Commit Graph

930 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Glauber Costa
81e49f8114 i915: bail out earlier when shrinker cannot acquire mutex
The main shrinker driver will keep trying for a while to free objects if
the returned value from the shrink scan procedure is 0.  That means "no
objects now", but a retry could very well succeed.

But what we should say here is a different thing: that it is impossible to
shrink, and we would better bail out soon.  We find this behavior more
appropriate for the case where the lock cannot be taken.  Specially given
the hammer behavior of the i915: if another thread is already shrinking,
we are likely not to be able to shrink anything anyway when we finally
acquire the mutex.

Signed-off-by: Glauber Costa <glommer@openvz.org>
Acked-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
Cc: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Cc: Mel Gorman <mgorman@suse.de>
Cc: Kent Overstreet <koverstreet@google.com>
Cc: "Theodore Ts'o" <tytso@mit.edu>
Cc: Adrian Hunter <adrian.hunter@intel.com>
Cc: Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk>
Cc: Artem Bityutskiy <artem.bityutskiy@linux.intel.com>
Cc: Arve Hjønnevåg <arve@android.com>
Cc: Carlos Maiolino <cmaiolino@redhat.com>
Cc: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
Cc: Chuck Lever <chuck.lever@oracle.com>
Cc: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
Cc: David Rientjes <rientjes@google.com>
Cc: Gleb Natapov <gleb@redhat.com>
Cc: Greg Thelen <gthelen@google.com>
Cc: J. Bruce Fields <bfields@redhat.com>
Cc: Jan Kara <jack@suse.cz>
Cc: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
Cc: John Stultz <john.stultz@linaro.org>
Cc: KAMEZAWA Hiroyuki <kamezawa.hiroyu@jp.fujitsu.com>
Cc: Kent Overstreet <koverstreet@google.com>
Cc: Kirill A. Shutemov <kirill.shutemov@linux.intel.com>
Cc: Marcelo Tosatti <mtosatti@redhat.com>
Cc: Mel Gorman <mgorman@suse.de>
Cc: Steven Whitehouse <swhiteho@redhat.com>
Cc: Thomas Hellstrom <thellstrom@vmware.com>
Cc: Trond Myklebust <Trond.Myklebust@netapp.com>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk>
2013-09-10 18:56:32 -04:00
Dave Chinner
7dc19d5aff drivers: convert shrinkers to new count/scan API
Convert the driver shrinkers to the new API.  Most changes are compile
tested only because I either don't have the hardware or it's staging
stuff.

FWIW, the md and android code is pretty good, but the rest of it makes me
want to claw my eyes out.  The amount of broken code I just encountered is
mind boggling.  I've added comments explaining what is broken, but I fear
that some of the code would be best dealt with by being dragged behind the
bike shed, burying in mud up to it's neck and then run over repeatedly
with a blunt lawn mower.

Special mention goes to the zcache/zcache2 drivers.  They can't co-exist
in the build at the same time, they are under different menu options in
menuconfig, they only show up when you've got the right set of mm
subsystem options configured and so even compile testing is an exercise in
pulling teeth.  And that doesn't even take into account the horrible,
broken code...

[glommer@openvz.org: fixes for i915, android lowmem, zcache, bcache]
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Glauber Costa <glommer@openvz.org>
Acked-by: Mel Gorman <mgorman@suse.de>
Cc: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
Cc: Kent Overstreet <koverstreet@google.com>
Cc: John Stultz <john.stultz@linaro.org>
Cc: David Rientjes <rientjes@google.com>
Cc: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
Cc: Thomas Hellstrom <thellstrom@vmware.com>
Cc: "Theodore Ts'o" <tytso@mit.edu>
Cc: Adrian Hunter <adrian.hunter@intel.com>
Cc: Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk>
Cc: Artem Bityutskiy <artem.bityutskiy@linux.intel.com>
Cc: Arve Hjønnevåg <arve@android.com>
Cc: Carlos Maiolino <cmaiolino@redhat.com>
Cc: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
Cc: Chuck Lever <chuck.lever@oracle.com>
Cc: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
Cc: David Rientjes <rientjes@google.com>
Cc: Gleb Natapov <gleb@redhat.com>
Cc: Greg Thelen <gthelen@google.com>
Cc: J. Bruce Fields <bfields@redhat.com>
Cc: Jan Kara <jack@suse.cz>
Cc: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com>
Cc: John Stultz <john.stultz@linaro.org>
Cc: KAMEZAWA Hiroyuki <kamezawa.hiroyu@jp.fujitsu.com>
Cc: Kent Overstreet <koverstreet@google.com>
Cc: Kirill A. Shutemov <kirill.shutemov@linux.intel.com>
Cc: Marcelo Tosatti <mtosatti@redhat.com>
Cc: Mel Gorman <mgorman@suse.de>
Cc: Steven Whitehouse <swhiteho@redhat.com>
Cc: Thomas Hellstrom <thellstrom@vmware.com>
Cc: Trond Myklebust <Trond.Myklebust@netapp.com>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>

Signed-off-by: Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk>
2013-09-10 18:56:32 -04:00
Chris Wilson
5a1d5eb020 drm/i915: Remove the double-list iteration from bound_any()
The purpose of the function is to find out whether the object is still
bound in any address space. This can be easily checked by looking at the
vma currently associated with the object, rather than asking if any of
the global address spaces have an active vma on the object.

Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-09-10 16:14:06 +02:00
Mika Kuoppala
be62acb4cc drm/i915: ban badly behaving contexts
Now when we have mechanism in place to track which context
was guilty of hanging the gpu, it is possible to punish
for bad behaviour.

If context has recently submitted a faulty batchbuffers guilty of
gpu hang and submits another batch which hangs gpu in quick
succession, ban it permanently. If ctx is banned, no more
batchbuffers will be queued for execution.

There is no need for global wedge machinery anymore and
it would be unwise to wedge the whole gpu if we have multiple
hanging batches queued for execution. Instead just ban
the guilty ones and carry on.

v2: Store guilty ban status bool in gpu_error instead of pointers
    that might become danling before hang is declared.

v3: Use return value for banned status instead of stashing state
    into gpu_error (Chris Wilson)

v4: - rebase on top of fixed hang stats api
    - add define for ban period
    - rename commit and improve commit msg

v5: - rely context banning instead of wedging the gpu
    - beautification and fix for ban calculation (Chris)

Signed-off-by: Mika Kuoppala <mika.kuoppala@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-09-06 17:55:50 +02:00
Chris Wilson
57094f8246 drm/i915: Hold an object reference whilst we shrink it
Whilst running the shrinker, we need to hold a reference as we unbind
the objects, or else we may end up waiting for and retiring requests,
which in turn may result in this object being freed.

This is very similar to the eviction code which also has to be very
careful to keep a reference to its objects as it retires and unbinds
them.

Another similarity, that Ben pointed out, is that as we may call
retire-requests, the unbound_list is outside of our control. We must
only process a single element of that list at a time, that is we can not
rely on the "safe" next pointer being valid after a call to
i915_vma_unbind().

  BUG: unable to handle kernel NULL pointer dereference at 0000000000000008
  IP: [<ffffffffa0082892>] i915_gem_gtt_finish_object+0x68/0xbd [i915]
  PGD 758d3067 PUD ac0d6067 PMD 0
  Oops: 0000 [#1] SMP
  Modules linked in: dm_mod snd_hda_codec_realtek iTCO_wdt iTCO_vendor_support pcspkr snd_hda_intel i2c_i801 snd_hda_codec snd_hwdep snd_pcm snd_page_alloc snd_timer snd lpc_ich mfd_core soundcore battery ac option usb_wwan usbserial uvcvideo videobuf2_vmalloc videobuf2_memops videobuf2_core videodev i915 video button drm_kms_helper drm acpi_cpufreq mperf freq_table
  CPU: 1 PID: 16835 Comm: fbo-maxsize Not tainted 3.11.0-rc7_nightlytop_8fdad4_20130902_+ #7977
  task: ffff8800712106d0 ti: ffff880028e4a000 task.ti: ffff880028e4a000
  RIP: 0010:[<ffffffffa0082892>]  [<ffffffffa0082892>] i915_gem_gtt_finish_object+0x68/0xbd [i915]
  RSP: 0018:ffff880028e4b9e8  EFLAGS: 00010246
  RAX: 0000000000000000 RBX: ffff880145734000 RCX: ffff880145735328
  RDX: ffff8801457353fc RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: ffff88007597cc00
  RBP: ffff88007597cc00 R08: 0000000000000001 R09: ffff88014f257f00
  R10: ffffea0001d65f00 R11: 0000000000bba60b R12: ffff880149e5b000
  R13: ffff880145734001 R14: ffff88007597ccc8 R15: ffff88007597cc00
  FS:  00007ff5bc919740(0000) GS:ffff88014f240000(0000) knlGS:0000000000000000
  CS:  0010 DS: 0000 ES: 0000 CR0: 0000000080050033
  CR2: 0000000000000008 CR3: 0000000028f4c000 CR4: 00000000001407e0
  DR0: 0000000000000000 DR1: 0000000000000000 DR2: 0000000000000000
  DR3: 0000000000000000 DR6: 00000000fffe0ff0 DR7: 0000000000000400
  Stack:
   0000000000000000 ffff88007597cc00 ffff8801440d6840 0000000000000000
   ffff880145734000 ffffffffa007c854 0000000000000010 ffff88007597c900
   0000000000018000 00000000004a1201 ffff88007597cc60 ffffffffa007d183
  Call Trace:
   [<ffffffffa007c854>] ? i915_vma_unbind+0xe2/0x1d1 [i915]
   [<ffffffffa007d183>] ? __i915_gem_shrink+0xf1/0x162 [i915]
   [<ffffffffa007d2ee>] ? i915_gem_object_get_pages_gtt+0xfa/0x303 [i915]
   [<ffffffffa00795f4>] ? i915_gem_object_get_pages+0x54/0x89 [i915]
   [<ffffffffa007cbda>] ? i915_gem_object_pin+0x238/0x5ce [i915]
   [<ffffffff812cba5f>] ? __sg_page_iter_next+0x2b/0x58
   [<ffffffffa0082056>] ? gen6_ppgtt_insert_entries+0xf2/0x114 [i915]
   [<ffffffffa007fe4b>] ? i915_gem_execbuffer_reserve_vma.isra.13+0x79/0x18d [i915]
   [<ffffffffa008017c>] ? i915_gem_execbuffer_reserve+0x21d/0x347 [i915]
   [<ffffffffa0080bfb>] ? i915_gem_do_execbuffer.isra.17+0x4f3/0xe61 [i915]
   [<ffffffffa00795f4>] ? i915_gem_object_get_pages+0x54/0x89 [i915]
   [<ffffffffa007e405>] ? i915_gem_pwrite_ioctl+0x743/0x7a5 [i915]
   [<ffffffffa0081a46>] ? i915_gem_execbuffer2+0x15e/0x1e4 [i915]
   [<ffffffffa000e20d>] ? drm_ioctl+0x2a5/0x3c4 [drm]
   [<ffffffffa00818e8>] ? i915_gem_execbuffer+0x37f/0x37f [i915]
   [<ffffffff816f64c0>] ? __do_page_fault+0x3ab/0x449
   [<ffffffff810be3da>] ? do_mmap_pgoff+0x2b2/0x341
   [<ffffffff810e49be>] ? vfs_ioctl+0x1e/0x31
   [<ffffffff810e5194>] ? do_vfs_ioctl+0x3ad/0x3ef
   [<ffffffff810e5224>] ? SyS_ioctl+0x4e/0x7e
   [<ffffffff816f88d2>] ? system_call_fastpath+0x16/0x1b
  Code: 52 0c a0 48 c7 c6 22 30 0d a0 31 c0 e8 ef 00 f9 ff bf c6 a7 00 00 e8 90 5d 24 e1 f6 85 13 01 00 00 10 75 44 48 8b 85 18 01 00 00 <8b> 50 08 48 8b 30 49 8b 84 24 88 02 00 00 48 89 c7 48 81 c7 98
  RIP  [<ffffffffa0082892>] i915_gem_gtt_finish_object+0x68/0xbd [i915]
  RSP <ffff880028e4b9e8>
  CR2: 0000000000000008

Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=68171
Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
[danvet: Bikeshed the comments a bit as discussed with Chris.]
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-09-05 14:47:59 +02:00
Chris Wilson
3c0e234c84 drm/i915; Preallocate the lazy request
It is possible for us to be forced to perform an allocation for the lazy
request whilst running the shrinker. This allocation may fail, leaving
us unable to reclaim any memory leading to premature OOM. A neat
solution to the problem is to preallocate the request at the same time
as acquiring the seqno for the ring transaction. This means that we can
report ENOMEM prior to touching the rings.

Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Reviewed-by: Mika Kuoppala <mika.kuoppala@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-09-05 12:03:53 +02:00
Chris Wilson
1823521d2b drm/i915: Rename ring->outstanding_lazy_request
Prior to preallocating an request for lazy emission, rename the existing
field to make way (and differentiate the seqno from the request struct).

Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Reviewed-by: Mika Kuoppala <mika.kuoppala@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-09-05 12:03:12 +02:00
Chris Wilson
9a7e0c2a1b drm/i915: Rearrange the comments in i915_add_request()
The comments were a little out-of-sequence with the code, forcing the
reader to jump around whilst reading. Whilst moving the comments around,
add one to explain the context reference.

Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Reviewed-by: Damien Lespiau <damien.lespiau@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-09-04 17:34:54 +02:00
Chris Wilson
c0321e2c5a drm/i915: Do not add an interrupt for a context switch
We use the request to ensure we hold a reference to the context for the
duration that it remains in use by the ring. Each request only holds a
reference to the current context, hence we emit a request after
switching contexts with the final reference to the old context. However,
the extra interrupt caused by that request is not useful (no timing
critical function will wait for the context object), instead the overhead
of servicing the IRQ shows up in some (lightweight) benchmarks. In order
to keep the useful property of using the request to manage the context
lifetime, we want to add a dummy request that is associated with the
interrupt from the subsequent real request following the batch.

The extra interrupt was added as a side-effect of using
i915_add_request() in

commit 112522f678
Author: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Date:   Thu May 2 16:48:07 2013 +0300

    drm/i915: put context upon switching

v2: Daniel convinced me that the request here was solely for context
lifetime tracking and that we have the active ref to keep the object
alive whilst the MI_SET_CONTEXT. So the only concern then is which
context should get the blame for MI_SET_CONTEXT failing. The old scheme
added a request for the old context so that any hang upto and including
the switch away would mark the old context as guilty. Now any hang here
implicates the new context. However since we have already gone through a
complete flush with the last context in its last request, and all that
lies in no-man's-land is an invalidate flush and the MI_SET_CONTEXT, we
should be safe in not unduly placing blame on the new context.

Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Cc: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Cc: Paulo Zanoni <paulo.r.zanoni@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Damien Lespiau <damien.lespiau@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-09-04 17:34:53 +02:00
Daniel Vetter
0ff501cbb5 drm/i915: Fix list corruption in vma_unbind
The saga around the breadcrumb vmas used by execbuf continues ...

This time around we've managed to unconditionally move the object to
the unbound list on the last vma unbind even though it might never
have been on either the bound or unbound list. Hilarity ensued.

Chris Wilson tracked this one down but compared to his patches I've
simply opted to completely separate the unbound case for not-yet bound
vmas. Otherwise we imo end up with semantically hard to parse checks
around the list_move_tail(global_list, ...).

Cc: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Cc: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=68462
Reviewed-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-09-04 17:34:52 +02:00
Rodrigo Vivi
9435373ef8 drm/i915: Report enabled slices on Haswell GT3
Batchbuffers constructed by userspace can conditionalise their URB
allocations through the use of the MI_SET_PREDICATE command. This
command can read the MI_PREDICATE_RESULT_2 register to see how many
slices are enabled on GT3, and by virtue of the result, scale their
memory allocations to fit enabled memory.

Of course, this only works if the kernel sets the appropriate bit in the
register first.

v2: Better commit subject and message by Chris Wilson.

Cc: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Credits-to: Yejun Guo <yejun.guo@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Rodrigo Vivi <rodrigo.vivi@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-09-04 17:34:51 +02:00
Daniel Vetter
b93dab6e9d drm/i915: More vma fixups around unbind/destroy
The important bugfix here is that we must not unlink the vma when
we keep it around as a placeholder for the execbuf code. Since then we
won't find it again when execbuf gets interrupt and restarted and
create a 2nd vma. And since the code as-is isn't fit yet to deal with
more than one vma, hilarity ensues.

