1===================== 2DRM Memory Management 3===================== 4 5Modern Linux systems require large amount of graphics memory to store 6frame buffers, textures, vertices and other graphics-related data. Given 7the very dynamic nature of many of that data, managing graphics memory 8efficiently is thus crucial for the graphics stack and plays a central 9role in the DRM infrastructure. 10 11The DRM core includes two memory managers, namely Translation Table Maps 12(TTM) and Graphics Execution Manager (GEM). TTM was the first DRM memory 13manager to be developed and tried to be a one-size-fits-them all 14solution. It provides a single userspace API to accommodate the need of 15all hardware, supporting both Unified Memory Architecture (UMA) devices 16and devices with dedicated video RAM (i.e. most discrete video cards). 17This resulted in a large, complex piece of code that turned out to be 18hard to use for driver development. 19 20GEM started as an Intel-sponsored project in reaction to TTM's 21complexity. Its design philosophy is completely different: instead of 22providing a solution to every graphics memory-related problems, GEM 23identified common code between drivers and created a support library to 24share it. GEM has simpler initialization and execution requirements than 25TTM, but has no video RAM management capabilities and is thus limited to 26UMA devices. 27 28The Translation Table Manager (TTM) 29=================================== 30 31TTM design background and information belongs here. 32 33TTM initialization 34------------------ 35 36 **Warning** 37 This section is outdated. 38 39Drivers wishing to support TTM must pass a filled :c:type:`ttm_bo_driver 40<ttm_bo_driver>` structure to ttm_bo_device_init, together with an 41initialized global reference to the memory manager. The ttm_bo_driver 42structure contains several fields with function pointers for 43initializing the TTM, allocating and freeing memory, waiting for command 44completion and fence synchronization, and memory migration. 45 46The :c:type:`struct drm_global_reference <drm_global_reference>` is made 47up of several fields: 48 49.. code-block:: c 50 51 struct drm_global_reference { 52 enum ttm_global_types global_type; 53 size_t size; 54 void *object; 55 int (*init) (struct drm_global_reference *); 56 void (*release) (struct drm_global_reference *); 57 }; 58 59 60There should be one global reference structure for your memory manager 61as a whole, and there will be others for each object created by the 62memory manager at runtime. Your global TTM should have a type of 63TTM_GLOBAL_TTM_MEM. The size field for the global object should be 64sizeof(struct ttm_mem_global), and the init and release hooks should 65point at your driver-specific init and release routines, which probably 66eventually call ttm_mem_global_init and ttm_mem_global_release, 67respectively. 68 69Once your global TTM accounting structure is set up and initialized by 70calling ttm_global_item_ref() on it, you need to create a buffer 71object TTM to provide a pool for buffer object allocation by clients and 72the kernel itself. The type of this object should be 73TTM_GLOBAL_TTM_BO, and its size should be sizeof(struct 74ttm_bo_global). Again, driver-specific init and release functions may 75be provided, likely eventually calling ttm_bo_global_init() and 76ttm_bo_global_release(), respectively. Also, like the previous 77object, ttm_global_item_ref() is used to create an initial reference 78count for the TTM, which will call your initialization function. 79 80See the radeon_ttm.c file for an example of usage. 81 82.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_global.c 83 :export: 84 85 86The Graphics Execution Manager (GEM) 87==================================== 88 89The GEM design approach has resulted in a memory manager that doesn't 90provide full coverage of all (or even all common) use cases in its 91userspace or kernel API. GEM exposes a set of standard memory-related 92operations to userspace and a set of helper functions to drivers, and 93let drivers implement hardware-specific operations with their own 94private API. 95 96The GEM userspace API is described in the `GEM - the Graphics Execution 97Manager <http://lwn.net/Articles/283798/>`__ article on LWN. While 98slightly outdated, the document provides a good overview of the GEM API 99principles. Buffer allocation and read and write operations, described 100as part of the common GEM API, are currently implemented using 101driver-specific ioctls. 