version 4:
make sure that normalized zpos value is stay in the defined property
range and warn user if not.
Fix NULL pointer bug in rcar-du while setting zpos value.
No changes in the other drivers.
version 3:
use kmalloc_array instead of kmalloc.
Correct normalize_zpos computation (comeback to Mareck original code)
version 2:
add a zpos property into drm_plane structure to simplify code.
This allow to get/set zpos value in core and not in drivers code.
Fix various remarks.
version 1:
refactor Marek's patches to have per plane zpos property instead of only
one in core.
Benjamin Gaignard (3):
drm: add generic zpos property
drm: sti: use generic zpos for plane
drm: rcar: use generic code for managing zpos plane property
Marek Szyprowski (1):
drm/exynos: use generic code for managing zpos plane property
Documentation/DocBook/gpu.tmpl | 10 ++
drivers/gpu/drm/Makefile | 2 +-
drivers/gpu/drm/drm_atomic.c | 4 +
drivers/gpu/drm/drm_atomic_helper.c | 6 +
drivers/gpu/drm/drm_blend.c | 230 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
drivers/gpu/drm/drm_crtc_internal.h | 3 +
drivers/gpu/drm/exynos/exynos_drm_drv.h | 2 -
drivers/gpu/drm/exynos/exynos_drm_plane.c | 67 ++-------
drivers/gpu/drm/exynos/exynos_mixer.c | 6 +-
drivers/gpu/drm/rcar-du/rcar_du_crtc.c | 2 +-
drivers/gpu/drm/rcar-du/rcar_du_drv.h | 1 -
drivers/gpu/drm/rcar-du/rcar_du_kms.c | 5 -
drivers/gpu/drm/rcar-du/rcar_du_plane.c | 9 +-
drivers/gpu/drm/rcar-du/rcar_du_plane.h | 2 -
drivers/gpu/drm/sti/sti_mixer.c | 9 +-
drivers/gpu/drm/sti/sti_plane.c | 80 ++++-------
drivers/gpu/drm/sti/sti_plane.h | 2 -
include/drm/drm_crtc.h | 30 ++++
18 files changed, 331 insertions(+), 139 deletions(-)
create mode 100644 drivers/gpu/drm/drm_blend.c
Cc: Inki Dae <inki.dae(a)samsung.com>
Cc: Daniel Vetter <daniel(a)ffwll.ch>
Cc: Ville Syrjala <ville.syrjala(a)linux.intel.com>
Cc: Joonyoung Shim <jy0922.shim(a)samsung.com>
Cc: Seung-Woo Kim <sw0312.kim(a)samsung.com>
Cc: Andrzej Hajda <a.hajda(a)samsung.com>
Cc: Krzysztof Kozlowski <k.kozlowski(a)samsung.com>
Cc: Bartlomiej Zolnierkiewicz <b.zolnierkie(a)samsung.com>
Cc: Tobias Jakobi <tjakobi(a)math.uni-bielefeld.de>
Cc: Gustavo Padovan <gustavo(a)padovan.org>
Cc: vincent.abriou(a)st.com
Cc: fabien.dessenne(a)st.com
Cc: Laurent Pinchart <laurent.pinchart(a)ideasonboard.com>
--
1.9.1
This small series is the v2 of the patch posted initially here:
http://www.spinics.net/lists/linux-media/msg101347.html
It not only fixes the type mix-up and addresses Daniel's remark (patch 1),
it also smoothes out the error handling in dma_buf_init_debugfs() (patch 2)
and removes the then unneeded function dma_buf_debugfs_create_file() (patch
3).
Please apply!
Mathias Krause (3):
dma-buf: propagate errors from dma_buf_describe() on debugfs read
dma-buf: remove dma_buf directory on bufinfo file creation errors
dma-buf: remove dma_buf_debugfs_create_file()
drivers/dma-buf/dma-buf.c | 44 ++++++++++++++------------------------------
include/linux/dma-buf.h | 2 --
2 files changed, 14 insertions(+), 32 deletions(-)
--
1.7.10.4
So, if we wanted to extend this to support the fourcc-modifiers that
we have on the kernel side for compressed/tiled/etc formats, what
would be the right approach?
A new version of the existing extension or a new
EGL_EXT_image_dma_buf_import2 extension, or ??
BR,
-R
On Mon, Feb 25, 2013 at 6:54 AM, Tom Cooksey <tom.cooksey(a)arm.com> wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> The final spec has had enum values assigned and been published on Khronos:
>
> http://www.khronos.org/registry/egl/extensions/EXT/EGL_EXT_image_dma_buf_im…
>
> Thanks to all who've provided input.
