intel_ringbuffer.h 27 KB

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  1. #ifndef _INTEL_RINGBUFFER_H_
  2. #define _INTEL_RINGBUFFER_H_
  3. #include <linux/hashtable.h>
  4. #include "i915_gem_batch_pool.h"
  5. #include "i915_gem_request.h"
  6. #include "i915_gem_timeline.h"
  7. #include "i915_selftest.h"
  8. #define I915_CMD_HASH_ORDER 9
  9. /* Early gen2 devices have a cacheline of just 32 bytes, using 64 is overkill,
  10. * but keeps the logic simple. Indeed, the whole purpose of this macro is just
  11. * to give some inclination as to some of the magic values used in the various
  12. * workarounds!
  13. */
  14. #define CACHELINE_BYTES 64
  15. #define CACHELINE_DWORDS (CACHELINE_BYTES / sizeof(uint32_t))
  16. struct intel_hw_status_page {
  17. struct i915_vma *vma;
  18. u32 *page_addr;
  19. u32 ggtt_offset;
  20. };
  21. #define I915_READ_TAIL(engine) I915_READ(RING_TAIL((engine)->mmio_base))
  22. #define I915_WRITE_TAIL(engine, val) I915_WRITE(RING_TAIL((engine)->mmio_base), val)
  23. #define I915_READ_START(engine) I915_READ(RING_START((engine)->mmio_base))
  24. #define I915_WRITE_START(engine, val) I915_WRITE(RING_START((engine)->mmio_base), val)
  25. #define I915_READ_HEAD(engine) I915_READ(RING_HEAD((engine)->mmio_base))
  26. #define I915_WRITE_HEAD(engine, val) I915_WRITE(RING_HEAD((engine)->mmio_base), val)
  27. #define I915_READ_CTL(engine) I915_READ(RING_CTL((engine)->mmio_base))
  28. #define I915_WRITE_CTL(engine, val) I915_WRITE(RING_CTL((engine)->mmio_base), val)
  29. #define I915_READ_IMR(engine) I915_READ(RING_IMR((engine)->mmio_base))
  30. #define I915_WRITE_IMR(engine, val) I915_WRITE(RING_IMR((engine)->mmio_base), val)
  31. #define I915_READ_MODE(engine) I915_READ(RING_MI_MODE((engine)->mmio_base))
  32. #define I915_WRITE_MODE(engine, val) I915_WRITE(RING_MI_MODE((engine)->mmio_base), val)
  33. /* seqno size is actually only a uint32, but since we plan to use MI_FLUSH_DW to
  34. * do the writes, and that must have qw aligned offsets, simply pretend it's 8b.
  35. */
  36. #define gen8_semaphore_seqno_size sizeof(uint64_t)
  37. #define GEN8_SEMAPHORE_OFFSET(__from, __to) \
  38. (((__from) * I915_NUM_ENGINES + (__to)) * gen8_semaphore_seqno_size)
  39. #define GEN8_SIGNAL_OFFSET(__ring, to) \
  40. (dev_priv->semaphore->node.start + \
  41. GEN8_SEMAPHORE_OFFSET((__ring)->id, (to)))
  42. #define GEN8_WAIT_OFFSET(__ring, from) \
  43. (dev_priv->semaphore->node.start + \
  44. GEN8_SEMAPHORE_OFFSET(from, (__ring)->id))
  45. enum intel_engine_hangcheck_action {
  46. ENGINE_IDLE = 0,
  47. ENGINE_WAIT,
  48. ENGINE_ACTIVE_SEQNO,
  49. ENGINE_ACTIVE_HEAD,
  50. ENGINE_ACTIVE_SUBUNITS,
  51. ENGINE_WAIT_KICK,
  52. ENGINE_DEAD,
  53. };
  54. static inline const char *
  55. hangcheck_action_to_str(const enum intel_engine_hangcheck_action a)
  56. {
  57. switch (a) {
  58. case ENGINE_IDLE:
  59. return "idle";
  60. case ENGINE_WAIT:
  61. return "wait";
  62. case ENGINE_ACTIVE_SEQNO:
  63. return "active seqno";
  64. case ENGINE_ACTIVE_HEAD:
  65. return "active head";
  66. case ENGINE_ACTIVE_SUBUNITS:
  67. return "active subunits";
  68. case ENGINE_WAIT_KICK:
  69. return "wait kick";
  70. case ENGINE_DEAD:
  71. return "dead";
  72. }
  73. return "unknown";
  74. }
  75. #define I915_MAX_SLICES 3
  76. #define I915_MAX_SUBSLICES 3
  77. #define instdone_slice_mask(dev_priv__) \
  78. (INTEL_GEN(dev_priv__) == 7 ? \
  79. 1 : INTEL_INFO(dev_priv__)->sseu.slice_mask)
  80. #define instdone_subslice_mask(dev_priv__) \
  81. (INTEL_GEN(dev_priv__) == 7 ? \