102 103GEM is data-agnostic. It manages abstract buffer objects without knowing 104what individual buffers contain. APIs that require knowledge of buffer 105contents or purpose, such as buffer allocation or synchronization 106primitives, are thus outside of the scope of GEM and must be implemented 107using driver-specific ioctls. 108 109On a fundamental level, GEM involves several operations: 110 111- Memory allocation and freeing 112- Command execution 113- Aperture management at command execution time 114 115Buffer object allocation is relatively straightforward and largely 116provided by Linux's shmem layer, which provides memory to back each 117object. 118 119Device-specific operations, such as command execution, pinning, buffer 120read & write, mapping, and domain ownership transfers are left to 121driver-specific ioctls. 122 123GEM Initialization 124------------------ 125 126Drivers that use GEM must set the DRIVER_GEM bit in the struct 127:c:type:`struct drm_driver <drm_driver>` driver_features 128field. The DRM core will then automatically initialize the GEM core 129before calling the load operation. Behind the scene, this will create a 130DRM Memory Manager object which provides an address space pool for 131object allocation. 132 133In a KMS configuration, drivers need to allocate and initialize a 134command ring buffer following core GEM initialization if required by the 135hardware. UMA devices usually have what is called a "stolen" memory 136region, which provides space for the initial framebuffer and large, 137contiguous memory regions required by the device. This space is 138typically not managed by GEM, and must be initialized separately into 139its own DRM MM object. 140 141GEM Objects Creation 142-------------------- 143 144GEM splits creation of GEM objects and allocation of the memory that 145backs them in two distinct operations. 146 147GEM objects are represented by an instance of struct :c:type:`struct 148drm_gem_object <drm_gem_object>`. Drivers usually need to 149extend GEM objects with private information and thus create a 150driver-specific GEM object structure type that embeds an instance of 151struct :c:type:`struct drm_gem_object <drm_gem_object>`. 152 153To create a GEM object, a driver allocates memory for an instance of its 154specific GEM object type and initializes the embedded struct 155:c:type:`struct drm_gem_object <drm_gem_object>` with a call 156to :c:func:`drm_gem_object_init()`. The function takes a pointer 157to the DRM device, a pointer to the GEM object and the buffer object 158size in bytes. 159 160GEM uses shmem to allocate anonymous pageable memory. 161:c:func:`drm_gem_object_init()` will create an shmfs file of the 162requested size and store it into the struct :c:type:`struct 163drm_gem_object <drm_gem_object>` filp field. The memory is 164used as either main storage for the object when the graphics hardware 165uses system memory directly or as a backing store otherwise. 166 167Drivers are responsible for the actual physical pages allocation by 168calling :c:func:`shmem_read_mapping_page_gfp()` for each page. 169Note that they can decide to allocate pages when initializing the GEM 170object, or to delay allocation until the memory is needed (for instance 171when a page fault occurs as a result of a userspace memory access or 172when the driver needs to start a DMA transfer involving the memory). 173 174Anonymous pageable memory allocation is not always desired, for instance 175when the hardware requires physically contiguous system memory as is 176often the case in embedded devices. Drivers can create GEM objects with 177no shmfs backing (called private GEM objects) by initializing them with 178a call to :c:func:`drm_gem_private_object_init()` instead of 179:c:func:`drm_gem_object_init()`. Storage for private GEM objects 180must be managed by drivers. 181 182GEM Objects Lifetime 183-------------------- 184 185All GEM objects are reference-counted by the GEM core. References can be 186acquired and release by :c:func:`calling drm_gem_object_get()` and 187:c:func:`drm_gem_object_put()` respectively. The caller must hold the 188:c:type:`struct drm_device <drm_device>` struct_mutex lock when calling 189:c:func:`drm_gem_object_get()`. As a convenience, GEM provides 190:c:func:`drm_gem_object_put_unlocked()` functions that can be called without 191holding the lock. 192 193When the last reference to a GEM object is released the GEM core calls 194the :c:type:`struct drm_driver <drm_driver>` gem_free_object 195operation. That operation is mandatory for GEM-enabled drivers and must 196free the GEM object and all associated resources. 