1 // SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only 2 /* 3 * Fence mechanism for dma-buf and to allow for asynchronous dma access 4 * 5 * Copyright (C) 2012 Canonical Ltd 6 * Copyright (C) 2012 Texas Instruments 7 * 8 * Authors: 9 * Rob Clark <robdclark@gmail.com> 10 * Maarten Lankhorst <maarten.lankhorst@canonical.com> 11 */ 12 13 #include <linux/slab.h> 14 #include <linux/export.h> 15 #include <linux/atomic.h> 16 #include <linux/dma-fence.h> 17 #include <linux/sched/signal.h> 18 #include <linux/seq_file.h> 19 20 #define CREATE_TRACE_POINTS 21 #include <trace/events/dma_fence.h> 22 23 EXPORT_TRACEPOINT_SYMBOL(dma_fence_emit); 24 EXPORT_TRACEPOINT_SYMBOL(dma_fence_enable_signal); 25 EXPORT_TRACEPOINT_SYMBOL(dma_fence_signaled); 26 27 static DEFINE_SPINLOCK(dma_fence_stub_lock); 28 static struct dma_fence dma_fence_stub; 29 30 /* 31 * fence context counter: each execution context should have its own 32 * fence context, this allows checking if fences belong to the same 33 * context or not. One device can have multiple separate contexts, 34 * and they're used if some engine can run independently of another. 35 */ 36 static atomic64_t dma_fence_context_counter = ATOMIC64_INIT(1); 37 38 /** 39 * DOC: DMA fences overview 40 * 41 * DMA fences, represented by &struct dma_fence, are the kernel internal 42 * synchronization primitive for DMA operations like GPU rendering, video 43 * encoding/decoding, or displaying buffers on a screen. 44 * 45 * A fence is initialized using dma_fence_init() and completed using 46 * dma_fence_signal(). Fences are associated with a context, allocated through 47 * dma_fence_context_alloc(), and all fences on the same context are 48 * fully ordered. 49 * 50 * Since the purposes of fences is to facilitate cross-device and 51 * cross-application synchronization, there's multiple ways to use one: 52 * 53 * - Individual fences can be exposed as a &sync_file, accessed as a file 54 * descriptor from userspace, created by calling sync_file_create(). This is 55 * called explicit fencing, since userspace passes around explicit 56 * synchronization points. 57 * 58 * - Some subsystems also have their own explicit fencing primitives, like 59 * &drm_syncobj. Compared to &sync_file, a &drm_syncobj allows the underlying 60 * fence to be updated. 61 * 62 * - Then there's also implicit fencing, where the synchronization points are 63 * implicitly passed around as part of shared &dma_buf instances. Such 64 * implicit fences are stored in &struct dma_resv through the 65 * &dma_buf.resv pointer. 66 */ 67 68 /** 69 * DOC: fence cross-driver contract 70 * 71 * Since &dma_fence provide a cross driver contract, all drivers must follow the 72 * same rules: 73 * 74 * * Fences must complete in a reasonable time. Fences which represent kernels 75 * and shaders submitted by userspace, which could run forever, must be backed 76 * up by timeout and gpu hang recovery code. Minimally that code must prevent 77 * further command submission and force complete all in-flight fences, e.g. 78 * when the driver or hardware do not support gpu reset, or if the gpu reset 79 * failed for some reason. Ideally the driver supports gpu recovery which only 80 * affects the offending userspace context, and no other userspace 81 * submissions. 82 * 83 * * Drivers may have different ideas of what completion within a reasonable 84 * time means. Some hang recovery code uses a fixed timeout, others a mix 85 * between observing forward progress and increasingly strict timeouts. 86 * Drivers should not try to second guess timeout handling of fences from 87 * other drivers. 88 * 89 * * To ensure there's no deadlocks of dma_fence_wait() against other locks 90 * drivers should annotate all code required to reach dma_fence_signal(), 91 * which completes the fences, with dma_fence_begin_signalling() and 92 * dma_fence_end_signalling(). 93 * 94 * * Drivers are allowed to call dma_fence_wait() while holding dma_resv_lock(). 95 * This means any code required for fence completion cannot acquire a 96 * &dma_resv lock. Note that this also pulls in the entire established 97 * locking hierarchy around dma_resv_lock() and dma_resv_unlock(). 98 * 99 * * Drivers are allowed to call dma_fence_wait() from their &shrinker 100 * callbacks. This means any code required for fence completion cannot 101 * allocate memory with GFP_KERNEL. 102 * 103 * * Drivers are allowed to call dma_fence_wait() from their &mmu_notifier 104 * respectively &mmu_interval_notifier callbacks. This means any code required 105 * for fence completion cannot allocate memory with GFP_NOFS or GFP_NOIO. 106 * Only GFP_ATOMIC is permissible, which might fail. 107 * 108 * Note that only GPU drivers have a reasonable excuse for both requiring 109 * &mmu_interval_notifier and &shrinker callbacks at the same time as having to 110 * track asynchronous compute work using &dma_fence. No driver outside of 111 * drivers/gpu should ever call dma_fence_wait() in such contexts. 