xref: /openbmc/linux/Documentation/gpu/drm-kms.rst (revision 8e74a48d)
1=========================
2Kernel Mode Setting (KMS)
3=========================
4
5Drivers must initialize the mode setting core by calling
6drmm_mode_config_init() on the DRM device. The function
7initializes the :c:type:`struct drm_device <drm_device>`
8mode_config field and never fails. Once done, mode configuration must
9be setup by initializing the following fields.
10
11-  int min_width, min_height; int max_width, max_height;
12   Minimum and maximum width and height of the frame buffers in pixel
13   units.
14
15-  struct drm_mode_config_funcs \*funcs;
16   Mode setting functions.
17
18Overview
19========
20
21.. kernel-render:: DOT
22   :alt: KMS Display Pipeline
23   :caption: KMS Display Pipeline Overview
24
25   digraph "KMS" {
26      node [shape=box]
27
28      subgraph cluster_static {
29          style=dashed
30          label="Static Objects"
31
32          node [bgcolor=grey style=filled]
33          "drm_plane A" -> "drm_crtc"
34          "drm_plane B" -> "drm_crtc"
35          "drm_crtc" -> "drm_encoder A"
36          "drm_crtc" -> "drm_encoder B"
37      }
38
39      subgraph cluster_user_created {
40          style=dashed
41          label="Userspace-Created"
42
43          node [shape=oval]
44          "drm_framebuffer 1" -> "drm_plane A"
45          "drm_framebuffer 2" -> "drm_plane B"
46      }
47
48      subgraph cluster_connector {
49          style=dashed
50          label="Hotpluggable"
51
52          "drm_encoder A" -> "drm_connector A"
53          "drm_encoder B" -> "drm_connector B"
54      }
55   }
56
57The basic object structure KMS presents to userspace is fairly simple.
58Framebuffers (represented by :c:type:`struct drm_framebuffer <drm_framebuffer>`,
59see `Frame Buffer Abstraction`_) feed into planes. Planes are represented by
60:c:type:`struct drm_plane <drm_plane>`, see `Plane Abstraction`_ for more
61details. One or more (or even no) planes feed their pixel data into a CRTC
62(represented by :c:type:`struct drm_crtc <drm_crtc>`, see `CRTC Abstraction`_)
63for blending. The precise blending step is explained in more detail in `Plane
64Composition Properties`_ and related chapters.
65
66For the output routing the first step is encoders (represented by
67:c:type:`struct drm_encoder <drm_encoder>`, see `Encoder Abstraction`_). Those
68are really just internal artifacts of the helper libraries used to implement KMS
69drivers. Besides that they make it unecessarily more complicated for userspace
70to figure out which connections between a CRTC and a connector are possible, and
71what kind of cloning is supported, they serve no purpose in the userspace API.
72Unfortunately encoders have been exposed to userspace, hence can't remove them
73at this point.  Futhermore the exposed restrictions are often wrongly set by
74drivers, and in many cases not powerful enough to express the real restrictions.
75A CRTC can be connected to multiple encoders, and for an active CRTC there must
76be at least one encoder.
77
78The final, and real, endpoint in the display chain is the connector (represented
79by :c:type:`struct drm_connector <drm_connector>`, see `Connector
80Abstraction`_). Connectors can have different possible encoders, but the kernel
81driver selects which encoder to use for each connector. The use case is DVI,
82which could switch between an analog and a digital encoder. Encoders can also
83drive multiple different connectors. There is exactly one active connector for
84every active encoder.
85
86Internally the output pipeline is a bit more complex and matches today's
87hardware more closely:
88
89.. kernel-render:: DOT
90   :alt: KMS Output Pipeline
91   :caption: KMS Output Pipeline
92
93   digraph "Output Pipeline" {
94      node [shape=box]
95
96      subgraph {
97          "drm_crtc" [bgcolor=grey style=filled]
98      }
99
100      subgraph cluster_internal {
101          style=dashed
102          label="Internal Pipeline"
103          {
104              node [bgcolor=grey style=filled]
105              "drm_encoder A";
106              "drm_encoder B";
107              "drm_encoder C";
108          }
109
110          {
111              node [bgcolor=grey style=filled]
112              "drm_encoder B" -> "drm_bridge B"
113              "drm_encoder C" -> "drm_bridge C1"
114              "drm_bridge C1" -> "drm_bridge C2";
115          }
116      }
117
118      "drm_crtc" -> "drm_encoder A"
119      "drm_crtc" -> "drm_encoder B"
120      "drm_crtc" -> "drm_encoder C"
121
122
123      subgraph cluster_output {
124          style=dashed
125          label="Outputs"
126
127          "drm_encoder A" -> "drm_connector A";
128          "drm_bridge B" -> "drm_connector B";
129          "drm_bridge C2" -> "drm_connector C";
130
131          "drm_panel"
132      }
133   }
134
135Internally two additional helper objects come into play. First, to be able to
136share code for encoders (sometimes on the same SoC, sometimes off-chip) one or
137more :ref:`drm_bridges` (represented by :c:type:`struct drm_bridge
138<drm_bridge>`) can be linked to an encoder. This link is static and cannot be
139changed, which means the cross-bar (if there is any) needs to be mapped between
140the CRTC and any encoders. Often for drivers with bridges there's no code left
141at the encoder level. Atomic drivers can leave out all the encoder callbacks to
142essentially only leave a dummy routing object behind, which is needed for
143backwards compatibility since encoders are exposed to userspace.
