On Thu, Apr 06, 2023 at 10:32:29PM +0900, Asahi Lina wrote:
On 06/04/2023 20.25, Daniel Vetter wrote:
On Thu, Apr 06, 2023 at 02:02:55PM +0900, Asahi Lina wrote:
On 05/04/2023 23.44, Daniel Vetter wrote:
On Tue, Mar 07, 2023 at 11:25:43PM +0900, Asahi Lina wrote:
+/// Look up a GEM object handle for a `File` and return an `ObjectRef` for it. +pub(crate) fn lookup_handle(file: &DrmFile, handle: u32) -> Result<ObjectRef> {
- Ok(ObjectRef::new(shmem::Object::lookup_handle(file, handle)?))
+}
So maybe my expectations for rust typing is a bit too much, but I kinda expected this to be fully generic:
- trait Driver (drm_driver) knows the driver's object type
- a generic create_handle function could ensure that for drm_file (which is always for a specific drm_device and hence Driver) can ensure at the type level that you only put the right objects into the drm_file
- a generic lookup_handle function on the drm_file knows the Driver trait and so can give you back the right type right away.
Why the wrapping, what do I miss?
Sigh, so this is one of the many ways I'm trying to work around the "Rust doesn't do subclasses" problem (so we can figure out what the best one is ^^).
The generic shmem::Object::lookup_handle() call *is* fully generic and will get you back a driver-specific object. But since Rust doesn't do subclassing, what you get back isn't a driver-specific type T, but rather a (reference to a) shmem::Object<T>. T represents the inner driver-specific data/functionality (only), and the outer shmem::Object<T> includes the actual drm_gem_shmem_object plus a T. This is backwards from C, where you expect the opposite situation where T contains a shmem object, but that just doesn't work with Rust because there's no way to build a safe API around that model as far as I know.
Ah I think I just got confused. I did untangle (I think at least) the Object<T> trick, I guess the only thing that confused me here is why this is in the shmem module? Or is that the rust problem again?
I'd kinda have expected that we'd have a gem::Object<T> here that the lookup_handle function returns. So for the shmem case I guess that would then be gem::Object<shmem::Object<T>> for the driver type T with driver specific stuff? I guess not very pretty ...
Ahh, uh... Yeah, so shmem objects are allocated their own way (the shmem core expects to kfree them in drm_gem_shmem_free) and bindings::drm_gem_shmem_object already contains a bindings::drm_gem_object. Since the composition is already done in the C side, we can't just do it again in Rust cleanly. That's why I have this weird setup with both a common trait for common GEM functionality and separate actual types that both implement it.
Hm this is annoying. For a single driver it doesn't matter, but I do expect that once we have more, and especially once we have more libraries wrapped (ttm, gpuva, execbuf submit helpers, ...) then the common glue really becomes the gem_bo for many of these things.
Could we have a GemObject trait which covers this? sole function is an unsafe one that gives you the raw C pointer :-) It still means that every gem memory manager library needs to impl that trait, but all the manager-agnostic bits in the wrappers would be generic? trait would then also have the right dependent type to ensure type safety in all this.
Maybe something to discuss in the next meeting with the rust folks.
Honestly the whole GEM codepath is untested other than the bits inherited by shmem. I'm not sure I'll be able to verify that this all makes sense until another Rust driver comes along that needs something other than shmem. I just felt I had to do *something* for GEM since the hierarchy is there and I needed shmem...
This whole gem stuff is IMO the messiest part of the abstractions though, so I'm happy to turn it on its head if it makes it better and someone has an idea of how to do that ^^
Yeah I still haven't worked up enough courage to type up my gem abstraction review :-/
Now the problem is from the higher layers I want object operations that interact with the shmem::Object<T> (that is, they call generic GEM functions on the object). Options so far:
- Add an outer wrapper and put that functionality there.
- Just have the functions on T as helpers, so you need to call T::foo(obj)
instead of obj.foo(). 3. Use the undocumented method receiver trait thing to make shmem::Object<T> a valid `self` type, plus add auto-Deref to shmem::Object. Then obj.foo() works.
#1 is what I use here. #2 is how the driver-specific File ioctl callbacks are implemented, and also sched::Job<T>. #3 is used for fence callbacks (FenceObject<T>). None of them are great, and I'd love to hear what people think of the various options...
There are other unexplored options, like in this GEM case it could be covered with a driver-internal auxiliary trait impl'd on shmem::Object<T> buuut that doesn't work when you actually need callbacks on T itself to circle back to shmem::Object<T>, as is the case with File/Job/FenceObject.
Ok I think I'm completely lost here. But I also havent' looked at how this is all really used in the driver, it's really just the shmem:: module in the lookup_handle function which looked strange to me.
Ah, sorry, I misunderstood what you were talking about in my previous email then. That's just a default trait function. It comes from common functionality in the gem module, but shmem::Object implements the trait so it ends up offering it too (lookup_handle() is not duplicated, it only lives in gem, shmem only has to implement going to/from the drm_gem_object pointer so the rest of the methods can use it). That's part of why the type/trait hierarchy is kind of messy here, it's so I can share functionality between both types even though they are pre-composed on the C side.
Ok, so it's all already what I expect and I'm just confused with rust syntax.
In the end the object types are specialized for any given driver, so you're always getting your own unique kind of object anyway. It's just that drivers based on shmem will go through it to reach the common code and work with a shmem::Object<T>, and drivers using raw gem will use gem::Object<T> instead.
Ok, sounds all good. -Daniel