112 */ 113 114 static const char *dma_fence_stub_get_name(struct dma_fence *fence) 115 { 116 return "stub"; 117 } 118 119 static const struct dma_fence_ops dma_fence_stub_ops = { 120 .get_driver_name = dma_fence_stub_get_name, 121 .get_timeline_name = dma_fence_stub_get_name, 122 }; 123 124 static int __init dma_fence_init_stub(void) 125 { 126 dma_fence_init(&dma_fence_stub, &dma_fence_stub_ops, 127 &dma_fence_stub_lock, 0, 0); 128 129 set_bit(DMA_FENCE_FLAG_ENABLE_SIGNAL_BIT, 130 &dma_fence_stub.flags); 131 132 dma_fence_signal(&dma_fence_stub); 133 return 0; 134 } 135 subsys_initcall(dma_fence_init_stub); 136 137 /** 138 * dma_fence_get_stub - return a signaled fence 139 * 140 * Return a stub fence which is already signaled. The fence's timestamp 141 * corresponds to the initialisation time of the linux kernel. 142 */ 143 struct dma_fence *dma_fence_get_stub(void) 144 { 145 return dma_fence_get(&dma_fence_stub); 146 } 147 EXPORT_SYMBOL(dma_fence_get_stub); 148 149 /** 150 * dma_fence_allocate_private_stub - return a private, signaled fence 151 * @timestamp: timestamp when the fence was signaled 152 * 153 * Return a newly allocated and signaled stub fence. 154 */ 155 struct dma_fence *dma_fence_allocate_private_stub(ktime_t timestamp) 156 { 157 struct dma_fence *fence; 158 159 fence = kzalloc(sizeof(*fence), GFP_KERNEL); 160 if (fence == NULL) 161 return NULL; 162 163 dma_fence_init(fence, 164 &dma_fence_stub_ops, 165 &dma_fence_stub_lock, 166 0, 0); 167 168 set_bit(DMA_FENCE_FLAG_ENABLE_SIGNAL_BIT, 169 &fence->flags); 170 171 dma_fence_signal_timestamp(fence, timestamp); 172 173 return fence; 174 } 175 EXPORT_SYMBOL(dma_fence_allocate_private_stub); 176 177 /** 178 * dma_fence_context_alloc - allocate an array of fence contexts 179 * @num: amount of contexts to allocate 180 * 181 * This function will return the first index of the number of fence contexts 182 * allocated. The fence context is used for setting &dma_fence.context to a 183 * unique number by passing the context to dma_fence_init(). 184 */ 185 u64 dma_fence_context_alloc(unsigned num) 186 { 187 WARN_ON(!num); 188 return atomic64_fetch_add(num, &dma_fence_context_counter); 189 } 190 EXPORT_SYMBOL(dma_fence_context_alloc); 191 192 /** 193 * DOC: fence signalling annotation 194 * 195 * Proving correctness of all the kernel code around &dma_fence through code 196 * review and testing is tricky for a few reasons: 197 * 198 * * It is a cross-driver contract, and therefore all drivers must follow the 199 * same rules for lock nesting order, calling contexts for various functions 200 * and anything else significant for in-kernel interfaces. But it is also 201 * impossible to test all drivers in a single machine, hence brute-force N vs. 202 * N testing of all combinations is impossible. Even just limiting to the 203 * possible combinations is infeasible. 204 * 205 * * There is an enormous amount of driver code involved. For render drivers 206 * there's the tail of command submission, after fences are published, 207 * scheduler code, interrupt and workers to process job completion, 208 * and timeout, gpu reset and gpu hang recovery code. Plus for integration 209 * with core mm with have &mmu_notifier, respectively &mmu_interval_notifier, 210 * and &shrinker. For modesetting drivers there's the commit tail functions 211 * between when fences for an atomic modeset are published, and when the 212 * corresponding vblank completes, including any interrupt processing and 213 * related workers. Auditing all that code, across all drivers, is not 214 * feasible. 215 * 216 * * Due to how many other subsystems are involved and the locking hierarchies 217 * this pulls in there is extremely thin wiggle-room for driver-specific 218 * differences. &dma_fence interacts with almost all of the core memory 219 * handling through page fault handlers via &dma_resv, dma_resv_lock() and 220 * dma_resv_unlock(). On the other side it also interacts through all 221 * allocation sites through &mmu_notifier and &shrinker. 222 * 223 * Furthermore lockdep does not handle cross-release dependencies, which means 224 * any deadlocks between dma_fence_wait() and dma_fence_signal() can't be caught 225 * at runtime with some quick testing. The simplest example is one thread 226 * waiting on a &dma_fence while holding a lock:: 227 * 228 * lock(A); 229 * dma_fence_wait(B); 230 * unlock(A); 231 * 232 * while the other thread is stuck trying to acquire the same lock, which 233 * prevents it from signalling the fence the previous thread is stuck waiting 234 * on:: 235 * 236 * lock(A); 237 * unlock(A); 238 * dma_fence_signal(B); 239 * 240 * By manually annotating all code relevant to signalling a &dma_fence we can 241 * teach lockdep about these dependencies, which also helps with the validation 242 * headache since now lockdep can check all the rules for us:: 243 * 244 * cookie = dma_fence_begin_signalling(); 245 * lock(A); 246 * unlock(A); 247 * dma_fence_signal(B); 248 * dma_fence_end_signalling(cookie); 249 * 250 * For using dma_fence_begin_signalling() and dma_fence_end_signalling() to 251 * annotate critical sections the following rules need to be observed: 252 * 253 * * All code necessary to complete a &dma_fence must be annotated, from the 254 * point where a fence is accessible to other threads, to the point where 255 * dma_fence_signal() is called. Un-annotated code can contain deadlock issues, 256 * and due to the very strict rules and many corner cases it is infeasible to 257 * catch these just with review or normal stress testing. 