Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Newly allocated objects need to be in the CPU domain as they've just been
cleared by the CPU. Also, unmapping objects from the GTT needs to put them
into the CPU domain, both to flush rendering as well as to ensure that any
paging action gets flushed before we remap to the GTT.
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Leave the flush call in place, which can fix domains up if necessary.
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pread and pwrite must update the memory domains to ensure consistency with
the GPU. At some point, it should be possible to avoid clflush through this
path, but that isn't working for me.
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Make the API names a bit more consistent.
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Whitespace changes, a few too-long-lines and some extra braces.
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Domain information is about buffer relationships, not buffer contents. That
means a relocation contains the domain information as it knows how the
source buffer references the target buffer.
This also adds the set_domain ioctl so that user space can move buffers to
the cpu domain.
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Memory domains allow the kernel to track which caches to flush and how to
move objects before buffer execution.
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Track named objects in /proc/dri/0/gem_names.
Track total object count in /proc/dri/0/gem_objects.
Initialize device gem data.
return -ENODEV for gem ioctls if the driver doesn't support gem.
Call unlock_page when unbinding from gtt.
Add numerous misssing calls to drm_gem_object_unreference.
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Names are just another unique integer set (from another idr object).
Names are removed when the user refernces (handles) are all destroyed --
this required that handles for objects be counted separately from
internal kernel references (so that we can tell when the handles are all
gone).
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Now that drm_gem_object has a drm_driver * in it, functions don't need both
parameters.
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mixed 32/64 bit systems need 'special' help for ioctl where the user-space
and kernel-space datatypes differ. Fixing the datatypes to be the same size,
and align the same way for both 32 and 64-bit ppc and x86 environments will
elimiante the need to have magic 32/64-bit ioctl translation code.
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krefs are way easier than a custom-coded spinlock+int combo.
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