Linux DRM Developer's GuideJesseBarnesInitial versionIntel Corporationjesse.barnes@intel.comLaurentPinchartDriver internalsIdeas on board SPRLlaurent.pinchart@ideasonboard.com2008-20092012Intel CorporationLaurent Pinchart
The contents of this file may be used under the terms of the GNU
General Public License version 2 (the "GPL") as distributed in
the kernel source COPYING file.
1.02012-07-13LPAdded extensive documentation about driver internals.
DRM Core
This first part of the DRM Developer's Guide documents core DRM code,
helper libraries for writting drivers and generic userspace interfaces
exposed by DRM drivers.
Introduction
The Linux DRM layer contains code intended to support the needs
of complex graphics devices, usually containing programmable
pipelines well suited to 3D graphics acceleration. Graphics
drivers in the kernel may make use of DRM functions to make
tasks like memory management, interrupt handling and DMA easier,
and provide a uniform interface to applications.
A note on versions: this guide covers features found in the DRM
tree, including the TTM memory manager, output configuration and
mode setting, and the new vblank internals, in addition to all
the regular features found in current kernels.
[Insert diagram of typical DRM stack here]
DRM Internals
This chapter documents DRM internals relevant to driver authors
and developers working to add support for the latest features to
existing drivers.
First, we go over some typical driver initialization
requirements, like setting up command buffers, creating an
initial output configuration, and initializing core services.
Subsequent sections cover core internals in more detail,
providing implementation notes and examples.
The DRM layer provides several services to graphics drivers,
many of them driven by the application interfaces it provides
through libdrm, the library that wraps most of the DRM ioctls.
These include vblank event handling, memory
management, output management, framebuffer management, command
submission & fencing, suspend/resume support, and DMA
services.
Driver Initialization
At the core of every DRM driver is a drm_driver
structure. Drivers typically statically initialize a drm_driver structure,
and then pass it to one of the drm_*_init() functions
to register it with the DRM subsystem.
The drm_driver structure contains static
information that describes the driver and features it supports, and
pointers to methods that the DRM core will call to implement the DRM API.
We will first go through the drm_driver static
information fields, and will then describe individual operations in
details as they get used in later sections.
Driver InformationDriver Features
Drivers inform the DRM core about their requirements and supported
features by setting appropriate flags in the
driver_features field. Since those flags
influence the DRM core behaviour since registration time, most of them
must be set to registering the drm_driver
instance.
u32 driver_features;Driver Feature FlagsDRIVER_USE_AGP
Driver uses AGP interface, the DRM core will manage AGP resources.
DRIVER_REQUIRE_AGP
Driver needs AGP interface to function. AGP initialization failure
will become a fatal error.
DRIVER_PCI_DMA
Driver is capable of PCI DMA, mapping of PCI DMA buffers to
userspace will be enabled. Deprecated.
DRIVER_SG
Driver can perform scatter/gather DMA, allocation and mapping of
scatter/gather buffers will be enabled. Deprecated.
DRIVER_HAVE_DMA
Driver supports DMA, the userspace DMA API will be supported.
Deprecated.
DRIVER_HAVE_IRQDRIVER_IRQ_SHARED
DRIVER_HAVE_IRQ indicates whether the driver has an IRQ handler
managed by the DRM Core. The core will support simple IRQ handler
installation when the flag is set. The installation process is
described in .DRIVER_IRQ_SHARED indicates whether the device & handler
support shared IRQs (note that this is required of PCI drivers).
DRIVER_GEM
Driver use the GEM memory manager.
DRIVER_MODESET
Driver supports mode setting interfaces (KMS).
DRIVER_PRIME
Driver implements DRM PRIME buffer sharing.
DRIVER_RENDER
Driver supports dedicated render nodes.
Major, Minor and Patchlevelint major;
int minor;
int patchlevel;
The DRM core identifies driver versions by a major, minor and patch
level triplet. The information is printed to the kernel log at
initialization time and passed to userspace through the
DRM_IOCTL_VERSION ioctl.
The major and minor numbers are also used to verify the requested driver
API version passed to DRM_IOCTL_SET_VERSION. When the driver API changes
between minor versions, applications can call DRM_IOCTL_SET_VERSION to
select a specific version of the API. If the requested major isn't equal
to the driver major, or the requested minor is larger than the driver
minor, the DRM_IOCTL_SET_VERSION call will return an error. Otherwise
the driver's set_version() method will be called with the requested
version.
Name, Description and Datechar *name;
char *desc;
char *date;
The driver name is printed to the kernel log at initialization time,
used for IRQ registration and passed to userspace through
DRM_IOCTL_VERSION.
The driver description is a purely informative string passed to
userspace through the DRM_IOCTL_VERSION ioctl and otherwise unused by
the kernel.
The driver date, formatted as YYYYMMDD, is meant to identify the date of
the latest modification to the driver. However, as most drivers fail to
update it, its value is mostly useless. The DRM core prints it to the
kernel log at initialization time and passes it to userspace through the
DRM_IOCTL_VERSION ioctl.
Driver Load
The load method is the driver and device
initialization entry point. The method is responsible for allocating and
initializing driver private data, performing resource allocation and
mapping (e.g. acquiring
clocks, mapping registers or allocating command buffers), initializing
the memory manager (), installing
the IRQ handler (), setting up
vertical blanking handling (), mode
setting () and initial output
configuration ().
If compatibility is a concern (e.g. with drivers converted over from
User Mode Setting to Kernel Mode Setting), care must be taken to prevent
device initialization and control that is incompatible with currently
active userspace drivers. For instance, if user level mode setting
drivers are in use, it would be problematic to perform output discovery
& configuration at load time. Likewise, if user-level drivers
unaware of memory management are in use, memory management and command
buffer setup may need to be omitted. These requirements are
driver-specific, and care needs to be taken to keep both old and new
applications and libraries working.
int (*load) (struct drm_device *, unsigned long flags);
The method takes two arguments, a pointer to the newly created
drm_device and flags. The flags are used to
pass the driver_data field of the device id
corresponding to the device passed to drm_*_init().
Only PCI devices currently use this, USB and platform DRM drivers have
their load method called with flags to 0.
Driver Private Data
The driver private hangs off the main
drm_device structure and can be used for
tracking various device-specific bits of information, like register
offsets, command buffer status, register state for suspend/resume, etc.
At load time, a driver may simply allocate one and set
drm_device.dev_priv
appropriately; it should be freed and
drm_device.dev_priv
set to NULL when the driver is unloaded.
IRQ Registration
The DRM core tries to facilitate IRQ handler registration and
unregistration by providing drm_irq_install and
drm_irq_uninstall functions. Those functions only
support a single interrupt per device, devices that use more than one
IRQs need to be handled manually.
Managed IRQ Registration
Both the drm_irq_install and
drm_irq_uninstall functions get the device IRQ by
calling drm_dev_to_irq. This inline function will
call a bus-specific operation to retrieve the IRQ number. For platform
devices, platform_get_irq(..., 0) is used to
retrieve the IRQ number.
drm_irq_install starts by calling the
irq_preinstall driver operation. The operation
is optional and must make sure that the interrupt will not get fired by
clearing all pending interrupt flags or disabling the interrupt.
The IRQ will then be requested by a call to
request_irq. If the DRIVER_IRQ_SHARED driver
feature flag is set, a shared (IRQF_SHARED) IRQ handler will be
requested.
The IRQ handler function must be provided as the mandatory irq_handler
driver operation. It will get passed directly to
request_irq and thus has the same prototype as all
IRQ handlers. It will get called with a pointer to the DRM device as the
second argument.
Finally the function calls the optional
irq_postinstall driver operation. The operation
usually enables interrupts (excluding the vblank interrupt, which is
enabled separately), but drivers may choose to enable/disable interrupts
at a different time.
drm_irq_uninstall is similarly used to uninstall an
IRQ handler. It starts by waking up all processes waiting on a vblank
interrupt to make sure they don't hang, and then calls the optional
irq_uninstall driver operation. The operation
must disable all hardware interrupts. Finally the function frees the IRQ
by calling free_irq.
Manual IRQ Registration
Drivers that require multiple interrupt handlers can't use the managed
IRQ registration functions. In that case IRQs must be registered and
unregistered manually (usually with the request_irq
and free_irq functions, or their devm_* equivalent).
When manually registering IRQs, drivers must not set the DRIVER_HAVE_IRQ
driver feature flag, and must not provide the
irq_handler driver operation. They must set the
drm_deviceirq_enabled
field to 1 upon registration of the IRQs, and clear it to 0 after
unregistering the IRQs.
Memory Manager Initialization
Every DRM driver requires a memory manager which must be initialized at
load time. DRM currently contains two memory managers, the Translation
Table Manager (TTM) and the Graphics Execution Manager (GEM).
This document describes the use of the GEM memory manager only. See
for details.