258 * 259 * * &struct dma_resv deserves a special note, since the readers are only 260 * protected by rcu. This means the signalling critical section starts as soon 261 * as the new fences are installed, even before dma_resv_unlock() is called. 262 * 263 * * The only exception are fast paths and opportunistic signalling code, which 264 * calls dma_fence_signal() purely as an optimization, but is not required to 265 * guarantee completion of a &dma_fence. The usual example is a wait IOCTL 266 * which calls dma_fence_signal(), while the mandatory completion path goes 267 * through a hardware interrupt and possible job completion worker. 268 * 269 * * To aid composability of code, the annotations can be freely nested, as long 270 * as the overall locking hierarchy is consistent. The annotations also work 271 * both in interrupt and process context. Due to implementation details this 272 * requires that callers pass an opaque cookie from 273 * dma_fence_begin_signalling() to dma_fence_end_signalling(). 274 * 275 * * Validation against the cross driver contract is implemented by priming 276 * lockdep with the relevant hierarchy at boot-up. This means even just 277 * testing with a single device is enough to validate a driver, at least as 278 * far as deadlocks with dma_fence_wait() against dma_fence_signal() are 279 * concerned. 280 */ 281 #ifdef CONFIG_LOCKDEP 282 static struct lockdep_map dma_fence_lockdep_map = { 283 .name = "dma_fence_map" 284 }; 285 286 /** 287 * dma_fence_begin_signalling - begin a critical DMA fence signalling section 288 * 289 * Drivers should use this to annotate the beginning of any code section 290 * required to eventually complete &dma_fence by calling dma_fence_signal(). 291 * 292 * The end of these critical sections are annotated with 293 * dma_fence_end_signalling(). 294 * 295 * Returns: 296 * 297 * Opaque cookie needed by the implementation, which needs to be passed to 298 * dma_fence_end_signalling(). 299 */ 300 bool dma_fence_begin_signalling(void) 301 { 302 /* explicitly nesting ... */ 303 if (lock_is_held_type(&dma_fence_lockdep_map, 1)) 304 return true; 305 306 /* rely on might_sleep check for soft/hardirq locks */ 307 if (in_atomic()) 308 return true; 309 310 /* ... and non-recursive successful read_trylock */ 311 lock_acquire(&dma_fence_lockdep_map, 0, 1, 1, 1, NULL, _RET_IP_); 312 313 return false; 314 } 315 EXPORT_SYMBOL(dma_fence_begin_signalling); 316 317 /** 318 * dma_fence_end_signalling - end a critical DMA fence signalling section 319 * @cookie: opaque cookie from dma_fence_begin_signalling() 320 * 321 * Closes a critical section annotation opened by dma_fence_begin_signalling(). 322 */ 323 void dma_fence_end_signalling(bool cookie) 324 { 325 if (cookie) 326 return; 327 328 lock_release(&dma_fence_lockdep_map, _RET_IP_); 329 } 330 EXPORT_SYMBOL(dma_fence_end_signalling); 331 332 void __dma_fence_might_wait(void) 333 { 334 bool tmp; 335 336 tmp = lock_is_held_type(&dma_fence_lockdep_map, 1); 337 if (tmp) 338 lock_release(&dma_fence_lockdep_map, _THIS_IP_); 339 lock_map_acquire(&dma_fence_lockdep_map); 340 lock_map_release(&dma_fence_lockdep_map); 341 if (tmp) 342 lock_acquire(&dma_fence_lockdep_map, 0, 1, 1, 1, NULL, _THIS_IP_); 343 } 344 #endif 345 346 347 /** 348 * dma_fence_signal_timestamp_locked - signal completion of a fence 349 * @fence: the fence to signal 350 * @timestamp: fence signal timestamp in kernel's CLOCK_MONOTONIC time domain 351 * 352 * Signal completion for software callbacks on a fence, this will unblock 353 * dma_fence_wait() calls and run all the callbacks added with 354 * dma_fence_add_callback(). Can be called multiple times, but since a fence 355 * can only go from the unsignaled to the signaled state and not back, it will 356 * only be effective the first time. Set the timestamp provided as the fence 357 * signal timestamp. 358 * 359 * Unlike dma_fence_signal_timestamp(), this function must be called with 360 * &dma_fence.lock held. 361 */ 362 void dma_fence_signal_timestamp_locked(struct dma_fence *fence, 363 ktime_t timestamp) 364 { 365 struct dma_fence_cb *cur, *tmp; 366 struct list_head cb_list; 367 368 lockdep_assert_held(fence->lock); 369 370 if (unlikely(test_and_set_bit(DMA_FENCE_FLAG_SIGNALED_BIT, 371 &fence->flags))) 372 return; 373 374 /* Stash the cb_list before replacing it with the timestamp */ 375 list_replace(&fence->cb_list, &cb_list); 376 377 fence->timestamp = timestamp; 378 set_bit(DMA_FENCE_FLAG_TIMESTAMP_BIT, &fence->flags); 379 trace_dma_fence_signaled(fence); 380 381 list_for_each_entry_safe(cur, tmp, &cb_list, node) { 382 INIT_LIST_HEAD(&cur->node); 383 cur->func(fence, cur); 384 } 385 } 386 EXPORT_SYMBOL(dma_fence_signal_timestamp_locked); 387 388 /** 389 * dma_fence_signal_timestamp - signal completion of a fence 390 * @fence: the fence to signal 391 * @timestamp: fence signal timestamp in kernel's CLOCK_MONOTONIC time domain 392 * 393 * Signal completion for software callbacks on a fence, this will unblock 394 * dma_fence_wait() calls and run all the callbacks added with 395 * dma_fence_add_callback(). Can be called multiple times, but since a fence 396 * can only go from the unsignaled to the signaled state and not back, it will 397 * only be effective the first time. Set the timestamp provided as the fence 398 * signal timestamp. 