Hardware testing revealed that SSY and PBK push to a different stack,
allowing code like this:
SSY label1;
PBK label2;
SYNC;
label1: PBK;
label2: EXIT;
Analysis passes do not have a good reason to depend on shader_ir.h to
work on top of nodes. This splits node-related declarations to their own
file and leaves the IR in shader_ir.h
Instead of having a vector of unique_ptr stored in a vector and
returning star pointers to this, use shared_ptr. While changing
initialization code, move it to a separate file when possible.
This is a first step to allow code analysis and node generation beyond
the ShaderIR class.
This allows for forming comment nodes without making unnecessary copies
of the std::string instance.
e.g. previously:
Comment(fmt::format("Base address is c[0x{:x}][0x{:x}]",
cbuf->GetIndex(), cbuf_offset));
Would result in a copy of the string being created, as CommentNode()
takes a std::string by value (a const ref passed to a value parameter
results in a copy).
Now, only one instance of the string is ever moved around. (fmt::format
returns a std::string, and since it's returned from a function by value,
this is a prvalue (which can be treated like an rvalue), so it's moved
into Comment's string parameter), we then move it into the CommentNode
constructor, which then moves the string into its member variable).
Amends cases where we were using things that were indirectly being
satisfied through other headers. This way, if those headers change and
eliminate dependencies on other headers in the future, we don't have
cascading compilation errors.
Many of these constructors don't even need to be templated. The only
ones that need to be templated are the ones that actually make use of
the parameter pack.
Even then, since std::vector accepts an initializer list, we can supply
the parameter pack directly to it instead of creating our own copy of
the list, then copying it again into the std::vector.
Given the class contains quite a lot of non-trivial types, place the
constructor and destructor within the cpp file to avoid inlining
construction and destruction code everywhere the class is used.