Specifically the dma map/unmap of the sg table isn't adjusted for
multiple vmas yet and will blow up like this:

BUG: unable to handle kernel NULL pointer dereference at 0000000000000008
IP: [<ffffffffa008fb37>] i915_gem_gtt_finish_object+0x73/0xc8 [i915]
PGD 56bb5067 PUD ad3dd067 PMD 0
Oops: 0000 [#1] SMP
Modules linked in: tcp_lp ppdev parport_pc lp parport ipv6 dm_mod dcdbas snd_hda_codec_hdmi pcspkr snd_hda_codec_realtek serio_raw i2c_i801 iTCO_wdt iTCO_vendor_support snd_hda_intel snd_hda_codec lpc_ich snd_hwdep mfd_core snd_pcm snd_page_alloc snd_timer snd soundcore acpi_cpufreq i915 video button drm_kms_helper drm mperf freq_table
CPU: 1 PID: 16650 Comm: fbo-maxsize Not tainted 3.11.0-rc4_nightlytop_d93f59_debug_20130814_+ #6957
Hardware name: Dell Inc. OptiPlex 9010/03JR84, BIOS A01 05/04/2012
task: ffff8800563b3f00 ti: ffff88004bdf4000 task.ti: ffff88004bdf4000
RIP: 0010:[<ffffffffa008fb37>]  [<ffffffffa008fb37>] i915_gem_gtt_finish_object+0x73/0xc8 [i915]
RSP: 0018:ffff88004bdf5958  EFLAGS: 00010246
RAX: 0000000000000000 RBX: ffff8801135e0000 RCX: ffff8800ad3bf8e0
RDX: ffff8800ad3bf8e0 RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: ffff8801007ee780
RBP: ffff88004bdf5978 R08: ffff8800ad3bf8e0 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: ffffffff86ca1810 R11: ffff880036a17101 R12: ffff8801007ee780
R13: 0000000000018001 R14: ffff880118c4e000 R15: ffff8801007ee780
FS:  00007f401a0ce740(0000) GS:ffff88011e280000(0000) knlGS:0000000000000000
CS:  0010 DS: 0000 ES: 0000 CR0: 0000000080050033
CR2: 0000000000000008 CR3: 000000005635c000 CR4: 00000000001407e0
Stack:
 ffff8801007ee780 ffff88005c253180 0000000000018000 ffff8801135e0000
 ffff88004bdf59a8 ffffffffa0088e55 0000000000000011 ffff8801007eec00
 0000000000018000 ffff880036a17101 ffff88004bdf5a08 ffffffffa0089026
Call Trace:
 [<ffffffffa0088e55>] i915_vma_unbind+0xdf/0x1ab [i915]
 [<ffffffffa0089026>] __i915_gem_shrink+0x105/0x177 [i915]
 [<ffffffffa0089452>] i915_gem_object_get_pages_gtt+0x108/0x309 [i915]
 [<ffffffffa0085ba9>] i915_gem_object_get_pages+0x61/0x90 [i915]
 [<ffffffffa008f22b>] ? gen6_ppgtt_insert_entries+0x103/0x125 [i915]
 [<ffffffffa008a113>] i915_gem_object_pin+0x1fa/0x5df [i915]
 [<ffffffffa008cdfe>] i915_gem_execbuffer_reserve_object.isra.6+0x8d/0x1bc [i915]
 [<ffffffffa008d156>] i915_gem_execbuffer_reserve+0x229/0x367 [i915]
 [<ffffffffa008dbf6>] i915_gem_do_execbuffer.isra.12+0x4dc/0xf3a [i915]
 [<ffffffff810fc823>] ? might_fault+0x40/0x90
 [<ffffffffa008eb89>] i915_gem_execbuffer2+0x187/0x222 [i915]
 [<ffffffffa000971c>] drm_ioctl+0x308/0x442 [drm]
 [<ffffffffa008ea02>] ? i915_gem_execbuffer+0x3ae/0x3ae [i915]
 [<ffffffff817db156>] ? __do_page_fault+0x3dd/0x481
 [<ffffffff8112fdba>] vfs_ioctl+0x26/0x39
 [<ffffffff811306a2>] do_vfs_ioctl+0x40e/0x451
 [<ffffffff817deda7>] ? sysret_check+0x1b/0x56
 [<ffffffff8113073c>] SyS_ioctl+0x57/0x87
 [<ffffffff8135bbfe>] ? trace_hardirqs_on_thunk+0x3a/0x3f
 [<ffffffff817ded82>] system_call_fastpath+0x16/0x1b
Code: 48 c7 c6 84 30 0e a0 31 c0 e8 d0 e9 f7 ff bf c6 a7 00 00 e8 07 af 2c e1 41 f6 84 24 03 01 00 00 10 75 44 49 8b 84 24 08 01 00 00 <8b> 50 08 48 8b 30 49 8b 86 b0 04 00 00 48 89 c7 48 81 c7 98 00
RIP  [<ffffffffa008fb37>] i915_gem_gtt_finish_object+0x73/0xc8 [i915]
 RSP <ffff88004bdf5958>
CR2: 0000000000000008

As a consequence we need to change the "only one vma for now" check in
vma_unbind - since vma_destroy isn't always called the obj->vma_list
might not be empty. Instead check that the vma list is singular at the
beginning of vma_unbind. This is also more symmetric with bind_to_vm.

This fixes the igt/gem_evict_everything|alignment testcases.

v2:
- Add a paranoid WARN to mark_free in the eviction code to make sure
  we never try to evict a vma used by the execbuf code right now.
- Move the check for a temporary execbuf vma into vma_destroy -
  otherwise the failure path cleanup in bind_to_vm will blow up.

Our first attempting at fixing this was

commit 1be81a2f2cfd8789a627401d470423358fba2d76
Author: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Date:   Tue Aug 20 12:56:40 2013 +0100

    drm/i915: Don't destroy the vma placeholder during execbuffer reservation

Squash with this when merging!

v3: Improvements suggested in Chris' review:
- Move the WARN_ON in vma_destroy that checks for vmas with an drm_mm
  allocation before the early return.
- Bail out if we hit the WARN in mark_free to hopefully make the
  kernel survive for long enough to capture it.

Cc: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Cc: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=68298
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=68171
Tested-by: lu hua <huax.lu@intel.com> (v2)
Reviewed-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-09-04 17:34:42 +02:00
Chris Wilson
aaa0566792 drm/i915: Don't destroy the vma placeholder during execbuffer reservation
The execbuffer handle and exec_link were moved from the object into the
vma. As the vma may be unbound and destroyed whilst attempting to
reserve the execbuffer objects (either through a forced unbind to fix up
a misalignment or through an evict-everything call) we need to prevent
the free of the i915_vma itself. Otherwise not only is the list of
objects to reserve corrupt, but we continue to reference stale vma
entries.

Fixes kernel crash with i-g-t/gem_evict_everything

This regression has been introduced in

commit 04038a515d6eda6dd0857c0ade0b3950d372f4c0
Author:     Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
AuthorDate: Wed Aug 14 11:38:36 2013 +0200

    drm/i915: Convert execbuf code to use vmas

Reported-by: Dan Carpenter <dan.carpenter@oracle.com>
References: http://www.spinics.net/lists/intel-gfx/msg32038.html
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=68298
Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Cc: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-09-04 17:34:42 +02:00
Daniel Vetter
e656a6cba0 drm/i915: inline vma_create into lookup_or_create_vma
In the execbuf code we don't clean up any vmas which ended up not
getting bound for code simplicity. To make sure that we don't end up
creating multiple vma for the same vm kill the somewhat dangerous
vma_create function and inline it into lookup_or_create.

This is just a safety measure to prevent surprises in the future.

Also update the somewhat confused comment in the execbuf code and
clarify what kind of magic is going on with a new one.

v2: Keep the function separate as requested by Chris. But give it a __
prefix for paranoia and move it tighter together with the other vma
stuff.

Cc: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Cc: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Acked-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-09-04 17:34:41 +02:00
Ben Widawsky
27173f1f95 drm/i915: Convert execbuf code to use vmas
In order to transition more of our code over to using a VMA instead of
an <OBJ, VM> pair - we must have the vma accessible at execbuf time. Up
until now, we've only had a VMA when actually binding an object.

The previous patch helped handle the distinction on bound vs. unbound.
This patch will help us catch leaks, and other issues before we actually
shuffle a bunch of stuff around.

This attempts to convert all the execbuf code to speak in vmas. Since
the execbuf code is very self contained it was a nice isolated
conversion.

The meat of the code is about turning eb_objects into eb_vma, and then
wiring up the rest of the code to use vmas instead of obj, vm pairs.

Unfortunately, to do this, we must move the exec_list link from the obj
structure. This list is reused in the eviction code, so we must also
modify the eviction code to make this work.

WARNING: This patch makes an already hotly profiled path slower. The cost is
unavoidable. In reply to this mail, I will attach the extra data.

v2: Release table lock early, and two a 2 phase vma lookup to avoid
having to use a GFP_ATOMIC. (Chris)

v3: s/obj_exec_list/obj_exec_link/
Updates to address
commit 6d2b888569
Author: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Date:   Wed Aug 7 18:30:54 2013 +0100

    drm/i915: List objects allocated from stolen memory in debugfs

v4: Use obj = vma->obj for neatness in some places (Chris)
need_reloc_mappable() should return false if ppgtt (Chris)

Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
[danvet: Split out prep patches. Also remove a FIXME comment which is
now taken care of.]
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-09-04 17:34:41 +02:00
Damien Lespiau
d2933a5b8f drm/i915: Don't call sg_free_table() if sg_alloc_table() fails
One needs to call __sg_free_table() if __sg_alloc_table() fails, but
sg_alloc_table() does that for us already.

Signed-off-by: Damien Lespiau <damien.lespiau@intel.com>
Reviewd-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-09-03 19:18:00 +02:00
Joe Perches
fac15c1082 i915_gem: Convert kmem_cache_alloc(...GFP_ZERO) to kmem_cache_zalloc
The helper exists, might as well use it instead of __GFP_ZERO.

Signed-off-by: Joe Perches <joe@perches.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-09-03 19:17:56 +02:00
Dave Airlie
efa27f9cec Merge tag 'drm-intel-next-2013-08-23' of git://people.freedesktop.org/~danvet/drm-intel into drm-next
Need to get my stuff out the door ;-) Highlights:
- pc8+ support from Paulo
- more vma patches from Ben.
- Kconfig option to enable preliminary support by default (Josh
  Triplett)
- Optimized cpu cache flush handling and support for write-through caching
  of display planes on Iris (Chris)
- rc6 tuning from Stéphane Marchesin for more stability
- VECS seqno wrap/semaphores fix (Ben)
- a pile of smaller cleanups and improvements all over

Note that I've ditched Ben's execbuf vma conversion for 3.12 since not yet
ready. But there's still other vma conversion stuff in here.

* tag 'drm-intel-next-2013-08-23' of git://people.freedesktop.org/~danvet/drm-intel: (62 commits)
  drm/i915: Print seqnos as unsigned in debugfs
  drm/i915: Fix context size calculation on SNB/IVB/VLV
  drm/i915: Use POSTING_READ in lcpll code
  drm/i915: enable Package C8+ by default
  drm/i915: add i915.pc8_timeout function
  drm/i915: add i915_pc8_status debugfs file
  drm/i915: allow package C8+ states on Haswell (disabled)
  drm/i915: fix SDEIMR assertion when disabling LCPLL
  drm/i915: grab force_wake when restoring LCPLL
  drm/i915: drop WaMbcDriverBootEnable workaround
  drm/i915: Cleaning up the relocate entry function
  drm/i915: merge HSW and SNB PM irq handlers
  drm/i915: fix how we mask PMIMR when adding work to the queue
  drm/i915: don't queue PM events we won't process
  drm/i915: don't disable/reenable IVB error interrupts when not needed
  drm/i915: add dev_priv->pm_irq_mask
  drm/i915: don't update GEN6_PMIMR when it's not needed
  drm/i915: wrap GEN6_PMIMR changes
  drm/i915: wrap GTIMR changes
  drm/i915: add the FCLK case to intel_ddi_get_cdclk_freq
  ...
2013-08-30 09:47:41 +10:00
Paulo Zanoni
c67a470b1d drm/i915: allow package C8+ states on Haswell (disabled)
This patch allows PC8+ states on Haswell. These states can only be
reached when all the display outputs are disabled, and they allow some
more power savings.

The fact that the graphics device is allowing PC8+ doesn't mean that
the machine will actually enter PC8+: all the other devices also need
to allow PC8+.

For now this option is disabled by default. You need i915.allow_pc8=1
if you want it.

This patch adds a big comment inside i915_drv.h explaining how it
works and how it tracks things. Read it.

v2: (this is not really v2, many previous versions were already sent,
     but they had different names)
    - Use the new functions to enable/disable GTIMR and GEN6_PMIMR
    - Rename almost all variables and functions to names suggested by
      Chris
    - More WARNs on the IRQ handling code
    - Also disable PC8 when there's GPU work to do (thanks to Ben for
      the help on this), so apps can run caster
    - Enable PC8 on a delayed work function that is delayed for 5
      seconds. This makes sure we only enable PC8+ if we're really
      idle
    - Make sure we're not in PC8+ when suspending
v3: - WARN if IRQs are disabled on __wait_seqno
    - Replace some DRM_ERRORs with WARNs
    - Fix calls to restore GT and PM interrupts
    - Use intel_mark_busy instead of intel_ring_advance to disable PC8
v4: - Use the force_wake, Luke!
v5: - Remove the "IIR is not zero" WARNs
    - Move the force_wake chunk to its own patch
    - Only restore what's missing from RC6, not everything

Signed-off-by: Paulo Zanoni <paulo.r.zanoni@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-08-23 14:52:33 +02:00
Ben Widawsky
accfef2e5a drm/i915: prepare bind_to_vm for preallocated vma
In the new execbuf code we want to track buffers using the vmas even
before they're all properly mapped. Which means that bind_to_vm needs
to deal with buffers which have preallocated vmas which aren't yet
bound.

This patch implements this prep work and adjusts our WARN/BUG checks.

Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
[danvet: Split out from Ben's big execbuf patch. Also move one BUG
back to its original place to deflate the diff a notch.]
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-08-22 13:31:53 +02:00
Ben Widawsky
82a55ad1a0 drm/i915: Switch eviction code to use vmas
The execbuf wants to do relocations usings vmas, so we need a
vma->exec_list. The eviction code also uses the old obj execbuf list
for it's own book-keeping, but would really prefer to deal in vmas
only. So switch it over to the new list.

Again this is just a prep patch for the big execbuf vma conversion.

Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
[danvet: Split out from Ben's big execbuf vma patch.]
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-08-22 13:31:52 +02:00
Ben Widawsky
b25cb2f882 drm/i915: s/obj->exec_list/obj->obj_exec_link in debugfs
To convert the execbuf code over to use vmas natively we need to
shuffle the exec_list a bit. This patch here just prepares things with
the debugfs code, which also uses the old exec_list list_head, newly
called obj_exec_link.

Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
[danvet: Split out from Ben's big patch.]
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-08-22 13:31:51 +02:00
Chris Wilson
4b6d846e9a drm/i915: Drop the overzealous warning from i915_gem_set_cache_level
By our earlier reckoning, move from a snooped/llc setting to an uncached
setting, leaves the CPU cache in a consistent state irrespective of our
domain tracking - so we can forgo the warning about the lack of
invalidation. Similarly for any writes posted to the snooped CPU domain,
we know will be safely clflushed to the uncached PTEs after forcing the
domain change.

This WARN started to pop up with

commit d46f1c3f13
Author:     Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
AuthorDate: Thu Aug 8 14:41:06 2013 +0100

    drm/i915: Allow the GPU to cache stolen memory

Ville brought up a scenario where the interaction of a set_caching
ioctl call from userspace on a scanout buffer (i.e. obj->pin_display
is set) resulted in the code getting confused and not properly
flushing stale cpu cachelines. Luckily we already prevent this by
rejecting caching changes when obj->pin_count is set.

Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Cc: Ville Syrjälä <ville.syrjala@linux.intel.com>
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=68040
Tested-by: cancan,feng <cancan.feng@intel.com>
[danvet: Add buglink, bisect result and explain why Ville's scenario
is already taken care of.]
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-08-22 13:31:46 +02:00
Daniel Vetter
49987099e2 drm/i915: use vma->node directly and rewrap map&fence in bind
Use () to make for neater alignment of the split lines, too. With this
we ditch another jump through the obj_gtt_size/offset indirection
maze.

Cc: Ben Widawsky <benjamin.widawsky@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-08-22 13:31:45 +02:00
Ben Widawsky
4bd561b3e8 drm/i915: cleanup map&fence in bind
Cleanup the map and fenceable setting during bind to make more sense,
and not check i915_is_ggtt() 2 unnecessary times

v2: Move the bools into the if block (Chris) - There are ways to tidy
this function (fence calculations for instance) even further, but they
are quite invasive, so I am punting on those unless specifically asked.

v3: Add newline between variable declaration and logic (Chris)

Recommended-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Reviewed-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-08-22 13:31:45 +02:00
Ben Widawsky
433544bd25 drm/i915: Remove node only when allocated
VMAs can be created and not bound. One may think of it as lazy cleanup,
and safely gloss over the conditions which manufacture it. In either
case, when the object backing the i915 vma is destroyed, we must cleanup
the vma without stumbling into a bunch of pitfalls that assume the vma
is bound.

NOTE: I was pretty certain the above condition could only happen when we
introduced the use of VMAs being looked up at execbuf, and already
existing. Paulo has hit this though, so I must be missing something. As
I believe the patch is correct anyway, therefore I won't scratch my head
too hard.

v2: use goto destroy as a compromise (Chris)

Cc: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Cc: Paulo Zanoni <paulo.r.zanoni@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Reviewed-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-08-22 13:31:44 +02:00
Chris Wilson
4257d3ba3b drm/i915: Allow the user to set bo into the DISPLAY cache domain
This is primarily for the benefit of the create2 ioctl so that the
caller can avoid the later step of rebinding the bo with new PTE bits.
After introducing WT (and possibly GFDT) cacheing for display targets,
not everything in the display is earmarked as UC, and more importantly
what is is controlled by the kernel.

Note that set_cache_level/get_cache_level for DISPLAY is not necessarily
idempotent; get_cache_level may return UC for architectures that have no
special cache domain for the display engine.

Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Reviewed-by: Ville Syrjälä <ville.syrjala@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-08-22 13:31:39 +02:00
Chris Wilson
651d794fae drm/i915: Use Write-Through cacheing for the display plane on Iris
Haswell GT3e has the unique feature of supporting Write-Through cacheing
of objects within the eLLC/LLC. The purpose of this is to enable the display
plane to remain coherent whilst objects lie resident in the eLLC/LLC - so
that we, in theory, get the best of both worlds, perfect display and fast
access.

However, we still need to be careful as the CPU does not see the WT when
accessing the cache. In particular, this means that we need to flush the
cache lines after writing to an object through the CPU, and on
transitioning from a cached state to WT.

v2: Actually do the clflush on transition to WT, nagging by Ville.
v3: Flush the CPU cache after writes into WT objects.
v4: Rease onto LLC updates and report WT as "uncached" for
get_cache_level_ioctl to remain symmetric with set_cache_level_ioctl.

Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Cc: Ville Syrjälä <ville.syrjala@linux.intel.com>
Cc: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Ville Syrjälä <ville.syrjala@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-08-22 13:31:38 +02:00
Jani Nikula
f2f4d82faf drm/i915: give more distinctive names to ring hangcheck action enums
The short lowercase names are bound to collide. The default warnings
don't even warn about shadowing.