144
145The second object is for panels, represented by :c:type:`struct drm_panel
146<drm_panel>`, see :ref:`drm_panel_helper`. Panels do not have a fixed binding
147point, but are generally linked to the driver private structure that embeds
148:c:type:`struct drm_connector <drm_connector>`.
149
150Note that currently the bridge chaining and interactions with connectors and
151panels are still in-flux and not really fully sorted out yet.
152
153KMS Core Structures and Functions
154=================================
155
156.. kernel-doc:: include/drm/drm_mode_config.h
157   :internal:
158
159.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_mode_config.c
160   :export:
161
162.. _kms_base_object_abstraction:
163
164Modeset Base Object Abstraction
165===============================
166
167.. kernel-render:: DOT
168   :alt: Mode Objects and Properties
169   :caption: Mode Objects and Properties
170
171   digraph {
172      node [shape=box]
173
174      "drm_property A" -> "drm_mode_object A"
175      "drm_property A" -> "drm_mode_object B"
176      "drm_property B" -> "drm_mode_object A"
177   }
178
179The base structure for all KMS objects is :c:type:`struct drm_mode_object
180<drm_mode_object>`. One of the base services it provides is tracking properties,
181which are especially important for the atomic IOCTL (see `Atomic Mode
182Setting`_). The somewhat surprising part here is that properties are not
183directly instantiated on each object, but free-standing mode objects themselves,
184represented by :c:type:`struct drm_property <drm_property>`, which only specify
185the type and value range of a property. Any given property can be attached
186multiple times to different objects using drm_object_attach_property().
187
188.. kernel-doc:: include/drm/drm_mode_object.h
189   :internal:
190
191.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_mode_object.c
192   :export:
193
194Atomic Mode Setting
195===================
196
197
198.. kernel-render:: DOT
199   :alt: Mode Objects and Properties
200   :caption: Mode Objects and Properties
201
202   digraph {
203      node [shape=box]
204
205      subgraph cluster_state {
206          style=dashed
207          label="Free-standing state"
208
209          "drm_atomic_state" -> "duplicated drm_plane_state A"
210          "drm_atomic_state" -> "duplicated drm_plane_state B"
211          "drm_atomic_state" -> "duplicated drm_crtc_state"
212          "drm_atomic_state" -> "duplicated drm_connector_state"
213          "drm_atomic_state" -> "duplicated driver private state"
214      }
215
216      subgraph cluster_current {
217          style=dashed
218          label="Current state"
219
220          "drm_device" -> "drm_plane A"
221          "drm_device" -> "drm_plane B"
222          "drm_device" -> "drm_crtc"
223          "drm_device" -> "drm_connector"
224          "drm_device" -> "driver private object"
225
226          "drm_plane A" -> "drm_plane_state A"
227          "drm_plane B" -> "drm_plane_state B"
228          "drm_crtc" -> "drm_crtc_state"
229          "drm_connector" -> "drm_connector_state"
230          "driver private object" -> "driver private state"
231      }
232
233      "drm_atomic_state" -> "drm_device" [label="atomic_commit"]
234      "duplicated drm_plane_state A" -> "drm_device"[style=invis]
235   }
236
237Atomic provides transactional modeset (including planes) updates, but a
238bit differently from the usual transactional approach of try-commit and
239rollback:
240
241- Firstly, no hardware changes are allowed when the commit would fail. This
242  allows us to implement the DRM_MODE_ATOMIC_TEST_ONLY mode, which allows
243  userspace to explore whether certain configurations would work or not.
