[RFC 0/5] rework fences on struct sync_file
Christian König
deathsimple at vodafone.de
Fri Jun 24 14:14:10 UTC 2016
Am 24.06.2016 um 15:17 schrieb Gustavo Padovan:
> Hi Christian,
>
> 2016-06-24 Christian König <christian.koenig at amd.com>:
>
>> Am 23.06.2016 um 17:29 schrieb Gustavo Padovan:
>>> From: Gustavo Padovan <gustavo.padovan at collabora.co.uk>
>>>
>>> Hi all,
>>>
>>> This is an attempt to improve fence support on Sync File. The basic idea
>>> is to have only sync_file->fence and store all fences there, either as
>>> normal fences or fence_arrays. That way we can remove some potential
>>> duplication when using fence_array with sync_file: the duplication of the array
>>> of fences and the duplication of fence_add_callback() for all fences.
>>>
>>> Now when creating a new sync_file during the merge process sync_file_set_fence()
>>> will set sync_file->fence based on the number of fences for that sync_file. If
>>> there is more than one fence a fence_array is created. One important advantage
>>> approach is that we only add one fence callback now, no matter how many fences
>>> there are in a sync_file - the individual callbacks are added by fence_array.
>>>
>>> Two fence ops had to be created to help abstract the difference between handling
>>> fences and fences_arrays: .teardown() and .get_fences(). The former run needed
>>> on fence_array, and the latter just return a copy of all fences in the fence.
>>> I'm not so sure about adding those two, speacially .get_fences(). What do you
>>> think?
>> Clearly not a good idea to add this a fence ops, cause those are specialized
>> functions for only a certain fence implementation (the fence_array).
> Are you refering only to .get_fences()?
That comment was only for the get_fences() operation, but the teardown()
callback looks very suspicious to me as well.
Can you explain once more why that should be necessary?
Regards,
Christian.
>
>> What you should do is try to cast the fence in your sync file using
>> to_fence_array() and then you can access the fences in the array.
> Yes, that seems a better idea I think. The initial idea was to abstract
> the difference as much as possible, but it doesn't seem really worth
> for .get_fences().
>
> Gustavo
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