399 */ 400 void dma_fence_signal_timestamp(struct dma_fence *fence, ktime_t timestamp) 401 { 402 unsigned long flags; 403 404 if (WARN_ON(!fence)) 405 return; 406 407 spin_lock_irqsave(fence->lock, flags); 408 dma_fence_signal_timestamp_locked(fence, timestamp); 409 spin_unlock_irqrestore(fence->lock, flags); 410 } 411 EXPORT_SYMBOL(dma_fence_signal_timestamp); 412 413 /** 414 * dma_fence_signal_locked - signal completion of a fence 415 * @fence: the fence to signal 416 * 417 * Signal completion for software callbacks on a fence, this will unblock 418 * dma_fence_wait() calls and run all the callbacks added with 419 * dma_fence_add_callback(). Can be called multiple times, but since a fence 420 * can only go from the unsignaled to the signaled state and not back, it will 421 * only be effective the first time. 422 * 423 * Unlike dma_fence_signal(), this function must be called with &dma_fence.lock 424 * held. 425 */ 426 void dma_fence_signal_locked(struct dma_fence *fence) 427 { 428 dma_fence_signal_timestamp_locked(fence, ktime_get()); 429 } 430 EXPORT_SYMBOL(dma_fence_signal_locked); 431 432 /** 433 * dma_fence_check_and_signal_locked - signal the fence if it's not yet signaled 434 * @fence: the fence to check and signal 435 * 436 * Checks whether a fence was signaled and signals it if it was not yet signaled. 437 * 438 * Unlike dma_fence_check_and_signal(), this function must be called with 439 * &struct dma_fence.lock being held. 440 * 441 * Return: true if fence has been signaled already, false otherwise. 442 */ 443 bool dma_fence_check_and_signal_locked(struct dma_fence *fence) 444 { 445 bool ret; 446 447 ret = dma_fence_test_signaled_flag(fence); 448 dma_fence_signal_locked(fence); 449 450 return ret; 451 } 452 EXPORT_SYMBOL(dma_fence_check_and_signal_locked); 453 454 /** 455 * dma_fence_check_and_signal - signal the fence if it's not yet signaled 456 * @fence: the fence to check and signal 457 * 458 * Checks whether a fence was signaled and signals it if it was not yet signaled. 459 * All this is done in a race-free manner. 460 * 461 * Return: true if fence has been signaled already, false otherwise. 462 */ 463 bool dma_fence_check_and_signal(struct dma_fence *fence) 464 { 465 unsigned long flags; 466 bool ret; 467 468 spin_lock_irqsave(fence->lock, flags); 469 ret = dma_fence_check_and_signal_locked(fence); 470 spin_unlock_irqrestore(fence->lock, flags); 471 472 return ret; 473 } 474 EXPORT_SYMBOL(dma_fence_check_and_signal); 475 476 /** 477 * dma_fence_signal - signal completion of a fence 478 * @fence: the fence to signal 479 * 480 * Signal completion for software callbacks on a fence, this will unblock 481 * dma_fence_wait() calls and run all the callbacks added with 482 * dma_fence_add_callback(). Can be called multiple times, but since a fence 483 * can only go from the unsignaled to the signaled state and not back, it will 484 * only be effective the first time. 485 */ 486 void dma_fence_signal(struct dma_fence *fence) 487 { 488 unsigned long flags; 489 bool tmp; 490 491 if (WARN_ON(!fence)) 492 return; 493 494 tmp = dma_fence_begin_signalling(); 495 496 spin_lock_irqsave(fence->lock, flags); 497 dma_fence_signal_timestamp_locked(fence, ktime_get()); 498 spin_unlock_irqrestore(fence->lock, flags); 499 500 dma_fence_end_signalling(tmp); 501 } 502 EXPORT_SYMBOL(dma_fence_signal); 503 504 /** 505 * dma_fence_wait_timeout - sleep until the fence gets signaled 506 * or until timeout elapses 507 * @fence: the fence to wait on 508 * @intr: if true, do an interruptible wait 509 * @timeout: timeout value in jiffies, or MAX_SCHEDULE_TIMEOUT 510 * 511 * Returns -ERESTARTSYS if interrupted, 0 if the wait timed out, or the 512 * remaining timeout in jiffies on success. Other error values may be 513 * returned on custom implementations. 514 * 515 * Performs a synchronous wait on this fence. It is assumed the caller 516 * directly or indirectly (buf-mgr between reservation and committing) 517 * holds a reference to the fence, otherwise the fence might be 518 * freed before return, resulting in undefined behavior. 519 * 520 * See also dma_fence_wait() and dma_fence_wait_any_timeout(). 521 */ 522 signed long 523 dma_fence_wait_timeout(struct dma_fence *fence, bool intr, signed long timeout) 524 { 525 signed long ret; 526 527 if (WARN_ON(timeout < 0)) 528 return -EINVAL; 529 530 might_sleep(); 531 532 __dma_fence_might_wait(); 533 534 dma_fence_enable_sw_signaling(fence); 535 536 if (trace_dma_fence_wait_start_enabled()) { 537 rcu_read_lock(); 538 trace_dma_fence_wait_start(fence); 539 rcu_read_unlock(); 540 } 541 if (fence->ops->wait) 542 ret = fence->ops->wait(fence, intr, timeout); 543 else 544 ret = dma_fence_default_wait(fence, intr, timeout); 545 if (trace_dma_fence_wait_end_enabled()) { 546 rcu_read_lock(); 547 trace_dma_fence_wait_end(fence); 548 rcu_read_unlock(); 549 } 550 return ret; 551 } 552 EXPORT_SYMBOL(dma_fence_wait_timeout); 553 554 /** 555 * dma_fence_release - default release function for fences 556 * @kref: &dma_fence.recfount 557 * 558 * This is the default release functions for &dma_fence. Drivers shouldn't call 559 * this directly, but instead call dma_fence_put(). 