197 198void (\*gem_free_object) (struct drm_gem_object \*obj); Drivers are 199responsible for freeing all GEM object resources. This includes the 200resources created by the GEM core, which need to be released with 201:c:func:`drm_gem_object_release()`. 202 203GEM Objects Naming 204------------------ 205 206Communication between userspace and the kernel refers to GEM objects 207using local handles, global names or, more recently, file descriptors. 208All of those are 32-bit integer values; the usual Linux kernel limits 209apply to the file descriptors. 210 211GEM handles are local to a DRM file. Applications get a handle to a GEM 212object through a driver-specific ioctl, and can use that handle to refer 213to the GEM object in other standard or driver-specific ioctls. Closing a 214DRM file handle frees all its GEM handles and dereferences the 215associated GEM objects. 216 217To create a handle for a GEM object drivers call 218:c:func:`drm_gem_handle_create()`. The function takes a pointer 219to the DRM file and the GEM object and returns a locally unique handle. 220When the handle is no longer needed drivers delete it with a call to 221:c:func:`drm_gem_handle_delete()`. Finally the GEM object 222associated with a handle can be retrieved by a call to 223:c:func:`drm_gem_object_lookup()`. 224 225Handles don't take ownership of GEM objects, they only take a reference 226to the object that will be dropped when the handle is destroyed. To 227avoid leaking GEM objects, drivers must make sure they drop the 228reference(s) they own (such as the initial reference taken at object 229creation time) as appropriate, without any special consideration for the 230handle. For example, in the particular case of combined GEM object and 231handle creation in the implementation of the dumb_create operation, 232drivers must drop the initial reference to the GEM object before 233returning the handle. 234 235GEM names are similar in purpose to handles but are not local to DRM 236files. They can be passed between processes to reference a GEM object 237globally. Names can't be used directly to refer to objects in the DRM 238API, applications must convert handles to names and names to handles 239using the DRM_IOCTL_GEM_FLINK and DRM_IOCTL_GEM_OPEN ioctls 240respectively. The conversion is handled by the DRM core without any 241driver-specific support. 242 243GEM also supports buffer sharing with dma-buf file descriptors through 244PRIME. GEM-based drivers must use the provided helpers functions to 245implement the exporting and importing correctly. See ?. Since sharing 246file descriptors is inherently more secure than the easily guessable and 247global GEM names it is the preferred buffer sharing mechanism. Sharing 248buffers through GEM names is only supported for legacy userspace. 249Furthermore PRIME also allows cross-device buffer sharing since it is 250based on dma-bufs. 251 252GEM Objects Mapping 253------------------- 254 255Because mapping operations are fairly heavyweight GEM favours 256read/write-like access to buffers, implemented through driver-specific 257ioctls, over mapping buffers to userspace. However, when random access 258to the buffer is needed (to perform software rendering for instance), 259direct access to the object can be more efficient. 260 261The mmap system call can't be used directly to map GEM objects, as they 262don't have their own file handle. Two alternative methods currently 263co-exist to map GEM objects to userspace. The first method uses a 264driver-specific ioctl to perform the mapping operation, calling 265:c:func:`do_mmap()` under the hood. This is often considered 266dubious, seems to be discouraged for new GEM-enabled drivers, and will 267thus not be described here. 268 269The second method uses the mmap system call on the DRM file handle. void 270\*mmap(void \*addr, size_t length, int prot, int flags, int fd, off_t 271offset); DRM identifies the GEM object to be mapped by a fake offset 272passed through the mmap offset argument. Prior to being mapped, a GEM 273object must thus be associated with a fake offset. To do so, drivers 274must call :c:func:`drm_gem_create_mmap_offset()` on the object. 