Re: [RFC v3 1/3] drm/doc/rfc: VM_BIND feature design document

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On Fri, Jun 03, 2022 at 10:20:25AM +0300, Lionel Landwerlin wrote:
  On 02/06/2022 23:35, Jason Ekstrand wrote:

    On Thu, Jun 2, 2022 at 3:11 PM Niranjana Vishwanathapura
    <niranjana.vishwanathapura@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

      On Wed, Jun 01, 2022 at 01:28:36PM -0700, Matthew Brost wrote:
      >On Wed, Jun 01, 2022 at 05:25:49PM +0300, Lionel Landwerlin wrote:
      >> On 17/05/2022 21:32, Niranjana Vishwanathapura wrote:
      >> > +VM_BIND/UNBIND ioctl will immediately start binding/unbinding
      the mapping in an
      >> > +async worker. The binding and unbinding will work like a special
      GPU engine.
      >> > +The binding and unbinding operations are serialized and will
      wait on specified
      >> > +input fences before the operation and will signal the output
      fences upon the
      >> > +completion of the operation. Due to serialization, completion of
      an operation
      >> > +will also indicate that all previous operations are also
      complete.
      >>
      >> I guess we should avoid saying "will immediately start
      binding/unbinding" if
      >> there are fences involved.
      >>
      >> And the fact that it's happening in an async worker seem to imply
      it's not
      >> immediate.
      >>

      Ok, will fix.
      This was added because in earlier design binding was deferred until
      next execbuff.
      But now it is non-deferred (immediate in that sense). But yah, this is
      confusing
      and will fix it.

      >>
      >> I have a question on the behavior of the bind operation when no
      input fence
      >> is provided. Let say I do :
      >>
      >> VM_BIND (out_fence=fence1)
      >>
      >> VM_BIND (out_fence=fence2)
      >>
      >> VM_BIND (out_fence=fence3)
      >>
      >>
      >> In what order are the fences going to be signaled?
      >>
      >> In the order of VM_BIND ioctls? Or out of order?
      >>
      >> Because you wrote "serialized I assume it's : in order
      >>

      Yes, in the order of VM_BIND/UNBIND ioctls. Note that bind and unbind
      will use
      the same queue and hence are ordered.

      >>
      >> One thing I didn't realize is that because we only get one
      "VM_BIND" engine,
      >> there is a disconnect from the Vulkan specification.
      >>
      >> In Vulkan VM_BIND operations are serialized but per engine.
      >>
      >> So you could have something like this :
      >>
      >> VM_BIND (engine=rcs0, in_fence=fence1, out_fence=fence2)
      >>
      >> VM_BIND (engine=ccs0, in_fence=fence3, out_fence=fence4)
      >>
      >>
      >> fence1 is not signaled
      >>
      >> fence3 is signaled
      >>
      >> So the second VM_BIND will proceed before the first VM_BIND.
      >>
      >>
      >> I guess we can deal with that scenario in userspace by doing the
      wait
      >> ourselves in one thread per engines.
      >>
      >> But then it makes the VM_BIND input fences useless.
      >>
      >>
      >> Daniel : what do you think? Should be rework this or just deal with
      wait
      >> fences in userspace?
      >>
      >
      >My opinion is rework this but make the ordering via an engine param
      optional.
      >
      >e.g. A VM can be configured so all binds are ordered within the VM
      >
      >e.g. A VM can be configured so all binds accept an engine argument
      (in
      >the case of the i915 likely this is a gem context handle) and binds
      >ordered with respect to that engine.
      >
      >This gives UMDs options as the later likely consumes more KMD
      resources
      >so if a different UMD can live with binds being ordered within the VM
      >they can use a mode consuming less resources.
      >

      I think we need to be careful here if we are looking for some out of
      (submission) order completion of vm_bind/unbind.
      In-order completion means, in a batch of binds and unbinds to be
      completed in-order, user only needs to specify in-fence for the
      first bind/unbind call and the our-fence for the last bind/unbind
      call. Also, the VA released by an unbind call can be re-used by
      any subsequent bind call in that in-order batch.

      These things will break if binding/unbinding were to be allowed to
      go out of order (of submission) and user need to be extra careful
      not to run into pre-mature triggereing of out-fence and bind failing
      as VA is still in use etc.

      Also, VM_BIND binds the provided mapping on the specified address
      space
      (VM). So, the uapi is not engine/context specific.