560 */ 561 void dma_fence_release(struct kref *kref) 562 { 563 struct dma_fence *fence = 564 container_of(kref, struct dma_fence, refcount); 565 566 rcu_read_lock(); 567 trace_dma_fence_destroy(fence); 568 569 if (!list_empty(&fence->cb_list) && 570 !dma_fence_test_signaled_flag(fence)) { 571 const char __rcu *timeline; 572 const char __rcu *driver; 573 unsigned long flags; 574 575 driver = dma_fence_driver_name(fence); 576 timeline = dma_fence_timeline_name(fence); 577 578 WARN(1, 579 "Fence %s:%s:%llx:%llx released with pending signals!\n", 580 rcu_dereference(driver), rcu_dereference(timeline), 581 fence->context, fence->seqno); 582 583 /* 584 * Failed to signal before release, likely a refcounting issue. 585 * 586 * This should never happen, but if it does make sure that we 587 * don't leave chains dangling. We set the error flag first 588 * so that the callbacks know this signal is due to an error. 589 */ 590 spin_lock_irqsave(fence->lock, flags); 591 fence->error = -EDEADLK; 592 dma_fence_signal_locked(fence); 593 spin_unlock_irqrestore(fence->lock, flags); 594 } 595 596 rcu_read_unlock(); 597 598 if (fence->ops->release) 599 fence->ops->release(fence); 600 else 601 dma_fence_free(fence); 602 } 603 EXPORT_SYMBOL(dma_fence_release); 604 605 /** 606 * dma_fence_free - default release function for &dma_fence. 607 * @fence: fence to release 608 * 609 * This is the default implementation for &dma_fence_ops.release. It calls 610 * kfree_rcu() on @fence. 611 */ 612 void dma_fence_free(struct dma_fence *fence) 613 { 614 kfree_rcu(fence, rcu); 615 } 616 EXPORT_SYMBOL(dma_fence_free); 617 618 static bool __dma_fence_enable_signaling(struct dma_fence *fence) 619 { 620 bool was_set; 621 622 lockdep_assert_held(fence->lock); 623 624 was_set = test_and_set_bit(DMA_FENCE_FLAG_ENABLE_SIGNAL_BIT, 625 &fence->flags); 626 627 if (dma_fence_test_signaled_flag(fence)) 628 return false; 629 630 if (!was_set && fence->ops->enable_signaling) { 631 trace_dma_fence_enable_signal(fence); 632 633 if (!fence->ops->enable_signaling(fence)) { 634 dma_fence_signal_locked(fence); 635 return false; 636 } 637 } 638 639 return true; 640 } 641 642 /** 643 * dma_fence_enable_sw_signaling - enable signaling on fence 644 * @fence: the fence to enable 645 * 646 * This will request for sw signaling to be enabled, to make the fence 647 * complete as soon as possible. This calls &dma_fence_ops.enable_signaling 648 * internally. 649 */ 650 void dma_fence_enable_sw_signaling(struct dma_fence *fence) 651 { 652 unsigned long flags; 653 654 spin_lock_irqsave(fence->lock, flags); 655 __dma_fence_enable_signaling(fence); 656 spin_unlock_irqrestore(fence->lock, flags); 657 } 658 EXPORT_SYMBOL(dma_fence_enable_sw_signaling); 659 660 /** 661 * dma_fence_add_callback - add a callback to be called when the fence 662 * is signaled 663 * @fence: the fence to wait on 664 * @cb: the callback to register 665 * @func: the function to call 666 * 667 * Add a software callback to the fence. The caller should keep a reference to 668 * the fence. 669 * 670 * @cb will be initialized by dma_fence_add_callback(), no initialization 671 * by the caller is required. Any number of callbacks can be registered 672 * to a fence, but a callback can only be registered to one fence at a time. 673 * 674 * If fence is already signaled, this function will return -ENOENT (and 675 * *not* call the callback). 676 * 677 * Note that the callback can be called from an atomic context or irq context. 678 * 679 * Returns 0 in case of success, -ENOENT if the fence is already signaled 680 * and -EINVAL in case of error. 681 */ 682 int dma_fence_add_callback(struct dma_fence *fence, struct dma_fence_cb *cb, 683 dma_fence_func_t func) 684 { 685 unsigned long flags; 686 int ret = 0; 687 688 if (WARN_ON(!fence || !func)) 689 return -EINVAL; 690 691 if (dma_fence_test_signaled_flag(fence)) { 692 INIT_LIST_HEAD(&cb->node); 693 return -ENOENT; 694 } 695 696 spin_lock_irqsave(fence->lock, flags); 697 698 if (__dma_fence_enable_signaling(fence)) { 699 cb->func = func; 700 list_add_tail(&cb->node, &fence->cb_list); 701 } else { 702 INIT_LIST_HEAD(&cb->node); 703 ret = -ENOENT; 704 } 705 706 spin_unlock_irqrestore(fence->lock, flags); 707 708 return ret; 709 } 710 EXPORT_SYMBOL(dma_fence_add_callback); 711 712 /** 713 * dma_fence_get_status - returns the status upon completion 714 * @fence: the dma_fence to query 715 * 716 * This wraps dma_fence_get_status_locked() to return the error status 717 * condition on a signaled fence. See dma_fence_get_status_locked() for more 718 * details. 