>
>
> Cheers,
>
> Tom
>
>
>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: mesa-dev-bounces+tom.cooksey=arm.com(a)lists.freedesktop.org [mailto:mesa-dev-
>> bounces+tom.cooksey=arm.com(a)lists.freedesktop.org] On Behalf Of Tom Cooksey
>> Sent: 04 October 2012 13:10
>> To: mesa-dev(a)lists.freedesktop.org; linaro-mm-sig(a)lists.linaro.org; dri-
>> devel(a)lists.freedesktop.org; linux-media(a)vger.kernel.org
>> Subject: [Mesa-dev] [RFC] New dma_buf -> EGLImage EGL extension - New draft!
>>
>> Hi All,
>>
>> After receiving a fair bit of feedback (thanks!), I've updated the
>> EGL_EXT_image_dma_buf_import spec
>> and expanded it to resolve a number of the issues. Please find the latest draft below and let
>> me
>> know any additional feedback you might have, either on the lists or by private e-mail - I
>> don't mind
>> which.
>>
>> I think the only remaining issue now is if we need a mechanism whereby an application can
>> query
>> which drm_fourcc.h formats EGL supports or if just failing with EGL_BAD_MATCH when the
>> application
>> has use one EGL doesn't support is sufficient. Any thoughts?
>>
>>
>> Cheers,
>>
>> Tom
>>
>>
>> --------------------8<--------------------
>>
>>
>> Name
>>
>> EXT_image_dma_buf_import
>>
>> Name Strings
>>
>> EGL_EXT_image_dma_buf_import
>>
>> Contributors
>>
>> Jesse Barker
>> Rob Clark
>> Tom Cooksey
>>
>> Contacts
>>
>> Jesse Barker (jesse 'dot' barker 'at' linaro 'dot' org)
>> Tom Cooksey (tom 'dot' cooksey 'at' arm 'dot' com)
>>
>> Status
>>
>> DRAFT
>>
>> Version
>>
>> Version 4, October 04, 2012
>>
>> Number
>>
>> EGL Extension ???
>>
>> Dependencies
>>
>> EGL 1.2 is required.
>>
>> EGL_KHR_image_base is required.
>>
>> The EGL implementation must be running on a Linux kernel supporting the
>> dma_buf buffer sharing mechanism.
>>
>> This extension is written against the wording of the EGL 1.2 Specification.
>>
>> Overview
>>
>> This extension allows creating an EGLImage from a Linux dma_buf file
>> descriptor or multiple file descriptors in the case of multi-plane YUV
>> images.
>>
>> New Types
>>
>> None
>>
>> New Procedures and Functions
>>
>> None
>>
>> New Tokens
>>
>> Accepted by the <target> parameter of eglCreateImageKHR:
>>
>> EGL_LINUX_DMA_BUF_EXT
>>
>> Accepted as an attribute in the <attrib_list> parameter of
>> eglCreateImageKHR:
>>
>> EGL_LINUX_DRM_FOURCC_EXT
>> EGL_DMA_BUF_PLANE0_FD_EXT
>> EGL_DMA_BUF_PLANE0_OFFSET_EXT
>> EGL_DMA_BUF_PLANE0_PITCH_EXT
>> EGL_DMA_BUF_PLANE1_FD_EXT
>> EGL_DMA_BUF_PLANE1_OFFSET_EXT
>> EGL_DMA_BUF_PLANE1_PITCH_EXT
>> EGL_DMA_BUF_PLANE2_FD_EXT
>> EGL_DMA_BUF_PLANE2_OFFSET_EXT
>> EGL_DMA_BUF_PLANE2_PITCH_EXT
>> EGL_YUV_COLOR_SPACE_HINT_EXT
>> EGL_SAMPLE_RANGE_HINT_EXT
>> EGL_YUV_CHROMA_HORIZONTAL_SITING_HINT_EXT
>> EGL_YUV_CHROMA_VERTICAL_SITING_HINT_EXT
>>
>> Accepted as the value for the EGL_YUV_COLOR_SPACE_HINT_EXT attribute:
>>
>> EGL_ITU_REC601_EXT
>> EGL_ITU_REC709_EXT
>> EGL_ITU_REC2020_EXT
>>
>> Accepted as the value for the EGL_SAMPLE_RANGE_HINT_EXT attribute:
>>
>> EGL_YUV_FULL_RANGE_EXT
>> EGL_YUV_NARROW_RANGE_EXT
>>
>> Accepted as the value for the EGL_YUV_CHROMA_HORIZONTAL_SITING_HINT_EXT &
>> EGL_YUV_CHROMA_VERTICAL_SITING_HINT_EXT attributes:
>>
>> EGL_YUV_CHROMA_SITING_0_EXT
>> EGL_YUV_CHROMA_SITING_0_5_EXT
>>
>>
>> Additions to Chapter 2 of the EGL 1.2 Specification (EGL Operation)
>>
>> Add to section 2.5.1 "EGLImage Specification" (as defined by the
>> EGL_KHR_image_base specification), in the description of
>> eglCreateImageKHR:
>>
>> "Values accepted for <target> are listed in Table aaa, below.