275 276Once allocated, the fake offset value must be passed to the application 277in a driver-specific way and can then be used as the mmap offset 278argument. 279 280The GEM core provides a helper method :c:func:`drm_gem_mmap()` to 281handle object mapping. The method can be set directly as the mmap file 282operation handler. It will look up the GEM object based on the offset 283value and set the VMA operations to the :c:type:`struct drm_driver 284<drm_driver>` gem_vm_ops field. Note that 285:c:func:`drm_gem_mmap()` doesn't map memory to userspace, but 286relies on the driver-provided fault handler to map pages individually. 287 288To use :c:func:`drm_gem_mmap()`, drivers must fill the struct 289:c:type:`struct drm_driver <drm_driver>` gem_vm_ops field 290with a pointer to VM operations. 291 292The VM operations is a :c:type:`struct vm_operations_struct <vm_operations_struct>` 293made up of several fields, the more interesting ones being: 294 295.. code-block:: c 296 297 struct vm_operations_struct { 298 void (*open)(struct vm_area_struct * area); 299 void (*close)(struct vm_area_struct * area); 300 int (*fault)(struct vm_fault *vmf); 301 }; 302 303 304The open and close operations must update the GEM object reference 305count. Drivers can use the :c:func:`drm_gem_vm_open()` and 306:c:func:`drm_gem_vm_close()` helper functions directly as open 307and close handlers. 308 309The fault operation handler is responsible for mapping individual pages 310to userspace when a page fault occurs. Depending on the memory 311allocation scheme, drivers can allocate pages at fault time, or can 312decide to allocate memory for the GEM object at the time the object is 313created. 314 315Drivers that want to map the GEM object upfront instead of handling page 316faults can implement their own mmap file operation handler. 317 318For platforms without MMU the GEM core provides a helper method 319:c:func:`drm_gem_cma_get_unmapped_area`. The mmap() routines will call 320this to get a proposed address for the mapping. 321 322To use :c:func:`drm_gem_cma_get_unmapped_area`, drivers must fill the 323struct :c:type:`struct file_operations <file_operations>` get_unmapped_area 324field with a pointer on :c:func:`drm_gem_cma_get_unmapped_area`. 325 326More detailed information about get_unmapped_area can be found in 327Documentation/nommu-mmap.txt 328 329Memory Coherency 330---------------- 331 332When mapped to the device or used in a command buffer, backing pages for 333an object are flushed to memory and marked write combined so as to be 334coherent with the GPU. Likewise, if the CPU accesses an object after the 335GPU has finished rendering to the object, then the object must be made 336coherent with the CPU's view of memory, usually involving GPU cache 337flushing of various kinds. This core CPU<->GPU coherency management is 338provided by a device-specific ioctl, which evaluates an object's current 339domain and performs any necessary flushing or synchronization to put the 340object into the desired coherency domain (note that the object may be 341busy, i.e. an active render target; in that case, setting the domain 342blocks the client and waits for rendering to complete before performing 343any necessary flushing operations). 344 345Command Execution 346----------------- 347 348Perhaps the most important GEM function for GPU devices is providing a 349command execution interface to clients. Client programs construct 350command buffers containing references to previously allocated memory 351objects, and then submit them to GEM. At that point, GEM takes care to 352bind all the objects into the GTT, execute the buffer, and provide 353necessary synchronization between clients accessing the same buffers. 354This often involves evicting some objects from the GTT and re-binding 355others (a fairly expensive operation), and providing relocation support 356which hides fixed GTT offsets from clients. Clients must take care not 357to submit command buffers that reference more objects than can fit in 358the GTT; otherwise, GEM will reject them and no rendering will occur. 359Similarly, if several objects in the buffer require fence registers to 360be allocated for correct rendering (e.g. 2D blits on pre-965 chips), 361care must be taken not to require more fence registers than are 362available to the client. Such resource management should be abstracted 363from the client in libdrm. 