On 27/09/2019 13:16, Chris Wilson wrote:
Quoting Tvrtko Ursulin (2019-09-27 13:08:51)
On 27/09/2019 12:25, Chris Wilson wrote:
Quoting Tvrtko Ursulin (2019-09-27 12:10:29)
On 25/09/2019 11:01, Chris Wilson wrote:
+struct dma_fence *
+__i915_active_fence_set(struct i915_active_fence *active,
+ struct dma_fence *fence)
Can you add a short comment for this function explaining the racyness
and so why it returns prev and what should the callers do with it?
Before using this function, we had the callers declare what mutex guards
this timeline and we check here that is held.
No, I mean because it has to reload prev and return it to the caller,
which implies that is to handle some designed-in racy-ness which I think
should be mentioned.
But that's not racing with the caller, that just racing with the
callback from the interrupt handler and the reason why we have to check
after serialising is called out. /* serialise with prev->cb_list */ ?
The caller is responsible for ensuring that prev is executed before
fence to keep the timeline in the same order as recorded.
I did not say it is racing with the caller, but that the caller has to
handle a race.
"Serialise with prev->cb_list" is too low level for me. Trust me, I
always struggle with the active tracking code since there is so many
indirections and relationships. So in the absence of a visual diagram a
higher level comment would be beneficial for the future self. Just
expanding on what you replied here talking about how interrupts
interacts with new stuff entering tracking would do it.
Regards,
Tvrtko
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