xref: /openbmc/linux/Documentation/gpu/todo.rst (revision cc19db8b)
1.. _todo:
2
3=========
4TODO list
5=========
6
7This section contains a list of smaller janitorial tasks in the kernel DRM
8graphics subsystem useful as newbie projects. Or for slow rainy days.
9
10Difficulty
11----------
12
13To make it easier task are categorized into different levels:
14
15Starter: Good tasks to get started with the DRM subsystem.
16
17Intermediate: Tasks which need some experience with working in the DRM
18subsystem, or some specific GPU/display graphics knowledge. For debugging issue
19it's good to have the relevant hardware (or a virtual driver set up) available
20for testing.
21
22Advanced: Tricky tasks that need fairly good understanding of the DRM subsystem
23and graphics topics. Generally need the relevant hardware for development and
24testing.
25
26Expert: Only attempt these if you've successfully completed some tricky
27refactorings already and are an expert in the specific area
28
29Subsystem-wide refactorings
30===========================
31
32Remove custom dumb_map_offset implementations
33---------------------------------------------
34
35All GEM based drivers should be using drm_gem_create_mmap_offset() instead.
36Audit each individual driver, make sure it'll work with the generic
37implementation (there's lots of outdated locking leftovers in various
38implementations), and then remove it.
39
40Contact: Daniel Vetter, respective driver maintainers
41
42Level: Intermediate
43
44Convert existing KMS drivers to atomic modesetting
45--------------------------------------------------
46
473.19 has the atomic modeset interfaces and helpers, so drivers can now be
48converted over. Modern compositors like Wayland or Surfaceflinger on Android
49really want an atomic modeset interface, so this is all about the bright
50future.
51
52There is a conversion guide for atomic and all you need is a GPU for a
53non-converted driver (again virtual HW drivers for KVM are still all
54suitable).
55
56As part of this drivers also need to convert to universal plane (which means
57exposing primary & cursor as proper plane objects). But that's much easier to
58do by directly using the new atomic helper driver callbacks.
59
60Contact: Daniel Vetter, respective driver maintainers
61
62Level: Advanced
63
64Clean up the clipped coordination confusion around planes
65---------------------------------------------------------
66
67We have a helper to get this right with drm_plane_helper_check_update(), but
68it's not consistently used. This should be fixed, preferrably in the atomic
69helpers (and drivers then moved over to clipped coordinates). Probably the
70helper should also be moved from drm_plane_helper.c to the atomic helpers, to
71avoid confusion - the other helpers in that file are all deprecated legacy
72helpers.
73
74Contact: Ville Syrjälä, Daniel Vetter, driver maintainers
75
76Level: Advanced
77
78Improve plane atomic_check helpers
79----------------------------------
80
81Aside from the clipped coordinates right above there's a few suboptimal things
82with the current helpers:
83
84- drm_plane_helper_funcs->atomic_check gets called for enabled or disabled
85  planes. At best this seems to confuse drivers, worst it means they blow up
86  when the plane is disabled without the CRTC. The only special handling is
87  resetting values in the plane state structures, which instead should be moved
88  into the drm_plane_funcs->atomic_duplicate_state functions.
89
90- Once that's done, helpers could stop calling ->atomic_check for disabled
91  planes.
92
93- Then we could go through all the drivers and remove the more-or-less confused
94  checks for plane_state->fb and plane_state->crtc.
95
96Contact: Daniel Vetter
97
98Level: Advanced
99
100Convert early atomic drivers to async commit helpers
101----------------------------------------------------
102
103For the first year the atomic modeset helpers didn't support asynchronous /
104nonblocking commits, and every driver had to hand-roll them. This is fixed
105now, but there's still a pile of existing drivers that easily could be
106converted over to the new infrastructure.
107
108One issue with the helpers is that they require that drivers handle completion
109events for atomic commits correctly. But fixing these bugs is good anyway.
110
111Somewhat related is the legacy_cursor_update hack, which should be replaced with
112the new atomic_async_check/commit functionality in the helpers in drivers that
113still look at that flag.
