Actually make the existing ioctls for adding and removing drawables do
something useful, and add another ioctl for the X server to update drawable
information. The only kind of drawable information tracked so far is cliprects.
When the vertical blank interrupt is enabled for both pipes, pipe A is
considered primary and pipe B secondary. When it's only enabled for one pipe,
it's always considered primary for backwards compatibility.
Change the fence object interface somewhat to allow some more flexibility.
Make list IOCTLS really restartable.
Try to avoid busy-waits in the kernel using immediate return to user-space with an -EAGAIN.
Add a function to free buffers on hold for destruction if their
fence object has expired.
Add a timer to periodically call that function when there are
buffers pending deletion.
First warning result from open-coded PTR_ERR,
the rest is caused by code like this:
*(u32 *) ((u32) buf_priv->kernel_virtual + used)
I've also fixed a missing PTR_ERR in i830_dma.c
From: Denis Vlasenko <vda.linux@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@linux.ie>
0x00 EXE fence. Signals when command stream interpreter has reached the point
where the fence was emitted.
0x01 FLUSH fence. Signals when command stream interpreter has reached the point
where the fence was emitted, and all previous drawing operations have been
completed and flushed.
Implements busy wait (for fastest response time / high CPU) and
lazy wait (User interrupt or timer driven).
First warning result from open-coded PTR_ERR,
the rest is caused by code like this:
*(u32 *) ((u32) buf_priv->kernel_virtual + used)
I've also fixed a missing PTR_ERR in i830_dma.c
From: Denis Vlasenko <vda.linux@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@linux.ie>
32-bit physical device addresses are mapped directly to user-tokens. No
duplicate maps are allowed, and the addresses are assumed to be outside
of the range 0x10000000 through 0x30000000. The user-token is identical
to the 32-bit physical start-address of the map.
64-bit physical device addressed are mapped to user-tokens in the range
0x10000000 to 0x30000000 with page-size increments. The user_token should
not be interpreted as an address.
Other map types, like upcoming TTM maps are mapped to user-tokens in the
range
0x10000000 to 0x30000000 with page-size increments. The user_token should
not be interpreted as an address.
This keeps compatibility with buggy drivers, while still implementing a
hashed map lookup. The SiS and via device driver major bumps are
reverted.
0x10000000 to 0x90000000 in PAGE_SIZE increments.
Implement hashed map lookups.
This potentially breaks both 2D and 3D drivers. If so, the corresponding
2D and 3D driver should be fixed, and it's corresponding drm device driver
should have its major bumped as soon as possible.
Bump sis and via drm device driver majors.
The SiS and Unichrome 3D drivers are fixed in Mesa CVS HEAD and
mesa_6_4_branch.
drm_mtrr_{add,del} for handling the MTRR setup. Still has a LOR issue
with DRM_VERIFYAREA_READ/DRM_COPY_FROM_USER_UNCHECKED in savage_bci.c
-- this won't work with the fine-grained locking in use, and just doing
a single copyin to a temporary will probably work fine. Also note that
the module leaks approximately 4 kb on unload.
radeon_cp.c to use a drm_local_map_t-type mapping (drm_core_ioremap
rather than drm_ioremap), which contains private device mapping
information on BSD. I also changed the ati_pcigart interface to use
"void *" for pointers to kva rather than "unsigned long". While PCIGART
support appears to be broken on FreeBSD currently, I think this is not
new, and BusType PCI remains working on my r100 in Linux.
drm_agp_foo_ioctl pair. Modifies the MGA DRM to use the drm_agp_foo
functions instead of the drm_foo_agp functions. The drm_foo_agp
functions are no longer exported by drm.ko.
Ensures that dma->seg_count and dma->page_count are properly set in
drm_addbufs_{agp,sg,fb}. drm_addbufs_pci was already correct.
Ensures that mga_do_agp_dma_bootstrap correctly sets agp_buffer_token.
At this point PCI DMA is still broken.
Xorg bug: #4797 Reviewed by: Dave Airlie, Eric Anholt Signed-off-by: Ian
Romanick <idr@us.ibm.com>
me to match other drivers and avoid ifdeffing. The linux via_drv.c will
be moved from shared-core to linux-core soon by repocopy.
Submitted by: Jake Burkholder <jake@FreeBSD.org> Tested by: unichrome
caller on fb / agp memory alloc and free. Otherwise malicious clients
can register allocations on other clients or free memory used by other
clients which will lead to severe memory manager inconsistensies.
understandable: preinit -> load postinit -> (removed) presetup ->
firstopen postsetup -> (removed) open_helper -> open prerelease ->
preclose free_filp_priv -> postclose pretakedown -> lastclose
postcleanup -> unload release -> reclaim_buffers_locked version ->
(removed)
postinit and version were replaced with generic code in the Linux DRM
(drivers now set their version numbers and description in the driver
structure, like on BSD). postsetup wasn't used at all. Fixes the savage
hooks for initializing and tearing down mappings at the right times.
