Commit 0380c684 authored by Daniel Vetter's avatar Daniel Vetter

drm/atomic: Update docs around locking and commit sequencing

Both locking and especially sequencing of nonblocking commits have
evolved a lot. The details are all there, but I noticed that the big
picture and connections have fallen behind a bit. Apply polish.

Motivated by some review discussions with Thierry.

v2: Review from Thierry
Reviewed-by: default avatarThierry Reding <treding@nvidia.com>
Cc: Thierry Reding <treding@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: default avatarDaniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@intel.com>
Link: https://patchwork.freedesktop.org/patch/msgid/20191204100011.859468-1-daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch
parent 3cc1430c
......@@ -260,7 +260,8 @@ Taken all together there's two consequences for the atomic design:
drm_connector_state <drm_connector_state>` for connectors. These are the only
objects with userspace-visible and settable state. For internal state drivers
can subclass these structures through embeddeding, or add entirely new state
structures for their globally shared hardware functions.
structures for their globally shared hardware functions, see :c:type:`struct
drm_private_state<drm_private_state>`.
- An atomic update is assembled and validated as an entirely free-standing pile
of structures within the :c:type:`drm_atomic_state <drm_atomic_state>`
......@@ -269,6 +270,14 @@ Taken all together there's two consequences for the atomic design:
to the driver and modeset objects. This way rolling back an update boils down
to releasing memory and unreferencing objects like framebuffers.
Locking of atomic state structures is internally using :c:type:`struct
drm_modeset_lock <drm_modeset_lock>`. As a general rule the locking shouldn't be
exposed to drivers, instead the right locks should be automatically acquired by
any function that duplicates or peeks into a state, like e.g.
:c:func:`drm_atomic_get_crtc_state()`. Locking only protects the software data
structure, ordering of committing state changes to hardware is sequenced using
:c:type:`struct drm_crtc_commit <drm_crtc_commit>`.
Read on in this chapter, and also in :ref:`drm_atomic_helper` for more detailed
coverage of specific topics.
......
......@@ -688,10 +688,12 @@ static void drm_atomic_plane_print_state(struct drm_printer *p,
* associated state struct &drm_private_state.
*
* Similar to userspace-exposed objects, private state structures can be
* acquired by calling drm_atomic_get_private_obj_state(). Since this function
* does not take care of locking, drivers should wrap it for each type of
* private state object they have with the required call to drm_modeset_lock()
* for the corresponding &drm_modeset_lock.
* acquired by calling drm_atomic_get_private_obj_state(). This also takes care
* of locking, hence drivers should not have a need to call drm_modeset_lock()
* directly. Sequence of the actual hardware state commit is not handled,
* drivers might need to keep track of struct drm_crtc_commit within subclassed
* structure of &drm_private_state as necessary, e.g. similar to
* &drm_plane_state.commit. See also &drm_atomic_state.fake_commit.
*
* All private state structures contained in a &drm_atomic_state update can be
* iterated using for_each_oldnew_private_obj_in_state(),
......
......@@ -1832,17 +1832,21 @@ EXPORT_SYMBOL(drm_atomic_helper_commit);
/**
* DOC: implementing nonblocking commit
*
* Nonblocking atomic commits have to be implemented in the following sequence:
* Nonblocking atomic commits should use struct &drm_crtc_commit to sequence
* different operations against each another. Locks, especially struct
* &drm_modeset_lock, should not be held in worker threads or any other
* asynchronous context used to commit the hardware state.
*
* 1. Run drm_atomic_helper_prepare_planes() first. This is the only function
* which commit needs to call which can fail, so we want to run it first and
* drm_atomic_helper_commit() implements the recommended sequence for
* nonblocking commits, using drm_atomic_helper_setup_commit() internally:
*
* 1. Run drm_atomic_helper_prepare_planes(). Since this can fail and we
* need to propagate out of memory/VRAM errors to userspace, it must be called
* synchronously.
*
* 2. Synchronize with any outstanding nonblocking commit worker threads which
* might be affected the new state update. This can be done by either cancelling
* or flushing the work items, depending upon whether the driver can deal with
* cancelled updates. Note that it is important to ensure that the framebuffer
* cleanup is still done when cancelling.
