On Sun, Jan 1, 2017 at 11:40 PM, Laurent Pinchart laurent.pinchart@ideasonboard.com wrote:
Hi Daniel,
Thank you for the patch.
On Friday 19 Aug 2016 22:50:38 Daniel Vetter wrote:
Everyone knows them, except all the new folks joining from the ARM side haven't lived through all the pain of the past years and are entirely surprised when I raise this. Definitely time to document this.
Last time this was a big discussion was about 6 years ago, when qcom tried to land a kernel driver without userspace. Dave Airlie made the rules really clear:
http://airlied.livejournal.com/73115.html
This write-up here is essentially what I've put into a presentation a while ago, which was also reviewed by Dave:
http://blog.ffwll.ch/2015/05/gfx-kernel-upstreaming-requirements.html
Cc: Dave Airlie airlied@gmail.com Cc: Oded Gabbay oded.gabbay@gmail.com Cc: Russell King rmk+kernel@armlinux.org.uk Cc: Tomi Valkeinen tomi.valkeinen@ti.com Cc: Eric Anholt eric@anholt.net Cc: Thomas Hellstrom thellstrom@vmware.com Cc: Sinclair Yeh syeh@vmware.com Cc: Lucas Stach l.stach@pengutronix.de Cc: Benjamin Gaignard benjamin.gaignard@linaro.org Cc: Mark Yao mark.yao@rock-chips.com Cc: Laurent Pinchart laurent.pinchart@ideasonboard.com Cc: Ben Skeggs bskeggs@redhat.com Cc: Rob Clark robdclark@gmail.com Cc: CK Hu ck.hu@mediatek.com Cc: Xinliang Liu z.liuxinliang@hisilicon.com Cc: Philipp Zabel p.zabel@pengutronix.de Cc: Stefan Agner stefan@agner.ch Cc: Inki Dae inki.dae@samsung.com Cc: Maxime Ripard maxime.ripard@free-electrons.com Cc: Boris Brezillon boris.brezillon@free-electrons.com Cc: Jani Nikula jani.nikula@linux.intel.com Cc: Daniel Vetter daniel.vetter@intel.com Cc: Thierry Reding thierry.reding@gmail.com Cc: Christian König christian.koenig@amd.com Cc: Alex Deucher alexander.deucher@amd.com Cc: Gerd Hoffmann kraxel@redhat.com Cc: Brian Starkey brian.starkey@arm.com Cc: Liviu Dudau liviu.dudau@arm.com Cc: Alexey Brodkin abrodkin@synopsys.com Acked-by: Dave Airlie airlied@gmail.com Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter daniel.vetter@intel.com
Documentation/gpu/drm-uapi.rst | 67 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 67 insertions(+)
diff --git a/Documentation/gpu/drm-uapi.rst b/Documentation/gpu/drm-uapi.rst index 94876938aef3..a7e3aa27167d 100644 --- a/Documentation/gpu/drm-uapi.rst +++ b/Documentation/gpu/drm-uapi.rst @@ -36,6 +36,73 @@ Primary Nodes, DRM Master and Authentication Open-Source Userspace Requirements ==================================
+The DRM subsystem has stricter requirements on what the userspace side for new +uAPI needs to look like. This section here explains what exactly those +requirements are, and why they exist.
+The short summary is that any addition of DRM uAPI requires corresponding +open-sourced userspace patches, and those patches must be reviewed and ready for +merging into a suitable and canonical upstream project.
+GFX devices (both display and render/GPU side) are really complex bits of hardware, +with userspace and kernel by necessity having to work together really closely. +The interfaces, for rendering and modesetting must be extremely wide and +flexible, and therefore it is almost always impossible to precisely define them +for every possible corner case. This in turns makes it really practically +infeasible to differentiate between behaviour that's required by userspace, and +which must not be changed to avoid regressions, and behaviour which is only an +accidental artifact of the current implementation.
While I agree that this is a proper description of the current state of the DRM/KMS subsystem, I don't like how it implies that shipping code is an acceptable replacement for documentation. We need to aim at documenting the DRM/KMS userspace API to a level of detail that will cover the vast majority of cases (be they corner or round), if not all of them.
I agree that this is a good idea, the trouble is in convincing everyone else, and more important, that this is important enough that they should spent time typing these docs. I think the only way to do that is to 1) type those docs for existing ioctls yourself, and then start and RFC to make it a standard. For properties I'm already starting with at least some not-too-formal docs within the existing kernel-doc stuff. Not there yet either. I somewhat plan to get around to ioctl in the next few years, but would be real awesome if someone beats me to it ;-)
+Without access to the full source code of all userspace users that means it +becomes impossible to change the implementation details, since userspace could +depend upon the accidental behaviour of the current implementation in minute +details. And debugging such regressions without access to source code is pretty +much impossible. As a consequence this means:
+- The Linux kernel's "no regression" policy holds in practice only for
- open-source userspace of the DRM subsystem. DRM developers are perfectly
fine + if closed-source blob drivers in userspace use the same uAPI as the open + drivers,
In which category do you put the open-source userspace code that is not part of the mainline version of a major userspace framework (X11, Weston, Android hwcomposer, ...) ? I'm thinking about open-source vendor forks of those projects, or home-brew implementation of a tailor-made display stack for a product (I'm intentionally using the word display instead of GFX here, if a full tailor-made GFX stack including 3D rendering is quite unlikely, a display stack or even just an application driving the display through the DRM/KMS API is much easier to write from scratch).
I think if it's just a vendor fork of an existing open-source project, then that existing open-source project should be the target. The idea behind requiring review&ready for acceptance by the userspace side is to make sure it'll be useful for more than just 1 vendor, just applying it to a vendor fork somewhat defeats that idea. Best option would be to either reintegrate the vendor for, or if that's not possible, have some shared library or other means of sharing code. Afaiui that's the entire point of libweston, so assuming your vendor fork is tracking upstream libweston (it really should) this shouldn't be a problem. If there's no direct code sharing, but at least common history, porting the patches to upstream as demonstration vehicle also shouldn't be that bad a burden.
An entirely different case is 2 independent codebases that solve the exact same problem. We have no precedence for that, but I expect we'll have that real soon with the community radv vulkan driver vs. the one from amd (that should be released as open source any minute now). Personally I'm leaning towards "why don't you just collaborate" and trying to look cute&cuddly, but no sure where that one will fall tbh. We will see soon.
but they must do so in the exact same way as the open drivers.
- Creative (ab)use of the interfaces will, and in the past routinely has,
lead + to breakage.
This in my opinion calls for documentation, otherwise how can userspace developers tell what is an abuse without copying open-source code verbatim ?
If there's a regression, and code disagrees with the documentation, the code wins. I agree that good docs would help, but the reality is that very often you get to review 10+ years of git history in a bunch of projects. I & others have done this plenty of times, and we generally get things mostly right. But again not having tons of forks and different implementations helps a lot with this, so "pls collaborate" is a good idea (for the community overall, and that's the point here) too. We have a bunch of forks and independent reimplemenations (e.g. the gallium intel driver), but most often those forks tend to lack in features so much that they're not hitting any of the uapi corner cases that might break. I'll be interesting when this happens for the first time for real, but personally I really hope this doesn't happen, and that everyone understands the long-term benefits of collaborating.
Cheers, Daniel