Re: [Intel-gfx] [PATCH 07/12] lib/igt_kms: Add support for the OUT_FENCE_PTR property

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On Tue, Nov 22, 2016 at 02:12:59PM +0100, Daniel Vetter wrote:
On Tue, Nov 22, 2016 at 12:37:47PM +0000, Brian Starkey wrote:
On Tue, Nov 22, 2016 at 12:10:52PM +0000, Chris Wilson wrote:
> On Tue, Nov 22, 2016 at 11:54:57AM +0000, Brian Starkey wrote:
> > On Tue, Nov 22, 2016 at 11:06:00AM +0000, Chris Wilson wrote:
> > >On Tue, Nov 22, 2016 at 10:53:51AM +0000, Brian Starkey wrote:
> > >>Hi Gustavo,
> > >>
> > >>A little late to the party here, but I was blocked by our internal
> > >>contributions process...
> > >>
> > >>I didn't see these end up in my checkout yet though, so I guess they
> > >>aren't picked up yet.
> > >>
> > >>On Mon, Nov 14, 2016 at 06:59:21PM +0900, Gustavo Padovan wrote:
> > >>>From: Gustavo Padovan <gustavo.padovan@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> > >>>
> > >>>Add support for the OUT_FENCE_PTR property to enable setting out fences for
> > >>>atomic commits.
> > >>>
> > >>>Signed-off-by: Gustavo Padovan <gustavo.padovan@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> > >>>---
> > >>>lib/igt_kms.c | 20 +++++++++++++++++++-
> > >>>lib/igt_kms.h |  3 +++
> > >>>2 files changed, 22 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)
> > >>>
> > >>>diff --git a/lib/igt_kms.c b/lib/igt_kms.c
> > >>>index 4748c0a..f25e1eb 100644
> > >>>--- a/lib/igt_kms.c
> > >>>+++ b/lib/igt_kms.c
> > >>>@@ -175,7 +175,8 @@ const char *igt_crtc_prop_names[IGT_NUM_CRTC_PROPS] = {
> > >>>	"DEGAMMA_LUT",
> > >>>	"GAMMA_LUT",
> > >>>	"MODE_ID",
> > >>>-	"ACTIVE"
> > >>>+	"ACTIVE",
> > >>>+	"OUT_FENCE_PTR"
> > >>>};
> > >>>
> > >>>const char *igt_connector_prop_names[IGT_NUM_CONNECTOR_PROPS] = {
> > >>>@@ -2103,6 +2104,9 @@ static void igt_atomic_prepare_crtc_commit(igt_pipe_t *pipe_obj, drmModeAtomicRe
> > >>>		igt_atomic_populate_crtc_req(req, pipe_obj, IGT_CRTC_ACTIVE, !!output);
> > >>>	}
> > >>>
> > >>>+	if (pipe_obj->out_fence_ptr)
> > >>>+		igt_atomic_populate_crtc_req(req, pipe_obj, IGT_CRTC_OUT_FENCE_PTR, pipe_obj->out_fence_ptr);
> > >>>+
> > >>>	/*
> > >>>	 *	TODO: Add all crtc level properties here
> > >>>	 */
> > >>>@@ -2683,6 +2687,20 @@ igt_pipe_set_gamma_lut(igt_pipe_t *pipe, void *ptr, size_t length)
> > >>>}
> > >>>
> > >>>/**
> > >>>+ * igt_pipe_set_out_fence_ptr:
> > >>>+ * @pipe: pipe pointer to which background color to be set
> > >>>+ * @fence_ptr: out fence pointer
> > >>
> > >>I don't think fence_ptr can be int *. It needs to be a pointer to a
> > >>64-bit type.
> > >>
> > >>>+ *
> > >>>+ * Sets the out fence pointer that will be passed to the kernel in
> > >>>+ * the atomic ioctl. When the kernel returns the out fence pointer
> > >>>+ * will contain the fd number of the out fence created by KMS.
> > >>>+ */
> > >>>+void igt_pipe_set_out_fence_ptr(igt_pipe_t *pipe, int *fence_ptr)
> > >>>+{
> > >>>+	pipe->out_fence_ptr = (uint64_t) fence_ptr;
> > >>>+}
> > >>>+
> > >>>+/**
> > >>> * igt_crtc_set_background:
> > >>> * @pipe: pipe pointer to which background color to be set
> > >>> * @background: background color value in BGR 16bpc
> > >>>diff --git a/lib/igt_kms.h b/lib/igt_kms.h
> > >>>index 344f931..02d7bd1 100644
> > >>>--- a/lib/igt_kms.h
> > >>>+++ b/lib/igt_kms.h
> > >>>@@ -110,6 +110,7 @@ enum igt_atomic_crtc_properties {
> > >>>       IGT_CRTC_GAMMA_LUT,
> > >>>       IGT_CRTC_MODE_ID,
> > >>>       IGT_CRTC_ACTIVE,
> > >>>+       IGT_CRTC_OUT_FENCE_PTR,
> > >>>       IGT_NUM_CRTC_PROPS
> > >>>};
> > >>>
> > >>>@@ -298,6 +299,7 @@ struct igt_pipe {
> > >>>
> > >>>	uint64_t mode_blob;
> > >>>	bool mode_changed;
> > >>>+	uint64_t out_fence_ptr;
> > >>
> > >>IMO this should be:
> > >>
> > >>	int64_t *out_fence_ptr;
> > >
> > >In userspace, fences are *fd*, a plain int. It is only the uabi that we
> > >pass pointers as u64 to the kernel, and indeed that should be limited to
> > >the uabi wrapper.
> > >-Chris
> >
> > Where's the uabi wrapper in this case?
> >
> > Wherever it is, afaik someone needs to have 64-bit type for the kernel
> > to stash its fd in - on the kernel side out_fence_ptr is
> > (s64 __user *), so if there's not a 64-bit variable on the other end
> > of it then someone's going to have a bad day.
>
> We do not have pointers in the uabi because they are different sizes on
> different platforms. The uabi must be a u64 representation of a user
> address to store the result - that is what we pass to the crtc set
> property ioctl.

