drm_gem.c 15 KB

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  1. /*
  2. * Copyright © 2008 Intel Corporation
  3. *
  4. * Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a
  5. * copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"),
  6. * to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation
  7. * the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense,
  8. * and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the
  9. * Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
  10. *
  11. * The above copyright notice and this permission notice (including the next
  12. * paragraph) shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the
  13. * Software.
  14. *
  15. * THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
  16. * IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
  17. * FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL
  18. * THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
  19. * LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING
  20. * FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS
  21. * IN THE SOFTWARE.
  22. *
  23. * Authors:
  24. * Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
  25. *
  26. */
  27. #include <linux/types.h>
  28. #include <linux/slab.h>
  29. #include <linux/mm.h>
  30. #include <linux/uaccess.h>
  31. #include <linux/fs.h>
  32. #include <linux/file.h>
  33. #include <linux/module.h>
  34. #include <linux/mman.h>
  35. #include <linux/pagemap.h>
  36. #include "drmP.h"
  37. /** @file drm_gem.c
  38. *
  39. * This file provides some of the base ioctls and library routines for
  40. * the graphics memory manager implemented by each device driver.
  41. *
  42. * Because various devices have different requirements in terms of
  43. * synchronization and migration strategies, implementing that is left up to
  44. * the driver, and all that the general API provides should be generic --
  45. * allocating objects, reading/writing data with the cpu, freeing objects.
  46. * Even there, platform-dependent optimizations for reading/writing data with
  47. * the CPU mean we'll likely hook those out to driver-specific calls. However,
  48. * the DRI2 implementation wants to have at least allocate/mmap be generic.
  49. *
  50. * The goal was to have swap-backed object allocation managed through
  51. * struct file. However, file descriptors as handles to a struct file have
  52. * two major failings:
  53. * - Process limits prevent more than 1024 or so being used at a time by
  54. * default.
  55. * - Inability to allocate high fds will aggravate the X Server's select()
  56. * handling, and likely that of many GL client applications as well.
  57. *
  58. * This led to a plan of using our own integer IDs (called handles, following
  59. * DRM terminology) to mimic fds, and implement the fd syscalls we need as
  60. * ioctls. The objects themselves will still include the struct file so
  61. * that we can transition to fds if the required kernel infrastructure shows
  62. * up at a later date, and as our interface with shmfs for memory allocation.
  63. */
  64. /*
  65. * We make up offsets for buffer objects so we can recognize them at
  66. * mmap time.
  67. */
  68. #define DRM_FILE_PAGE_OFFSET_START ((0xFFFFFFFFUL >> PAGE_SHIFT) + 1)
  69. #define DRM_FILE_PAGE_OFFSET_SIZE ((0xFFFFFFFFUL >> PAGE_SHIFT) * 16)
  70. /**
  71. * Initialize the GEM device fields
  72. */
  73. int
  74. drm_gem_init(struct drm_device *dev)
  75. {
  76. struct drm_gem_mm *mm;
  77. spin_lock_init(&dev->object_name_lock);
  78. idr_init(&dev->object_name_idr);
  79. atomic_set(&dev->object_count, 0);
