[Nouveau] [Mesa-dev] Chromium - Application-level nouveau blacklist
Jason Ekstrand
jason at jlekstrand.net
Sun Jan 6 07:37:04 UTC 2019
On Sat, Jan 5, 2019 at 2:40 PM Ilia Mirkin <imirkin at alum.mit.edu> wrote:
> It looks like as of Chromium 71, nouveau is completely blacklisted.
>
That's rather unfortunate. :-( The intel mesa drivers were also
blacklisted for quite some time a while back. I'm not really sure what we
did to get blacklisted or what we did to get unblacklisted.
> I don't really see a way back from this, since they don't cite any
> easily reproducible issues, except that some people had some issues
> with indeterminate hardware and indeterminate versions of mesa.
>
> In the bug that triggered this
> (https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=876523), where
> I might have slightly lost my cool, they (at the end) suggested that
> we try to make nouveau a first-class citizen with chromium. However I
> will never be able to present concrete evidence that inconcrete issues
> are resolved. I did run the WebGL CTS suite, but that resulted in some
> hangs from the the max-texture-size-equivalent test, and some
> browser-level weirdness after some tests where later tests all fail
> (due to what I have to assume is a browser bug). I don't think I
> managed to properly track down the true reason why. I didn't want to
> reach out to them with such results, as that's just further evidence
> of nouveau not working perfectly.
>
If you want concrete bugs to fix, I highly recommend OpenGL[ES] conformance
tests, dEQP, and the WebGL CTS (which is mostly a re-hash of the OpenGL ES
3.0 CTS). Google cares quite a bit about driver conformance and are much
more likely to consider nouveau to be high-quality if those test suites are
in good shape. Years of experience dealing with Google says that dEQP
results speak much louder than philosophical arguments about who should
decide whether or not Chromium should accept the distro GL. Fortunately
for you, the well funded driver teams (Intel and AMD) have already done a
lot of the painful work of getting a lot of the bugs and "bugs" out of core
mesa and galium. What's left are likely real back-end driver bugs which
may be affecting some user somewhere so they're worth fixing.
> In the meanwhile, end users are losing accelerated WebGL which in
> practice worked just fine (at least in my usage of it), and probably
> some other functionality.
>
> One idea is to flip GL_VENDOR to some random string if chromium is
> running. I don't like this idea, but I also don't have any great
> alternatives. We can also just take this, as yet-another nail in the
> nouveau coffin.
>
You asked for opinions, so here you go. :-P In my personal (and rather
disinterested) opinion, I would recommend against such measures. The last
thing anyone needs is an arms race between nouveau and Chromium teams. I
think the better short-term thing to do would be to provide some
documentation about WebGL and educate users about Chromium's
--ignore-gpu-blacklist option. This documentation could go on the mesa
website or, likely more usefully, it could go in various distro wiki
entries about nouveau and/or general nvidia issues. In the long term,
what's needed is improving nouveau quality and stability and re-building
trust with the Chromium team. I'm not trying to attack nouveau here but
the fact is that trust has been lost due to an unfortunate history of
mis-filed (against Chromium) bugs. That trust doesn't get re-built by
nuclear solutions.
--Jason
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <https://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/nouveau/attachments/20190106/7c518ce8/attachment-0001.html>
More information about the Nouveau
mailing list