1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
|
/*!
Definitions for index bounds checking.
*/
use crate::{valid, Handle, UniqueArena};
use bit_set::BitSet;
/// How should code generated by Naga do bounds checks?
///
/// When a vector, matrix, or array index is out of bounds—either negative, or
/// greater than or equal to the number of elements in the type—WGSL requires
/// that some other index of the implementation's choice that is in bounds is
/// used instead. (There are no types with zero elements.)
///
/// Similarly, when out-of-bounds coordinates, array indices, or sample indices
/// are presented to the WGSL `textureLoad` and `textureStore` operations, the
/// operation is redirected to do something safe.
///
/// Different users of Naga will prefer different defaults:
///
/// - When used as part of a WebGPU implementation, the WGSL specification
/// requires the `Restrict` behavior for array, vector, and matrix accesses,
/// and either the `Restrict` or `ReadZeroSkipWrite` behaviors for texture
/// accesses.
///
/// - When used by the `wgpu` crate for native development, `wgpu` selects
/// `ReadZeroSkipWrite` as its default.
///
/// - Naga's own default is `Unchecked`, so that shader translations
/// are as faithful to the original as possible.
///
/// Sometimes the underlying hardware and drivers can perform bounds checks
/// themselves, in a way that performs better than the checks Naga would inject.
/// If you're using native checks like this, then having Naga inject its own
/// checks as well would be redundant, and the `Unchecked` policy is
/// appropriate.
#[derive(Clone, Copy, Debug, Eq, Hash, PartialEq)]
#[cfg_attr(feature = "serialize", derive(serde::Serialize))]
#[cfg_attr(feature = "deserialize", derive(serde::Deserialize))]
pub enum BoundsCheckPolicy {
/// Replace out-of-bounds indexes with some arbitrary in-bounds index.
///
/// (This does not necessarily mean clamping. For example, interpreting the
/// index as unsigned and taking the minimum with the largest valid index
/// would also be a valid implementation. That would map negative indices to
/// the last element, not the first.)
Restrict,
/// Out-of-bounds reads return zero, and writes have no effect.
///
/// When applied to a chain of accesses, like `a[i][j].b[k]`, all index
/// expressions are evaluated, regardless of whether prior or later index
/// expressions were in bounds. But all the accesses per se are skipped
/// if any index is out of bounds.
ReadZeroSkipWrite,
/// Naga adds no checks to indexing operations. Generate the fastest code
/// possible. This is the default for Naga, as a translator, but consumers
/// should consider defaulting to a safer behavior.
Unchecked,
}
/// Policies for injecting bounds checks during code generation.
#[derive(Clone, Copy, Debug, Default, Eq, Hash, PartialEq)]
#[cfg_attr(feature = "serialize", derive(serde::Serialize))]
#[cfg_attr(feature = "deserialize", derive(serde::Deserialize))]
pub struct BoundsCheckPolicies {
/// How should the generated code handle array, vector, or matrix indices
/// that are out of range?
#[cfg_attr(feature = "deserialize", serde(default))]
pub index: BoundsCheckPolicy,
/// How should the generated code handle array, vector, or matrix indices
/// that are out of range, when those values live in a [`GlobalVariable`] in
/// the [`Storage`] or [`Uniform`] address spaces?
///
/// Some graphics hardware provides "robust buffer access", a feature that
/// ensures that using a pointer cannot access memory outside the 'buffer'
/// that it was derived from. In Naga terms, this means that the hardware
/// ensures that pointers computed by applying [`Access`] and
/// [`AccessIndex`] expressions to a [`GlobalVariable`] whose [`space`] is
/// [`Storage`] or [`Uniform`] will never read or write memory outside that
/// global variable.
///
/// When hardware offers such a feature, it is probably undesirable to have
/// Naga inject bounds checking code for such accesses, since the hardware
/// can probably provide the same protection more efficiently. However,
/// bounds checks are still needed on accesses to indexable values that do
/// not live in buffers, like local variables.