Signed-off-by: Jani Nikula <jani.nikula@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-08-22 13:31:37 +02:00
Ben Widawsky
7ace7ef2f5 drm/i915: WARN_ON failed map_and_fenceable
I just noticed in our code we don't really check the assertion, and
given some of the code I am changing in this area, I feel a WARN is very
nice to have.

Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
[danvet: s/&/&&/ to fix typo on the check.]
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-08-22 13:31:35 +02:00
Chris Wilson
000433b67e drm/i915: Only do a chipset flush after a clflush
Now that we skip clflushes more often, return a boolean indicating
whether the clflush was actually performed, and only if it was do the
chipset flush. (Though on most of the architectures where the clflush will
be skipped, the chipset flush is a no-op!)

Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Cc: Ville Syrjälä <ville.syrjala@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ville Syrjälä <ville.syrjala@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-08-22 13:31:34 +02:00
Dave Airlie
9712def2b3 Merge tag 'drm-intel-next-2013-08-09' of git://people.freedesktop.org/~danvet/drm-intel into drm-next
Daniel writes:
New pile of stuff for -next:
- Cleanup of the old crtc helper callbacks, all encoders are now converted
  to the i915 modeset infrastructure.
- Massive amount of wm patches from Ville for ilk, snb, ivb, hsw, this is
  prep work to eventually get things going for nuclear pageflips where we
  need to adjust watermarks on the fly.
- More vm/vma patches from Ben. This refactoring isn't yet fully rolled
  out, we miss the execbuf conversion and some of the low-level
  bind/unbind support code.
- Convert our hdmi infoframe code to use the new common helper functions
  (Damien). This contains some bugfixes for the common infoframe helpers.
- Some cruft removal from Damien.
- Various smaller bits&pieces all over, as usual.

* tag 'drm-intel-next-2013-08-09' of git://people.freedesktop.org/~danvet/drm-intel: (105 commits)
  drm/i915: Fix FB WM for HSW
  drm/i915: expose HDMI connectors on port C on BYT
  drm/i915: fix a limit check in hsw_compute_wm_results()
  drm/i915: unbreak i915_gem_object_ggtt_unbind()
  drm/i915: Make intel_set_mode() static
  drm/i915: Remove intel_modeset_disable()
  drm/i915: Make intel_encoder_dpms() static
  drm/i915: Make i915_hangcheck_elapsed() static
  drm/i915: Fix #endif comment
  drm/i915: Remove i915_gem_object_check_coherency()
  drm/i915: Remove stale prototypes
  drm/i915: List objects allocated from stolen memory in debugfs
  drm/i915: Always call intel_update_sprite_watermarks() when disabling a plane
  drm/i915: Pass plane and crtc to intel_update_sprite_watermarks
  drm/i915: Don't try to disable plane if it's already disabled
  drm/i915: Pass crtc to our update/disable_plane hooks
  drm/i915: Split plane watermark parameters into a separate struct
  drm/i915: Pull some watermarks state into a separate structure
  drm/i915: Calculate max watermark levels for ILK+
  drm/i915: Rename hsw_lp_wm_result to intel_wm_level
  ...
2013-08-21 12:48:59 +10:00
Chris Wilson
2c22569bba drm/i915: Update rules for writing through the LLC with the cpu
As mentioned in the previous commit, reads and writes from both the CPU
and GPU go through the LLC. This gives us coherency between the CPU and
GPU irrespective of the attribute settings either device sets. We can
use to avoid having to clflush even uncached memory.

Except for the scanout.

The scanout resides within another functional block that does not use
the LLC but reads directly from main memory. So in order to maintain
coherency with the scanout, writes to uncached memory must be flushed.
In order to optimize writes elsewhere, we start tracking whether an
framebuffer is attached to an object.

v2: Use pin_display tracking rather than fb_count (to ensure we flush
cursors as well etc) and only force the clflush along explicit writes to
the scanout paths (i.e. pin_to_display_plane and pwrite into scanout).

v3: Force the flush after hitting the slowpath in pwrite, as after
dropping the lock the object's cache domain may be invalidated. (Ville)

Based on a patch by Ville Syrjälä.

Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Cc: Ville Syrjälä <ville.syrjala@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ville Syrjälä <ville.syrjala@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-08-10 11:20:49 +02:00
Chris Wilson
cc98b413c1 drm/i915: Track when an object is pinned for use by the display engine
The display engine has unique coherency rules such that it requires
special handling to ensure that all writes to cursors, scanouts and
sprites are clflushed. This patch introduces the infrastructure to
simply track when an object is being accessed by the display engine.

v2: Explain the is_pin_display() magic as the sources for obj->pin_count
and their individual rules is not obvious. (Ville)

Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Reviewed-by: Ville Syrjälä <ville.syrjala@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-08-10 11:19:51 +02:00
Chris Wilson
c76ce038e3 drm/i915: Update rules for reading cache lines through the LLC
The LLC is a fun device. The cache is a distinct functional block within
the SA that arbitrates access from both the CPU and GPU cores. As such
all writes to memory land first in the LLC before further action is
taken. For example, an uncached write from either the CPU or GPU will
then proceed to memory and evict the cacheline from the LLC. This means that
a read from the LLC always returns the correct information even if the PTE
bit in the GPU differs from the PAT bit in the CPU. For the older
snooping architecture on non-LLC, the fundamental principle still holds
except that some coordination is required between the CPU and GPU to
explicitly perform the snooping (which is handled by our request
tracking).

The upshot of this is that we know that we can issue a read from either
LLC devices or snoopable memory and trust the contents of the cache -
i.e. we can forgo a clflush before a read in these circumstances.
Writing to memory from the CPU is a little more tricky as we have to
consider that the scanout does not read from the CPU cache at all, but
from main memory. So we have to currently treat all requests to write to
uncached memory as having to be flushed to main memory for coherency
with all consumers.

Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Cc: Ville Syrjälä <ville.syrjala@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ville Syrjälä <ville.syrjala@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-08-10 11:19:50 +02:00
Dan Carpenter
58e73e1570 drm/i915: unbreak i915_gem_object_ggtt_unbind()
There is an extra semi-colon here so we just leak and never unbind
anything.

This regression has been introduced in

commit 07fe0b1280
Author: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Date:   Wed Jul 31 17:00:10 2013 -0700

    drm/i915: plumb VM into bind/unbind code

Cc: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Signed-off-by: Dan Carpenter <dan.carpenter@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-08-09 12:04:53 +02:00
Ben Widawsky
8b9c2b9411 drm/i915: Add vma to list at creation
With the current code there shouldn't be a distinction - however with an
upcoming change we intend to allocate a vma much earlier, before it's
actually bound anywhere.

To do this we have to check node allocation as well for the _bound()
check.

Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
[danvet: move list_del(&vma->vma_link) from vma_unbind to vma_destroy,
again fallout from the loss of "rm/i915: Cleanup more of VMA in
destroy".]
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>

fixup for drm/i915: Add vma to list at creation
2013-08-08 14:10:20 +02:00
Ben Widawsky
ca191b1313 drm/i915: mm_list is per VMA
formerly: "drm/i915: Create VMAs (part 5) - move mm_list"

The mm_list is used for the active/inactive LRUs. Since those LRUs are
per address space, the link should be per VMx .

Because we'll only ever have 1 VMA before this point, it's not incorrect
to defer this change until this point in the patch series, and doing it
here makes the change much easier to understand.

Shamelessly manipulated out of Daniel:
"active/inactive stuff is used by eviction when we run out of address
space, so needs to be per-vma and per-address space. Bound/unbound otoh
is used by the shrinker which only cares about the amount of memory used
and not one bit about in which address space this memory is all used in.
Of course to actual kick out an object we need to unbind it from every
address space, but for that we have the per-object list of vmas."

v2: only bump GGTT LRU in i915_gem_object_set_to_gtt_domain (Chris)

v3: Moved earlier in the series

v4: Add dropped message from v3

Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
[danvet: Frob patch to apply and use vma->node.size directly as
discused with Ben. Also drop a needles BUG_ON before move_to_inactive,
the function itself has the same check.]
[danvet 2nd: Rebase on top of the lost "drm/i915: Cleanup more of VMA
in destroy", specifically unlink the vma from the mm_list in
vma_unbind (to keep it symmetric with bind_to_vm) instead of
vma_destroy.]
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-08-08 14:06:58 +02:00
Ben Widawsky
5cacaac77c drm/i915: Fix up map and fenceable for VMA
formerly: "drm/i915: Create VMAs (part 3.5) - map and fenceable
tracking"

The map_and_fenceable tracking is per object. GTT mapping, and fences
only apply to global GTT. As such,  object operations which are not
performed on the global GTT should not effect mappable or fenceable
characteristics.

Functionally, this commit could very well be squashed in to a previous
patch which updated object operations to take a VM argument.  This
commit is split out because it's a bit tricky (or at least it was for
me).

Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
[danvet: Drop the bogus hunk in i915_vma_unbind as discussed with
Ben.]
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-08-08 14:04:55 +02:00
Ben Widawsky
9843877d10 drm/i915: turn bound_ggtt checks to bound_any
In some places, we want to know if an object is bound in any address
space, and not just the global GTT. This often applies when there is a
single global resource (object, pages, etc.)

function                             |      reason
--------------------------------------------------
i915_gem_object_is_inactive          | global object
i915_gem_object_put_pages            | object's pages
915_gem_object_unpin                 | global object
i915_gem_execbuffer_unreserve_object | temporary until we plumb vma
pread/pwrite                         | see the note below

Note: set_to_gtt_domain in pwrite/pread is abused as a wait_rendering
call - but that once only worked if the object is bound. We really
should replace this with a plain wait_rendering call, which would have
the upside that in pread it would be clearer that we actually only
wait for oustanding gpu writes.

Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
[danvet: Explain the set_to_gtt_domain in pwrite/pread and volunteer
Ben to replace those with wait_rendering calls.]
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-08-08 14:04:43 +02:00
Ben Widawsky
f6cd1f15d3 drm/i915: Use new bind/unbind in eviction code
Eviction code, like the rest of the converted code needs to be aware of
the address space for which it is evicting (or the everything case, all
addresses). With the updated bind/unbind interfaces of the last patch,
we can now safely move the eviction code over.

Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-08-08 14:04:43 +02:00
Ben Widawsky
07fe0b1280 drm/i915: plumb VM into bind/unbind code
As alluded to in several patches, and it will be reiterated later... A
VMA is an abstraction for a GEM BO bound into an address space.
Therefore it stands to reason, that the existing bind, and unbind are
the ones which will be the most impacted. This patch implements this,
and updates all callers which weren't already updated in the series
(because it was too messy).

This patch represents the bulk of an earlier, larger patch. I've pulled
out a bunch of things by the request of Daniel. The history is preserved
for posterity with the email convention of ">" One big change from the
original patch aside from a bunch of cropping is I've created an
i915_vma_unbind() function. That is because we always have the VMA
anyway, and doing an extra lookup is useful. There is a caveat, we
retain an i915_gem_object_ggtt_unbind, for the global cases which might
not talk in VMAs.

> drm/i915: plumb VM into object operations
>
> This patch was formerly known as:
> "drm/i915: Create VMAs (part 3) - plumbing"
>
> This patch adds a VM argument, bind/unbind, and the object
> offset/size/color getters/setters. It preserves the old ggtt helper
> functions because things still need, and will continue to need them.
>
> Some code will still need to be ported over after this.
>
> v2: Fix purge to pick an object and unbind all vmas
> This was doable because of the global bound list change.
>
> v3: With the commit to actually pin/unpin pages in place, there is no
> longer a need to check if unbind succeeded before calling put_pages().
> Make put_pages only BUG() after checking pin count.
>
> v4: Rebased on top of the new hangcheck work by Mika
> plumbed eb_destroy also
> Many checkpatch related fixes
>
> v5: Very large rebase
>
> v6:
> Change BUG_ON to WARN_ON (Daniel)
> Rename vm to ggtt in preallocate stolen, since it is always ggtt when
> dealing with stolen memory. (Daniel)
> list_for_each will short-circuit already (Daniel)
> remove superflous space (Daniel)
> Use per object list of vmas (Daniel)
> Make obj_bound_any() use obj_bound for each vm (Ben)
> s/bind_to_gtt/bind_to_vm/ (Ben)
>
> Fixed up the inactive shrinker. As Daniel noticed the code could
> potentially count the same object multiple times. While it's not
> possible in the current case, since 1 object can only ever be bound into
> 1 address space thus far - we may as well try to get something more
> future proof in place now. With a prep patch before this to switch over
> to using the bound list + inactive check, we're now able to carry that
> forward for every address space an object is bound into.

Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
[danvet: Rebase on top of the loss of "drm/i915: Cleanup more of VMA
in destroy".]
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-08-08 14:04:20 +02:00
Ben Widawsky
80dcfdbd68 drm/i915: Rework __i915_gem_shrink
In order to do this for all VMs, it's convenient to rework the logic a
bit. This should have no functional impact.

Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-08-08 14:02:41 +02:00
Dave Airlie
32c913e436 Merge tag 'drm-intel-next-2013-07-26-fixed' of git://people.freedesktop.org/~danvet/drm-intel into drm-next
Neat that QA (and Ben) keeps on humming along while I'm on vacation, so
you already get the next feature pull request:
- proper eLLC support for HSW from Ben
- more interrupt refactoring
- add w/a tags where we implement them already (Damien)
- hangcheck fixes (Chris) + hangcheck stats (Mika)
- flesh out the new vm structs for ppgtt and ggtt (Ben)
- PSR for Haswell, still disabled by default (Rodrigo et al.)
- pc8+ refclock sequence code from Paulo
- more interrupt refactoring from Paulo, unifying ilk/snb with the ivb/hsw
  interrupt code
- full solution for the Haswell concurrent reg access issues (Chris)
- fix racy object accounting, used by some new leak tests
- fix sync polarity settings on ch7xxx dvo encoder
- random bits&pieces, little fixes and better debug output all over

[airlied: fix conflict with drm_mm cleanups]

* tag 'drm-intel-next-2013-07-26-fixed' of git://people.freedesktop.org/~danvet/drm-intel: (289 commits)
  drm/i915: Do not dereference NULL crtc or fb until after checking
  drm/i915: fix pnv display core clock readout out
  drm/i915: Replace open-coded offset_in_page()
  drm/i915: Retry DP aux_ch communications with a different clock after failure
  drm/i915: Add messages useful for HPD storm detection debugging (v2)
  drm/i915: dvo_ch7xxx: fix vsync polarity setting
  drm/i915: fix the racy object accounting
  drm/i915: Convert the register access tracepoint to be conditional
  drm/i915: Squash gen lookup through multiple indirections inside GT access
  drm/i915: Use the common register access functions for NOTRACE variants
  drm/i915: Use a private interface for register access within GT
  drm/i915: Colocate all GT access routines in the same file
  drm/i915: fix reference counting in i915_gem_create
  drm/i915: Use Graphics Base of Stolen Memory on all gen3+
  drm/i915: disable stolen mem for OVERLAY_NEEDS_PHYSICAL
  drm/i915: add functions to disable and restore LCPLL
  drm/i915: disable CLKOUT_DP when it's not needed
  drm/i915: extend lpt_enable_clkout_dp
  drm/i915: fix up error cleanup in i915_gem_object_bind_to_gtt
  drm/i915: Add some debug breadcrumbs to connector detection
  ...
2013-08-07 18:11:35 +10:00
David Herrmann
31e5d7c67b drm/mm: add "best_match" flag to drm_mm_insert_node()
Add a "best_match" flag similar to the drm_mm_search_*() helpers so we
can convert TTM to use them in follow up patches. We can also inline the
non-generic helpers and move them into the header to allow compile-time
optimizations.

To make calls to drm_mm_{search,insert}_node() more readable, this
converts the boolean argument to a flagset. There are pending patches that
add additional flags for top-down allocators and more.

v2:
 - use flag parameter instead of boolean "best_match"
 - convert *_search_free() helpers to also use flags argument

Signed-off-by: David Herrmann <dh.herrmann@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
2013-08-07 10:08:58 +10:00
Daniel Vetter
43387b37fa drm/gem: create drm_gem_dumb_destroy
All the gem based kms drivers really want the same function to
destroy a dumb framebuffer backing storage object.

So give it to them and roll it out in all drivers.

This still leaves the option open for kms drivers which don't use GEM
for backing storage, but it does decently simplify matters for gem
drivers.

Acked-by: Inki Dae <inki.dae@samsung.com>
Acked-by: Laurent Pinchart <laurent.pinchart@ideasonboard.com>
Cc: Intel Graphics Development <intel-gfx@lists.freedesktop.org>
Cc: Ben Skeggs <skeggsb@gmail.com>
Reviwed-by: Rob Clark <robdclark@gmail.com>
Cc: Alex Deucher <alexdeucher@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Patrik Jakobsson <patrik.r.jakobsson@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
2013-08-07 09:59:24 +10:00
Ben Widawsky
637efacf8f drm/i915: eliminate dead domain clearing on reset
The code itself is no longer accurate without updating once we have
multiple address space since clearing the domains of every object
requires scanning the inactive list for all VMs.

"This code is dead. Just remove it rather than port it to vma." - Chris
Wilson

Recommended-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <benjamin.widawsky@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-08-05 19:12:25 +02:00
Ben Widawsky
d1ccbb5d71 drm/i915: make reset&hangcheck code VM aware
Hangcheck, and some of the recent reset code for guilty batches need to
know which address space the object was in at the time of a hangcheck.
This is because we use offsets in the (PP|G)GTT to determine this
information, and those offsets can differ depending on which VM they are
bound into.

Since we still only have 1 VM ever, this code shouldn't yet have any
impact.

Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-08-05 19:04:13 +02:00
Ben Widawsky
3e12302705 drm/i915: BUG_ON put_pages later
With multiple VMs, the eviction code benefits from being able to blindly
put pages without needing to know if there are any entities still
holding on to those pages. As such it's preferable to return the -EBUSY
before the BUG.

Eviction code is the only user for now, but overall it makes sense
anyway, IMO.

Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-08-05 19:04:13 +02:00
Ben Widawsky
3089c6f239 drm/i915: make caching operate on all address spaces
For now, objects will maintain the same cache levels amongst all address
spaces. This is to limit the risk of bugs, as playing with cacheability
in the different domains can be very error prone.

In the future, it may be optimal to allow setting domains per VMA (ie.
an object bound into an address space).

Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-08-05 19:04:12 +02:00
Ben Widawsky
c37e220461 drm/i915: Add VM to pin
To verbalize it, one can say, "pin an object into the given address
space." The semantics of pinning remain the same otherwise.

Certain objects will always have to be bound into the global GTT.
Therefore, global GTT is a special case, and keep a special interface
around for it (i915_gem_obj_ggtt_pin).

v2: s/i915_gem_ggtt_pin/i915_gem_obj_ggtt_pin

Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-08-05 19:04:09 +02:00
Ben Widawsky
fcb4a57805 drm/i915: Use bound list for inactive shrink
Do to the move active/inactive lists, it no longer makes sense to use
them for shrinking, since shrinking isn't VM specific (such a need may
also exist, but doesn't yet).

What we can do instead is use the global bound list to find all objects
which aren't active.

Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-08-05 19:04:09 +02:00
Ben Widawsky
a70a3148b0 drm/i915: Make proper functions for VMs
Earlier in the conversion sequence we attempted to quickly wedge in the
transitional interface as static inlines.

Now that we're sure these interfaces are sane, for easier debug and to
decrease code size (since many of these functions may be called quite a
bit), make them real functions

While at it, kill off the set_color interface. We'll always have the
VMA, or easily get to it.

Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-08-05 19:04:08 +02:00
Ben Widawsky
fc8c067eee drm/i915: Create an init vm
Move all the similar address space (VM) initialization code to one
function. Until we have multiple VMs, there should only ever be 1 VM.
The aliasing ppgtt is a special case without it's own VM (since it
doesn't need it's own address space management).

Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-08-05 19:04:07 +02:00
Daniel Vetter
c20e835586 drm/i915: fix the racy object accounting
Just use a spinlock to protect them.

v2: Rebase onto the new object create refcount fix patch.

v3: Don't kill dev_priv->mm.object_memory as requested by Chris and
hence just use a spinlock instead of atomic_t.

Cc: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Reviewed-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=67287
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-07-25 15:30:54 +02:00
Daniel Vetter
cb54b53ada Merge commit 'Merge branch 'drm-fixes' of git://people.freedesktop.org/~airlied/linux'
This backmerges Linus' merge commit of the latest drm-fixes pull:

commit 549f3a1218
Merge: 42577ca 058ca4a
Author: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Date:   Tue Jul 23 15:47:08 2013 -0700

    Merge branch 'drm-fixes' of git://people.freedesktop.org/~airlied/linux

We've accrued a few too many conflicts, but the real reason is that I
want to merge the 100% solution for Haswell concurrent registers
writes into drm-intel-next. But that depends upon the 90% bandaid
merged into -fixes:

commit a7cd1b8fea
Author: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Date:   Fri Jul 19 20:36:51 2013 +0100

    drm/i915: Serialize almost all register access

Also, we can roll up on accrued conflicts.

Usually I'd backmerge a tagged -rc, but I want to get this done before
heading off to vacations next week ;-)

Conflicts:
	drivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_dma.c
	drivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_gem.c

v2: For added hilarity we have a init sequence conflict around the
gt_lock, so need to move that one, too. Spotted by Jani Nikula.

Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-07-25 15:18:41 +02:00
David Herrmann
51335df9f0 drm/vma: provide drm_vma_node_unmap() helper
Instead of unmapping the nodes in TTM and GEM users manually, we provide
a generic wrapper which does the correct thing for all vma-nodes.

v2: remove bdev->dev_mapping test in ttm_bo_unmap_virtual_unlocked() as
ttm_mem_io_free_vm() does nothing in that case (io_reserved_vm is 0).
v4: Fix docbook comments
v5: use drm_vma_node_size()

Cc: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Cc: Maarten Lankhorst <maarten.lankhorst@canonical.com>
Cc: Thomas Hellstrom <thellstrom@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: David Herrmann <dh.herrmann@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@gmail.com>
2013-07-25 20:47:08 +10:00
David Herrmann
0de23977cf drm/gem: convert to new unified vma manager
Use the new vma manager instead of the old hashtable. Also convert all
drivers to use the new convenience helpers. This drops all the
(map_list.hash.key << PAGE_SHIFT) non-sense.

Locking and access-management is exactly the same as before with an
additional lock inside of the vma-manager, which strictly wouldn't be
needed for gem.

v2:
 - rebase on drm-next
 - init nodes via drm_vma_node_reset() in drm_gem.c
v3:
 - fix tegra
v4:
 - remove duplicate if (drm_vma_node_has_offset()) checks
 - inline now trivial drm_vma_node_offset_addr() calls
v5:
 - skip node-reset on gem-init due to kzalloc()
 - do not allow mapping gem-objects with offsets (backwards compat)
 - remove unneccessary casts

Cc: Inki Dae <inki.dae@samsung.com>
Cc: Rob Clark <robdclark@gmail.com>
Cc: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Cc: Thierry Reding <thierry.reding@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David Herrmann <dh.herrmann@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Patrik Jakobsson <patrik.r.jakobsson@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@gmail.com>
2013-07-25 20:47:06 +10:00
Daniel Vetter
d861e33876 drm/i915: fix reference counting in i915_gem_create
This function is called without the dev->struct_mutex held, hence we
need to use the _unlocked unreference variants.

As soon as the object is registered userspace can sneak in here with a
gem_close ioctl call, so the object can (and with my new evil tests
actually does) get the final unreference in this place. The lack of
locking then results in hilarity and some good leakage.

To fix this we simply need to revert

Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>

v2: We need to make the trace call _before_ we drop our ref - the
object might very well be gone by then already.

v3: Just revert the original patch as suggested by Chris Wilson.

Cc: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Reviewed-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
[danvet: Remove the added white line again to tighten the return
block, requested by Chris.]
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-07-24 23:25:03 +02:00
Daniel Vetter
bc6bc15bd7 drm/i915: fix up error cleanup in i915_gem_object_bind_to_gtt
This has been broken in

commit 2f63315692
Author: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Date:   Wed Jul 17 12:19:03 2013 -0700

    drm/i915: Create VMAs

which resulted in an OOPS the first time around we've hit -ENOSPC.

Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=67156
Cc: Imre Deak <imre.deak@intel.com>
Cc: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Tested-by: meng <mengmeng.meng@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Reviewed-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-07-24 10:37:08 +02:00
Xiong Zhang
0b74b508f7 drm/i915: add prefault_disable module option
prefault is stll enabled by default which prevent most of pwrite/pread/reloc
from running slow path, in order to verify these slow pathes, prefault need
to be disabled.

Signed-off-by: Xiong Zhang <xiong.y.zhang@intel.com>
[danvet: Make checkpatch happy and bikeshed the module option help
text a bit.]
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-07-19 09:29:26 +02:00
Dan Carpenter
6286ef9b56 drm/i915: use after free on error path
i915_gem_vma_destroy() frees its argument so we have to move the
drm_mm_remove_node() call up a few lines.

Signed-off-by: Dan Carpenter <dan.carpenter@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-07-19 08:58:42 +02:00
Dan Carpenter
db473b36d4 drm/i915: checking for NULL instead of IS_ERR()
i915_gem_vma_create() returns and ERR_PTR() or a valid pointer, it never
returns NULL.

Signed-off-by: Dan Carpenter <dan.carpenter@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-07-19 08:58:33 +02:00
Dave Airlie
e13af9a834 Merge tag 'drm-intel-next-2013-07-12' of git://people.freedesktop.org/~danvet/drm-intel into drm-next
Highlights:
- follow-up refactoring after the shared dpll rework that landed in 3.11
- oddball prep cleanups from Ben for ppgtt
- encoder->get_config state tracking infrastructure from Jesse
- used by the experimental fastboot support from Jesse (disabled by
  default)
- make the error state file official and add it to our sysfs interface
  (Mika)
- drm_mm prep changes from Ben, prepares to embedd the drm_mm_node (which
  will be used by the vma rework later on)
- interrupt handling rework, follow up cleanups to the VECS enabling, hpd
  storm handling and fifo underrun reporting.
- Big pile of smaller cleanups, code improvements and related stuff.

* tag 'drm-intel-next-2013-07-12' of git://people.freedesktop.org/~danvet/drm-intel: (72 commits)
  drm/i915: clear DPLL reg when disabling i9xx dplls
  drm/i915: Fix up cpt pixel multiplier enable sequence
  drm/i915: clean up vlv ->pre_pll_enable and pll enable sequence
  drm/i915: move error state to own compilation unit
  drm/i915: Don't attempt to read an unitialized stack value
  drm/i915: Use for_each_pipe() when possible
  drm/i915: don't enable PM_VEBOX_CS_ERROR_INTERRUPT
  drm/i915: unify ring irq refcounts (again)
  drm/i915: kill dev_priv->rps.lock
  drm/i915: queue work outside spinlock in hsw_pm_irq_handler
  drm/i915: streamline hsw_pm_irq_handler
  drm/i915: irq handlers don't need interrupt-safe spinlocks
  drm/i915: kill lpt pch transcoder->crtc mapping code for fifo underruns
  drm/i915: improve GEN7_ERR_INT clearing for fifo underrun reporting
  drm/i915: improve SERR_INT clearing for fifo underrun reporting
  drm/i915: extract ibx_display_interrupt_update
  drm/i915: remove unused members from drm_i915_private
  drm/i915: don't frob mm.suspended when not using ums
  drm/i915: Fix VLV DP RBR/HDMI/DAC PLL LPF coefficients
  drm/i915: WARN if the bios reserved range is bigger than stolen size
  ...

Conflicts:
	drivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_gem.c
2013-07-19 12:12:21 +10:00
Daniel Vetter
94a335dba3 drm/i915: correctly restore fences with objects attached
To avoid stalls we delay tiling changes and especially hold of
committing the new fence state for as long as possible.
Synchronization points are in the execbuf code and in our gtt fault
handler.

Unfortunately we've missed that tricky detail when adding proper fence
restore code in

commit 19b2dbde57
Author: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Date:   Wed Jun 12 10:15:12 2013 +0100

    drm/i915: Restore fences after resume and GPU resets

The result was that we've restored fences for objects with no tiling,
since the object<->fence link still existed after resume. Now that
wouldn't have been too bad since any subsequent access would have
fixed things up, but if we've changed from tiled to untiled real havoc
happened:

The tiling stride is stored -1 in the fence register, so a stride of 0
resulted in all 1s in the top 32bits, and so a completely bogus fence
spanning everything from the start of the object to the top of the
GTT. The tell-tale in the register dumps looks like:

                 FENCE START 2: 0x0214d001
                 FENCE END 2: 0xfffff3ff

Bit 11 isn't set since the hw doesn't store it, even when writing all
1s (at least on my snb here).

To prevent such a gaffle in the future add a sanity check for fences
with an untiled object attached in i915_gem_write_fence.

v2: Fix the WARN, spotted by Chris.

v3: Trying to reuse get_fences looked ugly and obfuscated the code.
Instead reuse update_fence and to make it really dtrt also move the
fence dirty state clearing into update_fence.

Cc: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Cc: Stéphane Marchesin <marcheu@chromium.org>
Bugzilla: https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=60530
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org (for 3.10 only)
Reviewed-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Tested-by: Matthew Garrett <matthew.garrett@nebula.com>
Tested-by: Björn Bidar <theodorstormgrade@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-07-19 00:08:16 +02:00
Daniel Vetter
8157ee2115 Linux 3.10
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Merge tag 'v3.10' into drm-intel-fixes

Backmerge Linux 3.10 to get at

commit 19b2dbde57
Author: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Date:   Wed Jun 12 10:15:12 2013 +0100

    drm/i915: Restore fences after resume and GPU resets

That commit is not in my current -fixes pile since that's based on my
-next queue for 3.11. And the above mentioned fix was merged really
late into 3.10 (and blew up, bad me) so was on a diverging branch.

Option B would have been to rebase my current pile of fixes onto
Dave's drm-fixes branch. But since some of the patches here are a bit
tricky I've decided not to void all the testing by moving over the
entire merge window.

Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-07-18 12:03:29 +02:00
Ben Widawsky
2f63315692 drm/i915: Create VMAs
Formerly: "drm/i915: Create VMAs (part 1)"

In a previous patch, the notion of a VM was introduced. A VMA describes
an area of part of the VM address space. A VMA is similar to the concept
in the linux mm. However, instead of representing regular memory, a VMA
is backed by a GEM BO. There may be many VMAs for a given object, one
for each VM the object is to be used in. This may occur through flink,
dma-buf, or a number of other transient states.

Currently the code depends on only 1 VMA per object, for the global GTT
(and aliasing PPGTT). The following patches will address this and make
the rest of the infrastructure more suited

v2: s/i915_obj/i915_gem_obj (Chris)

v3: Only move an object to the now global unbound list if there are no
more VMAs for the object which are bound into a VM (ie. the list is
empty).

v4: killed obj->gtt_space
some reworks due to rebase

v5: Free vma on error path (Imre)

v6: Another missed vma free in i915_gem_object_bind_to_gtt error path
(Imre)
Fixed vma freeing in stolen preallocation (Imre)

Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Reviewed-by: Imre Deak <imre.deak@intel.com>
[danvet: Squash in fixup from Ben to not deref a non-existing vma in
set_cache_level, reported by Chris.]
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-07-18 08:46:13 +02:00
Ben Widawsky
5cef07e162 drm/i915: Move active/inactive lists to new mm
Shamelessly manipulated out of Daniel :-)
"When moving the lists around explain that the active/inactive stuff is
used by eviction when we run out of address space, so needs to be
per-vma and per-address space. Bound/unbound otoh is used by the
shrinker which only cares about the amount of memory used and not one
bit about in which address space this memory is all used in. Of course
to actual kick out an object we need to unbind it from every address
space, but for that we have the per-object list of vmas."

v2: Leave the bound list as a global one. (Chris, indirectly)

v3: Rebased with no i915_gtt_vm. In most places I added a new *vm local,
since it will eventually be replaces by a vm argument.
Put comment back inline, since it no longer makes sense to do otherwise.

v4: Rebased on hangcheck/error state movement

Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Reviewed-by: Imre Deak <imre.deak@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-07-17 22:24:32 +02:00
Ben Widawsky
93bd8649db drm/i915: Put the mm in the parent address space
Every address space should support object allocation. It therefore makes
sense to have the allocator be part of the "superclass" which GGTT and
PPGTT will derive.

Since our maximum address space size is only 2GB we're not yet able to
avoid doing allocation/eviction; but we'd hope one day this becomes
almost irrelvant.

v2: Rebased

Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Reviewed-by: Imre Deak <imre.deak@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-07-17 22:23:43 +02:00
Ben Widawsky
853ba5d223 drm/i915: Move gtt and ppgtt under address space umbrella
The GTT and PPGTT can be thought of more generally as GPU address
spaces. Many of their actions (insert entries), state (LRU lists), and
many of their characteristics (size) can be shared. Do that.

The change itself doesn't actually impact most of the VMA/VM rework
coming up, it just fits in with the grand scheme of abstracting the GPU
VM operations. GGTT will usually be a special case where we either know
an object must be in the GGTT (dislay engine, workarounds, etc.).

The scratch page is left as part of the VM (even though it's currently
shared with the ppgtt code) because in the future when we have Full
PPGTT, I intend to create a separate scratch page for each.

v2: Drop usage of i915_gtt_vm (Daniel)
Make cleanup also part of the parent class (Ben)
Modified commit msg
Rebased

v3: Properly share scratch page (Imre)
Finish commit message (Daniel, Imre)

Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Reviewed-by: Imre Deak <imre.deak@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-07-17 22:21:47 +02:00
Dave Airlie
6bd2cab2c1 Merge tag 'drm-intel-fixes-2013-07-11' of git://people.freedesktop.org/~danvet/drm-intel
One feature latecomer, I've forgotten to merge the patch to reeanble the
Haswell power well feature now that the audio interaction is fixed up.
Since that was the only unfixed issue with it I've figured I could throw
it in a bit late, and it's trivial to revert in case I'm wrong.

Otherwise all bug/regression fixes:
- Fix status page reinit after gpu hangs, spotted by more paranoid igt
  checks.
- Fix object list walking fumble regression in the shrinker (only the
  counting part, the actual shrinking code was correct so no Oops
  potential), from Xiong Zhang.
- Fix DP 1.2 bw limits (Imre).
- Restore legacy forcewake on ivb, too many broken biosen out there. We
  dump a warn though that recent userspace might fall over with that
  config (Guenter Roeck).
- Patch up the gen2 cs tlb w/a.
- Improve the fence coherency w/a now that we have a better understanding
  what's going on. The removed wbinvd+ipi should make -rt folks happy. Big
  thanks to Jon Bloomfield for figuring this out, patches from Chris.
- Fix write-read race when switching ring (Chris). Spotted with code
  inspection, but now we also have an igt for it.

There's an ugly regression we're still working on introduced between
3.10-rc7 and 3.10.0. Unfortunately we can't just revert the offender since
that one fixes another regression :( I've asked Steven to include my
-fixes branch into linux-next to prevent such fallout in the future,
hopefully.

* tag 'drm-intel-fixes-2013-07-11' of git://people.freedesktop.org/~danvet/drm-intel:
  Revert "drm/i915: Workaround incoherence between fences and LLC across multiple CPUs"
  drm/i915: Fix incoherence with fence updates on Sandybridge+
  drm/i915: Fix write-read race with multiple rings
  Partially revert "drm/i915: unconditionally use mt forcewake on hsw/ivb"
  drm/i915: fix lane bandwidth capping for DP 1.2 sinks
  drm/i915: fix up ring cleanup for the i830/i845 CS tlb w/a
  drm/i915: Correct obj->mm_list link to dev_priv->dev_priv->mm.inactive_list
  drm/i915: switch disable_power_well default value to 1
  drm/i915: reinit status page registers after gpu reset
2013-07-17 08:40:49 +10:00
Mika Kuoppala
10cd45b6e8 drm/i915: introduce i915_queue_hangcheck
To run hangcheck in near future.

