1/*
2 * SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT
3 *
4 * Copyright �� 2016 Intel Corporation
5 */
6
7#ifndef __I915_GEM_OBJECT_TYPES_H__
8#define __I915_GEM_OBJECT_TYPES_H__
9
10#include <linux/mmu_notifier.h>
11
12#include <drm/drm_gem.h>
13#include <drm/ttm/ttm_bo.h>
14#include <uapi/drm/i915_drm.h>
15
16#include "i915_active.h"
17#include "i915_selftest.h"
18#include "i915_vma_resource.h"
19
20#include "gt/intel_gt_defines.h"
21
22struct drm_i915_gem_object;
23struct intel_fronbuffer;
24struct intel_memory_region;
25
26/*
27 * struct i915_lut_handle tracks the fast lookups from handle to vma used
28 * for execbuf. Although we use a radixtree for that mapping, in order to
29 * remove them as the object or context is closed, we need a secondary list
30 * and a translation entry (i915_lut_handle).
31 */
32struct i915_lut_handle {
33	struct list_head obj_link;
34	struct i915_gem_context *ctx;
35	u32 handle;
36};
37
38struct drm_i915_gem_object_ops {
39	unsigned int flags;
40#define I915_GEM_OBJECT_IS_SHRINKABLE			BIT(1)
41/* Skip the shrinker management in set_pages/unset_pages */
42#define I915_GEM_OBJECT_SELF_MANAGED_SHRINK_LIST	BIT(2)
43#define I915_GEM_OBJECT_IS_PROXY			BIT(3)
44#define I915_GEM_OBJECT_NO_MMAP				BIT(4)
45
46	/* Interface between the GEM object and its backing storage.
47	 * get_pages() is called once prior to the use of the associated set
48	 * of pages before to binding them into the GTT, and put_pages() is
49	 * called after we no longer need them. As we expect there to be
50	 * associated cost with migrating pages between the backing storage
51	 * and making them available for the GPU (e.g. clflush), we may hold
52	 * onto the pages after they are no longer referenced by the GPU
53	 * in case they may be used again shortly (for example migrating the
54	 * pages to a different memory domain within the GTT). put_pages()
55	 * will therefore most likely be called when the object itself is
56	 * being released or under memory pressure (where we attempt to
57	 * reap pages for the shrinker).
58	 */
59	int (*get_pages)(struct drm_i915_gem_object *obj);
60	void (*put_pages)(struct drm_i915_gem_object *obj,
61			  struct sg_table *pages);
62	int (*truncate)(struct drm_i915_gem_object *obj);
63	/**
64	 * shrink - Perform further backend specific actions to facilate
65	 * shrinking.
66	 * @obj: The gem object
67	 * @flags: Extra flags to control shrinking behaviour in the backend
68	 *
69	 * Possible values for @flags:
70	 *
71	 * I915_GEM_OBJECT_SHRINK_WRITEBACK - Try to perform writeback of the
72	 * backing pages, if supported.
73	 *
74	 * I915_GEM_OBJECT_SHRINK_NO_GPU_WAIT - Don't wait for the object to
75	 * idle.  Active objects can be considered later. The TTM backend for
76	 * example might have aync migrations going on, which don't use any
77	 * i915_vma to track the active GTT binding, and hence having an unbound
78	 * object might not be enough.
79	 */
80#define I915_GEM_OBJECT_SHRINK_WRITEBACK   BIT(0)
81#define I915_GEM_OBJECT_SHRINK_NO_GPU_WAIT BIT(1)
82	int (*shrink)(struct drm_i915_gem_object *obj, unsigned int flags);
83
84	int (*pread)(struct drm_i915_gem_object *obj,
85		     const struct drm_i915_gem_pread *arg);
86	int (*pwrite)(struct drm_i915_gem_object *obj,
87		      const struct drm_i915_gem_pwrite *arg);
88	u64 (*mmap_offset)(struct drm_i915_gem_object *obj);
89	void (*unmap_virtual)(struct drm_i915_gem_object *obj);
90
91	int (*dmabuf_export)(struct drm_i915_gem_object *obj);
92
93	/**
94	 * adjust_lru - notify that the madvise value was updated
95	 * @obj: The gem object
96	 *
97	 * The madvise value may have been updated, or object was recently
98	 * referenced so act accordingly (Perhaps changing an LRU list etc).