  82. 1 : INTEL_INFO(dev_priv__)->sseu.subslice_mask)
  83. #define for_each_instdone_slice_subslice(dev_priv__, slice__, subslice__) \
  84. for ((slice__) = 0, (subslice__) = 0; \
  85. (slice__) < I915_MAX_SLICES; \
  86. (subslice__) = ((subslice__) + 1) < I915_MAX_SUBSLICES ? (subslice__) + 1 : 0, \
  87. (slice__) += ((subslice__) == 0)) \
  88. for_each_if((BIT(slice__) & instdone_slice_mask(dev_priv__)) && \
  89. (BIT(subslice__) & instdone_subslice_mask(dev_priv__)))
  90. struct intel_instdone {
  91. u32 instdone;
  92. /* The following exist only in the RCS engine */
  93. u32 slice_common;
  94. u32 sampler[I915_MAX_SLICES][I915_MAX_SUBSLICES];
  95. u32 row[I915_MAX_SLICES][I915_MAX_SUBSLICES];
  96. };
  97. struct intel_engine_hangcheck {
  98. u64 acthd;
  99. u32 seqno;
  100. enum intel_engine_hangcheck_action action;
  101. unsigned long action_timestamp;
  102. int deadlock;
  103. struct intel_instdone instdone;
  104. struct drm_i915_gem_request *active_request;
  105. bool stalled;
  106. };
  107. struct intel_ring {
  108. struct i915_vma *vma;
  109. void *vaddr;
  110. struct list_head request_list;
  111. u32 head;
  112. u32 tail;
  113. u32 emit;
  114. u32 space;
  115. u32 size;
  116. u32 effective_size;
  117. };
  118. struct i915_gem_context;
  119. struct drm_i915_reg_table;
  120. /*
  121. * we use a single page to load ctx workarounds so all of these
  122. * values are referred in terms of dwords
  123. *
  124. * struct i915_wa_ctx_bb:
  125. * offset: specifies batch starting position, also helpful in case
  126. * if we want to have multiple batches at different offsets based on
  127. * some criteria. It is not a requirement at the moment but provides
  128. * an option for future use.
  129. * size: size of the batch in DWORDS
  130. */
  131. struct i915_ctx_workarounds {
  132. struct i915_wa_ctx_bb {
  133. u32 offset;
  134. u32 size;
  135. } indirect_ctx, per_ctx;
  136. struct i915_vma *vma;
  137. };
  138. struct drm_i915_gem_request;
  139. struct intel_render_state;
  140. /*
  141. * Engine IDs definitions.
  142. * Keep instances of the same type engine together.
  143. */
  144. enum intel_engine_id {
  145. RCS = 0,
  146. BCS,
  147. VCS,
  148. VCS2,
  149. #define _VCS(n) (VCS + (n))
  150. VECS
  151. };
  152. struct i915_priolist {
  153. struct rb_node node;
  154. struct list_head requests;
  155. int priority;
  156. };
  157. /**
  158. * struct intel_engine_execlists - execlist submission queue and port state
  159. *
  160. * The struct intel_engine_execlists represents the combined logical state of
  161. * driver and the hardware state for execlist mode of submission.
  162. */
  163. struct intel_engine_execlists {
  164. /**
  165. * @irq_tasklet: softirq tasklet for bottom handler
  166. */
  167. struct tasklet_struct irq_tasklet;
  168. /**
  169. * @default_priolist: priority list for I915_PRIORITY_NORMAL
  170. */
  171. struct i915_priolist default_priolist;
  172. /**
  173. * @no_priolist: priority lists disabled
  174. */
  175. bool no_priolist;
  176. /**
  177. * @port: execlist port states
  178. *
  179. * For each hardware ELSP (ExecList Submission Port) we keep
  180. * track of the last request and the number of times we submitted
  181. * that port to hw. We then count the number of times the hw reports
  182. * a context completion or preemption. As only one context can
  183. * be active on hw, we limit resubmission of context to port[0]. This
  184. * is called Lite Restore, of the context.
