| <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> | 
 | <!DOCTYPE book PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.1.2//EN" | 
 | 	"http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.1.2/docbookx.dtd" []> | 
 |  | 
 | <book id="gpuDevelopersGuide"> | 
 |   <bookinfo> | 
 |     <title>Linux GPU Driver Developer's Guide</title> | 
 |  | 
 |     <authorgroup> | 
 |       <author> | 
 | 	<firstname>Jesse</firstname> | 
 | 	<surname>Barnes</surname> | 
 | 	<contrib>Initial version</contrib> | 
 | 	<affiliation> | 
 | 	  <orgname>Intel Corporation</orgname> | 
 | 	  <address> | 
 | 	    <email>jesse.barnes@intel.com</email> | 
 | 	  </address> | 
 | 	</affiliation> | 
 |       </author> | 
 |       <author> | 
 | 	<firstname>Laurent</firstname> | 
 | 	<surname>Pinchart</surname> | 
 | 	<contrib>Driver internals</contrib> | 
 | 	<affiliation> | 
 | 	  <orgname>Ideas on board SPRL</orgname> | 
 | 	  <address> | 
 | 	    <email>laurent.pinchart@ideasonboard.com</email> | 
 | 	  </address> | 
 | 	</affiliation> | 
 |       </author> | 
 |       <author> | 
 | 	<firstname>Daniel</firstname> | 
 | 	<surname>Vetter</surname> | 
 | 	<contrib>Contributions all over the place</contrib> | 
 | 	<affiliation> | 
 | 	  <orgname>Intel Corporation</orgname> | 
 | 	  <address> | 
 | 	    <email>daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch</email> | 
 | 	  </address> | 
 | 	</affiliation> | 
 |       </author> | 
 |       <author> | 
 | 	<firstname>Lukas</firstname> | 
 | 	<surname>Wunner</surname> | 
 | 	<contrib>vga_switcheroo documentation</contrib> | 
 | 	<affiliation> | 
 | 	  <address> | 
 | 	    <email>lukas@wunner.de</email> | 
 | 	  </address> | 
 | 	</affiliation> | 
 |       </author> | 
 |     </authorgroup> | 
 |  | 
 |     <copyright> | 
 |       <year>2008-2009</year> | 
 |       <year>2013-2014</year> | 
 |       <holder>Intel Corporation</holder> | 
 |     </copyright> | 
 |     <copyright> | 
 |       <year>2012</year> | 
 |       <holder>Laurent Pinchart</holder> | 
 |     </copyright> | 
 |     <copyright> | 
 |       <year>2015</year> | 
 |       <holder>Lukas Wunner</holder> | 
 |     </copyright> | 
 |  | 
 |     <legalnotice> | 
 |       <para> | 
 | 	The contents of this file may be used under the terms of the GNU | 
 | 	General Public License version 2 (the "GPL") as distributed in | 
 | 	the kernel source COPYING file. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |     </legalnotice> | 
 |  | 
 |     <revhistory> | 
 |       <!-- Put document revisions here, newest first. --> | 
 |       <revision> | 
 | 	<revnumber>1.0</revnumber> | 
 | 	<date>2012-07-13</date> | 
 | 	<authorinitials>LP</authorinitials> | 
 | 	<revremark>Added extensive documentation about driver internals. | 
 | 	</revremark> | 
 |       </revision> | 
 |       <revision> | 
 | 	<revnumber>1.1</revnumber> | 
 | 	<date>2015-10-11</date> | 
 | 	<authorinitials>LW</authorinitials> | 
 | 	<revremark>Added vga_switcheroo documentation. | 
 | 	</revremark> | 
 |       </revision> | 
 |     </revhistory> | 
 |   </bookinfo> | 
 |  | 
 | <toc></toc> | 
 |  | 
 | <part id="drmCore"> | 
 |   <title>DRM Core</title> | 
 |   <partintro> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       This first part of the GPU Driver Developer's Guide documents core DRM | 
 |       code, helper libraries for writing drivers and generic userspace | 
 |       interfaces exposed by DRM drivers. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |   </partintro> | 
 |  | 
 |   <chapter id="drmIntroduction"> | 
 |     <title>Introduction</title> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       The Linux DRM layer contains code intended to support the needs | 
 |       of complex graphics devices, usually containing programmable | 
 |       pipelines well suited to 3D graphics acceleration.  Graphics | 
 |       drivers in the kernel may make use of DRM functions to make | 
 |       tasks like memory management, interrupt handling and DMA easier, | 
 |       and provide a uniform interface to applications. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       A note on versions: this guide covers features found in the DRM | 
 |       tree, including the TTM memory manager, output configuration and | 
 |       mode setting, and the new vblank internals, in addition to all | 
 |       the regular features found in current kernels. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       [Insert diagram of typical DRM stack here] | 
 |     </para> | 
 |   <sect1> | 
 |     <title>Style Guidelines</title> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       For consistency this documentation uses American English. Abbreviations | 
 |       are written as all-uppercase, for example: DRM, KMS, IOCTL, CRTC, and so | 
 |       on. To aid in reading, documentations make full use of the markup | 
 |       characters kerneldoc provides: @parameter for function parameters, @member | 
 |       for structure members, &structure to reference structures and | 
 |       function() for functions. These all get automatically hyperlinked if | 
 |       kerneldoc for the referenced objects exists. When referencing entries in | 
 |       function vtables please use ->vfunc(). Note that kerneldoc does | 
 |       not support referencing struct members directly, so please add a reference | 
 |       to the vtable struct somewhere in the same paragraph or at least section. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       Except in special situations (to separate locked from unlocked variants) | 
 |       locking requirements for functions aren't documented in the kerneldoc. | 
 |       Instead locking should be check at runtime using e.g. | 
 |       <code>WARN_ON(!mutex_is_locked(...));</code>. Since it's much easier to | 
 |       ignore documentation than runtime noise this provides more value. And on | 
 |       top of that runtime checks do need to be updated when the locking rules | 
 |       change, increasing the chances that they're correct. Within the | 
 |       documentation the locking rules should be explained in the relevant | 
 |       structures: Either in the comment for the lock explaining what it | 
 |       protects, or data fields need a note about which lock protects them, or | 
 |       both. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       Functions which have a non-<code>void</code> return value should have a | 
 |       section called "Returns" explaining the expected return values in | 
 |       different cases and their meanings. Currently there's no consensus whether | 
 |       that section name should be all upper-case or not, and whether it should | 
 |       end in a colon or not. Go with the file-local style. Other common section | 
 |       names are "Notes" with information for dangerous or tricky corner cases, | 
 |       and "FIXME" where the interface could be cleaned up. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |   </sect1> | 
 |   </chapter> | 
 |  | 
 |   <!-- Internals --> | 
 |  | 
 |   <chapter id="drmInternals"> | 
 |     <title>DRM Internals</title> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       This chapter documents DRM internals relevant to driver authors | 