      We can however add a 'queue' to the uapi which can be one from the
      pre-defined queues,
      I915_VM_BIND_QUEUE_0
      I915_VM_BIND_QUEUE_1
      ...
      I915_VM_BIND_QUEUE_(N-1)

      KMD will spawn an async work queue for each queue which will only
      bind the mappings on that queue in the order of submission.
      User can assign the queue to per engine or anything like that.

      But again here, user need to be careful and not deadlock these
      queues with circular dependency of fences.

      I prefer adding this later an as extension based on whether it
      is really helping with the implementation.

    I can tell you right now that having everything on a single in-order
    queue will not get us the perf we want.  What vulkan really wants is one
    of two things:
     1. No implicit ordering of VM_BIND ops.  They just happen in whatever
    their dependencies are resolved and we ensure ordering ourselves by
    having a syncobj in the VkQueue.
     2. The ability to create multiple VM_BIND queues.  We need at least 2
    but I don't see why there needs to be a limit besides the limits the
    i915 API already has on the number of engines.  Vulkan could expose
    multiple sparse binding queues to the client if it's not arbitrarily
    limited.

Thanks Jason, Lionel.

Jason, what are you referring to when you say "limits the i915 API already
has on the number of engines"? I am not sure if there is such an uapi today.

I am trying to see how many queues we need and don't want it to be arbitrarily
large and unduely blow up memory usage and complexity in i915 driver.

    Why?  Because Vulkan has two basic kind of bind operations and we don't
    want any dependencies between them:
     1. Immediate.  These happen right after BO creation or maybe as part of
    vkBindImageMemory() or VkBindBufferMemory().  These don't happen on a
    queue and we don't want them serialized with anything.  To synchronize
    with submit, we'll have a syncobj in the VkDevice which is signaled by
    all immediate bind operations and make submits wait on it.
     2. Queued (sparse): These happen on a VkQueue which may be the same as
    a render/compute queue or may be its own queue.  It's up to us what we
    want to advertise.  From the Vulkan API PoV, this is like any other
    queue.  Operations on it wait on and signal semaphores.  If we have a
    VM_BIND engine, we'd provide syncobjs to wait and signal just like we do
    in execbuf().
    The important thing is that we don't want one type of operation to block
    on the other.  If immediate binds are blocking on sparse binds, it's
    going to cause over-synchronization issues.
    In terms of the internal implementation, I know that there's going to be
    a lock on the VM and that we can't actually do these things in
    parallel.  That's fine.  Once the dma_fences have signaled and we're

Thats correct. It is like a single VM_BIND engine with multiple queues
feeding to it.

    unblocked to do the bind operation, I don't care if there's a bit of
    synchronization due to locking.  That's expected.  What we can't afford
    to have is an immediate bind operation suddenly blocking on a sparse
    operation which is blocked on a compute job that's going to run for
    another 5ms.

As the VM_BIND queue is per VM, VM_BIND on one VM doesn't block the VM_BIND
on other VMs. I am not sure about usecases here, but just wanted to clarify.

Niranjana

    For reference, Windows solves this by allowing arbitrarily many paging
    queues (what they call a VM_BIND engine/queue).  That design works
    pretty well and solves the problems in question.  Again, we could just
    make everything out-of-order and require using syncobjs to order things
    as userspace wants. That'd be fine too.
    One more note while I'm here: danvet said something on IRC about VM_BIND
    queues waiting for syncobjs to materialize.  We don't really want/need
    this.  We already have all the machinery in userspace to handle
    wait-before-signal and waiting for syncobj fences to materialize and
    that machinery is on by default.  It would actually take MORE work in
    Mesa to turn it off and take advantage of the kernel being able to wait
    for syncobjs to materialize.  Also, getting that right is ridiculously
    hard and I really don't want to get it wrong in kernel space.  When we
    do memory fences, wait-before-signal will be a thing.  We don't need to
    try and make it a thing for syncobj.
    --Jason

  Thanks Jason,

  I missed the bit in the Vulkan spec that we're allowed to have a sparse
  queue that does not implement either graphics or compute operations :

    "While some implementations may include VK_QUEUE_SPARSE_BINDING_BIT
    support in queue families that also include

     graphics and compute support, other implementations may only expose a
    VK_QUEUE_SPARSE_BINDING_BIT-only queue

     family."

  So it can all be all a vm_bind engine that just does bind/unbind
  operations.

  But yes we need another engine for the immediate/non-sparse operations.

  -Lionel

      Daniel, any thoughts?

      Niranjana

      >Matt
      >
      >>
      >> Sorry I noticed this late.
      >>
      >>
      >> -Lionel
      >>
      >>



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