On Tue, 18 May 2021 10:32:48 -0400 Harry Wentland <harry.wentland@xxxxxxx> wrote: > On 2021-05-17 4:34 a.m., Pekka Paalanen wrote: > > On Fri, 14 May 2021 17:04:51 -0400 > > Harry Wentland <harry.wentland@xxxxxxx> wrote: > > > >> On 2021-04-30 8:53 p.m., Sebastian Wick wrote: > >>> On 2021-04-26 20:56, Harry Wentland wrote: > > > > ... > > > >>>> Another reason I'm proposing to define the color space (and gamma) of > >>>> a plane is to make this explicit. Up until the color space and gamma > >>>> of a plane or framebuffer are not well defined, which leads to drivers > >>>> assuming the color space and gamma of a buffer (for blending and other > >>>> purposes) and might lead to sub-optimal outcomes. > >>> > >>> Blending only is "correct" with linear light so that property of the > >>> color space is important. However, why does the kernel have to be > >>> involved here? As long as user space knows that for correct blending the > >>> data must represent linear light and knows when in the pipeline blending > >>> happens it can make sure that the data at that point in the pipeline > >>> contains linear light. > >>> > >> > >> The only reason the kernel needs to be involved is to take full advantage > >> of the available HW without requiring KMS clients to be aware of > >> the difference in display HW. > > > > Can you explain in more tangible examples, why you think so, please? > > > > Is it because hardware does not fit the KMS UAPI model of the abstract > > pixel pipeline? > > > > I'd wager no HW is designed to meet KMS UAPI, rather KMS UAPI is designed > to abstract HW. Of course, but you are in big trouble in any case if there is a fundamental mismatch. You may have to declare that all existing KMS properties for this stuff will be mutually exclusive with your new properties, so that you can introduce a new generic abstract pipeline in KMS. By mutually exclusive I mean that a driver must advertise only one or the other set of properties and never both. If you want to support userspace that doesn't understand the alternative set, maybe you also need a drm client cap to switch to the alternative set per-drm-client. > > Or is it because you have fixed-function hardware elements that you can > > only make use of when userspace uses an enum-based UAPI? > > > > One example is our degamma on our latest generation HW, where we have > fixed-function "degamma" (rather de-EOTF): > > https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/agd5f/linux/-/blob/amd-staging-drm-next/drivers/gpu/drm/amd/display/dc/dcn30/dcn30_dpp.c#L166 Ok. > > I would totally agree that the driver does not want to be analysing LUT > > entries to decipher if it could use a fixed-function element or not. It > > would introduce uncertainty in the UAPI. So fixed-function elements > > would need their own properties, but I don't know if that is feasible > > as generic UAPI or if it should be driver-specific (and so left unused > > by generic userspace). > > > > > For the CRTC LUTs we actually do a linearity check to program the > HW into bypass when the LUT is linear since the KMS LUT definition > doesn't map well onto the LUT definition used by our HW and leads > to rounding errors and failing IGT kms_color tests (if I remember > this correctly). > > https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/agd5f/linux/-/blob/amd-staging-drm-next/drivers/gpu/drm/amd/display/amdgpu_dm/amdgpu_dm_color.c#L330 > > Hence the suggestion to define pre-defined TFs right at a KMS level > for usecases where we can assume the display will tonemap the > content. Right. Explaining this would have been a good introduction in your cover letter. Maybe you want to define new KMS properties that shall be mutually exclusive with the existing KMS GAMMA/CTM/DEGAMMA properties and clearly document them as such. Thanks, pq
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