On Thu, Dec 19, 2024 at 09:02:27AM +0000, Daniel Stone wrote: > On Wed, 18 Dec 2024 at 10:32, Brian Starkey <brian.starkey@xxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Wed, Dec 18, 2024 at 11:24:58AM +0000, Simona Vetter wrote: > > > For that reason I think linear modifiers with explicit pitch/size > > > alignment constraints is a sound concept and fits into how modifiers work > > > overall. > > > > Could we make it (more) clear that pitch alignment is a "special" > > constraint (in that it's really a description of the buffer layout), > > and that constraints in-general shouldn't be exposed via modifiers? > > It's still worryingly common to see requirements for contiguous > allocation, if for no other reason than we'll all be stuck with > Freescale/NXP i.MX6 for a long time to come. Would that be in scope > for expressing constraints via modifiers as well, and if so, should we > be trying to use feature bits to express this? > > How this would be used in practice is also way too underdocumented. We > need to document that exact-round-up 64b is more restrictive than > any-multiple-of 64b is more restrictive than 'classic' linear. We need > to document what people should advertise - if we were starting from > scratch, the clear answer would be that anything which doesn't care > should advertise all three, anything advertising any-multiple-of > should also advertise exact-round-up, etc. > > But we're not starting from scratch, and since linear is 'special', > userspace already has explicit knowledge of it. So AMD is going to > have to advertise LINEAR forever, because media frameworks know about > DRM_FORMAT_MOD_LINEAR and pass that around explicitly when they know > that the buffer is linear. That and not breaking older userspace > running in containers or as part of a bisect or whatever. > > There's also the question of what e.g. gbm_bo_get_modifier() should > return. Again, if we were starting from scratch, most restrictive > would make sense. But we're not, so I think it has to return LINEAR > for maximum compatibility (because modifiers can't be morphed into > other ones for fun), which further cements that we're not removing > LINEAR. > > And how should allocators determine what to go for? Given that, I > think the only sensible semantics are, when only LINEAR has been > passed, to pick the most restrictive set possible; when LINEAR > variants have been passed as well as LINEAR, to act as if LINEAR were > not passed at all. Yeah I think this makes sense, and we'd need to add that to the kerneldoc about how drivers/apps/frameworks need to work with variants of LINEAR. Just deprecating LINEAR does indeed not work. The same way it was really hard slow crawl (and we're still not there everywhere, if you include stuff like bare metal Xorg) trying to retire the implied modifier. Maybe, in an extremely bright future were all relevant drivers advertise a full set of LINEAR variants, and all frameworks understand them, we'll get there. But if AMD is the one special case that really needs this I don't think it's realistic to plan for that, and what Daniel describe above looks like the future we're stuck to. -Sima -- Simona Vetter Software Engineer, Intel Corporation http://blog.ffwll.ch