| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <[email protected]>
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Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <[email protected]>
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trans_kill() only handles the single opcode. Drop the remnant of a time
when both KILL and KILL_IF were handled by the same fxn.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <[email protected]>
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Standalone compiler doesn't have screen or context. We need to come up
with a better way to control the target arch (ie. something that we can
control from cmdline w/ standalone compiler) but for now this hack keeps
it from segfault'ing.
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <[email protected]>
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total instructions in shared programs: 41168 -> 40976 (-0.47%)
instructions in affected programs: 18156 -> 17964 (-1.06%)
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This will let me coalesce the VPM writes into the instructions generating
the values.
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Signed-off-by: Timothy Arceri <[email protected]>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <[email protected]>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <[email protected]>
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Small immediates have the downside of taking over the raddr B field, so
you might have less chance to pack instructions together thanks to raddr B
conflicts. However, it also reduces some register pressure since it lets
you load 2 "uniform" values in one instruction (avoiding a previous load
of the constant value to a register), and increases some pairing for the
same reason.
total uniforms in shared programs: 16231 -> 13374 (-17.60%)
uniforms in affected programs: 10280 -> 7423 (-27.79%)
total instructions in shared programs: 40795 -> 41168 (0.91%)
instructions in affected programs: 25551 -> 25924 (1.46%)
In a previous version of this patch I had a reduction in instruction count
by forcing the other args alongside a SMALL_IMM to be in the A file or
accumulators, but that increases register pressure and had a bug in
handling FRAG_Z. In this patch is I just use raddr conflict resolution,
which is more expensive. I think I'd rather tweak allocation to have some
way to slightly prefer good choices for files in general, rather than risk
failing to register allocate by forcing things into register classes.
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I want this from other passes.
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$(RM) includes -f.
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Since our kernel BOs require CMA allocation, and the use of them requires
new mmaps, it's pretty expensive and we should avoid it if possible.
Copying my original design for Intel, make a userspace cache that reuses
BOs that haven't been shared to other processes but frees BOs that have
sat in the cache for over a second.
Improves glxgears framerate on RPi by around 30%.
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This gets DRI3 working on modesetting with glamor. It's not enabled under
simulation, because it looks like handing our dumb-allocated buffers off
to the server doesn't actually work for the server's rendering.
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This reverts db3dfcfe90a3d27e6020e0d3642f8ab0330e57be.
The commit was correct but we've got some precision problems later in
llvmpipe (or possibly in draw clip) due to the vertices coming in in
different order, causing some internal test failures. So revert for now.
(Will only affect drivers which actually support constant-interpolated
attributes and not just flatshading.)
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total instructions in shared programs: 43053 -> 40795 (-5.24%)
instructions in affected programs: 37996 -> 35738 (-5.94%)
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We're deciding about the WS bit, not PM.
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Signed-off-by: Timothy Arceri <[email protected]>
Reviewed-By: Jose Fonseca <[email protected]>
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <[email protected]>
Reviewed-by: Matt Turner <[email protected]>
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This is the same basic logic from the original Broadcom driver.
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Commit ade8b26bf missed adding this cap to nvc0.
Signed-off-by: Ilia Mirkin <[email protected]>
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This fixes 4 vertexid related piglit tests with llvmpipe due to switching
behavior of vertexid to the one gl expects.
(Won't fix non-llvm draw path since we don't get the basevertex currently.)
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Plus a new PIPE_CAP_VERTEXID_NOBASE query. The idea is that drivers not
supporting vertex ids with base vertex offset applied (so, only support
d3d10-style vertex ids) will get such a d3d10-style vertex id instead -
with the caveat they'll also need to handle the basevertex system value
too (this follows what core mesa already does).
Additionally, this is also useful for other state trackers (for instance
llvmpipe / draw right now implement the d3d10 behavior on purpose, but
with different semantics it can just do both).
Doesn't do anything yet.
And fix up the docs wrt similar values.
v2: incorporate feedback from Brian and others, better names, better docs.
Reviewed-by: Brian Paul <[email protected]>
Reviewed-by: Jose Fonseca <[email protected]>
Reviewed-by: Marek Olšák <[email protected]>
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r600, rv610 and rv630 all have a bug in their GPR indexing
and how the hw inserts access to PV.
If the base index for the src is the same as the dst gpr
in a previous group, then it will use PV instead of using
the indexed gpr correctly.
The workaround is to insert a NOP when you detect this.
v2: add second part of fix detecting DST rel writes followed
by same src base index reads.
v3: forget adding stuff to structs, just iterate over the
previous node group again, makes it more obvious.
v3.1: drop local_nop.
Fixes ~200 piglit regressions on rv635 since SB was introduced.
Reviewed-By: Glenn Kennard <[email protected]>
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <[email protected]>
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Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <[email protected]>
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This reverts commit 7b0067d23a6f64cf83c42e7f11b2cd4100c569fe.
Vadim's patch fixes this a lot better.
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32-bit unsigned would require some adjustments to handle values >=
0x80000000.
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It's only an f16 conversion if you're doing a float operation, otherwise
it's 16 bit signed to 32-bit signed.
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There was just way too much indentation.
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We're actually allocating out of r3 now, and I missed it because I'd typed
this one as qpu_rn(3) instead of qpu_r3().
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There is an equivalent unpack function without conversion to float if you
use an integer operation instead.
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I typoed this when rebasing the memory leak fixes.
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They're copied into a vc4_bo after compiling is done.
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No performance difference on a microbenchmark with norast that should hit it
enough to have mattered, n=220.
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Previously, the hash_table API required the user to do all of the hashing
of keys as it passed them in. Since the hashing function is intrinsically
tied to the comparison function, it makes sense for the hash table to know
about it. Also, it makes for a somewhat clumsy API as the user is
constantly calling hashing functions many of which have long names. This
is especially bad when the standard call looks something like
_mesa_hash_table_insert(ht, _mesa_pointer_hash(key), key, data);
In the above case, there is no reason why the hash table shouldn't do the
hashing for you. We leave the option for you to do your own hashing if
it's more efficient, but it's no longer needed. Also, if you do do your
own hashing, the hash table will assert that your hash matches what it
expects out of the hashing function. This should make it harder to mess up
your hashing.
v2: change to call the old entrypoint "pre_hashed" rather than
"with_hash", like cworth's equivalent change upstream (change by
anholt, acked-in-general by Jason).
Signed-off-by: Jason Ekstrand <[email protected]>
Signed-off-by: Eric Anholt <[email protected]>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <[email protected]>
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Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <[email protected]>
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