The encoding for negation and absolute value was wrong.
Extracting is now done manually. Similar instructions having different
encodings is the rule, not the exception. To keep sanity and readability
I preferred to extract the desired bit manually.
This is implemented against nxas:
8dbc389957/table.h (L68)
That is itself tested against nvdisasm (Nvidia's official disassembler).
Some variables aren't used, so we can remove these.
Unfortunately, diagnostics are still reported on structured bindings
even when annotated with [[maybe_unused]], so we need to unpack the
elements that we want to use manually.
Allows reporting more cases where logic errors may exist, such as
implicit fallthrough cases, etc.
We currently ignore unused parameters, since we currently have many
cases where this is intentional (virtual interfaces).
While we're at it, we can also tidy up any existing code that causes
warnings. This also uncovered a few bugs as well.
Implements the common usages for VMNMX. Inputs with a different size
than 32 bits are not supported and sign mismatches aren't supported
either.
VMNMX works as follows:
It grabs Ra and Rb and applies a maximum/minimum on them (this is
defined by .MX), having in mind the input sign. This result can then be
saturated. After the intermediate result is calculated, it applies
another operation on it using Rc. These operations are merges,
accumulations or another min/max pass.
This instruction allows to implement with a more flexible approach GCN's
min3 and max3 instructions (for instance).
Since commit e22816a5bb we handle type mismatches from the CPU.
We don't need to hack our shader decoder due to game bugs anymore.
Removed in this commit.
Reimplements I2I adding sign extension, saturation (clamp source value
to the destination), selection and destination sizes that are not 32
bits wide.
It doesn't implement CC yet.
Implements a reduction operation. It's an atomic operation that doesn't
return a value.
This commit introduces another primitive because some shading languages
might have a primitive for reduction operations.