We have been doing a better job at hiding device code (and moving code
into libraries). Smoke out source that no longer needs to be compiled by
device compilers.
The newer version of `ArrayHandle` no longer supports different types of
portals for different devices. Thus, the `ReadPortalType` and
`WritePortalType` are sufficient for all types of portals across all
devices.
This significantly simplifies supporting execution objects on devices,
and thus this change also includes many changes to various execution
objects to remove their dependence on the device adapter tag.
Marked the old versions of PrepareFor* that do not use tokens as
deprecated and moved all of the code to use the new versions that
require a token. This makes the scope of the execution object more
explicit so that it will be kept while in use and can potentially be
reclaimed afterward.
It is very easy to cause ODR violations with DeviceAdapterTagCuda.
If you include that header from a C++ file and a CUDA file inside
the same program we an ODR violation. The reasons is that the C++
versions will say the tag is invalid, and the CUDA will say the
tag is valid.
The solution to this is that any compilation unit that includes
DeviceAdapterTagCuda from a version of VTK-m that has CUDA enabled
must be invoked by the cuda compiler.
While making changes to how execution objects work, we had agreed to
name the base object ExecutionObjectBase instead of its original name of
ExecutionObjectFactoryBase. Somehow that change did not make it through.
cleaned up a logic error texture2d and cleaned how the constructor for execution object was being called. Also, went and cleaned up how the execution object was being created for particle to align it with the same method for creating the execution object.
In order to make the change from the current way execution obejcts are utilized to the new proposed executionObjectFactory process type checks now has to look for the new execution object factory class to check against.