 |       and developers working to add support for the latest features to | 
 |       existing drivers. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       First, we go over some typical driver initialization | 
 |       requirements, like setting up command buffers, creating an | 
 |       initial output configuration, and initializing core services. | 
 |       Subsequent sections cover core internals in more detail, | 
 |       providing implementation notes and examples. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       The DRM layer provides several services to graphics drivers, | 
 |       many of them driven by the application interfaces it provides | 
 |       through libdrm, the library that wraps most of the DRM ioctls. | 
 |       These include vblank event handling, memory | 
 |       management, output management, framebuffer management, command | 
 |       submission & fencing, suspend/resume support, and DMA | 
 |       services. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |  | 
 |   <!-- Internals: driver init --> | 
 |  | 
 |   <sect1> | 
 |     <title>Driver Initialization</title> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       At the core of every DRM driver is a <structname>drm_driver</structname> | 
 |       structure. Drivers typically statically initialize a drm_driver structure, | 
 |       and then pass it to <function>drm_dev_alloc()</function> to allocate a | 
 |       device instance. After the device instance is fully initialized it can be | 
 |       registered (which makes it accessible from userspace) using | 
 |       <function>drm_dev_register()</function>. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       The <structname>drm_driver</structname> structure contains static | 
 |       information that describes the driver and features it supports, and | 
 |       pointers to methods that the DRM core will call to implement the DRM API. | 
 |       We will first go through the <structname>drm_driver</structname> static | 
 |       information fields, and will then describe individual operations in | 
 |       details as they get used in later sections. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>Driver Information</title> | 
 |       <sect3> | 
 |         <title>Driver Features</title> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           Drivers inform the DRM core about their requirements and supported | 
 |           features by setting appropriate flags in the | 
 |           <structfield>driver_features</structfield> field. Since those flags | 
 |           influence the DRM core behaviour since registration time, most of them | 
 |           must be set to registering the <structname>drm_driver</structname> | 
 |           instance. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <synopsis>u32 driver_features;</synopsis> | 
 |         <variablelist> | 
 |           <title>Driver Feature Flags</title> | 
 |           <varlistentry> | 
 |             <term>DRIVER_USE_AGP</term> | 
 |             <listitem><para> | 
 |               Driver uses AGP interface, the DRM core will manage AGP resources. | 
 |             </para></listitem> | 
 |           </varlistentry> | 
 |           <varlistentry> | 
 |             <term>DRIVER_REQUIRE_AGP</term> | 
 |             <listitem><para> | 
 |               Driver needs AGP interface to function. AGP initialization failure | 
 |               will become a fatal error. | 
 |             </para></listitem> | 
 |           </varlistentry> | 
 |           <varlistentry> | 
 |             <term>DRIVER_PCI_DMA</term> | 
 |             <listitem><para> | 
 |               Driver is capable of PCI DMA, mapping of PCI DMA buffers to | 
 |               userspace will be enabled. Deprecated. | 
 |             </para></listitem> | 
 |           </varlistentry> | 
 |           <varlistentry> | 
 |             <term>DRIVER_SG</term> | 
 |             <listitem><para> | 
 |               Driver can perform scatter/gather DMA, allocation and mapping of | 
 |               scatter/gather buffers will be enabled. Deprecated. | 
 |             </para></listitem> | 
 |           </varlistentry> | 
 |           <varlistentry> | 
 |             <term>DRIVER_HAVE_DMA</term> | 
 |             <listitem><para> | 
 |               Driver supports DMA, the userspace DMA API will be supported. | 
 |               Deprecated. | 
 |             </para></listitem> | 
 |           </varlistentry> | 
 |           <varlistentry> | 
 |             <term>DRIVER_HAVE_IRQ</term><term>DRIVER_IRQ_SHARED</term> | 
 |             <listitem><para> | 
 |               DRIVER_HAVE_IRQ indicates whether the driver has an IRQ handler | 
 |               managed by the DRM Core. The core will support simple IRQ handler | 
 |               installation when the flag is set. The installation process is | 
 |               described in <xref linkend="drm-irq-registration"/>.</para> | 
 |               <para>DRIVER_IRQ_SHARED indicates whether the device & handler | 
 |               support shared IRQs (note that this is required of PCI  drivers). | 
 |             </para></listitem> | 
 |           </varlistentry> | 
 |           <varlistentry> | 
 |             <term>DRIVER_GEM</term> | 
 |             <listitem><para> | 
 |               Driver use the GEM memory manager. | 
 |             </para></listitem> | 
 |           </varlistentry> | 
 |           <varlistentry> | 
 |             <term>DRIVER_MODESET</term> | 
 |             <listitem><para> | 
 |               Driver supports mode setting interfaces (KMS). | 
 |             </para></listitem> | 
 |           </varlistentry> | 
 |           <varlistentry> | 
 |             <term>DRIVER_PRIME</term> | 
 |             <listitem><para> | 
 |               Driver implements DRM PRIME buffer sharing. | 
 |             </para></listitem> | 
 |           </varlistentry> | 
 |           <varlistentry> | 
 |             <term>DRIVER_RENDER</term> | 
 |             <listitem><para> | 
 |               Driver supports dedicated render nodes. | 
 |             </para></listitem> | 
 |           </varlistentry> | 
 |           <varlistentry> | 
 |             <term>DRIVER_ATOMIC</term> | 
 |             <listitem><para> | 
 |               Driver supports atomic properties.  In this case the driver | 
 |               must implement appropriate obj->atomic_get_property() vfuncs | 
 |               for any modeset objects with driver specific properties. | 
 |             </para></listitem> | 
 |           </varlistentry> | 
 |         </variablelist> | 
 |       </sect3> | 
 |       <sect3> | 
 |         <title>Major, Minor and Patchlevel</title> | 
 |         <synopsis>int major; | 
 | int minor; | 
 | int patchlevel;</synopsis> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           The DRM core identifies driver versions by a major, minor and patch | 
 |           level triplet. The information is printed to the kernel log at | 
 |           initialization time and passed to userspace through the | 