  185. */
  186. struct execlist_port {
  187. /**
  188. * @request_count: combined request and submission count
  189. */
  190. struct drm_i915_gem_request *request_count;
  191. #define EXECLIST_COUNT_BITS 2
  192. #define port_request(p) ptr_mask_bits((p)->request_count, EXECLIST_COUNT_BITS)
  193. #define port_count(p) ptr_unmask_bits((p)->request_count, EXECLIST_COUNT_BITS)
  194. #define port_pack(rq, count) ptr_pack_bits(rq, count, EXECLIST_COUNT_BITS)
  195. #define port_unpack(p, count) ptr_unpack_bits((p)->request_count, count, EXECLIST_COUNT_BITS)
  196. #define port_set(p, packed) ((p)->request_count = (packed))
  197. #define port_isset(p) ((p)->request_count)
  198. #define port_index(p, execlists) ((p) - (execlists)->port)
  199. /**
  200. * @context_id: context ID for port
  201. */
  202. GEM_DEBUG_DECL(u32 context_id);
  203. #define EXECLIST_MAX_PORTS 2
  204. } port[EXECLIST_MAX_PORTS];
  205. /**
  206. * @port_mask: number of execlist ports - 1
  207. */
  208. unsigned int port_mask;
  209. /**
  210. * @queue: queue of requests, in priority lists
  211. */
  212. struct rb_root queue;
  213. /**
  214. * @first: leftmost level in priority @queue
  215. */
  216. struct rb_node *first;
  217. /**
  218. * @fw_domains: forcewake domains for irq tasklet
  219. */
  220. unsigned int fw_domains;
  221. /**
  222. * @csb_head: context status buffer head
  223. */
  224. unsigned int csb_head;
  225. /**
  226. * @csb_use_mmio: access csb through mmio, instead of hwsp
  227. */
  228. bool csb_use_mmio;
  229. };
  230. #define INTEL_ENGINE_CS_MAX_NAME 8
  231. struct intel_engine_cs {
  232. struct drm_i915_private *i915;
  233. char name[INTEL_ENGINE_CS_MAX_NAME];
  234. enum intel_engine_id id;
  235. unsigned int uabi_id;
  236. unsigned int hw_id;
  237. unsigned int guc_id;
  238. u8 class;
  239. u8 instance;
  240. u32 context_size;
  241. u32 mmio_base;
  242. unsigned int irq_shift;
  243. struct intel_ring *buffer;
  244. struct intel_timeline *timeline;
  245. struct intel_render_state *render_state;
  246. atomic_t irq_count;
  247. unsigned long irq_posted;
  248. #define ENGINE_IRQ_BREADCRUMB 0
  249. #define ENGINE_IRQ_EXECLIST 1
  250. /* Rather than have every client wait upon all user interrupts,
  251. * with the herd waking after every interrupt and each doing the
  252. * heavyweight seqno dance, we delegate the task (of being the
  253. * bottom-half of the user interrupt) to the first client. After
  254. * every interrupt, we wake up one client, who does the heavyweight
  255. * coherent seqno read and either goes back to sleep (if incomplete),
  256. * or wakes up all the completed clients in parallel, before then
  257. * transferring the bottom-half status to the next client in the queue.
  258. *
  259. * Compared to walking the entire list of waiters in a single dedicated
  260. * bottom-half, we reduce the latency of the first waiter by avoiding
  261. * a context switch, but incur additional coherent seqno reads when
  262. * following the chain of request breadcrumbs. Since it is most likely
  263. * that we have a single client waiting on each seqno, then reducing
  264. * the overhead of waking that client is much preferred.
  265. */
  266. struct intel_breadcrumbs {
  267. spinlock_t irq_lock; /* protects irq_*; irqsafe */
  268. struct intel_wait *irq_wait; /* oldest waiter by retirement */
  269. spinlock_t rb_lock; /* protects the rb and wraps irq_lock */
  270. struct rb_root waiters; /* sorted by retirement, priority */
  271. struct rb_root signals; /* sorted by retirement */
  272. struct task_struct *signaler; /* used for fence signalling */
  273. struct drm_i915_gem_request __rcu *first_signal;
  274. struct timer_list fake_irq; /* used after a missed interrupt */
  275. struct timer_list hangcheck; /* detect missed interrupts */
  276. unsigned int hangcheck_interrupts;
  277. bool irq_armed : 1;
  278. bool irq_enabled : 1;
  279. I915_SELFTEST_DECLARE(bool mock : 1);
  280. } breadcrumbs;
  281. /*
  282. * A pool of objects to use as shadow copies of client batch buffers
  283. * when the command parser is enabled. Prevents the client from
  284. * modifying the batch contents after software parsing.
