1 /* 2 * Copyright © 2008-2018 Intel Corporation 3 * 4 * Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a 5 * copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), 6 * to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation 7 * the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, 8 * and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the 9 * Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: 10 * 11 * The above copyright notice and this permission notice (including the next 12 * paragraph) shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the 13 * Software. 14 * 15 * THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR 16 * IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, 17 * FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL 18 * THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER 19 * LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING 20 * FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS 21 * IN THE SOFTWARE. 22 * 23 */ 24 25 #ifndef I915_REQUEST_H 26 #define I915_REQUEST_H 27 28 #include <linux/dma-fence.h> 29 30 #include "i915_gem.h" 31 #include "i915_scheduler.h" 32 #include "i915_sw_fence.h" 33 #include "i915_scheduler.h" 34 35 #include <uapi/drm/i915_drm.h> 36 37 struct drm_file; 38 struct drm_i915_gem_object; 39 struct i915_request; 40 struct i915_timeline; 41 42 struct intel_wait { 43 struct rb_node node; 44 struct task_struct *tsk; 45 struct i915_request *request; 46 u32 seqno; 47 }; 48 49 struct intel_signal_node { 50 struct intel_wait wait; 51 struct list_head link; 52 }; 53 54 struct i915_capture_list { 55 struct i915_capture_list *next; 56 struct i915_vma *vma; 57 }; 58 59 /** 60 * Request queue structure. 61 * 62 * The request queue allows us to note sequence numbers that have been emitted 63 * and may be associated with active buffers to be retired. 64 * 65 * By keeping this list, we can avoid having to do questionable sequence 66 * number comparisons on buffer last_read|write_seqno. It also allows an 67 * emission time to be associated with the request for tracking how far ahead 68 * of the GPU the submission is. 69 * 70 * When modifying this structure be very aware that we perform a lockless 71 * RCU lookup of it that may race against reallocation of the struct 72 * from the slab freelist. We intentionally do not zero the structure on 73 * allocation so that the lookup can use the dangling pointers (and is 74 * cogniscent that those pointers may be wrong). Instead, everything that 75 * needs to be initialised must be done so explicitly. 76 * 77 * The requests are reference counted. 78 */ 79 struct i915_request { 80 struct dma_fence fence; 81 spinlock_t lock; 82 83 /** On Which ring this request was generated */ 84 struct drm_i915_private *i915; 85 86 /** 87 * Context and ring buffer related to this request 88 * Contexts are refcounted, so when this request is associated with a 89 * context, we must increment the context's refcount, to guarantee that 90 * it persists while any request is linked to it. Requests themselves 91 * are also refcounted, so the request will only be freed when the last 92 * reference to it is dismissed, and the code in 93 * i915_request_free() will then decrement the refcount on the 94 * context. 95 */ 96 struct i915_gem_context *gem_context; 97 struct intel_engine_cs *engine; 98 struct intel_context *hw_context; 99 struct intel_ring *ring; 100 struct i915_timeline *timeline; 101 struct intel_signal_node signaling; 102 103 /* 104 * Fences for the various phases in the request's lifetime. 105 * 106 * The submit fence is used to await upon all of the request's 107 * dependencies. When it is signaled, the request is ready to run. 108 * It is used by the driver to then queue the request for execution. 109 */ 110 struct i915_sw_fence submit; 111 wait_queue_entry_t submitq; 112 wait_queue_head_t execute; 113 114 /* 115 * A list of everyone we wait upon, and everyone who waits upon us. 116 * Even though we will not be submitted to the hardware before the 117 * submit fence is signaled (it waits for all external events as well 118 * as our own requests), the scheduler still needs to know the 119 * dependency tree for the lifetime of the request (from execbuf 120 * to retirement), i.e. bidirectional dependency information for the 121 * request not tied to individual fences. 