99	 */
100	void (*adjust_lru)(struct drm_i915_gem_object *obj);
101
102	/**
103	 * delayed_free - Override the default delayed free implementation
104	 */
105	void (*delayed_free)(struct drm_i915_gem_object *obj);
106
107	/**
108	 * migrate - Migrate object to a different region either for
109	 * pinning or for as long as the object lock is held.
110	 */
111	int (*migrate)(struct drm_i915_gem_object *obj,
112		       struct intel_memory_region *mr,
113		       unsigned int flags);
114
115	void (*release)(struct drm_i915_gem_object *obj);
116
117	const struct vm_operations_struct *mmap_ops;
118	const char *name; /* friendly name for debug, e.g. lockdep classes */
119};
120
121/**
122 * enum i915_cache_level - The supported GTT caching values for system memory
123 * pages.
124 *
125 * These translate to some special GTT PTE bits when binding pages into some
126 * address space. It also determines whether an object, or rather its pages are
127 * coherent with the GPU, when also reading or writing through the CPU cache
128 * with those pages.
129 *
130 * Userspace can also control this through struct drm_i915_gem_caching.
131 */
132enum i915_cache_level {
133	/**
134	 * @I915_CACHE_NONE:
135	 *
136	 * GPU access is not coherent with the CPU cache. If the cache is dirty
137	 * and we need the underlying pages to be coherent with some later GPU
138	 * access then we need to manually flush the pages.
139	 *
140	 * On shared LLC platforms reads and writes through the CPU cache are
141	 * still coherent even with this setting. See also
142	 * &drm_i915_gem_object.cache_coherent for more details. Due to this we
143	 * should only ever use uncached for scanout surfaces, otherwise we end
144	 * up over-flushing in some places.
145	 *
146	 * This is the default on non-LLC platforms.
147	 */
148	I915_CACHE_NONE = 0,
149	/**
150	 * @I915_CACHE_LLC:
151	 *
152	 * GPU access is coherent with the CPU cache. If the cache is dirty,
153	 * then the GPU will ensure that access remains coherent, when both
154	 * reading and writing through the CPU cache. GPU writes can dirty the
155	 * CPU cache.
156	 *
157	 * Not used for scanout surfaces.
158	 *
159	 * Applies to both platforms with shared LLC(HAS_LLC), and snooping
160	 * based platforms(HAS_SNOOP).
161	 *
162	 * This is the default on shared LLC platforms.  The only exception is
163	 * scanout objects, where the display engine is not coherent with the
164	 * CPU cache. For such objects I915_CACHE_NONE or I915_CACHE_WT is
165	 * automatically applied by the kernel in pin_for_display, if userspace
166	 * has not done so already.
167	 */
168	I915_CACHE_LLC,
169	/**
170	 * @I915_CACHE_L3_LLC:
171	 *
172	 * Explicitly enable the Gfx L3 cache, with coherent LLC.
173	 *
174	 * The Gfx L3 sits between the domain specific caches, e.g
175	 * sampler/render caches, and the larger LLC. LLC is coherent with the
176	 * GPU, but L3 is only visible to the GPU, so likely needs to be flushed
177	 * when the workload completes.
178	 *
179	 * Not used for scanout surfaces.
180	 *
181	 * Only exposed on some gen7 + GGTT. More recent hardware has dropped
182	 * this explicit setting, where it should now be enabled by default.