  285. */
  286. struct i915_gem_batch_pool batch_pool;
  287. struct intel_hw_status_page status_page;
  288. struct i915_ctx_workarounds wa_ctx;
  289. struct i915_vma *scratch;
  290. u32 irq_keep_mask; /* always keep these interrupts */
  291. u32 irq_enable_mask; /* bitmask to enable ring interrupt */
  292. void (*irq_enable)(struct intel_engine_cs *engine);
  293. void (*irq_disable)(struct intel_engine_cs *engine);
  294. int (*init_hw)(struct intel_engine_cs *engine);
  295. void (*reset_hw)(struct intel_engine_cs *engine,
  296. struct drm_i915_gem_request *req);
  297. void (*set_default_submission)(struct intel_engine_cs *engine);
  298. struct intel_ring *(*context_pin)(struct intel_engine_cs *engine,
  299. struct i915_gem_context *ctx);
  300. void (*context_unpin)(struct intel_engine_cs *engine,
  301. struct i915_gem_context *ctx);
  302. int (*request_alloc)(struct drm_i915_gem_request *req);
  303. int (*init_context)(struct drm_i915_gem_request *req);
  304. int (*emit_flush)(struct drm_i915_gem_request *request,
  305. u32 mode);
  306. #define EMIT_INVALIDATE BIT(0)
  307. #define EMIT_FLUSH BIT(1)
  308. #define EMIT_BARRIER (EMIT_INVALIDATE | EMIT_FLUSH)
  309. int (*emit_bb_start)(struct drm_i915_gem_request *req,
  310. u64 offset, u32 length,
  311. unsigned int dispatch_flags);
  312. #define I915_DISPATCH_SECURE BIT(0)
  313. #define I915_DISPATCH_PINNED BIT(1)
  314. #define I915_DISPATCH_RS BIT(2)
  315. void (*emit_breadcrumb)(struct drm_i915_gem_request *req,
  316. u32 *cs);
  317. int emit_breadcrumb_sz;
  318. /* Pass the request to the hardware queue (e.g. directly into
  319. * the legacy ringbuffer or to the end of an execlist).
  320. *
  321. * This is called from an atomic context with irqs disabled; must
  322. * be irq safe.
  323. */
  324. void (*submit_request)(struct drm_i915_gem_request *req);
  325. /* Call when the priority on a request has changed and it and its
  326. * dependencies may need rescheduling. Note the request itself may
  327. * not be ready to run!
  328. *
  329. * Called under the struct_mutex.
  330. */
  331. void (*schedule)(struct drm_i915_gem_request *request,
  332. int priority);
  333. /*
  334. * Cancel all requests on the hardware, or queued for execution.
  335. * This should only cancel the ready requests that have been
  336. * submitted to the engine (via the engine->submit_request callback).
  337. * This is called when marking the device as wedged.
  338. */
  339. void (*cancel_requests)(struct intel_engine_cs *engine);
  340. /* Some chipsets are not quite as coherent as advertised and need
  341. * an expensive kick to force a true read of the up-to-date seqno.
  342. * However, the up-to-date seqno is not always required and the last
  343. * seen value is good enough. Note that the seqno will always be
  344. * monotonic, even if not coherent.
  345. */
  346. void (*irq_seqno_barrier)(struct intel_engine_cs *engine);
  347. void (*cleanup)(struct intel_engine_cs *engine);
  348. /* GEN8 signal/wait table - never trust comments!