  80. atomic_set(&dev->object_memory, 0);
  81. atomic_set(&dev->pin_count, 0);
  82. atomic_set(&dev->pin_memory, 0);
  83. atomic_set(&dev->gtt_count, 0);
  84. atomic_set(&dev->gtt_memory, 0);
  85. mm = kzalloc(sizeof(struct drm_gem_mm), GFP_KERNEL);
  86. if (!mm) {
  87. DRM_ERROR("out of memory\n");
  88. return -ENOMEM;
  89. }
  90. dev->mm_private = mm;
  91. if (drm_ht_create(&mm->offset_hash, 19)) {
  92. kfree(mm);
  93. return -ENOMEM;
  94. }
  95. if (drm_mm_init(&mm->offset_manager, DRM_FILE_PAGE_OFFSET_START,
  96. DRM_FILE_PAGE_OFFSET_SIZE)) {
  97. drm_ht_remove(&mm->offset_hash);
  98. kfree(mm);
  99. return -ENOMEM;
  100. }
  101. return 0;
  102. }
  103. void
  104. drm_gem_destroy(struct drm_device *dev)
  105. {
  106. struct drm_gem_mm *mm = dev->mm_private;
  107. drm_mm_takedown(&mm->offset_manager);
  108. drm_ht_remove(&mm->offset_hash);
  109. kfree(mm);
  110. dev->mm_private = NULL;
  111. }
  112. /**
  113. * Allocate a GEM object of the specified size with shmfs backing store
  114. */
  115. struct drm_gem_object *
  116. drm_gem_object_alloc(struct drm_device *dev, size_t size)
  117. {
  118. struct drm_gem_object *obj;
  119. BUG_ON((size & (PAGE_SIZE - 1)) != 0);
  120. obj = kzalloc(sizeof(*obj), GFP_KERNEL);
  121. if (!obj)
  122. goto free;
  123. obj->dev = dev;
  124. obj->filp = shmem_file_setup("drm mm object", size, VM_NORESERVE);
  125. if (IS_ERR(obj->filp))
  126. goto free;
  127. kref_init(&obj->refcount);
  128. kref_init(&obj->handlecount);
  129. obj->size = size;
  130. if (dev->driver->gem_init_object != NULL &&
  131. dev->driver->gem_init_object(obj) != 0) {
  132. goto fput;
  133. }
  134. atomic_inc(&dev->object_count);
  135. atomic_add(obj->size, &dev->object_memory);
  136. return obj;
  137. fput:
  138. fput(obj->filp);
  139. free:
  140. kfree(obj);
  141. return NULL;
  142. }
  143. EXPORT_SYMBOL(drm_gem_object_alloc);
  144. /**
  145. * Removes the mapping from handle to filp for this object.
  146. */
  147. static int
  148. drm_gem_handle_delete(struct drm_file *filp, u32 handle)
  149. {
  150. struct drm_device *dev;
  151. struct drm_gem_object *obj;
  152. /* This is gross. The idr system doesn't let us try a delete and
  153. * return an error code. It just spews if you fail at deleting.
  154. * So, we have to grab a lock around finding the object and then
  155. * doing the delete on it and dropping the refcount, or the user
  156. * could race us to double-decrement the refcount and cause a
  157. * use-after-free later. Given the frequency of our handle lookups,
  158. * we may want to use ida for number allocation and a hash table
  159. * for the pointers, anyway.
  160. */
  161. spin_lock(&filp->table_lock);
  162. /* Check if we currently have a reference on the object */
  163. obj = idr_find(&filp->object_idr, handle);
  164. if (obj == NULL) {
  165. spin_unlock(&filp->table_lock);
  166. return -EINVAL;
  167. }
  168. dev = obj->dev;
  169. /* Release reference and decrement refcount. */
  170. idr_remove(&filp->object_idr, handle);
  171. spin_unlock(&filp->table_lock);
  172. drm_gem_object_handle_unreference_unlocked(obj);
  173. return 0;
  174. }
  175. /**
  176. * Create a handle for this object. This adds a handle reference
  177. * to the object, which includes a regular reference count. Callers
  178. * will likely want to dereference the object afterwards.
  179. */
  180. int
  181. drm_gem_handle_create(struct drm_file *file_priv,
  182. struct drm_gem_object *obj,
  183. u32 *handlep)
  184. {
  185. int ret;
  186. /*
  187. * Get the user-visible handle using idr.