719 * 720 * Returns 0 if the fence has not yet been signaled, 1 if the fence has 721 * been signaled without an error condition, or a negative error code 722 * if the fence has been completed in err. 723 */ 724 int dma_fence_get_status(struct dma_fence *fence) 725 { 726 unsigned long flags; 727 int status; 728 729 spin_lock_irqsave(fence->lock, flags); 730 status = dma_fence_get_status_locked(fence); 731 spin_unlock_irqrestore(fence->lock, flags); 732 733 return status; 734 } 735 EXPORT_SYMBOL(dma_fence_get_status); 736 737 /** 738 * dma_fence_remove_callback - remove a callback from the signaling list 739 * @fence: the fence to wait on 740 * @cb: the callback to remove 741 * 742 * Remove a previously queued callback from the fence. This function returns 743 * true if the callback is successfully removed, or false if the fence has 744 * already been signaled. 745 * 746 * *WARNING*: 747 * Cancelling a callback should only be done if you really know what you're 748 * doing, since deadlocks and race conditions could occur all too easily. For 749 * this reason, it should only ever be done on hardware lockup recovery, 750 * with a reference held to the fence. 751 * 752 * Behaviour is undefined if @cb has not been added to @fence using 753 * dma_fence_add_callback() beforehand. 754 */ 755 bool 756 dma_fence_remove_callback(struct dma_fence *fence, struct dma_fence_cb *cb) 757 { 758 unsigned long flags; 759 bool ret; 760 761 spin_lock_irqsave(fence->lock, flags); 762 763 ret = !list_empty(&cb->node); 764 if (ret) 765 list_del_init(&cb->node); 766 767 spin_unlock_irqrestore(fence->lock, flags); 768 769 return ret; 770 } 771 EXPORT_SYMBOL(dma_fence_remove_callback); 772 773 struct default_wait_cb { 774 struct dma_fence_cb base; 775 struct task_struct *task; 776 }; 777 778 static void 779 dma_fence_default_wait_cb(struct dma_fence *fence, struct dma_fence_cb *cb) 780 { 781 struct default_wait_cb *wait = 782 container_of(cb, struct default_wait_cb, base); 783 784 wake_up_state(wait->task, TASK_NORMAL); 785 } 786 787 /** 788 * dma_fence_default_wait - default sleep until the fence gets signaled 789 * or until timeout elapses 790 * @fence: the fence to wait on 791 * @intr: if true, do an interruptible wait 792 * @timeout: timeout value in jiffies, or MAX_SCHEDULE_TIMEOUT 793 * 794 * Returns -ERESTARTSYS if interrupted, 0 if the wait timed out, or the 795 * remaining timeout in jiffies on success. If timeout is zero the value one is 796 * returned if the fence is already signaled for consistency with other 797 * functions taking a jiffies timeout. 798 */ 799 signed long 800 dma_fence_default_wait(struct dma_fence *fence, bool intr, signed long timeout) 801 { 802 struct default_wait_cb cb; 803 unsigned long flags; 804 signed long ret = timeout ? timeout : 1; 805 806 spin_lock_irqsave(fence->lock, flags); 807 808 if (dma_fence_test_signaled_flag(fence)) 809 goto out; 810 811 if (intr && signal_pending(current)) { 812 ret = -ERESTARTSYS; 813 goto out; 814 } 815 816 if (!timeout) { 817 ret = 0; 818 goto out; 819 } 820 821 cb.base.func = dma_fence_default_wait_cb; 822 cb.task = current; 823 list_add(&cb.base.node, &fence->cb_list); 824 825 while (!dma_fence_test_signaled_flag(fence) && ret > 0) { 826 if (intr) 827 __set_current_state(TASK_INTERRUPTIBLE); 828 else 829 __set_current_state(TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE); 830 spin_unlock_irqrestore(fence->lock, flags); 831 832 ret = schedule_timeout(ret); 833 834 spin_lock_irqsave(fence->lock, flags); 835 if (ret > 0 && intr && signal_pending(current)) 836 ret = -ERESTARTSYS; 837 } 838 839 if (!list_empty(&cb.base.node)) 840 list_del(&cb.base.node); 841 __set_current_state(TASK_RUNNING); 842 843 out: 844 spin_unlock_irqrestore(fence->lock, flags); 845 return ret; 846 } 847 EXPORT_SYMBOL(dma_fence_default_wait); 848 849 static bool 850 dma_fence_test_signaled_any(struct dma_fence **fences, uint32_t count, 851 uint32_t *idx) 852 { 853 int i; 854 855 for (i = 0; i < count; ++i) { 856 struct dma_fence *fence = fences[i]; 857 if (dma_fence_test_signaled_flag(fence)) { 858 if (idx) 859 *idx = i; 860 return true; 861 } 862 } 863 return false; 864 } 865 866 /** 867 * dma_fence_wait_any_timeout - sleep until any fence gets signaled 868 * or until timeout elapses 869 * @fences: array of fences to wait on 870 * @count: number of fences to wait on 871 * @intr: if true, do an interruptible wait 872 * @timeout: timeout value in jiffies, or MAX_SCHEDULE_TIMEOUT 873 * @idx: used to store the first signaled fence index, meaningful only on 874 * positive return 875 * 876 * Returns -EINVAL on custom fence wait implementation, -ERESTARTSYS if 877 * interrupted, 0 if the wait timed out, or the remaining timeout in jiffies 878 * on success. 879 * 880 * Synchronous waits for the first fence in the array to be signaled. The 881 * caller needs to hold a reference to all fences in the array, otherwise a 882 * fence might be freed before return, resulting in undefined behavior. 883 * 884 * See also dma_fence_wait() and dma_fence_wait_timeout(). 