///
/// So, this option provides a separate policy that applies only to accesses
/// to storage and uniform globals. When depending on hardware bounds
/// checking, this policy can be `Unchecked` to avoid unnecessary overhead.
///
/// When special hardware support is not available, this should probably be
/// the same as `index_bounds_check_policy`.
///
/// [`GlobalVariable`]: crate::GlobalVariable
/// [`space`]: crate::GlobalVariable::space
/// [`Restrict`]: crate::back::BoundsCheckPolicy::Restrict
/// [`ReadZeroSkipWrite`]: crate::back::BoundsCheckPolicy::ReadZeroSkipWrite
/// [`Access`]: crate::Expression::Access
/// [`AccessIndex`]: crate::Expression::AccessIndex
/// [`Storage`]: crate::AddressSpace::Storage
/// [`Uniform`]: crate::AddressSpace::Uniform
#[cfg_attr(feature = "deserialize", serde(default))]
pub buffer: BoundsCheckPolicy,
/// How should the generated code handle image texel loads that are out
/// of range?
///
/// This controls the behavior of [`ImageLoad`] expressions when a coordinate,
/// texture array index, level of detail, or multisampled sample number is out of range.
///
/// [`ImageLoad`]: crate::Expression::ImageLoad
#[cfg_attr(feature = "deserialize", serde(default))]
pub image_load: BoundsCheckPolicy,
/// How should the generated code handle image texel stores that are out
/// of range?
///
/// This controls the behavior of [`ImageStore`] statements when a coordinate,
/// texture array index, level of detail, or multisampled sample number is out of range.
///
/// This policy should't be needed since all backends should ignore OOB writes.
///
/// [`ImageStore`]: crate::Statement::ImageStore
#[cfg_attr(feature = "deserialize", serde(default))]
pub image_store: BoundsCheckPolicy,
/// How should the generated code handle binding array indexes that are out of bounds.
#[cfg_attr(feature = "deserialize", serde(default))]
pub binding_array: BoundsCheckPolicy,
}
/// The default `BoundsCheckPolicy` is `Unchecked`.
impl Default for BoundsCheckPolicy {
fn default() -> Self {
BoundsCheckPolicy::Unchecked
}
}
impl BoundsCheckPolicies {
/// Determine which policy applies to `base`.
///
/// `base` is the "base" expression (the expression being indexed) of a `Access`
/// and `AccessIndex` expression. This is either a pointer, a value, being directly
/// indexed, or a binding array.
///
/// See the documentation for [`BoundsCheckPolicy`] for details about
/// when each policy applies.
pub fn choose_policy(
&self,
base: Handle<crate::Expression>,
types: &UniqueArena<crate::Type>,
info: &valid::FunctionInfo,
) -> BoundsCheckPolicy {
let ty = info[base].ty.inner_with(types);
if let crate::TypeInner::BindingArray { .. } = *ty {
return self.binding_array;
}
match ty.pointer_space() {
Some(crate::AddressSpace::Storage { access: _ } | crate::AddressSpace::Uniform) => {
self.buffer
}
// This covers other address spaces, but also accessing vectors and
// matrices by value, where no pointer is involved.
_ => self.index,
}
}
/// Return `true` if any of `self`'s policies are `policy`.
pub fn contains(&self, policy: BoundsCheckPolicy) -> bool {
self.index == policy
|| self.buffer == policy
|| self.image_load == policy
|| self.image_store == policy
}
}
/// An index that may be statically known, or may need to be computed at runtime.
///
/// This enum lets us handle both [`Access`] and [`AccessIndex`] expressions
/// with the same code.
///
/// [`Access`]: crate::Expression::Access
/// [`AccessIndex`]: crate::Expression::AccessIndex
#[derive(Clone, Copy, Debug)]
pub enum GuardedIndex {
Known(u32),
Expression(Handle<crate::Expression>),
}
/// Build a set of expressions used as indices, to cache in temporary variables when
/// emitted.
///
/// Given the bounds-check policies `policies`, construct a `BitSet` containing the handle
/// indices of all the expressions in `function` that are ever used as guarded indices
/// under the [`ReadZeroSkipWrite`] policy. The `module` argument must be the module to
/// which `function` belongs, and `info` should be that function's analysis results.