183	 */
184	I915_CACHE_L3_LLC,
185	/**
186	 * @I915_CACHE_WT:
187	 *
188	 * Write-through. Used for scanout surfaces.
189	 *
190	 * The GPU can utilise the caches, while still having the display engine
191	 * be coherent with GPU writes, as a result we don't need to flush the
192	 * CPU caches when moving out of the render domain. This is the default
193	 * setting chosen by the kernel, if supported by the HW, otherwise we
194	 * fallback to I915_CACHE_NONE. On the CPU side writes through the CPU
195	 * cache still need to be flushed, to remain coherent with the display
196	 * engine.
197	 */
198	I915_CACHE_WT,
199	/**
200	 * @I915_MAX_CACHE_LEVEL:
201	 *
202	 * Mark the last entry in the enum. Used for defining cachelevel_to_pat
203	 * array for cache_level to pat translation table.
204	 */
205	I915_MAX_CACHE_LEVEL,
206};
207
208enum i915_map_type {
209	I915_MAP_WB = 0,
210	I915_MAP_WC,
211#define I915_MAP_OVERRIDE BIT(31)
212	I915_MAP_FORCE_WB = I915_MAP_WB | I915_MAP_OVERRIDE,
213	I915_MAP_FORCE_WC = I915_MAP_WC | I915_MAP_OVERRIDE,
214};
215
216enum i915_mmap_type {
217	I915_MMAP_TYPE_GTT = 0,
218	I915_MMAP_TYPE_WC,
219	I915_MMAP_TYPE_WB,
220	I915_MMAP_TYPE_UC,
221	I915_MMAP_TYPE_FIXED,
222};
223
224struct i915_mmap_offset {
225	struct drm_vma_offset_node vma_node;
226	struct drm_i915_gem_object *obj;
227	enum i915_mmap_type mmap_type;
228
229	struct rb_node offset;
230};
231
232struct i915_gem_object_page_iter {
233	struct scatterlist *sg_pos;
234	unsigned int sg_idx; /* in pages, but 32bit eek! */
235
236	struct radix_tree_root radix;
237	struct mutex lock; /* protects this cache */
238};
239
240struct drm_i915_gem_object {
241	/*
242	 * We might have reason to revisit the below since it wastes
243	 * a lot of space for non-ttm gem objects.
244	 * In any case, always use the accessors for the ttm_buffer_object
245	 * when accessing it.
246	 */
247	union {
248		struct drm_gem_object base;
249		struct ttm_buffer_object __do_not_access;
250	};
251
252	const struct drm_i915_gem_object_ops *ops;
253
254	struct {
255		/**
256		 * @vma.lock: protect the list/tree of vmas
257		 */
258		spinlock_t lock;
259
260		/**
261		 * @vma.list: List of VMAs backed by this object
262		 *
263		 * The VMA on this list are ordered by type, all GGTT vma are
264		 * placed at the head and all ppGTT vma are placed at the tail.
265		 * The different types of GGTT vma are unordered between
266		 * themselves, use the @vma.tree (which has a defined order
267		 * between all VMA) to quickly find an exact match.
268		 */
269		struct list_head list;
270
271		/**
272		 * @vma.tree: Ordered tree of VMAs backed by this object
273		 *
274		 * All VMA created for this object are placed in the @vma.tree
275		 * for fast retrieval via a binary search in
276		 * i915_vma_instance(). They are also added to @vma.list for
277		 * easy iteration.
278		 */
279		struct rb_root tree;
280	} vma;
281
282	/**
283	 * @lut_list: List of vma lookup entries in use for this object.
284	 *
285	 * If this object is closed, we need to remove all of its VMA from
286	 * the fast lookup index in associated contexts; @lut_list provides
287	 * this translation from object to context->handles_vma.
