[PATCH v6 3/3] drm/doc/rfc: VM_BIND uapi definition
Jason Ekstrand
jason at jlekstrand.net
Thu Jun 30 05:11:15 UTC 2022
On Sat, Jun 25, 2022 at 8:49 PM Niranjana Vishwanathapura <
niranjana.vishwanathapura at intel.com> wrote:
> VM_BIND and related uapi definitions
>
> v2: Reduce the scope to simple Mesa use case.
> v3: Expand VM_UNBIND documentation and add
> I915_GEM_VM_BIND/UNBIND_FENCE_VALID
> and I915_GEM_VM_BIND_TLB_FLUSH flags.
> v4: Remove I915_GEM_VM_BIND_TLB_FLUSH flag and add additional
> documentation for vm_bind/unbind.
> v5: Remove TLB flush requirement on VM_UNBIND.
> Add version support to stage implementation.
> v6: Define and use drm_i915_gem_timeline_fence structure for
> all timeline fences.
> v7: Rename I915_PARAM_HAS_VM_BIND to I915_PARAM_VM_BIND_VERSION.
> Update documentation on async vm_bind/unbind and versioning.
> Remove redundant vm_bind/unbind FENCE_VALID flag, execbuf3
> batch_count field and I915_EXEC3_SECURE flag.
>
> Signed-off-by: Niranjana Vishwanathapura <
> niranjana.vishwanathapura at intel.com>
> Reviewed-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter at ffwll.ch>
> ---
> Documentation/gpu/rfc/i915_vm_bind.h | 280 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++
> 1 file changed, 280 insertions(+)
> create mode 100644 Documentation/gpu/rfc/i915_vm_bind.h
>
> diff --git a/Documentation/gpu/rfc/i915_vm_bind.h
> b/Documentation/gpu/rfc/i915_vm_bind.h
> new file mode 100644
> index 000000000000..a93e08bceee6
> --- /dev/null
> +++ b/Documentation/gpu/rfc/i915_vm_bind.h
> @@ -0,0 +1,280 @@
> +/* SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT */
> +/*
> + * Copyright © 2022 Intel Corporation
> + */
> +
> +/**
> + * DOC: I915_PARAM_VM_BIND_VERSION
> + *
> + * VM_BIND feature version supported.
> + * See typedef drm_i915_getparam_t param.
> + *
> + * Specifies the VM_BIND feature version supported.
> + * The following versions of VM_BIND have been defined:
> + *
> + * 0: No VM_BIND support.
> + *
> + * 1: In VM_UNBIND calls, the UMD must specify the exact mappings created
> + * previously with VM_BIND, the ioctl will not support unbinding
> multiple
> + * mappings or splitting them. Similarly, VM_BIND calls will not
> replace
> + * any existing mappings.
> + *
> + * 2: The restrictions on unbinding partial or multiple mappings is
> + * lifted, Similarly, binding will replace any mappings in the given
> range.
> + *
> + * See struct drm_i915_gem_vm_bind and struct drm_i915_gem_vm_unbind.
> + */
> +#define I915_PARAM_VM_BIND_VERSION 57
> +
> +/**
> + * DOC: I915_VM_CREATE_FLAGS_USE_VM_BIND
> + *
> + * Flag to opt-in for VM_BIND mode of binding during VM creation.
> + * See struct drm_i915_gem_vm_control flags.
> + *
> + * The older execbuf2 ioctl will not support VM_BIND mode of operation.
> + * For VM_BIND mode, we have new execbuf3 ioctl which will not accept any
> + * execlist (See struct drm_i915_gem_execbuffer3 for more details).