 |           DRM_IOCTL_VERSION ioctl. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           The major and minor numbers are also used to verify the requested driver | 
 |           API version passed to DRM_IOCTL_SET_VERSION. When the driver API changes | 
 |           between minor versions, applications can call DRM_IOCTL_SET_VERSION to | 
 |           select a specific version of the API. If the requested major isn't equal | 
 |           to the driver major, or the requested minor is larger than the driver | 
 |           minor, the DRM_IOCTL_SET_VERSION call will return an error. Otherwise | 
 |           the driver's set_version() method will be called with the requested | 
 |           version. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |       </sect3> | 
 |       <sect3> | 
 |         <title>Name, Description and Date</title> | 
 |         <synopsis>char *name; | 
 | char *desc; | 
 | char *date;</synopsis> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           The driver name is printed to the kernel log at initialization time, | 
 |           used for IRQ registration and passed to userspace through | 
 |           DRM_IOCTL_VERSION. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           The driver description is a purely informative string passed to | 
 |           userspace through the DRM_IOCTL_VERSION ioctl and otherwise unused by | 
 |           the kernel. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           The driver date, formatted as YYYYMMDD, is meant to identify the date of | 
 |           the latest modification to the driver. However, as most drivers fail to | 
 |           update it, its value is mostly useless. The DRM core prints it to the | 
 |           kernel log at initialization time and passes it to userspace through the | 
 |           DRM_IOCTL_VERSION ioctl. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |       </sect3> | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>Device Instance and Driver Handling</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/drm_drv.c driver instance overview | 
 | !Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_drv.c | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>Driver Load</title> | 
 |       <sect3 id="drm-irq-registration"> | 
 |         <title>IRQ Registration</title> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           The DRM core tries to facilitate IRQ handler registration and | 
 |           unregistration by providing <function>drm_irq_install</function> and | 
 |           <function>drm_irq_uninstall</function> functions. Those functions only | 
 |           support a single interrupt per device, devices that use more than one | 
 |           IRQs need to be handled manually. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <sect4> | 
 |           <title>Managed IRQ Registration</title> | 
 |           <para> | 
 |             <function>drm_irq_install</function> starts by calling the | 
 |             <methodname>irq_preinstall</methodname> driver operation. The operation | 
 |             is optional and must make sure that the interrupt will not get fired by | 
 |             clearing all pending interrupt flags or disabling the interrupt. | 
 |           </para> | 
 |           <para> | 
 |             The passed-in IRQ will then be requested by a call to | 
 |             <function>request_irq</function>. If the DRIVER_IRQ_SHARED driver | 
 |             feature flag is set, a shared (IRQF_SHARED) IRQ handler will be | 
 |             requested. | 
 |           </para> | 
 |           <para> | 
 |             The IRQ handler function must be provided as the mandatory irq_handler | 
 |             driver operation. It will get passed directly to | 
 |             <function>request_irq</function> and thus has the same prototype as all | 
 |             IRQ handlers. It will get called with a pointer to the DRM device as the | 
 |             second argument. | 
 |           </para> | 
 |           <para> | 
 |             Finally the function calls the optional | 
 |             <methodname>irq_postinstall</methodname> driver operation. The operation | 
 |             usually enables interrupts (excluding the vblank interrupt, which is | 
 |             enabled separately), but drivers may choose to enable/disable interrupts | 
 |             at a different time. | 
 |           </para> | 
 |           <para> | 
 |             <function>drm_irq_uninstall</function> is similarly used to uninstall an | 
 |             IRQ handler. It starts by waking up all processes waiting on a vblank | 
 |             interrupt to make sure they don't hang, and then calls the optional | 
 |             <methodname>irq_uninstall</methodname> driver operation. The operation | 
 |             must disable all hardware interrupts. Finally the function frees the IRQ | 
 |             by calling <function>free_irq</function>. | 
 |           </para> | 
 |         </sect4> | 
 |         <sect4> | 
 |           <title>Manual IRQ Registration</title> | 
 |           <para> | 
 |             Drivers that require multiple interrupt handlers can't use the managed | 
 |             IRQ registration functions. In that case IRQs must be registered and | 
 |             unregistered manually (usually with the <function>request_irq</function> | 
 |             and <function>free_irq</function> functions, or their devm_* equivalent). | 
 |           </para> | 
 |           <para> | 
 |             When manually registering IRQs, drivers must not set the DRIVER_HAVE_IRQ | 
 |             driver feature flag, and must not provide the | 
 | 	    <methodname>irq_handler</methodname> driver operation. They must set the | 
 | 	    <structname>drm_device</structname> <structfield>irq_enabled</structfield> | 
 | 	    field to 1 upon registration of the IRQs, and clear it to 0 after | 
 | 	    unregistering the IRQs. | 
 |           </para> | 
 |         </sect4> | 
 |       </sect3> | 
 |       <sect3> | 
 |         <title>Memory Manager Initialization</title> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           Every DRM driver requires a memory manager which must be initialized at | 
 |           load time. DRM currently contains two memory managers, the Translation | 
 |           Table Manager (TTM) and the Graphics Execution Manager (GEM). | 
 |           This document describes the use of the GEM memory manager only. See | 
 |           <xref linkend="drm-memory-management"/> for details. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |       </sect3> | 
 |       <sect3> | 
 |         <title>Miscellaneous Device Configuration</title> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           Another task that may be necessary for PCI devices during configuration | 
 |           is mapping the video BIOS. On many devices, the VBIOS describes device | 
 |           configuration, LCD panel timings (if any), and contains flags indicating | 
 |           device state. Mapping the BIOS can be done using the pci_map_rom() call, | 
 |           a convenience function that takes care of mapping the actual ROM, | 
 |           whether it has been shadowed into memory (typically at address 0xc0000) | 
