Re: ttm_mem_global

From: Thomas HellstrÃm
Date: Wed Jul 29 2009 - 05:40:01 EST


Jerome Glisse wrote:
On Tue, 2009-07-28 at 20:55 +0200, Thomas HellstrÃm wrote:
Jerome Glisse skrev:
On Wed, 2009-07-22 at 10:37 +0200, Thomas HellstrÃm wrote:
TTM has a device struct per device and an optional global struct that is common for all devices and intended to be per subsystem.

The only subsystem currently having a global structure is the memory accounting subsystem:
struct ttm_mem_global
Thomas i don't think the way we init ttm_mem_global today make
it follow the 1 struct ttm_mem_global for everyone. I think it
should be initialized and refcounted by device struct.

So on first device creation a ttm_mem_global is created and
then anytime a new device is created the refcount of ttm_mem_global
is increased.
Jerome,
This is exactly what the current code intends to do.

Are you seeing something different?

I definitly don't see that :) In radeon we do create a structure
which hold the ttm_mem_global struct so it's not shared at all
it got inited & destroyed along the driver. This is why i think
it's better to remove the driver initialization and let bo_device
init path take care of initializing one and only one object which
can be shared by multiple driverttm_mem_global_inits.

Which radeon struct is holding the ttm_mem_global struct?

The radeon code looks very similar to the openchrome code in which the struct ttm_mem_global is allocated at ttm_global.c, line 74 and freed at ttm_global.c, line 108 when its refcount has reached zero.

So the device holds a struct ttm_global_reference that *only points* to the global item, and which is destroyed on device takedown. If there are more than one device pointing to the mem_global object, it won't get destroyed.

So the code should be working perfectly fine unless there is a bug.

So what i propose is remove mem_glob parameter from :
ttm_bo_device_init, add a call to ttm_mem_global_init in
ttm_bo_device_init

Nope, The ttm_mem_global object is used by other ttm subsystems (fencing, user-space objects),
so that can't be done.

and add some static refcount in ttm_memory.c
if refcount = 0 then ttm_mem_global_init create a ttm_mem_global
struct and initialize things, if refcount > 0 then it gives
back the already initialized ttm_mem_global.


This is exactly what ttm_global was created to do, and what it hopefully does. If you create two radeon devices the ttm_mem_global object should be the same, even though the global references pointing to it are of course different. Have you actually tried this?

/Thomas

Of course we unref with ttm_mem_global_release and destroy
once refcount reach 0.

Cheers,
Jerome




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