Re: [RFC PATCH 00/10] drm/panthor: Add user submission

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On 04/09/2024 08:49, Christian König wrote:
> Am 03.09.24 um 23:11 schrieb Simona Vetter:
>> On Tue, Sep 03, 2024 at 03:46:43PM +0200, Christian König wrote:
>>> Hi Steven,
>>>
>>> Am 29.08.24 um 15:37 schrieb Steven Price:
>>>> Hi Christian,
>>>>
>>>> Mihail should be able to give more definitive answers, but I think I
>>>> can
>>>> answer your questions.
>>>>
>>>> On 29/08/2024 10:40, Christian König wrote:
>>>>> Am 28.08.24 um 19:25 schrieb Mihail Atanassov:
>>>>>> Hello all,
>>>>>>
>>>>>> This series implements a mechanism to expose Mali CSF GPUs' queue
>>>>>> ringbuffers directly to userspace, along with paraphernalia to allow
>>>>>> userspace to control job synchronisation between the CPU and GPU.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> The goal of these changes is to allow userspace to control work
>>>>>> submission to the FW/HW directly without kernel intervention in the
>>>>>> common case, thereby reducing context switching overhead. It also
>>>>>> allows
>>>>>> for greater flexibility in the way work is enqueued in the ringbufs.
>>>>>> For example, the current kernel submit path only supports indirect
>>>>>> calls, which is inefficient for small command buffers. Userspace can
>>>>>> also skip unnecessary sync operations.
>>>>> Question is how do you guarantee forward progress for fence signaling?
>>>> A timeout. Although looking at it I think it's probably set too high
>>>> currently:
>>>>
>>>>> +#define JOB_TIMEOUT_MS                5000
>>>> But basically the XGS queue is a DRM scheduler just like a normal GPU
>>>> queue and the jobs have a timeout. If the timeout is hit then any
>>>> fences
>>>> will be signalled (with an error).
>>> Mhm, that is unfortunately exactly what I feared.
>>>
>>>>> E.g. when are fences created and published? How do they signal?
>>>>>
>>>>> How are dependencies handled? How can the kernel suspend an userspace
>>>>> queue?
>>>> The actual userspace queue can be suspended. This is actually a
>>>> combination of firmware and kernel driver, and this functionality is
>>>> already present without the user submission. The firmware will
>>>> multiplex
>>>> multiple 'groups' onto the hardware, and if there are too many for the
>>>> firmware then the kernel multiplexes the extra groups onto the ones the
>>>> firmware supports.
>>> How do you guarantee forward progress and that resuming of suspended
>>> queues
>>> doesn't end up in a circle dependency?

I'm not entirely sure what you mean by "guarantee" here - the kernel by
itself only guarantees forward progress by the means of timeouts. User
space can 'easily' shoot itself in the foot by using a XGS queue to
block waiting on a GPU event which will never happen.

However dependencies between applications (and/or other device drivers)
will only occur via dma fences and an unsignalled fence will only be
returned when there is a path forward to signal it. So it shouldn't be
possible to create a dependency loop between contexts (or command stream
groups to use the Mali jargon).

Because the groups can't have dependency cycles it should be possible to
suspend/resume them without deadlocks.

