[PATCH 2/5] drm/nouveau: add reservation to nouveau_gem_ioctl_cpu_prep

Thomas Hellstrom thellstrom at vmware.com
Wed Jan 22 01:40:24 PST 2014


On 01/22/2014 09:19 AM, Maarten Lankhorst wrote:
> op 21-01-14 18:44, Thomas Hellstrom schreef:
>> On 01/21/2014 04:29 PM, Maarten Lankhorst wrote:
>>> Hey,
>>>
>>> op 21-01-14 16:17, Thomas Hellstrom schreef:
>>>> Maarten, for this and the other patches in this series,
>>>>
>>>> I seem to recall we have this discussion before?
>>>> IIRC I stated that reservation was a too heavy-weight lock to hold to
>>>> determine whether a buffer was idle? It's a pretty nasty thing to
>>>> build in.
>>>>
>>> I've sent this patch after determining that this already didn't end up
>>> being heavyweight.
>>> Most places were already using the fence_lock and reservation, I just
>>> fixed up the few
>>> places that didn't hold a reservation while waiting. Converting the
>>> few places that didn't
>>> ended up being trivial, so I thought I'd submit it.
>> Actually the only *valid* reason for holding a reservation when waiting
>> for idle is
>> 1) You want to block further command submission on the buffer.
>> 2) You want to switch GPU engine and don't have access to gpu semaphores
>> / barriers.
>>
>> Reservation has the nasty side effect that it blocks command submission
>> and pins the buffer (in addition now makes the evict list traversals
>> skip the buffer) which in general is *not* necessary for most wait
>> cases, so we should instead actually convert the wait cases that don't
>> fulfill 1) and 2) above in the other direction if we have performance
>> and latency-reduction in mind. I can't see how a spinlock protecting a
>> fence pointer or fence list is stopping you from using RW fences as long
>> as the spinlock is held while manipulating the fence list?
>>
> You wish. Fine I'll enumerate all cases of ttm_bo_wait (with the
> patchset, though) and enumerate if they can be changed to work without
> reservation or not.
>
> ttm/ttm_bo.c
> ttm_bo_cleanup_refs_or_queue: needs reservation and ttm_bo_wait to
> finish for the direct destroy fastpath, if either fails it needs to be
> queued. Cannot work without reservation.

Doesn't block and no significant reservation contention expected.

> ttm_bo_cleanup_refs_and_unlock: already drops reservation to wait,
> doesn't need to re-acquire. Simply reordering ttm_bo_wait until after
> re-reserve is enough.

Currently follows the above rules.

> ttm_bo_evict: already has the reservation, cannot be dropped since
> only trylock is allowed. Dropping reservation would cause badness,
> cannot be converted.

Follows rule 2 above. We're about to move the buffer and if that can't
be pipelined using the GPU (which TTM currently doesn't allow), we need
to wait. Although eviction should be low priority compared to new
command submission, so I can't really see why we couldn't wait before
trying to reserve here?

>
> ttm_bo_move_buffer: called from ttm_bo_validate, cannot drop
> reservation for same reason as ttm_bo_evict. It might be part of a
> ticketed reservation so really don't drop lock here.

Part of command submission and as such follows rule 2 above. If we can
pipeline the move with the GPU, no need to wait (but needs to be
implemented, of course).

>
> ttm_bo_synccpu_write_grab: the wait could be converted to be done
> afterwards, without  fence_lock. But in this case reservation could
> take the role of fence_lock too,
>
> so no separate fence_lock would be needed.

With the exception that reservation is more likely to be contended.

> ttm_bo_swapout: see ttm_bo_evict.
>
> ttm/ttm_bo_util.c:
> ttm_bo_move_accel_cleanup: calls ttm_bo_wait, cannot drop lock, see
> ttm_bo_move_buffer, can be called from that function.

Rule 2.

>
> ttm/ttm_bo_vm.c
> ttm_bo_vm_fault_idle: I guess you COULD drop the reservation here, but
> you already had the reservation, so a similar optimization to
> ttm_bo_synccpu_write_grab could be done without requiring fence_lock.
> If you would write it like that, you would end up with a patch similar
> to drm/nouveau: add reservation to nouveau_gem_ioctl_cpu_prep. I think
> we should do this, an
>
> Ok, so the core does NOT need fence_lock because we can never drop
> reservations except in synccpu_write_grab and maybe
> ttm_bo_vm_fault_idle, but even in those cases reservation is done. So
> that could be used instead of fence_lock.
>
> nouveau_gem_ioctl_cpu_prep:
> Either block on a global spinlock or a local reservation lock. Doesn't
> matter much which, I don't need the need to keep a global lock for
> this function...
> 2 cases can happen in the trylock reservation failure case: buffer is
> not reserved, so it's not in the process of being evicted. buffer is
> reserved, which means it's being used in command submission right now,
> or in one of the functions described above (eg not idle).
>
> nouveau_gem_pushbuf_reloc_apply:
> has to call ttm_bo_wait with reservation, cannot be dropped.
>
> So for core ttm and nouveau the fence_lock is never needed, radeon has
> only 1 function that calls ttm_bo_wait which uses a reservation too.
> It doesn't need the fence_lock either.

And vmwgfx now also has a syccpu IOCTL (see drm-next).

So assuming that we converted the functions that can be converted to
wait outside of reservation, the same way you have done with Nouveau,
leaving the ones that fall under 1) and 2) above, I would still argue
that a spinlock should be used because taking a reservation may
implicitly mean wait for gpu, and could give bad performance- and
latency charateristics. You shouldn't need to wait for gpu to check for
buffer idle.

/Thomas




>
> ~Maarten


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