summaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
path: root/src/intel/vulkan
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorKristian Høgsberg Kristensen <[email protected]>2016-03-08 15:31:47 -0800
committerJason Ekstrand <[email protected]>2016-11-09 11:31:14 -0800
commitb3a29f2e9eb528a16ceec0fd88aad9f0c3c3b6d4 (patch)
tree08b2340d2680a1494aed9ee9784fb3b2ec50c246 /src/intel/vulkan
parent8b61c57049ff75766715ad4f7b1ad2d3657b9b4d (diff)
anv: Do relocations in userspace before execbuf ioctl
Since our surface state buffer is shared by all batches, the kernel does a full stall and sync with the CPU between batches every time we call execbuf2 because it refuses to do relocations on an active buffer. Doing them in userspace and passing the NO_RELOC flag to the kernel allows us to perform the relocations without stalling. This improves the performance of Dota 2 by around 30% on a Sky Lake GT2. v2 (Jason Ekstrand): - Better comments (Chris Wilson) - Fixed write_reloc for correct canonical form (Chris Wilson) v3 (Jason Ekstrand): - Skip relocations which aren't needed - Provide an environment variable to always use the kernel - More comments about correctness (Chris Wilson) v4 (Jason Ekstrand): - More comments (Chris Wilson) v5 (Jason Ekstrand): - Rebase on top of moving execbuf2 setup go QueueSubmit Signed-off-by: Jason Ekstrand <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Kristian H. Kristensen <[email protected]> Cc: "13.0" <[email protected]>
Diffstat (limited to 'src/intel/vulkan')
-rw-r--r--src/intel/vulkan/anv_batch_chain.c151
-rw-r--r--src/intel/vulkan/anv_device.c8
2 files changed, 150 insertions, 9 deletions
diff --git a/src/intel/vulkan/anv_batch_chain.c b/src/intel/vulkan/anv_batch_chain.c
index e03b5859e1e..6f05867ff71 100644
--- a/src/intel/vulkan/anv_batch_chain.c
+++ b/src/intel/vulkan/anv_batch_chain.c
@@ -32,6 +32,8 @@
#include "genxml/gen7_pack.h"
#include "genxml/gen8_pack.h"
+#include "util/debug.h"
+
/** \file anv_batch_chain.c
*
* This file contains functions related to anv_cmd_buffer as a data
@@ -1115,6 +1117,108 @@ adjust_relocations_to_state_pool(struct anv_block_pool *pool,
}
}
+static void
+anv_reloc_list_apply(struct anv_device *device,
+ struct anv_reloc_list *list,
+ struct anv_bo *bo,
+ bool always_relocate)
+{
+ for (size_t i = 0; i < list->num_relocs; i++) {
+ struct anv_bo *target_bo = list->reloc_bos[i];
+ if (list->relocs[i].presumed_offset == target_bo->offset &&
+ !always_relocate)
+ continue;
+
+ void *p = bo->map + list->relocs[i].offset;
+ write_reloc(device, p, target_bo->offset + list->relocs[i].delta, true);
+ list->relocs[i].presumed_offset = target_bo->offset;
+ }
+}
+
+/**
+ * This function applies the relocation for a command buffer and writes the
+ * actual addresses into the buffers as per what we were told by the kernel on
+ * the previous execbuf2 call. This should be safe to do because, for each
+ * relocated address, we have two cases:
+ *
+ * 1) The target BO is inactive (as seen by the kernel). In this case, it is
+ * not in use by the GPU so updating the address is 100% ok. It won't be
+ * in-use by the GPU (from our context) again until the next execbuf2
+ * happens. If the kernel decides to move it in the next execbuf2, it
+ * will have to do the relocations itself, but that's ok because it should
+ * have all of the information needed to do so.
+ *
+ * 2) The target BO is active (as seen by the kernel). In this case, it
+ * hasn't moved since the last execbuffer2 call because GTT shuffling
+ * *only* happens when the BO is idle. (From our perspective, it only
+ * happens inside the execbuffer2 ioctl, but the shuffling may be
+ * triggered by another ioctl, with full-ppgtt this is limited to only
+ * execbuffer2 ioctls on the same context, or memory pressure.) Since the
+ * target BO hasn't moved, our anv_bo::offset exactly matches the BO's GTT
+ * address and the relocated value we are writing into the BO will be the
+ * same as the value that is already there.
+ *
+ * There is also a possibility that the target BO is active but the exact
+ * RENDER_SURFACE_STATE object we are writing the relocation into isn't in
+ * use. In this case, the address currently in the RENDER_SURFACE_STATE
+ * may be stale but it's still safe to write the relocation because that
+ * particular RENDER_SURFACE_STATE object isn't in-use by the GPU and
+ * won't be until the next execbuf2 call.
+ *
+ * By doing relocations on the CPU, we can tell the kernel that it doesn't
+ * need to bother. We want to do this because the surface state buffer is
+ * used by every command buffer so, if the kernel does the relocations, it
+ * will always be busy and the kernel will always stall. This is also
+ * probably the fastest mechanism for doing relocations since the kernel would
+ * have to make a full copy of all the relocations lists.
+ */
+static bool
+relocate_cmd_buffer(struct anv_cmd_buffer *cmd_buffer,
+ struct anv_execbuf *exec)
+{
+ static int userspace_relocs = -1;
+ if (userspace_relocs < 0)
+ userspace_relocs = env_var_as_boolean("ANV_USERSPACE_RELOCS", true);
+ if (!userspace_relocs)
+ return false;
+
+ /* First, we have to check to see whether or not we can even do the
+ * relocation. New buffers which have never been submitted to the kernel
+ * don't have a valid offset so we need to let the kernel do relocations so
+ * that we can get offsets for them. On future execbuf2 calls, those
+ * buffers will have offsets and we will be able to skip relocating.