Miscellaneous Device Configuration
Another task that may be necessary for PCI devices during configuration
is mapping the video BIOS. On many devices, the VBIOS describes device
configuration, LCD panel timings (if any), and contains flags indicating
device state. Mapping the BIOS can be done using the pci_map_rom() call,
a convenience function that takes care of mapping the actual ROM,
whether it has been shadowed into memory (typically at address 0xc0000)
or exists on the PCI device in the ROM BAR. Note that after the ROM has
been mapped and any necessary information has been extracted, it should
be unmapped; on many devices, the ROM address decoder is shared with
other BARs, so leaving it mapped could cause undesired behaviour like
hangs or memory corruption.
Memory management
Modern Linux systems require large amount of graphics memory to store
frame buffers, textures, vertices and other graphics-related data. Given
the very dynamic nature of many of that data, managing graphics memory
efficiently is thus crucial for the graphics stack and plays a central
role in the DRM infrastructure.
The DRM core includes two memory managers, namely Translation Table Maps
(TTM) and Graphics Execution Manager (GEM). TTM was the first DRM memory
manager to be developed and tried to be a one-size-fits-them all
solution. It provides a single userspace API to accommodate the need of
all hardware, supporting both Unified Memory Architecture (UMA) devices
and devices with dedicated video RAM (i.e. most discrete video cards).
This resulted in a large, complex piece of code that turned out to be
hard to use for driver development.
GEM started as an Intel-sponsored project in reaction to TTM's
complexity. Its design philosophy is completely different: instead of
providing a solution to every graphics memory-related problems, GEM
identified common code between drivers and created a support library to
share it. GEM has simpler initialization and execution requirements than
TTM, but has no video RAM management capabitilies and is thus limited to
UMA devices.
The Translation Table Manager (TTM)
TTM design background and information belongs here.
TTM initializationThis section is outdated.
Drivers wishing to support TTM must fill out a drm_bo_driver
structure. The structure contains several fields with function
pointers for initializing the TTM, allocating and freeing memory,
waiting for command completion and fence synchronization, and memory
migration. See the radeon_ttm.c file for an example of usage.
The ttm_global_reference structure is made up of several fields:
struct ttm_global_reference {
enum ttm_global_types global_type;
size_t size;
void *object;
int (*init) (struct ttm_global_reference *);
void (*release) (struct ttm_global_reference *);
};
There should be one global reference structure for your memory
manager as a whole, and there will be others for each object
created by the memory manager at runtime. Your global TTM should
have a type of TTM_GLOBAL_TTM_MEM. The size field for the global
object should be sizeof(struct ttm_mem_global), and the init and
release hooks should point at your driver-specific init and
release routines, which probably eventually call
ttm_mem_global_init and ttm_mem_global_release, respectively.
Once your global TTM accounting structure is set up and initialized
by calling ttm_global_item_ref() on it,
you need to create a buffer object TTM to
provide a pool for buffer object allocation by clients and the
kernel itself. The type of this object should be TTM_GLOBAL_TTM_BO,
and its size should be sizeof(struct ttm_bo_global). Again,
driver-specific init and release functions may be provided,
likely eventually calling ttm_bo_global_init() and
ttm_bo_global_release(), respectively. Also, like the previous
object, ttm_global_item_ref() is used to create an initial reference
count for the TTM, which will call your initialization function.
The Graphics Execution Manager (GEM)
The GEM design approach has resulted in a memory manager that doesn't
provide full coverage of all (or even all common) use cases in its
userspace or kernel API. GEM exposes a set of standard memory-related
operations to userspace and a set of helper functions to drivers, and let
drivers implement hardware-specific operations with their own private API.
The GEM userspace API is described in the
GEM - the Graphics
Execution Manager article on LWN. While slightly
outdated, the document provides a good overview of the GEM API principles.
Buffer allocation and read and write operations, described as part of the
common GEM API, are currently implemented using driver-specific ioctls.
GEM is data-agnostic. It manages abstract buffer objects without knowing
what individual buffers contain. APIs that require knowledge of buffer
contents or purpose, such as buffer allocation or synchronization
primitives, are thus outside of the scope of GEM and must be implemented
using driver-specific ioctls.
On a fundamental level, GEM involves several operations:
Memory allocation and freeingCommand executionAperture management at command execution time
Buffer object allocation is relatively straightforward and largely
provided by Linux's shmem layer, which provides memory to back each
object.
Device-specific operations, such as command execution, pinning, buffer
read & write, mapping, and domain ownership transfers are left to
driver-specific ioctls.
GEM Initialization
Drivers that use GEM must set the DRIVER_GEM bit in the struct
drm_driverdriver_features field. The DRM core will
then automatically initialize the GEM core before calling the
load operation. Behind the scene, this will
create a DRM Memory Manager object which provides an address space
pool for object allocation.
In a KMS configuration, drivers need to allocate and initialize a
command ring buffer following core GEM initialization if required by
the hardware. UMA devices usually have what is called a "stolen"
memory region, which provides space for the initial framebuffer and
large, contiguous memory regions required by the device. This space is
typically not managed by GEM, and must be initialized separately into
its own DRM MM object.
GEM Objects Creation
GEM splits creation of GEM objects and allocation of the memory that
backs them in two distinct operations.
GEM objects are represented by an instance of struct
drm_gem_object. Drivers usually need to extend
GEM objects with private information and thus create a driver-specific
GEM object structure type that embeds an instance of struct
drm_gem_object.
To create a GEM object, a driver allocates memory for an instance of its
specific GEM object type and initializes the embedded struct
drm_gem_object with a call to
drm_gem_object_init. The function takes a pointer to
the DRM device, a pointer to the GEM object and the buffer object size
in bytes.
GEM uses shmem to allocate anonymous pageable memory.
drm_gem_object_init will create an shmfs file of
the requested size and store it into the struct
drm_gem_objectfilp
field. The memory is used as either main storage for the object when the
graphics hardware uses system memory directly or as a backing store
otherwise.
Drivers are responsible for the actual physical pages allocation by
calling shmem_read_mapping_page_gfp for each page.
Note that they can decide to allocate pages when initializing the GEM
object, or to delay allocation until the memory is needed (for instance
when a page fault occurs as a result of a userspace memory access or
when the driver needs to start a DMA transfer involving the memory).
Anonymous pageable memory allocation is not always desired, for instance
when the hardware requires physically contiguous system memory as is
often the case in embedded devices. Drivers can create GEM objects with
no shmfs backing (called private GEM objects) by initializing them with
a call to drm_gem_private_object_init instead of
drm_gem_object_init. Storage for private GEM
objects must be managed by drivers.
Drivers that do not need to extend GEM objects with private information
can call the drm_gem_object_alloc function to
allocate and initialize a struct drm_gem_object
instance. The GEM core will call the optional driver
gem_init_object operation after initializing
the GEM object with drm_gem_object_init.
int (*gem_init_object) (struct drm_gem_object *obj);
No alloc-and-init function exists for private GEM objects.
GEM Objects Lifetime
All GEM objects are reference-counted by the GEM core. References can be
acquired and release by calling drm_gem_object_reference
and drm_gem_object_unreference respectively. The
caller must hold the drm_devicestruct_mutex lock. As a convenience, GEM
provides the drm_gem_object_reference_unlocked and
drm_gem_object_unreference_unlocked functions that
can be called without holding the lock.
When the last reference to a GEM object is released the GEM core calls
the drm_drivergem_free_object operation. That operation is
mandatory for GEM-enabled drivers and must free the GEM object and all
associated resources.
void (*gem_free_object) (struct drm_gem_object *obj);
Drivers are responsible for freeing all GEM object resources, including
the resources created by the GEM core. If an mmap offset has been
created for the object (in which case
drm_gem_object::map_list::map
is not NULL) it must be freed by a call to
drm_gem_free_mmap_offset. The shmfs backing store
must be released by calling drm_gem_object_release
(that function can safely be called if no shmfs backing store has been
created).
GEM Objects Naming
Communication between userspace and the kernel refers to GEM objects
using local handles, global names or, more recently, file descriptors.
All of those are 32-bit integer values; the usual Linux kernel limits
apply to the file descriptors.
GEM handles are local to a DRM file. Applications get a handle to a GEM
object through a driver-specific ioctl, and can use that handle to refer
to the GEM object in other standard or driver-specific ioctls. Closing a
DRM file handle frees all its GEM handles and dereferences the
associated GEM objects.
To create a handle for a GEM object drivers call
drm_gem_handle_create. The function takes a pointer
to the DRM file and the GEM object and returns a locally unique handle.
When the handle is no longer needed drivers delete it with a call to
drm_gem_handle_delete. Finally the GEM object
associated with a handle can be retrieved by a call to
drm_gem_object_lookup.
Handles don't take ownership of GEM objects, they only take a reference
to the object that will be dropped when the handle is destroyed. To
avoid leaking GEM objects, drivers must make sure they drop the
reference(s) they own (such as the initial reference taken at object
creation time) as appropriate, without any special consideration for the
handle. For example, in the particular case of combined GEM object and
handle creation in the implementation of the
dumb_create operation, drivers must drop the
initial reference to the GEM object before returning the handle.