///
/// Such index expressions will be used twice in the generated code: first for the
/// comparison to see if the index is in bounds, and then for the access itself, should
/// the comparison succeed. To avoid computing the expressions twice, the generated code
/// should cache them in temporary variables.
///
/// Why do we need to build such a set in advance, instead of just processing access
/// expressions as we encounter them? Whether an expression needs to be cached depends on
/// whether it appears as something like the [`index`] operand of an [`Access`] expression
/// or the [`level`] operand of an [`ImageLoad`] expression, and on the index bounds check
/// policies that apply to those accesses. But [`Emit`] statements just identify a range
/// of expressions by index; there's no good way to tell what an expression is used
/// for. The only way to do it is to just iterate over all the expressions looking for
/// relevant `Access` expressions --- which is what this function does.
///
/// Simple expressions like variable loads and constants don't make sense to cache: it's
/// no better than just re-evaluating them. But constants are not covered by `Emit`
/// statements, and `Load`s are always cached to ensure they occur at the right time, so
/// we don't bother filtering them out from this set.
///
/// Fortunately, we don't need to deal with [`ImageStore`] statements here. When we emit
/// code for a statement, the writer isn't in the middle of an expression, so we can just
/// emit declarations for temporaries, initialized appropriately.
///
/// None of these concerns apply for SPIR-V output, since it's easy to just reuse an
/// instruction ID in two places; that has the same semantics as a temporary variable, and
/// it's inherent in the design of SPIR-V. This function is more useful for text-based
/// back ends.
///
/// [`ReadZeroSkipWrite`]: BoundsCheckPolicy::ReadZeroSkipWrite
/// [`index`]: crate::Expression::Access::index
/// [`Access`]: crate::Expression::Access
/// [`level`]: crate::Expression::ImageLoad::level
/// [`ImageLoad`]: crate::Expression::ImageLoad
/// [`Emit`]: crate::Statement::Emit
/// [`ImageStore`]: crate::Statement::ImageStore
pub fn find_checked_indexes(
module: &crate::Module,
function: &crate::Function,
info: &valid::FunctionInfo,
policies: BoundsCheckPolicies,
) -> BitSet {
use crate::Expression as Ex;
let mut guarded_indices = BitSet::new();
// Don't bother scanning if we never need `ReadZeroSkipWrite`.
if policies.contains(BoundsCheckPolicy::ReadZeroSkipWrite) {
for (_handle, expr) in function.expressions.iter() {
// There's no need to handle `AccessIndex` expressions, as their
// indices never need to be cached.
match *expr {
Ex::Access { base, index } => {
if policies.choose_policy(base, &module.types, info)
== BoundsCheckPolicy::ReadZeroSkipWrite
&& access_needs_check(
base,
GuardedIndex::Expression(index),
module,
function,
info,
)
.is_some()
{
guarded_indices.insert(index.index());
}
}
Ex::ImageLoad {
coordinate,
array_index,
sample,
level,
..
} => {
if policies.image_load == BoundsCheckPolicy::ReadZeroSkipWrite {
guarded_indices.insert(coordinate.index());
if let Some(array_index) = array_index {
guarded_indices.insert(array_index.index());
}
if let Some(sample) = sample {
guarded_indices.insert(sample.index());
}
if let Some(level) = level {
guarded_indices.insert(level.index());
}
}
}
_ => {}
}
}
}
guarded_indices
}
/// Determine whether `index` is statically known to be in bounds for `base`.
///
/// If we can't be sure that the index is in bounds, return the limit within
/// which valid indices must fall.
///
/// The return value is one of the following:
///
/// - `Some(Known(n))` indicates that `n` is the largest valid index.
///
/// - `Some(Computed(global))` indicates that the largest valid index is one
/// less than the length of the array that is the last member of the
/// struct held in `global`.
///
/// - `None` indicates that the index need not be checked, either because it
/// is statically known to be in bounds, or because the applicable policy
/// is `Unchecked`.