+ * Invalid offsets are indicated by anv_bo::offset == (uint64_t)-1.
+ */
+ for (uint32_t i = 0; i < exec->bo_count; i++) {
+ if (exec->bos[i]->offset == (uint64_t)-1)
+ return false;
+ }
+
+ /* Since surface states are shared between command buffers and we don't
+ * know what order they will be submitted to the kernel, we don't know
+ * what address is actually written in the surface state object at any
+ * given time. The only option is to always relocate them.
+ */
+ anv_reloc_list_apply(cmd_buffer->device, &cmd_buffer->surface_relocs,
+ &cmd_buffer->device->surface_state_block_pool.bo,
+ true /* always relocate surface states */);
+
+ /* Since we own all of the batch buffers, we know what values are stored
+ * in the relocated addresses and only have to update them if the offsets
+ * have changed.
+ */
+ struct anv_batch_bo **bbo;
+ u_vector_foreach(bbo, &cmd_buffer->seen_bbos) {
+ anv_reloc_list_apply(cmd_buffer->device,
+ &(*bbo)->relocs, &(*bbo)->bo, false);
+ }
+
+ for (uint32_t i = 0; i < exec->bo_count; i++)
+ exec->objects[i].offset = exec->bos[i]->offset;
+
+ return true;
+}
+
VkResult
anv_cmd_buffer_execbuf(struct anv_device *device,
struct anv_cmd_buffer *cmd_buffer)
@@ -1205,14 +1309,45 @@ anv_cmd_buffer_execbuf(struct anv_device *device,
.rsvd2 = 0,
};
- /* Since surface states are shared between command buffers and we don't
- * know what order they will be submitted to the kernel, we don't know what
- * address is actually written in the surface state object at any given
- * time. The only option is to set a bogus presumed offset and let
- * relocations do their job.
- */
- for (size_t i = 0; i < cmd_buffer->surface_relocs.num_relocs; i++)
- cmd_buffer->surface_relocs.relocs[i].presumed_offset = -1;
+ if (relocate_cmd_buffer(cmd_buffer, &execbuf)) {
+ /* If we were able to successfully relocate everything, tell the kernel
+ * that it can skip doing relocations. The requirement for using
+ * NO_RELOC is:
+ *
+ * 1) The addresses written in the objects must match the corresponding
+ * reloc.presumed_offset which in turn must match the corresponding
+ * execobject.offset.
+ *
+ * 2) To avoid stalling, execobject.offset should match the current
+ * address of that object within the active context.
+ *
+ * In order to satisfy all of the invariants that make userspace
+ * relocations to be safe (see relocate_cmd_buffer()), we need to
+ * further ensure that the addresses we use match those used by the
+ * kernel for the most recent execbuf2.
+ *
+ * The kernel may still choose to do relocations anyway if something has
+ * moved in the GTT. In this case, the relocation list still needs to be
+ * valid. All relocations on the batch buffers are already valid and
+ * kept up-to-date. For surface state relocations, by applying the
+ * relocations in relocate_cmd_buffer, we ensured that the address in
+ * the RENDER_SURFACE_STATE matches presumed_offset, so it should be
+ * safe for the kernel to relocate them as needed.
+ */
+ execbuf.execbuf.flags |= I915_EXEC_NO_RELOC;
+ } else {
+ /* In the case where we fall back to doing kernel relocations, we need
+ * to ensure that the relocation list is valid. All relocations on the
+ * batch buffers are already valid and kept up-to-date. Since surface
+ * states are shared between command buffers and we don't know what
+ * order they will be submitted to the kernel, we don't know what
+ * address is actually written in the surface state object at any given
+ * time. The only option is to set a bogus presumed offset and let the
+ * kernel relocate them.
+ */
+ for (size_t i = 0; i < cmd_buffer->surface_relocs.num_relocs; i++)
+ cmd_buffer->surface_relocs.relocs[i].presumed_offset = -1;
+ }
VkResult result = anv_device_execbuf(device, &execbuf.execbuf, execbuf.bos);
diff --git a/src/intel/vulkan/anv_device.c b/src/intel/vulkan/anv_device.c
index c47961efcec..6b2676b234d 100644
--- a/src/intel/vulkan/anv_device.c
+++ b/src/intel/vulkan/anv_device.c
@@ -1097,7 +1097,7 @@ VkResult anv_QueueSubmit(
struct anv_device *device = queue->device;
VkResult result = VK_SUCCESS;
- /* We lock around QueueSubmit for two main reasons:
+ /* We lock around QueueSubmit for three main reasons:
*
* 1) When a block pool is resized, we create a new gem handle with a
* different size and, in the case of surface states, possibly a
@@ -1112,6 +1112,12 @@ VkResult anv_QueueSubmit(
* came up in the wild due to a broken app. It's better to play it
* safe and just lock around QueueSubmit.
*
+ * 3) The anv_cmd_buffer_execbuf function may perform relocations in
+ * userspace. Due to the fact that the surface state buffer is shared
+ * between batches, we can't afford to have that happen from multiple
+ * threads at the same time. Even though the user is supposed to
+ * ensure this doesn't happen, we play it safe as in (2) above.
+ *
* Since the only other things that ever take the device lock such as block
* pool resize only rarely happen, this will almost never be contended so
* taking a lock isn't really an expensive operation in this case.