[RFC] Remove AGP support from Radeon/Nouveau/TTM
Emil Velikov
emil.l.velikov at gmail.com
Mon May 11 20:59:38 UTC 2020
On Mon, 11 May 2020 at 21:43, Dave Airlie <airlied at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> On Tue, 12 May 2020 at 06:28, Alex Deucher <alexdeucher at gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> > On Mon, May 11, 2020 at 4:22 PM Al Dunsmuir <al.dunsmuir at sympatico.ca> wrote:
> > >
> > > On Monday, May 11, 2020, 1:17:19 PM, "Christian König" wrote:
> > > > Hi guys,
> > >
> > > > Well let's face it AGP is a total headache to maintain and dead for at least 10+ years.
> > >
> > > > We have a lot of x86 specific stuff in the architecture independent
> > > > graphics memory management to get the caching right, abusing the DMA
> > > > API on multiple occasions, need to distinct between AGP and driver specific page tables etc etc...
> > >
> > > > So the idea here is to just go ahead and remove the support from
> > > > Radeon and Nouveau and then drop the necessary code from TTM.
> > >
> > > > For Radeon this means that we just switch over to the driver
> > > > specific page tables and everything should more or less continue to work.
> > >
> > > > For Nouveau I'm not 100% sure, but from the code it of hand looks
> > > > like we can do it similar to Radeon.
> > >
> > > > Please comment what you think about this.
> > >
> > > > Regards,
> > > > Christian.
> > >
> > > Christian,
> > >
> > > I would respectfully ask that this change be rejected.
> > >
> > > I'm currently an end user on both Intel (32-bit and 64-bit) and PPC
> > > (Macs, IBM Power - BE and LE).
> > >
> > > Linux is not just used for modern hardware. There is also a subset of
> > > the user base that uses it for what is often termed retro-computing.
> > > No it's not commercial usage, but no one can seriously claim that that
> > > Linux is for business only.
> > >
> > > Often the old hardware is built far batter than the modern junk, and
> > > will continue to run for years to come. This group of folks either has
> > > existing hardware they wish to continue to use, or are acquiring the
> > > same because they are tired of generic locked-down hardware.
> > >
> > > A significant percentage of the video hardware that falls in the retro
> > > category uses the AGP video bus. Removing that support for those cases
> > > where it works would severely limit performance and in some cases
> > > functionality. This can mean the difference between being able to run
> > > an application, or having it fail.
> > >
> >
> > Note there is no loss of functionality here, at least on radeon
> > hardware. It just comes down to which MMU gets used for access to
> > system memory, the AGP MMU on the chipset or the MMU built into the
> > GPU. On powerpc hardware, AGP has been particularly unstable, and AGP
> > has been disabled by default on radeon on powerpc for years now. In
> > fact, this will probably make older hardware more reliable as it takes
> > AGP out of the equation.
> >
>
> From memory there is quite a loss in speed though, like pretty severe.
>
> The radeon PCI GART has a single slot TLB, if memory serves.
>
> I think this is going to be a hard sell at this stage, I'm guessing
> users will crawl out of the woodwork, I'm sure with 2 hours after I'm
> able to access the office, I can boot the 865 AGP box with an rv350 in
> it on a modern distro.
>
I have a system with nforce2 motherboard and Nvidia fx5500 GPU. I
could dust it off and some quick performance tests over the weekend.
Unless someone beats me to it, of course :-)
-Emil
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