GEM names are similar in purpose to handles but are not local to DRM
files. They can be passed between processes to reference a GEM object
globally. Names can't be used directly to refer to objects in the DRM
API, applications must convert handles to names and names to handles
using the DRM_IOCTL_GEM_FLINK and DRM_IOCTL_GEM_OPEN ioctls
respectively. The conversion is handled by the DRM core without any
driver-specific support.
Similar to global names, GEM file descriptors are also used to share GEM
objects across processes. They offer additional security: as file
descriptors must be explicitly sent over UNIX domain sockets to be shared
between applications, they can't be guessed like the globally unique GEM
names.
Drivers that support GEM file descriptors, also known as the DRM PRIME
API, must set the DRIVER_PRIME bit in the struct
drm_driverdriver_features field, and implement the
prime_handle_to_fd and
prime_fd_to_handle operations.
int (*prime_handle_to_fd)(struct drm_device *dev,
struct drm_file *file_priv, uint32_t handle,
uint32_t flags, int *prime_fd);
int (*prime_fd_to_handle)(struct drm_device *dev,
struct drm_file *file_priv, int prime_fd,
uint32_t *handle);
Those two operations convert a handle to a PRIME file descriptor and
vice versa. Drivers must use the kernel dma-buf buffer sharing framework
to manage the PRIME file descriptors.
While non-GEM drivers must implement the operations themselves, GEM
drivers must use the drm_gem_prime_handle_to_fd
and drm_gem_prime_fd_to_handle helper functions.
Those helpers rely on the driver
gem_prime_export and
gem_prime_import operations to create a dma-buf
instance from a GEM object (dma-buf exporter role) and to create a GEM
object from a dma-buf instance (dma-buf importer role).
struct dma_buf * (*gem_prime_export)(struct drm_device *dev,
struct drm_gem_object *obj,
int flags);
struct drm_gem_object * (*gem_prime_import)(struct drm_device *dev,
struct dma_buf *dma_buf);
These two operations are mandatory for GEM drivers that support DRM
PRIME.
DRM PRIME Helper Functions Reference
!Pdrivers/gpu/drm/drm_prime.c PRIME Helpers
GEM Objects Mapping
Because mapping operations are fairly heavyweight GEM favours
read/write-like access to buffers, implemented through driver-specific
ioctls, over mapping buffers to userspace. However, when random access
to the buffer is needed (to perform software rendering for instance),
direct access to the object can be more efficient.
The mmap system call can't be used directly to map GEM objects, as they
don't have their own file handle. Two alternative methods currently
co-exist to map GEM objects to userspace. The first method uses a
driver-specific ioctl to perform the mapping operation, calling
do_mmap under the hood. This is often considered
dubious, seems to be discouraged for new GEM-enabled drivers, and will
thus not be described here.
The second method uses the mmap system call on the DRM file handle.
void *mmap(void *addr, size_t length, int prot, int flags, int fd,
off_t offset);
DRM identifies the GEM object to be mapped by a fake offset passed
through the mmap offset argument. Prior to being mapped, a GEM object
must thus be associated with a fake offset. To do so, drivers must call
drm_gem_create_mmap_offset on the object. The
function allocates a fake offset range from a pool and stores the
offset divided by PAGE_SIZE in
obj->map_list.hash.key. Care must be taken not to
call drm_gem_create_mmap_offset if a fake offset
has already been allocated for the object. This can be tested by
obj->map_list.map being non-NULL.
Once allocated, the fake offset value
(obj->map_list.hash.key << PAGE_SHIFT)
must be passed to the application in a driver-specific way and can then
be used as the mmap offset argument.
The GEM core provides a helper method drm_gem_mmap
to handle object mapping. The method can be set directly as the mmap
file operation handler. It will look up the GEM object based on the
offset value and set the VMA operations to the
drm_drivergem_vm_ops
field. Note that drm_gem_mmap doesn't map memory to
userspace, but relies on the driver-provided fault handler to map pages
individually.
To use drm_gem_mmap, drivers must fill the struct
drm_drivergem_vm_ops
field with a pointer to VM operations.
struct vm_operations_struct *gem_vm_ops
struct vm_operations_struct {
void (*open)(struct vm_area_struct * area);
void (*close)(struct vm_area_struct * area);
int (*fault)(struct vm_area_struct *vma, struct vm_fault *vmf);
};
The open and close
operations must update the GEM object reference count. Drivers can use
the drm_gem_vm_open and
drm_gem_vm_close helper functions directly as open
and close handlers.
The fault operation handler is responsible for mapping individual pages
to userspace when a page fault occurs. Depending on the memory
allocation scheme, drivers can allocate pages at fault time, or can
decide to allocate memory for the GEM object at the time the object is
created.
Drivers that want to map the GEM object upfront instead of handling page
faults can implement their own mmap file operation handler.
Memory Coherency
When mapped to the device or used in a command buffer, backing pages
for an object are flushed to memory and marked write combined so as to
be coherent with the GPU. Likewise, if the CPU accesses an object
after the GPU has finished rendering to the object, then the object
must be made coherent with the CPU's view of memory, usually involving
GPU cache flushing of various kinds. This core CPU<->GPU
coherency management is provided by a device-specific ioctl, which
evaluates an object's current domain and performs any necessary
flushing or synchronization to put the object into the desired
coherency domain (note that the object may be busy, i.e. an active
render target; in that case, setting the domain blocks the client and
waits for rendering to complete before performing any necessary
flushing operations).
Command Execution
Perhaps the most important GEM function for GPU devices is providing a
command execution interface to clients. Client programs construct
command buffers containing references to previously allocated memory
objects, and then submit them to GEM. At that point, GEM takes care to
bind all the objects into the GTT, execute the buffer, and provide
necessary synchronization between clients accessing the same buffers.
This often involves evicting some objects from the GTT and re-binding
others (a fairly expensive operation), and providing relocation
support which hides fixed GTT offsets from clients. Clients must take
care not to submit command buffers that reference more objects than
can fit in the GTT; otherwise, GEM will reject them and no rendering
will occur. Similarly, if several objects in the buffer require fence
registers to be allocated for correct rendering (e.g. 2D blits on
pre-965 chips), care must be taken not to require more fence registers
than are available to the client. Such resource management should be
abstracted from the client in libdrm.
GEM Function Reference
!Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_gem.c
VMA Offset Manager
!Pdrivers/gpu/drm/drm_vma_manager.c vma offset manager
!Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_vma_manager.c
!Iinclude/drm/drm_vma_manager.h
Mode Setting
Drivers must initialize the mode setting core by calling
drm_mode_config_init on the DRM device. The function
initializes the drm_devicemode_config field and never fails. Once done,
mode configuration must be setup by initializing the following fields.
int min_width, min_height;
int max_width, max_height;
Minimum and maximum width and height of the frame buffers in pixel
units.
struct drm_mode_config_funcs *funcs;Mode setting functions.Frame Buffer Creationstruct drm_framebuffer *(*fb_create)(struct drm_device *dev,
struct drm_file *file_priv,
struct drm_mode_fb_cmd2 *mode_cmd);
Frame buffers are abstract memory objects that provide a source of
pixels to scanout to a CRTC. Applications explicitly request the
creation of frame buffers through the DRM_IOCTL_MODE_ADDFB(2) ioctls and
receive an opaque handle that can be passed to the KMS CRTC control,
plane configuration and page flip functions.
Frame buffers rely on the underneath memory manager for low-level memory
operations. When creating a frame buffer applications pass a memory
handle (or a list of memory handles for multi-planar formats) through
the drm_mode_fb_cmd2 argument. For drivers using
GEM as their userspace buffer management interface this would be a GEM
handle. Drivers are however free to use their own backing storage object
handles, e.g. vmwgfx directly exposes special TTM handles to userspace
and so expects TTM handles in the create ioctl and not GEM handles.
Drivers must first validate the requested frame buffer parameters passed
through the mode_cmd argument. In particular this is where invalid
sizes, pixel formats or pitches can be caught.
If the parameters are deemed valid, drivers then create, initialize and
return an instance of struct drm_framebuffer.
If desired the instance can be embedded in a larger driver-specific
structure. Drivers must fill its width,
height, pitches,
offsets, depth,
bits_per_pixel and
pixel_format fields from the values passed
through the drm_mode_fb_cmd2 argument. They
should call the drm_helper_mode_fill_fb_struct
helper function to do so.
The initialization of the new framebuffer instance is finalized with a
call to drm_framebuffer_init which takes a pointer
to DRM frame buffer operations (struct
drm_framebuffer_funcs). Note that this function
publishes the framebuffer and so from this point on it can be accessed
concurrently from other threads. Hence it must be the last step in the
driver's framebuffer initialization sequence. Frame buffer operations
are
int (*create_handle)(struct drm_framebuffer *fb,
struct drm_file *file_priv, unsigned int *handle);
Create a handle to the frame buffer underlying memory object. If
the frame buffer uses a multi-plane format, the handle will
reference the memory object associated with the first plane.