  349. * signal to signal to signal to signal to signal to
  350. * RCS VCS BCS VECS VCS2
  351. * --------------------------------------------------------------------
  352. * RCS | NOP (0x00) | VCS (0x08) | BCS (0x10) | VECS (0x18) | VCS2 (0x20) |
  353. * |-------------------------------------------------------------------
  354. * VCS | RCS (0x28) | NOP (0x30) | BCS (0x38) | VECS (0x40) | VCS2 (0x48) |
  355. * |-------------------------------------------------------------------
  356. * BCS | RCS (0x50) | VCS (0x58) | NOP (0x60) | VECS (0x68) | VCS2 (0x70) |
  357. * |-------------------------------------------------------------------
  358. * VECS | RCS (0x78) | VCS (0x80) | BCS (0x88) | NOP (0x90) | VCS2 (0x98) |
  359. * |-------------------------------------------------------------------
  360. * VCS2 | RCS (0xa0) | VCS (0xa8) | BCS (0xb0) | VECS (0xb8) | NOP (0xc0) |
  361. * |-------------------------------------------------------------------
  362. *
  363. * Generalization:
  364. * f(x, y) := (x->id * NUM_RINGS * seqno_size) + (seqno_size * y->id)
  365. * ie. transpose of g(x, y)
  366. *
  367. * sync from sync from sync from sync from sync from
  368. * RCS VCS BCS VECS VCS2
  369. * --------------------------------------------------------------------
  370. * RCS | NOP (0x00) | VCS (0x28) | BCS (0x50) | VECS (0x78) | VCS2 (0xa0) |
  371. * |-------------------------------------------------------------------
  372. * VCS | RCS (0x08) | NOP (0x30) | BCS (0x58) | VECS (0x80) | VCS2 (0xa8) |
  373. * |-------------------------------------------------------------------
  374. * BCS | RCS (0x10) | VCS (0x38) | NOP (0x60) | VECS (0x88) | VCS2 (0xb0) |
  375. * |-------------------------------------------------------------------
  376. * VECS | RCS (0x18) | VCS (0x40) | BCS (0x68) | NOP (0x90) | VCS2 (0xb8) |
  377. * |-------------------------------------------------------------------
  378. * VCS2 | RCS (0x20) | VCS (0x48) | BCS (0x70) | VECS (0x98) | NOP (0xc0) |
  379. * |-------------------------------------------------------------------
  380. *
  381. * Generalization:
  382. * g(x, y) := (y->id * NUM_RINGS * seqno_size) + (seqno_size * x->id)
  383. * ie. transpose of f(x, y)
  384. */
  385. struct {
  386. union {
  387. #define GEN6_SEMAPHORE_LAST VECS_HW
  388. #define GEN6_NUM_SEMAPHORES (GEN6_SEMAPHORE_LAST + 1)
  389. #define GEN6_SEMAPHORES_MASK GENMASK(GEN6_SEMAPHORE_LAST, 0)
  390. struct {
  391. /* our mbox written by others */
  392. u32 wait[GEN6_NUM_SEMAPHORES];
  393. /* mboxes this ring signals to */
  394. i915_reg_t signal[GEN6_NUM_SEMAPHORES];
  395. } mbox;
  396. u64 signal_ggtt[I915_NUM_ENGINES];
  397. };
  398. /* AKA wait() */
  399. int (*sync_to)(struct drm_i915_gem_request *req,
  400. struct drm_i915_gem_request *signal);
  401. u32 *(*signal)(struct drm_i915_gem_request *req, u32 *cs);
  402. } semaphore;
  403. struct intel_engine_execlists execlists;
  404. /* Contexts are pinned whilst they are active on the GPU. The last
  405. * context executed remains active whilst the GPU is idle - the
  406. * switch away and write to the context object only occurs on the
  407. * next execution. Contexts are only unpinned on retirement of the
  408. * following request ensuring that we can always write to the object
  409. * on the context switch even after idling. Across suspend, we switch
  410. * to the kernel context and trash it as the save may not happen
  411. * before the hardware is powered down.
  412. */
  413. struct i915_gem_context *last_retired_context;
  414. /* We track the current MI_SET_CONTEXT in order to eliminate
  415. * redudant context switches. This presumes that requests are not
  416. * reordered! Or when they are the tracking is updated along with
  417. * the emission of individual requests into the legacy command
  418. * stream (ring).
  419. */
  420. struct i915_gem_context *legacy_active_context;
  421. /* status_notifier: list of callbacks for context-switch changes */
  422. struct atomic_notifier_head context_status_notifier;
  423. struct intel_engine_hangcheck hangcheck;
  424. bool needs_cmd_parser;
  425. /*
  426. * Table of commands the command parser needs to know about
  427. * for this engine.
  428. */
  429. DECLARE_HASHTABLE(cmd_hash, I915_CMD_HASH_ORDER);
  430. /*
  431. * Table of registers allowed in commands that read/write registers.
  432. */
  433. const struct drm_i915_reg_table *reg_tables;
  434. int reg_table_count;
  435. /*
  436. * Returns the bitmask for the length field of the specified command.
  437. * Return 0 for an unrecognized/invalid command.
  438. *
  439. * If the command parser finds an entry for a command in the engine's
  440. * cmd_tables, it gets the command's length based on the table entry.
  441. * If not, it calls this function to determine the per-engine length
  442. * field encoding for the command (i.e. different opcode ranges use
  443. * certain bits to encode the command length in the header).