288	 */
289	struct list_head lut_list;
290	spinlock_t lut_lock; /* guards lut_list */
291
292	/**
293	 * @obj_link: Link into @i915_gem_ww_ctx.obj_list
294	 *
295	 * When we lock this object through i915_gem_object_lock() with a
296	 * context, we add it to the list to ensure we can unlock everything
297	 * when i915_gem_ww_ctx_backoff() or i915_gem_ww_ctx_fini() are called.
298	 */
299	struct list_head obj_link;
300	/**
301	 * @shared_resv_from: The object shares the resv from this vm.
302	 */
303	struct i915_address_space *shares_resv_from;
304
305#ifdef CONFIG_PROC_FS
306	/**
307	 * @client: @i915_drm_client which created the object
308	 */
309	struct i915_drm_client *client;
310
311	/**
312	 * @client_link: Link into @i915_drm_client.objects_list
313	 */
314	struct list_head client_link;
315#endif
316
317	union {
318		struct rcu_head rcu;
319		struct llist_node freed;
320	};
321
322	/**
323	 * Whether the object is currently in the GGTT or any other supported
324	 * fake offset mmap backed by lmem.
325	 */
326	unsigned int userfault_count;
327	struct list_head userfault_link;
328
329	struct {
330		spinlock_t lock; /* Protects access to mmo offsets */
331		struct rb_root offsets;
332	} mmo;
333
334	I915_SELFTEST_DECLARE(struct list_head st_link);
335
336	unsigned long flags;
337#define I915_BO_ALLOC_CONTIGUOUS  BIT(0)
338#define I915_BO_ALLOC_VOLATILE    BIT(1)
339#define I915_BO_ALLOC_CPU_CLEAR   BIT(2)
340#define I915_BO_ALLOC_USER        BIT(3)
341/* Object is allowed to lose its contents on suspend / resume, even if pinned */
342#define I915_BO_ALLOC_PM_VOLATILE BIT(4)
343/* Object needs to be restored early using memcpy during resume */
344#define I915_BO_ALLOC_PM_EARLY    BIT(5)
345/*
346 * Object is likely never accessed by the CPU. This will prioritise the BO to be
347 * allocated in the non-mappable portion of lmem. This is merely a hint, and if
348 * dealing with userspace objects the CPU fault handler is free to ignore this.
349 */
350#define I915_BO_ALLOC_GPU_ONLY	  BIT(6)
351#define I915_BO_ALLOC_CCS_AUX	  BIT(7)
352/*
353 * Object is allowed to retain its initial data and will not be cleared on first
354 * access if used along with I915_BO_ALLOC_USER. This is mainly to keep
355 * preallocated framebuffer data intact while transitioning it to i915drmfb.
356 */
357#define I915_BO_PREALLOC	  BIT(8)
358#define I915_BO_ALLOC_FLAGS (I915_BO_ALLOC_CONTIGUOUS | \
359			     I915_BO_ALLOC_VOLATILE | \
360			     I915_BO_ALLOC_CPU_CLEAR | \
361			     I915_BO_ALLOC_USER | \
362			     I915_BO_ALLOC_PM_VOLATILE | \
363			     I915_BO_ALLOC_PM_EARLY | \
364			     I915_BO_ALLOC_GPU_ONLY | \
365			     I915_BO_ALLOC_CCS_AUX | \
366			     I915_BO_PREALLOC)
367#define I915_BO_READONLY          BIT(9)
368#define I915_TILING_QUIRK_BIT     10 /* unknown swizzling; do not release! */
369#define I915_BO_PROTECTED         BIT(11)
370	/**
371	 * @mem_flags - Mutable placement-related flags
372	 *
373	 * These are flags that indicate specifics of the memory region
374	 * the object is currently in. As such they are only stable
375	 * either under the object lock or if the object is pinned.
376	 */
377	unsigned int mem_flags;
378#define I915_BO_FLAG_STRUCT_PAGE BIT(0) /* Object backed by struct pages */
379#define I915_BO_FLAG_IOMEM       BIT(1) /* Object backed by IO memory */
380	/**
381	 * @pat_index: The desired PAT index.