>>
>> +-------------------------+--------------------------------------------+
>> | <target> | Notes |
>> +-------------------------+--------------------------------------------+
>> | EGL_LINUX_DMA_BUF_EXT | Used for EGLImages imported from Linux |
>> | | dma_buf file descriptors |
>> +-------------------------+--------------------------------------------+
>> Table aaa. Legal values for eglCreateImageKHR <target> parameter
>>
>> ...
>>
>> If <target> is EGL_LINUX_DMA_BUF_EXT, <dpy> must be a valid display, <ctx>
>> must be EGL_NO_CONTEXT, and <buffer> must be NULL, cast into the type
>> EGLClientBuffer. The details of the image is specified by the attributes
>> passed into eglCreateImageKHR. Required attributes and their values are as
>> follows:
>>
>> * EGL_WIDTH & EGL_HEIGHT: The logical dimensions of the buffer in pixels
>>
>> * EGL_LINUX_DRM_FOURCC_EXT: The pixel format of the buffer, as specified
>> by drm_fourcc.h and used as the pixel_format parameter of the
>> drm_mode_fb_cmd2 ioctl.
>>
>> * EGL_DMA_BUF_PLANE0_FD_EXT: The dma_buf file descriptor of plane 0 of
>> the image.
>>
>> * EGL_DMA_BUF_PLANE0_OFFSET_EXT: The offset from the start of the
>> dma_buf of the first sample in plane 0, in bytes.
>>
>> * EGL_DMA_BUF_PLANE0_PITCH_EXT: The number of bytes between the start of
>> subsequent rows of samples in plane 0. May have special meaning for
>> non-linear formats.
>>
>> For images in an RGB color-space or those using a single-plane YUV format,
>> only the first plane's file descriptor, offset & pitch should be specified.
>> For semi-planar YUV formats, the chroma samples are stored in plane 1 and
>> for fully planar formats, U-samples are stored in plane 1 and V-samples are
>> stored in plane 2. Planes 1 & 2 are specified by the following attributes,
>> which have the same meanings as defined above for plane 0:
>>
>> * EGL_DMA_BUF_PLANE1_FD_EXT
>> * EGL_DMA_BUF_PLANE1_OFFSET_EXT
>> * EGL_DMA_BUF_PLANE1_PITCH_EXT
>> * EGL_DMA_BUF_PLANE2_FD_EXT
>> * EGL_DMA_BUF_PLANE2_OFFSET_EXT
>> * EGL_DMA_BUF_PLANE2_PITCH_EXT
>>
>> In addition to the above required attributes, the application may also
>> provide hints as to how the data should be interpreted by the GL. If any of
>> these hints are not specified, the GL will guess based on the pixel format
>> passed as the EGL_LINUX_DRM_FOURCC_EXT attribute or may fall-back to some
>> default value. Not all GLs will be able to support all combinations of
>> these hints and are free to use whatever settings they choose to achieve
>> the closest possible match.
>>
>> * EGL_YUV_COLOR_SPACE_HINT_EXT: The color-space the data is in. Only
>> relevant for images in a YUV format, ignored when specified for an
>> image in an RGB format. Accepted values are:
>> EGL_ITU_REC601_EXT, EGL_ITU_REC709_EXT & EGL_ITU_REC2020_EXT.
>>
>> * EGL_YUV_CHROMA_HORIZONTAL_SITING_HINT_EXT &
>> EGL_YUV_CHROMA_VERTICAL_SITING_HINT_EXT: Where chroma samples are
>> sited relative to luma samples when the image is in a sub-sampled
>> format. When the image is not using chroma sub-sampling, the luma and
>> chroma samples are assumed to be co-sited. Siting is split into the
>> vertical and horizontal and is in a fixed range. A siting of zero
>> means the first luma sample is taken from the same position in that
>> dimension as the chroma sample. This is best illustrated in the
>> diagram below:
>>
>> (0.5, 0.5) (0.0, 0.5) (0.0, 0.0)
>> + + + + + + + + * + * +
>> x x x x
>> + + + + + + + + + + + +
>>
>> + + + + + + + + * + * +
>> x x x x
>> + + + + + + + + + + + +
>>
>> Luma samples (+), Chroma samples (x) Chrome & Luma samples (*)
>>
>> Note this attribute is ignored for RGB images and non sub-sampled
>> YUV images. Accepted values are: EGL_YUV_CHROMA_SITING_0_EXT (0.0)
>> & EGL_YUV_CHROMA_SITING_0_5_EXT (0.5)
>>
>> * EGL_SAMPLE_RANGE_HINT_EXT: The numerical range of samples. Only
>> relevant for images in a YUV format, ignored when specified for
>> images in an RGB format. Accepted values are: EGL_YUV_FULL_RANGE_EXT
>> (0-256) & EGL_YUV_NARROW_RANGE_EXT (16-235).
>>
>>
>> If eglCreateImageKHR is successful for a EGL_LINUX_DMA_BUF_EXT target, the
>> EGL takes ownership of the file descriptor and is responsible for closing
>> it, which it may do at any time while the EGLDisplay is initialized."
