[PATCH v8 2/3] CMDQ: Mediatek CMDQ driver
Matthias Brugger
matthias.bgg at gmail.com
Wed Jun 8 08:35:33 PDT 2016
On 08/06/16 14:25, Horng-Shyang Liao wrote:
> Hi Matthias,
>
> On Wed, 2016-06-08 at 12:45 +0200, Matthias Brugger wrote:
>>
>> On 08/06/16 07:40, Horng-Shyang Liao wrote:
>>> Hi Matthias,
>>>
>>> On Tue, 2016-06-07 at 18:59 +0200, Matthias Brugger wrote:
>>>>
>>>> On 03/06/16 15:11, Matthias Brugger wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>> [...]
>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> +
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> + smp_mb(); /* modify jump before enable thread */
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> + }
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> +
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> + cmdq_thread_writel(thread, task->pa_base +
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> task->command_size,
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> + CMDQ_THR_END_ADDR);
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> + cmdq_thread_resume(thread);
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> + }
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> + list_move_tail(&task->list_entry, &thread->task_busy_list);
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> + spin_unlock_irqrestore(&cmdq->exec_lock, flags);
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> +}
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> +
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> +static void cmdq_handle_error_done(struct cmdq *cmdq,
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> + struct cmdq_thread *thread, u32 irq_flag)
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> +{
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> + struct cmdq_task *task, *tmp, *curr_task = NULL;
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> + u32 curr_pa;
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> + struct cmdq_cb_data cmdq_cb_data;
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> + bool err;
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> +
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> + if (irq_flag & CMDQ_THR_IRQ_ERROR)
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> + err = true;
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> + else if (irq_flag & CMDQ_THR_IRQ_DONE)
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> + err = false;
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> + else
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> + return;
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> +
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> + curr_pa = cmdq_thread_readl(thread, CMDQ_THR_CURR_ADDR);
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> +
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> + list_for_each_entry_safe(task, tmp, &thread->task_busy_list,
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> + list_entry) {
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> + if (curr_pa >= task->pa_base &&
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> + curr_pa < (task->pa_base + task->command_size))
>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>> What are you checking here? It seems as if you make some implcit
>>>>>>>>>>>>> assumptions about pa_base and the order of execution of
>>>>>>>>>>>>> commands in the
>>>>>>>>>>>>> thread. Is it save to do so? Does dma_alloc_coherent give any
>>>>>>>>>>>>> guarantees
>>>>>>>>>>>>> about dma_handle?
>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>> 1. Check what is the current running task in this GCE thread.
>>>>>>>>>>>> 2. Yes.
>>>>>>>>>>>> 3. Yes, CMDQ doesn't use iommu, so physical address is continuous.
>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Yes, physical addresses might be continous, but AFAIK there is no
>>>>>>>>>>> guarantee that the dma_handle address is steadily growing, when
>>>>>>>>>>> calling
>>>>>>>>>>> dma_alloc_coherent. And if I understand the code correctly, you
>>>>>>>>>>> use this
>>>>>>>>>>> assumption to decide if the task picked from task_busy_list is
>>>>>>>>>>> currently
>>>>>>>>>>> executing. So I think this mecanism is not working.
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> I don't use dma_handle address, and just use physical addresses.
>>>>>>>>>> From CPU's point of view, tasks are linked by the busy list.
>>>>>>>>>> From GCE's point of view, tasks are linked by the JUMP command.
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> In which cases does the HW thread raise an interrupt.
>>>>>>>>>>> In case of error. When does CMDQ_THR_IRQ_DONE get raised?
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> GCE will raise interrupt if any task is done or error.
>>>>>>>>>> However, GCE is fast, so CPU may get multiple done tasks
>>>>>>>>>> when it is running ISR.
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> In case of error, that GCE thread will pause and raise interrupt.
>>>>>>>>>> So, CPU may get multiple done tasks and one error task.
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> I think we should reimplement the ISR mechanism. Can't we just read
>>>>>>>>> CURR_IRQ_STATUS and THR_IRQ_STATUS in the handler and leave
>>>>>>>>> cmdq_handle_error_done to the thread_fn? You will need to pass
>>>>>>>>> information from the handler to thread_fn, but that shouldn't be an
>>>>>>>>> issue. AFAIK interrupts are disabled in the handler, so we should stay
>>>>>>>>> there as short as possible. Traversing task_busy_list is expensive, so
>>>>>>>>> we need to do it in a thread context.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Actually, our initial implementation is similar to your suggestion,
>>>>>>>> but display needs CMDQ to return callback function very precisely,
>>>>>>>> else display will drop frame.
>>>>>>>> For display, CMDQ interrupt will be raised every 16 ~ 17 ms,
>>>>>>>> and CMDQ needs to call callback function in ISR.
>>>>>>>> If we defer callback to workqueue, the time interval may be larger than
>>>>>>>> 32 ms.sometimes.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> I think the problem is, that you implemented the workqueue as a ordered
>>>>>>> workqueue, so there is no parallel processing. I'm still not sure why
>>>>>>> you need the workqueue to be ordered. Can you please explain.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> The order should be kept.
>>>>>> Let me use mouse cursor as an example.
>>>>>> If task 1 means move mouse cursor to point A, task 2 means point B,
>>>>>> and task 3 means point C, our expected result is A -> B -> C.
>>>>>> If the order is not kept, the result could become A -> C -> B.
>>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Got it, thanks for the clarification.
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> I think a way to get rid of the workqueue is to use a timer, which gets
>>>> programmed to the time a timeout in the first task in the busy list
>>>> would happen. Everytime we update the busy list (e.g. because of task
>>>> got finished by the thread), we update the timer. When the timer
>>>> triggers, which hopefully won't happen too often, we return timeout on
>>>> the busy list elements, until the time is lower then the actual time.
>>>>
>>>> At least with this we can reduce the data structures in this driver and
>>>> make it more lightweight.
>>>
>>> From my understanding, your proposed method can handle timeout case.
>>>
>>> However, the workqueue is also in charge of releasing tasks.
>>> Do you take releasing tasks into consideration by using the proposed
>>> timer method?
>>> Furthermore, I think the code will become more complex if we also use
>>> timer to implement releasing tasks.
>>>
>>
>> Can't we call
>> clk_disable_unprepare(cmdq->clock);
>> cmdq_task_release(task);
>> after invoking the callback?
>
> Do you mean just call these two functions in ISR?
> My major concern is dma_free_coherent() and kfree() in
> cmdq_task_release(task).
Why do we need the dma calls at all? Can't we just calculate the
physical address using __pa(x)?
> Therefore, your suggestion is to use GFP_ATOMIC for both
> dma_alloc_coherent() and kzalloc(). Right?
I don't think we need GFP_ATOMIC, the critical path will just free the
memory.
> If so, I can try to implement timeout by timer, and discuss with you
> if I have further questions.
>
Sounds good :)
Thanks,
Matthias
>> Regrading the clock, wouldn't it be easier to handle the clock
>> enable/disable depending on the state of task_busy_list? I suppose we
>> can't as we would need to check the task_busy_list of all threads, right?
>>
>> Regards,
>> Matthias
>
> Thanks,
> HS
>
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