Drivers call drm_gem_handle_create to create
the handle.
void (*destroy)(struct drm_framebuffer *framebuffer);
Destroy the frame buffer object and frees all associated
resources. Drivers must call
drm_framebuffer_cleanup to free resources
allocated by the DRM core for the frame buffer object, and must
make sure to unreference all memory objects associated with the
frame buffer. Handles created by the
create_handle operation are released by
the DRM core.
int (*dirty)(struct drm_framebuffer *framebuffer,
struct drm_file *file_priv, unsigned flags, unsigned color,
struct drm_clip_rect *clips, unsigned num_clips);
This optional operation notifies the driver that a region of the
frame buffer has changed in response to a DRM_IOCTL_MODE_DIRTYFB
ioctl call.
The lifetime of a drm framebuffer is controlled with a reference count,
drivers can grab additional references with
drm_framebuffer_reference and drop them
again with drm_framebuffer_unreference. For
driver-private framebuffers for which the last reference is never
dropped (e.g. for the fbdev framebuffer when the struct
drm_framebuffer is embedded into the fbdev
helper struct) drivers can manually clean up a framebuffer at module
unload time with
drm_framebuffer_unregister_private.
Dumb Buffer Objects
The KMS API doesn't standardize backing storage object creation and
leaves it to driver-specific ioctls. Furthermore actually creating a
buffer object even for GEM-based drivers is done through a
driver-specific ioctl - GEM only has a common userspace interface for
sharing and destroying objects. While not an issue for full-fledged
graphics stacks that include device-specific userspace components (in
libdrm for instance), this limit makes DRM-based early boot graphics
unnecessarily complex.
Dumb objects partly alleviate the problem by providing a standard
API to create dumb buffers suitable for scanout, which can then be used
to create KMS frame buffers.
To support dumb objects drivers must implement the
dumb_create,
dumb_destroy and
dumb_map_offset operations.
int (*dumb_create)(struct drm_file *file_priv, struct drm_device *dev,
struct drm_mode_create_dumb *args);
The dumb_create operation creates a driver
object (GEM or TTM handle) suitable for scanout based on the
width, height and depth from the struct
drm_mode_create_dumb argument. It fills the
argument's handle,
pitch and size
fields with a handle for the newly created object and its line
pitch and size in bytes.
int (*dumb_destroy)(struct drm_file *file_priv, struct drm_device *dev,
uint32_t handle);
The dumb_destroy operation destroys a dumb
object created by dumb_create.
int (*dumb_map_offset)(struct drm_file *file_priv, struct drm_device *dev,
uint32_t handle, uint64_t *offset);
The dumb_map_offset operation associates an
mmap fake offset with the object given by the handle and returns
it. Drivers must use the
drm_gem_create_mmap_offset function to
associate the fake offset as described in
.
Note that dumb objects may not be used for gpu acceleration, as has been
attempted on some ARM embedded platforms. Such drivers really must have
a hardware-specific ioctl to allocate suitable buffer objects.
Output Pollingvoid (*output_poll_changed)(struct drm_device *dev);
This operation notifies the driver that the status of one or more
connectors has changed. Drivers that use the fb helper can just call the
drm_fb_helper_hotplug_event function to handle this
operation.
Locking
Beside some lookup structures with their own locking (which is hidden
behind the interface functions) most of the modeset state is protected
by the dev-<mode_config.lock mutex and additionally
per-crtc locks to allow cursor updates, pageflips and similar operations
to occur concurrently with background tasks like output detection.
Operations which cross domains like a full modeset always grab all
locks. Drivers there need to protect resources shared between crtcs with
additional locking. They also need to be careful to always grab the
relevant crtc locks if a modset functions touches crtc state, e.g. for
load detection (which does only grab the mode_config.lock
to allow concurrent screen updates on live crtcs).
KMS Initialization and Cleanup
A KMS device is abstracted and exposed as a set of planes, CRTCs, encoders
and connectors. KMS drivers must thus create and initialize all those
objects at load time after initializing mode setting.
CRTCs (struct drm_crtc)
A CRTC is an abstraction representing a part of the chip that contains a
pointer to a scanout buffer. Therefore, the number of CRTCs available
determines how many independent scanout buffers can be active at any
given time. The CRTC structure contains several fields to support this:
a pointer to some video memory (abstracted as a frame buffer object), a
display mode, and an (x, y) offset into the video memory to support
panning or configurations where one piece of video memory spans multiple
CRTCs.
CRTC Initialization
A KMS device must create and register at least one struct
drm_crtc instance. The instance is allocated
and zeroed by the driver, possibly as part of a larger structure, and
registered with a call to drm_crtc_init with a
pointer to CRTC functions.
CRTC OperationsSet Configurationint (*set_config)(struct drm_mode_set *set);
Apply a new CRTC configuration to the device. The configuration
specifies a CRTC, a frame buffer to scan out from, a (x,y) position in
the frame buffer, a display mode and an array of connectors to drive
with the CRTC if possible.
If the frame buffer specified in the configuration is NULL, the driver
must detach all encoders connected to the CRTC and all connectors
attached to those encoders and disable them.
This operation is called with the mode config lock held.
Note that the drm core has no notion of restoring the mode setting
state after resume, since all resume handling is in the full
responsibility of the driver. The common mode setting helper library
though provides a helper which can be used for this:
drm_helper_resume_force_mode.
Page Flippingint (*page_flip)(struct drm_crtc *crtc, struct drm_framebuffer *fb,
struct drm_pending_vblank_event *event);
Schedule a page flip to the given frame buffer for the CRTC. This
operation is called with the mode config mutex held.
Page flipping is a synchronization mechanism that replaces the frame
buffer being scanned out by the CRTC with a new frame buffer during
vertical blanking, avoiding tearing. When an application requests a page
flip the DRM core verifies that the new frame buffer is large enough to
be scanned out by the CRTC in the currently configured mode and then
calls the CRTC page_flip operation with a
pointer to the new frame buffer.
The page_flip operation schedules a page flip.
Once any pending rendering targeting the new frame buffer has
completed, the CRTC will be reprogrammed to display that frame buffer
after the next vertical refresh. The operation must return immediately
without waiting for rendering or page flip to complete and must block
any new rendering to the frame buffer until the page flip completes.
If a page flip can be successfully scheduled the driver must set the
drm_crtc-<fb field to the new framebuffer pointed to
by fb. This is important so that the reference counting
on framebuffers stays balanced.
If a page flip is already pending, the
page_flip operation must return
-EBUSY.
To synchronize page flip to vertical blanking the driver will likely
need to enable vertical blanking interrupts. It should call
drm_vblank_get for that purpose, and call
drm_vblank_put after the page flip completes.
If the application has requested to be notified when page flip completes
the page_flip operation will be called with a
non-NULL event argument pointing to a
drm_pending_vblank_event instance. Upon page
flip completion the driver must call drm_send_vblank_event
to fill in the event and send to wake up any waiting processes.
This can be performed with
event_lock, flags);
...
drm_send_vblank_event(dev, pipe, event);
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&dev->event_lock, flags);
]]>
FIXME: Could drivers that don't need to wait for rendering to complete
just add the event to dev->vblank_event_list and
let the DRM core handle everything, as for "normal" vertical blanking
events?
While waiting for the page flip to complete, the
event->base.link list head can be used freely by
the driver to store the pending event in a driver-specific list.
If the file handle is closed before the event is signaled, drivers must
take care to destroy the event in their
preclose operation (and, if needed, call
drm_vblank_put).
Miscellaneousvoid (*set_property)(struct drm_crtc *crtc,
struct drm_property *property, uint64_t value);
Set the value of the given CRTC property to
value. See
for more information about properties.
void (*gamma_set)(struct drm_crtc *crtc, u16 *r, u16 *g, u16 *b,
uint32_t start, uint32_t size);
Apply a gamma table to the device. The operation is optional.
void (*destroy)(struct drm_crtc *crtc);
Destroy the CRTC when not needed anymore. See
.
Planes (struct drm_plane)
A plane represents an image source that can be blended with or overlayed
on top of a CRTC during the scanout process. Planes are associated with
a frame buffer to crop a portion of the image memory (source) and
optionally scale it to a destination size. The result is then blended
with or overlayed on top of a CRTC.
Plane Initialization
Planes are optional. To create a plane, a KMS drivers allocates and
zeroes an instances of struct drm_plane
(possibly as part of a larger structure) and registers it with a call
to drm_plane_init. The function takes a bitmask
of the CRTCs that can be associated with the plane, a pointer to the
plane functions and a list of format supported formats.
Plane Operationsint (*update_plane)(struct drm_plane *plane, struct drm_crtc *crtc,
struct drm_framebuffer *fb, int crtc_x, int crtc_y,
unsigned int crtc_w, unsigned int crtc_h,
uint32_t src_x, uint32_t src_y,
uint32_t src_w, uint32_t src_h);
Enable and configure the plane to use the given CRTC and frame buffer.
The source rectangle in frame buffer memory coordinates is given by
the src_x, src_y,
src_w and src_h
parameters (as 16.16 fixed point values). Devices that don't support
subpixel plane coordinates can ignore the fractional part.
