Files
linux/drivers/gpu/drm
Chris Wilson 7d1c4804ae drm/i915: Maintain LRU order of inactive objects upon access by CPU (v2)
In order to reduce the penalty of fallbacks under memory pressure and to
avoid a potential immediate ping-pong of evicting a mmaped buffer, we
move the object to the tail of the inactive list when a page is freshly
faulted or the object is moved into the CPU domain.

We choose not to protect the CPU objects from casual eviction,
preferring to keep the GPU active for as long as possible.

v2: Daniel Vetter found a bug where I forgot that pinned objects are
kept off the inactive list.

Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
2010-08-09 11:24:33 -07:00
..
2010-08-05 11:54:40 +10:00
2010-08-05 11:54:40 +10:00
2010-08-04 09:46:06 +10:00
2010-05-18 15:57:05 +10:00
2010-05-18 15:57:05 +10:00
2010-08-05 11:54:40 +10:00
2010-08-05 11:54:40 +10:00
2010-06-01 10:07:56 +10:00
2010-08-04 09:46:06 +10:00

************************************************************
* For the very latest on DRI development, please see:      *
*     http://dri.freedesktop.org/                          *
************************************************************

The Direct Rendering Manager (drm) is a device-independent kernel-level
device driver that provides support for the XFree86 Direct Rendering
Infrastructure (DRI).

The DRM supports the Direct Rendering Infrastructure (DRI) in four major
ways:

    1. The DRM provides synchronized access to the graphics hardware via
       the use of an optimized two-tiered lock.

    2. The DRM enforces the DRI security policy for access to the graphics
       hardware by only allowing authenticated X11 clients access to
       restricted regions of memory.

    3. The DRM provides a generic DMA engine, complete with multiple
       queues and the ability to detect the need for an OpenGL context
       switch.

    4. The DRM is extensible via the use of small device-specific modules
       that rely extensively on the API exported by the DRM module.


Documentation on the DRI is available from:
    http://dri.freedesktop.org/wiki/Documentation
    http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=387
    http://dri.sourceforge.net/doc/

For specific information about kernel-level support, see:

    The Direct Rendering Manager, Kernel Support for the Direct Rendering
    Infrastructure
    http://dri.sourceforge.net/doc/drm_low_level.html

    Hardware Locking for the Direct Rendering Infrastructure
    http://dri.sourceforge.net/doc/hardware_locking_low_level.html

    A Security Analysis of the Direct Rendering Infrastructure
    http://dri.sourceforge.net/doc/security_low_level.html