 |           or exists on the PCI device in the ROM BAR. Note that after the ROM has | 
 |           been mapped and any necessary information has been extracted, it should | 
 |           be unmapped; on many devices, the ROM address decoder is shared with | 
 |           other BARs, so leaving it mapped could cause undesired behaviour like | 
 |           hangs or memory corruption. | 
 |   <!--!Fdrivers/pci/rom.c pci_map_rom--> | 
 |         </para> | 
 |       </sect3> | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>Bus-specific Device Registration and PCI Support</title> | 
 |       <para> | 
 |         A number of functions are provided to help with device registration. | 
 | 	The functions deal with PCI and platform devices respectively and are | 
 | 	only provided for historical reasons. These are all deprecated and | 
 | 	shouldn't be used in new drivers. Besides that there's a few | 
 | 	helpers for pci drivers. | 
 |       </para> | 
 | !Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_pci.c | 
 | !Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_platform.c | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |   </sect1> | 
 |  | 
 |   <!-- Internals: memory management --> | 
 |  | 
 |   <sect1 id="drm-memory-management"> | 
 |     <title>Memory management</title> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       Modern Linux systems require large amount of graphics memory to store | 
 |       frame buffers, textures, vertices and other graphics-related data. Given | 
 |       the very dynamic nature of many of that data, managing graphics memory | 
 |       efficiently is thus crucial for the graphics stack and plays a central | 
 |       role in the DRM infrastructure. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       The DRM core includes two memory managers, namely Translation Table Maps | 
 |       (TTM) and Graphics Execution Manager (GEM). TTM was the first DRM memory | 
 |       manager to be developed and tried to be a one-size-fits-them all | 
 |       solution. It provides a single userspace API to accommodate the need of | 
 |       all hardware, supporting both Unified Memory Architecture (UMA) devices | 
 |       and devices with dedicated video RAM (i.e. most discrete video cards). | 
 |       This resulted in a large, complex piece of code that turned out to be | 
 |       hard to use for driver development. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       GEM started as an Intel-sponsored project in reaction to TTM's | 
 |       complexity. Its design philosophy is completely different: instead of | 
 |       providing a solution to every graphics memory-related problems, GEM | 
 |       identified common code between drivers and created a support library to | 
 |       share it. GEM has simpler initialization and execution requirements than | 
 |       TTM, but has no video RAM management capabilities and is thus limited to | 
 |       UMA devices. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>The Translation Table Manager (TTM)</title> | 
 |       <para> | 
 |         TTM design background and information belongs here. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |       <sect3> | 
 |         <title>TTM initialization</title> | 
 |         <warning><para>This section is outdated.</para></warning> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           Drivers wishing to support TTM must fill out a drm_bo_driver | 
 |           structure. The structure contains several fields with function | 
 |           pointers for initializing the TTM, allocating and freeing memory, | 
 |           waiting for command completion and fence synchronization, and memory | 
 |           migration. See the radeon_ttm.c file for an example of usage. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           The ttm_global_reference structure is made up of several fields: | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <programlisting> | 
 |           struct ttm_global_reference { | 
 |                   enum ttm_global_types global_type; | 
 |                   size_t size; | 
 |                   void *object; | 
 |                   int (*init) (struct ttm_global_reference *); | 
 |                   void (*release) (struct ttm_global_reference *); | 
 |           }; | 
 |         </programlisting> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           There should be one global reference structure for your memory | 
 |           manager as a whole, and there will be others for each object | 
 |           created by the memory manager at runtime.  Your global TTM should | 
 |           have a type of TTM_GLOBAL_TTM_MEM.  The size field for the global | 
 |           object should be sizeof(struct ttm_mem_global), and the init and | 
 |           release hooks should point at your driver-specific init and | 
 |           release routines, which probably eventually call | 
 |           ttm_mem_global_init and ttm_mem_global_release, respectively. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           Once your global TTM accounting structure is set up and initialized | 
 |           by calling ttm_global_item_ref() on it, | 
 |           you need to create a buffer object TTM to | 
 |           provide a pool for buffer object allocation by clients and the | 
 |           kernel itself.  The type of this object should be TTM_GLOBAL_TTM_BO, | 
 |           and its size should be sizeof(struct ttm_bo_global).  Again, | 
 |           driver-specific init and release functions may be provided, | 
 |           likely eventually calling ttm_bo_global_init() and | 
 |           ttm_bo_global_release(), respectively.  Also, like the previous | 
 |           object, ttm_global_item_ref() is used to create an initial reference | 
 |           count for the TTM, which will call your initialization function. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |       </sect3> | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2 id="drm-gem"> | 
 |       <title>The Graphics Execution Manager (GEM)</title> | 
 |       <para> | 
 |         The GEM design approach has resulted in a memory manager that doesn't | 
 |         provide full coverage of all (or even all common) use cases in its | 
 |         userspace or kernel API. GEM exposes a set of standard memory-related | 
 |         operations to userspace and a set of helper functions to drivers, and let | 
 |         drivers implement hardware-specific operations with their own private API. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |       <para> | 
 |         The GEM userspace API is described in the | 
 |         <ulink url="http://lwn.net/Articles/283798/"><citetitle>GEM - the Graphics | 
 |         Execution Manager</citetitle></ulink> article on LWN. While slightly | 
 |         outdated, the document provides a good overview of the GEM API principles. | 
 |         Buffer allocation and read and write operations, described as part of the | 
 |         common GEM API, are currently implemented using driver-specific ioctls. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |       <para> | 