885 */ 886 signed long 887 dma_fence_wait_any_timeout(struct dma_fence **fences, uint32_t count, 888 bool intr, signed long timeout, uint32_t *idx) 889 { 890 struct default_wait_cb *cb; 891 signed long ret = timeout; 892 unsigned i; 893 894 if (WARN_ON(!fences || !count || timeout < 0)) 895 return -EINVAL; 896 897 if (timeout == 0) { 898 for (i = 0; i < count; ++i) 899 if (dma_fence_is_signaled(fences[i])) { 900 if (idx) 901 *idx = i; 902 return 1; 903 } 904 905 return 0; 906 } 907 908 cb = kcalloc(count, sizeof(struct default_wait_cb), GFP_KERNEL); 909 if (cb == NULL) { 910 ret = -ENOMEM; 911 goto err_free_cb; 912 } 913 914 for (i = 0; i < count; ++i) { 915 struct dma_fence *fence = fences[i]; 916 917 cb[i].task = current; 918 if (dma_fence_add_callback(fence, &cb[i].base, 919 dma_fence_default_wait_cb)) { 920 /* This fence is already signaled */ 921 if (idx) 922 *idx = i; 923 goto fence_rm_cb; 924 } 925 } 926 927 while (ret > 0) { 928 if (intr) 929 set_current_state(TASK_INTERRUPTIBLE); 930 else 931 set_current_state(TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE); 932 933 if (dma_fence_test_signaled_any(fences, count, idx)) 934 break; 935 936 ret = schedule_timeout(ret); 937 938 if (ret > 0 && intr && signal_pending(current)) 939 ret = -ERESTARTSYS; 940 } 941 942 __set_current_state(TASK_RUNNING); 943 944 fence_rm_cb: 945 while (i-- > 0) 946 dma_fence_remove_callback(fences[i], &cb[i].base); 947 948 err_free_cb: 949 kfree(cb); 950 951 return ret; 952 } 953 EXPORT_SYMBOL(dma_fence_wait_any_timeout); 954 955 /** 956 * DOC: deadline hints 957 * 958 * In an ideal world, it would be possible to pipeline a workload sufficiently 959 * that a utilization based device frequency governor could arrive at a minimum 960 * frequency that meets the requirements of the use-case, in order to minimize 961 * power consumption. But in the real world there are many workloads which 962 * defy this ideal. For example, but not limited to: 963 * 964 * * Workloads that ping-pong between device and CPU, with alternating periods 965 * of CPU waiting for device, and device waiting on CPU. This can result in 966 * devfreq and cpufreq seeing idle time in their respective domains and in 967 * result reduce frequency. 968 * 969 * * Workloads that interact with a periodic time based deadline, such as double 970 * buffered GPU rendering vs vblank sync'd page flipping. In this scenario, 971 * missing a vblank deadline results in an *increase* in idle time on the GPU 972 * (since it has to wait an additional vblank period), sending a signal to 973 * the GPU's devfreq to reduce frequency, when in fact the opposite is what is 974 * needed. 975 * 976 * To this end, deadline hint(s) can be set on a &dma_fence via &dma_fence_set_deadline 977 * (or indirectly via userspace facing ioctls like &sync_set_deadline). 978 * The deadline hint provides a way for the waiting driver, or userspace, to 979 * convey an appropriate sense of urgency to the signaling driver. 980 * 981 * A deadline hint is given in absolute ktime (CLOCK_MONOTONIC for userspace 982 * facing APIs). The time could either be some point in the future (such as 983 * the vblank based deadline for page-flipping, or the start of a compositor's 984 * composition cycle), or the current time to indicate an immediate deadline 985 * hint (Ie. forward progress cannot be made until this fence is signaled). 986 * 987 * Multiple deadlines may be set on a given fence, even in parallel. See the 988 * documentation for &dma_fence_ops.set_deadline. 989 * 990 * The deadline hint is just that, a hint. The driver that created the fence 991 * may react by increasing frequency, making different scheduling choices, etc. 992 * Or doing nothing at all. 993 */ 994 995 /** 996 * dma_fence_set_deadline - set desired fence-wait deadline hint 997 * @fence: the fence that is to be waited on 998 * @deadline: the time by which the waiter hopes for the fence to be 999 * signaled 1000 * 1001 * Give the fence signaler a hint about an upcoming deadline, such as 1002 * vblank, by which point the waiter would prefer the fence to be 1003 * signaled by. This is intended to give feedback to the fence signaler 1004 * to aid in power management decisions, such as boosting GPU frequency 1005 * if a periodic vblank deadline is approaching but the fence is not 1006 * yet signaled.. 1007 */ 1008 void dma_fence_set_deadline(struct dma_fence *fence, ktime_t deadline) 1009 { 1010 if (fence->ops->set_deadline && !dma_fence_is_signaled(fence)) 1011 fence->ops->set_deadline(fence, deadline); 1012 } 1013 EXPORT_SYMBOL(dma_fence_set_deadline); 1014 1015 /** 1016 * dma_fence_describe - Dump fence description into seq_file 1017 * @fence: the fence to describe 1018 * @seq: the seq_file to put the textual description into 1019 * 1020 * Dump a textual description of the fence and it's state into the seq_file. 1021 */ 1022 void dma_fence_describe(struct dma_fence *fence, struct seq_file *seq) 1023 { 1024 const char __rcu *timeline = ""; 1025 const char __rcu *driver = ""; 1026 const char *signaled = ""; 1027 1028 rcu_read_lock(); 1029 1030 if (!dma_fence_is_signaled(fence)) { 1031 timeline = dma_fence_timeline_name(fence); 1032 driver = dma_fence_driver_name(fence); 1033 signaled = "un"; 1034 } 1035 1036 seq_printf(seq, "%llu:%llu %s %s %ssignalled\n", 1037 fence->context, fence->seqno, timeline, driver, 1038 signaled); 1039 1040 rcu_read_unlock(); 1041 } 1042 EXPORT_SYMBOL(dma_fence_describe); 1043 1044 static void 1045 __dma_fence_init(struct dma_fence *fence, const struct dma_fence_ops *ops, 1046 spinlock_t *lock, u64 context, u64 seqno, unsigned long flags) 1047 { 1048 BUG_ON(!lock); 1049 BUG_ON(!ops || !ops->get_driver_name || !ops->get_timeline_name); 1050 1051 kref_init(&fence->refcount); 1052 fence->ops = ops; 1053 INIT_LIST_HEAD(&fence->cb_list); 1054 fence->lock = lock; 1055 fence->context = context; 1056 fence->seqno = seqno; 1057 fence->flags = flags; 1058 fence->error = 0; 1059 1060 trace_dma_fence_init(fence); 1061 } 1062 1063 /** 1064 * dma_fence_init - Initialize a custom fence. 