Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Everything has been constant-sized until now, but constant buffer
handling changes will make us want some additional variable sized
array.
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Saves ~2KB of code.
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Saves ~480 bytes of code.
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1. new PCI ids
2. fix some 3D commands on new chipset
3. fix send instruction on new chipset
4. new VUE vertex header
5. ff_sync message (added by Zou Nan Hai <nanhai.zou@intel.com>)
6. the offset in JMPI is in unit of 64bits on new chipset
7. new cube map layout
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Hook up a constant buffer, binding table, etc for the VS unit.
This will allow using large constant buffers with vertex shaders.
The new code is disabled at this time (use_const_buffer=FALSE).
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As far as I can read in the docs, VS threads can be 1:1 with the pairs of
VUE handles allocated for them. Also, G4X can run twice as many threads as
before (though we won't unless the we bump the preferred URB entries for VS).
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Makefile.template
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This reverts commit 7c81124d7c4a4d1da9f48cbf7e82ab1a3a970a7a.
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This reverts commit 53675e5c05c0598b7ea206d5c27dbcae786a2c03.
Conflicts:
src/mesa/drivers/dri/i965/brw_wm_surface_state.c
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To do this, I had to clean up some of 965 state upload stuff. We may end
up over-emitting state in the aperture overflow case, but that should be rare,
and I'd rather have the simplification of state management.
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This is an API breakage only.
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The GEM flags are much more descriptive for what we need. Since this makes
bufmgr_fake rather device-specific, move it to the intel common directory.
We've wanted to do device-specific stuff to it before.
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Makes state emission into a 2 phase, prepare sets things up and accounts
the size of all referenced buffer objects. The emit stage then actually
does the batchbuffer touching for emitting the objects.
There is an assert in dri_emit_reloc if a reloc occurs for a buffer
that hasn't been accounted yet.
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We have two consumers of relocations. One is static state buffers, which
want the same relocation every time. The other is the batchbuffer, which gets
thrown out immediately after submit. This lets us reduce repeated computation
for static state buffers, and clean up the code by moving relocations nearer
to where the state buffer is computed.
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The user-space suballocator that was used avoided relocation computations by
using the general and surface state base registers and allocating those types
of buffers out of pools built on top of single buffer objects. It also
avoided calls into the buffer manager for these small state allocations, since
only one buffer object was being used.
However, the buffer allocation cost appears to be low, and with relocation
caching, computing relocations for buffers is essentially free. Additionally,
implementing the suballocator required a don't-fence-subdata flag to disable
waiting on buffer maps so that writing new data didn't block on rendering using
old data, and careful handling when mapping to update old data (which we need
to do for unavoidable relocations with FBOs). More importantly, when the
suballocator filled, it had no replacement algorithm and just threw out all
of the contents and forced them to be recomputed, which is a significant cost.
This is the first step, which just changes the buffer type, but doesn't yet
improve the hash table to not result in full recompute on overflow. Because
the buffers are all allocated out of the general buffer allocator, we can
no longer use the general/surface state bases to avoid relocations, and they
are set to 0 instead.
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In the process, fix some alignment issues:
- Scratch space allocation was aligned into units of 1KB, while the allocation
wanted units of bytes, so we never allocated enough space for scratch.
- GRF register count was programmed as ALIGN(val - 1, 16) / 16 instead of
ALIGN(val, 16) / 16 - 1, which overcounted for val != 16n+1.
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between the vertex cache, the vertex shader and the clipping stages,
all of which are competitors for URB entries assigned to the VS unit.
This change reduces the maximum number of clip and VS threads by
enough to ensure that they cannot consume all the available URB
entries, and then reduces the number somewhat more up to an arbitary
amount I discovered by trial and error. Unfortunately trial and error
solutions don't inspire total confidence...
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This driver comes from Tungsten Graphics, with a few further modifications by
Intel.
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