>>
>>
>> Add to the list of error conditions for eglCreateImageKHR:
>>
>> "* If <target> is EGL_LINUX_DMA_BUF_EXT and <buffer> is not NULL, the
>> error EGL_BAD_PARAMETER is generated.
>>
>> * If <target> is EGL_LINUX_DMA_BUF_EXT, and the list of attributes is
>> incomplete, EGL_BAD_PARAMETER is generated.
>>
>> * If <target> is EGL_LINUX_DMA_BUF_EXT, and the EGL_LINUX_DRM_FOURCC_EXT
>> attribute is set to a format not supported by the EGL, EGL_BAD_MATCH
>> is generated.
>>
>> * If <target> is EGL_LINUX_DMA_BUF_EXT, and the EGL_LINUX_DRM_FOURCC_EXT
>> attribute indicates a single-plane format, EGL_BAD_ATTRIBUTE is
>> generated if any of the EGL_DMA_BUF_PLANE1_* or EGL_DMA_BUF_PLANE2_*
>> attributes are specified.
>>
>> * If <target> is EGL_LINUX_DMA_BUF_EXT and the value specified for
>> EGL_YUV_COLOR_SPACE_HINT_EXT is not EGL_ITU_REC601_EXT,
>> EGL_ITU_REC709_EXT or EGL_ITU_REC2020_EXT, EGL_BAD_ATTRIBUTE is
>> generated.
>>
>> * If <target> is EGL_LINUX_DMA_BUF_EXT and the value specified for
>> EGL_SAMPLE_RANGE_HINT_EXT is not EGL_YUV_FULL_RANGE_EXT or
>> EGL_YUV_NARROW_RANGE_EXT, EGL_BAD_ATTRIBUTE is generated.
>>
>> * If <target> is EGL_LINUX_DMA_BUF_EXT and the value specified for
>> EGL_YUV_CHROMA_HORIZONTAL_SITING_HINT_EXT or
>> EGL_YUV_CHROMA_VERTICAL_SITING_HINT_EXT is not
>> EGL_YUV_CHROMA_SITING_0_EXT or EGL_YUV_CHROMA_SITING_0_5_EXT,
>> EGL_BAD_ATTRIBUTE is generated.
>>
>> * If <target> is EGL_LINUX_DMA_BUF_EXT and one or more of the values
>> specified for a plane's pitch or offset isn't supported by EGL,
>> EGL_BAD_ACCESS is generated.
>>
>> * If <target> is EGL_LINUX_DMA_BUF_EXT and eglCreateImageKHR fails,
>> EGL does not retain ownership of the file descriptor and it is the
>> responsibility of the application to close it."
>>
>>
>> Issues
>>
>> 1. Should this be a KHR or EXT extension?
>>
>> ANSWER: EXT. Khronos EGL working group not keen on this extension as it is
>> seen as contradicting the EGLStream direction the specification is going in.
>> The working group recommends creating additional specs to allow an EGLStream
>> producer/consumer connected to v4l2/DRM or any other Linux interface.
>>
>> 2. Should this be a generic any platform extension, or a Linux-only
>> extension which explicitly states the handles are dma_buf fds?
>>
>> ANSWER: There's currently no intention to port this extension to any OS not
>> based on the Linux kernel. Consequently, this spec can be explicitly written
>> against Linux and the dma_buf API.
>>
>> 3. Does ownership of the file descriptor pass to the EGL library?
>>
>> ANSWER: If eglCreateImageKHR is successful, EGL assumes ownership of the
>> file descriptors and is responsible for closing them.
>>
>> 4. How are the different YUV color spaces handled (BT.709/BT.601)?
>>
>> ANSWER: The pixel formats defined in drm_fourcc.h only specify how the data
>> is laid out in memory. It does not define how that data should be
>> interpreted. Added a new EGL_YUV_COLOR_SPACE_HINT_EXT attribute to allow the
>> application to specify which color space the data is in to allow the GL to
>> choose an appropriate set of co-efficients if it needs to convert that data
>> to RGB for example.
>>
>> 5. What chroma-siting is used for sub-sampled YUV formats?
>>
>> ANSWER: The chroma siting is not specified by either the v4l2 or DRM APIs.
>> This is similar to the color-space issue (4) in that the chroma siting
>> doesn't affect how the data is stored in memory. However, the GL will need
>> to know the siting in order to filter the image correctly. While the visual
>> impact of getting the siting wrong is minor, provision should be made to
>> allow an application to specify the siting if desired. Added additional
>> EGL_YUV_CHROMA_HORIZONTAL_SITING_HINT_EXT &
>> EGL_YUV_CHROMA_VERTICAL_SITING_HINT_EXT attributes to allow the siting to
>> be specified using a set of pre-defined values (0 or 0.5).
>>
>> 6. How can an application query which formats the EGL implementation
>> supports?
>>
>> PROPOSAL: Don't provide a query mechanism but instead add an error condition
>> that EGL_BAD_MATCH is raised if the EGL implementation doesn't support that
>> particular format.
