On 4/15/21 3:37 PM, Daniel Vetter wrote:
On Tue, Apr 13, 2021 at 09:57:06AM +0200, Christian König wrote:
Am 13.04.21 um 09:50 schrieb Thomas Hellström:
Hi!
During the dma_resv conversion of the i915 driver, we've been using ww
transaction lock lists to keep track of ww_mutexes that are locked
during the transaction so that they can be batch unlocked at suitable
locations. Including also the LMEM/VRAM eviction we've ended up with
two static lists per transaction context; one typically unlocked at the
end of transaction and one initialized before and unlocked after each
buffer object validate. This enables us to do sleeping locking at
eviction and keep objects locked on the eviction list until we
eventually succeed allocating memory (modulo minor flaws of course).
It would be beneficial with the i915 TTM conversion to be able to
introduce a similar functionality that would work in ttm but also
cross-driver in, for example move_notify. It would also be beneficial
to be able to put any dma_resv ww mutex on the lists, and not require
it to be embedded in a particular object type.
I started scetching on some utilities for this. For TTM, for example,
the idea would be to pass a list head for the ww transaction lock list
in the ttm_operation_ctx. A function taking a ww_mutex could then
either attach a grabbed lock to the list for batch unlocking, or be
responsible for unlocking when the lock's scope is exited. It's also
possible to create sublists if so desired. I believe the below would be
sufficient to cover the i915 functionality.
Any comments and suggestions appreciated!
ah yes Daniel and I haven been discussing something like this for years.
I also came up with rough implementation, but we always ran into lifetime
issues.
In other words the ww_mutexes which are on the list would need to be kept
alive until unlocked.
Because of this we kind of backed up and said we would need this on the GEM
level instead of working with dma_resv objects.
Yeah there's a few funny concerns here that make this awkward:
- For simplicity doing these helpers at the gem level should make things a
bit easier, because then we have a standard way to drop the reference.
It does mean that the only thing you can lock like this are gem objects,
but I think that's fine. At least for a first cut.
- This is a bit awkward for vmwgfx, but a) Zack has mentioned he's looking
into adopting gem bo internally to be able to drop a pile of code and
stop making vmwgfx the only special-case we have b) drivers which don't
need this won't need this, so should be fine.
The other awkward thing I guess is that ttm would need to use the
embedded kref from the gem bo, but that should be transparent I think.
- Next up is dma-buf: For i915 we'd like to do the same eviction trick
also through p2p dma-buf callbacks, so that this works the same as
eviction/reservation within a gpu. But for these internal bo you might
not have a dma-buf, so we can't just lift the trick to the dma-buf
level. But I think if we pass e.g. a struct list_head and a callback to
unreference/unlock all the buffers in there to the exporter, plus
similar for the slowpath lock, then that should be doable without
glorious layering inversions between dma-buf and gem.
I think for dma-buf it should even be ok if this requires that we
allocate an entire structure with kmalloc or something, allocating
memory while holding dma_resv is ok.
Yes, the thing here with the suggested helpers is that you would just
embed a trans_lockitem struct in the gem object (and defines the gem
object ops). Otherwise and for passing to dma-buf this is pretty much
exactly what you are suggesting, but the huge benefit of encapsulating
the needed members like this is that when we need to change something we
change it in just one place.
For anything that doesn't have a gem object (dma-buf, vmwgfx or
whatever) you have the choice of either allocating a struct
trans_lockitem or embed it wherever you prefer. In particular, this is
beneficial where you have a single dma-resv class ww-mutex sitting
somewhere in the way and you don't want to needlessly have a gem object
that embeds it.
/Thomas
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