Testing involved at least starting X, running glxgears, killing
glxgears, exiting X, and repeating.
Tested on: FreeBSD (g200, g400, r200, r128) Linux (r200, savage4)
buffers that have been allocated from AGP. This includes some new
capable(CAP_SYS_ADMIN) checks, these functions are also protected by
the root requirement on the IOCTL macros.
code duplication, and it also hands you the map pointer so you don't
need to re-find it.
- Remove the permanent maps flag. Instead, for register and framebuffer
maps, we always check whether there's already a map of that type and
offset around. Move the Radeon map initialization into presetup (first
open) so it happens again after every takedown.
- Remove the split cleanup of maps between driver takedown (last close) and
cleanup (module unload). Instead, always tear down maps on takedown,
and drivers can recreate them on first open.
- Make MGA always use addmap, instead of allocating consistent memory in
the PCI case and then faking up a map for it, which accomplished nearly
the same thing, in a different order. Note that the maps are exposed to
the user again: we may want to expose a flag to avoid this, but it's
not a security concern, and saves us a lot of code.
- Remove rmmaps in the MGA driver. Since the function is only called during
takedown anyway, we can let them die a natural death.
- Make removal of maps happen in one function, which is called by both
drm_takedown and drm_rmmap_ioctl.
Reviewed by: idr (previous revision) Tested on: mga (old/new/pci dma),
radeon, savage
This patch adds serveral new ioctls and a new query to get_param query to
support PCI MGA cards.
Two ioctls were added to implement interrupt based waiting. With this
change, the client-side driver no longer needs to map the primary DMA
region or the MMIO region. Previously, end-of-frame waiting was done by
busy waiting in the client-side driver until one of the MMIO registers
(the current DMA pointer) matched a pointer to the end of primary DMA
space. By using interrupts, the busy waiting and the extra mappings are
removed.
A third ioctl was added to bootstrap DMA. This ioctl, which is used by the
X-server, moves a *LOT* of code from the X-server into the kernel. This
allows the kernel to do whatever needs to be done to setup DMA buffers.
The entire process and the locations of the buffers are hidden from
user-mode.
Additionally, a get_param query was added to differentiate between G4x0
cards and G550 cards. A gap was left in the numbering sequence so that,
if needed, G450 cards could be distinguished from G400 cards. According
to Ville Syrjälä, the G4x0 cards and the G550 cards handle
anisotropic filtering differently. This seems the most compatible way
to let the client-side driver know which card it's own. Doing this very
small change now eliminates the need to bump the DRM minor version
twice.
http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=dri-devel&m=106625815319773&w=2
A number of ioctl handlers in linux-core were also modified so that they
could be called in-kernel. In these cases, the in-kernel callable
version kept the existing name (e.g., drm_agp_acquire) and the ioctl
handler added _ioctl to the name (e.g., drm_agp_acquire_ioctl).
This patch also replaces the drm_agp_do_release function with
drm_agp_release. drm_agp_release (drm_core_agp_release in the previous
patch) is very similar to drm_agp_do_release, and I saw no reason to
have both.
This commit *breaks the build* on BSD. Eric said that he would make the
required updates to the BSD side soon.
Xorg bug: 3259 Reviewed by: Eric Anholt
There were two problems. First, the 'warp' and 'primary' pointers weren't
cleared, so mga_do_cleanup_dma, which gets called multiple times, would
try to ioremapfree them multiple times. This resulted in the new error
messages to syslog. The second problem was the, since the dev_private
structure isn't reallocated and cleaned out in mga_do_init_dma, when
the server is reloaded idle-waits would wait for impossible values.
I have given this patch some more riggorous testing. This includes:
- Load module, start server, run GL app, stop server, unload module.
- Load module, start server, run GL app, stop server, unload module, reload
module, restart server, run GL app.
- Load module, start server, run GL app, stop server, restart server, run
GL app, stop server, unload module.
In all three cases, everything worked as expected. Please let me know if
there are any further regressions with this patch.
Xorg bug: 3408 Reported by: Chris Rankin
linux-core to free pci memory without freeing the structure. Linux-core
internals often create pci dma handle structures on the stack due to
the lack of a drm_local_map_t to store them in properly. Fix the
original drm_pci_free to actually free the dma handle structure instead
of leaking it.
Signed-off-by: Sergey Vlasov <vsu@altlinux.ru>