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Paulo Zanoni authored
This was already on my TODO list, and was requested both by Chris and Ville, for different reasons. The advantages are avoiding a frequent malloc/free pair, and the locality of having the work structure embedded in dev_priv. The maximum used memory is also smaller since previously we could have multiple allocated intel_fbc_work structs at the same time, and now we'll always have a single one - the one embedded on dev_priv. Of course, we're now using a little more memory on the cases where there's nothing scheduled. The biggest challenge here is to keep everything synchronized the way it was before. Currently, when we try to activate FBC, we allocate a new intel_fbc_work structure. Then later when we conclude we must delay the FBC activation a little more, we allocate a new intel_fbc_work struct, and then adjust dev_priv->fbc.fbc_work to point to the new struct. So when the old work runs - at intel_fbc_work_fn() - it will check that dev_priv->fbc.fbc_work points to something else, so it does nothing. Everything is also protected by fbc.lock. Just cancelling the old delayed work doesn't work because we might just cancel it after the work function already started to run, but while it is still waiting to grab fbc.lock. That's why we use the "dev_priv->fbc.fbc_work == work" check described in the paragraph above. So now that we have a single work struct we have to introduce a new way to synchronize everything. So we're making the work function a normal work instead of a delayed work, and it will be responsible for sleeping the appropriate amount of time itself. This way, after it wakes up it can grab the lock, ask "were we delayed or cancelled?" and then go back to sleep, enable FBC or give up. v2: - Spelling fixes. - Rebase after changing the patch order. - Fix ms/jiffies confusion. Reviewed-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk> (v1) Signed-off-by: Paulo Zanoni <paulo.r.zanoni@intel.com> Link: http://patchwork.freedesktop.org/patch/msgid/
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