>>>> I haven't studied Mihail's series in detail yet, but if I understand
>>>> correctly, the XGS queues are handled separately and are not suspended
>>>> when the hardware queues are suspended. I guess this might be an area
>>>> for improvement and might explain the currently very high timeout (to
>>>> deal with the case where the actual GPU work has been suspended).
>>>>
>>>>> How does memory management work in this case?
>>>> I'm not entirely sure what you mean here. If you are referring to the
>>>> potential memory issues with signalling path then this should be
>>>> handled
>>>> by the timeout - although I haven't studied the code to check for
>>>> bugs here.
>>> You might have misunderstood my question (and I might misunderstand the
>>> code), but on first glance it strongly sounds like the current
>>> approach will
>>> be NAKed.
>>>
>>>> The actual new XGS queues don't allocate/free memory during the queue
>>>> execution - so it's just the memory usage related to fences (and the
>>>> other work which could be blocked on the fence).
>>> But the kernel and the hardware could suspend the queues, right?
>>>
>>>> In terms of memory management for the GPU work itself, this is handled
>>>> the same as before. The VM_BIND mechanism allows dependencies to be
>>>> created between syncobjs and VM operations, with XGS these can then be
>>>> tied to GPU HW events.
>>> I don't know the details, but that again strongly sounds like that won't
>>> work.
>>>
>>> What you need is to somehow guarantee that work doesn't run into memory
>>> management deadlocks which are resolved by timeouts.
>>>
>>> Please read up here on why that stuff isn't allowed:
>>> https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/driver-api/dma-buf.html#indefinite-dma-fences
>> panthor doesn't yet have a shrinker, so all memory is pinned, which means
>> memory management easy mode.
> 
> Ok, that at least makes things work for the moment.

Ah, perhaps this should have been spelt out more clearly ;)

The VM_BIND mechanism that's already in place jumps through some hoops
to ensure that memory is preallocated when the memory operations are
enqueued. So any memory required should have been allocated before any
sync object is returned. We're aware of the issue with memory
allocations on the signalling path and trying to ensure that we don't
have that.

I'm hoping that we don't need a shrinker which deals with (active) GPU
memory with our design. Memory which user space thinks the GPU might
need should be pinned before the GPU work is submitted. APIs which
require any form of 'paging in' of data would need to be implemented by
the GPU work completing and being resubmitted by user space after the
memory changes (i.e. there could be a DMA fence pending on the GPU work).

>> But also this means there might be an uapi design bug in here, and we
>> really don't want to commit to that. My stance is that panthor should
>> gain
>> a proper shrinker first, which means there will be some changes here too.
>> And then we can properly evaluate this. As-is it's a bit too much on the
>> toy end of things.
> 
> I wouldn't say toy end, it looks rather fleshed out to me.
> 
> But I agree that the people who design the UAPI needs to be aware of the
> restrictions.

Yes, I'm aware this could restrict the design in the future. This is of
course why it's an RFC as we welcome discussion on what problems we
could be setting ourselves up for!

>>
>> That aside, I've thought this all through with tons of people, and I do
>> think it's all possible.
> 
> It's certainly possible, we have user queue patches for amdgpu in the
> pipeline as well.
> 
> It's just really really really hard to get right without creating some
> circle dependencies and deadlocks in between.
> 
> If I would get free beer every time somebody came up with a broken
> dma_fence design I would probably end up as alcoholic without spending a
> single penny.

I'll try hard to restrict your beer intake ;)

