There were several updates in the driver on how the workarounds are handled since its documentation was written. Update the documentation to reflect the current reality. Signed-off-by: Lucas De Marchi <lucas.demarchi@xxxxxxxxx> --- drivers/gpu/drm/i915/gt/intel_workarounds.c | 87 +++++++++++++-------- 1 file changed, 56 insertions(+), 31 deletions(-) diff --git a/drivers/gpu/drm/i915/gt/intel_workarounds.c b/drivers/gpu/drm/i915/gt/intel_workarounds.c index 3cdf5c24dbc5..0db3713c1beb 100644 --- a/drivers/gpu/drm/i915/gt/intel_workarounds.c +++ b/drivers/gpu/drm/i915/gt/intel_workarounds.c @@ -17,43 +17,68 @@ /** * DOC: Hardware workarounds * - * This file is intended as a central place to implement most [1]_ of the - * required workarounds for hardware to work as originally intended. They fall - * in five basic categories depending on how/when they are applied: + * This is intended as a central place to implement most [1]_ of the + * required workarounds for hardware to work as originally intended. Hardware + * workarounds are register programming documented to be executed in the driver + * that fall outside of the normal programming sequences for a platform. There + * are some basic categories of workarounds, depending on how/when they are + * applied: * - * - Workarounds that touch registers that are saved/restored to/from the HW - * context image. The list is emitted (via Load Register Immediate commands) - * everytime a new context is created. - * - GT workarounds. The list of these WAs is applied whenever these registers - * revert to default values (on GPU reset, suspend/resume [2]_, etc..). - * - Display workarounds. The list is applied during display clock-gating - * initialization. - * - Workarounds that whitelist a privileged register, so that UMDs can manage - * them directly. This is just a special case of a MMMIO workaround (as we - * write the list of these to/be-whitelisted registers to some special HW - * registers). - * - Workaround batchbuffers, that get executed automatically by the hardware - * on every HW context restore. + * - Context workarounds: workarounds that touch registers that are + * saved/restored to/from the HW context image. The list is emitted (via Load + * Register Immediate commands) once when initializing the device and saved in + * the default context. That default context is then used on every context + * creation to have a "primed golden context", i.e. a context image that + * already contains the changes needed to all the registers. * - * .. [1] Please notice that there are other WAs that, due to their nature, - * cannot be applied from a central place. Those are peppered around the rest - * of the code, as needed. + * - Engine workarounds: the list of these WAs is applied whenever the specific + * engine is reset. It's also possible that a set of engine classes share a + * common power domain and they are reset together. This happens on some + * platforms with render and compute engines. In this case (at least) one of + * them need to keeep the workaround programming: the approach taken in the + * driver is to tie those workarounds to the first compute/render engine that + * is registered. When executing with GuC submission, engine resets are + * outside of kernel driver control, hence the list of registers involved in + * written once, on engine initialization, and then passed to GuC, that + * saves/restores their values before/after the reset takes place. See + * ``drivers/gpu/drm/i915/gt/uc/intel_guc_ads.c`` for reference. * - * .. [2] Technically, some registers are powercontext saved & restored, so they - * survive a suspend/resume. In practice, writing them again is not too - * costly and simplifies things. We can revisit this in the future. + * - GT workarounds: the list of these WAs is applied whenever these registers + * revert to their default values: on GPU reset, suspend/resume, etc. * - * Layout - * ~~~~~~ + * - Register whitelist: some workarounds need to be implemented in userspace, + * but need to touch privileged registers. The whitelist in the kernel + * instructs the hardware to allow the access to happen. From the kernel side, + * this is just a special case of a MMIO workaround (as we write the list of + * these to/be-whitelisted registers to some special HW registers). * - * Keep things in this file ordered by WA type, as per the above (context, GT, - * display, register whitelist, batchbuffer). Then, inside each type, keep the - * following order: + * - Workaround batchbuffers: buffers that get executed automatically by the + * hardware on every HW context restore. These buffers are created and + * programmed in the default context so the hardware always go through those + * programming sequences when switching contexts. The support for workaround + * batchbuffers is enabled these hardware mechanisms: * - * - Infrastructure functions and macros - * - WAs per platform in standard gen/chrono order - * - Public functions to init or apply the given workaround type. - */ + * #. INDIRECT_CTX: A batchbuffer and an offset are provided in the default + * context, pointing the hardware to jump to that location when that offset + * is reached in the context restore. Workaround batchbuffer in the driver + * currently uses this mechanism for all platforms. + * + * #. BB_PER_CTX_PTR: A batchbuffer is provided in the default context, + * pointing the hardware to a buffer to continue executing after the + * engine registers are restored in a context restore sequence. This is + * currently not used in the driver. + * + * - Display workarounds. The list is applied during display clock-gating + * initialization. However most of the display workarounds may be considered + * to fall under the "Others" category below. + * + * - Other: There are WAs that, due to their nature, cannot be applied from a central + * place. Those are peppered around the rest of the code, as needed. + * + * .. [1] Technically, some registers are powercontext saved & restored, so they + * survive a suspend/resume. In practice, writing them again is not too + * costly and simplifies things, so it's the approach taken in the driver. + */ static void wa_init_start(struct i915_wa_list *wal, const char *name, const char *engine_name) { -- 2.38.1