  188. */
  189. again:
  190. /* ensure there is space available to allocate a handle */
  191. if (idr_pre_get(&file_priv->object_idr, GFP_KERNEL) == 0)
  192. return -ENOMEM;
  193. /* do the allocation under our spinlock */
  194. spin_lock(&file_priv->table_lock);
  195. ret = idr_get_new_above(&file_priv->object_idr, obj, 1, (int *)handlep);
  196. spin_unlock(&file_priv->table_lock);
  197. if (ret == -EAGAIN)
  198. goto again;
  199. if (ret != 0)
  200. return ret;
  201. drm_gem_object_handle_reference(obj);
  202. return 0;
  203. }
  204. EXPORT_SYMBOL(drm_gem_handle_create);
  205. /** Returns a reference to the object named by the handle. */
  206. struct drm_gem_object *
  207. drm_gem_object_lookup(struct drm_device *dev, struct drm_file *filp,
  208. u32 handle)
  209. {
  210. struct drm_gem_object *obj;
  211. spin_lock(&filp->table_lock);
  212. /* Check if we currently have a reference on the object */
  213. obj = idr_find(&filp->object_idr, handle);
  214. if (obj == NULL) {
  215. spin_unlock(&filp->table_lock);
  216. return NULL;
  217. }
  218. drm_gem_object_reference(obj);
  219. spin_unlock(&filp->table_lock);
  220. return obj;
  221. }
  222. EXPORT_SYMBOL(drm_gem_object_lookup);
  223. /**
  224. * Releases the handle to an mm object.
  225. */
  226. int
  227. drm_gem_close_ioctl(struct drm_device *dev, void *data,
  228. struct drm_file *file_priv)
  229. {
  230. struct drm_gem_close *args = data;
  231. int ret;
  232. if (!(dev->driver->driver_features & DRIVER_GEM))
  233. return -ENODEV;
  234. ret = drm_gem_handle_delete(file_priv, args->handle);
  235. return ret;
  236. }
  237. /**
  238. * Create a global name for an object, returning the name.
  239. *
  240. * Note that the name does not hold a reference; when the object
  241. * is freed, the name goes away.
  242. */
  243. int
  244. drm_gem_flink_ioctl(struct drm_device *dev, void *data,
  245. struct drm_file *file_priv)
  246. {
  247. struct drm_gem_flink *args = data;
  248. struct drm_gem_object *obj;
  249. int ret;
  250. if (!(dev->driver->driver_features & DRIVER_GEM))
  251. return -ENODEV;
  252. obj = drm_gem_object_lookup(dev, file_priv, args->handle);
  253. if (obj == NULL)
  254. return -EBADF;
  255. again:
  256. if (idr_pre_get(&dev->object_name_idr, GFP_KERNEL) == 0) {
  257. ret = -ENOMEM;
  258. goto err;
  259. }
  260. spin_lock(&dev->object_name_lock);
  261. if (!obj->name) {
  262. ret = idr_get_new_above(&dev->object_name_idr, obj, 1,
  263. &obj->name);
  264. args->name = (uint64_t) obj->name;
  265. spin_unlock(&dev->object_name_lock);
  266. if (ret == -EAGAIN)
  267. goto again;
  268. if (ret != 0)
  269. goto err;
  270. /* Allocate a reference for the name table. */
  271. drm_gem_object_reference(obj);
  272. } else {
  273. args->name = (uint64_t) obj->name;
  274. spin_unlock(&dev->object_name_lock);
  275. ret = 0;
  276. }
  277. err:
  278. drm_gem_object_unreference_unlocked(obj);
  279. return ret;
  280. }
  281. /**
  282. * Open an object using the global name, returning a handle and the size.
  283. *
  284. * This handle (of course) holds a reference to the object, so the object
  285. * will not go away until the handle is deleted.
  286. */
  287. int
  288. drm_gem_open_ioctl(struct drm_device *dev, void *data,
  289. struct drm_file *file_priv)
  290. {
  291. struct drm_gem_open *args = data;
  292. struct drm_gem_object *obj;
  293. int ret;
  294. u32 handle;
  295. if (!(dev->driver->driver_features & DRIVER_GEM))
  296. return -ENODEV;
  297. spin_lock(&dev->object_name_lock);
  298. obj = idr_find(&dev->object_name_idr, (int) args->name);
  299. if (obj)
  300. drm_gem_object_reference(obj);
  301. spin_unlock(&dev->object_name_lock);
  302. if (!obj)
  303. return -ENOENT;
  304. ret = drm_gem_handle_create(file_priv, obj, &handle);
  305. drm_gem_object_unreference_unlocked(obj);
  306. if (ret)
  307. return ret;
  308. args->handle = handle;
  309. args->size = obj->size;
  310. return 0;
  311. }
  312. /**
  313. * Called at device open time, sets up the structure for handling refcounting
  314. * of mm objects.