 |         GEM is data-agnostic. It manages abstract buffer objects without knowing | 
 |         what individual buffers contain. APIs that require knowledge of buffer | 
 |         contents or purpose, such as buffer allocation or synchronization | 
 |         primitives, are thus outside of the scope of GEM and must be implemented | 
 |         using driver-specific ioctls. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |       <para> | 
 |         On a fundamental level, GEM involves several operations: | 
 |         <itemizedlist> | 
 |           <listitem>Memory allocation and freeing</listitem> | 
 |           <listitem>Command execution</listitem> | 
 |           <listitem>Aperture management at command execution time</listitem> | 
 |         </itemizedlist> | 
 |         Buffer object allocation is relatively straightforward and largely | 
 |         provided by Linux's shmem layer, which provides memory to back each | 
 |         object. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |       <para> | 
 |         Device-specific operations, such as command execution, pinning, buffer | 
 |         read & write, mapping, and domain ownership transfers are left to | 
 |         driver-specific ioctls. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |       <sect3> | 
 |         <title>GEM Initialization</title> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           Drivers that use GEM must set the DRIVER_GEM bit in the struct | 
 |           <structname>drm_driver</structname> | 
 |           <structfield>driver_features</structfield> field. The DRM core will | 
 |           then automatically initialize the GEM core before calling the | 
 |           <methodname>load</methodname> operation. Behind the scene, this will | 
 |           create a DRM Memory Manager object which provides an address space | 
 |           pool for object allocation. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           In a KMS configuration, drivers need to allocate and initialize a | 
 |           command ring buffer following core GEM initialization if required by | 
 |           the hardware. UMA devices usually have what is called a "stolen" | 
 |           memory region, which provides space for the initial framebuffer and | 
 |           large, contiguous memory regions required by the device. This space is | 
 |           typically not managed by GEM, and must be initialized separately into | 
 |           its own DRM MM object. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |       </sect3> | 
 |       <sect3> | 
 |         <title>GEM Objects Creation</title> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           GEM splits creation of GEM objects and allocation of the memory that | 
 |           backs them in two distinct operations. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           GEM objects are represented by an instance of struct | 
 |           <structname>drm_gem_object</structname>. Drivers usually need to extend | 
 |           GEM objects with private information and thus create a driver-specific | 
 |           GEM object structure type that embeds an instance of struct | 
 |           <structname>drm_gem_object</structname>. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           To create a GEM object, a driver allocates memory for an instance of its | 
 |           specific GEM object type and initializes the embedded struct | 
 |           <structname>drm_gem_object</structname> with a call to | 
 |           <function>drm_gem_object_init</function>. The function takes a pointer to | 
 |           the DRM device, a pointer to the GEM object and the buffer object size | 
 |           in bytes. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           GEM uses shmem to allocate anonymous pageable memory. | 
 |           <function>drm_gem_object_init</function> will create an shmfs file of | 
 |           the requested size and store it into the struct | 
 |           <structname>drm_gem_object</structname> <structfield>filp</structfield> | 
 |           field. The memory is used as either main storage for the object when the | 
 |           graphics hardware uses system memory directly or as a backing store | 
 |           otherwise. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           Drivers are responsible for the actual physical pages allocation by | 
 |           calling <function>shmem_read_mapping_page_gfp</function> for each page. | 
 |           Note that they can decide to allocate pages when initializing the GEM | 
 |           object, or to delay allocation until the memory is needed (for instance | 
 |           when a page fault occurs as a result of a userspace memory access or | 
 |           when the driver needs to start a DMA transfer involving the memory). | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           Anonymous pageable memory allocation is not always desired, for instance | 
 |           when the hardware requires physically contiguous system memory as is | 
 |           often the case in embedded devices. Drivers can create GEM objects with | 
 |           no shmfs backing (called private GEM objects) by initializing them with | 
 |           a call to <function>drm_gem_private_object_init</function> instead of | 
 |           <function>drm_gem_object_init</function>. Storage for private GEM | 
 |           objects must be managed by drivers. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |       </sect3> | 
 |       <sect3> | 
 |         <title>GEM Objects Lifetime</title> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           All GEM objects are reference-counted by the GEM core. References can be | 
 |           acquired and release by <function>calling drm_gem_object_reference</function> | 
 |           and <function>drm_gem_object_unreference</function> respectively. The | 
 |           caller must hold the <structname>drm_device</structname> | 
 | 	  <structfield>struct_mutex</structfield> lock when calling | 
 | 	  <function>drm_gem_object_reference</function>. As a convenience, GEM | 
 | 	  provides <function>drm_gem_object_unreference_unlocked</function> | 
 | 	  functions that can be called without holding the lock. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           When the last reference to a GEM object is released the GEM core calls | 
 |           the <structname>drm_driver</structname> | 
 |           <methodname>gem_free_object</methodname> operation. That operation is | 
 |           mandatory for GEM-enabled drivers and must free the GEM object and all | 
 |           associated resources. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           <synopsis>void (*gem_free_object) (struct drm_gem_object *obj);</synopsis> | 
 |           Drivers are responsible for freeing all GEM object resources. This includes | 
 |           the resources created by the GEM core, which need to be released with | 
 |           <function>drm_gem_object_release</function>. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |       </sect3> | 
 |       <sect3> | 