122 */ 123 struct i915_sched_node sched; 124 struct i915_dependency dep; 125 126 /** 127 * GEM sequence number associated with this request on the 128 * global execution timeline. It is zero when the request is not 129 * on the HW queue (i.e. not on the engine timeline list). 130 * Its value is guarded by the timeline spinlock. 131 */ 132 u32 global_seqno; 133 134 /** Position in the ring of the start of the request */ 135 u32 head; 136 137 /** Position in the ring of the start of the user packets */ 138 u32 infix; 139 140 /** 141 * Position in the ring of the start of the postfix. 142 * This is required to calculate the maximum available ring space 143 * without overwriting the postfix. 144 */ 145 u32 postfix; 146 147 /** Position in the ring of the end of the whole request */ 148 u32 tail; 149 150 /** Position in the ring of the end of any workarounds after the tail */ 151 u32 wa_tail; 152 153 /** Preallocate space in the ring for the emitting the request */ 154 u32 reserved_space; 155 156 /** Batch buffer related to this request if any (used for 157 * error state dump only). 158 */ 159 struct i915_vma *batch; 160 /** 161 * Additional buffers requested by userspace to be captured upon 162 * a GPU hang. The vma/obj on this list are protected by their 163 * active reference - all objects on this list must also be 164 * on the active_list (of their final request). 165 */ 166 struct i915_capture_list *capture_list; 167 struct list_head active_list; 168 169 /** Time at which this request was emitted, in jiffies. */ 170 unsigned long emitted_jiffies; 171 172 bool waitboost; 173 174 /** engine->request_list entry for this request */ 175 struct list_head link; 176 177 /** ring->request_list entry for this request */ 178 struct list_head ring_link; 179 180 struct drm_i915_file_private *file_priv; 181 /** file_priv list entry for this request */ 182 struct list_head client_link; 183 }; 184 185 #define I915_FENCE_GFP (GFP_KERNEL | __GFP_RETRY_MAYFAIL | __GFP_NOWARN) 186 187 extern const struct dma_fence_ops i915_fence_ops; 188 189 static inline bool dma_fence_is_i915(const struct dma_fence *fence) 190 { 191 return fence->ops == &i915_fence_ops; 192 } 193 194 struct i915_request * __must_check 195 i915_request_alloc(struct intel_engine_cs *engine, 196 struct i915_gem_context *ctx); 197 void i915_request_retire_upto(struct i915_request *rq); 198 199 static inline struct i915_request * 200 to_request(struct dma_fence *fence) 201 { 202 /* We assume that NULL fence/request are interoperable */ 203 BUILD_BUG_ON(offsetof(struct i915_request, fence) != 0); 204 GEM_BUG_ON(fence && !dma_fence_is_i915(fence)); 205 return container_of(fence, struct i915_request, fence); 206 } 207 208 static inline struct i915_request * 209 i915_request_get(struct i915_request *rq) 210 { 211 return to_request(dma_fence_get(&rq->fence)); 212 } 213 214 static inline struct i915_request * 215 i915_request_get_rcu(struct i915_request *rq) 216 { 217 return to_request(dma_fence_get_rcu(&rq->fence)); 218 } 219 220 static inline void 221 i915_request_put(struct i915_request *rq) 222 { 223 dma_fence_put(&rq->fence); 224 } 225 226 /** 227 * i915_request_global_seqno - report the current global seqno 228 * @request - the request 229 * 230 * A request is assigned a global seqno only when it is on the hardware 231 * execution queue. The global seqno can be used to maintain a list of 232 * requests on the same engine in retirement order, for example for 233 * constructing a priority queue for waiting. Prior to its execution, or 234 * if it is subsequently removed in the event of preemption, its global 235 * seqno is zero. As both insertion and removal from the execution queue 236 * may operate in IRQ context, it is not guarded by the usual struct_mutex 237 * BKL. Instead those relying on the global seqno must be prepared for its 238 * value to change between reads. Only when the request is complete can 239 * the global seqno be stable (due to the memory barriers on submitting 240 * the commands to the hardware to write the breadcrumb, if the HWS shows 241 * that it has passed the global seqno and the global seqno is unchanged 242 * after the read, it is indeed complete). 