  315. */
  316. void
  317. drm_gem_open(struct drm_device *dev, struct drm_file *file_private)
  318. {
  319. idr_init(&file_private->object_idr);
  320. spin_lock_init(&file_private->table_lock);
  321. }
  322. /**
  323. * Called at device close to release the file's
  324. * handle references on objects.
  325. */
  326. static int
  327. drm_gem_object_release_handle(int id, void *ptr, void *data)
  328. {
  329. struct drm_gem_object *obj = ptr;
  330. drm_gem_object_handle_unreference_unlocked(obj);
  331. return 0;
  332. }
  333. /**
  334. * Called at close time when the filp is going away.
  335. *
  336. * Releases any remaining references on objects by this filp.
  337. */
  338. void
  339. drm_gem_release(struct drm_device *dev, struct drm_file *file_private)
  340. {
  341. idr_for_each(&file_private->object_idr,
  342. &drm_gem_object_release_handle, NULL);
  343. idr_destroy(&file_private->object_idr);
  344. }
  345. static void
  346. drm_gem_object_free_common(struct drm_gem_object *obj)
  347. {
  348. struct drm_device *dev = obj->dev;
  349. fput(obj->filp);
  350. atomic_dec(&dev->object_count);
  351. atomic_sub(obj->size, &dev->object_memory);
  352. kfree(obj);
  353. }
  354. /**
  355. * Called after the last reference to the object has been lost.
  356. * Must be called holding struct_ mutex
  357. *
  358. * Frees the object
  359. */
  360. void
  361. drm_gem_object_free(struct kref *kref)
  362. {
  363. struct drm_gem_object *obj = (struct drm_gem_object *) kref;
  364. struct drm_device *dev = obj->dev;
  365. BUG_ON(!mutex_is_locked(&dev->struct_mutex));
  366. if (dev->driver->gem_free_object != NULL)
  367. dev->driver->gem_free_object(obj);
  368. drm_gem_object_free_common(obj);
  369. }
  370. EXPORT_SYMBOL(drm_gem_object_free);
  371. /**
  372. * Called after the last reference to the object has been lost.
  373. * Must be called without holding struct_mutex
  374. *
  375. * Frees the object
  376. */
  377. void
  378. drm_gem_object_free_unlocked(struct kref *kref)
  379. {
  380. struct drm_gem_object *obj = (struct drm_gem_object *) kref;
  381. struct drm_device *dev = obj->dev;
  382. if (dev->driver->gem_free_object_unlocked != NULL)
  383. dev->driver->gem_free_object_unlocked(obj);
  384. else if (dev->driver->gem_free_object != NULL) {
  385. mutex_lock(&dev->struct_mutex);
  386. dev->driver->gem_free_object(obj);
  387. mutex_unlock(&dev->struct_mutex);
  388. }
  389. drm_gem_object_free_common(obj);
  390. }
  391. EXPORT_SYMBOL(drm_gem_object_free_unlocked);
  392. static void drm_gem_object_ref_bug(struct kref *list_kref)
  393. {
  394. BUG();
  395. }
  396. /**
  397. * Called after the last handle to the object has been closed
  398. *
  399. * Removes any name for the object. Note that this must be
  400. * called before drm_gem_object_free or we'll be touching
  401. * freed memory
  402. */
  403. void
  404. drm_gem_object_handle_free(struct kref *kref)
  405. {
  406. struct drm_gem_object *obj = container_of(kref,
  407. struct drm_gem_object,
  408. handlecount);
  409. struct drm_device *dev = obj->dev;
  410. /* Remove any name for this object */
  411. spin_lock(&dev->object_name_lock);
  412. if (obj->name) {
  413. idr_remove(&dev->object_name_idr, obj->name);
  414. obj->name = 0;
  415. spin_unlock(&dev->object_name_lock);
  416. /*
  417. * The object name held a reference to this object, drop
  418. * that now.