Signed-off-by: Mika Kuoppala <mika.kuoppala@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-07-16 12:44:02 +02:00
Ben Widawsky
59124506ba drm/i915: store eLLC size
The eLLC cannot be determined by PCIID because as far as we know, even
machines supporting eLLC may not have it enabled, or fused off or
whatever. It's possible this isn't actually true, and at that point we
can switch to a DEV_INFO flag instead.

I've defined everything where the docs are clear, and left the rest as
magic.

But we need it before we set the pte_encode function pointers, which
happens really early, in gtt_init.

The problem with just doing the normal sequence earlier is we don't have
the ability to use forcewake until after the pte functions have been set
up.

Since all solutions are somewhat ugly (barring rewriting all the init
ordering), I've opted to do the detection really early, and the enabling
later - since the register to detect doesn't require forcewake.

Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
[danvet: Move dev_priv->ellc_size away from the dri1 dungeon to a nice
place right next to the l3 parity stuff. Also squash in the follow-up
commit to read out the eLLC size a bit earlier.]
Reviewed-by: Rodrigo Vivi <rodrigo.vivi@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-07-16 08:08:21 +02:00
Ben Widawsky
05e21cc43d drm/i915: Define some of the eLLC magic
The EDRAM present register isn't really defined in the docs. It just
says check to see if it's set to 1. So I haven't defined the 1 value not
knowing what it actually means.

Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-07-16 08:00:52 +02:00
Chris Wilson
46a0b638f3 Revert "drm/i915: Workaround incoherence between fences and LLC across multiple CPUs"
This reverts commit 25ff119 and the follow on for Valleyview commit 2dc8aae.

commit 25ff1195f8
Author: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Date:   Thu Apr 4 21:31:03 2013 +0100

    drm/i915: Workaround incoherence between fences and LLC across multiple CPUs

commit 2dc8aae06d
Author: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Date:   Wed May 22 17:08:06 2013 +0100

    drm/i915: Workaround incoherence with fence updates on Valleyview

Jon Bloomfield came up with a plausible explanation and cheap fix
(drm/i915: Fix incoherence with fence updates on Sandybridge+) for the
race condition, so lets run with it.

This is a candidate for stable as the old workaround incurs a
significant cost (calling wbinvd on all CPUs before performing the
register write) for some workloads as noted by Carsten Emde.

Link: http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/intel-gfx/2013-June/028819.html
References: https://www.osadl.org/?id=1543#c7602
References: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=63825
Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Cc: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
Cc: Jon Bloomfield <jon.bloomfield@intel.com>
Cc: Carsten Emde <C.Emde@osadl.org>
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-07-10 15:31:12 +02:00
Chris Wilson
d18b961903 drm/i915: Fix incoherence with fence updates on Sandybridge+
This hopefully fixes the root cause behind the workaround added in

commit 25ff1195f8
Author: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Date:   Thu Apr 4 21:31:03 2013 +0100

    drm/i915: Workaround incoherence between fences and LLC across multiple CPUs

Thanks to further investigation by Jon Bloomfield, he realised that
the 64-bit register might be broken up by the hardware into two 32-bit
writes (a problem we have encountered elsewhere). This non-atomicity
would then cause an issue where a second thread would see an
intermediate register state (new high dword, old low dword), and this
register would randomly be used in preference to its own thread register.
This would cause the second thread to read from and write into a fairly
random tiled location.  Breaking the operation into 3 explicit 32-bit
updates (first disable the fence, poke the upper bits, then poke the lower
bits and enable) ensures that, given proper serialisation between the
32-bit register write and the memory transfer, that the fence value is
always consistent.

Armed with this knowledge, we can explain how the previous workaround
work. The key to the corruption is that a second thread sees an
erroneous fence register that conflicts and overrides its own. By
serialising the fence update across all CPUs, we have a small window
where no GTT access is occurring and so hide the potential corruption.
This also leads to the conclusion that the earlier workaround was
incomplete.

v2: Be overly paranoid about the order in which fence updates become
visible to the GPU to make really sure that we turn the fence off before
doing the update, and then only switch the fence on afterwards.

Signed-off-by: Jon Bloomfield <jon.bloomfield@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Cc: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
Cc: Carsten Emde <C.Emde@osadl.org>
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-07-10 14:41:46 +02:00
Daniel Vetter
db1b76ca6a drm/i915: don't frob mm.suspended when not using ums
In kernel modeset driver mode we're in full control of the chip,
always. So there's no need at all to set mm.suspended in
i915_gem_idle. Hence move that out into the leavevt ioctl. Since
i915_gem_idle doesn't suspend gem any more we can also drop the
re-enabling for KMS in the thaw function.

Also clean up the handling of mm.suspend at driver load by coalescing
all the assignments.

Stumbled over while reading through our resume code for unrelated
reasons.

v2: Shovel mm.suspended into the (newly created) ums dungeon as
suggested by Chris Wilson. The plan is that once we've completely
stopped relying on the register save/restore code we could shovel even
that in there.

v3: Improve the locking for the entervt/leavevt ioctls a bit by moving
the dev->struct_mutex locking outside of i915_gem_idle. Also don't
clear dev_priv->ums.mm_suspended for the kms case, we allocate it with
kzalloc. Both suggested by Chris Wilson.

Cc: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Reviewed-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk> (v2)
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-07-10 14:30:25 +02:00
Chris Wilson
02978ff57a drm/i915: Fix write-read race with multiple rings
Daniel noticed a problem where is we wrote to an object with ring A in
the middle of a very long running batch, then executed a quick batch on
ring B before a batch that reads from the same object, its obj->ring would
now point to ring B, but its last_write_seqno would be still relative to
ring A. This would allow for the user to read from the object before the
GPU had completed the write, as set_domain would only check that ring B
had passed the last_write_seqno.

To fix this simply (and inelegantly), we bump the last_write_seqno when
switching rings so that the last_write_seqno is always relative to the
current obj->ring.

This fixes igt/tests/gem_write_read_ring_switch.

Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Cc: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
[danvet: Add note about the newly created igt which exercises this
bug.]
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-07-10 10:41:55 +02:00
Linus Torvalds
2e17c5a97e Merge branch 'drm-next' of git://people.freedesktop.org/~airlied/linux
Pull drm updates from Dave Airlie:
 "Okay this is the big one, I was stalled on the fbdev pull req as I
  stupidly let fbdev guys merge a patch I required to fix a warning with
  some patches I had, they ended up merging the patch from the wrong
  place, but the warning should be fixed.  In future I'll just take the
  patch myself!

  Outside drm:

  There are some snd changes for the HDMI audio interactions on haswell,
  they've been acked for inclusion via my tree.  This relies on the
  wound/wait tree from Ingo which is already merged.

  Major changes:

  AMD finally released the dynamic power management code for all their
  GPUs from r600->present day, this is great, off by default for now but
  also a huge amount of code, in fact it is most of this pull request.

  Since it landed there has been a lot of community testing and Alex has
  sent a lot of fixes for any bugs found so far.  I suspect radeon might
  now be the biggest kernel driver ever :-P p.s.  radeon.dpm=1 to enable
  dynamic powermanagement for anyone.

  New drivers:

  Renesas r-car display unit.

  Other highlights:

   - core: GEM CMA prime support, use new w/w mutexs for TTM
     reservations, cursor hotspot, doc updates
   - dvo chips: chrontel 7010B support
   - i915: Haswell (fbc, ips, vecs, watermarks, audio powerwell),
     Valleyview (enabled by default, rc6), lots of pll reworking, 30bpp
     support (this time for sure)
   - nouveau: async buffer object deletion, context/register init
     updates, kernel vp2 engine support, GF117 support, GK110 accel
     support (with external nvidia ucode), context cleanups.
   - exynos: memory leak fixes, Add S3C64XX SoC series support, device
     tree updates, common clock framework support,
   - qxl: cursor hotspot support, multi-monitor support, suspend/resume
     support
   - mgag200: hw cursor support, g200 mode limiting
   - shmobile: prime support
   - tegra: fixes mostly

  I've been banging on this quite a lot due to the size of it, and it
  seems to okay on everything I've tested it on."

* 'drm-next' of git://people.freedesktop.org/~airlied/linux: (811 commits)
  drm/radeon/dpm: implement vblank_too_short callback for si
  drm/radeon/dpm: implement vblank_too_short callback for cayman
  drm/radeon/dpm: implement vblank_too_short callback for btc
  drm/radeon/dpm: implement vblank_too_short callback for evergreen
  drm/radeon/dpm: implement vblank_too_short callback for 7xx
  drm/radeon/dpm: add checks against vblank time
  drm/radeon/dpm: add helper to calculate vblank time
  drm/radeon: remove stray line in old pm code
  drm/radeon/dpm: fix display_gap programming on rv7xx
  drm/nvc0/gr: fix gpc firmware regression
  drm/nouveau: fix minor thinko causing bo moves to not be async on kepler
  drm/radeon/dpm: implement force performance level for TN
  drm/radeon/dpm: implement force performance level for ON/LN
  drm/radeon/dpm: implement force performance level for SI
  drm/radeon/dpm: implement force performance level for cayman
  drm/radeon/dpm: implement force performance levels for 7xx/eg/btc
  drm/radeon/dpm: add infrastructure to force performance levels
  drm/radeon: fix surface setup on r1xx
  drm/radeon: add support for 3d perf states on older asics
  drm/radeon: set default clocks for SI when DPM is disabled
  ...
2013-07-09 16:04:31 -07:00
Xiong Zhang
067556084a drm/i915: Correct obj->mm_list link to dev_priv->dev_priv->mm.inactive_list
obj->mm_list link to dev_priv->mm.inactive_list/active_list
obj->global_list link to dev_priv->mm.unbound_list/bound_list

This regression has been introduced in

commit 93927ca52a
Author: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
Date:   Thu Jan 10 18:03:00 2013 +0100

    drm/i915: Revert shrinker changes from "Track unbound pages"

Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Xiong Zhang <xiong.y.zhang@intel.com>
[danvet: Add regression notice.]
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-07-09 16:31:48 +02:00
Ben Widawsky
c6cfb32567 drm/i915: Embed drm_mm_node in i915 gem obj
Embedding the node in the obj is more natural in the transition to VMAs
which will also have embedded nodes. This change also helps transition
away from put_block to remove node.

Though it's quite an uncommon occurrence, it's somewhat convenient to not
fail at bind time because we cannot allocate the node. Though in
practice there are other allocations (like the request structure) which
would probably make this point not terribly useful.

Quoting Daniel:
Note that the only difference between put_block and remove_node is
that the former fills up the preallocation cache. Which we don't need
anyway and hence is just wasted space.

v2: Clean up the stolen preallocation code.
Rebased on the reserve_node patches
renames ggtt_ stuff to gtt_ stuff
WARN_ON if the object is already bound (which doesn't mean it's in the
bound list, tricky)

Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-07-08 22:04:36 +02:00
Ben Widawsky
edd41a870f drm/i915: Kill obj->gtt_offset
With the getters in place from the previous patch this members serves no
purpose other than saving one spare pointer chase, which will be killed
in the next patch anyway.

Moving to VMAs, this members adds unnecessary confusion since an object
may exist at different offsets in different VMs.

v2: Properly preserve the stolen offset. This code is a bit hacky but it
all goes away when we embed the drm_mm_node and removes the need for the
incorrect patch I submitted previously: "Use gtt_space->start for stolen
reservation"

Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-07-08 22:04:35 +02:00
Ben Widawsky
f343c5f647 drm/i915: Getter/setter for object attributes
Soon we want to gut a lot of our existing assumptions how many address
spaces an object can live in, and in doing so, embed the drm_mm_node in
the object (and later the VMA).

It's possible in the future we'll want to add more getter/setter
methods, but for now this is enough to enable the VMAs.

v2: Reworked commit message (Ben)
Added comments to the main functions (Ben)
sed -i "s/i915_gem_obj_set_color/i915_gem_obj_ggtt_set_color/" drivers/gpu/drm/i915/*.[ch]
sed -i "s/i915_gem_obj_bound/i915_gem_obj_ggtt_bound/" drivers/gpu/drm/i915/*.[ch]
sed -i "s/i915_gem_obj_size/i915_gem_obj_ggtt_size/" drivers/gpu/drm/i915/*.[ch]
sed -i "s/i915_gem_obj_offset/i915_gem_obj_ggtt_offset/" drivers/gpu/drm/i915/*.[ch]
(Daniel)

v3: Rebased on new reserve_node patch
Changed DRM_DEBUG_KMS to actually work (will need fixing later)

Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-07-08 22:04:34 +02:00
Chris Wilson
d26e3af842 drm/i915: Refactor the wait_rendering completion into a common routine
Harmonise the completion logic between the non-blocking and normal
wait_rendering paths, and move that logic into a common function.

In the process, we note that the last_write_seqno is by definition the
earlier of the two read/write seqnos and so all successful waits will
have passed the last_write_seqno. Therefore we can unconditionally clear
the write seqno and its domains in the completion logic.

v2: Add the missing ring parameter, because sometimes it is good to have
things compile.

Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-07-01 11:15:01 +02:00
Chris Wilson
daa13e1ca5 drm/i915: Only clear write-domains after a successful wait-seqno
In the introduction of the non-blocking wait, I cut'n'pasted the wait
completion code from normal locked path. Unfortunately, this neglected
that the normal path returned early if the wait returned early. The
result is that read-only waits may return whilst the GPU is still
writing to the bo.

Fixes regression from
commit 3236f57a01 [v3.7]
Author: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Date:   Fri Aug 24 09:35:09 2012 +0100

    drm/i915: Use a non-blocking wait for set-to-domain ioctl

Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=66163
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-07-01 11:15:00 +02:00
Jani Nikula
3765f30486 drm/i915: fix build warning on format specifier mismatch
drivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_gem.c: In function ‘i915_gem_object_bind_to_gtt’:
drivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_gem.c:3002:3: warning: format ‘%ld’ expects
argument of type ‘long int’, but argument 5 has type ‘size_t’ [-Wformat]

v2: Use %zu instead of %d. Two char patch, and 100% wrong. (Ville)

Signed-off-by: Jani Nikula <jani.nikula@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ville Syrjälä <ville.syrjala@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-07-01 11:14:43 +02:00
Konrad Rzeszutek Wilk
1625e7e549 drm/i915: make compact dma scatter lists creation work with SWIOTLB backend.
Git commit 90797e6d1e
("drm/i915: create compact dma scatter lists for gem objects") makes
certain assumptions about the under laying DMA API that are not always
correct.

On a ThinkPad X230 with an Intel HD 4000 with Xen during the bootup
I see:

[drm:intel_pipe_set_base] *ERROR* pin & fence failed
[drm:intel_crtc_set_config] *ERROR* failed to set mode on [CRTC:3], err = -28

Bit of debugging traced it down to dma_map_sg failing (in
i915_gem_gtt_prepare_object) as some of the SG entries were huge (3MB).

That unfortunately are sizes that the SWIOTLB is incapable of handling -
the maximum it can handle is a an entry of 512KB of virtual contiguous
memory for its bounce buffer. (See IO_TLB_SEGSIZE).

Previous to the above mention git commit the SG entries were of 4KB, and
the code introduced by above git commit squashed the CPU contiguous PFNs
in one big virtual address provided to DMA API.

This patch is a simple semi-revert - were we emulate the old behavior
if we detect that SWIOTLB is online. If it is not online then we continue
on with the new compact scatter gather mechanism.

An alternative solution would be for the the '.get_pages' and the
i915_gem_gtt_prepare_object to retry with smaller max gap of the
amount of PFNs that can be combined together - but with this issue
discovered during rc7 that might be too risky.

Reported-and-Tested-by: Konrad Rzeszutek Wilk <konrad.wilk@oracle.com>
CC: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
CC: Imre Deak <imre.deak@intel.com>
CC: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
CC: David Airlie <airlied@linux.ie>
CC: <dri-devel@lists.freedesktop.org>
Signed-off-by: Konrad Rzeszutek Wilk <konrad.wilk@oracle.com>
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-07-01 11:14:42 +02:00
Dave Airlie
28419261b0 Merge tag 'drm-intel-next-2013-06-18' of git://people.freedesktop.org/~danvet/drm-intel into drm-next
Last 3.11 feature pull. I have a few odds bits and pieces and fixes in my
queue, I'll sort them out later on to see what's for 3.11-fixes and what's
for 3.12. But nothing to hold this here up imo.

Highlights:
- more hangcheck work from Mika and Chris to prepare for arb robustness
- trickle feed fixes from Ville
- first parts of the shared pch pll rework, with some basic hw state
  readout and cross-checking (this shuts up the confused pch pll refcount
  WARN that Linus just recently forwarded)
- Haswell audio power well support from Wang Xingchao (alsa bits acked by
  Takashi)
- some cleanups and asserts sprinkling around the plane/gamma enabling
  sequence from Ville
- more gtt refactoring from Ben
- clear up the adjusted->mode vs. pixel clock vs. port clock confusion
- 30bpp support, this time for real hopefully

* tag 'drm-intel-next-2013-06-18' of git://people.freedesktop.org/~danvet/drm-intel: (97 commits)
  drm/i915: remove a superflous semi-colon
  drm/i915: Kill useless "Enable panel fitter" comments
  drm/i915: Remove extra "ring" from error message
  drm/i915: simplify the reduced clock handling for pch plls
  drm/i915: stop killing pfit on i9xx
  drm/i915: explicitly set up PIPECONF (and gamma table) on haswell
  drm/i915: set up PIPECONF explicitly for i9xx/vlv platforms
  drm/i915: set up PIPECONF explicitly on ilk-ivb
  drm/i915: find guilty batch buffer on ring resets
  drm/i915: store ring hangcheck action
  drm/i915: add batch bo to i915_add_request()
  drm/i915: change i915_add_request to macro
  drm/i915: add i915_gem_context_get_hang_stats()
  drm/i915: add struct i915_ctx_hang_stats
  drm/i915: Try harder to disable trickle feed on VLV
  drm/i915: fix up pch pll enabling for pixel multipliers
  drm/i915: hw state readout and cross-checking for shared dplls
  drm/i915: WARN on lack of shared dpll
  drm/i915: split up intel_modeset_check_state
  drm/i915: extract readout_hw_state from setup_hw_state
  ...