382	 *
383	 * See hardware specification for valid PAT indices for each platform.
384	 * This field replaces the @cache_level that contains a value of enum
385	 * i915_cache_level since PAT indices are being used by both userspace
386	 * and kernel mode driver for caching policy control after GEN12.
387	 * In the meantime platform specific tables are created to translate
388	 * i915_cache_level into pat index, for more details check the macros
389	 * defined i915/i915_pci.c, e.g. PVC_CACHELEVEL.
390	 * For backward compatibility, this field contains values exactly match
391	 * the entries of enum i915_cache_level for pre-GEN12 platforms (See
392	 * LEGACY_CACHELEVEL), so that the PTE encode functions for these
393	 * legacy platforms can stay the same.
394	 */
395	unsigned int pat_index:6;
396	/**
397	 * @pat_set_by_user: Indicate whether pat_index is set by user space
398	 *
399	 * This field is set to false by default, only set to true if the
400	 * pat_index is set by user space. By design, user space is capable of
401	 * managing caching behavior by setting pat_index, in which case this
402	 * kernel mode driver should never touch the pat_index.
403	 */
404	unsigned int pat_set_by_user:1;
405	/**
406	 * @cache_coherent:
407	 *
408	 * Note: with the change above which replaced @cache_level with pat_index,
409	 * the use of @cache_coherent is limited to the objects created by kernel
410	 * or by userspace without pat index specified.
411	 * Check for @pat_set_by_user to find out if an object has pat index set
412	 * by userspace. The ioctl's to change cache settings have also been
413	 * disabled for the objects with pat index set by userspace. Please don't
414	 * assume @cache_coherent having the flags set as describe here. A helper
415	 * function i915_gem_object_has_cache_level() provides one way to bypass
416	 * the use of this field.
417	 *
418	 * Track whether the pages are coherent with the GPU if reading or
419	 * writing through the CPU caches. The largely depends on the
420	 * @cache_level setting.
421	 *
422	 * On platforms which don't have the shared LLC(HAS_SNOOP), like on Atom
423	 * platforms, coherency must be explicitly requested with some special
424	 * GTT caching bits(see enum i915_cache_level). When enabling coherency
425	 * it does come at a performance and power cost on such platforms. On
426	 * the flip side the kernel does not need to manually flush any buffers
427	 * which need to be coherent with the GPU, if the object is not coherent
428	 * i.e @cache_coherent is zero.
429	 *
430	 * On platforms that share the LLC with the CPU(HAS_LLC), all GT memory
431	 * access will automatically snoop the CPU caches(even with CACHE_NONE).
432	 * The one exception is when dealing with the display engine, like with
433	 * scanout surfaces. To handle this the kernel will always flush the
434	 * surface out of the CPU caches when preparing it for scanout.  Also
435	 * note that since scanout surfaces are only ever read by the display
436	 * engine we only need to care about flushing any writes through the CPU
437	 * cache, reads on the other hand will always be coherent.
438	 *
439	 * Something strange here is why @cache_coherent is not a simple
440	 * boolean, i.e coherent vs non-coherent. The reasoning for this is back
441	 * to the display engine not being fully coherent. As a result scanout
442	 * surfaces will either be marked as I915_CACHE_NONE or I915_CACHE_WT.
443	 * In the case of seeing I915_CACHE_NONE the kernel makes the assumption
444	 * that this is likely a scanout surface, and will set @cache_coherent
445	 * as only I915_BO_CACHE_COHERENT_FOR_READ, on platforms with the shared
446	 * LLC. The kernel uses this to always flush writes through the CPU
447	 * cache as early as possible, where it can, in effect keeping
448	 * @cache_dirty clean, so we can potentially avoid stalling when
449	 * flushing the surface just before doing the scanout.  This does mean
450	 * we might unnecessarily flush non-scanout objects in some places, but
451	 * the default assumption is that all normal objects should be using
452	 * I915_CACHE_LLC, at least on platforms with the shared LLC.