114
115Contact: Daniel Vetter, respective driver maintainers
116
117Level: Advanced
118
119Fallout from atomic KMS
120-----------------------
121
122``drm_atomic_helper.c`` provides a batch of functions which implement legacy
123IOCTLs on top of the new atomic driver interface. Which is really nice for
124gradual conversion of drivers, but unfortunately the semantic mismatches are
125a bit too severe. So there's some follow-up work to adjust the function
126interfaces to fix these issues:
127
128* atomic needs the lock acquire context. At the moment that's passed around
129  implicitly with some horrible hacks, and it's also allocate with
130  ``GFP_NOFAIL`` behind the scenes. All legacy paths need to start allocating
131  the acquire context explicitly on stack and then also pass it down into
132  drivers explicitly so that the legacy-on-atomic functions can use them.
133
134  Except for some driver code this is done. This task should be finished by
135  adding WARN_ON(!drm_drv_uses_atomic_modeset) in drm_modeset_lock_all().
136
137* A bunch of the vtable hooks are now in the wrong place: DRM has a split
138  between core vfunc tables (named ``drm_foo_funcs``), which are used to
139  implement the userspace ABI. And then there's the optional hooks for the
140  helper libraries (name ``drm_foo_helper_funcs``), which are purely for
141  internal use. Some of these hooks should be move from ``_funcs`` to
142  ``_helper_funcs`` since they are not part of the core ABI. There's a
143  ``FIXME`` comment in the kerneldoc for each such case in ``drm_crtc.h``.
144
145Contact: Daniel Vetter
146
147Level: Intermediate
148
149Get rid of dev->struct_mutex from GEM drivers
150---------------------------------------------
151
152``dev->struct_mutex`` is the Big DRM Lock from legacy days and infested
153everything. Nowadays in modern drivers the only bit where it's mandatory is
154serializing GEM buffer object destruction. Which unfortunately means drivers
155have to keep track of that lock and either call ``unreference`` or
156``unreference_locked`` depending upon context.
157
158Core GEM doesn't have a need for ``struct_mutex`` any more since kernel 4.8,
159and there's a GEM object ``free`` callback for any drivers which are
160entirely ``struct_mutex`` free.
161
162For drivers that need ``struct_mutex`` it should be replaced with a driver-
163private lock. The tricky part is the BO free functions, since those can't
164reliably take that lock any more. Instead state needs to be protected with
165suitable subordinate locks or some cleanup work pushed to a worker thread. For
166performance-critical drivers it might also be better to go with a more
167fine-grained per-buffer object and per-context lockings scheme. Currently only
168the ``msm`` and `i915` drivers use ``struct_mutex``.
169
170Contact: Daniel Vetter, respective driver maintainers
171
172Level: Advanced
173
174Move Buffer Object Locking to dma_resv_lock()
175---------------------------------------------
176
177Many drivers have their own per-object locking scheme, usually using
178mutex_lock(). This causes all kinds of trouble for buffer sharing, since
179depending which driver is the exporter and importer, the locking hierarchy is
180reversed.
181
182To solve this we need one standard per-object locking mechanism, which is
183dma_resv_lock(). This lock needs to be called as the outermost lock, with all
184other driver specific per-object locks removed. The problem is tha rolling out
185the actual change to the locking contract is a flag day, due to struct dma_buf
186buffer sharing.
187
188Level: Expert
189
190Convert logging to drm_* functions with drm_device paramater
191------------------------------------------------------------
192
193For drivers which could have multiple instances, it is necessary to
194differentiate between which is which in the logs. Since DRM_INFO/WARN/ERROR
195don't do this, drivers used dev_info/warn/err to make this differentiation. We
196now have drm_* variants of the drm print functions, so we can start to convert
197those drivers back to using drm-formatted specific log messages.
198
199Before you start this conversion please contact the relevant maintainers to make
200sure your work will be merged - not everyone agrees that the DRM dmesg macros
201are better.
202
203Contact: Sean Paul, Maintainer of the driver you plan to convert
204
205Level: Starter
206
207Convert drivers to use simple modeset suspend/resume
208----------------------------------------------------
209
210Most drivers (except i915 and nouveau) that use
211drm_atomic_helper_suspend/resume() can probably be converted to use
212drm_mode_config_helper_suspend/resume(). Also there's still open-coded version
213of the atomic suspend/resume code in older atomic modeset drivers.
214
215Contact: Maintainer of the driver you plan to convert
216
217Level: Intermediate
218
219Convert drivers to use drm_fbdev_generic_setup()
220------------------------------------------------
221
222Most drivers can use drm_fbdev_generic_setup(). Driver have to implement
223atomic modesetting and GEM vmap support. Historically, generic fbdev emulation
224expected the framebuffer in system memory or system-like memory. By employing
225struct dma_buf_map, drivers with frambuffers in I/O memory can be supported
226as well.