>>
>> 7. Which image formats should be supported and how is format specified?
>>
>> Seem to be two options 1) specify a new enum in this specification and
>> enumerate all possible formats. 2) Use an existing enum already in Linux,
>> either v4l2_mbus_pixelcode and/or those formats listed in drm_fourcc.h?
>>
>> ANSWER: Go for option 2) and just use values defined in drm_fourcc.h.
>>
>> 8. How can AYUV images be handled?
>>
>> ANSWER: At least on fourcc.org and in drm_fourcc.h, there only seems to be
>> a single AYUV format and that is a packed format, so everything, including
>> the alpha component would be in the first plane.
>>
>> 9. How can you import interlaced images?
>>
>> ANSWER: Interlaced frames are usually stored with the top & bottom fields
>> interleaved in a single buffer. As the fields would need to be displayed as
>> at different times, the application would create two EGLImages from the same
>> buffer, one for the top field and another for the bottom. Both EGLImages
>> would set the pitch to 2x the buffer width and the second EGLImage would use
>> a suitable offset to indicate it started on the second line of the buffer.
>> This should work regardless of whether the data is packed in a single plane,
>> semi-planar or multi-planar.
>>
>> If each interlaced field is stored in a separate buffer then it should be
>> trivial to create two EGLImages, one for each field's buffer.
>>
>> 10. How are semi-planar/planar formats handled that have a different
>> width/height for Y' and CbCr such as YUV420?
>>
>> ANSWER: The spec says EGL_WIDTH & EGL_HEIGHT specify the *logical* width and
>> height of the buffer in pixels. For pixel formats with sub-sampled Chroma
>> values, it should be trivial for the EGL implementation to calculate the
>> width/height of the Chroma sample buffers using the logical width & height
>> and by inspecting the pixel format passed as the EGL_LINUX_DRM_FOURCC_EXT
>> attribute. I.e. If the pixel format says it's YUV420, the Chroma buffer's
>> width = EGL_WIDTH/2 & height =EGL_HEIGHT/2.
>>
>> 11. How are Bayer formats handled?
>>
>> ANSWER: As of Linux 2.6.34, drm_fourcc.h does not include any Bayer formats.
>> However, future kernel versions may add such formats in which case they
>> would be handled in the same way as any other format.
>>
>> 12. Should the spec support buffers which have samples in a "narrow range"?
>>
>> Content sampled from older analogue sources typically don't use the full
>> (0-256) range of the data type storing the sample and instead use a narrow
>> (16-235) range to allow some headroom & toeroom in the signals to avoid
>> clipping signals which overshoot slightly during processing. This is
>> sometimes known as signals using "studio swing".
>>
>> ANSWER: Add a new attribute to define if the samples use a narrow 16-235
>> range or the full 0-256 range.
>>
>> 13. Specifying the color space and range seems cumbersome, why not just
>> allow the application to specify the full YUV->RGB color conversion matrix?
>>
>> ANSWER: Some hardware may not be able to use an arbitrary conversion matrix
>> and needs to select an appropriate pre-defined matrix based on the color
>> space and the sample range.
>>
>> 14. How do you handle EGL implementations which have restrictions on pitch
>> and/or offset?
>>
>> ANSWER: Buffers being imported using dma_buf pretty much have to be
>> allocated by a kernel-space driver. As such, it is expected that a system
>> integrator would make sure all devices which allocate buffers suitable for
>> exporting make sure they use a pitch supported by all possible importers.
>> However, it is still possible eglCreateImageKHR can fail due to an
>> unsupported pitch. Added a new error to the list indicating this.
>>
>> 15. Should this specification also describe how to export an existing
>> EGLImage as a dma_buf file descriptor?
>>
>> ANSWER: No. Importing and exporting buffers are two separate operations and
>> importing an existing dma_buf fd into an EGLImage is useful functionality in
>> itself. Agree that exporting an EGLImage as a dma_buf fd is useful, E.g. it
>> could be used by an OpenMAX IL implementation's OMX_UseEGLImage function to
>> give access to the buffer backing an EGLImage to video hardware. However,
>> exporting can be split into a separate extension specification.
>>
>>
>> Revision History
>>
>> #4 (Tom Cooksey, October 04, 2012)
>> - Fixed issue numbering!
>> - Added issues 8 - 15.
>> - Promoted proposal for Issue 3 to be the answer.
>> - Added an additional attribute to allow an application to specify the color
>> space as a hint which should address issue 4.
>> - Added an additional attribute to allow an application to specify the chroma
>> siting as a hint which should address issue 5.
>> - Added an additional attribute to allow an application to specify the sample
>> range as a hint which should address the new issue 12.
>> - Added language to end of error section clarifying who owns the fd passed
>> to eglCreateImageKHR if an error is generated.
>>
>> #3 (Tom Cooksey, August 16, 2012)
>> - Changed name from EGL_EXT_image_external and re-written language to
>> explicitly state this for use with Linux & dma_buf.
