1============ 2Introduction 3============ 4 5The Linux DRM layer contains code intended to support the needs of 6complex graphics devices, usually containing programmable pipelines well 7suited to 3D graphics acceleration. Graphics drivers in the kernel may 8make use of DRM functions to make tasks like memory management, 9interrupt handling and DMA easier, and provide a uniform interface to 10applications. 11 12A note on versions: this guide covers features found in the DRM tree, 13including the TTM memory manager, output configuration and mode setting, 14and the new vblank internals, in addition to all the regular features 15found in current kernels. 16 17[Insert diagram of typical DRM stack here] 18 19Style Guidelines 20================ 21 22For consistency this documentation uses American English. Abbreviations 23are written as all-uppercase, for example: DRM, KMS, IOCTL, CRTC, and so 24on. To aid in reading, documentations make full use of the markup 25characters kerneldoc provides: @parameter for function parameters, 26@member for structure members, &structure to reference structures and 27function() for functions. These all get automatically hyperlinked if 28kerneldoc for the referenced objects exists. When referencing entries in 29function vtables please use ->vfunc(). Note that kerneldoc does not 30support referencing struct members directly, so please add a reference 31to the vtable struct somewhere in the same paragraph or at least 32section. 33 34Except in special situations (to separate locked from unlocked variants) 35locking requirements for functions aren't documented in the kerneldoc. 36Instead locking should be check at runtime using e.g. 37``WARN_ON(!mutex_is_locked(...));``. Since it's much easier to ignore 38documentation than runtime noise this provides more value. And on top of 39that runtime checks do need to be updated when the locking rules change, 40increasing the chances that they're correct. Within the documentation 41the locking rules should be explained in the relevant structures: Either 42in the comment for the lock explaining what it protects, or data fields 43need a note about which lock protects them, or both. 44 45Functions which have a non-\ ``void`` return value should have a section 46called "Returns" explaining the expected return values in different 47cases and their meanings. Currently there's no consensus whether that 48section name should be all upper-case or not, and whether it should end 49in a colon or not. Go with the file-local style. Other common section 50names are "Notes" with information for dangerous or tricky corner cases, 51and "FIXME" where the interface could be cleaned up. 52