[Intel-gfx] [PATCH v6 00/20] drm/i915/vm_bind: Add VM_BIND functionality
Zanoni, Paulo R
paulo.r.zanoni at intel.com
Thu Nov 10 21:37:20 UTC 2022
On Thu, 2022-11-10 at 15:05 +0000, Matthew Auld wrote:
> On 10/11/2022 14:47, Tvrtko Ursulin wrote:
> >
> > On 10/11/2022 05:49, Niranjana Vishwanathapura wrote:
> > > On Wed, Nov 09, 2022 at 04:16:25PM -0800, Zanoni, Paulo R wrote:
> > > > On Mon, 2022-11-07 at 00:51 -0800, Niranjana Vishwanathapura wrote:
> > > > > DRM_I915_GEM_VM_BIND/UNBIND ioctls allows UMD to bind/unbind GEM
> > > > > buffer objects (BOs) or sections of a BOs at specified GPU virtual
> > > > > addresses on a specified address space (VM). Multiple mappings can map
> > > > > to the same physical pages of an object (aliasing). These mappings
> > > > > (also
> > > > > referred to as persistent mappings) will be persistent across multiple
> > > > > GPU submissions (execbuf calls) issued by the UMD, without user having
> > > > > to provide a list of all required mappings during each submission (as
> > > > > required by older execbuf mode).
> > > > >
> > > > > This patch series support VM_BIND version 1, as described by the param
> > > > > I915_PARAM_VM_BIND_VERSION.
> > > > >
> > > > > Add new execbuf3 ioctl (I915_GEM_EXECBUFFER3) which only works in
> > > > > vm_bind mode. The vm_bind mode only works with this new execbuf3 ioctl.
> > > > > The new execbuf3 ioctl will not have any execlist support and all the
> > > > > legacy support like relocations etc., are removed.
> > > > >
> > > > > NOTEs:
> > > > > * It is based on below VM_BIND design+uapi rfc.
> > > > > Documentation/gpu/rfc/i915_vm_bind.rst
> > > >
> > > > Hi
> > > >
> > > > One difference for execbuf3 that I noticed that is not mentioned in the
> > > > RFC document is that we now don't have a way to signal
> > > > EXEC_OBJECT_WRITE. When looking at the Kernel code, some there are some
> > > > pieces that check for this flag:
> > > >
> > > > - there's code that deals with frontbuffer rendering
> > > > - there's code that deals with fences
> > > > - there's code that prevents self-modifying batches
> > > > - another that seems related to waiting for objects
> > > >
> > > > Are there any new rules regarding frontbuffer rendering when we use
> > > > execbuf3? Any other behavior changes related to the other places that
> > > > we should expect when using execbuf3?
> > > >
> > >
> > > Paulo,
> > > Most of the EXEC_OBJECT_WRITE check in execbuf path is related to
> > > implicit dependency tracker which execbuf3 does not support. The
> > > frontbuffer related updated is the only exception and I don't
> > > remember the rationale to not require this on execbuf3.
> > >
> > > Matt, Tvrtko, Daniel, can you please comment here?
> >
> > Does not ring a bell to me. Looking at the code it certainly looks like
> > it would be silently failing to handle it properly.
> >
> > I'll let people with more experience in this area answer, but from my
> > point of view, if it is decided that it can be left unsupported, then we
> > probably need a way of failing the ioctl is used against a frontbuffer,
> > or something, instead of having display corruption.
There's no way for the ioctl to even know we're writing to
frontbuffers. Unless of course it decides to parse the whole
batchbuffer and understand everything that's going on there, which
sounds insane.
>
> Maybe it's a coincidence but there is:
> https://patchwork.freedesktop.org/series/110715/
>
> Which looks relevant. Maarten, any hints here?
Can we pretty please have the rules of frontbuffer tracking written
anywhere? I had major trouble trying to understand this back when I was
working on FBC, and now I regret not having written it back then
because I just forgot how it's supposed to work.
My first guess when looking at that patch is that it would completely
break FBC, but hey so many years have passed since I worked on this
that maybe things changed completely. At least I wrote tests to cover
this.
>
> >
> > Regards,
> >
> > Tvrtko
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