Re: [PATCH] drm/cirrus: rewrite and modernize driver.
From: Gerd Hoffmann
Date: Thu Apr 04 2019 - 01:51:03 EST
On Thu, Apr 04, 2019 at 12:58:09PM +1000, David Airlie wrote:
> On Wed, Apr 3, 2019 at 5:23 PM Gerd Hoffmann <kraxel@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >
> > Time to kill some bad sample code people are copying from ;)
> >
> > This is a complete rewrite of the cirrus driver. The cirrus_mode_set()
> > function is pretty much the only function which is carried over largely
> > unmodified. Everything else is upside down.
> >
> > It is a single monster patch. But given that it does some pretty
> > fundamental changes to the drivers workflow and also reduces the code
> > size by roughly 70% I think it'll still be alot easier to review than a
> > longish baby-step patch series.
> >
> > Changes summary:
> > - Given the small amout of video memory (4 MB) the cirrus device has
> > the rewritten driver doesn't try to manage buffers there. Instead
> > it will blit (memcpy) the active framebuffer to video memory.
>
> Does it get any slower, with TTM I just wrote it to migrate just the
> frontbuffer in/out of VRAM on modeset, won't we end up with more
> copies now?
I didn't benchmark it, but if you care about performance you should not
be using cirrus anyway ...
For fbcon it probably doesn't make much of a difference, fbcon used a
shadow framebuffer before (for fbdev mmap and dirty tracking).
xorg probably ends up with more copying.
Anything doing display updates with page flips (i.e wayland) should end
up with less copying, because you have one copy (blit) instead of two
copies (migrate old frontbuffer out of vram, migrate new frontbuffer
into vram) on pageflip.
Speaking of wayland: Seems at least gnome-shell insists on using XR24.
> > - Only DRM_FORMAT_RGB565 (depth 16) is supported. The old driver does
> > that too by default. There was a module parameter which enables 24/32
> > bpp support and disables higher resolutions (due to cirrus hardware
> > constrains). That parameter wasn't reimplemented.
> This might be the big sticking point, this is a userspace regression
> for a feature that was explicitly added a few years ago, can we really
> get away without it?
Well, I can reintroduce the module option. I don't see any other
reasonable way to support 32bpp. If the driver reports XR24 as
supported and also adds the higher resolutions (which work with RG16
only) to the mode list userspace will of course try the higher
resolutions with XR24 and struggle ...
cheers,
Gerd