>> - Added a list of issues, including some still open ones.
>>
>> #2 (Jesse Barker, May 30, 2012)
>> - Revision to split eglCreateImageKHR functionality from export
>> Functionality.
>> - Update definition of EGLNativeBufferType to be a struct containing a list
>> of handles to support multi-buffer/multi-planar formats.
>>
>> #1 (Jesse Barker, March 20, 2012)
>> - Initial draft.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> mesa-dev mailing list
>> mesa-dev(a)lists.freedesktop.org
>> http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/mesa-dev
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> mesa-dev mailing list
> mesa-dev(a)lists.freedesktop.org
> http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/mesa-dev
The callback function dma_buf_describe() returns an int not void so the
function pointer cast in dma_buf_show() is wrong. dma_buf_describe() can
also fail when acquiring the mutex gets interrupted so always returning
0 in dma_buf_show() is wrong, too.
Fix both issues by casting the function pointer to the correct type and
propagate its return value.
This type mismatch was caught by the PaX RAP plugin.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Krause <minipli(a)googlemail.com>
Cc: Sumit Semwal <sumit.semwal(a)linaro.org>
Cc: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter(a)ffwll.ch>
Cc: PaX Team <pageexec(a)freemail.hu>
---
drivers/dma-buf/dma-buf.c | 5 ++---
1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)
diff --git a/drivers/dma-buf/dma-buf.c b/drivers/dma-buf/dma-buf.c
index 6355ab38d630..0f2a4592fdd2 100644
--- a/drivers/dma-buf/dma-buf.c
+++ b/drivers/dma-buf/dma-buf.c
@@ -881,10 +881,9 @@ static int dma_buf_describe(struct seq_file *s)
static int dma_buf_show(struct seq_file *s, void *unused)
{
- void (*func)(struct seq_file *) = s->private;
+ int (*func)(struct seq_file *) = s->private;
- func(s);
- return 0;
+ return func(s);
}
static int dma_buf_debug_open(struct inode *inode, struct file *file)
--
1.7.10.4
Hi,
This is some clean up of old Ion interfaces and APIs. These are interfaces that
mostly existed before dma_buf was well integrated into the kernel along with
reservations for board files.
If there are objections to deletion I expect it to turn into a discussion about
what other APIs need to be extended.
Thanks,
Laura
Laura Abbott (5):
staging: android: ion: Get rid of ion_sg_table
staging: android: ion: Drop ion_phys interface
staging: android: ion: Get rid of map_dma/unmap_dma
staging: android: ion: Drop ion_carveout_allocate definitions
staging: android: ion: Get rid of ion_reserve
drivers/staging/android/ion/ion.c | 103 ++----------------------
drivers/staging/android/ion/ion.h | 41 ----------
drivers/staging/android/ion/ion_carveout_heap.c | 33 +-------
drivers/staging/android/ion/ion_chunk_heap.c | 17 +---
drivers/staging/android/ion/ion_cma_heap.c | 34 +-------
drivers/staging/android/ion/ion_priv.h | 30 +------
drivers/staging/android/ion/ion_system_heap.c | 44 +---------
7 files changed, 19 insertions(+), 283 deletions(-)
--
2.5.5
On 06/08/2016 08:15 AM, Brian Starkey wrote:
> Hi Laura,
>
> On Mon, Jun 06, 2016 at 11:23:27AM -0700, Laura Abbott wrote:
>> The ABI for Ion's ioctl interface are a pain to work with. The heap IDs
>> are a 32-bit non-discoverable namespace that form part of the ABI. There's
>> no way to determine what ABI version is in use which leads to problems
>> if the ABI changes or needs to be updated.
>>
>> This series is a first approach to give a better ABI for Ion. This includes:
>>
>> - Following the advice in botching-up-ioctls.txt
>> - Ioctl for ABI version
>> - Dynamic assignment of heap ids
>> - queryable heap ids
>> - Runtime mapping of heap ids, including fallbacks. This avoids the need to
>> encode the fallbacks as an ABI.
>>
>> I'm most interested in feedback if this ABI is actually an improvement and
>> usable. The heap id map/query interface seems error prone but I didn't have
>> a cleaner solution. There aren't any kernel APIs for the new features as the
>> focus was on a userspace API but I anticipate that following easily once
>> the userspace API is established.
>>
>
> If I understand it right, the big improvement here is that userspace can
> find out what heap IDs are available, and what type of heap they
> correspond to? This seems good.
>
> I'm not sure about how userspace is meant to use the usage mappings
> though. Who calls ION_IOC_ID_MAP?
>
The thought was daemons (surfaceflinger, mediaserver etc.) would set this
up.
> (also, map/mapping is pretty overloaded. How about groups/groupings?)
>
That's a good suggestion.