227
228Contact: Maintainer of the driver you plan to convert
229
230Level: Intermediate
231
232Reimplement functions in drm_fbdev_fb_ops without fbdev
233-------------------------------------------------------
234
235A number of callback functions in drm_fbdev_fb_ops could benefit from
236being rewritten without dependencies on the fbdev module. Some of the
237helpers could further benefit from using struct dma_buf_map instead of
238raw pointers.
239
240Contact: Thomas Zimmermann <tzimmermann@suse.de>, Daniel Vetter
241
242Level: Advanced
243
244
245drm_framebuffer_funcs and drm_mode_config_funcs.fb_create cleanup
246-----------------------------------------------------------------
247
248A lot more drivers could be switched over to the drm_gem_framebuffer helpers.
249Various hold-ups:
250
251- Need to switch over to the generic dirty tracking code using
252  drm_atomic_helper_dirtyfb first (e.g. qxl).
253
254- Need to switch to drm_fbdev_generic_setup(), otherwise a lot of the custom fb
255  setup code can't be deleted.
256
257- Many drivers wrap drm_gem_fb_create() only to check for valid formats. For
258  atomic drivers we could check for valid formats by calling
259  drm_plane_check_pixel_format() against all planes, and pass if any plane
260  supports the format. For non-atomic that's not possible since like the format
261  list for the primary plane is fake and we'd therefor reject valid formats.
262
263- Many drivers subclass drm_framebuffer, we'd need a embedding compatible
264  version of the varios drm_gem_fb_create functions. Maybe called
265  drm_gem_fb_create/_with_dirty/_with_funcs as needed.
266
267Contact: Daniel Vetter
268
269Level: Intermediate
270
271Generic fbdev defio support
272---------------------------
273
274The defio support code in the fbdev core has some very specific requirements,
275which means drivers need to have a special framebuffer for fbdev. The main
276issue is that it uses some fields in struct page itself, which breaks shmem
277gem objects (and other things). To support defio, affected drivers require
278the use of a shadow buffer, which may add CPU and memory overhead.
279
280Possible solution would be to write our own defio mmap code in the drm fbdev
281emulation. It would need to fully wrap the existing mmap ops, forwarding
282everything after it has done the write-protect/mkwrite trickery:
283
284- In the drm_fbdev_fb_mmap helper, if we need defio, change the
285  default page prots to write-protected with something like this::
286
287      vma->vm_page_prot = pgprot_wrprotect(vma->vm_page_prot);
288
289- Set the mkwrite and fsync callbacks with similar implementions to the core
290  fbdev defio stuff. These should all work on plain ptes, they don't actually
291  require a struct page.  uff. These should all work on plain ptes, they don't
292  actually require a struct page.
293
294- Track the dirty pages in a separate structure (bitfield with one bit per page
295  should work) to avoid clobbering struct page.
296
297Might be good to also have some igt testcases for this.
298
299Contact: Daniel Vetter, Noralf Tronnes
300
301Level: Advanced
302
303idr_init_base()
304---------------
305
306DRM core&drivers uses a lot of idr (integer lookup directories) for mapping
307userspace IDs to internal objects, and in most places ID=0 means NULL and hence
308is never used. Switching to idr_init_base() for these would make the idr more
309efficient.
310
311Contact: Daniel Vetter
312
313Level: Starter
314
315struct drm_gem_object_funcs
316---------------------------
317
318GEM objects can now have a function table instead of having the callbacks on the
319DRM driver struct. This is now the preferred way. Callbacks in drivers have been
320converted, except for struct drm_driver.gem_prime_mmap.
321
322Level: Intermediate
323
324Rename CMA helpers to DMA helpers
325---------------------------------
326
327CMA (standing for contiguous memory allocator) is really a bit an accident of
328what these were used for first, a much better name would be DMA helpers. In the
329text these should even be called coherent DMA memory helpers (so maybe CDM, but
330no one knows what that means) since underneath they just use dma_alloc_coherent.