> + */
> +#define I915_VM_CREATE_FLAGS_USE_VM_BIND (1 << 0)
> +
> +/* VM_BIND related ioctls */
> +#define DRM_I915_GEM_VM_BIND 0x3d
> +#define DRM_I915_GEM_VM_UNBIND 0x3e
> +#define DRM_I915_GEM_EXECBUFFER3 0x3f
> +
> +#define DRM_IOCTL_I915_GEM_VM_BIND DRM_IOWR(DRM_COMMAND_BASE
> + DRM_I915_GEM_VM_BIND, struct drm_i915_gem_vm_bind)
> +#define DRM_IOCTL_I915_GEM_VM_UNBIND DRM_IOWR(DRM_COMMAND_BASE
> + DRM_I915_GEM_VM_UNBIND, struct drm_i915_gem_vm_bind)
> +#define DRM_IOCTL_I915_GEM_EXECBUFFER3 DRM_IOWR(DRM_COMMAND_BASE
> + DRM_I915_GEM_EXECBUFFER3, struct drm_i915_gem_execbuffer3)
> +
> +/**
> + * struct drm_i915_gem_timeline_fence - An input or output timeline fence.
> + *
> + * The operation will wait for input fence to signal.
> + *
> + * The returned output fence will be signaled after the completion of the
> + * operation.
> + */
> +struct drm_i915_gem_timeline_fence {
> + /** @handle: User's handle for a drm_syncobj to wait on or signal.
> */
> + __u32 handle;
> +
> + /**
> + * @flags: Supported flags are:
> + *
> + * I915_TIMELINE_FENCE_WAIT:
> + * Wait for the input fence before the operation.
> + *
> + * I915_TIMELINE_FENCE_SIGNAL:
> + * Return operation completion fence as output.
> + */
> + __u32 flags;
> +#define I915_TIMELINE_FENCE_WAIT (1 << 0)
> +#define I915_TIMELINE_FENCE_SIGNAL (1 << 1)
> +#define __I915_TIMELINE_FENCE_UNKNOWN_FLAGS (-(I915_TIMELINE_FENCE_SIGNAL
> << 1))
> +
> + /**
> + * @value: A point in the timeline.
> + * Value must be 0 for a binary drm_syncobj. A Value of 0 for a
> + * timeline drm_syncobj is invalid as it turns a drm_syncobj into a
> + * binary one.
> + */
> + __u64 value;
> +};
> +
> +/**
> + * struct drm_i915_gem_vm_bind - VA to object mapping to bind.
> + *
> + * This structure is passed to VM_BIND ioctl and specifies the mapping of
> GPU
> + * virtual address (VA) range to the section of an object that should be
> bound
> + * in the device page table of the specified address space (VM).
> + * The VA range specified must be unique (ie., not currently bound) and
> can
> + * be mapped to whole object or a section of the object (partial binding).
> + * Multiple VA mappings can be created to the same section of the object
> + * (aliasing).
> + *
> + * The @start, @offset and @length must be 4K page aligned. However the
> DG2
> + * and XEHPSDV has 64K page size for device local-memory and has compact
> page
> + * table. On those platforms, for binding device local-memory objects, the
> + * @start must be 2M aligned, @offset and @length must be 64K aligned.
>
This is not acceptable. We need 64K granularity. This includes the
starting address, the BO offset, and the length. Why? The tl;dr is that
it's a requirement for about 50% of D3D12 apps if we want them to run on
Linux via D3D12. A longer explanation follows. I don't necessarily expect
kernel folks to get all the details but hopefully I'll have left enough of
a map that some of the Intel Mesa folks can help fill in details.
Many modern D3D12 apps have a hard requirement on Tier2 tiled resources.
This is a feature that Intel has supported in the D3D12 driver since
Skylake. In order to implement this feature, VKD3D requires the various
sparseResidencyImage* and sparseResidency*Sampled Vulkan features. If we
want those apps to work (there's getting to be quite a few of them), we
need to implement the Vulkan sparse residency features.
What is sparse residency? I'm glad you asked! The sparse residency
features allow a client to separately bind each miplevel or array slice of
an image to a chunk of device memory independently, without affecting any
other areas of the image. Once you get to a high enough miplevel that
everything fits inside a single sparse image block (that's a technical
Vulkan term you can search for in the spec), you can enter a "miptail"
which contains all the remaining miplevels in a single sparse image block.
