Re: [PATCH v2 00/25] AMDKFD kernel driver

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On Mon, Jul 21, 2014 at 03:39:09PM +0200, Christian König wrote:
> Am 21.07.2014 14:36, schrieb Oded Gabbay:
> >On 20/07/14 20:46, Jerome Glisse wrote:
> >>On Thu, Jul 17, 2014 at 04:57:25PM +0300, Oded Gabbay wrote:
> >>>Forgot to cc mailing list on cover letter. Sorry.
> >>>
> >>>As a continuation to the existing discussion, here is a v2 patch series
> >>>restructured with a cleaner history and no
> >>>totally-different-early-versions
> >>>of the code.
> >>>
> >>>Instead of 83 patches, there are now a total of 25 patches, where 5 of
> >>>them
> >>>are modifications to radeon driver and 18 of them include only amdkfd
> >>>code.
> >>>There is no code going away or even modified between patches, only
> >>>added.
> >>>
> >>>The driver was renamed from radeon_kfd to amdkfd and moved to reside
> >>>under
> >>>drm/radeon/amdkfd. This move was done to emphasize the fact that this
> >>>driver
> >>>is an AMD-only driver at this point. Having said that, we do foresee a
> >>>generic hsa framework being implemented in the future and in that
> >>>case, we
> >>>will adjust amdkfd to work within that framework.
> >>>
> >>>As the amdkfd driver should support multiple AMD gfx drivers, we want
> >>>to
> >>>keep it as a seperate driver from radeon. Therefore, the amdkfd code is
> >>>contained in its own folder. The amdkfd folder was put under the radeon
> >>>folder because the only AMD gfx driver in the Linux kernel at this
> >>>point
> >>>is the radeon driver. Having said that, we will probably need to move
> >>>it
> >>>(maybe to be directly under drm) after we integrate with additional
> >>>AMD gfx
> >>>drivers.
> >>>
> >>>For people who like to review using git, the v2 patch set is located
> >>>at:
> >>>http://cgit.freedesktop.org/~gabbayo/linux/log/?h=kfd-next-3.17-v2
> >>>
> >>>Written by Oded Gabbayh <oded.gabbay@xxxxxxx>
> >>
> >>So quick comments before i finish going over all patches. There is many
> >>things that need more documentation espacialy as of right now there is
> >>no userspace i can go look at.
> >So quick comments on some of your questions but first of all, thanks for
> >the time you dedicated to review the code.
> >>
> >>There few show stopper, biggest one is gpu memory pinning this is a big
> >>no, that would need serious arguments for any hope of convincing me on
> >>that side.
> >We only do gpu memory pinning for kernel objects. There are no userspace
> >objects that are pinned on the gpu memory in our driver. If that is the
> >case, is it still a show stopper ?
> >
> >The kernel objects are:
> >- pipelines (4 per device)
> >- mqd per hiq (only 1 per device)
> >- mqd per userspace queue. On KV, we support up to 1K queues per process,
> >for a total of 512K queues. Each mqd is 151 bytes, but the allocation is
> >done in 256 alignment. So total *possible* memory is 128MB
> >- kernel queue (only 1 per device)
> >- fence address for kernel queue
> >- runlists for the CP (1 or 2 per device)
> 
> The main questions here are if it's avoid able to pin down the memory and if
> the memory is pinned down at driver load, by request from userspace or by
> anything else.
> 
> As far as I can see only the "mqd per userspace queue" might be a bit
> questionable, everything else sounds reasonable.

Aside, i915 perspective again (i.e. how we solved this): When scheduling
away from contexts we unpin them and put them into the lru. And in the
shrinker we have a last-ditch callback to switch to a default context
(since you can't ever have no context once you've started) which means we
can evict any context object if it's getting in the way.

We must do that since the contexts have to be in global gtt, which is
shared for scanouts. So fragmenting that badly with lots of context
objects and other stuff is a no-go, since that means we'll start to fail
pageflips.

I don't know whether ttm has a ready-made concept for such
opportunistically pinned stuff. I guess you could wire up the "switch to
dflt context" action to the evict/move function if ttm wants to get rid of
the currently used hw context.

Oh and: This is another reason for letting the kernel schedule contexts,
since you can't do this defrag trick if the gpu does all the scheduling
itself.
-Daniel
-- 
Daniel Vetter
Software Engineer, Intel Corporation
+41 (0) 79 365 57 48 - http://blog.ffwll.ch

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