[Intel-gfx] [CI 2/2] drm/i915: Initialize legacy semaphores from engine hw id indexed array

Tvrtko Ursulin tvrtko.ursulin at linux.intel.com
Wed Aug 17 15:10:00 UTC 2016


On 17/08/16 15:44, Chris Wilson wrote:
> On Wed, Aug 17, 2016 at 03:36:51PM +0100, Tvrtko Ursulin wrote:
>> On 17/08/16 11:05, Chris Wilson wrote:
>>> On Wed, Aug 17, 2016 at 10:57:34AM +0100, Tvrtko Ursulin wrote:
>>>>
>>>> On 17/08/16 10:41, Chris Wilson wrote:
>>>>> On Wed, Aug 17, 2016 at 10:34:18AM +0100, Tvrtko Ursulin wrote:
>>>>>> Or add an initialized engine array to dev_priv, in addition to the
>>>>>> existing map for best of both worlds.
>>>>>
>>>>> We have the ring_mask which already tells us that mapping, so I think
>>>>> the second array is overkill.
>>>>
>>>> Yes, I said "in addition to the existing map". In addition we could
>>>> have an array of only initialized engines to avoid any skipping at
>>>> runtime. Since iterators end with intel_engine_initialized anyway.
>>>
>>> And I'm saying we already have that information in ring_mask.
>>
>> The ffs smarts you've been developing? I am not sure devising very
>> smart macros and expanding all that code to all the call sites is
>> that great. It is effectively just re-implementing arrays at runtime
>> using CPU instructions.
>>
>> What would be the big deal of just building the array when engines
>> are initialized for simplicity? Just the allure of getting away with
>> no iterator variable?
>
> It's just the redundant information. We definitely want the (sparse)
> id->engine lookup table just for convenience in execbuf and friends.
> Given that, having a second array is overkill. A list may be a
> reasonable compromise, and I guess pushing for using an ffs iterator
> where it matters (where we know we have a sparse set).

Don't get what you consider a list vs array? I was talking about an 
contiguous array of engine pointers (only initialized ones).

Can't see that it is redundant or overkill since it is not that uncommon 
to have two separate data structure/indices pointing the the same thing 
for ease of manipulation/use.

As I said, you build the list once at init time, or you build it 
effectively at the every iterator site. When you call ffs() you make the 
CPU do the skipping just on a lower level than the current C code does.

Regards,

Tvrtko




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