The destination rectangle in CRTC coordinates is given by the
crtc_x, crtc_y,
crtc_w and crtc_h
parameters (as integer values). Devices scale the source rectangle to
the destination rectangle. If scaling is not supported, and the source
rectangle size doesn't match the destination rectangle size, the
driver must return a -EINVAL error.
int (*disable_plane)(struct drm_plane *plane);
Disable the plane. The DRM core calls this method in response to a
DRM_IOCTL_MODE_SETPLANE ioctl call with the frame buffer ID set to 0.
Disabled planes must not be processed by the CRTC.
void (*destroy)(struct drm_plane *plane);
Destroy the plane when not needed anymore. See
.
Encoders (struct drm_encoder)
An encoder takes pixel data from a CRTC and converts it to a format
suitable for any attached connectors. On some devices, it may be
possible to have a CRTC send data to more than one encoder. In that
case, both encoders would receive data from the same scanout buffer,
resulting in a "cloned" display configuration across the connectors
attached to each encoder.
Encoder Initialization
As for CRTCs, a KMS driver must create, initialize and register at
least one struct drm_encoder instance. The
instance is allocated and zeroed by the driver, possibly as part of a
larger structure.
Drivers must initialize the struct drm_encoderpossible_crtcs and
possible_clones fields before registering the
encoder. Both fields are bitmasks of respectively the CRTCs that the
encoder can be connected to, and sibling encoders candidate for cloning.
After being initialized, the encoder must be registered with a call to
drm_encoder_init. The function takes a pointer to
the encoder functions and an encoder type. Supported types are
DRM_MODE_ENCODER_DAC for VGA and analog on DVI-I/DVI-A
DRM_MODE_ENCODER_TMDS for DVI, HDMI and (embedded) DisplayPort
DRM_MODE_ENCODER_LVDS for display panels
DRM_MODE_ENCODER_TVDAC for TV output (Composite, S-Video, Component,
SCART)
DRM_MODE_ENCODER_VIRTUAL for virtual machine displays
Encoders must be attached to a CRTC to be used. DRM drivers leave
encoders unattached at initialization time. Applications (or the fbdev
compatibility layer when implemented) are responsible for attaching the
encoders they want to use to a CRTC.
Encoder Operationsvoid (*destroy)(struct drm_encoder *encoder);
Called to destroy the encoder when not needed anymore. See
.
void (*set_property)(struct drm_plane *plane,
struct drm_property *property, uint64_t value);
Set the value of the given plane property to
value. See
for more information about properties.
Connectors (struct drm_connector)
A connector is the final destination for pixel data on a device, and
usually connects directly to an external display device like a monitor
or laptop panel. A connector can only be attached to one encoder at a
time. The connector is also the structure where information about the
attached display is kept, so it contains fields for display data, EDID
data, DPMS & connection status, and information about modes
supported on the attached displays.
Connector Initialization
Finally a KMS driver must create, initialize, register and attach at
least one struct drm_connector instance. The
instance is created as other KMS objects and initialized by setting the
following fields.
interlace_allowed
Whether the connector can handle interlaced modes.
doublescan_allowed
Whether the connector can handle doublescan.
display_info
Display information is filled from EDID information when a display
is detected. For non hot-pluggable displays such as flat panels in
embedded systems, the driver should initialize the
display_info.width_mm
and
display_info.height_mm
fields with the physical size of the display.
polled
Connector polling mode, a combination of
DRM_CONNECTOR_POLL_HPD
The connector generates hotplug events and doesn't need to be
periodically polled. The CONNECT and DISCONNECT flags must not
be set together with the HPD flag.
DRM_CONNECTOR_POLL_CONNECT
Periodically poll the connector for connection.
DRM_CONNECTOR_POLL_DISCONNECT
Periodically poll the connector for disconnection.
Set to 0 for connectors that don't support connection status
discovery.
The connector is then registered with a call to
drm_connector_init with a pointer to the connector
functions and a connector type, and exposed through sysfs with a call to
drm_sysfs_connector_add.
Supported connector types are
DRM_MODE_CONNECTOR_VGADRM_MODE_CONNECTOR_DVIIDRM_MODE_CONNECTOR_DVIDDRM_MODE_CONNECTOR_DVIADRM_MODE_CONNECTOR_CompositeDRM_MODE_CONNECTOR_SVIDEODRM_MODE_CONNECTOR_LVDSDRM_MODE_CONNECTOR_ComponentDRM_MODE_CONNECTOR_9PinDINDRM_MODE_CONNECTOR_DisplayPortDRM_MODE_CONNECTOR_HDMIADRM_MODE_CONNECTOR_HDMIBDRM_MODE_CONNECTOR_TVDRM_MODE_CONNECTOR_eDPDRM_MODE_CONNECTOR_VIRTUAL
Connectors must be attached to an encoder to be used. For devices that
map connectors to encoders 1:1, the connector should be attached at
initialization time with a call to
drm_mode_connector_attach_encoder. The driver must
also set the drm_connectorencoder field to point to the attached
encoder.
Finally, drivers must initialize the connectors state change detection
with a call to drm_kms_helper_poll_init. If at
least one connector is pollable but can't generate hotplug interrupts
(indicated by the DRM_CONNECTOR_POLL_CONNECT and
DRM_CONNECTOR_POLL_DISCONNECT connector flags), a delayed work will
automatically be queued to periodically poll for changes. Connectors
that can generate hotplug interrupts must be marked with the
DRM_CONNECTOR_POLL_HPD flag instead, and their interrupt handler must
call drm_helper_hpd_irq_event. The function will
queue a delayed work to check the state of all connectors, but no
periodic polling will be done.
Connector Operations
Unless otherwise state, all operations are mandatory.
DPMSvoid (*dpms)(struct drm_connector *connector, int mode);
The DPMS operation sets the power state of a connector. The mode
argument is one of
DRM_MODE_DPMS_ONDRM_MODE_DPMS_STANDBYDRM_MODE_DPMS_SUSPENDDRM_MODE_DPMS_OFF
In all but DPMS_ON mode the encoder to which the connector is attached
should put the display in low-power mode by driving its signals
appropriately. If more than one connector is attached to the encoder
care should be taken not to change the power state of other displays as
a side effect. Low-power mode should be propagated to the encoders and
CRTCs when all related connectors are put in low-power mode.
Modesint (*fill_modes)(struct drm_connector *connector, uint32_t max_width,
uint32_t max_height);
Fill the mode list with all supported modes for the connector. If the
max_width and max_height
arguments are non-zero, the implementation must ignore all modes wider
than max_width or higher than
max_height.
The connector must also fill in this operation its
display_infowidth_mm and
height_mm fields with the connected display
physical size in millimeters. The fields should be set to 0 if the value
isn't known or is not applicable (for instance for projector devices).
Connection Status
The connection status is updated through polling or hotplug events when
supported (see ). The status
value is reported to userspace through ioctls and must not be used
inside the driver, as it only gets initialized by a call to
drm_mode_getconnector from userspace.
enum drm_connector_status (*detect)(struct drm_connector *connector,
bool force);
Check to see if anything is attached to the connector. The
force parameter is set to false whilst polling or
to true when checking the connector due to user request.
force can be used by the driver to avoid
expensive, destructive operations during automated probing.
Return connector_status_connected if something is connected to the
connector, connector_status_disconnected if nothing is connected and
connector_status_unknown if the connection state isn't known.
Drivers should only return connector_status_connected if the connection
status has really been probed as connected. Connectors that can't detect
the connection status, or failed connection status probes, should return
connector_status_unknown.
Miscellaneousvoid (*set_property)(struct drm_connector *connector,
struct drm_property *property, uint64_t value);
Set the value of the given connector property to
value. See
for more information about properties.
void (*destroy)(struct drm_connector *connector);
Destroy the connector when not needed anymore. See
.
Cleanup
The DRM core manages its objects' lifetime. When an object is not needed
anymore the core calls its destroy function, which must clean up and
free every resource allocated for the object. Every
drm_*_init call must be matched with a
corresponding drm_*_cleanup call to cleanup CRTCs
(drm_crtc_cleanup), planes
(drm_plane_cleanup), encoders
(drm_encoder_cleanup) and connectors
(drm_connector_cleanup). Furthermore, connectors
that have been added to sysfs must be removed by a call to
drm_sysfs_connector_remove before calling
drm_connector_cleanup.
Connectors state change detection must be cleanup up with a call to
drm_kms_helper_poll_fini.
