nil;
    }
2022-11-12 20:07:30 +09:00
Bill Currie
7518ba0a27 [qfcc] Add failing test case for defspace_alloc_aligned_loc
qfcc is putting two temps in the same location due to
defspace_alloc_aligned_loc returning the same address when there was a
hole caused by an earlier aligned alloc: specifically, a size-3 hole and
a size-2 allocation with alignment-2.
2022-05-01 14:35:24 +09:00
Bill Currie
bf53edf5e3 [qfcc] Use correct vector expression size in test
Vector expressions no longer auto-widen due to the new vector types (I
might add such later, but for now this lets the tests try to build
(minus actual fixes in qfcc)).
2022-04-29 18:12:47 +09:00
Bill Currie
12c84046f3 [cvar] Make cvars properly typed
This is an extremely extensive patch as it hits every cvar, and every
usage of the cvars. Cvars no longer store the value they control,
instead, they use a cexpr value object to reference the value and
specify the value's type (currently, a null type is used for strings).
Non-string cvars are passed through cexpr, allowing expressions in the
cvars' settings. Also, cvars have returned to an enhanced version of the
original (id quake) registration scheme.

As a minor benefit, relevant code having direct access to the
cvar-controlled variables is probably a slight optimization as it
removed a pointer dereference, and the variables can be located for data
locality.

The static cvar descriptors are made private as an additional safety
layer, though there's nothing stopping external modification via
Cvar_FindVar (which is needed for adding listeners).

While not used yet (partly due to working out the design), cvars can
have a validation function.

Registering a cvar allows a primary listener (and its data) to be
specified: it will always be called first when the cvar is modified. The
combination of proper listeners and direct access to the controlled
variable greatly simplifies the more complex cvar interactions as much
less null checking is required, and there's no need for one cvar's
callback to call another's.

nq-x11 is known to work at least well enough for the demos. More testing
will come.
2022-04-24 19:15:22 +09:00
Bill Currie
db8cf68ef3 [gamecode] Pass registered data pointer to builtins
This is the bulk of the work for recording the resource pointer with
with builtin data. I don't know how much of a difference it makes for
most things, but it's probably pretty big for qwaq-curses due to the
very high number of calls to the curses builtins.

Closes #26
2022-02-14 12:28:38 +09:00
Bill Currie
c10b09d41b [ruamoko] Make RUA_Sprintf more generally useful
It now takes the function name to print in error message (passed on to
PR_Sprintf) and the argument number of the format string. The variable
arguments (in ...) are assumed to be immediately after the format
argument.
2022-02-05 20:24:17 +09:00
Bill Currie
6f4bb0df2c [qfcc] Update sendv test to use @return
The return value can't be checked in the test, but it was useful for
getting everything actually working.
2022-02-05 19:30:08 +09:00
Bill Currie
3d8ee5df43 [qfcc] Ensure ops on globals occur before return
This fixes the return-postop test, and covers calls, too.
2022-02-03 16:33:42 +09:00
Bill Currie
b668759b7d [qfcc] Add a very basic attribute system
Ruamoko passes va_list (@args) through the ... parameter (as such), but
IMP uses ... to defeat parameter type and count checking and doesn't
want va_list. While possibly not the best solution, adding a no_va_list
flag to function types and skipping ex_args entirely does take care of
the problem without hard-coding anything specific to IMP.

The system currently just sets some bits in the type specifier (the
attribute list should probably be carried around with the specifier),
but it gets the job done for now, and at least gets things started.
2022-02-02 23:51:37 +09:00
Bill Currie
0fa9d0d256 [qfcc] Tweak the printf to make more sense
Though I'm sure I had a good reason at the time, seeing 6.98487e-315
when expecting pi is a bit disconcerting.
2022-02-02 19:04:43 +09:00
Bill Currie
38550922cc [qfcc] Map 64-bit load/store/assign instructions
In order to not waste instructions, the Ruamoko ISA does not provide 1
and 2 component 64-bit load/store instructions since they can be
implemented using 2 and 4 component 32-bit instructions (load and store
are independent of the interpretation of the data). This fixes the
double test, and technically the double-alias test, but it fails due to
a problem with the optimizer causing lea to use the wrong reference for
the address. It also breaks the quaternion test due to what seems to be
a type error that may have been lurking for a while, further
investigation is needed there.
2022-02-02 16:06:15 +09:00
Bill Currie
9b81d27f1a [qfcc] Add test for var = func(var)
That is, updating a variable using a function that takes the same
variable, probably very common in iterators, thus the name. It happens
to be the first qfcc test specific to Ruamoko. It's really just the
typedef, zerolinker, and vkgen type encoding loop stripped down for ease
of debugging.