The term "sparse image block" is what the Vulkan spec uses. On Intel
hardware and in the docs, it's what we call a "tile". Specifically, the
image needs to use Yf or Ys tiling on SKL-TGL or a Tile64 on DG2+. This is
because Tile4 and legacy X and Y-tiling don't provide any guarantees about
page alignment for slices. Yf, Ys, and Tile64, on the other hand, align
all slices of the image to a tile boundary, allowing us to map memory to
different slices independently, assuming we have 64K (or 4K for Yf) VM_BIND
granularity. (4K isn't actually a requirement for SKL-TGL; we can use Ys
all the time which has 64K tiles but there's no reason to not support 4K
alignments on integrated.)
Someone may be tempted to ask, "Can't we wiggle the strides around or
something to make it work?" I thought about that and no, you can't. The
problem here is LOD2+. Sure, you can have a stride such that the image is
a multiple of 2M worth of tiles across. That'll work fine for LOD0 and
LOD1; both will be 2M aligned. However, LOD2 won't be and there's no way
to control that. The hardware will place it to the right of LOD1 by
ROUND_UP(width, tile_width) pixels and there's nothing you can do about
that. If that position doesn't happen to hit a 2M boundary, you're out of
luck.
I hope that explanation provides enough detail. Sadly, this is one of
those things which has a lot of moving pieces all over different bits of
the hardware and various APIs and they all have to work together just right
for it to all come out in the end. But, yeah, we really need 64K aligned
binding if we want VKD3D to work.
--Jason
> + * Also, for such mappings, i915 will reserve the whole 2M range for it
> so as
> + * to not allow multiple mappings in that 2M range (Compact page tables
> do not
> + * allow 64K page and 4K page bindings in the same 2M range).
> + *
> + * Error code -EINVAL will be returned if @start, @offset and @length are
> not
> + * properly aligned. In version 1 (See I915_PARAM_VM_BIND_VERSION), error
> code
> + * -ENOSPC will be returned if the VA range specified can't be reserved.
> + *
> + * VM_BIND/UNBIND ioctl calls executed on different CPU threads
> concurrently
> + * are not ordered. Furthermore, parts of the VM_BIND operation can be
> done
> + * asynchronously, if valid @fence is specified.
> + */
> +struct drm_i915_gem_vm_bind {
> + /** @vm_id: VM (address space) id to bind */
> + __u32 vm_id;
> +
> + /** @handle: Object handle */
> + __u32 handle;
> +
> + /** @start: Virtual Address start to bind */
> + __u64 start;
> +
> + /** @offset: Offset in object to bind */
> + __u64 offset;
> +
> + /** @length: Length of mapping to bind */
> + __u64 length;
> +
> + /**
> + * @flags: Supported flags are:
> + *
> + * I915_GEM_VM_BIND_READONLY:
> + * Mapping is read-only.
> + *
> + * I915_GEM_VM_BIND_CAPTURE:
> + * Capture this mapping in the dump upon GPU error.
> + */
> + __u64 flags;
> +#define I915_GEM_VM_BIND_READONLY (1 << 1)
> +#define I915_GEM_VM_BIND_CAPTURE (1 << 2)
> +
> + /**
> + * @fence: Timeline fence for bind completion signaling.
> + *
> + * It is an out fence, hence using I915_TIMELINE_FENCE_WAIT flag
> + * is invalid, and an error will be returned.
> + */
> + struct drm_i915_gem_timeline_fence fence;
> +
> + /**
> + * @extensions: Zero-terminated chain of extensions.
> + *
> + * For future extensions. See struct i915_user_extension.
> + */
> + __u64 extensions;
> +};
> +
> +/**
> + * struct drm_i915_gem_vm_unbind - VA to object mapping to unbind.
> + *
> + * This structure is passed to VM_UNBIND ioctl and specifies the GPU
> virtual
> + * address (VA) range that should be unbound from the device page table
> of the
> + * specified address space (VM). VM_UNBIND will force unbind the specified
> + * range from device page table without waiting for any GPU job to
> complete.
> + * It is UMDs responsibility to ensure the mapping is no longer in use
> before
> + * calling VM_UNBIND.
