[PATCH 0/4] Drop wbinvd_on_all_cpus usage

Thomas Hellström thomas.hellstrom at linux.intel.com
Mon Mar 21 15:15:01 UTC 2022


On Mon, 2022-03-21 at 14:43 +0000, Tvrtko Ursulin wrote:
> 
> On 21/03/2022 13:40, Thomas Hellström wrote:
> > Hi,
> > 
> > On Mon, 2022-03-21 at 13:12 +0000, Tvrtko Ursulin wrote:
> > > 
> > > On 21/03/2022 12:33, Thomas Hellström wrote:
> > > > On Mon, 2022-03-21 at 12:22 +0000, Tvrtko Ursulin wrote:
> > > > > 
> > > > > On 21/03/2022 11:03, Thomas Hellström wrote:
> > > > > > Hi, Tvrtko.
> > > > > > 
> > > > > > On 3/21/22 11:27, Tvrtko Ursulin wrote:
> > > > > > > 
> > > > > > > On 19/03/2022 19:42, Michael Cheng wrote:
> > > > > > > > To align with the discussion in [1][2], this patch
> > > > > > > > series
> > > > > > > > drops
> > > > > > > > all
> > > > > > > > usage of
> > > > > > > > wbvind_on_all_cpus within i915 by either replacing the
> > > > > > > > call
> > > > > > > > with certain
> > > > > > > > drm clflush helpers, or reverting to a previous logic.
> > > > > > > 
> > > > > > > AFAIU, complaint from [1] was that it is wrong to provide
> > > > > > > non
> > > > > > > x86
> > > > > > > implementations under the wbinvd_on_all_cpus name.
> > > > > > > Instead an
> > > > > > > arch
> > > > > > > agnostic helper which achieves the same effect could be
> > > > > > > created.
> > > > > > > Does
> > > > > > > Arm have such concept?
> > > > > > 
> > > > > > I also understand Linus' email like we shouldn't leak
> > > > > > incoherent
> > > > > > IO
> > > > > > to
> > > > > > other architectures, meaning any remaining wbinvd()s should
> > > > > > be
> > > > > > X86
> > > > > > only.
> > > > > 
> > > > > The last part is completely obvious since it is a x86
> > > > > instruction
> > > > > name.
> > > > 
> > > > Yeah, I meant the function implementing wbinvd() semantics.
> > > > 
> > > > > 
> > > > > But I think we can't pick a solution until we know how the
> > > > > concept
> > > > > maps
> > > > > to Arm and that will also include seeing how the
> > > > > drm_clflush_sg for
> > > > > Arm
> > > > > would look. Is there a range based solution, or just a big
> > > > > hammer
> > > > > there.
> > > > > If the latter, then it is no good to churn all these reverts
> > > > > but
> > > > > instead
> > > > > an arch agnostic wrapper, with a generic name, would be the
> > > > > way to
> > > > > go.
> > > > 
> > > > But my impression was that ARM would not need the range-based
> > > > interface
> > > > either, because ARM is only for discrete and with discrete
> > > > we're
> > > > always
> > > > coherent.
> > > 
> > > Not sure what you mean here - what about flushing system memory
> > > objects
> > > on discrete? Those still need flushing on paths like suspend
> > > which this
> > > series touches. Am I missing something?
> > 
> > System bos on discrete should always have
> > 
> > I915_BO_CACHE_COHERENT_FOR_READ | I915_BO_CACHE_COHERENT_FOR_WRITE
> > 
> > either by the gpu being fully cache coherent (or us mapping system
> > write-combined). Hence no need for cache clflushes or wbinvd() for
> > incoherent IO.
> 
> Hmm so you are talking about the shmem ttm backend. It ends up
> depending on the result of i915_ttm_cache_level, yes? It cannot end
> up with I915_CACHE_NONE from that function?

If the object is allocated with allowable placement in either LMEM or
SYSTEM, and it ends in system, it gets allocated with I915_CACHE_NONE,
but then the shmem ttm backend isn't used but TTM's wc pools, and the
object should *always* be mapped wc. Even in system.

> 
> I also found in i915_drm.h:
> 
>          * As caching mode when specifying `I915_MMAP_OFFSET_FIXED`,
> WC or WB will
>          * be used, depending on the object placement on creation. WB
> will be used
>          * when the object can only exist in system memory, WC
> otherwise.
> 
> If what you say is true, that on discrete it is _always_ WC, then
> that needs updating as well.

If an object is allocated as system only, then it is mapped WB, and
we're relying on the gpu being cache coherent to avoid clflushes. Same
is actually currently true if the object happens to be accessed by the
cpu while evicted. Might need an update for that.

> 
> > 
> > That's adhering to Linus'
> > 
> > "And I sincerely hope to the gods that no cache-incoherent i915
> > mess
> > ever makes it out of the x86 world. Incoherent IO was always a
> > historical mistake and should never ever happen again, so we should
> > not spread that horrific pattern around."
> 
> Sure, but I was not talking about IO - just the CPU side access to
> CPU side objects.

OK, I was under the impression that clflushes() and wbinvd()s in i915
was only ever used to make data visible to non-snooping GPUs. 

Do you mean that there are other uses as well? Agreed the wb cache
flush on on suspend only if gpu is !I915_BO_CACHE_COHERENT_FOR_READ?
looks to not fit this pattern completely.

Otherwise, for architectures where memory isn't always fully coherent
with the cpu cache, I'd expect them to use the apis in
asm/cacheflush.h, like flush_cache_range() and similar, which are nops
on x86.

Thanks,
Thomas


> 
> Regards,
> 
> Tvrtko




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