1065 * @fence: the fence to initialize 1066 * @ops: the dma_fence_ops for operations on this fence 1067 * @lock: the irqsafe spinlock to use for locking this fence 1068 * @context: the execution context this fence is run on 1069 * @seqno: a linear increasing sequence number for this context 1070 * 1071 * Initializes an allocated fence, the caller doesn't have to keep its 1072 * refcount after committing with this fence, but it will need to hold a 1073 * refcount again if &dma_fence_ops.enable_signaling gets called. 1074 * 1075 * context and seqno are used for easy comparison between fences, allowing 1076 * to check which fence is later by simply using dma_fence_later(). 1077 */ 1078 void 1079 dma_fence_init(struct dma_fence *fence, const struct dma_fence_ops *ops, 1080 spinlock_t *lock, u64 context, u64 seqno) 1081 { 1082 __dma_fence_init(fence, ops, lock, context, seqno, 0UL); 1083 } 1084 EXPORT_SYMBOL(dma_fence_init); 1085 1086 /** 1087 * dma_fence_init64 - Initialize a custom fence with 64-bit seqno support. 1088 * @fence: the fence to initialize 1089 * @ops: the dma_fence_ops for operations on this fence 1090 * @lock: the irqsafe spinlock to use for locking this fence 1091 * @context: the execution context this fence is run on 1092 * @seqno: a linear increasing sequence number for this context 1093 * 1094 * Initializes an allocated fence, the caller doesn't have to keep its 1095 * refcount after committing with this fence, but it will need to hold a 1096 * refcount again if &dma_fence_ops.enable_signaling gets called. 1097 * 1098 * Context and seqno are used for easy comparison between fences, allowing 1099 * to check which fence is later by simply using dma_fence_later(). 1100 */ 1101 void 1102 dma_fence_init64(struct dma_fence *fence, const struct dma_fence_ops *ops, 1103 spinlock_t *lock, u64 context, u64 seqno) 1104 { 1105 __dma_fence_init(fence, ops, lock, context, seqno, 1106 BIT(DMA_FENCE_FLAG_SEQNO64_BIT)); 1107 } 1108 EXPORT_SYMBOL(dma_fence_init64); 1109 1110 /** 1111 * dma_fence_driver_name - Access the driver name 1112 * @fence: the fence to query 1113 * 1114 * Returns a driver name backing the dma-fence implementation. 1115 * 1116 * IMPORTANT CONSIDERATION: 1117 * Dma-fence contract stipulates that access to driver provided data (data not 1118 * directly embedded into the object itself), such as the &dma_fence.lock and 1119 * memory potentially accessed by the &dma_fence.ops functions, is forbidden 1120 * after the fence has been signalled. Drivers are allowed to free that data, 1121 * and some do. 1122 * 1123 * To allow safe access drivers are mandated to guarantee a RCU grace period 1124 * between signalling the fence and freeing said data. 1125 * 1126 * As such access to the driver name is only valid inside a RCU locked section. 1127 * The pointer MUST be both queried and USED ONLY WITHIN a SINGLE block guarded 1128 * by the &rcu_read_lock and &rcu_read_unlock pair. 1129 */ 1130 const char __rcu *dma_fence_driver_name(struct dma_fence *fence) 1131 { 1132 RCU_LOCKDEP_WARN(!rcu_read_lock_held(), 1133 "RCU protection is required for safe access to returned string"); 1134 1135 if (!dma_fence_test_signaled_flag(fence)) 1136 return fence->ops->get_driver_name(fence); 1137 else 1138 return "detached-driver"; 1139 } 1140 EXPORT_SYMBOL(dma_fence_driver_name); 1141 1142 /** 1143 * dma_fence_timeline_name - Access the timeline name 1144 * @fence: the fence to query 1145 * 1146 * Returns a timeline name provided by the dma-fence implementation. 1147 * 1148 * IMPORTANT CONSIDERATION: 1149 * Dma-fence contract stipulates that access to driver provided data (data not 1150 * directly embedded into the object itself), such as the &dma_fence.lock and 1151 * memory potentially accessed by the &dma_fence.ops functions, is forbidden 1152 * after the fence has been signalled. Drivers are allowed to free that data, 1153 * and some do. 1154 * 1155 * To allow safe access drivers are mandated to guarantee a RCU grace period 1156 * between signalling the fence and freeing said data. 1157 * 1158 * As such access to the driver name is only valid inside a RCU locked section. 1159 * The pointer MUST be both queried and USED ONLY WITHIN a SINGLE block guarded 1160 * by the &rcu_read_lock and &rcu_read_unlock pair. 1161 */ 1162 const char __rcu *dma_fence_timeline_name(struct dma_fence *fence) 1163 { 1164 RCU_LOCKDEP_WARN(!rcu_read_lock_held(), 1165 "RCU protection is required for safe access to returned string"); 1166 1167 if (!dma_fence_test_signaled_flag(fence)) 1168 return fence->ops->get_timeline_name(fence); 1169 else 1170 return "signaled-timeline"; 1171 } 1172 EXPORT_SYMBOL(dma_fence_timeline_name); 1173