mesa/src/gallium
Dmitry Osipenko 79f47249e8 llvmpipe: Align persistent mappings to page size
KVM requires memory mapping to be aligned to page size, otherwise it
refuses to do the mapping. In particular this causes KVM mapping errors
when llvmpipe is used by virtio-gpu on host and guest tries to map buffer
that has a persistent mapping, i.e. it tries to map the llvmpipe's host
blob/buffer. Mesa virgl driver uses host blobs only for the buffers with
persistent mapping, hence let's align buffer allocations to the page size
when the persistence flag is set to fix the KVM fault.

Reviewed-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
Acked-by: Antonio Caggiano <antonio.caggiano@collabora.com>
Signed-off-by: Dmitry Osipenko <dmitry.osipenko@collabora.com>
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/mesa/mesa/-/merge_requests/18053>
2022-08-18 15:51:40 +00:00
..
auxiliary nir_to_tgsi_info: drop const_buffers_declared 2022-08-17 05:48:49 +10:00
drivers llvmpipe: Align persistent mappings to page size 2022-08-18 15:51:40 +00:00
frontends frontend/nine: Fix ff position_t fallback when w = 0 2022-08-12 21:53:11 +02:00
include gallium: add PIPE_QUIRK_TEXTURE_BORDER_COLOR_SWIZZLE_ALPHA_NOT_W 2022-08-12 14:24:52 +00:00
targets virgl: add support for hardware video acceleration 2022-08-11 10:21:03 +00:00
tests meson: Enable graw tests on mingw 2022-08-12 16:10:51 +00:00
tools pytracediff: implement pager ('less') invocation internally 2022-06-28 11:40:58 +00:00
winsys wgl: Allow per-framebuffer swap interval overrides 2022-08-10 21:00:42 +00:00
meson.build gallium/swr: Remove common code and build options 2021-12-06 23:37:50 +00:00
README.portability

	      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.