364 365GEM Function Reference 366---------------------- 367 368.. kernel-doc:: include/drm/drm_gem.h 369 :internal: 370 371.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_gem.c 372 :export: 373 374GEM CMA Helper Functions Reference 375---------------------------------- 376 377.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_gem_cma_helper.c 378 :doc: cma helpers 379 380.. kernel-doc:: include/drm/drm_gem_cma_helper.h 381 :internal: 382 383.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_gem_cma_helper.c 384 :export: 385 386VMA Offset Manager 387================== 388 389.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_vma_manager.c 390 :doc: vma offset manager 391 392.. kernel-doc:: include/drm/drm_vma_manager.h 393 :internal: 394 395.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_vma_manager.c 396 :export: 397 398PRIME Buffer Sharing 399==================== 400 401PRIME is the cross device buffer sharing framework in drm, originally 402created for the OPTIMUS range of multi-gpu platforms. To userspace PRIME 403buffers are dma-buf based file descriptors. 404 405Overview and Driver Interface 406----------------------------- 407 408Similar to GEM global names, PRIME file descriptors are also used to 409share buffer objects across processes. They offer additional security: 410as file descriptors must be explicitly sent over UNIX domain sockets to 411be shared between applications, they can't be guessed like the globally 412unique GEM names. 413 414Drivers that support the PRIME API must set the DRIVER_PRIME bit in the 415struct :c:type:`struct drm_driver <drm_driver>` 416driver_features field, and implement the prime_handle_to_fd and 417prime_fd_to_handle operations. 418 419int (\*prime_handle_to_fd)(struct drm_device \*dev, struct drm_file 420\*file_priv, uint32_t handle, uint32_t flags, int \*prime_fd); int 421(\*prime_fd_to_handle)(struct drm_device \*dev, struct drm_file 422\*file_priv, int prime_fd, uint32_t \*handle); Those two operations 423convert a handle to a PRIME file descriptor and vice versa. Drivers must 424use the kernel dma-buf buffer sharing framework to manage the PRIME file 425descriptors. Similar to the mode setting API PRIME is agnostic to the 426underlying buffer object manager, as long as handles are 32bit unsigned 427integers. 428 429While non-GEM drivers must implement the operations themselves, GEM 430drivers must use the :c:func:`drm_gem_prime_handle_to_fd()` and 431:c:func:`drm_gem_prime_fd_to_handle()` helper functions. Those 432helpers rely on the driver gem_prime_export and gem_prime_import 433operations to create a dma-buf instance from a GEM object (dma-buf 434exporter role) and to create a GEM object from a dma-buf instance 435(dma-buf importer role). 436 437struct dma_buf \* (\*gem_prime_export)(struct drm_device \*dev, 438struct drm_gem_object \*obj, int flags); struct drm_gem_object \* 439(\*gem_prime_import)(struct drm_device \*dev, struct dma_buf 440\*dma_buf); These two operations are mandatory for GEM drivers that 441support PRIME. 442 443PRIME Helper Functions 444---------------------- 445 446.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_prime.c 447 :doc: PRIME Helpers 448 449PRIME Function References 450------------------------- 451 452.. kernel-doc:: include/drm/drm_prime.h 453 :internal: 454 455.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_prime.c 456 :export: 457 458DRM MM Range Allocator 459====================== 460 461Overview 462-------- 463 464.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_mm.c 465 :doc: Overview 466 467LRU Scan/Eviction Support 468------------------------- 469 470.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_mm.c 471 :doc: lru scan roster 472 473DRM MM Range Allocator Function References 474------------------------------------------ 475 476.. kernel-doc:: include/drm/drm_mm.h 477 :internal: 478 479.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_mm.c 480 :export: 481 482DRM Cache Handling 483================== 484 485.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_cache.c 486 :export: 487 488DRM Sync Objects 489=========================== 490 491.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_syncobj.c 492 :doc: Overview 493 494.. kernel-doc:: include/drm/drm_syncobj.h 495 :export: 496 497.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_syncobj.c 498 :export: 499