  444. */
  445. u32 (*get_cmd_length_mask)(u32 cmd_header);
  446. };
  447. static inline unsigned int
  448. execlists_num_ports(const struct intel_engine_execlists * const execlists)
  449. {
  450. return execlists->port_mask + 1;
  451. }
  452. static inline void
  453. execlists_port_complete(struct intel_engine_execlists * const execlists,
  454. struct execlist_port * const port)
  455. {
  456. const unsigned int m = execlists->port_mask;
  457. GEM_BUG_ON(port_index(port, execlists) != 0);
  458. memmove(port, port + 1, m * sizeof(struct execlist_port));
  459. memset(port + m, 0, sizeof(struct execlist_port));
  460. }
  461. static inline unsigned int
  462. intel_engine_flag(const struct intel_engine_cs *engine)
  463. {
  464. return BIT(engine->id);
  465. }
  466. static inline u32
  467. intel_read_status_page(struct intel_engine_cs *engine, int reg)
  468. {
  469. /* Ensure that the compiler doesn't optimize away the load. */
  470. return READ_ONCE(engine->status_page.page_addr[reg]);
  471. }
  472. static inline void
  473. intel_write_status_page(struct intel_engine_cs *engine, int reg, u32 value)
  474. {
  475. /* Writing into the status page should be done sparingly. Since
  476. * we do when we are uncertain of the device state, we take a bit
  477. * of extra paranoia to try and ensure that the HWS takes the value
  478. * we give and that it doesn't end up trapped inside the CPU!
  479. */
  480. if (static_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_CLFLUSH)) {
  481. mb();
  482. clflush(&engine->status_page.page_addr[reg]);
  483. engine->status_page.page_addr[reg] = value;
  484. clflush(&engine->status_page.page_addr[reg]);
  485. mb();
  486. } else {
  487. WRITE_ONCE(engine->status_page.page_addr[reg], value);
  488. }
  489. }
  490. /*
  491. * Reads a dword out of the status page, which is written to from the command
  492. * queue by automatic updates, MI_REPORT_HEAD, MI_STORE_DATA_INDEX, or
  493. * MI_STORE_DATA_IMM.
  494. *
  495. * The following dwords have a reserved meaning:
  496. * 0x00: ISR copy, updated when an ISR bit not set in the HWSTAM changes.
  497. * 0x04: ring 0 head pointer
  498. * 0x05: ring 1 head pointer (915-class)
  499. * 0x06: ring 2 head pointer (915-class)
  500. * 0x10-0x1b: Context status DWords (GM45)
  501. * 0x1f: Last written status offset. (GM45)
  502. * 0x20-0x2f: Reserved (Gen6+)
  503. *
  504. * The area from dword 0x30 to 0x3ff is available for driver usage.
  505. */
  506. #define I915_GEM_HWS_INDEX 0x30
  507. #define I915_GEM_HWS_INDEX_ADDR (I915_GEM_HWS_INDEX << MI_STORE_DWORD_INDEX_SHIFT)
  508. #define I915_GEM_HWS_SCRATCH_INDEX 0x40
  509. #define I915_GEM_HWS_SCRATCH_ADDR (I915_GEM_HWS_SCRATCH_INDEX << MI_STORE_DWORD_INDEX_SHIFT)
  510. #define I915_HWS_CSB_BUF0_INDEX 0x10
  511. #define I915_HWS_CSB_WRITE_INDEX 0x1f
  512. #define CNL_HWS_CSB_WRITE_INDEX 0x2f
  513. struct intel_ring *
  514. intel_engine_create_ring(struct intel_engine_cs *engine, int size);
  515. int intel_ring_pin(struct intel_ring *ring,
  516. struct drm_i915_private *i915,
  517. unsigned int offset_bias);
  518. void intel_ring_reset(struct intel_ring *ring, u32 tail);
  519. unsigned int intel_ring_update_space(struct intel_ring *ring);
  520. void intel_ring_unpin(struct intel_ring *ring);
  521. void intel_ring_free(struct intel_ring *ring);
  522. void intel_engine_stop(struct intel_engine_cs *engine);
  523. void intel_engine_cleanup(struct intel_engine_cs *engine);
  524. void intel_legacy_submission_resume(struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv);
  525. int __must_check intel_ring_cacheline_align(struct drm_i915_gem_request *req);
  526. u32 __must_check *intel_ring_begin(struct drm_i915_gem_request *req,
  527. unsigned int n);
  528. static inline void
  529. intel_ring_advance(struct drm_i915_gem_request *req, u32 *cs)
  530. {
  531. /* Dummy function.
  532. *
  533. * This serves as a placeholder in the code so that the reader
  534. * can compare against the preceding intel_ring_begin() and
  535. * check that the number of dwords emitted matches the space
  536. * reserved for the command packet (i.e. the value passed to
  537. * intel_ring_begin()).