244
245- This would still allow setting and rollback of just the software state,
246  simplifying conversion of existing drivers. But auditing drivers for
247  correctness of the atomic_check code becomes really hard with that: Rolling
248  back changes in data structures all over the place is hard to get right.
249
250- Lastly, for backwards compatibility and to support all use-cases, atomic
251  updates need to be incremental and be able to execute in parallel. Hardware
252  doesn't always allow it, but where possible plane updates on different CRTCs
253  should not interfere, and not get stalled due to output routing changing on
254  different CRTCs.
255
256Taken all together there's two consequences for the atomic design:
257
258- The overall state is split up into per-object state structures:
259  :c:type:`struct drm_plane_state <drm_plane_state>` for planes, :c:type:`struct
260  drm_crtc_state <drm_crtc_state>` for CRTCs and :c:type:`struct
261  drm_connector_state <drm_connector_state>` for connectors. These are the only
262  objects with userspace-visible and settable state. For internal state drivers
263  can subclass these structures through embeddeding, or add entirely new state
264  structures for their globally shared hardware functions, see :c:type:`struct
265  drm_private_state<drm_private_state>`.
266
267- An atomic update is assembled and validated as an entirely free-standing pile
268  of structures within the :c:type:`drm_atomic_state <drm_atomic_state>`
269  container. Driver private state structures are also tracked in the same
270  structure; see the next chapter.  Only when a state is committed is it applied
271  to the driver and modeset objects. This way rolling back an update boils down
272  to releasing memory and unreferencing objects like framebuffers.
273
274Locking of atomic state structures is internally using :c:type:`struct
275drm_modeset_lock <drm_modeset_lock>`. As a general rule the locking shouldn't be
276exposed to drivers, instead the right locks should be automatically acquired by
277any function that duplicates or peeks into a state, like e.g.
278drm_atomic_get_crtc_state().  Locking only protects the software data
279structure, ordering of committing state changes to hardware is sequenced using
280:c:type:`struct drm_crtc_commit <drm_crtc_commit>`.
281
282Read on in this chapter, and also in :ref:`drm_atomic_helper` for more detailed
283coverage of specific topics.
284
285Handling Driver Private State
286-----------------------------
287
288.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_atomic.c
289   :doc: handling driver private state
290
291Atomic Mode Setting Function Reference
292--------------------------------------
293
294.. kernel-doc:: include/drm/drm_atomic.h
295   :internal:
296
297.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_atomic.c
298   :export:
299
300Atomic Mode Setting IOCTL and UAPI Functions
301--------------------------------------------
302
303.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_atomic_uapi.c
304   :doc: overview
305
306.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_atomic_uapi.c
307   :export:
308
309CRTC Abstraction
310================
311
312.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_crtc.c
313   :doc: overview
314
315CRTC Functions Reference
316--------------------------------
317
318.. kernel-doc:: include/drm/drm_crtc.h
319   :internal:
320
321.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_crtc.c
322   :export:
323
324Color Management Functions Reference
325------------------------------------
326
327.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_color_mgmt.c
328   :export:
329
330.. kernel-doc:: include/drm/drm_color_mgmt.h
331   :internal:
332
333Frame Buffer Abstraction
334========================
335
336.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_framebuffer.c
337   :doc: overview
338
339Frame Buffer Functions Reference
340--------------------------------
341
342.. kernel-doc:: include/drm/drm_framebuffer.h
343   :internal:
344
345.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_framebuffer.c
346   :export:
347
348DRM Format Handling
349===================
350
351.. kernel-doc:: include/uapi/drm/drm_fourcc.h
352   :doc: overview
353
354Format Functions Reference
355--------------------------
356
357.. kernel-doc:: include/drm/drm_fourcc.h
358   :internal:
359
360.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_fourcc.c
361   :export:
362
363Dumb Buffer Objects
364===================
365
366.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_dumb_buffers.c
367   :doc: overview
368
369Plane Abstraction
370=================
371
372.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_plane.c
373   :doc: overview
374
375Plane Functions Reference
376-------------------------
377
378.. kernel-doc:: include/drm/drm_plane.h
379   :internal:
380
381.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_plane.c
382   :export:
383
384Plane Composition Functions Reference
385-------------------------------------
386
387.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_blend.c
388   :export:
389
390Plane Damage Tracking Functions Reference
391-----------------------------------------
392
393.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_damage_helper.c
394   :export:
395
396.. kernel-doc:: include/drm/drm_damage_helper.h
397   :internal:
398
399Display Modes Function Reference
400================================
401
402.. kernel-doc:: include/drm/drm_modes.h
403   :internal:
404
405.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_modes.c
406   :export:
407
408Connector Abstraction
409=====================
410
411.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_connector.c
412   :doc: overview
413
414Connector Functions Reference
415-----------------------------
416
417.. kernel-doc:: include/drm/drm_connector.h
418   :internal:
419
420.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_connector.c
421   :export:
422
423Writeback Connectors
424--------------------
425
426.. kernel-doc:: include/drm/drm_writeback.h
427  :internal:
428
429.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_writeback.c
430  :doc: overview
431
432.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_writeback.c
433  :export:
434
435Encoder Abstraction
436===================
437
438.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_encoder.c
439   :doc: overview
440
441Encoder Functions Reference
442---------------------------
443
444.. kernel-doc:: include/drm/drm_encoder.h
445   :internal:
446
447.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_encoder.c
448   :export:
449
450KMS Locking
451===========
452
453.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_modeset_lock.c
454   :doc: kms locking
455
456.. kernel-doc:: include/drm/drm_modeset_lock.h
457   :internal:
458
459.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_modeset_lock.c
460   :export:
461
462KMS Properties
463==============
464
465This section of the documentation is primarily aimed at user-space developers.