Conflicts:
	drivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_display.c
	drivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_fb.c
	drivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_sdvo.c
2013-06-28 09:50:34 +10:00
Dave Airlie
4300a0f8bd Linux 3.10-rc7
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Merge tag 'v3.10-rc7' into drm-next

Linux 3.10-rc7

The sdvo lvds fix in this -fixes pull

commit c3456fb3e4
Author: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
Date:   Mon Jun 10 09:47:58 2013 +0200

    drm/i915: prefer VBT modes for SVDO-LVDS over EDID

has a silent functional conflict with

commit 990256aec2
Author: Ville Syrjälä <ville.syrjala@linux.intel.com>
Date:   Fri May 31 12:17:07 2013 +0000

    drm: Add probed modes in probe order

in drm-next. W simply need to add the vbt modes before edid modes, i.e. the
other way round than now.

Conflicts:
	drivers/gpu/drm/drm_prime.c
	drivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_sdvo.c
2013-06-27 20:40:44 +10:00
Konrad Rzeszutek Wilk
426729dcc7 drm/i915: make compact dma scatter lists creation work with SWIOTLB backend.
Git commit 90797e6d1e
("drm/i915: create compact dma scatter lists for gem objects") makes
certain assumptions about the under laying DMA API that are not always
correct.

On a ThinkPad X230 with an Intel HD 4000 with Xen during the bootup
I see:

[drm:intel_pipe_set_base] *ERROR* pin & fence failed
[drm:intel_crtc_set_config] *ERROR* failed to set mode on [CRTC:3], err = -28

Bit of debugging traced it down to dma_map_sg failing (in
i915_gem_gtt_prepare_object) as some of the SG entries were huge (3MB).

That unfortunately are sizes that the SWIOTLB is incapable of handling -
the maximum it can handle is a an entry of 512KB of virtual contiguous
memory for its bounce buffer. (See IO_TLB_SEGSIZE).

Previous to the above mention git commit the SG entries were of 4KB, and
the code introduced by above git commit squashed the CPU contiguous PFNs
in one big virtual address provided to DMA API.

This patch is a simple semi-revert - were we emulate the old behavior
if we detect that SWIOTLB is online. If it is not online then we continue
on with the new compact scatter gather mechanism.

An alternative solution would be for the the '.get_pages' and the
i915_gem_gtt_prepare_object to retry with smaller max gap of the
amount of PFNs that can be combined together - but with this issue
discovered during rc7 that might be too risky.

Reported-and-Tested-by: Konrad Rzeszutek Wilk <konrad.wilk@oracle.com>
CC: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
CC: Imre Deak <imre.deak@intel.com>
CC: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
CC: David Airlie <airlied@linux.ie>
CC: <dri-devel@lists.freedesktop.org>
Signed-off-by: Konrad Rzeszutek Wilk <konrad.wilk@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
2013-06-25 10:39:57 +10:00
Chris Wilson
19b2dbde57 drm/i915: Restore fences after resume and GPU resets
Stéphane Marchesin found that fences for pinned objects (i.e. the
scanout) were not being restored upon resume, leading to corruption on
the display and reference counting issues. This is due to a bug in

commit 312817a39f [2.6.38]
Author: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Date:   Mon Nov 22 11:50:11 2010 +0000

    drm/i915: Only save and restore fences for UMS

that zapped the pinned fences even though they were in use.
Fortuitously, whilst we forced a VT switch during suspend and resume,
no fences were ever pinned at the time. However, we now can do
switchless S3 transitions and so the old bug finally surfaces.

Reported-by: Stéphane Marchesin <marcheu@chromium.org>
Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Cc: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
Cc: Stéphane Marchesin <marcheu@chromium.org>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-06-16 01:10:45 +02:00
Mika Kuoppala
aa60c664e6 drm/i915: find guilty batch buffer on ring resets
After hang check timer has declared gpu to be hung,
rings are reset. In ring reset, when clearing
request list, do post mortem analysis to find out
the guilty batch buffer.

Select requests for further analysis by inspecting
the completed sequence number which has been updated
into the HWS page. If request was completed, it can't
be related to the hang.

For noncompleted requests mark the batch as guilty
if the ring was not waiting and the ring head was
stuck inside the buffer object or in the flush region
right after the batch. For everything else, mark
them as innocents.

v2: Fixed a typo in commit message (Ville Syrjälä)

v3: - more descriptive function parameters (Chris Wilson)
    - use masked head address when inspecting if request is in ring
    - s/hangcheck.last_action/hangcheck.action
    - added comment about unmasked head hitting batch_obj range

Reviewed-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Mika Kuoppala <mika.kuoppala@intel.com>
Acked-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-06-13 17:42:17 +02:00
Mika Kuoppala
7d736f4f0b drm/i915: add batch bo to i915_add_request()
In order to track down a batch buffer and context which
caused the ring to hang, store reference to bo into the request struct.
Request can also cause gpu to hang after the batch in the flush section
in the ring. To detect this add start of the flush portion offset into the
request.

v2: Included comment about request vs batch_obj lifetimes (Chris Wilson)

Signed-off-by: Mika Kuoppala <mika.kuoppala@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Acked-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-06-13 17:42:16 +02:00
Mika Kuoppala
0025c0772d drm/i915: change i915_add_request to macro
Only execbuffer needed all the parameters on i915_add_request().
By putting __i915_add_request behind macro, all current callsites
become cleaner. Following patch will introduce a new parameter
for __i915_add_request. With this patch, only the relevant callsite
will reflect the change making commit smaller and easier to understand.

v2: _i915_add_request as function name (Chris Wilson)

v3: change name __i915_add_request and fix ordering of params (Ben Widawsky)

Signed-off-by: Mika Kuoppala <mika.kuoppala@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Acked-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-06-13 17:42:15 +02:00
Dave Airlie
e6dfcc5303 Merge tag 'drm-intel-next-2013-06-01' of git://people.freedesktop.org/~danvet/drm-intel into drm-next
Daniel writes:
Another round of drm-intel-next for 3.11. Highlights:
- Haswell IPS support (Paulo Zanoni)
- VECS support on Haswell (Ben Widawsky, Xiang Haihao, ...)
- Haswell watermark fixes (Paulo Zanoni)
- "Make the gun bigger again" multithread fence fix from Chris.
- i915_error_state finnally no longer fails with -ENOMEM! Big thanks to
  Mika for tackling this.
- vlv sideband locking fixes from Jani
- Hangcheck prep work for arb_robustness support (Mika&Chris)
- edp vs cpu port confusion clean-up from Imre
- pile of smaller fixes and cleanups all over.

* tag 'drm-intel-next-2013-06-01' of git://people.freedesktop.org/~danvet/drm-intel: (70 commits)
  drm/i915: add i915_ips_status debugfs entry
  drm/i915: add enable_ips module option
  drm/i915: implement IPS feature
  drm/i915: fix up the edp power well check
  drm/i915: add I915_PARAM_HAS_VEBOX to i915_getparam
  drm/i915: add I915_EXEC_VEBOX to i915_gem_do_execbuffer()
  drm/i915: add VEBOX into debugfs
  drm/i915: Enable vebox interrupts
  drm/i915: vebox interrupt get/put
  drm/i915: consolidate interrupt naming scheme
  drm/i915: Convert irq_refounct to struct
  drm/i915: make PM interrupt writes non-destructive
  drm/i915: Add PM regs to pre/post install
  drm/i915: Create an ivybridge_irq_preinstall
  drm/i915: Create a more generic pm handler for hsw+
  drm/i915: add support for 5/6 data buffer partitioning on Haswell
  drm/i915: properly set HSW WM_LP watermarks
  drm/i915: properly set HSW WM_PIPE registers
  drm/i915: fix pch_nop support
  drm/i915: Vebox ringbuffer init
  ...
2013-06-11 08:38:56 +10:00
Daniel Vetter
7abb690a0e drm/i915: Fix spurious -EIO/SIGBUS on wedged gpus
Chris Wilson noticed that since

commit 1f83fee08d [v3.9]
Author: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
Date:   Thu Nov 15 17:17:22 2012 +0100

    drm/i915: clear up wedged transitions

X can again get -EIO when it does not expect it. And even worse score
a SIGBUS when accessing gtt mmaps. The established ABI is that we
_only_ return an -EIO from execbuf - all other ioctls should just
work. And since the reset code moves all bos out of gpu domains and
clears out all the last_seqno/ring tracking there really shouldn't be
any reason for non-execbuf code to ever touch the hw and see an -EIO.

After some extensive discussions we've noticed that these spurios -EIO
are caused by i915_gem_wait_for_error:

http://www.mail-archive.com/intel-gfx@lists.freedesktop.org/msg20540.html

That is easy to fix by returning 0 instead of -EIO, since grabbing the
dev->struct_mutex does not yet mean that we actually want to touch the
hw. And so there is no reason at all to fail with -EIO.

But that's not the entire since, since often (at least it's easily
googleable) dmesg indicates that the reset fails and we declare the
gpu wedged. Then, quite a bit later X wakes up with the "Timed out
waiting for the gpu reset to complete" DRM_ERROR message in
wait_for_errror and brings down the desktop with an -EIO/SIGBUS.

So clearly we're missing a wakeup somewhere, since the gpu reset just
doesn't take 10 seconds to complete. And indeed we're do handle the
terminally wedged state wrong.

Fix this all up.

References: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=63921
References: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=64073
Cc: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Cc: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
Cc: Damien Lespiau <damien.lespiau@intel.com>
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Reviewed-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-06-03 14:35:18 +02:00
Ben Widawsky
35c20a60c7 drm/i915: Rename the gtt_list to global_list
Since it will be used for the global bound/unbound list with full PPGTT,
this helps clarify things for upcoming code rework.

Recommended-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Reviewed-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-06-03 10:51:14 +02:00
Ben Widawsky
401c29f607 drm/i915: unpin pages at unbind
If we properly keep track of the pages_pin_count, then when we later add
multiple address spaces, the put_pages doesn't need any special checks
to be able to perform it's job.

CC: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Reviewed-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
[danvet: Rebased on top of the fix for stolen memory pinning.]
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-06-03 10:50:22 +02:00
Ben Widawsky
1d64ae719b drm/i915: Unpin stolen pages
The way the stolen handling works is we take a pin on the backing pages,
but we never actually get a reference to the bo. On freeing objects
allocated with stolen memory, the final unref will end up freeing the
object with pinned pages count left. To enable an assertion to catch
bugs in this code path, this patch cleans up that remaining pin.

Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Reviewed-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-06-03 10:49:08 +02:00
Ben Widawsky
9a8a2213a7 drm/i915: Vebox ringbuffer init
v2: Add set_seqno which didn't exist before rebase (Haihao)

Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Reviewed-by: Damien Lespiau <damien.lespiau@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Xiang, Haihao <haihao.xiang@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-05-31 20:54:12 +02:00
Ben Widawsky
0a9ae0d7f8 drm/i915: pre-fixes for checkpatch
Since I'll need to modify i915_gem_object_bind_to_gtt(), fix the errors
now to get checkpatch to not complain.

Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
[danvet: Resolve conflict with Chris' improved debug output, and
bikeshed the new variable with s/max/gtt_max/ a bit while at it.]
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-05-31 20:53:56 +02:00
Dave Airlie
e81f3d81e2 Merge tag 'drm-intel-next-2013-05-20-merged' of git://people.freedesktop.org/~danvet/drm-intel into drm-next
Daniel writes:
Highlights (copy-pasted from my testing cycle mails):
- fbc support for Haswell (Rodrigo)
- streamlined workaround comments, including an igt tool to grep for
  them (Damien)
- sdvo and TV out cleanups, including a fixup for sdvo multifunction devices
- refactor our eDP mess a bit (Imre)
- don't register the hdmi connector on haswell when desktop eDP is present
- vlv support is no longer preliminary!
- more vlv fixes from Jesse for stolen and dpll handling
- more flexible power well checking infrastructure from Paulo
- a few gtt patches from Ben
- a bit of OCD cleanups for transcoder #defines and an assorted pile
  of smaller things.
- fixes for the gmch modeset sequence
- a bit of OCD around plane/pipe usage (Ville)
- vlv turbo support (Jesse)
- tons of vlv modeset fixes (Jesse et al.)
- vlv pte write fixes (Kenneth Graunke)
- hpd filtering to avoid costly probes on unaffected outputs (Egbert Eich)
- intel dev_info cleanups and refactorings (Damien)
- vlv rc6 support (Jesse)
- random pile of fixes around non-24bpp modes handling
- asle/opregion cleanups and locking fixes (Jani)
- dp dpll refactoring
- improvements for reduced_clock computation on g4x/ilk+
- pfit state refactored to use pipe_config (Jesse)
- lots more computed modeset state moved to pipe_config, including readout
  and cross-check support
- fdi auto-dithering for ivb B/C links, using the neat pipe_config
  improvements
- drm_rect helpers plus sprite clipping fixes (Ville)
- hw context refcounting (Mika + Ben)

* tag 'drm-intel-next-2013-05-20-merged' of git://people.freedesktop.org/~danvet/drm-intel: (155 commits)
  drm/i915: add support for dvo Chrontel 7010B
  drm/i915: Use pipe config state to control gmch pfit enable/disable
  drm/i915: Use pipe_config state to disable ilk+ pfit
  drm/i915: panel fitter hw state readout&check support
  drm/i915: implement WADPOClockGatingDisable for LPT
  drm/i915: Add missing platform tags to FBC workaround comments
  drm/i915: rip out an unused lvds_reg variable
  drm/i915: Compute WR PLL dividers dynamically
  drm/i915: HSW FBC WaFbcDisableDpfcClockGating
  drm/i915: HSW FBC WaFbcAsynchFlipDisableFbcQueue
  drm/i915: Enable FBC at Haswell.
  drm/i915: IVB FBC WaFbcDisableDpfcClockGating
  drm/i915: IVB FBC WaFbcAsynchFlipDisableFbcQueue
  drm/i915: Add support for FBC on Ivybridge.
  drm/i915: Organize VBT stuff inside drm_i915_private
  drm/i915: make SDVO TV-out work for multifunction devices
  drm/i915: rip out now unused is_foo tracking from crtc code
  drm/i915: rip out TV-out lore ...
  drm/i915: drop TVclock special casing on ilk+
  drm/i915: move sdvo TV clock computation to intel_sdvo.c
  ...
2013-05-31 12:56:05 +10:00
Chris Wilson
2dc8aae06d drm/i915: Workaround incoherence with fence updates on Valleyview
In commit 25ff1195f8
Author: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Date:   Thu Apr 4 21:31:03 2013 +0100

    drm/i915: Workaround incoherence between fences and LLC across multiple CPUs

we introduced an empirical workaround for memory corruption when using
fences from multiple CPUs. At the time, we did not have any results for
Valleyview, so the presumption was that it was limited to recent
generations using LLC. Now we have evidence that Valleyview also suffers
incoherence and requires a similar but different workaround. For
Valleyview, the wbinvd instruction is insufficient and we require the
serialising register write per-CPU. Conversely, that serialising
register write is not enough for SNB/IVB/HSW. To compromise and keep the
code relatively clean, employ both serialisation techniques in the same
workaround.

Reported-by: Jon Bloomfield <jon.bloomfield@intel.com>
Tested-by: Jon Bloomfield <jon.bloomfield@intel.com>
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=62191
Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-05-23 12:51:31 +02:00
Chris Wilson
a36689cb77 drm/i915: Be more informative when reporting "too large for aperture" error
This should help debugging the truly unexpected cases where it occurs -
in particular to see which value is garbage.

References: https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=58511
Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
[danvet: s/%ld/%zd/ as spotted by Wu Fengguang's autobuilder.]
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-05-23 12:51:29 +02:00
Imre Deak
e054cc3937 drm/i915: avoid premature timeouts in __wait_seqno()
At the moment wait_event_timeout/wait_event_interruptible_timeout may
time out 1 jiffy too early, as the calculated expiry time is 1 less than
needed. Besides timing out too early this also means that the
calculation of the remaining time will be incorrect and we will pass a
non-zero remaining time to user space in case of a time out. This is one
reason for the following bugzilla report:

Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=64270

Signed-off-by: Imre Deak <imre.deak@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-05-22 13:51:23 +02:00
Daniel Vetter
e1b73cba13 Linux 3.10-rc2
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Merge tag 'v3.10-rc2' into drm-intel-next-queued

Backmerge Linux 3.10-rc2 since the various (rather trivial) conflicts
grew a bit out of hand. intel_dp.c has the only real functional
conflict since the logic changed while dev_priv->edp.bpp was moved
around.

Also squash in a whitespace fixup from Ben Widawsky for
i915_gem_gtt.c, git seems to do something pretty strange in there
(which I don't fully understand tbh).

Conflicts:
	drivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_reg.h
	drivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_dp.c

Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-05-21 09:52:16 +02:00
Mika Kuoppala
0e50e96bf2 drm/i915: add context into request struct
Storing context reference into request struct
allows us to inspect context and its associated
objects when requests are retired.

Both ppgtt and arb robustness work will need
this.

Signed-off-by: Mika Kuoppala <mika.kuoppala@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-05-06 11:21:51 +02:00
Chris Wilson
4f42f4ef0d drm/i915: Always normalize return timeout for wait_timeout_ioctl
As we recompute the remaining timeout after waiting, there is a
potential for that timeout to be less than zero and so need sanitizing.
The timeout is always returned to userspace and validated, so we should
always perform the sanitation.

v2 [vsyrjala]: Only normalize the timespec if it's invalid
v3: Add a comment to clarify the situation and remove the now
    useless WARN_ON() (ickle)

Cc: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Ville Syrjälä <ville.syrjala@linux.intel.com>
Tested-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-04-30 10:50:32 +02:00
Ville Syrjälä
42b5aeabe9 drm/i915: IVB/HSW have 32 fence register
Increase the number of fence registers to 32 on IVB/HSW. VLV however
only has 16 fence registers according to the docs.