Output discovery and initialization examplebase;
drm_connector_init(dev, &intel_output->base,
&intel_crt_connector_funcs, DRM_MODE_CONNECTOR_VGA);
drm_encoder_init(dev, &intel_output->enc, &intel_crt_enc_funcs,
DRM_MODE_ENCODER_DAC);
drm_mode_connector_attach_encoder(&intel_output->base,
&intel_output->enc);
/* Set up the DDC bus. */
intel_output->ddc_bus = intel_i2c_create(dev, GPIOA, "CRTDDC_A");
if (!intel_output->ddc_bus) {
dev_printk(KERN_ERR, &dev->pdev->dev, "DDC bus registration "
"failed.\n");
return;
}
intel_output->type = INTEL_OUTPUT_ANALOG;
connector->interlace_allowed = 0;
connector->doublescan_allowed = 0;
drm_encoder_helper_add(&intel_output->enc, &intel_crt_helper_funcs);
drm_connector_helper_add(connector, &intel_crt_connector_helper_funcs);
drm_sysfs_connector_add(connector);
}]]>
In the example above (taken from the i915 driver), a CRTC, connector and
encoder combination is created. A device-specific i2c bus is also
created for fetching EDID data and performing monitor detection. Once
the process is complete, the new connector is registered with sysfs to
make its properties available to applications.
KMS API Functions
!Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_crtc.c
Mode Setting Helper Functions
The CRTC, encoder and connector functions provided by the drivers
implement the DRM API. They're called by the DRM core and ioctl handlers
to handle device state changes and configuration request. As implementing
those functions often requires logic not specific to drivers, mid-layer
helper functions are available to avoid duplicating boilerplate code.
The DRM core contains one mid-layer implementation. The mid-layer provides
implementations of several CRTC, encoder and connector functions (called
from the top of the mid-layer) that pre-process requests and call
lower-level functions provided by the driver (at the bottom of the
mid-layer). For instance, the
drm_crtc_helper_set_config function can be used to
fill the struct drm_crtc_funcsset_config field. When called, it will split
the set_config operation in smaller, simpler
operations and call the driver to handle them.
To use the mid-layer, drivers call drm_crtc_helper_add,
drm_encoder_helper_add and
drm_connector_helper_add functions to install their
mid-layer bottom operations handlers, and fill the
drm_crtc_funcs,
drm_encoder_funcs and
drm_connector_funcs structures with pointers to
the mid-layer top API functions. Installing the mid-layer bottom operation
handlers is best done right after registering the corresponding KMS object.
The mid-layer is not split between CRTC, encoder and connector operations.
To use it, a driver must provide bottom functions for all of the three KMS
entities.
Helper Functionsint drm_crtc_helper_set_config(struct drm_mode_set *set);
The drm_crtc_helper_set_config helper function
is a CRTC set_config implementation. It
first tries to locate the best encoder for each connector by calling
the connector best_encoder helper
operation.
After locating the appropriate encoders, the helper function will
call the mode_fixup encoder and CRTC helper
operations to adjust the requested mode, or reject it completely in
which case an error will be returned to the application. If the new
configuration after mode adjustment is identical to the current
configuration the helper function will return without performing any
other operation.
If the adjusted mode is identical to the current mode but changes to
the frame buffer need to be applied, the
drm_crtc_helper_set_config function will call
the CRTC mode_set_base helper operation. If
the adjusted mode differs from the current mode, or if the
mode_set_base helper operation is not
provided, the helper function performs a full mode set sequence by
calling the prepare,
mode_set and
commit CRTC and encoder helper operations,
in that order.
void drm_helper_connector_dpms(struct drm_connector *connector, int mode);
The drm_helper_connector_dpms helper function
is a connector dpms implementation that
tracks power state of connectors. To use the function, drivers must
provide dpms helper operations for CRTCs
and encoders to apply the DPMS state to the device.
The mid-layer doesn't track the power state of CRTCs and encoders.
The dpms helper operations can thus be
called with a mode identical to the currently active mode.
int drm_helper_probe_single_connector_modes(struct drm_connector *connector,
uint32_t maxX, uint32_t maxY);
The drm_helper_probe_single_connector_modes helper
function is a connector fill_modes
implementation that updates the connection status for the connector
and then retrieves a list of modes by calling the connector
get_modes helper operation.
The function filters out modes larger than
max_width and max_height
if specified. It then calls the connector
mode_valid helper operation for each mode in
the probed list to check whether the mode is valid for the connector.
CRTC Helper Operationsbool (*mode_fixup)(struct drm_crtc *crtc,
const struct drm_display_mode *mode,
struct drm_display_mode *adjusted_mode);
Let CRTCs adjust the requested mode or reject it completely. This
operation returns true if the mode is accepted (possibly after being
adjusted) or false if it is rejected.
The mode_fixup operation should reject the
mode if it can't reasonably use it. The definition of "reasonable"
is currently fuzzy in this context. One possible behaviour would be
to set the adjusted mode to the panel timings when a fixed-mode
panel is used with hardware capable of scaling. Another behaviour
would be to accept any input mode and adjust it to the closest mode
supported by the hardware (FIXME: This needs to be clarified).
int (*mode_set_base)(struct drm_crtc *crtc, int x, int y,
struct drm_framebuffer *old_fb)
Move the CRTC on the current frame buffer (stored in
crtc->fb) to position (x,y). Any of the frame
buffer, x position or y position may have been modified.
This helper operation is optional. If not provided, the
drm_crtc_helper_set_config function will fall
back to the mode_set helper operation.
FIXME: Why are x and y passed as arguments, as they can be accessed
through crtc->x and
crtc->y?
void (*prepare)(struct drm_crtc *crtc);
Prepare the CRTC for mode setting. This operation is called after
validating the requested mode. Drivers use it to perform
device-specific operations required before setting the new mode.
int (*mode_set)(struct drm_crtc *crtc, struct drm_display_mode *mode,
struct drm_display_mode *adjusted_mode, int x, int y,
struct drm_framebuffer *old_fb);
Set a new mode, position and frame buffer. Depending on the device
requirements, the mode can be stored internally by the driver and
applied in the commit operation, or
programmed to the hardware immediately.
The mode_set operation returns 0 on success
or a negative error code if an error occurs.
void (*commit)(struct drm_crtc *crtc);
Commit a mode. This operation is called after setting the new mode.
Upon return the device must use the new mode and be fully
operational.
Encoder Helper Operationsbool (*mode_fixup)(struct drm_encoder *encoder,
const struct drm_display_mode *mode,
struct drm_display_mode *adjusted_mode);
Let encoders adjust the requested mode or reject it completely. This
operation returns true if the mode is accepted (possibly after being
adjusted) or false if it is rejected. See the
mode_fixup CRTC helper
operation for an explanation of the allowed adjustments.
void (*prepare)(struct drm_encoder *encoder);
Prepare the encoder for mode setting. This operation is called after
validating the requested mode. Drivers use it to perform
device-specific operations required before setting the new mode.
void (*mode_set)(struct drm_encoder *encoder,
struct drm_display_mode *mode,
struct drm_display_mode *adjusted_mode);
Set a new mode. Depending on the device requirements, the mode can
be stored internally by the driver and applied in the
commit operation, or programmed to the
hardware immediately.
void (*commit)(struct drm_encoder *encoder);
Commit a mode. This operation is called after setting the new mode.
Upon return the device must use the new mode and be fully
operational.
Connector Helper Operationsstruct drm_encoder *(*best_encoder)(struct drm_connector *connector);
Return a pointer to the best encoder for the connecter. Device that
map connectors to encoders 1:1 simply return the pointer to the
associated encoder. This operation is mandatory.
int (*get_modes)(struct drm_connector *connector);
Fill the connector's probed_modes list
by parsing EDID data with drm_add_edid_modes or
calling drm_mode_probed_add directly for every
supported mode and return the number of modes it has detected. This
operation is mandatory.
When adding modes manually the driver creates each mode with a call to
drm_mode_create and must fill the following fields.
__u32 type;
Mode type bitmask, a combination of
DRM_MODE_TYPE_BUILTINnot used?DRM_MODE_TYPE_CLOCK_Cnot used?DRM_MODE_TYPE_CRTC_Cnot used?
DRM_MODE_TYPE_PREFERRED - The preferred mode for the connector
not used?DRM_MODE_TYPE_DEFAULTnot used?DRM_MODE_TYPE_USERDEFnot used?DRM_MODE_TYPE_DRIVER
The mode has been created by the driver (as opposed to
to user-created modes).
Drivers must set the DRM_MODE_TYPE_DRIVER bit for all modes they
create, and set the DRM_MODE_TYPE_PREFERRED bit for the preferred
mode.
__u32 clock;Pixel clock frequency in kHz unit__u16 hdisplay, hsync_start, hsync_end, htotal;
__u16 vdisplay, vsync_start, vsync_end, vtotal;Horizontal and vertical timing information<----------------><-------------><-------------->
//////////////////////|
////////////////////// |
////////////////////// |.................. ................
_______________
<----- [hv]display ----->
<------------- [hv]sync_start ------------>
<--------------------- [hv]sync_end --------------------->
<-------------------------------- [hv]total ----------------------------->
]]>__u16 hskew;
__u16 vscan;Unknown__u32 flags;
Mode flags, a combination of
DRM_MODE_FLAG_PHSYNC
Horizontal sync is active high
DRM_MODE_FLAG_NHSYNC
Horizontal sync is active low
DRM_MODE_FLAG_PVSYNC
Vertical sync is active high
DRM_MODE_FLAG_NVSYNC
Vertical sync is active low
DRM_MODE_FLAG_INTERLACE
Mode is interlaced
DRM_MODE_FLAG_DBLSCAN
Mode uses doublescan
DRM_MODE_FLAG_CSYNC
Mode uses composite sync
DRM_MODE_FLAG_PCSYNC
Composite sync is active high
DRM_MODE_FLAG_NCSYNC
Composite sync is active low
DRM_MODE_FLAG_HSKEW
hskew provided (not used?)