453	 *
454	 * Supported values:
455	 *
456	 * I915_BO_CACHE_COHERENT_FOR_READ:
457	 *
458	 * On shared LLC platforms, we use this for special scanout surfaces,
459	 * where the display engine is not coherent with the CPU cache. As such
460	 * we need to ensure we flush any writes before doing the scanout. As an
461	 * optimisation we try to flush any writes as early as possible to avoid
462	 * stalling later.
463	 *
464	 * Thus for scanout surfaces using I915_CACHE_NONE, on shared LLC
465	 * platforms, we use:
466	 *
467	 *	cache_coherent = I915_BO_CACHE_COHERENT_FOR_READ
468	 *
469	 * While for normal objects that are fully coherent, including special
470	 * scanout surfaces marked as I915_CACHE_WT, we use:
471	 *
472	 *	cache_coherent = I915_BO_CACHE_COHERENT_FOR_READ |
473	 *			 I915_BO_CACHE_COHERENT_FOR_WRITE
474	 *
475	 * And then for objects that are not coherent at all we use:
476	 *
477	 *	cache_coherent = 0
478	 *
479	 * I915_BO_CACHE_COHERENT_FOR_WRITE:
480	 *
481	 * When writing through the CPU cache, the GPU is still coherent. Note
482	 * that this also implies I915_BO_CACHE_COHERENT_FOR_READ.
483	 */
484#define I915_BO_CACHE_COHERENT_FOR_READ BIT(0)
485#define I915_BO_CACHE_COHERENT_FOR_WRITE BIT(1)
486	unsigned int cache_coherent:2;
487
488	/**
489	 * @cache_dirty:
490	 *
491	 * Note: with the change above which replaced cache_level with pat_index,
492	 * the use of @cache_dirty is limited to the objects created by kernel
493	 * or by userspace without pat index specified.
494	 * Check for @pat_set_by_user to find out if an object has pat index set
495	 * by userspace. The ioctl's to change cache settings have also been
496	 * disabled for the objects with pat_index set by userspace. Please don't
497	 * assume @cache_dirty is set as describe here. Also see helper function
498	 * i915_gem_object_has_cache_level() for possible ways to bypass the use
499	 * of this field.
500	 *
501	 * Track if we are we dirty with writes through the CPU cache for this
502	 * object. As a result reading directly from main memory might yield
503	 * stale data.
504	 *
505	 * This also ties into whether the kernel is tracking the object as
506	 * coherent with the GPU, as per @cache_coherent, as it determines if
507	 * flushing might be needed at various points.
508	 *
509	 * Another part of @cache_dirty is managing flushing when first
510	 * acquiring the pages for system memory, at this point the pages are
511	 * considered foreign, so the default assumption is that the cache is
512	 * dirty, for example the page zeroing done by the kernel might leave
513	 * writes though the CPU cache, or swapping-in, while the actual data in
514	 * main memory is potentially stale.  Note that this is a potential
515	 * security issue when dealing with userspace objects and zeroing. Now,
516	 * whether we actually need apply the big sledgehammer of flushing all
517	 * the pages on acquire depends on if @cache_coherent is marked as
518	 * I915_BO_CACHE_COHERENT_FOR_WRITE, i.e that the GPU will be coherent
519	 * for both reads and writes though the CPU cache.
520	 *
521	 * Note that on shared LLC platforms we still apply the heavy flush for
522	 * I915_CACHE_NONE objects, under the assumption that this is going to
523	 * be used for scanout.
524	 *
525	 * Update: On some hardware there is now also the 'Bypass LLC' MOCS
526	 * entry, which defeats our @cache_coherent tracking, since userspace
527	 * can freely bypass the CPU cache when touching the pages with the GPU,
528	 * where the kernel is completely unaware. On such platform we need
529	 * apply the sledgehammer-on-acquire regardless of the @cache_coherent.
