Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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With the interrupt enable/disable using only the mask register, it was wrong
to use the enable register to detect which pipes had vblank detection
turned on. Also, as we keep a local copy of the mask register around, and
MSI machines smack the hardware during the interrupt handler, it is more
efficient and more correct to use the local copy.
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This shares common code sequences for managing the interrupt register bits
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A mis-spelled config option (was it spelled that way in the past?)
eliminated kmap_atomic_prot_pfn from core DRM.
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I915_GEM_DOMAIN_CPU is very expensive to wait for -- it generally requires
clflushing the frame buffer.
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Clean up queues, free objects. On the next entervt, unmark the hardware to
let the user try again (presumably after resetting the chip). Someday we'll
automatically recover...
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Pin/copy_from_user/unpin through the GTT to eliminate clflush costs.
Benchmarks say this helps quite a bit.
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A mis-spelled config option (was it spelled that way in the past?)
eliminated kmap_atomic_prot_pfn from core DRM.
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I915_GEM_DOMAIN_CPU is very expensive to wait for -- it generally requires
clflushing the frame buffer.
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While debugging the 915, I tried this trick there and accidentally left it
set.
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Clean up queues, free objects. On the next entervt, unmark the hardware to
let the user try again (presumably after resetting the chip). Someday we'll
automatically recover...
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Pin/copy_from_user/unpin through the GTT to eliminate clflush costs.
Benchmarks say this helps quite a bit.
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still not sure which works best on which hardware; this will make it easier
to experiment.
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Noting that the interrupt mask register was more reliable than the interrupt
enable register for managing interrupts in user_irq_on/user_irq_off, this
patch replaces the remaining IER frobbing with IMR instead.
The test which exposes IER related failures is:
$ glxgears & glxgears & glxgears
(reposition the glxgears windows away from the upper left corner)
$ while :; do x11perf -rect100 -reps 800 -repeat 1; sleep 1; done &
$ while :; do runoa; runet; done &
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This tracks most of the interrupt-related status, including the
interrupt registers in the chip and the sequence number variables.
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Another patch adds this to a /proc/dri file for debugging and monitoring.
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While waiting for the hardware to idle on leavevt or lastclose, poll
for the sync sequence number instead of waiting for an interrupt. This
allows the code to bail if the hardware hangs for some reason. Also, this
avoids issues with signals as the exisiting wait function is interruptible.
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This adds gem_active, gem_flushing, gem_inactive, gem_request and gem_seqno
entries to monitor gem operation and help debug issues.
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This allows device drivers to add proc files
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find_or_create_page doesn't quite set up pages correctly; any newly created
pages aren't hooked into the shmem object quite right; user space mmaps of
those pages end up mapping pages full of zeros which then get written to the
real pages inappropriately. This patch requires that the kernel export
shmem_getpage.
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When a software fallback has completed, usermode must notify the kernel so
that any scanout buffers can be synchronized. This ioctl should be called
whenever a fallback completes to flush CPU and chipset caches.
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The PCI caps register reports MSI support even though it isn't really there.
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This fixes registration when MSI is set up after the stub function fills in
dev->irq. Otherwise /proc/interrupts would report attachment to the fasteoi
interrupt. dev->irq is still exposed (and updated at IRQ setup)
for the drivers that use it for whatever reason.
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In leavevt_ioctl, queue an MI_FLUSH and then block waiting for it to
complete. This will empty the active and flushing lists. That leaves only
the inactive list to evict.
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Pin/unpin need to know whether to remove/add objects from the inactive list,
inactive objects cannot be in any GPU write domain as those would be on the
flushing list instead. However, inactive objects may be in the CPU write
domain.
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Now that gem_object_unbind waits for rendering to complete, objects should
not be active when they are being pulled from the GTT. BUG_ON if this is
broken.
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Inactive list elements may not be pinned, active or have non-CPU write
domains.
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Moving to the CPU domain doesn't ensure that rendering is finished, the
buffer may still be in use as a texture or other data source.
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Receiving a signal should be ignored by the library, so just restart any
ioctl which returns EINTR or EAGAIN.
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Not quite portable, but these are useful for intel. Some more general
mechanism could be done...
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Loop end variable 'pinned' was set one too low.
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Pinning the objects avoids accidentally evicting them while binding
other objects.
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Record the last execbuffer sequence for each client.
Record that sequence in the throttle ioctl as the 'throttle sequence'.
Wait for the last throttle sequence in the throttle ioctl.
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When i915_wait_request clears object from the active list, it may end up
freeing them and not moving them to the inactive list. This ends up
unbinding objects from the GTT without there ever being new objects visible
to i915_gem_evict_something on the inactive list. As the only success
condition required the presence of objects on the inactive list, this would
falsely assume that no GTT space had been made available, and end up
returning -ENOMEM to the application.
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The interrupt identity register must be writen before any work occurs lest
we drop an interrupt on the floor. This patch just shuffles code around to
make sure that IIR is written as early as possible.
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We want request retirement to occur about once a second when the request
queue is non-empty. This was done with a timer that queued a work_struct,
using a delayed_work instead makes a lot more sense.
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i915_add_request was calling schedule_delayed_work before adding the request
to the list; it makes more sense to do that last.
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In the short-circuit code for the breadcrumb already being new enough, we
need to update the sarea_priv copy of the breadcrumb just as if we had
waited. Otherwise userland error checking will notice that we returned
too early based on its wrong information, and call wait_irq again (leading
to spinning until someone else comes along and updates the sarea_priv).
This bug was hidden when we had interrupt masking disabled, such as in
master, since the interrupt handler would update sarea_priv.
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Thanks to Thomas Hellstrom for catching the issue, no thanks to the kernel
developer who authoritatively told me that they would get restarted on their
own.
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This was insufficient once we started masking interrupts to only when someone
was waiting for them (and would thus retire requests themselves). It was
replaced by the retire_timer.
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