243 */ 244 static u32 245 i915_request_global_seqno(const struct i915_request *request) 246 { 247 return READ_ONCE(request->global_seqno); 248 } 249 250 int i915_request_await_object(struct i915_request *to, 251 struct drm_i915_gem_object *obj, 252 bool write); 253 int i915_request_await_dma_fence(struct i915_request *rq, 254 struct dma_fence *fence); 255 256 void i915_request_add(struct i915_request *rq); 257 258 void __i915_request_submit(struct i915_request *request); 259 void i915_request_submit(struct i915_request *request); 260 261 void __i915_request_unsubmit(struct i915_request *request); 262 void i915_request_unsubmit(struct i915_request *request); 263 264 long i915_request_wait(struct i915_request *rq, 265 unsigned int flags, 266 long timeout) 267 __attribute__((nonnull(1))); 268 #define I915_WAIT_INTERRUPTIBLE BIT(0) 269 #define I915_WAIT_LOCKED BIT(1) /* struct_mutex held, handle GPU reset */ 270 #define I915_WAIT_ALL BIT(2) /* used by i915_gem_object_wait() */ 271 #define I915_WAIT_FOR_IDLE_BOOST BIT(3) 272 273 static inline u32 intel_engine_get_seqno(struct intel_engine_cs *engine); 274 275 /** 276 * Returns true if seq1 is later than seq2. 277 */ 278 static inline bool i915_seqno_passed(u32 seq1, u32 seq2) 279 { 280 return (s32)(seq1 - seq2) >= 0; 281 } 282 283 static inline bool 284 __i915_request_completed(const struct i915_request *rq, u32 seqno) 285 { 286 GEM_BUG_ON(!seqno); 287 return i915_seqno_passed(intel_engine_get_seqno(rq->engine), seqno) && 288 seqno == i915_request_global_seqno(rq); 289 } 290 291 static inline bool i915_request_completed(const struct i915_request *rq) 292 { 293 u32 seqno; 294 295 seqno = i915_request_global_seqno(rq); 296 if (!seqno) 297 return false; 298 299 return __i915_request_completed(rq, seqno); 300 } 301 302 static inline bool i915_request_started(const struct i915_request *rq) 303 { 304 u32 seqno; 305 306 seqno = i915_request_global_seqno(rq); 307 if (!seqno) 308 return false; 309 310 return i915_seqno_passed(intel_engine_get_seqno(rq->engine), 311 seqno - 1); 312 } 313 314 static inline bool i915_sched_node_signaled(const struct i915_sched_node *node) 315 { 316 const struct i915_request *rq = 317 container_of(node, const struct i915_request, sched); 318 319 return i915_request_completed(rq); 320 } 321 322 void i915_retire_requests(struct drm_i915_private *i915); 323 324 /* 325 * We treat requests as fences. This is not be to confused with our 326 * "fence registers" but pipeline synchronisation objects ala GL_ARB_sync. 327 * We use the fences to synchronize access from the CPU with activity on the 328 * GPU, for example, we should not rewrite an object's PTE whilst the GPU 329 * is reading them. We also track fences at a higher level to provide 330 * implicit synchronisation around GEM objects, e.g. set-domain will wait 331 * for outstanding GPU rendering before marking the object ready for CPU 332 * access, or a pageflip will wait until the GPU is complete before showing 333 * the frame on the scanout. 334 * 335 * In order to use a fence, the object must track the fence it needs to 336 * serialise with. For example, GEM objects want to track both read and 337 * write access so that we can perform concurrent read operations between 338 * the CPU and GPU engines, as well as waiting for all rendering to 339 * complete, or waiting for the last GPU user of a "fence register". The 340 * object then embeds a #i915_gem_active to track the most recent (in 341 * retirement order) request relevant for the desired mode of access. 342 * The #i915_gem_active is updated with i915_gem_active_set() to track the 343 * most recent fence request, typically this is done as part of 344 * i915_vma_move_to_active(). 345 * 346 * When the #i915_gem_active completes (is retired), it will 347 * signal its completion to the owner through a callback as well as mark 348 * itself as idle (i915_gem_active.request == NULL). The owner 349 * can then perform any action, such as delayed freeing of an active 350 * resource including itself. 