| Deferred IO |
| ----------- |
| |
| Deferred IO is a way to delay and repurpose IO. It uses host memory as a |
| buffer and the MMU pagefault as a pretrigger for when to perform the device |
| IO. The following example may be a useful explanation of how one such setup |
| works: |
| |
| - userspace app like Xfbdev mmaps framebuffer |
| - deferred IO and driver sets up fault and page_mkwrite handlers |
| - userspace app tries to write to mmaped vaddress |
| - we get pagefault and reach fault handler |
| - fault handler finds and returns physical page |
| - we get page_mkwrite where we add this page to a list |
| - schedule a workqueue task to be run after a delay |
| - app continues writing to that page with no additional cost. this is |
| the key benefit. |
| - the workqueue task comes in and mkcleans the pages on the list, then |
| completes the work associated with updating the framebuffer. this is |
| the real work talking to the device. |
| - app tries to write to the address (that has now been mkcleaned) |
| - get pagefault and the above sequence occurs again |
| |
| As can be seen from above, one benefit is roughly to allow bursty framebuffer |
| writes to occur at minimum cost. Then after some time when hopefully things |
| have gone quiet, we go and really update the framebuffer which would be |
| a relatively more expensive operation. |
| |
| For some types of nonvolatile high latency displays, the desired image is |
| the final image rather than the intermediate stages which is why it's okay |
| to not update for each write that is occurring. |
| |
| It may be the case that this is useful in other scenarios as well. Paul Mundt |
| has mentioned a case where it is beneficial to use the page count to decide |
| whether to coalesce and issue SG DMA or to do memory bursts. |
| |
| Another one may be if one has a device framebuffer that is in an usual format, |
| say diagonally shifting RGB, this may then be a mechanism for you to allow |
| apps to pretend to have a normal framebuffer but reswizzle for the device |
| framebuffer at vsync time based on the touched pagelist. |
| |
| How to use it: (for applications) |
| --------------------------------- |
| No changes needed. mmap the framebuffer like normal and just use it. |
| |
| How to use it: (for fbdev drivers) |
| ---------------------------------- |
| The following example may be helpful. |
| |
| 1. Setup your structure. Eg: |
| |
| static struct fb_deferred_io hecubafb_defio = { |
| .delay = HZ, |
| .deferred_io = hecubafb_dpy_deferred_io, |
| }; |
| |
| The delay is the minimum delay between when the page_mkwrite trigger occurs |
| and when the deferred_io callback is called. The deferred_io callback is |
| explained below. |
| |
| 2. Setup your deferred IO callback. Eg: |
| static void hecubafb_dpy_deferred_io(struct fb_info *info, |
| struct list_head *pagelist) |
| |
| The deferred_io callback is where you would perform all your IO to the display |
| device. You receive the pagelist which is the list of pages that were written |
| to during the delay. You must not modify this list. This callback is called |
| from a workqueue. |
| |
| 3. Call init |
| info->fbdefio = &hecubafb_defio; |
| fb_deferred_io_init(info); |
| |
| 4. Call cleanup |
| fb_deferred_io_cleanup(info); |