466For the driver APIs, see the other sections.
467
468Requirements
469------------
470
471KMS drivers might need to add extra properties to support new features. Each
472new property introduced in a driver needs to meet a few requirements, in
473addition to the one mentioned above:
474
475* It must be standardized, documenting:
476
477  * The full, exact, name string;
478  * If the property is an enum, all the valid value name strings;
479  * What values are accepted, and what these values mean;
480  * What the property does and how it can be used;
481  * How the property might interact with other, existing properties.
482
483* It must provide a generic helper in the core code to register that
484  property on the object it attaches to.
485
486* Its content must be decoded by the core and provided in the object's
487  associated state structure. That includes anything drivers might want
488  to precompute, like struct drm_clip_rect for planes.
489
490* Its initial state must match the behavior prior to the property
491  introduction. This might be a fixed value matching what the hardware
492  does, or it may be inherited from the state the firmware left the
493  system in during boot.
494
495* An IGT test must be submitted where reasonable.
496
497Property Types and Blob Property Support
498----------------------------------------
499
500.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_property.c
501   :doc: overview
502
503.. kernel-doc:: include/drm/drm_property.h
504   :internal:
505
506.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_property.c
507   :export:
508
509.. _standard_connector_properties:
510
511Standard Connector Properties
512-----------------------------
513
514.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_connector.c
515   :doc: standard connector properties
516
517HDMI Specific Connector Properties
518----------------------------------
519
520.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_connector.c
521   :doc: HDMI connector properties
522
523Standard CRTC Properties
524------------------------
525
526.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_crtc.c
527   :doc: standard CRTC properties
528
529Standard Plane Properties
530-------------------------
531
532.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_plane.c
533   :doc: standard plane properties
534
535Plane Composition Properties
536----------------------------
537
538.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_blend.c
539   :doc: overview
540
541Damage Tracking Properties
542--------------------------
543
544.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_plane.c
545   :doc: damage tracking
546
547Color Management Properties
548---------------------------
549
550.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_color_mgmt.c
551   :doc: overview
552
553Tile Group Property
554-------------------
555
556.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_connector.c
557   :doc: Tile group
558
559Explicit Fencing Properties
560---------------------------
561
562.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_atomic_uapi.c
563   :doc: explicit fencing properties
564
565
566Variable Refresh Properties
567---------------------------
568
569.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_connector.c
570   :doc: Variable refresh properties
571
572Existing KMS Properties
573-----------------------
574
575The following table gives description of drm properties exposed by various
576modules/drivers. Because this table is very unwieldy, do not add any new
577properties here. Instead document them in a section above.
578
579.. csv-table::
580   :header-rows: 1
581   :file: kms-properties.csv
582
583Vertical Blanking
584=================
585
586.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_vblank.c
587   :doc: vblank handling
588
589Vertical Blanking and Interrupt Handling Functions Reference
590------------------------------------------------------------
591
592.. kernel-doc:: include/drm/drm_vblank.h
593   :internal:
594
595.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_vblank.c
596   :export:
597
598Vertical Blank Work
599===================
600
601.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_vblank_work.c
602   :doc: vblank works
603
604Vertical Blank Work Functions Reference
605---------------------------------------
606
607.. kernel-doc:: include/drm/drm_vblank_work.h
608   :internal:
609
610.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_vblank_work.c
611   :export:
612