351 */ 352 struct i915_gem_active; 353 354 typedef void (*i915_gem_retire_fn)(struct i915_gem_active *, 355 struct i915_request *); 356 357 struct i915_gem_active { 358 struct i915_request __rcu *request; 359 struct list_head link; 360 i915_gem_retire_fn retire; 361 }; 362 363 void i915_gem_retire_noop(struct i915_gem_active *, 364 struct i915_request *request); 365 366 /** 367 * init_request_active - prepares the activity tracker for use 368 * @active - the active tracker 369 * @func - a callback when then the tracker is retired (becomes idle), 370 * can be NULL 371 * 372 * init_request_active() prepares the embedded @active struct for use as 373 * an activity tracker, that is for tracking the last known active request 374 * associated with it. When the last request becomes idle, when it is retired 375 * after completion, the optional callback @func is invoked. 376 */ 377 static inline void 378 init_request_active(struct i915_gem_active *active, 379 i915_gem_retire_fn retire) 380 { 381 INIT_LIST_HEAD(&active->link); 382 active->retire = retire ?: i915_gem_retire_noop; 383 } 384 385 /** 386 * i915_gem_active_set - updates the tracker to watch the current request 387 * @active - the active tracker 388 * @request - the request to watch 389 * 390 * i915_gem_active_set() watches the given @request for completion. Whilst 391 * that @request is busy, the @active reports busy. When that @request is 392 * retired, the @active tracker is updated to report idle. 393 */ 394 static inline void 395 i915_gem_active_set(struct i915_gem_active *active, 396 struct i915_request *request) 397 { 398 list_move(&active->link, &request->active_list); 399 rcu_assign_pointer(active->request, request); 400 } 401 402 /** 403 * i915_gem_active_set_retire_fn - updates the retirement callback 404 * @active - the active tracker 405 * @fn - the routine called when the request is retired 406 * @mutex - struct_mutex used to guard retirements 407 * 408 * i915_gem_active_set_retire_fn() updates the function pointer that 409 * is called when the final request associated with the @active tracker 410 * is retired. 411 */ 412 static inline void 413 i915_gem_active_set_retire_fn(struct i915_gem_active *active, 414 i915_gem_retire_fn fn, 415 struct mutex *mutex) 416 { 417 lockdep_assert_held(mutex); 418 active->retire = fn ?: i915_gem_retire_noop; 419 } 420 421 static inline struct i915_request * 422 __i915_gem_active_peek(const struct i915_gem_active *active) 423 { 424 /* 425 * Inside the error capture (running with the driver in an unknown 426 * state), we want to bend the rules slightly (a lot). 427 * 428 * Work is in progress to make it safer, in the meantime this keeps 429 * the known issue from spamming the logs. 430 */ 431 return rcu_dereference_protected(active->request, 1); 432 } 433 434 /** 435 * i915_gem_active_raw - return the active request 436 * @active - the active tracker 437 * 438 * i915_gem_active_raw() returns the current request being tracked, or NULL. 439 * It does not obtain a reference on the request for the caller, so the caller 440 * must hold struct_mutex. 441 */ 442 static inline struct i915_request * 443 i915_gem_active_raw(const struct i915_gem_active *active, struct mutex *mutex) 444 { 445 return rcu_dereference_protected(active->request, 446 lockdep_is_held(mutex)); 447 } 448 449 /** 450 * i915_gem_active_peek - report the active request being monitored 451 * @active - the active tracker 452 * 453 * i915_gem_active_peek() returns the current request being tracked if 454 * still active, or NULL. It does not obtain a reference on the request 455 * for the caller, so the caller must hold struct_mutex. 456 */ 457 static inline struct i915_request * 458 i915_gem_active_peek(const struct i915_gem_active *active, struct mutex *mutex) 459 { 460 struct i915_request *request; 461 462 request = i915_gem_active_raw(active, mutex); 463 if (!request || i915_request_completed(request)) 464 return NULL; 465 466 return request; 467 } 468 469 /** 470 * i915_gem_active_get - return a reference to the active request 471 * @active - the active tracker 472 * 473 * i915_gem_active_get() returns a reference to the active request, or NULL 474 * if the active tracker is idle. The caller must hold struct_mutex. 