331
332Contact: Laurent Pinchart, Daniel Vetter
333
334Level: Intermediate (mostly because it is a huge tasks without good partial
335milestones, not technically itself that challenging)
336
337connector register/unregister fixes
338-----------------------------------
339
340- For most connectors it's a no-op to call drm_connector_register/unregister
341  directly from driver code, drm_dev_register/unregister take care of this
342  already. We can remove all of them.
343
344- For dp drivers it's a bit more a mess, since we need the connector to be
345  registered when calling drm_dp_aux_register. Fix this by instead calling
346  drm_dp_aux_init, and moving the actual registering into a late_register
347  callback as recommended in the kerneldoc.
348
349Level: Intermediate
350
351Remove load/unload callbacks from all non-DRIVER_LEGACY drivers
352---------------------------------------------------------------
353
354The load/unload callbacks in struct &drm_driver are very much midlayers, plus
355for historical reasons they get the ordering wrong (and we can't fix that)
356between setting up the &drm_driver structure and calling drm_dev_register().
357
358- Rework drivers to no longer use the load/unload callbacks, directly coding the
359  load/unload sequence into the driver's probe function.
360
361- Once all non-DRIVER_LEGACY drivers are converted, disallow the load/unload
362  callbacks for all modern drivers.
363
364Contact: Daniel Vetter
365
366Level: Intermediate
367
368Replace drm_detect_hdmi_monitor() with drm_display_info.is_hdmi
369---------------------------------------------------------------
370
371Once EDID is parsed, the monitor HDMI support information is available through
372drm_display_info.is_hdmi. Many drivers still call drm_detect_hdmi_monitor() to
373retrieve the same information, which is less efficient.
374
375Audit each individual driver calling drm_detect_hdmi_monitor() and switch to
376drm_display_info.is_hdmi if applicable.
377
378Contact: Laurent Pinchart, respective driver maintainers
379
380Level: Intermediate
381
382Consolidate custom driver modeset properties
383--------------------------------------------
384
385Before atomic modeset took place, many drivers where creating their own
386properties. Among other things, atomic brought the requirement that custom,
387driver specific properties should not be used.
388
389For this task, we aim to introduce core helpers or reuse the existing ones
390if available:
391
392A quick, unconfirmed, examples list.
393
394Introduce core helpers:
395- audio (amdgpu, intel, gma500, radeon)
396- brightness, contrast, etc (armada, nouveau) - overlay only (?)
397- broadcast rgb (gma500, intel)
398- colorkey (armada, nouveau, rcar) - overlay only (?)
399- dither (amdgpu, nouveau, radeon) - varies across drivers
400- underscan family (amdgpu, radeon, nouveau)
401
402Already in core:
403- colorspace (sti)
404- tv format names, enhancements (gma500, intel)
405- tv overscan, margins, etc. (gma500, intel)
406- zorder (omapdrm) - same as zpos (?)
407
408
409Contact: Emil Velikov, respective driver maintainers
410
411Level: Intermediate
412
413Use struct dma_buf_map throughout codebase
414------------------------------------------
415
416Pointers to shared device memory are stored in struct dma_buf_map. Each
417instance knows whether it refers to system or I/O memory. Most of the DRM-wide
418interface have been converted to use struct dma_buf_map, but implementations
419often still use raw pointers.
420
421The task is to use struct dma_buf_map where it makes sense.
422
423* Memory managers should use struct dma_buf_map for dma-buf-imported buffers.
424* TTM might benefit from using struct dma_buf_map internally.
425* Framebuffer copying and blitting helpers should operate on struct dma_buf_map.
426
427Contact: Thomas Zimmermann <tzimmermann@suse.de>, Christian König, Daniel Vetter
428
429Level: Intermediate
430
431Review all drivers for setting struct drm_mode_config.{max_width,max_height} correctly
432--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
433
434The values in struct drm_mode_config.{max_width,max_height} describe the
435maximum supported framebuffer size. It's the virtual screen size, but many
436drivers treat it like limitations of the physical resolution.
437
438The maximum width depends on the hardware's maximum scanline pitch. The
439maximum height depends on the amount of addressable video memory. Review all
440drivers to initialize the fields to the correct values.
441
442Contact: Thomas Zimmermann <tzimmermann@suse.de>
443
444Level: Intermediate
445
446
447Core refactorings
448=================
449
450Make panic handling work
451------------------------
452
453This is a really varied tasks with lots of little bits and pieces:
454
455* The panic path can't be tested currently, leading to constant breaking. The
456  main issue here is that panics can be triggered from hardirq contexts and
457  hence all panic related callback can run in hardirq context. It would be
458  awesome if we could test at least the fbdev helper code and driver code by
459  e.g. trigger calls through drm debugfs files. hardirq context could be
460  achieved by using an IPI to the local processor.