> If I assume that the thing calling ION_IOC_ID_MAP is the same thing
> doing the allocating, then there doesn't seem to be much need for
> creating mappings. The combined mapper/allocator would necessarily need
> some knowledge about which types can satisfy which usage, and so could
> follow something like this:
> 1. The heaps can be queried, finding their IDs and types
> 2. A mask of heap IDs can be created which satisfies a "usage", based
> on the queried types
> 3. Allocation operations can then simply use this constructed mask
>
> On the other hand, if I assume that the thing doing the allocating is
> different to the thing doing the usage mapping (i.e. the allocator
> doesn't need to know about heap _types_, only usages); then I can't see
> a way for the allocator to figure out which usage_id it's meant to
> allocate with - which puts it right back to the old problem of opaque
> heap IDs (-> opaque usage_ids), except it's worse because they can
> change dynamically.
>
I see your point about the mapping. My thought was that whoever was doing
the mapping would have a way to pass information to the allocator or the
allocator could do a query. Relying on the passing of information may
not be plausible and I realize there isn't enough information from a query
to determine what usage id to use.
I like the suggestion of just using the query. One of
the goals I initially had with this series was to get rid of the heap mask.
The 32-bit heap mask became a name space that needed to be controlled
across all targets and the fallbacks were difficult to change. The problem
that actually wants to be solved is giving userspace enough information
to determine what heap masks to allocate from.
Just a query ioctl should be able to give that information as long as the
requirement is that userspace clients match on the heap name + type only
and not rely on the heap ids being constant (I don't think I made that
clear with this version of the query ioctl so I'll make sure to clarify).
The platform registration can adjust the priority order of the heap ids
as necessary. Different names should be able to take care of any changes
to the platform configuration.
I'll think about this more when I work on v2.
Thanks,
Laura
> Thanks,
> Brian
>
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Laura
>>
>> P.S. Not to turn this into a bike shedding session but if you have suggestions
>> for a name for this framework other than Ion I would be interested to hear
>> them. Too many other things are already named Ion.
>>
>> Laura Abbott (6):
>> staging: android: ion: return error value for ion_device_add_heap
>> staging: android: ion: Switch to using an idr to manage heaps
>> staging: android: ion: Drop heap type masks
>> staging: android: ion: Pull out ion ioctls to a separate file
>> staging: android: ion: Add an ioctl for ABI checking
>> staging: android: ion: Introduce new ioctls for dynamic heaps
>>
>> drivers/staging/android/ion/Makefile | 3 +-
>> drivers/staging/android/ion/ion-ioctl.c | 243 ++++++++++++++++++
>> drivers/staging/android/ion/ion.c | 438 ++++++++++++++++----------------
>> drivers/staging/android/ion/ion_priv.h | 109 +++++++-
>> drivers/staging/android/uapi/ion.h | 164 +++++++++++-
>> 5 files changed, 728 insertions(+), 229 deletions(-)
>> create mode 100644 drivers/staging/android/ion/ion-ioctl.c
>>
>> -- 2.5.5
The ABI for Ion's ioctl interface are a pain to work with. The heap IDs
are a 32-bit non-discoverable namespace that form part of the ABI. There's
no way to determine what ABI version is in use which leads to problems
if the ABI changes or needs to be updated.
This series is a first approach to give a better ABI for Ion. This includes:
- Following the advice in botching-up-ioctls.txt
- Ioctl for ABI version
- Dynamic assignment of heap ids
- queryable heap ids
- Runtime mapping of heap ids, including fallbacks. This avoids the need to
encode the fallbacks as an ABI.
I'm most interested in feedback if this ABI is actually an improvement and
usable. The heap id map/query interface seems error prone but I didn't have
a cleaner solution. There aren't any kernel APIs for the new features as the
focus was on a userspace API but I anticipate that following easily once
the userspace API is established.
Thanks,
Laura
P.S. Not to turn this into a bike shedding session but if you have suggestions
for a name for this framework other than Ion I would be interested to hear
them. Too many other things are already named Ion.
Laura Abbott (6):
staging: android: ion: return error value for ion_device_add_heap
staging: android: ion: Switch to using an idr to manage heaps
staging: android: ion: Drop heap type masks
staging: android: ion: Pull out ion ioctls to a separate file
staging: android: ion: Add an ioctl for ABI checking
staging: android: ion: Introduce new ioctls for dynamic heaps
drivers/staging/android/ion/Makefile | 3 +-
drivers/staging/android/ion/ion-ioctl.c | 243 ++++++++++++++++++
drivers/staging/android/ion/ion.c | 438 ++++++++++++++++----------------
drivers/staging/android/ion/ion_priv.h | 109 +++++++-
drivers/staging/android/uapi/ion.h | 164 +++++++++++-
5 files changed, 728 insertions(+), 229 deletions(-)
create mode 100644 drivers/staging/android/ion/ion-ioctl.c
--
2.5.5
On 06/06/2016 11:59 PM, Chen Feng wrote:
> The idea is good, define the heap ids in header file is inconvenient.
>
> But if we query the heaps information from user-space.