 |         <title>GEM Objects Naming</title> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           Communication between userspace and the kernel refers to GEM objects | 
 |           using local handles, global names or, more recently, file descriptors. | 
 |           All of those are 32-bit integer values; the usual Linux kernel limits | 
 |           apply to the file descriptors. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           GEM handles are local to a DRM file. Applications get a handle to a GEM | 
 |           object through a driver-specific ioctl, and can use that handle to refer | 
 |           to the GEM object in other standard or driver-specific ioctls. Closing a | 
 |           DRM file handle frees all its GEM handles and dereferences the | 
 |           associated GEM objects. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           To create a handle for a GEM object drivers call | 
 |           <function>drm_gem_handle_create</function>. The function takes a pointer | 
 |           to the DRM file and the GEM object and returns a locally unique handle. | 
 |           When the handle is no longer needed drivers delete it with a call to | 
 |           <function>drm_gem_handle_delete</function>. Finally the GEM object | 
 |           associated with a handle can be retrieved by a call to | 
 |           <function>drm_gem_object_lookup</function>. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           Handles don't take ownership of GEM objects, they only take a reference | 
 |           to the object that will be dropped when the handle is destroyed. To | 
 |           avoid leaking GEM objects, drivers must make sure they drop the | 
 |           reference(s) they own (such as the initial reference taken at object | 
 |           creation time) as appropriate, without any special consideration for the | 
 |           handle. For example, in the particular case of combined GEM object and | 
 |           handle creation in the implementation of the | 
 |           <methodname>dumb_create</methodname> operation, drivers must drop the | 
 |           initial reference to the GEM object before returning the handle. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           GEM names are similar in purpose to handles but are not local to DRM | 
 |           files. They can be passed between processes to reference a GEM object | 
 |           globally. Names can't be used directly to refer to objects in the DRM | 
 |           API, applications must convert handles to names and names to handles | 
 |           using the DRM_IOCTL_GEM_FLINK and DRM_IOCTL_GEM_OPEN ioctls | 
 |           respectively. The conversion is handled by the DRM core without any | 
 |           driver-specific support. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           GEM also supports buffer sharing with dma-buf file descriptors through | 
 |           PRIME. GEM-based drivers must use the provided helpers functions to | 
 |           implement the exporting and importing correctly. See <xref linkend="drm-prime-support" />. | 
 |           Since sharing file descriptors is inherently more secure than the | 
 |           easily guessable and global GEM names it is the preferred buffer | 
 |           sharing mechanism. Sharing buffers through GEM names is only supported | 
 |           for legacy userspace. Furthermore PRIME also allows cross-device | 
 |           buffer sharing since it is based on dma-bufs. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |       </sect3> | 
 |       <sect3 id="drm-gem-objects-mapping"> | 
 |         <title>GEM Objects Mapping</title> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           Because mapping operations are fairly heavyweight GEM favours | 
 |           read/write-like access to buffers, implemented through driver-specific | 
 |           ioctls, over mapping buffers to userspace. However, when random access | 
 |           to the buffer is needed (to perform software rendering for instance), | 
 |           direct access to the object can be more efficient. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           The mmap system call can't be used directly to map GEM objects, as they | 
 |           don't have their own file handle. Two alternative methods currently | 
 |           co-exist to map GEM objects to userspace. The first method uses a | 
 |           driver-specific ioctl to perform the mapping operation, calling | 
 |           <function>do_mmap</function> under the hood. This is often considered | 
 |           dubious, seems to be discouraged for new GEM-enabled drivers, and will | 
 |           thus not be described here. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           The second method uses the mmap system call on the DRM file handle. | 
 |           <synopsis>void *mmap(void *addr, size_t length, int prot, int flags, int fd, | 
 |              off_t offset);</synopsis> | 
 |           DRM identifies the GEM object to be mapped by a fake offset passed | 
 |           through the mmap offset argument. Prior to being mapped, a GEM object | 
 |           must thus be associated with a fake offset. To do so, drivers must call | 
 |           <function>drm_gem_create_mmap_offset</function> on the object. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           Once allocated, the fake offset value | 
 |           must be passed to the application in a driver-specific way and can then | 
 |           be used as the mmap offset argument. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           The GEM core provides a helper method <function>drm_gem_mmap</function> | 
 |           to handle object mapping. The method can be set directly as the mmap | 
 |           file operation handler. It will look up the GEM object based on the | 
 |           offset value and set the VMA operations to the | 
 |           <structname>drm_driver</structname> <structfield>gem_vm_ops</structfield> | 
 |           field. Note that <function>drm_gem_mmap</function> doesn't map memory to | 
 |           userspace, but relies on the driver-provided fault handler to map pages | 
 |           individually. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           To use <function>drm_gem_mmap</function>, drivers must fill the struct | 
 |           <structname>drm_driver</structname> <structfield>gem_vm_ops</structfield> | 
 |           field with a pointer to VM operations. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           <synopsis>struct vm_operations_struct *gem_vm_ops | 
 |  | 
 |   struct vm_operations_struct { | 
 |           void (*open)(struct vm_area_struct * area); | 
 |           void (*close)(struct vm_area_struct * area); | 
 |           int (*fault)(struct vm_area_struct *vma, struct vm_fault *vmf); | 
 |   };</synopsis> | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           The <methodname>open</methodname> and <methodname>close</methodname> | 
 |           operations must update the GEM object reference count. Drivers can use | 
 |           the <function>drm_gem_vm_open</function> and | 
 |           <function>drm_gem_vm_close</function> helper functions directly as open | 