///
/// This function only handles subscriptable types: arrays, vectors, and
/// matrices. It does not handle struct member indices; those never require
/// run-time checks, so it's best to deal with them further up the call
/// chain.
pub fn access_needs_check(
base: Handle<crate::Expression>,
mut index: GuardedIndex,
module: &crate::Module,
function: &crate::Function,
info: &valid::FunctionInfo,
) -> Option<IndexableLength> {
let base_inner = info[base].ty.inner_with(&module.types);
// Unwrap safety: `Err` here indicates unindexable base types and invalid
// length constants, but `access_needs_check` is only used by back ends, so
// validation should have caught those problems.
let length = base_inner.indexable_length(module).unwrap();
index.try_resolve_to_constant(function, module);
if let (&GuardedIndex::Known(index), &IndexableLength::Known(length)) = (&index, &length) {
if index < length {
// Index is statically known to be in bounds, no check needed.
return None;
}
};
Some(length)
}
impl GuardedIndex {
/// Make a `GuardedIndex::Known` from a `GuardedIndex::Expression` if possible.
///
/// Return values that are already `Known` unchanged.
fn try_resolve_to_constant(&mut self, function: &crate::Function, module: &crate::Module) {
if let GuardedIndex::Expression(expr) = *self {
if let Ok(value) = module
.to_ctx()
.eval_expr_to_u32_from(expr, &function.expressions)
{
*self = GuardedIndex::Known(value);
}
}
}
}
#[derive(Clone, Copy, Debug, thiserror::Error, PartialEq)]
pub enum IndexableLengthError {
#[error("Type is not indexable, and has no length (validation error)")]
TypeNotIndexable,
#[error("Array length constant {0:?} is invalid")]
InvalidArrayLength(Handle<crate::Expression>),
}
impl crate::TypeInner {
/// Return the length of a subscriptable type.
///
/// The `self` parameter should be a handle to a vector, matrix, or array
/// type, a pointer to one of those, or a value pointer. Arrays may be
/// fixed-size, dynamically sized, or sized by a specializable constant.
/// This function does not handle struct member references, as with
/// `AccessIndex`.
///
/// The value returned is appropriate for bounds checks on subscripting.
///
/// Return an error if `self` does not describe a subscriptable type at all.
pub fn indexable_length(
&self,
module: &crate::Module,
) -> Result<IndexableLength, IndexableLengthError> {
use crate::TypeInner as Ti;
let known_length = match *self {
Ti::Vector { size, .. } => size as _,
Ti::Matrix { columns, .. } => columns as _,
Ti::Array { size, .. } | Ti::BindingArray { size, .. } => {
return size.to_indexable_length(module);
}
Ti::ValuePointer {
size: Some(size), ..
} => size as _,
Ti::Pointer { base, .. } => {
// When assigning types to expressions, ResolveContext::Resolve
// does a separate sub-match here instead of a full recursion,
// so we'll do the same.
let base_inner = &module.types[base].inner;
match *base_inner {
Ti::Vector { size, .. } => size as _,
Ti::Matrix { columns, .. } => columns as _,
Ti::Array { size, .. } | Ti::BindingArray { size, .. } => {
return size.to_indexable_length(module)
}
_ => return Err(IndexableLengthError::TypeNotIndexable),
}
}
_ => return Err(IndexableLengthError::TypeNotIndexable),
};
Ok(IndexableLength::Known(known_length))
}
}
/// The number of elements in an indexable type.
///
/// This summarizes the length of vectors, matrices, and arrays in a way that is
/// convenient for indexing and bounds-checking code.
#[derive(Debug)]
pub enum IndexableLength {
/// Values of this type always have the given number of elements.
Known(u32),
/// The number of elements is determined at runtime.
Dynamic,
}
impl crate::ArraySize {
pub const fn to_indexable_length(
self,
_module: &crate::Module,
) -> Result<IndexableLength, IndexableLengthError> {
Ok(match self {
Self::Constant(length) => IndexableLength::Known(length.get()),
Self::Dynamic => IndexableLength::Dynamic,
})
}
}
|