DRM_MODE_FLAG_BCAST
not used?
DRM_MODE_FLAG_PIXMUX
not used?
DRM_MODE_FLAG_DBLCLK
not used?
DRM_MODE_FLAG_CLKDIV2
?
Note that modes marked with the INTERLACE or DBLSCAN flags will be
filtered out by
drm_helper_probe_single_connector_modes if
the connector's interlace_allowed or
doublescan_allowed field is set to 0.
char name[DRM_DISPLAY_MODE_LEN];
Mode name. The driver must call
drm_mode_set_name to fill the mode name from
hdisplay,
vdisplay and interlace flag after
filling the corresponding fields.
The vrefresh value is computed by
drm_helper_probe_single_connector_modes.
When parsing EDID data, drm_add_edid_modes fill the
connector display_infowidth_mm and
height_mm fields. When creating modes
manually the get_modes helper operation must
set the display_infowidth_mm and
height_mm fields if they haven't been set
already (for instance at initialization time when a fixed-size panel is
attached to the connector). The mode width_mm
and height_mm fields are only used internally
during EDID parsing and should not be set when creating modes manually.
int (*mode_valid)(struct drm_connector *connector,
struct drm_display_mode *mode);
Verify whether a mode is valid for the connector. Return MODE_OK for
supported modes and one of the enum drm_mode_status values (MODE_*)
for unsupported modes. This operation is mandatory.
As the mode rejection reason is currently not used beside for
immediately removing the unsupported mode, an implementation can
return MODE_BAD regardless of the exact reason why the mode is not
valid.
Note that the mode_valid helper operation is
only called for modes detected by the device, and
not for modes set by the user through the CRTC
set_config operation.
Modeset Helper Functions Reference
!Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_crtc_helper.c
fbdev Helper Functions Reference
!Pdrivers/gpu/drm/drm_fb_helper.c fbdev helpers
!Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_fb_helper.c
!Iinclude/drm/drm_fb_helper.h
Display Port Helper Functions Reference
!Pdrivers/gpu/drm/drm_dp_helper.c dp helpers
!Iinclude/drm/drm_dp_helper.h
!Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_dp_helper.c
EDID Helper Functions Reference
!Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_edid.c
Rectangle Utilities Reference
!Pinclude/drm/drm_rect.h rect utils
!Iinclude/drm/drm_rect.h
!Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_rect.c
Flip-work Helper Reference
!Pinclude/drm/drm_flip_work.h flip utils
!Iinclude/drm/drm_flip_work.h
!Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_flip_work.c
KMS Properties
Drivers may need to expose additional parameters to applications than
those described in the previous sections. KMS supports attaching
properties to CRTCs, connectors and planes and offers a userspace API to
list, get and set the property values.
Properties are identified by a name that uniquely defines the property
purpose, and store an associated value. For all property types except blob
properties the value is a 64-bit unsigned integer.
KMS differentiates between properties and property instances. Drivers
first create properties and then create and associate individual instances
of those properties to objects. A property can be instantiated multiple
times and associated with different objects. Values are stored in property
instances, and all other property information are stored in the propery
and shared between all instances of the property.
Every property is created with a type that influences how the KMS core
handles the property. Supported property types are
DRM_MODE_PROP_RANGERange properties report their minimum and maximum
admissible values. The KMS core verifies that values set by
application fit in that range.DRM_MODE_PROP_ENUMEnumerated properties take a numerical value that
ranges from 0 to the number of enumerated values defined by the
property minus one, and associate a free-formed string name to each
value. Applications can retrieve the list of defined value-name pairs
and use the numerical value to get and set property instance values.
DRM_MODE_PROP_BITMASKBitmask properties are enumeration properties that
additionally restrict all enumerated values to the 0..63 range.
Bitmask property instance values combine one or more of the
enumerated bits defined by the property.DRM_MODE_PROP_BLOBBlob properties store a binary blob without any format
restriction. The binary blobs are created as KMS standalone objects,
and blob property instance values store the ID of their associated
blob object.Blob properties are only used for the connector EDID property
and cannot be created by drivers.
To create a property drivers call one of the following functions depending
on the property type. All property creation functions take property flags
and name, as well as type-specific arguments.
struct drm_property *drm_property_create_range(struct drm_device *dev, int flags,
const char *name,
uint64_t min, uint64_t max);Create a range property with the given minimum and maximum
values.struct drm_property *drm_property_create_enum(struct drm_device *dev, int flags,
const char *name,
const struct drm_prop_enum_list *props,
int num_values);Create an enumerated property. The props
argument points to an array of num_values
value-name pairs.struct drm_property *drm_property_create_bitmask(struct drm_device *dev,
int flags, const char *name,
const struct drm_prop_enum_list *props,
int num_values);Create a bitmask property. The props
argument points to an array of num_values
value-name pairs.
Properties can additionally be created as immutable, in which case they
will be read-only for applications but can be modified by the driver. To
create an immutable property drivers must set the DRM_MODE_PROP_IMMUTABLE
flag at property creation time.
When no array of value-name pairs is readily available at property
creation time for enumerated or range properties, drivers can create
the property using the drm_property_create function
and manually add enumeration value-name pairs by calling the
drm_property_add_enum function. Care must be taken to
properly specify the property type through the flags
argument.
After creating properties drivers can attach property instances to CRTC,
connector and plane objects by calling the
drm_object_attach_property. The function takes a
pointer to the target object, a pointer to the previously created property
and an initial instance value.
Vertical Blanking
Vertical blanking plays a major role in graphics rendering. To achieve
tear-free display, users must synchronize page flips and/or rendering to
vertical blanking. The DRM API offers ioctls to perform page flips
synchronized to vertical blanking and wait for vertical blanking.
The DRM core handles most of the vertical blanking management logic, which
involves filtering out spurious interrupts, keeping race-free blanking
counters, coping with counter wrap-around and resets and keeping use
counts. It relies on the driver to generate vertical blanking interrupts
and optionally provide a hardware vertical blanking counter. Drivers must
implement the following operations.
int (*enable_vblank) (struct drm_device *dev, int crtc);
void (*disable_vblank) (struct drm_device *dev, int crtc);
Enable or disable vertical blanking interrupts for the given CRTC.
u32 (*get_vblank_counter) (struct drm_device *dev, int crtc);
Retrieve the value of the vertical blanking counter for the given
CRTC. If the hardware maintains a vertical blanking counter its value
should be returned. Otherwise drivers can use the
drm_vblank_count helper function to handle this
operation.
Drivers must initialize the vertical blanking handling core with a call to
drm_vblank_init in their
load operation. The function will set the struct
drm_devicevblank_disable_allowed field to 0. This will
keep vertical blanking interrupts enabled permanently until the first mode
set operation, where vblank_disable_allowed is
set to 1. The reason behind this is not clear. Drivers can set the field
to 1 after calling drm_vblank_init to make vertical
blanking interrupts dynamically managed from the beginning.
Vertical blanking interrupts can be enabled by the DRM core or by drivers
themselves (for instance to handle page flipping operations). The DRM core
maintains a vertical blanking use count to ensure that the interrupts are
not disabled while a user still needs them. To increment the use count,
drivers call drm_vblank_get. Upon return vertical
blanking interrupts are guaranteed to be enabled.
To decrement the use count drivers call
drm_vblank_put. Only when the use count drops to zero
will the DRM core disable the vertical blanking interrupts after a delay
by scheduling a timer. The delay is accessible through the vblankoffdelay
module parameter or the drm_vblank_offdelay global
variable and expressed in milliseconds. Its default value is 5000 ms.
When a vertical blanking interrupt occurs drivers only need to call the
drm_handle_vblank function to account for the
interrupt.
Resources allocated by drm_vblank_init must be freed
with a call to drm_vblank_cleanup in the driver
unload operation handler.
Open/Close, File Operations and IOCTLsOpen and Closeint (*firstopen) (struct drm_device *);
void (*lastclose) (struct drm_device *);
int (*open) (struct drm_device *, struct drm_file *);
void (*preclose) (struct drm_device *, struct drm_file *);
void (*postclose) (struct drm_device *, struct drm_file *);Open and close handlers. None of those methods are mandatory.
The firstopen method is called by the DRM core
for legacy UMS (User Mode Setting) drivers only when an application
opens a device that has no other opened file handle. UMS drivers can
implement it to acquire device resources. KMS drivers can't use the
method and must acquire resources in the load
method instead.