 |           and close handlers. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           The fault operation handler is responsible for mapping individual pages | 
 |           to userspace when a page fault occurs. Depending on the memory | 
 |           allocation scheme, drivers can allocate pages at fault time, or can | 
 |           decide to allocate memory for the GEM object at the time the object is | 
 |           created. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           Drivers that want to map the GEM object upfront instead of handling page | 
 |           faults can implement their own mmap file operation handler. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |       </sect3> | 
 |       <sect3> | 
 |         <title>Memory Coherency</title> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           When mapped to the device or used in a command buffer, backing pages | 
 |           for an object are flushed to memory and marked write combined so as to | 
 |           be coherent with the GPU. Likewise, if the CPU accesses an object | 
 |           after the GPU has finished rendering to the object, then the object | 
 |           must be made coherent with the CPU's view of memory, usually involving | 
 |           GPU cache flushing of various kinds. This core CPU<->GPU | 
 |           coherency management is provided by a device-specific ioctl, which | 
 |           evaluates an object's current domain and performs any necessary | 
 |           flushing or synchronization to put the object into the desired | 
 |           coherency domain (note that the object may be busy, i.e. an active | 
 |           render target; in that case, setting the domain blocks the client and | 
 |           waits for rendering to complete before performing any necessary | 
 |           flushing operations). | 
 |         </para> | 
 |       </sect3> | 
 |       <sect3> | 
 |         <title>Command Execution</title> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           Perhaps the most important GEM function for GPU devices is providing a | 
 |           command execution interface to clients. Client programs construct | 
 |           command buffers containing references to previously allocated memory | 
 |           objects, and then submit them to GEM. At that point, GEM takes care to | 
 |           bind all the objects into the GTT, execute the buffer, and provide | 
 |           necessary synchronization between clients accessing the same buffers. | 
 |           This often involves evicting some objects from the GTT and re-binding | 
 |           others (a fairly expensive operation), and providing relocation | 
 |           support which hides fixed GTT offsets from clients. Clients must take | 
 |           care not to submit command buffers that reference more objects than | 
 |           can fit in the GTT; otherwise, GEM will reject them and no rendering | 
 |           will occur. Similarly, if several objects in the buffer require fence | 
 |           registers to be allocated for correct rendering (e.g. 2D blits on | 
 |           pre-965 chips), care must be taken not to require more fence registers | 
 |           than are available to the client. Such resource management should be | 
 |           abstracted from the client in libdrm. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |       </sect3> | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>GEM Function Reference</title> | 
 | !Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_gem.c | 
 | !Iinclude/drm/drm_gem.h | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>VMA Offset Manager</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/drm_vma_manager.c vma offset manager | 
 | !Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_vma_manager.c | 
 | !Iinclude/drm/drm_vma_manager.h | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2 id="drm-prime-support"> | 
 |       <title>PRIME Buffer Sharing</title> | 
 |       <para> | 
 |         PRIME is the cross device buffer sharing framework in drm, originally | 
 |         created for the OPTIMUS range of multi-gpu platforms. To userspace | 
 |         PRIME buffers are dma-buf based file descriptors. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |       <sect3> | 
 |         <title>Overview and Driver Interface</title> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           Similar to GEM global names, PRIME file descriptors are | 
 |           also used to share buffer objects across processes. They offer | 
 |           additional security: as file descriptors must be explicitly sent over | 
 |           UNIX domain sockets to be shared between applications, they can't be | 
 |           guessed like the globally unique GEM names. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           Drivers that support the PRIME | 
 |           API must set the DRIVER_PRIME bit in the struct | 
 |           <structname>drm_driver</structname> | 
 |           <structfield>driver_features</structfield> field, and implement the | 
 |           <methodname>prime_handle_to_fd</methodname> and | 
 |           <methodname>prime_fd_to_handle</methodname> operations. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           <synopsis>int (*prime_handle_to_fd)(struct drm_device *dev, | 
 |                           struct drm_file *file_priv, uint32_t handle, | 
 |                           uint32_t flags, int *prime_fd); | 
 | int (*prime_fd_to_handle)(struct drm_device *dev, | 
 |                           struct drm_file *file_priv, int prime_fd, | 
 |                           uint32_t *handle);</synopsis> | 
 |             Those two operations convert a handle to a PRIME file descriptor and | 
 |             vice versa. Drivers must use the kernel dma-buf buffer sharing framework | 
 |             to manage the PRIME file descriptors. Similar to the mode setting | 
 |             API PRIME is agnostic to the underlying buffer object manager, as | 
 |             long as handles are 32bit unsigned integers. | 
 |           </para> | 
 |           <para> | 
 |             While non-GEM drivers must implement the operations themselves, GEM | 
 |             drivers must use the <function>drm_gem_prime_handle_to_fd</function> | 
 |             and <function>drm_gem_prime_fd_to_handle</function> helper functions. | 
 |             Those helpers rely on the driver | 
 |             <methodname>gem_prime_export</methodname> and | 
 |             <methodname>gem_prime_import</methodname> operations to create a dma-buf | 
 |             instance from a GEM object (dma-buf exporter role) and to create a GEM | 
 |             object from a dma-buf instance (dma-buf importer role). | 
 |           </para> | 
 |           <para> | 
 |             <synopsis>struct dma_buf * (*gem_prime_export)(struct drm_device *dev, | 
 |                              struct drm_gem_object *obj, | 
 |                              int flags); | 
 | struct drm_gem_object * (*gem_prime_import)(struct drm_device *dev, | 
 |                                             struct dma_buf *dma_buf);</synopsis> | 