Sure, but igt_pipe is not a uabi structure. By storing a uint64_t here
we're making it needlessly opaque what the value is actually meant to
be - which is the address of a 64-bit signed integer.

Regardless, tests cannot set out_fence_ptr to the address of an int, I
hope we can agree on that. Where that detail gets taken care of I
don't much mind - but this code as-is is incorrect.

By making igt_pipe.out_fence_ptr an (int64_t *) I thought we'd be
letting the compiler warn anyone else away from incorrect code.

> That it has been futher managled not to pass around fd
> is an interesting twist, but ideally that sillyness should not make
> itself into our API.

Allowing the kernel and userspace to have different ideas about how
big an int is doesn't sound so silly to me. It may not be a
theoretical problem forever.

What Chris means is that you want to have an int out_fence in igt_pipe,
and just pass the address of that into the OUT_FENCE_PTR property.

Storing the fence itself in igt_pipe instead of a pointer to it is a
different matter (and it isn't what's implemented in this patch).

It still doesn't change the fact that you can't do as you suggest -
you cannot just pass the address of an int in the OUT_FENCE_PTR
property.

In the kernel, put_user(fd, fence_state[i].out_fence_ptr); is going to
write 8 bytes. If out_fence_ptr is the address of a 4-byte variable,
then obviously that's not going to work out so well.

In
userspace we want to directly handle the fd, not a pointer to an fd. Like
Chris explained, the pointer-to-fd-cast-to-u64 is just to be able to reuse
the atomic ioctl as transport, it's not a reasonable interface within
userspace.

I don't really follow this bit. At some point, something in userspace
is going to need to take care of the fact that the kernel needs to
have an 8-byte container to write into.

-Brian

-Daniel
--
Daniel Vetter
Software Engineer, Intel Corporation
http://blog.ffwll.ch
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