[Mesa-dev] [RFC PATCH 00/16] A new IR for Mesa

Marek Olšák maraeo at gmail.com
Mon Aug 18 06:21:43 PDT 2014


On Mon, Aug 18, 2014 at 2:44 PM, Roland Scheidegger <sroland at vmware.com> wrote:
> Am 16.08.2014 02:12, schrieb Connor Abbott:
>> I know what you might be thinking right now. "Wait, *another* IR? Don't
>> we already have like 5 of those, not counting all the driver-specific
>> ones? Isn't this stuff complicated enough already?" Well, there are some
>> pretty good reasons to start afresh (again...). In the years we've been
>> using GLSL IR, we've come to realize that, in fact, it's not what we
>> want *at all* to do optimizations on. Ian has done a talk at FOSDEM that
>> highlights some of the problems they've run into:
>>
>> https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v1/url?u=https://video.fosdem.org/2014/H1301_Cornil/Saturday/Three_Years_Experience_with_a_Treelike_Shader_IR.webm&k=oIvRg1%2BdGAgOoM1BIlLLqw%3D%3D%0A&r=F4msKE2WxRzA%2BwN%2B25muztFm5TSPwE8HKJfWfR2NgfY%3D%0A&m=iXhCeAYmidPDc1lFo757Cc9V0PvWAN4n3X%2Fw%2B%2F7Lx%2Fs%3D%0A&s=f103fb26bf53eee64318a490517d1ee9ab88ecd29fcdbe49d54b5a27e7581c2e
>>
>> But here's the summary:
>>
>> * GLSL IR is way too much of a memory hog, since it has to make a new
>> variable for each temporary the compiler creates and then each time you
>> want to dereference that temporary you need to create an
>> ir_dereference_variable that points to it which is also very
>> cache-unfriendly ("downright cache-mean!").
>>
>> * The expression trees were originally added so that we could do
>> pattern matching to automatically optimize things, but this turned out
>> to be both very difficult to do and not very helpful. Instead, all it
>> does is add more complexity to the IR without much benefit - with SSA or
>> having proper use-def chains, we could get back what the trees give us
>> while also being able to do lots more optimizations.
>>
>> * We don't have the concept of basic blocks in GLSL IR, which makes a
>> lot of optimizations harder because they were originally designed with
>> basic blocks in mind - take, for example, my SSA series. I had to map a
>> whole lot of concepts that were based on the control flow graph to this
>> tree of statements that GLSL IR uses, and the end result wound up
>> looking nothing at all like the original paper. This problem gets even
>> worse for things like e.g. Global Code Motion that depend upon having
>> the dominance tree.
>>
>> I originally wanted to modify GLSL IR to fix these problems by adding
>> new instruction types that would address these issues and then
>> converting back and forth between the old and the new form, but I
>> realized that fixing all the problems would basically mean a complete
>> rewrite - and if that's the case, then why don't we start from scratch?
>> So I took Ken's suggestions and started designing, and then at Intel
>> over the summer started implementing, a completely new IR which I call
>> NIR that's at a lower level than GLSL IR, but still high-level enough to
>> be mostly device-independant (different drivers may have different
>> passes and different ways of lowering e.g.  matrix multiplies) so that
>> we can do generic optimizations on it. Having support for SSA from the
>> beginning was also a must, because lots of optimisations that we really
>> want for cleaning up DX9-translated games are either a lot easier in or
>> made possible by SSA. I also made the decision for it to be typeless,
>> because that's what the cool kids are all doing :) and for a
>> lower-level, flat IR it seemed like the thing to do (it could have gone
>> either way, though). So the key design points of NIR (pronounced either
>> like "near" as in "NIR is near!" or to rhyme with "burr") are:
>>
>> * It's flat (no expression trees)
>>
>> * It's typeless
>>
>> * Modifiers (abs, negate, saturate), swizzles, and write masks are part
>> of ALU instructions
>>
>> * It includes enough GLSL-like things (variables that you can load from
>> or store to, function calls) to be hardware-agnostic (although we don't
>> have a way to represent matrix multiplies right now, but that could
>> easily be added) to be able to do optimizations at a high level, while
>> having lowering passes that convert variables to registers and
>> input/output/uniform loads/stores that will open up more opportunities
>> for optimization and save memory while being more hardware-specific.
>>
>> * Control flow consists of a tree of if statements and loops, like in
>> GLSL IR, except the leaves of the tree are now basic blocks instead of
>> instructions. Also, each basic block keeps track of its successors and
>> predecessors, so the control flow graph is explicit in the IR.
>>
>> * SSA is natively supported, and SSA uses point directly to the SSA
>> definition, which means that the use-def chains are always there, and
>> def-use chains are kept by tracking the set of all uses for each
>> definition.
>>
>> * It's written in C.
>>
>> (see the README in patch 3 and nir.h in patch 4 for more details)
>>
>> Some things that are missing or could be improved:
>>
>> * There's currently no alias tracking for inputs, outputs, and uniforms.
>> This is especially important for uniforms because we don't pack them
>> like we pack inputs and outputs.
>>
>> * We need a way to represent matrix multiplies so that we can do
>> matrix-flipping optimizations in NIR (currently GLSL IR does this for
>> us).
>>
>> * I'm not entirely happy about how we represent loads and stores in the
>> IR. Right now, they're intrinsics, but that means we need a different
>> intrinsic for each size and combination of arguments (indirect vs. not
>> indirect, etc.) and we might run into a combinatorial explosion problem
>> in the future, so we might need to make separate load/store instructions
>> like what I did for textures.
>>
>> * Right now, we only have a pass that lowers variables for scalar
>> backends. We need to write a similar pass for vector backends that uses
>> std140 packing or something similar, as well as porting
>> lower_ubo_reference to NIR and changing it to output offsets in the
>> hardware-native units instead of bytes.
>>
>> * We'll need to write a pass that splits up vector expressions for
>> scalar backends.
>
> Interesting. I think conceptually this makes sense (I'm far from an
> expert in that area though), though I wonder if we actually even should
> have our own IR? GL NG will specify a common shading language
> intermediate representation, and I suspect there'd be benefits if we'd
> just use that? Obviously I don't have any idea how that's going to look
> like but maybe it will be just like SPIR (which is llvm ir essentially)?
> Granted a lot of stuff in your isa is conceptually similar (such as
> being based around basic blocks).

OpenGL NG won't have anything to do with current OpenGL and thus
anything that happens in Mesa core and GLSL (even NIR) is irrelevant.
The gallium interface will also need a major surgery to be able to
support GL NG. However, let's face it, gallium is stuck with TGSI
forever. Switching to another IR in Gallium is insane (unless you can
rewrite all drivers and state trackers for it - let's be realistic, it
just won't happen). The next GL NG IR, whatever it is going to be,
will be just as important as the IR of ARB_vertex_program. TGSI will
continue to be the major IR whether we like or not.

Marek


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