  538. */
  539. GEM_BUG_ON((req->ring->vaddr + req->ring->emit) != cs);
  540. }
  541. static inline u32
  542. intel_ring_wrap(const struct intel_ring *ring, u32 pos)
  543. {
  544. return pos & (ring->size - 1);
  545. }
  546. static inline u32
  547. intel_ring_offset(const struct drm_i915_gem_request *req, void *addr)
  548. {
  549. /* Don't write ring->size (equivalent to 0) as that hangs some GPUs. */
  550. u32 offset = addr - req->ring->vaddr;
  551. GEM_BUG_ON(offset > req->ring->size);
  552. return intel_ring_wrap(req->ring, offset);
  553. }
  554. static inline void
  555. assert_ring_tail_valid(const struct intel_ring *ring, unsigned int tail)
  556. {
  557. /* We could combine these into a single tail operation, but keeping
  558. * them as seperate tests will help identify the cause should one
  559. * ever fire.
  560. */
  561. GEM_BUG_ON(!IS_ALIGNED(tail, 8));
  562. GEM_BUG_ON(tail >= ring->size);
  563. /*
  564. * "Ring Buffer Use"
  565. * Gen2 BSpec "1. Programming Environment" / 1.4.4.6
  566. * Gen3 BSpec "1c Memory Interface Functions" / 2.3.4.5
  567. * Gen4+ BSpec "1c Memory Interface and Command Stream" / 5.3.4.5
  568. * "If the Ring Buffer Head Pointer and the Tail Pointer are on the
  569. * same cacheline, the Head Pointer must not be greater than the Tail
  570. * Pointer."
  571. *
  572. * We use ring->head as the last known location of the actual RING_HEAD,
  573. * it may have advanced but in the worst case it is equally the same
  574. * as ring->head and so we should never program RING_TAIL to advance
  575. * into the same cacheline as ring->head.
  576. */
  577. #define cacheline(a) round_down(a, CACHELINE_BYTES)
  578. GEM_BUG_ON(cacheline(tail) == cacheline(ring->head) &&
  579. tail < ring->head);
  580. #undef cacheline
  581. }
  582. static inline unsigned int
  583. intel_ring_set_tail(struct intel_ring *ring, unsigned int tail)
  584. {
  585. /* Whilst writes to the tail are strictly order, there is no
  586. * serialisation between readers and the writers. The tail may be
  587. * read by i915_gem_request_retire() just as it is being updated
  588. * by execlists, as although the breadcrumb is complete, the context
  589. * switch hasn't been seen.
  590. */
  591. assert_ring_tail_valid(ring, tail);
  592. ring->tail = tail;
  593. return tail;
  594. }
  595. void intel_engine_init_global_seqno(struct intel_engine_cs *engine, u32 seqno);
  596. void intel_engine_setup_common(struct intel_engine_cs *engine);
  597. int intel_engine_init_common(struct intel_engine_cs *engine);
  598. int intel_engine_create_scratch(struct intel_engine_cs *engine, int size);
  599. void intel_engine_cleanup_common(struct intel_engine_cs *engine);
  600. int intel_init_render_ring_buffer(struct intel_engine_cs *engine);
  601. int intel_init_bsd_ring_buffer(struct intel_engine_cs *engine);
  602. int intel_init_blt_ring_buffer(struct intel_engine_cs *engine);
  603. int intel_init_vebox_ring_buffer(struct intel_engine_cs *engine);
  604. u64 intel_engine_get_active_head(struct intel_engine_cs *engine);
  605. u64 intel_engine_get_last_batch_head(struct intel_engine_cs *engine);
  606. static inline u32 intel_engine_get_seqno(struct intel_engine_cs *engine)
  607. {
  608. return intel_read_status_page(engine, I915_GEM_HWS_INDEX);
  609. }
  610. static inline u32 intel_engine_last_submit(struct intel_engine_cs *engine)
  611. {
  612. /* We are only peeking at the tail of the submit queue (and not the
  613. * queue itself) in order to gain a hint as to the current active
  614. * state of the engine. Callers are not expected to be taking
  615. * engine->timeline->lock, nor are they expected to be concerned
  616. * wtih serialising this hint with anything, so document it as
  617. * a hint and nothing more.
  618. */
  619. return READ_ONCE(engine->timeline->seqno);
  620. }
  621. int init_workarounds_ring(struct intel_engine_cs *engine);
  622. int intel_ring_workarounds_emit(struct drm_i915_gem_request *req);
  623. void intel_engine_get_instdone(struct intel_engine_cs *engine,
  624. struct intel_instdone *instdone);
  625. /*
  626. * Arbitrary size for largest possible 'add request' sequence. The code paths
  627. * are complex and variable. Empirical measurement shows that the worst case
  628. * is BDW at 192 bytes (6 + 6 + 36 dwords), then ILK at 136 bytes. However,
  629. * we need to allocate double the largest single packet within that emission
  630. * to account for tail wraparound (so 6 + 6 + 72 dwords for BDW).
