Re: [RFC PATCH v1] dma-buf: heaps: move the verification of heap_flags to the corresponding heap

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On 6/4/2024 2:06 AM, John Stultz wrote:
> On Mon, Jun 3, 2024 at 10:21 AM Hailong Liu <hailong.liu@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> On Mon, 03. Jun 09:01, John Stultz wrote:
>>> On Mon, Jun 3, 2024 at 4:40 AM <hailong.liu@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> From: "Hailong.Liu" <hailong.liu@xxxxxxxx>
>>>>
>>>> This help module use heap_flags to determine the type of dma-buf,
>>>> so that some mechanisms can be used to speed up allocation, such as
>>>> memory_pool, to optimize the allocation time of dma-buf.
>>>
>>> This feels like it's trying to introduce heap specific flags, but
>>> doesn't introduce any details about what those flags might be?
>>>
>>> This seems like it would re-allow the old opaque vendor specific heap
>>> flags that we saw in the ION days, which was problematic as different
>>> userspaces would use the same interface with potentially colliding
>>> heap flags with different meanings. Resulting in no way to properly
>>> move to an upstream solution.
>>>
>>> With the dma-heaps interface, we're trying to make sure it is well
>>> defined. One can register a number of heaps with different behaviors,
>>> and the heap name is used to differentiate the behavior. Any flags
>>> introduced will need to be well defined and behaviorally consistent
>>> between heaps. That way when an upstream solution lands, if necessary
>>> we can provide backwards compatibility via symlinks.
>>>
>>> So I don't think this is a good direction to go for dma-heaps.
>>>
>>> It would be better if you were able to clarify what flag requirements
>>> you need, so we can better understand how they might apply to other
>>> heaps, and see if it was something we would want to define as a flag
>>> (see the discussion here for similar thoughts:
>>> https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/CANDhNCoOKwtpstFE2VDcUvzdXUWkZ-Zx+fz6xrdPWTyciVXMXQ@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx/
>>> )
>>>
>>> But if your vendor heap really needs some sort of flags argument that
>>> you can't generalize, you can always implement your own dmabuf
>>> exporter driver with whatever ioctl interface you'd prefer.
>>
>> Thanks for your reply. Let’s continue our discussion here instead
>> of on android-review. We aim to enhance memory allocation on each
>> all heaps. Your pointer towards heap_flags used in /dev/ion for heap
>> identification was helpful.
>>
>> We now aim to improve priority dma-buf allocation. Consider android
>> animations scene:
>>
>> when device is in low memory, Allocating dma-buf as animation
>> buffers enter direct_reclaimation, longer allocation time result in a
>> laggy UI. But if we know the usage of the dma-buf, we can use some
>> mechanisms to boost, e.g. animation-memory-pool.
> 
> Can you generalize this a bit further? When would userland know to use
> this new flag?
> If it is aware, would it make sense to just use a separate heap name instead?
> 
> (Also: These other mechanisms you mention should probably also be
> submitted upstream, however for upstream there's also the requirement
> that we have open users and are not just enabling proprietary blob
> userspace, which makes any changes to dma-buf heaps for out of tree
> code quite difficult)
> 
>> However, dma-buf usage identification becomes a challenge. A potential
>> solution could be heap_flags. the use of heap_flags seems ugly and
>> contrary to the intended design as you said, How aboult extending
>> dma_heap_allocation_data as follows?
>>
>> struct dma_heap_allocation_data {
>>         __u64 len;
>>         __u32 fd;
>>         __u32 fd_flags;
>>         __u64 heap_flags;
>>         __u64 buf_flags: // buf usage
>> };
> 
> This would affect the ABI (forcing a new ioctl number).  And it's
> unclear what flags you envision as buffer specific (rather than heap
> specific as this patch suggested).
> 
> I think we need more details about the specific problem you're seeing
> and trying to resolve.
This patch mainly focuses on optimization for Android scenarios. Let’s 
discuss it on the issue website.
Bug: 344501512

Brs,
Hailong.

> 
> thanks
> -john




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