* might be affected by the new state update. This is handled by
* drm_atomic_helper_setup_commit().
*
* Asynchronous workers need to have sufficient parallelism to be able to run
* different atomic commits on different CRTCs in parallel. The simplest way to
......@@ -1853,21 +1857,29 @@ EXPORT_SYMBOL(drm_atomic_helper_commit);
* must be done as one global operation, and enabling or disabling a CRTC can
* take a long time. But even that is not required.
*
* IMPORTANT: A &drm_atomic_state update for multiple CRTCs is sequenced
* against all CRTCs therein. Therefore for atomic state updates which only flip
* planes the driver must not get the struct &drm_crtc_state of unrelated CRTCs
* in its atomic check code: This would prevent committing of atomic updates to
* multiple CRTCs in parallel. In general, adding additional state structures
* should be avoided as much as possible, because this reduces parallelism in
* (nonblocking) commits, both due to locking and due to commit sequencing
* requirements.
*
* 3. The software state is updated synchronously with
* drm_atomic_helper_swap_state(). Doing this under the protection of all modeset
* locks means concurrent callers never see inconsistent state. And doing this
* while it's guaranteed that no relevant nonblocking worker runs means that
* nonblocking workers do not need grab any locks. Actually they must not grab
* locks, for otherwise the work flushing will deadlock.
* locks means concurrent callers never see inconsistent state. Note that commit
* workers do not hold any locks; their access is only coordinated through
* ordering. If workers would access state only through the pointers in the
* free-standing state objects (currently not the case for any driver) then even
* multiple pending commits could be in-flight at the same time.
*
* 4. Schedule a work item to do all subsequent steps, using the split-out
* commit helpers: a) pre-plane commit b) plane commit c) post-plane commit and
* then cleaning up the framebuffers after the old framebuffer is no longer
* being displayed.
*
* The above scheme is implemented in the atomic helper libraries in
* drm_atomic_helper_commit() using a bunch of helper functions. See
* drm_atomic_helper_setup_commit() for a starting point.
* being displayed. The scheduled work should synchronize against other workers
* using the &drm_crtc_commit infrastructure as needed. See
* drm_atomic_helper_setup_commit() for more details.
*/
static int stall_checks(struct drm_crtc *crtc, bool nonblock)
......@@ -2096,7 +2108,7 @@ EXPORT_SYMBOL(drm_atomic_helper_setup_commit);
*
* This function waits for all preceeding commits that touch the same CRTC as
* @old_state to both be committed to the hardware (as signalled by
* drm_atomic_helper_commit_hw_done) and executed by the hardware (as signalled
* drm_atomic_helper_commit_hw_done()) and executed by the hardware (as signalled
* by calling drm_crtc_send_vblank_event() on the &drm_crtc_state.event).
*
* This is part of the atomic helper support for nonblocking commits, see
......
......@@ -60,8 +60,8 @@
* wait for flip_done <----
* clean up atomic state
*
* The important bit to know is that cleanup_done is the terminal event, but the
* ordering between flip_done and hw_done is entirely up to the specific driver
* The important bit to know is that &cleanup_done is the terminal event, but the
* ordering between &flip_done and &hw_done is entirely up to the specific driver
* and modeset state change.
*
* For an implementation of how to use this look at
......@@ -92,6 +92,9 @@ struct drm_crtc_commit {
* commit is sent to userspace, or when an out-fence is singalled. Note
* that for most hardware, in most cases this happens after @hw_done is
* signalled.
*
* Completion of this stage is signalled implicitly by calling
* drm_crtc_send_vblank_event() on &drm_crtc_state.event.
*/
struct completion flip_done;
......@@ -107,6 +110,9 @@ struct drm_crtc_commit {
* Note that this does not need to include separately reference-counted
* resources like backing storage buffer pinning, or runtime pm
* management.
*
* Drivers should call drm_atomic_helper_commit_hw_done() to signal
* completion of this stage.
*/
struct completion hw_done;
......@@ -118,6 +124,9 @@ struct drm_crtc_commit {
* a vblank wait completed it might be a bit later. This completion is
* useful to throttle updates and avoid hardware updates getting ahead
* of the buffer cleanup too much.
*
* Drivers should call drm_atomic_helper_commit_cleanup_done() to signal
* completion of this stage.
*/
struct completion cleanup_done;
......
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