Similarly the lastclose method is called when
the last application holding a file handle opened on the device closes
it, for both UMS and KMS drivers. Additionally, the method is also
called at module unload time or, for hot-pluggable devices, when the
device is unplugged. The firstopen and
lastclose calls can thus be unbalanced.
The open method is called every time the device
is opened by an application. Drivers can allocate per-file private data
in this method and store them in the struct
drm_filedriver_priv
field. Note that the open method is called
before firstopen.
The close operation is split into preclose and
postclose methods. Drivers must stop and
cleanup all per-file operations in the preclose
method. For instance pending vertical blanking and page flip events must
be cancelled. No per-file operation is allowed on the file handle after
returning from the preclose method.
Finally the postclose method is called as the
last step of the close operation, right before calling the
lastclose method if no other open file handle
exists for the device. Drivers that have allocated per-file private data
in the open method should free it here.
The lastclose method should restore CRTC and
plane properties to default value, so that a subsequent open of the
device will not inherit state from the previous user. It can also be
used to execute delayed power switching state changes, e.g. in
conjunction with the vga-switcheroo infrastructure. Beyond that KMS
drivers should not do any further cleanup. Only legacy UMS drivers might
need to clean up device state so that the vga console or an independent
fbdev driver could take over.
File Operationsconst struct file_operations *fopsFile operations for the DRM device node.
Drivers must define the file operations structure that forms the DRM
userspace API entry point, even though most of those operations are
implemented in the DRM core. The open,
release and ioctl
operations are handled by
.owner = THIS_MODULE,
.open = drm_open,
.release = drm_release,
.unlocked_ioctl = drm_ioctl,
#ifdef CONFIG_COMPAT
.compat_ioctl = drm_compat_ioctl,
#endif
Drivers that implement private ioctls that requires 32/64bit
compatibility support must provide their own
compat_ioctl handler that processes private
ioctls and calls drm_compat_ioctl for core ioctls.
The read and poll
operations provide support for reading DRM events and polling them. They
are implemented by
.poll = drm_poll,
.read = drm_read,
.llseek = no_llseek,
The memory mapping implementation varies depending on how the driver
manages memory. Pre-GEM drivers will use drm_mmap,
while GEM-aware drivers will use drm_gem_mmap. See
.
.mmap = drm_gem_mmap,
No other file operation is supported by the DRM API.
IOCTLsstruct drm_ioctl_desc *ioctls;
int num_ioctls;Driver-specific ioctls descriptors table.
Driver-specific ioctls numbers start at DRM_COMMAND_BASE. The ioctls
descriptors table is indexed by the ioctl number offset from the base
value. Drivers can use the DRM_IOCTL_DEF_DRV() macro to initialize the
table entries.
DRM_IOCTL_DEF_DRV(ioctl, func, flags)ioctl is the ioctl name. Drivers must define
the DRM_##ioctl and DRM_IOCTL_##ioctl macros to the ioctl number
offset from DRM_COMMAND_BASE and the ioctl number respectively. The
first macro is private to the device while the second must be exposed
to userspace in a public header.
func is a pointer to the ioctl handler function
compatible with the drm_ioctl_t type.
typedef int drm_ioctl_t(struct drm_device *dev, void *data,
struct drm_file *file_priv);flags is a bitmask combination of the following
values. It restricts how the ioctl is allowed to be called.
DRM_AUTH - Only authenticated callers allowed
DRM_MASTER - The ioctl can only be called on the master file
handle
DRM_ROOT_ONLY - Only callers with the SYSADMIN capability allowed
DRM_CONTROL_ALLOW - The ioctl can only be called on a control
device
DRM_UNLOCKED - The ioctl handler will be called without locking
the DRM global mutex
Suspend/Resume
The DRM core provides some suspend/resume code, but drivers wanting full
suspend/resume support should provide save() and restore() functions.
These are called at suspend, hibernate, or resume time, and should perform
any state save or restore required by your device across suspend or
hibernate states.
int (*suspend) (struct drm_device *, pm_message_t state);
int (*resume) (struct drm_device *);
Those are legacy suspend and resume methods. New driver should use the
power management interface provided by their bus type (usually through
the struct device_driver dev_pm_ops) and set
these methods to NULL.
DMA services
This should cover how DMA mapping etc. is supported by the core.
These functions are deprecated and should not be used.
Userland interfaces
The DRM core exports several interfaces to applications,
generally intended to be used through corresponding libdrm
wrapper functions. In addition, drivers export device-specific
interfaces for use by userspace drivers & device-aware
applications through ioctls and sysfs files.
External interfaces include: memory mapping, context management,
DMA operations, AGP management, vblank control, fence
management, memory management, and output management.
Cover generic ioctls and sysfs layout here. We only need high-level
info, since man pages should cover the rest.
Render nodes
DRM core provides multiple character-devices for user-space to use.
Depending on which device is opened, user-space can perform a different
set of operations (mainly ioctls). The primary node is always created
and called card<num>. Additionally, a currently
unused control node, called controlD<num> is also
created. The primary node provides all legacy operations and
historically was the only interface used by userspace. With KMS, the
control node was introduced. However, the planned KMS control interface
has never been written and so the control node stays unused to date.
With the increased use of offscreen renderers and GPGPU applications,
clients no longer require running compositors or graphics servers to
make use of a GPU. But the DRM API required unprivileged clients to
authenticate to a DRM-Master prior to getting GPU access. To avoid this
step and to grant clients GPU access without authenticating, render
nodes were introduced. Render nodes solely serve render clients, that
is, no modesetting or privileged ioctls can be issued on render nodes.
Only non-global rendering commands are allowed. If a driver supports
render nodes, it must advertise it via the DRIVER_RENDER
DRM driver capability. If not supported, the primary node must be used
for render clients together with the legacy drmAuth authentication
procedure.
If a driver advertises render node support, DRM core will create a
separate render node called renderD<num>. There will
be one render node per device. No ioctls except PRIME-related ioctls
will be allowed on this node. Especially GEM_OPEN will be
explicitly prohibited. Render nodes are designed to avoid the
buffer-leaks, which occur if clients guess the flink names or mmap
offsets on the legacy interface. Additionally to this basic interface,
drivers must mark their driver-dependent render-only ioctls as
DRM_RENDER_ALLOW so render clients can use them. Driver
authors must be careful not to allow any privileged ioctls on render
nodes.
With render nodes, user-space can now control access to the render node
via basic file-system access-modes. A running graphics server which
authenticates clients on the privileged primary/legacy node is no longer
required. Instead, a client can open the render node and is immediately
granted GPU access. Communication between clients (or servers) is done
via PRIME. FLINK from render node to legacy node is not supported. New
clients must not use the insecure FLINK interface.
Besides dropping all modeset/global ioctls, render nodes also drop the
DRM-Master concept. There is no reason to associate render clients with
a DRM-Master as they are independent of any graphics server. Besides,
they must work without any running master, anyway.
Drivers must be able to run without a master object if they support
render nodes. If, on the other hand, a driver requires shared state
between clients which is visible to user-space and accessible beyond
open-file boundaries, they cannot support render nodes.
VBlank event handling
The DRM core exposes two vertical blank related ioctls:
DRM_IOCTL_WAIT_VBLANK
This takes a struct drm_wait_vblank structure as its argument,
and it is used to block or request a signal when a specified
vblank event occurs.
DRM_IOCTL_MODESET_CTL
This should be called by application level drivers before and
after mode setting, since on many devices the vertical blank
counter is reset at that time. Internally, the DRM snapshots
the last vblank count when the ioctl is called with the
_DRM_PRE_MODESET command, so that the counter won't go backwards
(which is dealt with when _DRM_POST_MODESET is used).
DRM Drivers
This second part of the DRM Developer's Guide documents driver code,
implementation details and also all the driver-specific userspace
interfaces. Especially since all hardware-acceleration interfaces to
userspace are driver specific for efficiency and other reasons these
interfaces can be rather substantial. Hence every driver has its own
chapter.
drm/i915 Intel GFX Driver
The drm/i915 driver supports all (with the exception of some very early
models) integrated GFX chipsets with both Intel display and rendering
blocks. This excludes a set of SoC platforms with an SGX rendering unit,
those have basic support through the gma500 drm driver.
Display Hardware Handling
This section covers everything related to the display hardware including
the mode setting infrastructure, plane, sprite and cursor handling and
display, output probing and related topics.
Mode Setting Infrastructure
The i915 driver is thus far the only DRM driver which doesn't use the
common DRM helper code to implement mode setting sequences. Thus it
has its own tailor-made infrastructure for executing a display
configuration change.
Plane Configuration
This section covers plane configuration and composition with the
primary plane, sprites, cursors and overlays. This includes the
infrastructure to do atomic vsync'ed updates of all this state and
also tightly coupled topics like watermark setup and computation,
framebuffer compression and panel self refresh.
Output Probing
This section covers output probing and related infrastructure like the
hotplug interrupt storm detection and mitigation code. Note that the
i915 driver still uses most of the common DRM helper code for output
probing, so those sections fully apply.
Memory Management and Command Submission
This sections covers all things related to the GEM implementation in the
i915 driver.