Of course, it fails :)
2022-02-01 21:40:59 +09:00
Bill Currie
e0c5c475ea [qfcc] Modify the modulo tests to be compatible with Ruamoko ISA
Surprisingly, it passes (I didn't expect it to due to the doubles). I'll
look into to it further later on.
2022-02-01 14:57:16 +09:00
Bill Currie
64c8c02eac [qfcc] Add pragma to control optimization
And force a couple of tests to be built with optimization. I'll probably
add it to most, if not all, but for now I'm clearing up tests as I go.
2022-02-01 14:57:16 +09:00
Bill Currie
b8c2b7f856 [ruamoko] Make a common sprintf wrapper function
This takes care of converting from progs varargs to what PR_Sprintf
expects. I got tired of modifying the wrappers when I found a third one.
2022-02-01 09:27:03 +09:00
Bill Currie
b8df11b2cb [qfcc] Really get vecaddr.r working on both ISAs
Deliberately defeating an optimiser is not so easy (but I really needed
that variable to be set).
2022-01-30 20:01:32 +09:00
Bill Currie
d18ee8dd86 [qfcc] Make vecaddr work in both v6p and Ruamoko
It's full of evil hacks, but has always been an evil hack relying on
undefined behavior. The weird shenanigans with local variables are
because Ruamoko doesn't copy the parameters like v6p does and thus v and
z are NOT adjacent as parameters. Worse, the padding is uninitialized
and thus should not be relied upon to be any particular value. Still
does a nice job of testing dot products, though.
2022-01-30 14:22:05 +09:00
Bill Currie
218481764b [qfcc] Add failing test for temp.component
While it specifically checks vectors, I'm pretty sure it applies to
structs, too. Also, it's a little redundant with vecaddr.r, but is much
more specific and far less evil in what it does (no horrible pointer
shenanigans): just something that is fairly common practice.
2022-01-30 13:57:41 +09:00
Bill Currie
54e079ab75 [qfcc] Fold int constants more aggressively
This code now reaches into one level of the expression tree and
rearranges the nodes to allow the constant folder to do its things, but
only for ints, and only when the folding is trivially correct (* and *,
+/- and +/-). There may be more opportunities, but these cover what I
needed for now and anything more will need code generation or smarter
tree manipulation as things are getting out of hand.
2022-01-29 15:38:39 +09:00
Bill Currie
4b4cb60c65 [qfcc] Check qfo target matches compile target
Linking mixed target VMs is unlikely to end well.
2022-01-27 13:24:21 +09:00
Bill Currie
a2fd42f174 [qfcc] Align progs memory to 32 bytes in the test harness
This ensures the engine can align everything to 32 bytes.
2022-01-26 16:57:34 +09:00
Bill Currie
e4bb5c8048 [qfcc] Add pragma to control warning promotion
This allows me to disable -Werror in the Makefile but still have the
build tests work properly and not fail when they shouldn't.
2022-01-25 22:15:28 +09:00
Bill Currie
37f08f9d4f [qfcc] Build the Ruamoko function parameters
The parameter defs are allocated from the parameter space using a
minimum alignment of 4, and varargs functions get a va_list struct in
place of the ...

An "args" expression is unconditionally injected into the call arguments
list at the place where ... is in the list, with arguments passed
through ... coming after the ...

Arguments get through to functions now, but there's problems with taking
the address of local variables: currently done using constant pointer
defs, which can't work for the base register addressing used in Ruamoko
progs.

With the update to test-bi's printf (and a hack to qfcc for lea),
triangle.r actually works, printing the expected results (but -1 instead
of 1 for equality, though that too is actually expected). qfcc will take
a bit longer because it seems there are some design issues in address
expressions (ambiguity, and a few other things) that have pretty much
always been there.
2022-01-24 23:44:48 +09:00