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On many chipsets, the checks for DPLL enable or VGA mode will prevent the
pipeconf regs from being restored, which could result in a blank display or X
failing to come back after resume. So restore them unconditionally along with
actually restoring pipe B's palette correctly.
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On resume, if the interrupt state isn't restored correctly, we may end
up with a flood of unexpected or ill-timed interrupts, which could cause
the kernel to disable the interrupt or vblank events to happen at the
wrong time. So save/restore them properly.
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There were two problems with the existing callback code: the vblank
enable callback happened multiple times per disable, making drivers more
complex than they had to be, and there was a race between the final
decrement of the vblank usage counter and the next enable call, which
could have resulted in a put->schedule disable->get->enable->disable
sequence, which would be bad.
So add a new vblank_enabled array to track vblank enable on per-pipe
basis, and add a lock to protect it along with the refcount +
enable/disable calls to fix the race.
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since a breadcrumb may actually turn up before a corresponding fence object
has been placed on the fence ring.
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sequence number may actually turn up before the corresponding fence
object has been queued on the ring.
Fence drivers can use this member to determine whether a
sequence number must be re-reported.
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waiting types.
Add a "command_stream_barrier" method to the bo driver.
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In hibernate, we may end up calling the VGA save regs function twice, so we
need to make sure it's idempotent. That means leaving ARX in index mode after
the first save operation. Fixes hibernate on 965.
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Should be 0x08 rather than 0xa0, and shouldn't use typedefs.
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Conflicts:
linux-core/drmP.h
linux-core/drm_drv.c
shared-core/i915_drv.h
shared-core/i915_irq.c
shared-core/mga_irq.c
shared-core/radeon_irq.c
shared-core/via_irq.c
Mostly trivial conflicts.
mach64 support from Mathieu Bérard.
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i915_flush_ttm was unconditionally executing a clflush instruction
to (obviously) flush the cache. Instead, check if the cpu supports
clflush, and if not, fall back to calling wbinvd to flush the entire
cache.
Signed-off-by: Kyle McMartin <kmcmartin@redhat.com>
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This adds new chipset id in drm.
Signed-off-by: Zhenyu Wang <zhenyu.z.wang@intel.com>
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(1 << bits) is an undefined value when bits == 32.
gcc may generate 1 with this expression
which will lead to an infinite retry loop in
drm_ht_just_insert_please.
Because of the different implement of hash_long,
this issue is more frequenly see on 64 bit system
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Just to be safe, we don't really know exactly how the tables work yet, so
we can't be certain there's a way to say "page not present".
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Due to commit d1187641d64f442968a3b9ea6a19de6cdd45acd4.
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As DRM_DEBUG macro already prints out the __FUNCTION__ string (see
drivers/char/drm/drmP.h), it is not worth doing this again. At some
other places the ending "\n" was added.
airlied:- I cleaned up a few that this patch missed also
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I couldn't figure out what drm_bo_type_dc was for; Dave Airlie finally clued
me in that it was the 'normal' buffer objects with kernel allocated pages
that could be mmapped from the drm device file.
I thought that 'drm_bo_type_device' was a more descriptive name.
I also added a bunch of comments describing the use of the type enum values and
the functions that use them.
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Flags pending validation were stored in a misleadingly named field, 'mask'.
As 'mask' is already used to indicate pieces of a flags field which are
changing, it seems better to use a name reflecting the actual purpose of
this field. I chose 'proposed_flags' as they may not actually end up in
'flags', and in an case will be modified when they are moved over.
This affects the API, but not ABI of the user-mode interface.
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Previously, dummy_read_page was used only for read-only user allocations; it
filled in pages that were not present in the user address map (presumably,
these were allocated but never written to pages).
This patch allows them to be used for read-only ttms allocated from the
kernel, so that applications can over-allocate buffers without forcing every
page to be allocated.
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I'm hoping to use the dummy_read_page for kernel allocated buffers to avoid
allocating extra pages for read-only buffers (like vertex and batch buffers).
This also eliminates the 'write' parameter to drm_ttm_set_user and just
has DRM_TTM_PAGE_WRITE passed into drm_ttm_create.
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Aside from changing drm_bind_ttm to drm_ttm_bind, this patch
adds only documentation and fixes the functions inside drm_ttm.c
to all be prefixed with drm_ttm_.
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Add a comment explaining the parameters for this function
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Just add documentation for this function, no code changes.
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drmBOSetStatus does not bother to set the fence_class parameter.
Fortunately, drm_bo_setstatus_ioctl doesn't end up using it as it
calls drm_bo_handle_validate with use_old_fence_class = 1.
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Document parameters and usage for drm_bo_handle_validate. Change parameter
order to match drm_bo_do_validate (fence_class has been moved to after
flags, hint and mask values). Existing users of this function have been
changed, but out-of-tree users must be modified separately.
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Add comments about the parameters to drm_bo_do_validate, along
with comments for the DRM_BO_HINT options. Remove the 'do_wait'
parameter as it is duplicated by DRM_BO_HINT_DONT_BLOCK.
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Creating a ttm was done with drm_ttm_init while destruction was done with
drm_destroy_ttm. Renaming these to drm_ttm_create and drm_ttm_destroy makes
their use clearer. Passing page_flags to the create function will allow that
to know whether user or kernel pages are needed, with the goal of allowing
kernel ttms to be saved for later reuse.
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This flag indicates that the driver is responsible for the map.
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Add a nut vs hammer style chipset flush for the i8xx chipsets - reenable TTM
code paths
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This header file is shared across linux and bsd, but is not installed
for user space to access. It's the place to put prototypes and data
types that aren't platform or chipset specific, but still internal to
the drm.
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This reverts commit 2370ded79b4176d76cda1ec5f495fd33c2d566ed.
Err.. didn't mean for that to slip in :)
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