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Message-ID: <041de509-f56f-f460-1961-810bc5a3c18e@vodafone.de>
Date: Fri, 21 Apr 2017 15:21:21 +0200
From: Christian König <deathsimple@...afone.de>
To: Gerd Hoffmann <kraxel@...hat.com>,
Christian König <christian.koenig@....com>
Cc: amd-gfx@...ts.freedesktop.org,
Michel Dänzer <michel@...nzer.net>,
open list <linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org>,
dri-devel@...ts.freedesktop.org,
Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@...el.com>
Subject: Re: [PATCH] drm: fourcc byteorder: brings header file comments in
line with reality.
Am 21.04.2017 um 15:12 schrieb Gerd Hoffmann:
> Hi,
>
>>> "native" to me feels more like "native to the GPU" since these things
>>> really are tied to the GPU not the CPU. That's also why I went with the
>>> explicit endianness originally so that the driver could properly declare
>>> what the GPU supports.
>> And to be honest I would really prefer to stick with that approach for
>> exactly that reason.
>>
>> The proposed change would require that drivers have different code path
>> for different CPU byte order. Those code path tend to be not tested very
>> well and are additional complexity we probably don't want inside the driver.
> We can add fixed-endian #defines without too much effort, at least for
> the 8 bits per color formats. In qemu we have the same problem, only
> with pixman. Those formats are native endian too, but often we have to
> handle a fixed format, so we did this:
>
> /*
> * pixman image formats are defined to be native endian,
> * that means host byte order on qemu. So we go define
> * fixed formats here for cases where it is needed, like
> * feeding libjpeg / libpng and writing screenshots.
> */
>
> #ifdef HOST_WORDS_BIGENDIAN
> # define PIXMAN_BE_r8g8b8 PIXMAN_r8g8b8
> # define PIXMAN_BE_x8r8g8b8 PIXMAN_x8r8g8b8
> # define PIXMAN_BE_a8r8g8b8 PIXMAN_a8r8g8b8
> # define PIXMAN_BE_b8g8r8x8 PIXMAN_b8g8r8x8
> # define PIXMAN_BE_b8g8r8a8 PIXMAN_b8g8r8a8
> # define PIXMAN_BE_r8g8b8x8 PIXMAN_r8g8b8x8
> # define PIXMAN_BE_r8g8b8a8 PIXMAN_r8g8b8a8
> # define PIXMAN_BE_x8b8g8r8 PIXMAN_x8b8g8r8
> # define PIXMAN_BE_a8b8g8r8 PIXMAN_a8b8g8r8
> # define PIXMAN_LE_x8r8g8b8 PIXMAN_b8g8r8x8
> #else
> # define PIXMAN_BE_r8g8b8 PIXMAN_b8g8r8
> # define PIXMAN_BE_x8r8g8b8 PIXMAN_b8g8r8x8
> # define PIXMAN_BE_a8r8g8b8 PIXMAN_b8g8r8a8
> # define PIXMAN_BE_b8g8r8x8 PIXMAN_x8r8g8b8
> # define PIXMAN_BE_b8g8r8a8 PIXMAN_a8r8g8b8
> # define PIXMAN_BE_r8g8b8x8 PIXMAN_x8b8g8r8
> # define PIXMAN_BE_r8g8b8a8 PIXMAN_a8b8g8r8
> # define PIXMAN_BE_x8b8g8r8 PIXMAN_r8g8b8x8
> # define PIXMAN_BE_a8b8g8r8 PIXMAN_r8g8b8a8
> # define PIXMAN_LE_x8r8g8b8 PIXMAN_x8r8g8b8
> #endif
Exactly what Mesa did as well.
>> My personal opinion is that formats in drm_fourcc.h should be
>> independent of the CPU byte order and the function
>> drm_mode_legacy_fb_format() and drivers depending on that incorrect
>> assumption be fixed instead.
> The problem is this isn't a kernel-internal thing any more. With the
> addition of the ADDFB2 ioctl the fourcc codes became part of the
> kernel/userspace abi ...
I know and that's exactly the reason I'm going to object those changes.
The kernel/userspace abi is fixed and changing it like this could
potentially break drivers I'm the co-maintainer of. So that whole
approach is a clear NAK from my side.
If you find a driver or userspace which doesn't use the formats as
defined in the comments of drm_fourcc.h the fix the driver instead of
trying to adjust the common header to broken behavior. Cause the later
will clearly cause problems with drivers who correctly implemented the
interface.
Regards,
Christian.
>
> cheers,
> Gerd
>
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