475 */ 476 static inline struct i915_request * 477 i915_gem_active_get(const struct i915_gem_active *active, struct mutex *mutex) 478 { 479 return i915_request_get(i915_gem_active_peek(active, mutex)); 480 } 481 482 /** 483 * __i915_gem_active_get_rcu - return a reference to the active request 484 * @active - the active tracker 485 * 486 * __i915_gem_active_get() returns a reference to the active request, or NULL 487 * if the active tracker is idle. The caller must hold the RCU read lock, but 488 * the returned pointer is safe to use outside of RCU. 489 */ 490 static inline struct i915_request * 491 __i915_gem_active_get_rcu(const struct i915_gem_active *active) 492 { 493 /* 494 * Performing a lockless retrieval of the active request is super 495 * tricky. SLAB_TYPESAFE_BY_RCU merely guarantees that the backing 496 * slab of request objects will not be freed whilst we hold the 497 * RCU read lock. It does not guarantee that the request itself 498 * will not be freed and then *reused*. Viz, 499 * 500 * Thread A Thread B 501 * 502 * rq = active.request 503 * retire(rq) -> free(rq); 504 * (rq is now first on the slab freelist) 505 * active.request = NULL 506 * 507 * rq = new submission on a new object 508 * ref(rq) 509 * 510 * To prevent the request from being reused whilst the caller 511 * uses it, we take a reference like normal. Whilst acquiring 512 * the reference we check that it is not in a destroyed state 513 * (refcnt == 0). That prevents the request being reallocated 514 * whilst the caller holds on to it. To check that the request 515 * was not reallocated as we acquired the reference we have to 516 * check that our request remains the active request across 517 * the lookup, in the same manner as a seqlock. The visibility 518 * of the pointer versus the reference counting is controlled 519 * by using RCU barriers (rcu_dereference and rcu_assign_pointer). 520 * 521 * In the middle of all that, we inspect whether the request is 522 * complete. Retiring is lazy so the request may be completed long 523 * before the active tracker is updated. Querying whether the 524 * request is complete is far cheaper (as it involves no locked 525 * instructions setting cachelines to exclusive) than acquiring 526 * the reference, so we do it first. The RCU read lock ensures the 527 * pointer dereference is valid, but does not ensure that the 528 * seqno nor HWS is the right one! However, if the request was 529 * reallocated, that means the active tracker's request was complete. 530 * If the new request is also complete, then both are and we can 531 * just report the active tracker is idle. If the new request is 532 * incomplete, then we acquire a reference on it and check that 533 * it remained the active request. 534 * 535 * It is then imperative that we do not zero the request on 536 * reallocation, so that we can chase the dangling pointers! 537 * See i915_request_alloc(). 538 */ 539 do { 540 struct i915_request *request; 541 542 request = rcu_dereference(active->request); 543 if (!request || i915_request_completed(request)) 544 return NULL; 545 546 /* 547 * An especially silly compiler could decide to recompute the 548 * result of i915_request_completed, more specifically 549 * re-emit the load for request->fence.seqno. A race would catch 550 * a later seqno value, which could flip the result from true to 551 * false. Which means part of the instructions below might not 552 * be executed, while later on instructions are executed. Due to 553 * barriers within the refcounting the inconsistency can't reach 554 * past the call to i915_request_get_rcu, but not executing 555 * that while still executing i915_request_put() creates 556 * havoc enough. Prevent this with a compiler barrier. 557 */ 558 barrier(); 559 560 request = i915_request_get_rcu(request); 561 562 /* 563 * What stops the following rcu_access_pointer() from occurring 564 * before the above i915_request_get_rcu()? If we were 565 * to read the value before pausing to get the reference to 566 * the request, we may not notice a change in the active 567 * tracker. 568 * 569 * The rcu_access_pointer() is a mere compiler barrier, which 570 * means both the CPU and compiler are free to perform the 571 * memory read without constraint. The compiler only has to 572 * ensure that any operations after the rcu_access_pointer() 573 * occur afterwards in program order. This means the read may 574 * be performed earlier by an out-of-order CPU, or adventurous 575 * compiler. 