Increasing the number of fences was attempted before [1], but there was
some uncertainty about the maximum CPU fence number for FBC. Since then
BSpec has been updated to state that there are in fact 32 fence registers,
and the CPU fence number field in the SNB_DPFC_CTL_SA register is 5 bits,
and the CPU fence number field in the ILK_DPFC_CONTROL register must be
zero. So now it all makes sense.

[1] http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/intel-gfx/2011-October/012865.html

v2: Include some background information based on the previous attempt

Signed-off-by: Ville Syrjälä <ville.syrjala@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-04-18 09:43:21 +02:00
Ben Widawsky
b7c36d2546 drm/i915: Allow PPGTT enable to fail
I'm really not happy that we have to support this, but this will be the
simplest way to handle cases where PPGTT init can fail, which I promise
will be coming in the future.

v2: Resolve conflicts due to patch series reordering.

Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net> (v1)
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-04-18 09:43:16 +02:00
Ben Widawsky
6197349bde drm/i915: Abstract PPGTT enabling
Since we've already set up a nice vtable to abstract other PPGTT
functions, also abstract the actual register programming to enable
things.

This function will probably need to change a bit as we implement real
processes.

v2: Resolve conflicts due to patch series reordering.

Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net> (v1)
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-04-18 09:43:15 +02:00
Chris Wilson
25ff1195f8 drm/i915: Workaround incoherence between fences and LLC across multiple CPUs
In order to fully serialize access to the fenced region and the update
to the fence register we need to take extreme measures on SNB+, and
manually flush writes to memory prior to writing the fence register in
conjunction with the memory barriers placed around the register write.

Fixes i-g-t/gem_fence_thrash

v2: Bring a bigger gun
v3: Switch the bigger gun for heavier bullets (Arjan van de Ven)
v4: Remove changes for working generations.
v5: Reduce to a per-cpu wbinvd() call prior to updating the fences.
v6: Rewrite comments to ellide forgotten history.

Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=62191
Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Cc: Jon Bloomfield <jon.bloomfield@intel.com>
Tested-by: Jon Bloomfield <jon.bloomfield@intel.com> (v2)
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Reviewed-by: Jesse Barnes <jbarnes@virtuousgeek.org>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-04-18 09:43:10 +02:00
Ben Widawsky
88a2b2a32d drm/i915: Don't wait for PCH on reset
BIOS should be setting this, but in case it doesn't...

v2: Define the bits we actually want to clear (Jesse)
Make it an RMW op (Jesse)

Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Reviewed-by: Jesse Barnes <jbarnes@virtuousgeek.org>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-04-08 20:53:05 +02:00
Imre Deak
2db76d7c3c lib/scatterlist: sg_page_iter: support sg lists w/o backing pages
The i915 driver uses sg lists for memory without backing 'struct page'
pages, similarly to other IO memory regions, setting only the DMA
address for these. It does this, so that it can program the HW MMU
tables in a uniform way both for sg lists with and without backing pages.

Without a valid page pointer we can't call nth_page to get the current
page in __sg_page_iter_next, so add a helper that relevant users can
call separately. Also add a helper to get the DMA address of the current
page (idea from Daniel).

Convert all places in i915, to use the new API.

Signed-off-by: Imre Deak <imre.deak@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Damien Lespiau <damien.lespiau@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-03-27 17:13:44 +01:00
Chris Wilson
f9c513e9d6 drm/i915: Always call fence-lost prior to removing the fence
There is a minute window for a race between put-fence removing the fence
and for a new transaction by an external party on the GTT mmap. That is
we must zap the mmap prior to removing the fence and not afterwards.

Fixes regression from
commit 61050808bb
Author: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Date:   Tue Apr 17 15:31:31 2012 +0100

    drm/i915: Refactor put_fence() to use the common fence writing routine

v2: Remember the fence to remove with a local variable (gcc)

Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Cc: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
Reviewed-by: Imre Deak <imre.deak@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-03-26 20:16:18 +01:00
Imre Deak
90797e6d1e drm/i915: create compact dma scatter lists for gem objects
So far we created a sparse dma scatter list for gem objects, where each
scatter list entry represented only a single page. In the future we'll
have to handle compact scatter lists too where each entry can consist of
multiple pages, for example for objects imported through PRIME.

The previous patches have already fixed up all other places where the
i915 driver _walked_ these lists. Here we have the corresponding fix to
_create_ compact lists. It's not a performance or memory footprint
improvement, but it helps to better exercise the new logic.

Reference: http://www.spinics.net/lists/dri-devel/msg33917.html
Signed-off-by: Imre Deak <imre.deak@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-03-23 12:17:09 +01:00
Imre Deak
67d5a50c04 drm/i915: handle walking compact dma scatter lists
So far the assumption was that each dma scatter list entry contains only
a single page. This might not hold in the future, when we'll introduce
compact scatter lists, so prepare for this everywhere in the i915 code
where we walk such a list.

We'll fix the place _creating_ these lists separately in the next patch
to help the reviewing/bisectability.

Reference: http://www.spinics.net/lists/dri-devel/msg33917.html
Signed-off-by: Imre Deak <imre.deak@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-03-23 12:16:36 +01:00
Daniel Vetter
0d4a42f6bd Linux 3.9-rc3
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Merge tag 'v3.9-rc3' into drm-intel-next-queued

Backmerge so that I can merge Imre Deak's coalesced sg entries fixes,
which depend upon the new for_each_sg_page introduce in

commit a321e91b6d
Author: Imre Deak <imre.deak@intel.com>
Date:   Wed Feb 27 17:02:56 2013 -0800

    lib/scatterlist: add simple page iterator

The merge itself is just two trivial conflicts:

Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-03-19 09:47:30 +01:00
Jesse Barnes
d62b4892f3 drm/i915: allow force wake at init time on VLV v2
We need to set the 'allow force wake' bit to enable forcewake handling
later on.

v2: split from clock gating patch (Jani)
    check for allowwakeack (Ville)

Signed-off-by: Jesse Barnes <jbarnes@virtuousgeek.org>
Reviewed-by: Ville Syrjälä <ville.syrjala@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-03-19 09:38:32 +01:00
Ville Syrjälä
2bb4629add drm/i915: Add to_user_ptr()
to_user_ptr() simply casts a pointer passed as u64 from user space
to void __user * correctly. Using this lets us get rid of all the
tiresome casts.

The idea came from Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>.

Signed-off-by: Ville Syrjälä <ville.syrjala@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-03-03 19:49:11 +01:00
Linus Torvalds
d895cb1af1 Merge branch 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/viro/vfs
Pull vfs pile (part one) from Al Viro:
 "Assorted stuff - cleaning namei.c up a bit, fixing ->d_name/->d_parent
  locking violations, etc.

  The most visible changes here are death of FS_REVAL_DOT (replaced with
  "has ->d_weak_revalidate()") and a new helper getting from struct file
  to inode.  Some bits of preparation to xattr method interface changes.

  Misc patches by various people sent this cycle *and* ocfs2 fixes from
  several cycles ago that should've been upstream right then.

  PS: the next vfs pile will be xattr stuff."

* 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/viro/vfs: (46 commits)
  saner proc_get_inode() calling conventions
  proc: avoid extra pde_put() in proc_fill_super()
  fs: change return values from -EACCES to -EPERM
  fs/exec.c: make bprm_mm_init() static
  ocfs2/dlm: use GFP_ATOMIC inside a spin_lock
  ocfs2: fix possible use-after-free with AIO
  ocfs2: Fix oops in ocfs2_fast_symlink_readpage() code path
  get_empty_filp()/alloc_file() leave both ->f_pos and ->f_version zero
  target: writev() on single-element vector is pointless
  export kernel_write(), convert open-coded instances
  fs: encode_fh: return FILEID_INVALID if invalid fid_type
  kill f_vfsmnt
  vfs: kill FS_REVAL_DOT by adding a d_weak_revalidate dentry op
  nfsd: handle vfs_getattr errors in acl protocol
  switch vfs_getattr() to struct path
  default SET_PERSONALITY() in linux/elf.h
  ceph: prepopulate inodes only when request is aborted
  d_hash_and_lookup(): export, switch open-coded instances
  9p: switch v9fs_set_create_acl() to inode+fid, do it before d_instantiate()
  9p: split dropping the acls from v9fs_set_create_acl()
  ...
2013-02-26 20:16:07 -08:00
Al Viro
496ad9aa8e new helper: file_inode(file)
Signed-off-by: Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk>
2013-02-22 23:31:31 -05:00
Daniel Vetter
eb32e4584d drm/i915: Use HAS_L3_GPU_CACHE in i915_gem_l3_remap
Yet another remnant ... this might explain why l3 remapping didn't
really work on HSW.

Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=57441
Spotted-by: Ville Syrjälä <ville.syrjala@linux.intel.com>
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Reviewed-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-02-20 00:21:47 +01:00
Imre Deak
769ce4643b drm/i915: don't clflush gem objects in stolen memory
As explained by Chris Wilson gem objects in stolen memory are always
coherent with the GPU so we don't need to ever flush the CPU caches for
these.

This fixes a breakage - at least with the compact sg patches applied -
during the resume/restore gtt mappings path, when we tried to clflush an
FB object in stolen memory, but since stolen objects don't have backing
pages we passed an invalid page pointer to drm_clflush_page().

Signed-off-by: Imre Deak <imre.deak@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-02-20 00:21:43 +01:00
Ben Widawsky
4fc7c971c3 drm/i915: Extract ring init from hw_init
The ring initialization will differ a bit in upcoming generations, and
this split will prepare the code for what's needed.

This patch also fixes a bug introduced in:
commit 9943393195
Author: Mika Kuoppala <mika.kuoppala@linux.intel.com>
Date:   Tue Jan 22 14:12:17 2013 +0200

    drm/i915: use gem_set_seqno() on hardware init

After doing the extraction, the bad error handling became obvious.  I
acknowledge that this should be two patches, but it's a pretty
small/trivial patch. If requested, I can certainly do the fix as a
distinct patch.

v2: Should be cleanup blt, not init blt on failure (Chris)

v3: Forgot to git add on v2

Cc: Mika Kuoppala <mika.kuoppala@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-02-15 10:30:39 +01:00
Dave Airlie
cd17ef4114 Merge tag 'drm-intel-next-2013-02-01' of git://people.freedesktop.org/~danvet/drm-intel into drm-next
Daniel writes:
"Probably the last feature pull for 3.9, there's some fixes outstanding
thought that I'd like to sneak in. And maybe 3.8 takes a bit longer ...
Anyway, highlights of this pull:
- Kill the horrible IS_DISPLAYREG hack to handle the mmio offset movements
  on vlv, big thanks to Ville.
- Dynamic power well support for Haswell, shaves away a bit when only
  using the eDP port on pipe A (Paulo). Plus unclaimed register fixes
  uncovered by this.
- Clarifications of the gpu hang/reset state transitions, hopefully fixing
  a few spurious -EIO deaths in userspace.
- Haswell ELD fixes.
- Some more (pp)gtt cleanups from Ben.
- A few smaller things all over.

Plus all the stuff from the previous rather small pull request:
- Broadcast RBG improvements and reduced color range fixes from Ville.
- Ben is on a "kill legacy gtt code for good" spree, first pile of patches
  included.
- No-relocs and bo lut improvements for faster execbuf from Chris.
- Some refactorings from Imre."

* tag 'drm-intel-next-2013-02-01' of git://people.freedesktop.org/~danvet/drm-intel: (101 commits)
  GPU/i915: Fix acpi_bus_get_device() check in drivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_opregion.c
  drm/i915: Set the SR01 "screen off" bit in i915_redisable_vga() too
  drm/i915: Kill IS_DISPLAYREG()
  drm/i915: Introduce i915_vgacntrl_reg()
  drm/i915: gen6_gmch_remove can be static
  drm/i915: dynamic Haswell display power well support
  drm/i915: check the power down well on assert_pipe()
  drm/i915: don't send DP "idle" pattern before "normal" on HSW PORT_A
  drm/i915: don't run hsw power well code on !hsw
  drm/i915: kill cargo-culted locking from power well code
  drm/i915: Only run idle processing from i915_gem_retire_requests_worker
  drm/i915: Fix CAGF for HSW
  drm/i915: Reclaim GTT space for failed PPGTT
  drm/i915: remove intel_gtt structure
  drm/i915: Add probe and remove to the gtt ops
  drm/i915: extract hw ppgtt setup/cleanup code
  drm/i915: pte_encode is gen6+
  drm/i915: vfuncs for ppgtt
  drm/i915: vfuncs for gtt_clear_range/insert_entries
  drm/i915: Error state should print /sys/kernel/debug
  ...
2013-02-08 11:08:10 +10:00
Chris Wilson
725a5b5402 drm/i915: Only run idle processing from i915_gem_retire_requests_worker
When adding the fb idle detection to mark-inactive, it was forgotten
that userspace can drive the processing of retire-requests. We assumed
that it would be principally driven by the retire requests worker,
running once every second whilst active and so we would get the deferred
timer for free. Instead we spend too many CPU cycles reclocking the LVDS
preventing real work from being done.

Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Reported-and-tested-by: Alexander Lam <lambchop468@gmail.com>
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=58843
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Reviewed-by: Rodrigo Vivi <rodrigo.vivi@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-01-31 11:50:09 +01:00
Mika Kuoppala
9943393195 drm/i915: use gem_set_seqno() on hardware init
When machine was rebooted or module was reloaded,
gem_hw_init() set last_seqno to be identical to next_seqno.
This lead to situation that waits for first ever request
always passed immediately regardless if it was actually
executed.

Use gem_set_seqno() to be consistent how hw is
initialized on init, wrap and on resume.

Signed-off-by: Mika Kuoppala <mika.kuoppala@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-01-22 13:52:26 +01:00
Daniel Vetter
f69061bedd drm/i915: create a race-free reset detection
With the previous patch the state transition handling of the reset
code itself is now (hopefully) race free and solid. But that still
leaves out everyone else - with the various lock-free wait paths
we have there's the possibility that the reset happens between the
point where we read the seqno we should wait on and the actual wait.

And if __wait_seqno then never sees the RESET_IN_PROGRESS state, we'll
happily wait for a seqno which will in all likelyhood never signal.

In practice this is not a big problem since the X server gets
constantly interrupted, and can then submit more work (hopefully) to
unblock everyone else: As soon as a new seqno write lands, all waiters
will unblock. But running the i-g-t reset testcase ZZ_hangman can
expose this race, especially on slower hw with fewer cpu cores.

Now looking forward to ARB_robustness and friends that's not the best
possible behaviour, hence this patch adds a reset_counter to be able
to detect any reset, even if a given thread never observed the
in-progress state.

The important part is to correctly order things:
- The write side needs to increment the counter after any seqno gets
  reset.  Hence we need to do that at the end of the reset work, and
  again wake everyone up. We also need to place a barrier in between
  any possible seqno changes and the counter increment, since any
  unlock operations only guarantee that nothing leaks out, but not
  that at later load operation gets moved ahead.
- On the read side we need to ensure that no reset can sneak in and
  invalidate the seqno. In all cases we can use the one-sided barrier
  that unlock operations guarantee (of the lock protecting the
  respective seqno/ring pair) to ensure correct ordering. Hence it is
  sufficient to place the atomic read before the mutex/spin_unlock and
  no additional barriers are required.

The end-result of all this is that we need to wake up everyone twice
in a reset operation:
- First, before the reset starts, to get any lockholders of the locks,
  so that the reset can proceed.
- Second, after the reset is completed, to allow waiters to properly
  and reliably detect the reset condition and bail out.

I admit that this entire reset_counter thing smells a bit like
overkill, but I think it's justified since it makes it really explicit
what the bail-out condition is. And we need a reset counter anyway to
implement ARB_robustness, and imo with finer-grained locking on the
horizont this is the most resilient scheme I could think of.

v2: Drop spurious change in the wait_for_error EXIT_COND - we only
need to wait until we leave the reset-in-progress wedged state.

v3: Don't play tricks with barriers in the throttle ioctl, the
spin_unlock is barrier enough.

I've also considered using a little helper to grab the current
reset_counter, but then decided that hiding the atomic_read isn't a
great idea, since having it explicitly show up in the code is a nice
remainder to reviews to check the memory barriers.

v4: Add a comment to explain why we need to fall through in
__wait_seqno in the end variable assignments.

v5: Review from Damien:
- s/smb/smp/ in a comment
- don't increment the reset counter after we've set it to WEDGED. Now
  we (again) properly wedge the gpu when the reset fails.

Reviewed-by: Damien Lespiau <damien.lespiau@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-01-21 19:53:54 +01:00
Dave Airlie
735dc0d1e2 Merge branch 'drm-kms-locking' of git://people.freedesktop.org/~danvet/drm-intel into drm-next
The aim of this locking rework is that ioctls which a compositor should be
might call for every frame (set_cursor, page_flip, addfb, rmfb and
getfb/create_handle) should not be able to block on kms background
activities like output detection. And since each EDID read takes about
25ms (in the best case), that always means we'll drop at least one frame.

The solution is to add per-crtc locking for these ioctls, and restrict
background activities to only use the global lock. Change-the-world type
of events (modeset, dpms, ...) need to grab all locks.

Two tricky parts arose in the conversion:
- A lot of current code assumes that a kms fb object can't disappear while
  holding the global lock, since the current code serializes fb
  destruction with it. Hence proper lifetime management using the already
  created refcounting for fbs need to be instantiated for all ioctls and
  interfaces/users.

- The rmfb ioctl removes the to-be-deleted fb from all active users. But
  unconditionally taking the global kms lock to do so introduces an
  unacceptable potential stall point. And obviously changing the userspace
  abi isn't on the table, either. Hence this conversion opportunistically
  checks whether the rmfb ioctl holds the very last reference, which
  guarantees that the fb isn't in active use on any crtc or plane (thanks
  to the conversion to the new lifetime rules using proper refcounting).
  Only if this is not the case will the code go through the slowpath and
  grab all modeset locks. Sane compositors will never hit this path and so
  avoid the stall, but userspace relying on these semantics will also not
  break.