Thanks,
Steve

> Christian.
> 
>> -Sima
>>
>>> Regards,
>>> Christian.
>>>
>>>>
>>>> Fundamentally (modulo bugs) there is little change compared to kernel
>>>> submission - it's already fairly trivial to write GPU job which will
>>>> make no forward progress (a 'while (1)' equivalent job). The only
>>>> difference here is that XGS makes this 'easy' and doesn't involve the
>>>> GPU spinning. Either way we rely on a timeout to recover from these
>>>> situations.
>>>>
>>>> Thanks,
>>>> Steve
>>>>
>>>>> Regards,
>>>>> Christian.
>>>>>
>>>>>> This is still a work-in-progress, there's an outstanding issue with
>>>>>> multiple processes using different submission flows triggering
>>>>>> scheduling bugs (e.g. the same group getting scheduled twice), but
>>>>>> we'd
>>>>>> love to gather some feedback on the suitability of the approach in
>>>>>> general and see if there's a clear path to merging something like
>>>>>> this
>>>>>> eventually.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I've also CCd AMD maintainers because they have in the past done
>>>>>> something similar[1], in case they want to chime in.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> There are two uses of this new uAPI in Mesa, one in gallium/panfrost
>>>>>> (link TBD), and one in panvk [2].
>>>>>>
>>>>>> The Gallium implementation is a naïve change just to switch the
>>>>>> submission model and exercise the new kernel code, and we don't plan
>>>>>> on pursuing this at this time.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> The panvk driver changes are, however, a better representation of the
>>>>>> intent behind this new uAPI, so please consider that as the reference
>>>>>> userspace. It is still very much also a work in progress.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>     * patch 1 adds all the uAPI changes;
>>>>>>     * patch 2 implements the GROUP_CREATE ioctl changes necessary
>>>>>> to expose
>>>>>>       the required objects to userspace;
>>>>>>     * patch 3 maps the doorbell pages, similarly to how the user I/O
>>>>>> page is
>>>>>>       mapped;
>>>>>>     * patch 4 implements GROUP_KICK, which lets userspace request an
>>>>>>       inactive group to be scheduled on the GPU;
>>>>>>     * patches 5 & 6 implement XGS queues, a way for userspace to
>>>>>>       synchronise GPU queue progress with DRM syncobjs;
>>>>>>     * patches 7 & 8 add notification mechanisms for user & kernel
>>>>>> to signal
>>>>>>       changes to native GPU syncobjs.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> [1]
>>>>>> https://lore.kernel.org/amd-gfx/CADnq5_N61q_o+5WYUZsZ=qu7VmeXTFHQSxLwTco05gLzHaiswA@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx/t/#m116a36a598d8fad1329e053974ad37a4dc0f28ed
>>>>>> [2]
>>>>>> https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/larsivsi/mesa/-/commits/panvk-v10-usersubmit?ref_type=heads
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Ketil Johnsen (7):
>>>>>>      drm/panthor: Add uAPI to submit from user space
>>>>>>      drm/panthor: Extend GROUP_CREATE for user submission
>>>>>>      drm/panthor: Map doorbell pages
>>>>>>      drm/panthor: Add GROUP_KICK ioctl
>>>>>>      drm/panthor: Factor out syncobj handling
>>>>>>      drm/panthor: Implement XGS queues
>>>>>>      drm/panthor: Add SYNC_UPDATE ioctl
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Mihail Atanassov (1):
>>>>>>      drm/panthor: Add sync_update eventfd handling
>>>>>>
>>>>>>     drivers/gpu/drm/panthor/Makefile          |   4 +-
>>>>>>     drivers/gpu/drm/panthor/panthor_device.c  |  66 ++-
>>>>>>     drivers/gpu/drm/panthor/panthor_device.h  |  35 +-
>>>>>>     drivers/gpu/drm/panthor/panthor_drv.c     | 233 +++++++-
>>>>>>     drivers/gpu/drm/panthor/panthor_fw.c      |   2 +-
>>>>>>     drivers/gpu/drm/panthor/panthor_sched.c   | 408 +++++++++-----
>>>>>>     drivers/gpu/drm/panthor/panthor_sched.h   |   8 +-
>>>>>>     drivers/gpu/drm/panthor/panthor_syncobj.c | 167 ++++++
>>>>>>     drivers/gpu/drm/panthor/panthor_syncobj.h |  27 +
>>>>>>     drivers/gpu/drm/panthor/panthor_xgs.c     | 638
>>>>>> ++++++++++++++++++++++
>>>>>>     drivers/gpu/drm/panthor/panthor_xgs.h     |  42 ++
>>>>>>     include/uapi/drm/panthor_drm.h            | 243 +++++++-
>>>>>>     12 files changed, 1696 insertions(+), 177 deletions(-)
>>>>>>     create mode 100644 drivers/gpu/drm/panthor/panthor_syncobj.c
>>>>>>     create mode 100644 drivers/gpu/drm/panthor/panthor_syncobj.h
>>>>>>     create mode 100644 drivers/gpu/drm/panthor/panthor_xgs.c
>>>>>>     create mode 100644 drivers/gpu/drm/panthor/panthor_xgs.h
>>>>>>
> 




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