461
462* There's a massive confusion of different panic handlers. DRM fbdev emulation
463  helpers have one, but on top of that the fbcon code itself also has one. We
464  need to make sure that they stop fighting over each another.
465
466* ``drm_can_sleep()`` is a mess. It hides real bugs in normal operations and
467  isn't a full solution for panic paths. We need to make sure that it only
468  returns true if there's a panic going on for real, and fix up all the
469  fallout.
470
471* The panic handler must never sleep, which also means it can't ever
472  ``mutex_lock()``. Also it can't grab any other lock unconditionally, not
473  even spinlocks (because NMI and hardirq can panic too). We need to either
474  make sure to not call such paths, or trylock everything. Really tricky.
475
476* For the above locking troubles reasons it's pretty much impossible to
477  attempt a synchronous modeset from panic handlers. The only thing we could
478  try to achive is an atomic ``set_base`` of the primary plane, and hope that
479  it shows up. Everything else probably needs to be delayed to some worker or
480  something else which happens later on. Otherwise it just kills the box
481  harder, prevent the panic from going out on e.g. netconsole.
482
483* There's also proposal for a simplied DRM console instead of the full-blown
484  fbcon and DRM fbdev emulation. Any kind of panic handling tricks should
485  obviously work for both console, in case we ever get kmslog merged.
486
487Contact: Daniel Vetter
488
489Level: Advanced
490
491Clean up the debugfs support
492----------------------------
493
494There's a bunch of issues with it:
495
496- The drm_info_list ->show() function doesn't even bother to cast to the drm
497  structure for you. This is lazy.
498
499- We probably want to have some support for debugfs files on crtc/connectors and
500  maybe other kms objects directly in core. There's even drm_print support in
501  the funcs for these objects to dump kms state, so it's all there. And then the
502  ->show() functions should obviously give you a pointer to the right object.
503
504- The drm_info_list stuff is centered on drm_minor instead of drm_device. For
505  anything we want to print drm_device (or maybe drm_file) is the right thing.
506
507- The drm_driver->debugfs_init hooks we have is just an artifact of the old
508  midlayered load sequence. DRM debugfs should work more like sysfs, where you
509  can create properties/files for an object anytime you want, and the core
510  takes care of publishing/unpuplishing all the files at register/unregister
511  time. Drivers shouldn't need to worry about these technicalities, and fixing
512  this (together with the drm_minor->drm_device move) would allow us to remove
513  debugfs_init.
514
515Previous RFC that hasn't landed yet: https://lore.kernel.org/dri-devel/20200513114130.28641-2-wambui.karugax@gmail.com/
516
517Contact: Daniel Vetter
518
519Level: Intermediate
520
521Object lifetime fixes
522---------------------
523
524There's two related issues here
525
526- Cleanup up the various ->destroy callbacks, which often are all the same
527  simple code.
528
529- Lots of drivers erroneously allocate DRM modeset objects using devm_kzalloc,
530  which results in use-after free issues on driver unload. This can be serious
531  trouble even for drivers for hardware integrated on the SoC due to
532  EPROBE_DEFERRED backoff.
533
534Both these problems can be solved by switching over to drmm_kzalloc(), and the
535various convenience wrappers provided, e.g. drmm_crtc_alloc_with_planes(),
536drmm_universal_plane_alloc(), ... and so on.
537
538Contact: Daniel Vetter
539
540Level: Intermediate
541
542Remove automatic page mapping from dma-buf importing
543----------------------------------------------------
544
545When importing dma-bufs, the dma-buf and PRIME frameworks automatically map
546imported pages into the importer's DMA area. drm_gem_prime_fd_to_handle() and
547drm_gem_prime_handle_to_fd() require that importers call dma_buf_attach()
548even if they never do actual device DMA, but only CPU access through
549dma_buf_vmap(). This is a problem for USB devices, which do not support DMA
550operations.
551
552To fix the issue, automatic page mappings should be removed from the
553buffer-sharing code. Fixing this is a bit more involved, since the import/export
554cache is also tied to &drm_gem_object.import_attach. Meanwhile we paper over
555this problem for USB devices by fishing out the USB host controller device, as
556long as that supports DMA. Otherwise importing can still needlessly fail.