530	 *
531	 * Special care is taken on non-LLC platforms, to prevent potential
532	 * information leak. The driver currently ensures:
533	 *
534	 *   1. All userspace objects, by default, have @cache_level set as
535	 *   I915_CACHE_NONE. The only exception is userptr objects, where we
536	 *   instead force I915_CACHE_LLC, but we also don't allow userspace to
537	 *   ever change the @cache_level for such objects. Another special case
538	 *   is dma-buf, which doesn't rely on @cache_dirty,  but there we
539	 *   always do a forced flush when acquiring the pages, if there is a
540	 *   chance that the pages can be read directly from main memory with
541	 *   the GPU.
542	 *
543	 *   2. All I915_CACHE_NONE objects have @cache_dirty initially true.
544	 *
545	 *   3. All swapped-out objects(i.e shmem) have @cache_dirty set to
546	 *   true.
547	 *
548	 *   4. The @cache_dirty is never freely reset before the initial
549	 *   flush, even if userspace adjusts the @cache_level through the
550	 *   i915_gem_set_caching_ioctl.
551	 *
552	 *   5. All @cache_dirty objects(including swapped-in) are initially
553	 *   flushed with a synchronous call to drm_clflush_sg in
554	 *   __i915_gem_object_set_pages. The @cache_dirty can be freely reset
555	 *   at this point. All further asynchronous clfushes are never security
556	 *   critical, i.e userspace is free to race against itself.
557	 */
558	unsigned int cache_dirty:1;
559
560	/* @is_dpt: Object houses a display page table (DPT) */
561	unsigned int is_dpt:1;
562
563	/**
564	 * @read_domains: Read memory domains.
565	 *
566	 * These monitor which caches contain read/write data related to the
567	 * object. When transitioning from one set of domains to another,
568	 * the driver is called to ensure that caches are suitably flushed and
569	 * invalidated.
570	 */
571	u16 read_domains;
572
573	/**
574	 * @write_domain: Corresponding unique write memory domain.
575	 */
576	u16 write_domain;
577
578	struct intel_frontbuffer __rcu *frontbuffer;
579
580	/** Current tiling stride for the object, if it's tiled. */
581	unsigned int tiling_and_stride;
582#define FENCE_MINIMUM_STRIDE 128 /* See i915_tiling_ok() */
583#define TILING_MASK (FENCE_MINIMUM_STRIDE - 1)
584#define STRIDE_MASK (~TILING_MASK)
585
586	struct {
587		/*
588		 * Protects the pages and their use. Do not use directly, but
589		 * instead go through the pin/unpin interfaces.
590		 */
591		atomic_t pages_pin_count;
592
593		/**
594		 * @shrink_pin: Prevents the pages from being made visible to
595		 * the shrinker, while the shrink_pin is non-zero. Most users
596		 * should pretty much never have to care about this, outside of
597		 * some special use cases.
598		 *
599		 * By default most objects will start out as visible to the
600		 * shrinker(if I915_GEM_OBJECT_IS_SHRINKABLE) as soon as the
601		 * backing pages are attached to the object, like in
602		 * __i915_gem_object_set_pages(). They will then be removed the
603		 * shrinker list once the pages are released.
604		 *
605		 * The @shrink_pin is incremented by calling
606		 * i915_gem_object_make_unshrinkable(), which will also remove
607		 * the object from the shrinker list, if the pin count was zero.
608		 *
609		 * Callers will then typically call
610		 * i915_gem_object_make_shrinkable() or
611		 * i915_gem_object_make_purgeable() to decrement the pin count,
612		 * and make the pages visible again.
613		 */
614		atomic_t shrink_pin;
615
616		/**
617		 * @ttm_shrinkable: True when the object is using shmem pages
618		 * underneath. Protected by the object lock.