All these cases are exercised by the newly added subtests for the i-g-t
kms_flip, tested on a machine where a full detect cycle takes around 100
ms.  It works, and no frames are dropped any more with these patches
applied.  kms_flip also contains a special case to exercise the
above-describe rmfb slowpath.

* 'drm-kms-locking' of git://people.freedesktop.org/~danvet/drm-intel: (335 commits)
  drm/fb_helper: check whether fbcon is bound
  drm/doc: updates for new framebuffer lifetime rules
  drm: don't hold crtc mutexes for connector ->detect callbacks
  drm: only grab the crtc lock for pageflips
  drm: optimize drm_framebuffer_remove
  drm/vmwgfx: add proper framebuffer refcounting
  drm/i915: dump refcount into framebuffer debugfs file
  drm: refcounting for crtc framebuffers
  drm: refcounting for sprite framebuffers
  drm: fb refcounting for dirtyfb_ioctl
  drm: don't take modeset locks in getfb ioctl
  drm: push modeset_lock_all into ->fb_create driver callbacks
  drm: nest modeset locks within fpriv->fbs_lock
  drm: reference framebuffers which are on the idr
  drm: revamp framebuffer cleanup interfaces
  drm: create drm_framebuffer_lookup
  drm: revamp locking around fb creation/destruction
  drm: only take the crtc lock for ->cursor_move
  drm: only take the crtc lock for ->cursor_set
  drm: add per-crtc locks
  ...
2013-01-21 07:44:58 +10:00
Chris Wilson
97c809fd9c drm/i915: Only apply the mb() when flushing the GTT domain during a finish
Now that we seem to have brought order to the GTT barriers, the last one
to review is the terminal barrier before we unbind the buffer from the
GTT. This needs to only be performed if the buffer still resides in the
GTT domain, and so we can skip some needless barriers otherwise.

Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Reviewed-by: Jesse Barnes <jbarnes@virtuousgeek.org>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-01-20 13:11:17 +01:00
Chris Wilson
d0a57789d5 drm/i915: Only insert the mb() before updating the fence parameter
With a fence, we only need to insert a memory barrier around the actual
fence alteration for CPU accesses through the GTT. Performing the
barrier in flush-fence was inserting unnecessary and expensive barriers
for never fenced objects.

Note removing the barriers from flush-fence, which was effectively a
barrier before every direct access through the GTT, revealed that we
where missing a barrier before the first access through the GTT. Lack of
that barrier was sufficient to cause GPU hangs.

v2: Add a couple more comments to explain the new barriers

Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
Reviewed-by: Jesse Barnes <jbarnes@virtuousgeek.org>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-01-20 13:11:16 +01:00
Daniel Vetter
1f83fee08d drm/i915: clear up wedged transitions
We have two important transitions of the wedged state in the current
code:

- 0 -> 1: This means a hang has been detected, and signals to everyone
  that they please get of any locks, so that the reset work item can
  do its job.

- 1 -> 0: The reset handler has completed.

Now the last transition mixes up two states: "Reset completed and
successful" and "Reset failed". To distinguish these two we do some
tricks with the reset completion, but I simply could not convince
myself that this doesn't race under odd circumstances.

Hence split this up, and add a new terminal state indicating that the
hw is gone for good.

Also add explicit #defines for both states, update comments.

v2: Split out the reset handling bugfix for the throttle ioctl.

v3: s/tmp/wedged/ sugested by Chris Wilson. Also fixup up a rebase
error which prevented this patch from actually compiling.

v4: To unify the wedged state with the reset counter, keep the
reset-in-progress state just as a flag. The terminally-wedged state is
now denoted with a big number.

v5: Add a comment to the reset_counter special values explaining that
WEDGED & RESET_IN_PROGRESS needs to be true for the code to be
correct.

v6: Fixup logic errors introduced with the wedged+reset_counter
unification. Since WEDGED implies reset-in-progress (in a way we're
terminally stuck in the dead-but-reset-not-completed state), we need
ensure that we check for this everywhere. The specific bug was in
wait_for_error, which would simply have timed out.

v7: Extract an inline i915_reset_in_progress helper to make the code
more readable. Also annote the reset-in-progress case with an
unlikely, to help the compiler optimize the fastpath. Do the same for
the terminally wedged case with i915_terminally_wedged.

Reviewed-by: Damien Lespiau <damien.lespiau@intel.com>
Signed-Off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-01-20 13:11:16 +01:00
Daniel Vetter
308887aad1 drm/i915: fix reset handling in the throttle ioctl
While auditing the code I've noticed one place (the throttle ioctl)
which does not yet wait for the reset handler to complete and doesn't
properly decode the wedge state into -EAGAIN/-EIO. Fix this up by
calling the right helpers. This might explain the oddball "my
compositor just died in a successfull gpu reset" reports. Or maybe not, since
current mesa doesn't use this ioctl to throttle command submission.

The throttle ioctl doesn't take the struct_mutex, so to avoid busy-looping
with -EAGAIN while a reset is in process, check for errors first and wait
for the handler to complete if a reset is pending by calling
i915_gem_wait_for_error.

Reviewed-by: Damien Lespiau <damien.lespiau@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-01-20 13:11:15 +01:00
Daniel Vetter
33196dedda drm/i915: move wedged to the other gpu error handling stuff
And to make Ben Widawsky happier, use the gpu_error instead of
the entire device as the argument in some functions.

Drop the outdated comment on ->wedged for now, a follow-up patch will
change the semantics and add a proper comment again.

Reviewed-by: Damien Lespiau <damien.lespiau@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-01-20 13:11:15 +01:00
Daniel Vetter
99584db33b drm/i915: extract hangcheck/reset/error_state state into substruct
This has been sprinkled all over the place in dev_priv. I think
it'd be good to also move all the code into a separate file like
i915_gem_error.c, but that's for another patch.

Reviewed-by: Damien Lespiau <damien.lespiau@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-01-20 13:11:14 +01:00
Ben Widawsky
93d187993b drm/i915: Remove use of gtt_mappable_entries
Mappable_end, ie. size is almost always what you want as opposed to the
number of entries. Since we already have that information, we can scrap
the number of entries and only calculate it when needed.

If gtt_start is !0, this will have slightly different behavior. This
difference can only occur in DRI1, and exists when we try to kick out
the firmware fb. The new code seems like a bugfix to me.

The other case where we've changed the behavior is during init we check
the mappable region against our current known upper and lower limits
(64MB, and 512MB). This now matches the comment, and makes things more
convenient after removing gtt_mappable_entries.

Also worth noting is the setting of mappable_end is taken out of setup
because we do it earlier now in the DRI2 case and therefore need to add
that tiny hunk to support the DRI1 IOCTL.

v2: Move up mappable end to before legacy AGP init

v3: Add the dev_priv inclusion here from previous rebase error in patch
5

Reviewed-by: Rodrigo Vivi <rodrigo.vivi@gmail.com> (v2)
Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
[danvet: squash in fix for a printk format flag mismatch warning.]
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-01-20 13:09:20 +01:00
Ben Widawsky
5d4545aef5 drm/i915: Create a gtt structure
The purpose of the gtt structure is to help isolate our gtt specific
properties from the rest of the code (in doing so it help us finish the
isolation from the AGP connection).

The following members are pulled out (and renamed):
gtt_start
gtt_total
gtt_mappable_end
gtt_mappable
gtt_base_addr
gsm

The gtt structure will serve as a nice place to put gen specific gtt
routines in upcoming patches. As far as what else I feel belongs in this
structure: it is meant to encapsulate the GTT's physical properties.
This is why I've not added fields which track various drm_mm properties,
or things like gtt_mtrr (which is itself a pretty transient field).

Reviewed-by: Rodrigo Vivi <rodrigo.vivi@gmail.com>
[Ben modified commit messages]
Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-01-17 22:33:56 +01:00
Chris Wilson
43e28f092b drm/i915: Bail if we attempt to allocate pages for a purged object
Move the existing checking inside bind_to_gtt() to the more appropriate
layer in order to prevent recreation of the pages after they have been
explicitly truncated.

Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Reviewed-by: Imre Deak <imre.deak@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-01-17 22:07:59 +01:00
Chris Wilson
dd624afd53 drm/i915: Add a debug interface to forcibly evict and shrink our object caches
As a means to investigate some bad system behaviour related to the
purging of the active, inactive and unbound lists, it is useful to be
able to manually control when those lists should be cleared.

v2: use _safe list iterators as we kick objects from the list as we
walk.

Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
[danvet: Add a small comment explaining why we don't need to check and
wait for gpu resets, acked by Chris on irc.]
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-01-17 22:07:57 +01:00
Imre Deak
0fa8779651 drm/i915: use gtt_get_size() instead of open coding it
Signed-off-by: Imre Deak <imre.deak@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-01-17 22:07:56 +01:00
Imre Deak
56c844e539 drm/i915: merge {i965, sandybridge}_write_fence_reg()
The two functions are rather similar, so merge them.

Signed-off-by: Imre Deak <imre.deak@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-01-17 22:07:55 +01:00
Imre Deak
d865110cc2 drm/i915: merge get_gtt_alignment/get_unfenced_gtt_alignment()
The two functions are rather similar, so merge them.

Signed-off-by: Imre Deak <imre.deak@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-01-17 22:07:54 +01:00
Dave Airlie
b5cc6c0387 Merge tag 'drm-intel-next-2012-12-21' of git://people.freedesktop.org/~danvet/drm-intel into drm-next
Daniel writes:
- seqno wrap fixes and debug infrastructure from Mika Kuoppala and Chris
  Wilson
- some leftover kill-agp on gen6+ patches from Ben
- hotplug improvements from Damien
- clear fb when allocated from stolen, avoids dirt on the fbcon (Chris)
- Stolen mem support from Chris Wilson, one of the many steps to get to
  real fastboot support.
- Some DDI code cleanups from Paulo.
- Some refactorings around lvds and dp code.
- some random little bits&pieces

* tag 'drm-intel-next-2012-12-21' of git://people.freedesktop.org/~danvet/drm-intel: (93 commits)
  drm/i915: Return the real error code from intel_set_mode()
  drm/i915: Make GSM void
  drm/i915: Move GSM mapping into dev_priv
  drm/i915: Move even more gtt code to i915_gem_gtt
  drm/i915: Make next_seqno debugs entry to use i915_gem_set_seqno
  drm/i915: Introduce i915_gem_set_seqno()
  drm/i915: Always clear semaphore mboxes on seqno wrap
  drm/i915: Initialize hardware semaphore state on ring init
  drm/i915: Introduce ring set_seqno
  drm/i915: Missed conversion to gtt_pte_t
  drm/i915: Bug on unsupported swizzled platforms
  drm/i915: BUG() if fences are used on unsupported platform
  drm/i915: fixup overlay stolen memory leak
  drm/i915: clean up PIPECONF bpc #defines
  drm/i915: add intel_dp_set_signal_levels
  drm/i915: remove leftover display.update_wm assignment
  drm/i915: check for the PCH when setting pch_transcoder
  drm/i915: Clear the stolen fb before enabling
  drm/i915: Access to snooped system memory through the GTT is incoherent
  drm/i915: Remove stale comment about intel_dp_detect()
  ...

Conflicts:
	drivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_display.c
2013-01-17 20:34:08 +10:00
Daniel Vetter
93927ca52a drm/i915: Revert shrinker changes from "Track unbound pages"
This partially reverts

commit 6c085a728c
Author: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Date:   Mon Aug 20 11:40:46 2012 +0200

    drm/i915: Track unbound pages

Closer inspection of that patch revealed a bunch of unrelated changes
in the shrinker:
- The shrinker count is now in pages instead of objects.
- For counting the shrinkable objects the old code only looked at the
  inactive list, the new code looks at all bounds objects (including
  pinned ones). That is obviously in addition to the new unbound list.
- The shrinker cound is no longer scaled with
  sysctl_vfs_cache_pressure. Note though that with the default tuning
  value of vfs_cache_pressue = 100 this doesn't affect the shrinker
  behaviour.
- When actually shrinking objects, the old code first dropped
  purgeable objects, then normal (inactive) objects. Only then did it,
  in a last-ditch effort idle the gpu and evict everything. The new
  code omits the intermediate step of evicting normal inactive
  objects.

Safe for the first change, which seems benign, and the shrinker count
scaling, which is a bit a different story, the endresult of all these
changes is that the shrinker is _much_ more likely to fall back to the
last-ditch resort of idling the gpu and evicting everything.  The old
code could only do that if something else evicted lots of objects
meanwhile (since without any other changes the nr_to_scan will be
smaller than the object count).

Reverting the vfs_cache_pressure behaviour itself is a bit bogus: Only
dentry/inode object caches should scale their shrinker counts with
vfs_cache_pressure. Originally I've had that change reverted, too. But
Chris Wilson insisted that it's too bogus and shouldn't again see the
light of day.

Hence revert all these other changes and restore the old shrinker
behaviour, with the minor adjustment that we now first scan the
unbound list, then the inactive list for each object category
(purgeable or normal).

A similar patch has been tested by a few people affected by the gen4/5
hangs which started to appear in 3.7, which some people bisected to
the "drm/i915: Track unbound pages" commit. But just disabling the
unbound logic alone didn't change things at all.

Note that this patch doesn't fix the referenced bugs, it only hides
the underlying bug(s) well enough to restore pre-3.7 behaviour. The
key to achieve that is to massively reduce the likelyhood of going
into a full gpu stall and evicting everything.

v2: Reword commit message a bit, taking Chris Wilson's comment into
account.

v3: On Chris Wilson's insistency, do not reinstate the rather bogus
vfs_cache_pressure change.

Tested-by: Greg KH <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
Tested-by: Dave Kleikamp <dave.kleikamp@oracle.com>
References: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=55984
References: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=57122
References: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=56916
References: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=57136
Cc: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Acked-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-01-10 18:02:44 +01:00
Chris Wilson
93be8788e6 drm/i915; Only increment the user-pin-count after successfully pinning the bo
As along the error path we do not correct the user pin-count for the
failure, we may end up with userspace believing that it has a pinned
object at offset 0 (when interrupted by a signal for example).

Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2013-01-07 10:30:53 +01:00
Dave Airlie
8be0e5c427 Merge branch 'drm-intel-fixes' of git://people.freedesktop.org/~danvet/drm-intel into drm-next
Some fixes for 3.8:
- Watermark fixups from Chris Wilson (4 pieces).
- 2 snb workarounds, seem to be recently added to our internal DB.
- workaround for the infamous i830/i845 hang, seems now finally solid!
  Based on Chris' fix for SNA, now also for UXA/mesa&old SNA.
- Some more fixlets for shrinker-pulls-the-rug issues (Chris&me).
- Fix dma-buf flags when exporting (you).
- Disable the VGA plane if it's enabled on lid open - similar fix in
  spirit to the one I've sent you last weeek, BIOS' really like to mess
  with the display when closing the lid (awesome debug work from Krzysztof
  Mazur).

* 'drm-intel-fixes' of git://people.freedesktop.org/~danvet/drm-intel:
  drm/i915: disable shrinker lock stealing for create_mmap_offset
  drm/i915: optionally disable shrinker lock stealing
  drm/i915: fix flags in dma buf exporting
  i915: ensure that VGA plane is disabled
  drm/i915: Preallocate the drm_mm_node prior to manipulating the GTT drm_mm manager
  drm: Export routines for inserting preallocated nodes into the mm manager
  drm/i915: don't disable disconnected outputs
  drm/i915: Implement workaround for broken CS tlb on i830/845
  drm/i915: Implement WaSetupGtModeTdRowDispatch
  drm/i915: Implement WaDisableHiZPlanesWhenMSAAEnabled
  drm/i915: Prefer CRTC 'active' rather than 'enabled' during WM computations
  drm/i915: Clear self-refresh watermarks when disabled
  drm/i915: Double the cursor self-refresh latency on Valleyview
  drm/i915: Fixup cursor latency used for IVB lp3 watermarks
2012-12-30 13:54:12 +10:00
Ben Widawsky
d7e5008f7c drm/i915: Move even more gtt code to i915_gem_gtt
This really should have been part of the kill agp series.

Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Reviewed-by: Mika Kuoppala <mika.kuoppala@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2012-12-20 16:27:35 +01:00
Daniel Vetter
da494d7ca5 drm/i915: disable shrinker lock stealing for create_mmap_offset
The mmap offset structure is not part of the drm/i915 code, but
provided by gem helpers. To avoid leaky abstractions (by either
depending upon implementation details of said helper wrt to
preallocations, or reimplementing it in our code and so fuzzing
around in internal details of that helpr) simply disable
the shrinker lock stealing accross calls into the helper functions.

This should fix igt/gem_tiled_swapping.

v2: Fix cleanup path confusion bemoaned by Chris Wilson.

Reported-by: Mika Kuoppala <mika.kuoppala@linux.intel.com>
Cc: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Cc: Mika Kuoppala <mika.kuoppala@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2012-12-20 14:57:35 +01:00
Daniel Vetter
677feac291 drm/i915: optionally disable shrinker lock stealing
commit 5774506f15
Author: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Date:   Wed Nov 21 13:04:04 2012 +0000

    drm/i915: Borrow our struct_mutex for the direct reclaim

added a nice trick to steal the struct_mutex lock in the shrinker if
it's the current task holding it. But this also caused the requirement
that every place which allocates memory needs to be careful about the
gem state of objects, since the shrinker could have pulled the rug out
from under it. We've usually solved this by carefully preallocating
things or ensure that buffers are pinned already.

But the shrinker also reaps mmap offset, so allocating those needs to
be careful, too. Now that code has been factored out into some common
helpers, so either we have fragile code depending upon the common
helper not doing something we don't want it to do. Or we need to
reimplement the mmap offset creation and so also leak implementation
details into our code.

Since this all results in leaky abstraction, cop out by disabling the
lock borrowing trick while calling down into the helpers. That way our
craziness is nicely confined to files in drm/i915.

v2: Split out the change to create_mmap_offset as request by Chris Wilson.

Cc: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Cc: Mika Kuoppala <mika.kuoppala@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2012-12-20 14:56:04 +01:00