557
558Contact: Thomas Zimmermann <tzimmermann@suse.de>, Daniel Vetter
559
560Level: Advanced
561
562
563Better Testing
564==============
565
566Enable trinity for DRM
567----------------------
568
569And fix up the fallout. Should be really interesting ...
570
571Level: Advanced
572
573Make KMS tests in i-g-t generic
574-------------------------------
575
576The i915 driver team maintains an extensive testsuite for the i915 DRM driver,
577including tons of testcases for corner-cases in the modesetting API. It would
578be awesome if those tests (at least the ones not relying on Intel-specific GEM
579features) could be made to run on any KMS driver.
580
581Basic work to run i-g-t tests on non-i915 is done, what's now missing is mass-
582converting things over. For modeset tests we also first need a bit of
583infrastructure to use dumb buffers for untiled buffers, to be able to run all
584the non-i915 specific modeset tests.
585
586Level: Advanced
587
588Extend virtual test driver (VKMS)
589---------------------------------
590
591See the documentation of :ref:`VKMS <vkms>` for more details. This is an ideal
592internship task, since it only requires a virtual machine and can be sized to
593fit the available time.
594
595Level: See details
596
597Backlight Refactoring
598---------------------
599
600Backlight drivers have a triple enable/disable state, which is a bit overkill.
601Plan to fix this:
602
6031. Roll out backlight_enable() and backlight_disable() helpers everywhere. This
604   has started already.
6052. In all, only look at one of the three status bits set by the above helpers.
6063. Remove the other two status bits.
607
608Contact: Daniel Vetter
609
610Level: Intermediate
611
612Driver Specific
613===============
614
615AMD DC Display Driver
616---------------------
617
618AMD DC is the display driver for AMD devices starting with Vega. There has been
619a bunch of progress cleaning it up but there's still plenty of work to be done.
620
621See drivers/gpu/drm/amd/display/TODO for tasks.
622
623Contact: Harry Wentland, Alex Deucher
624
625vmwgfx: Replace hashtable with Linux' implementation
626----------------------------------------------------
627
628The vmwgfx driver uses its own hashtable implementation. Replace the
629code with Linux' implementation and update the callers. It's mostly a
630refactoring task, but the interfaces are different.
631
632Contact: Zack Rusin, Thomas Zimmermann <tzimmermann@suse.de>
633
634Level: Intermediate
635
636Bootsplash
637==========
638
639There is support in place now for writing internal DRM clients making it
640possible to pick up the bootsplash work that was rejected because it was written
641for fbdev.
642
643- [v6,8/8] drm/client: Hack: Add bootsplash example
644  https://patchwork.freedesktop.org/patch/306579/
645
646- [RFC PATCH v2 00/13] Kernel based bootsplash
647  https://lore.kernel.org/r/20171213194755.3409-1-mstaudt@suse.de
648
649Contact: Sam Ravnborg
650
651Level: Advanced
652
653Outside DRM
654===========
655
656Convert fbdev drivers to DRM
657----------------------------
658
659There are plenty of fbdev drivers for older hardware. Some hardware has
660become obsolete, but some still provides good(-enough) framebuffers. The
661drivers that are still useful should be converted to DRM and afterwards
662removed from fbdev.
663
664Very simple fbdev drivers can best be converted by starting with a new
665DRM driver. Simple KMS helpers and SHMEM should be able to handle any
666existing hardware. The new driver's call-back functions are filled from
667existing fbdev code.
668
669More complex fbdev drivers can be refactored step-by-step into a DRM
670driver with the help of the DRM fbconv helpers. [1] These helpers provide
671the transition layer between the DRM core infrastructure and the fbdev
672driver interface. Create a new DRM driver on top of the fbconv helpers,
673copy over the fbdev driver, and hook it up to the DRM code. Examples for
674several fbdev drivers are available at [1] and a tutorial of this process
675available at [2]. The result is a primitive DRM driver that can run X11
676and Weston.
677
678 - [1] https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/tzimmermann/linux/tree/fbconv
679 - [2] https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/tzimmermann/linux/blob/fbconv/drivers/gpu/drm/drm_fbconv_helper.c
680
681Contact: Thomas Zimmermann <tzimmermann@suse.de>
682
683Level: Advanced
684