576 * 577 * The atomic operation at the heart of 578 * i915_request_get_rcu(), see dma_fence_get_rcu(), is 579 * atomic_inc_not_zero() which is only a full memory barrier 580 * when successful. That is, if i915_request_get_rcu() 581 * returns the request (and so with the reference counted 582 * incremented) then the following read for rcu_access_pointer() 583 * must occur after the atomic operation and so confirm 584 * that this request is the one currently being tracked. 585 * 586 * The corresponding write barrier is part of 587 * rcu_assign_pointer(). 588 */ 589 if (!request || request == rcu_access_pointer(active->request)) 590 return rcu_pointer_handoff(request); 591 592 i915_request_put(request); 593 } while (1); 594 } 595 596 /** 597 * i915_gem_active_get_unlocked - return a reference to the active request 598 * @active - the active tracker 599 * 600 * i915_gem_active_get_unlocked() returns a reference to the active request, 601 * or NULL if the active tracker is idle. The reference is obtained under RCU, 602 * so no locking is required by the caller. 603 * 604 * The reference should be freed with i915_request_put(). 605 */ 606 static inline struct i915_request * 607 i915_gem_active_get_unlocked(const struct i915_gem_active *active) 608 { 609 struct i915_request *request; 610 611 rcu_read_lock(); 612 request = __i915_gem_active_get_rcu(active); 613 rcu_read_unlock(); 614 615 return request; 616 } 617 618 /** 619 * i915_gem_active_isset - report whether the active tracker is assigned 620 * @active - the active tracker 621 * 622 * i915_gem_active_isset() returns true if the active tracker is currently 623 * assigned to a request. Due to the lazy retiring, that request may be idle 624 * and this may report stale information. 625 */ 626 static inline bool 627 i915_gem_active_isset(const struct i915_gem_active *active) 628 { 629 return rcu_access_pointer(active->request); 630 } 631 632 /** 633 * i915_gem_active_wait - waits until the request is completed 634 * @active - the active request on which to wait 635 * @flags - how to wait 636 * @timeout - how long to wait at most 637 * @rps - userspace client to charge for a waitboost 638 * 639 * i915_gem_active_wait() waits until the request is completed before 640 * returning, without requiring any locks to be held. Note that it does not 641 * retire any requests before returning. 642 * 643 * This function relies on RCU in order to acquire the reference to the active 644 * request without holding any locks. See __i915_gem_active_get_rcu() for the 645 * glory details on how that is managed. Once the reference is acquired, we 646 * can then wait upon the request, and afterwards release our reference, 647 * free of any locking. 648 * 649 * This function wraps i915_request_wait(), see it for the full details on 650 * the arguments. 651 * 652 * Returns 0 if successful, or a negative error code. 653 */ 654 static inline int 655 i915_gem_active_wait(const struct i915_gem_active *active, unsigned int flags) 656 { 657 struct i915_request *request; 658 long ret = 0; 659 660 request = i915_gem_active_get_unlocked(active); 661 if (request) { 662 ret = i915_request_wait(request, flags, MAX_SCHEDULE_TIMEOUT); 663 i915_request_put(request); 664 } 665 666 return ret < 0 ? ret : 0; 667 } 668 669 /** 670 * i915_gem_active_retire - waits until the request is retired 671 * @active - the active request on which to wait 672 * 673 * i915_gem_active_retire() waits until the request is completed, 674 * and then ensures that at least the retirement handler for this 675 * @active tracker is called before returning. If the @active 676 * tracker is idle, the function returns immediately. 677 */ 678 static inline int __must_check 679 i915_gem_active_retire(struct i915_gem_active *active, 680 struct mutex *mutex) 681 { 682 struct i915_request *request; 683 long ret; 684 685 request = i915_gem_active_raw(active, mutex); 686 if (!request) 687 return 0; 688 689 ret = i915_request_wait(request, 690 I915_WAIT_INTERRUPTIBLE | I915_WAIT_LOCKED, 691 MAX_SCHEDULE_TIMEOUT); 692 if (ret < 0) 693 return ret; 694 695 list_del_init(&active->link); 696 RCU_INIT_POINTER(active->request, NULL); 697 698 active->retire(active, request); 699 700 return 0; 701 } 702 703 #define for_each_active(mask, idx) \ 704 for (; mask ? idx = ffs(mask) - 1, 1 : 0; mask &= ~BIT(idx)) 705 706 #endif /* I915_REQUEST_H */ 707