mesa/src/gallium
Kenneth Graunke be80839ac5 iris: Consider resolves after changing a resource's aux state
The intention of IRIS_DIRTY_{RENDER,COMPUTE}_RESOLVES_AND_FLUSHES
is to avoid considering resolves/flushes on back to back draw calls
where nothing of significance has changed with the resources.  When
anything changes that could require a resolve, we must flag those.

Those situations are:
1. Texture/image/framebuffer bindings change
   (as the set of images we need to look at is now different)
2. Depth writes are enabled/disabled (the resolve code uses this)
3. The aux state for a currently bound resource changes.

We were missing this last case.  In particular, one example where
we missed this was:

1. Bind a texture.
2. Clear that texture (likely blits/copies/teximage would work too)
3. Draw and sample from that texture

Clear-then-Bind would work, as binding would flag resolves as dirty.
But Bind-then-Clear doesn't work, as clear can change the aux state
of the bound texture, but wasn't flagging that anything had changed.

Technically, we could consider whether the resource whose aux state
is changing is bound for compute (and only flag COMPUTE_RESOLVES),
or bound for a 3D stage (and only flag RENDER_RESOLVES), and flag
nothing at all if it isn't bound.  But we don't track that well,
and it probably isn't worth bothering.  So, flag unconditionally
for now.

This does not appear to impact Piglit's drawoverhead scores.

Cc: mesa-stable
Closes: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/mesa/mesa/-/issues/3994
Closes: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/mesa/mesa/-/issues/4019
Reviewed-by: Nanley Chery <nanley.g.chery@intel.com>
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/mesa/mesa/-/merge_requests/8603>
(cherry picked from commit e2500c02cc)
2021-01-22 09:01:40 -08:00
..
auxiliary cso: set index_bounds_valid = true for arrays draws 2021-01-20 09:22:16 -08:00
drivers iris: Consider resolves after changing a resource's aux state 2021-01-22 09:01:40 -08:00
frontends lavapipe: fix missing piece of VK_KHR_get_physical_device_properties2 2021-01-20 09:22:16 -08:00
include gallium: Add new cap PIPE_CAP_TEXTURE_BUFFER_SAMPLER 2021-01-12 19:06:00 +00:00
targets hgl: Major refactor and cleanup 2021-01-09 20:51:35 -06:00
tests gallium: inline pipe_depth_state to decrease DSA state size by 4 bytes 2020-12-22 12:01:38 +00:00
tools gallium: change comments to remove 'state tracker' 2020-05-13 13:47:27 -04:00
winsys drisw: fix unused variables warnings 2021-01-11 19:54:46 +00:00
Android.common.mk etnaviv: update Android build files 2020-01-24 14:03:28 +00:00
Android.mk gallium: rename 'state tracker' to 'frontend' 2020-05-13 13:46:53 -04:00
meson.build mesa: Retire classic OSMesa. 2020-12-10 18:38:13 +00:00
README.portability gallium: change comments to remove 'state tracker' 2020-05-13 13:47:27 -04:00
SConscript gallium: change comments to remove 'state tracker' 2020-05-13 13:47:27 -04:00

	      CROSS-PLATFORM PORTABILITY GUIDELINES FOR GALLIUM3D 


= General Considerations =

The frontend and winsys driver support a rather limited number of
platforms. However, the pipe drivers are meant to run in a wide number of
platforms. Hence the pipe drivers, the auxiliary modules, and all public
headers in general, should strictly follow these guidelines to ensure


= Compiler Support =

* Include the p_compiler.h.

* Cast explicitly when converting to integer types of smaller sizes.

* Cast explicitly when converting between float, double and integral types.

* Don't use named struct initializers.

* Don't use variable number of macro arguments. Use static inline functions
instead.

* Don't use C99 features.

= Standard Library =

* Avoid including standard library headers. Most standard library functions are
not available in Windows Kernel Mode. Use the appropriate p_*.h include.

== Memory Allocation ==

* Use MALLOC, CALLOC, FREE instead of the malloc, calloc, free functions.

* Use align_pointer() function defined in u_memory.h for aligning pointers
 in a portable way.

== Debugging ==

* Use the functions/macros in p_debug.h.

* Don't include assert.h, call abort, printf, etc.


= Code Style =

== Inherantice in C ==

The main thing we do is mimic inheritance by structure containment.

Here's a silly made-up example:

/* base class */
struct buffer
{
  int size;
  void (*validate)(struct buffer *buf);
};

/* sub-class of bufffer */
struct texture_buffer
{
  struct buffer base;  /* the base class, MUST COME FIRST! */
  int format;
  int width, height;
};


Then, we'll typically have cast-wrapper functions to convert base-class 
pointers to sub-class pointers where needed:

static inline struct vertex_buffer *vertex_buffer(struct buffer *buf)
{
  return (struct vertex_buffer *) buf;
}


To create/init a sub-classed object:

struct buffer *create_texture_buffer(int w, int h, int format)
{
  struct texture_buffer *t = malloc(sizeof(*t));
  t->format = format;
  t->width = w;
  t->height = h;
  t->base.size = w * h;
  t->base.validate = tex_validate;
  return &t->base;
}

Example sub-class method:

void tex_validate(struct buffer *buf)
{
  struct texture_buffer *tb = texture_buffer(buf);
  assert(tb->format);
  assert(tb->width);
  assert(tb->height);
}


Note that we typically do not use typedefs to make "class names"; we use
'struct whatever' everywhere.

Gallium's pipe_context and the subclassed psb_context, etc are prime examples 
of this.  There's also many examples in Mesa and the Mesa state tracker.