>
> It need to maintain this ids and name userspace one by one. The code may
> be complicated in different module user-space.
>
> In android, the gralloc and other lib will all use ion to alloc memory.
>
> This will make it more difficult to maintain user-space code.
>
This was a concern I had had as well. Anything that involves dynamic
probing is going to involve more tracking. Do you think some library
code in libion would help?
Thanks,
Laura
>
> But beyond this, The new alloc2 with not-handle flag is good.
> And the pull out of ioctl interface is also a good cleanup.
>
> On 2016/6/7 2:23, Laura Abbott wrote:
>>
>> The ABI for Ion's ioctl interface are a pain to work with. The heap IDs
>> are a 32-bit non-discoverable namespace that form part of the ABI. There's
>> no way to determine what ABI version is in use which leads to problems
>> if the ABI changes or needs to be updated.
>>
>> This series is a first approach to give a better ABI for Ion. This includes:
>>
>> - Following the advice in botching-up-ioctls.txt
>> - Ioctl for ABI version
>> - Dynamic assignment of heap ids
>> - queryable heap ids
>> - Runtime mapping of heap ids, including fallbacks. This avoids the need to
>> encode the fallbacks as an ABI.
>>
>> I'm most interested in feedback if this ABI is actually an improvement and
>> usable. The heap id map/query interface seems error prone but I didn't have
>> a cleaner solution. There aren't any kernel APIs for the new features as the
>> focus was on a userspace API but I anticipate that following easily once
>> the userspace API is established.
>>
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Laura
>>
>> P.S. Not to turn this into a bike shedding session but if you have suggestions
>> for a name for this framework other than Ion I would be interested to hear
>> them. Too many other things are already named Ion.
>>
>> Laura Abbott (6):
>> staging: android: ion: return error value for ion_device_add_heap
>> staging: android: ion: Switch to using an idr to manage heaps
>> staging: android: ion: Drop heap type masks
>> staging: android: ion: Pull out ion ioctls to a separate file
>> staging: android: ion: Add an ioctl for ABI checking
>> staging: android: ion: Introduce new ioctls for dynamic heaps
>>
>> drivers/staging/android/ion/Makefile | 3 +-
>> drivers/staging/android/ion/ion-ioctl.c | 243 ++++++++++++++++++
>> drivers/staging/android/ion/ion.c | 438 ++++++++++++++++----------------
>> drivers/staging/android/ion/ion_priv.h | 109 +++++++-
>> drivers/staging/android/uapi/ion.h | 164 +++++++++++-
>> 5 files changed, 728 insertions(+), 229 deletions(-)
>> create mode 100644 drivers/staging/android/ion/ion-ioctl.c
>>
>
Hi,
This series cleans up Ion a bit to be more in line with existing standards for
caching and dma mapping.
The most controversial part of this is probably going to be the first patch.
Ion takes quite a few liberties with how the DMA APIs are used for cache
syncing. dma_sync_sg is used without calling dma_map first. There isn't a
good way to get the cache synchronization with the DMA APIs. The behavior of
Ion is closer to the DRM framework which uses its own private cache APIs for
synchronization so I took that approach.
Assuming the approach of the first patch is appropriate, the next two patches
are fairly simple. dma_buf added support for a sync ioctl. Ion has a similar
ioctl already so this fixes the Ion APIs to be compatible with the dma_buf
ioctl. My plan would be to put a timeline on deprecation for the old Ion
sync ioctl. The map_dma_buf calls were also missing calls to the underlying
DMA APIs so the final patch in the series adds the appropriate calls.
Feedback is appreciated.
Thanks,
Laura
Laura Abbott (3):
staging: ion: Move away from the DMA APIs for cache flushing
staging: ion: Add support for syncing with DMA_BUF_IOCTL_SYNC
staging: ion: Add dma_map/dma_unmap calls to dma_buf calls
drivers/staging/android/ion/Kconfig | 14 ++++-
drivers/staging/android/ion/Makefile | 3 +
drivers/staging/android/ion/ion-arm.c | 83 ++++++++++++++++++++++++
drivers/staging/android/ion/ion-arm64.c | 46 ++++++++++++++
drivers/staging/android/ion/ion-x86.c | 34 ++++++++++
drivers/staging/android/ion/ion.c | 84 +++++++++++++------------
drivers/staging/android/ion/ion_carveout_heap.c | 5 +-
drivers/staging/android/ion/ion_chunk_heap.c | 7 +--
drivers/staging/android/ion/ion_page_pool.c | 3 +-
drivers/staging/android/ion/ion_priv.h | 14 ++---
drivers/staging/android/ion/ion_system_heap.c | 5 +-
11 files changed, 235 insertions(+), 63 deletions(-)
create mode 100644 drivers/staging/android/ion/ion-arm.c
create mode 100644 drivers/staging/android/ion/ion-arm64.c
create mode 100644 drivers/staging/android/ion/ion-x86.c
--
2.5.5