- There is one fb, used for as many outputs as possible.
- Eventually smaller screens will be scaled to see the full console, but for the moment this'll do.
When scheduled swaps occur, we need to blit between front & back buffers. I
the buffers are tiled, we need to set the appropriate XY_SRC_COPY tile bit,
only on 965 chips, since it will cause corruption on pre-965 (e.g. 945).
Bug reported by and fix tested by Tomas Janousek <tomi@nomi.cz>.
Signed-off-by: Jesse Barnes <jbarnes@virtuousgeek.org>
When scheduled swaps occur, we need to blit between front & back buffers. If
the buffers are tiled, we need to set the appropriate XY_SRC_COPY tile bit, but
only on 965 chips, since it will cause corruption on pre-965 (e.g. 945).
Bug reported by and fix tested by Tomas Janousek <tomi@nomi.cz>.
Signed-off-by: Jesse Barnes <jbarnes@virtuousgeek.org>
On 9xx chips, bus mastering needs to be enabled at resume time for much of the
chip to function. With this patch, vblank interrupts will work as expected
on resume, along with other chip functions. Fixes kernel bugzilla #10844.
Signed-off-by: Jie Luo <clotho67@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jesse Barnes <jbarnes@virtuousgeek.org>
We won't get a PFIFO context switch when the same channel ID is recreated if
the hw still thinks the channel is already active, which causes fun issues.
Should allow X to be stopped and started without tearing down the entire
card state in lastclose().
This avoids seeing garbage from engine setup etc before X gets around
to pointing the CRTCs at a new scanout buffer. Not actually a noticable
problem before G80 as PRAMIN is forced to the end of VRAM by the hardware
already.
We won't get a PFIFO context switch when the same channel ID is recreated if
the hw still thinks the channel is already active, which causes fun issues.
Should allow X to be stopped and started without tearing down the entire
card state in lastclose().
With the interrupt enable/disable using only the mask register, it was wrong
to use the enable register to detect which pipes had vblank detection
turned on. Also, as we keep a local copy of the mask register around, and
MSI machines smack the hardware during the interrupt handler, it is more
efficient and more correct to use the local copy.
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.
Clean up queues, free objects. On the next entervt, unmark the hardware to
let the user try again (presumably after resetting the chip). Someday we'll
automatically recover...
Clean up queues, free objects. On the next entervt, unmark the hardware to
let the user try again (presumably after resetting the chip). Someday we'll
automatically recover...