This resolves a panic on FreeBSD which was caused by trying
to re-initialize the swap lock. It's just much easier to
initialize all of the locks at load time. It should also
ensure that the vblank structures are available earlier.
modifications to make it work correctly on my test hardware (altered the
backlight write function, made it enable the legacy backlight controller
interrupts on mobile hardware, sorted the interrupt function so we don't
get an excessive number of vblank interrupts). This lets the backlight
keys on my T61 work properly, though there's a 750msec or so delay
between the request and the brightness actually changing - this sounds
awfully like the hardware spinning waiting for a status flag to become
ready, but as far as I can tell they're all set correctly. If anyone can
figure out what's wrong here, it'd be nice to know.
Some of the functions are still stubs and just tell the hardware that
the request was successful. These can be filled in as kernel modesetting
gets integrated. I think it's worth getting this in anyway, since it's
required for backlight control to work properly on some new platforms.
Signed-off-by: Matthew Garrett <mjg@redhat.com>
It would be nice if one day the DRM driver was the canonical source for
register definitions and core macros. To that end, this patch cleans things up
quite a bit, removing redundant definitions (some with different names
referring to the same register) and generally tidying up the header file.
Conflicts:
linux-core/drm_compat.c
linux-core/drm_compat.h
linux-core/drm_ttm.c
shared-core/i915_dma.c
Bump driver minor to 13 due to introduction of new
relocation type.
As DRM_DEBUG macro already prints out the __FUNCTION__ string (see
drivers/char/drm/drmP.h), it is not worth doing this again. At some
other places the ending "\n" was added.
airlied:- I cleaned up a few that this patch missed also
Document parameters and usage for drm_bo_handle_validate. Change parameter
order to match drm_bo_do_validate (fence_class has been moved to after
flags, hint and mask values). Existing users of this function have been
changed, but out-of-tree users must be modified separately.
One of the costs of superioctl has been the need to perform relocations
inside the kernel. The cost of mapping the buffers to the CPU and writing
data is fairly high, especially if those buffers have been mapped and read
by the GPU.
If we assume that buffers don't move around very often, we can have the
client compute the relocations itself using the previous GPU address. When
that object doesn't move, the kernel can skip computing and writing the
updated data.
Here's a patch which adds a new field to struct drm_bo_info_req called
'presumed_offset', and a new DRM_BO_HINT_PRESUMED_OFFSET that is set when
this field has been filled in by the client.
There are two separate optimizations performed when the presumed_offset is
correct:
1. i915_exec_reloc checks to see if all previous buffer offsets were guessed
correctly. If so, there's no need for it to look at *any* of the
relocations for a buffer. When this happens, it skips the whole
relocation process, simply returning success.
2. i915_apply_reloc checks to see if the target buffer offset was guessed
correctly. If so, it skips mapping the relocatee, computing the
relocation and writing the value. If no relocations are needed, the
relocatee should never be mapped to the CPU, and so the kernel shouldn't
need to wait for any fences to pass.
Add suspend/resume support to the i915 driver. Moves some of the
initialization into the driver load routine, and fixes up places where we
assumed no dev_private existed in some of the cleanup paths. This allows
us to suspend/resume properly even if X isn't running.