According to the extension SPV_GOOGLE_decorate_string,
OpDecorateString (or OpMemberDecorateString) ought to be capable of
supporting multiple literal strings. Each literal strings are padded
with null terminator to make word alignment. The layout is:
Inst | Target | Decoration | Literal String, Literal String, ...
Remapper errors are generally fatal: there has been some unexpected situation while
parsing the SPV binary, and there is no reasonable way to carry on. The
errorHandler() function is called in this case, which by default exits, but
it is possible to submit a handler which does not. In that case the remapper would
carry on in a bad state.
This change ensures a graceful termination of the remap() function.
While a try {} catch {} construct would be the ideal and safe way to do this,
that's off limits for certain environments, so this tries to do the same thing
with explicit code, to catch all the bailout paths.
OpSpecConstantOp contains an embedded opcode which is given as a literal
argument to the OpSpecConstantOp. The subsequent arguments are as the
embedded op would expect, which may be a mixture of IDs and literals. This
adds support for that to the remapper binary parser. Upon seeing such an
embedded op, the parser flips over to parsing the argument list as
appropriate for that opcode.
Fixes#882.
- fixed ParseHelper.cpp newlines (crlf -> lf)
- removed trailing white space in most source files
- fix some spelling issues
- extra blank lines
- tabs to spaces
- replace #include comment about no location
If some DCE is performed such as removing dead functions, then even
if we are NOT stripping debug info, we still must remove the debug
opcodes that refer to the now-dead IDs.
Also, this adds a small change to perform no ID remapping if none
is requested, making spirv-remap properly be a no-op if no options
are given.