> + *
> + * If the specified mapping is not found, the ioctl will simply return
> without
> + * any error.
> + *
> + * VM_BIND/UNBIND ioctl calls executed on different CPU threads
> concurrently
> + * are not ordered. Furthermore, parts of the VM_UNBIND operation can be
> done
> + * asynchronously, if valid @fence is specified.
> + */
> +struct drm_i915_gem_vm_unbind {
> + /** @vm_id: VM (address space) id to bind */
> + __u32 vm_id;
> +
> + /** @rsvd: Reserved, MBZ */
> + __u32 rsvd;
> +
> + /** @start: Virtual Address start to unbind */
> + __u64 start;
> +
> + /** @length: Length of mapping to unbind */
> + __u64 length;
> +
> + /** @flags: Currently reserved, MBZ */
> + __u64 flags;
> +
> + /**
> + * @fence: Timeline fence for unbind completion signaling.
> + *
> + * It is an out fence, hence using I915_TIMELINE_FENCE_WAIT flag
> + * is invalid, and an error will be returned.
> + */
> + struct drm_i915_gem_timeline_fence fence;
> +
> + /**
> + * @extensions: Zero-terminated chain of extensions.
> + *
> + * For future extensions. See struct i915_user_extension.
> + */
> + __u64 extensions;
> +};
> +
> +/**
> + * struct drm_i915_gem_execbuffer3 - Structure for
> DRM_I915_GEM_EXECBUFFER3
> + * ioctl.
> + *
> + * DRM_I915_GEM_EXECBUFFER3 ioctl only works in VM_BIND mode and VM_BIND
> mode
> + * only works with this ioctl for submission.
> + * See I915_VM_CREATE_FLAGS_USE_VM_BIND.
> + */
> +struct drm_i915_gem_execbuffer3 {
> + /**
> + * @ctx_id: Context id
> + *
> + * Only contexts with user engine map are allowed.
> + */
> + __u32 ctx_id;
> +
> + /**
> + * @engine_idx: Engine index
> + *
> + * An index in the user engine map of the context specified by
> @ctx_id.
> + */
> + __u32 engine_idx;
> +
> + /**
> + * @batch_address: Batch gpu virtual address/es.
> + *
> + * For normal submission, it is the gpu virtual address of the
> batch
> + * buffer. For parallel submission, it is a pointer to an array of
> + * batch buffer gpu virtual addresses with array size equal to the
> + * number of (parallel) engines involved in that submission (See
> + * struct i915_context_engines_parallel_submit).
> + */
> + __u64 batch_address;
> +
> + /** @flags: Currently reserved, MBZ */
> + __u64 flags;
> +
> + /** @rsvd1: Reserved, MBZ */
> + __u32 rsvd1;
> +
> + /** @fence_count: Number of fences in @timeline_fences array. */
> + __u32 fence_count;
> +
> + /**
> + * @timeline_fences: Pointer to an array of timeline fences.
> + *
> + * Timeline fences are of format struct
> drm_i915_gem_timeline_fence.
> + */
> + __u64 timeline_fences;
> +
> + /** @rsvd2: Reserved, MBZ */
> + __u64 rsvd2;
> +
> + /**
> + * @extensions: Zero-terminated chain of extensions.
> + *
> + * For future extensions. See struct i915_user_extension.
> + */
> + __u64 extensions;
> +};
> +
> +/**
> + * struct drm_i915_gem_create_ext_vm_private - Extension to make the
> object
> + * private to the specified VM.
> + *
> + * See struct drm_i915_gem_create_ext.
> + */
> +struct drm_i915_gem_create_ext_vm_private {
> +#define I915_GEM_CREATE_EXT_VM_PRIVATE 2
> + /** @base: Extension link. See struct i915_user_extension. */
> + struct i915_user_extension base;
> +
> + /** @vm_id: Id of the VM to which the object is private */
> + __u32 vm_id;
> +};
> --
> 2.21.0.rc0.32.g243a4c7e27
>
>
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