  631. */
  632. #define MIN_SPACE_FOR_ADD_REQUEST 336
  633. static inline u32 intel_hws_seqno_address(struct intel_engine_cs *engine)
  634. {
  635. return engine->status_page.ggtt_offset + I915_GEM_HWS_INDEX_ADDR;
  636. }
  637. /* intel_breadcrumbs.c -- user interrupt bottom-half for waiters */
  638. int intel_engine_init_breadcrumbs(struct intel_engine_cs *engine);
  639. static inline void intel_wait_init(struct intel_wait *wait,
  640. struct drm_i915_gem_request *rq)
  641. {
  642. wait->tsk = current;
  643. wait->request = rq;
  644. }
  645. static inline void intel_wait_init_for_seqno(struct intel_wait *wait, u32 seqno)
  646. {
  647. wait->tsk = current;
  648. wait->seqno = seqno;
  649. }
  650. static inline bool intel_wait_has_seqno(const struct intel_wait *wait)
  651. {
  652. return wait->seqno;
  653. }
  654. static inline bool
  655. intel_wait_update_seqno(struct intel_wait *wait, u32 seqno)
  656. {
  657. wait->seqno = seqno;
  658. return intel_wait_has_seqno(wait);
  659. }
  660. static inline bool
  661. intel_wait_update_request(struct intel_wait *wait,
  662. const struct drm_i915_gem_request *rq)
  663. {
  664. return intel_wait_update_seqno(wait, i915_gem_request_global_seqno(rq));
  665. }
  666. static inline bool
  667. intel_wait_check_seqno(const struct intel_wait *wait, u32 seqno)
  668. {
  669. return wait->seqno == seqno;
  670. }
  671. static inline bool
  672. intel_wait_check_request(const struct intel_wait *wait,
  673. const struct drm_i915_gem_request *rq)
  674. {
  675. return intel_wait_check_seqno(wait, i915_gem_request_global_seqno(rq));
  676. }
  677. static inline bool intel_wait_complete(const struct intel_wait *wait)
  678. {
  679. return RB_EMPTY_NODE(&wait->node);
  680. }
  681. bool intel_engine_add_wait(struct intel_engine_cs *engine,
  682. struct intel_wait *wait);
  683. void intel_engine_remove_wait(struct intel_engine_cs *engine,
  684. struct intel_wait *wait);
  685. void intel_engine_enable_signaling(struct drm_i915_gem_request *request,
  686. bool wakeup);
  687. void intel_engine_cancel_signaling(struct drm_i915_gem_request *request);
  688. static inline bool intel_engine_has_waiter(const struct intel_engine_cs *engine)
  689. {
  690. return READ_ONCE(engine->breadcrumbs.irq_wait);
  691. }
  692. unsigned int intel_engine_wakeup(struct intel_engine_cs *engine);
  693. #define ENGINE_WAKEUP_WAITER BIT(0)
  694. #define ENGINE_WAKEUP_ASLEEP BIT(1)
  695. void __intel_engine_disarm_breadcrumbs(struct intel_engine_cs *engine);
  696. void intel_engine_disarm_breadcrumbs(struct intel_engine_cs *engine);
  697. void intel_engine_reset_breadcrumbs(struct intel_engine_cs *engine);
  698. void intel_engine_fini_breadcrumbs(struct intel_engine_cs *engine);
  699. bool intel_breadcrumbs_busy(struct intel_engine_cs *engine);
  700. static inline u32 *gen8_emit_pipe_control(u32 *batch, u32 flags, u32 offset)
  701. {
  702. memset(batch, 0, 6 * sizeof(u32));
  703. batch[0] = GFX_OP_PIPE_CONTROL(6);
  704. batch[1] = flags;
  705. batch[2] = offset;
  706. return batch + 6;
  707. }
  708. bool intel_engine_is_idle(struct intel_engine_cs *engine);
  709. bool intel_engines_are_idle(struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv);
  710. void intel_engines_mark_idle(struct drm_i915_private *i915);
  711. void intel_engines_reset_default_submission(struct drm_i915_private *i915);
  712. bool intel_engine_can_store_dword(struct intel_engine_cs *engine);
  713. #endif /* _INTEL_RINGBUFFER_H_ */