On 2021-05-20 4:18 p.m., Daniel Vetter wrote:
On Thu, May 20, 2021 at 10:13:38AM +0200, Michel Dänzer wrote:
On 2021-05-20 9:55 a.m., Daniel Vetter wrote:
On Wed, May 19, 2021 at 5:48 PM Michel Dänzer michel@daenzer.net wrote:
On 2021-05-19 5:21 p.m., Jason Ekstrand wrote:
On Wed, May 19, 2021 at 5:52 AM Michel Dänzer michel@daenzer.net wrote:
On 2021-05-19 12:06 a.m., Jason Ekstrand wrote: > On Tue, May 18, 2021 at 4:17 PM Daniel Vetter daniel@ffwll.ch wrote: >> >> On Tue, May 18, 2021 at 7:40 PM Christian König >> ckoenig.leichtzumerken@gmail.com wrote: >>> >>> Am 18.05.21 um 18:48 schrieb Daniel Vetter: >>>> On Tue, May 18, 2021 at 2:49 PM Christian König >>>> ckoenig.leichtzumerken@gmail.com wrote: >>>> >>>>> And as long as we are all inside amdgpu we also don't have any oversync, >>>>> the issue only happens when we share dma-bufs with i915 (radeon and >>>>> AFAIK nouveau does the right thing as well). >>>> Yeah because then you can't use the amdgpu dma_resv model anymore and >>>> have to use the one atomic helpers use. Which is also the one that >>>> e.g. Jason is threathening to bake in as uapi with his dma_buf ioctl, >>>> so as soon as that lands and someone starts using it, something has to >>>> adapt _anytime_ you have a dma-buf hanging around. Not just when it's >>>> shared with another device. >>> >>> Yeah, and that is exactly the reason why I will NAK this uAPI change. >>> >>> This doesn't works for amdgpu at all for the reasons outlined above. >> >> Uh that's really not how uapi works. "my driver is right, everyone >> else is wrong" is not how cross driver contracts are defined. If that >> means a perf impact until you've fixed your rules, that's on you. >> >> Also you're a few years too late with nacking this, it's already uapi >> in the form of the dma-buf poll() support. > > ^^ My fancy new ioctl doesn't expose anything that isn't already > there. It just lets you take a snap-shot of a wait instead of doing > an active wait which might end up with more fences added depending on > interrupts and retries. The dma-buf poll waits on all fences for > POLLOUT and only the exclusive fence for POLLIN. It's already uAPI.
Note that the dma-buf poll support could be useful to Wayland compositors for the same purpose as Jason's new ioctl (only using client buffers which have finished drawing for an output frame, to avoid missing a refresh cycle due to client drawing), *if* it didn't work differently with amdgpu.
Am I understanding correctly that Jason's new ioctl would also work differently with amdgpu as things stand currently? If so, that would be a real bummer and might hinder adoption of the ioctl by Wayland compositors.
My new ioctl has identical semantics to poll(). It just lets you take a snapshot in time to wait on later instead of waiting on whatever happens to be set right now. IMO, having identical semantics to poll() isn't something we want to change.
Agreed.
I'd argue then that making amdgpu poll semantics match those of other drivers is a pre-requisite for the new ioctl, otherwise it seems unlikely that the ioctl will be widely adopted.
This seems backwards, because that means useful improvements in all other drivers are stalled until amdgpu is fixed.
I think we need agreement on what the rules are, reasonable plan to get there, and then that should be enough to unblock work in the wider community. Holding the community at large hostage because one driver is different is really not great.
I think we're in violent agreement. :) The point I was trying to make is that amdgpu really needs to be fixed to be consistent with other drivers ASAP.
It's not that easy at all. I think best case we're looking at about a one year plan to get this into shape, taking into account usual release/distro update latencies.
Best case.
But also it's not a really big issue, since this shouldn't stop compositors from using poll on dma-buf fd or the sync_file stuff from Jason: The use-case for this in compositors is to avoid a single client stalling the entire desktop. If a driver lies by not setting the exclusive fence when expected, you simply don't get this stall avoidance benefit of misbehaving clients.
That's a good point; I was coming to the same realization.
But also this needs a gpu scheduler and higher priority for the compositor (or a lot of hw planes so you can composite with them alone), so it's all fairly academic issue.
I went ahead and implemented this for mutter: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1880
Works as intended on my work laptop with Intel GPU, so it's not just academic. :)
I hope this can serve as motivation for providing the same poll semantics (and a higher priority GFX queue exposed via EGL_IMG_context_priority) in amdgpu as well.