  419. *
  420. * This cannot be the last reference, since the handle holds one too.
  421. */
  422. kref_put(&obj->refcount, drm_gem_object_ref_bug);
  423. } else
  424. spin_unlock(&dev->object_name_lock);
  425. }
  426. EXPORT_SYMBOL(drm_gem_object_handle_free);
  427. void drm_gem_vm_open(struct vm_area_struct *vma)
  428. {
  429. struct drm_gem_object *obj = vma->vm_private_data;
  430. drm_gem_object_reference(obj);
  431. }
  432. EXPORT_SYMBOL(drm_gem_vm_open);
  433. void drm_gem_vm_close(struct vm_area_struct *vma)
  434. {
  435. struct drm_gem_object *obj = vma->vm_private_data;
  436. drm_gem_object_unreference_unlocked(obj);
  437. }
  438. EXPORT_SYMBOL(drm_gem_vm_close);
  439. /**
  440. * drm_gem_mmap - memory map routine for GEM objects
  441. * @filp: DRM file pointer
  442. * @vma: VMA for the area to be mapped
  443. *
  444. * If a driver supports GEM object mapping, mmap calls on the DRM file
  445. * descriptor will end up here.
  446. *
  447. * If we find the object based on the offset passed in (vma->vm_pgoff will
  448. * contain the fake offset we created when the GTT map ioctl was called on
  449. * the object), we set up the driver fault handler so that any accesses
  450. * to the object can be trapped, to perform migration, GTT binding, surface
  451. * register allocation, or performance monitoring.
  452. */
  453. int drm_gem_mmap(struct file *filp, struct vm_area_struct *vma)
  454. {
  455. struct drm_file *priv = filp->private_data;
  456. struct drm_device *dev = priv->minor->dev;
  457. struct drm_gem_mm *mm = dev->mm_private;
  458. struct drm_local_map *map = NULL;
  459. struct drm_gem_object *obj;
  460. struct drm_hash_item *hash;
  461. int ret = 0;
  462. mutex_lock(&dev->struct_mutex);
  463. if (drm_ht_find_item(&mm->offset_hash, vma->vm_pgoff, &hash)) {
  464. mutex_unlock(&dev->struct_mutex);
  465. return drm_mmap(filp, vma);
  466. }
  467. map = drm_hash_entry(hash, struct drm_map_list, hash)->map;
  468. if (!map ||
  469. ((map->flags & _DRM_RESTRICTED) && !capable(CAP_SYS_ADMIN))) {
  470. ret = -EPERM;
  471. goto out_unlock;
  472. }
  473. /* Check for valid size. */
  474. if (map->size < vma->vm_end - vma->vm_start) {
  475. ret = -EINVAL;
  476. goto out_unlock;
  477. }
  478. obj = map->handle;
  479. if (!obj->dev->driver->gem_vm_ops) {
  480. ret = -EINVAL;
  481. goto out_unlock;
  482. }
  483. vma->vm_flags |= VM_RESERVED | VM_IO | VM_PFNMAP | VM_DONTEXPAND;
  484. vma->vm_ops = obj->dev->driver->gem_vm_ops;
  485. vma->vm_private_data = map->handle;
  486. vma->vm_page_prot = pgprot_writecombine(vm_get_page_prot(vma->vm_flags));
  487. /* Take a ref for this mapping of the object, so that the fault
  488. * handler can dereference the mmap offset's pointer to the object.
  489. * This reference is cleaned up by the corresponding vm_close
  490. * (which should happen whether the vma was created by this call, or
  491. * by a vm_open due to mremap or partial unmap or whatever).
  492. */
  493. drm_gem_object_reference(obj);
  494. vma->vm_file = filp; /* Needed for drm_vm_open() */
  495. drm_vm_open_locked(vma);
  496. out_unlock:
  497. mutex_unlock(&dev->struct_mutex);
  498. return ret;
  499. }
  500. EXPORT_SYMBOL(drm_gem_mmap);