619		 */
620		bool ttm_shrinkable;
621
622		/**
623		 * @unknown_state: Indicate that the object is effectively
624		 * borked. This is write-once and set if we somehow encounter a
625		 * fatal error when moving/clearing the pages, and we are not
626		 * able to fallback to memcpy/memset, like on small-BAR systems.
627		 * The GPU should also be wedged (or in the process) at this
628		 * point.
629		 *
630		 * Only valid to read this after acquiring the dma-resv lock and
631		 * waiting for all DMA_RESV_USAGE_KERNEL fences to be signalled,
632		 * or if we otherwise know that the moving fence has signalled,
633		 * and we are certain the pages underneath are valid for
634		 * immediate access (under normal operation), like just prior to
635		 * binding the object or when setting up the CPU fault handler.
636		 * See i915_gem_object_has_unknown_state();
637		 */
638		bool unknown_state;
639
640		/**
641		 * Priority list of potential placements for this object.
642		 */
643		struct intel_memory_region **placements;
644		int n_placements;
645
646		/**
647		 * Memory region for this object.
648		 */
649		struct intel_memory_region *region;
650
651		/**
652		 * Memory manager resource allocated for this object. Only
653		 * needed for the mock region.
654		 */
655		struct ttm_resource *res;
656
657		/**
658		 * Element within memory_region->objects or region->purgeable
659		 * if the object is marked as DONTNEED. Access is protected by
660		 * region->obj_lock.
661		 */
662		struct list_head region_link;
663
664		struct i915_refct_sgt *rsgt;
665		struct sg_table *pages;
666		void *mapping;
667
668		struct i915_page_sizes page_sizes;
669
670		I915_SELFTEST_DECLARE(unsigned int page_mask);
671
672		struct i915_gem_object_page_iter get_page;
673		struct i915_gem_object_page_iter get_dma_page;
674
675		/**
676		 * Element within i915->mm.shrink_list or i915->mm.purge_list,
677		 * locked by i915->mm.obj_lock.
678		 */
679		struct list_head link;
680
681		/**
682		 * Advice: are the backing pages purgeable?
683		 */
684		unsigned int madv:2;
685
686		/**
687		 * This is set if the object has been written to since the
688		 * pages were last acquired.
689		 */
690		bool dirty:1;
691
692		u32 tlb[I915_MAX_GT];
693	} mm;
694
695	struct {
696		struct i915_refct_sgt *cached_io_rsgt;
697		struct i915_gem_object_page_iter get_io_page;
698		struct drm_i915_gem_object *backup;
699		bool created:1;
700	} ttm;
701
702	/*
703	 * Record which PXP key instance this object was created against (if
704	 * any), so we can use it to determine if the encryption is valid by
705	 * comparing against the current key instance.
706	 */
707	u32 pxp_key_instance;
708
709	/** Record of address bit 17 of each page at last unbind. */
710	unsigned long *bit_17;
711
712	union {
713#ifdef CONFIG_MMU_NOTIFIER
714		struct i915_gem_userptr {
715			uintptr_t ptr;
716			unsigned long notifier_seq;
717
718			struct mmu_interval_notifier notifier;
719			struct page **pvec;
720			int page_ref;
721		} userptr;
722#endif
723
724		struct drm_mm_node *stolen;
725
726		resource_size_t bo_offset;
727
728		unsigned long scratch;
729		u64 encode;
730
731		void *gvt_info;
732	};
733};
734
735#define intel_bo_to_drm_bo(bo) (&(bo)->base)
736#define intel_bo_to_i915(bo) to_i915(intel_bo_to_drm_bo(bo)->dev)
737
738static inline struct drm_i915_gem_object *
739to_intel_bo(struct drm_gem_object *gem)
740{
741	/* Assert that to_intel_bo(NULL) == NULL */
742	BUILD_BUG_ON(offsetof(struct drm_i915_gem_object, base));
743
744	return container_of(gem, struct drm_i915_gem_object, base);
745}
746
747#endif
748