 |             These two operations are mandatory for GEM drivers that support | 
 |             PRIME. | 
 |           </para> | 
 |         </sect3> | 
 |       <sect3> | 
 |         <title>PRIME Helper Functions</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/drm_prime.c PRIME Helpers | 
 |       </sect3> | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>PRIME Function References</title> | 
 | !Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_prime.c | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>DRM MM Range Allocator</title> | 
 |       <sect3> | 
 |         <title>Overview</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/drm_mm.c Overview | 
 |       </sect3> | 
 |       <sect3> | 
 |         <title>LRU Scan/Eviction Support</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/drm_mm.c lru scan roaster | 
 |       </sect3> | 
 |       </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>DRM MM Range Allocator Function References</title> | 
 | !Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_mm.c | 
 | !Iinclude/drm/drm_mm.h | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>CMA Helper Functions Reference</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/drm_gem_cma_helper.c cma helpers | 
 | !Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_gem_cma_helper.c | 
 | !Iinclude/drm/drm_gem_cma_helper.h | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |   </sect1> | 
 |  | 
 |   <!-- Internals: mode setting --> | 
 |  | 
 |   <sect1 id="drm-mode-setting"> | 
 |     <title>Mode Setting</title> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       Drivers must initialize the mode setting core by calling | 
 |       <function>drm_mode_config_init</function> on the DRM device. The function | 
 |       initializes the <structname>drm_device</structname> | 
 |       <structfield>mode_config</structfield> field and never fails. Once done, | 
 |       mode configuration must be setup by initializing the following fields. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |     <itemizedlist> | 
 |       <listitem> | 
 |         <synopsis>int min_width, min_height; | 
 | int max_width, max_height;</synopsis> | 
 |         <para> | 
 | 	  Minimum and maximum width and height of the frame buffers in pixel | 
 | 	  units. | 
 | 	</para> | 
 |       </listitem> | 
 |       <listitem> | 
 |         <synopsis>struct drm_mode_config_funcs *funcs;</synopsis> | 
 | 	<para>Mode setting functions.</para> | 
 |       </listitem> | 
 |     </itemizedlist> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>Display Modes Function Reference</title> | 
 | !Iinclude/drm/drm_modes.h | 
 | !Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_modes.c | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>Atomic Mode Setting Function Reference</title> | 
 | !Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_atomic.c | 
 | !Idrivers/gpu/drm/drm_atomic.c | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>Frame Buffer Abstraction</title> | 
 |       <para> | 
 |         Frame buffers are abstract memory objects that provide a source of | 
 |         pixels to scanout to a CRTC. Applications explicitly request the | 
 |         creation of frame buffers through the DRM_IOCTL_MODE_ADDFB(2) ioctls and | 
 |         receive an opaque handle that can be passed to the KMS CRTC control, | 
 |         plane configuration and page flip functions. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |       <para> | 
 |         Frame buffers rely on the underneath memory manager for low-level memory | 
 |         operations. When creating a frame buffer applications pass a memory | 
 |         handle (or a list of memory handles for multi-planar formats) through | 
 | 	the <parameter>drm_mode_fb_cmd2</parameter> argument. For drivers using | 
 | 	GEM as their userspace buffer management interface this would be a GEM | 
 | 	handle.  Drivers are however free to use their own backing storage object | 
 | 	handles, e.g. vmwgfx directly exposes special TTM handles to userspace | 
 | 	and so expects TTM handles in the create ioctl and not GEM handles. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |       <para> | 
 | 	The lifetime of a drm framebuffer is controlled with a reference count, | 
 | 	drivers can grab additional references with | 
 | 	<function>drm_framebuffer_reference</function>and drop them | 
 | 	again with <function>drm_framebuffer_unreference</function>. For | 
 | 	driver-private framebuffers for which the last reference is never | 
 | 	dropped (e.g. for the fbdev framebuffer when the struct | 
 | 	<structname>drm_framebuffer</structname> is embedded into the fbdev | 
 | 	helper struct) drivers can manually clean up a framebuffer at module | 
 | 	unload time with | 
 | 	<function>drm_framebuffer_unregister_private</function>. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>Dumb Buffer Objects</title> | 
 |       <para> | 
 | 	The KMS API doesn't standardize backing storage object creation and | 
 | 	leaves it to driver-specific ioctls. Furthermore actually creating a | 
 | 	buffer object even for GEM-based drivers is done through a | 
 | 	driver-specific ioctl - GEM only has a common userspace interface for | 
 | 	sharing and destroying objects. While not an issue for full-fledged | 
 | 	graphics stacks that include device-specific userspace components (in | 
 | 	libdrm for instance), this limit makes DRM-based early boot graphics | 
 | 	unnecessarily complex. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |       <para> | 
 |         Dumb objects partly alleviate the problem by providing a standard | 
 |         API to create dumb buffers suitable for scanout, which can then be used | 
 |         to create KMS frame buffers. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |       <para> | 
 |         To support dumb objects drivers must implement the | 
 |         <methodname>dumb_create</methodname>, | 
 |         <methodname>dumb_destroy</methodname> and | 
 |         <methodname>dumb_map_offset</methodname> operations. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |       <itemizedlist> | 
 |         <listitem> | 
 |           <synopsis>int (*dumb_create)(struct drm_file *file_priv, struct drm_device *dev, | 
 |                    struct drm_mode_create_dumb *args);</synopsis> | 
 |           <para> | 
 |             The <methodname>dumb_create</methodname> operation creates a driver | 
 | 	    object (GEM or TTM handle) suitable for scanout based on the | 
 | 	    width, height and depth from the struct | 
 | 	    <structname>drm_mode_create_dumb</structname> argument. It fills the | 
 | 	    argument's <structfield>handle</structfield>, | 
 | 	    <structfield>pitch</structfield> and <structfield>size</structfield> | 
 | 	    fields with a handle for the newly created object and its line | 
 |             pitch and size in bytes. | 
 |           </para> | 
 |         </listitem> | 
 |         <listitem> | 
 |           <synopsis>int (*dumb_destroy)(struct drm_file *file_priv, struct drm_device *dev, | 
 |                     uint32_t handle);</synopsis> | 
 |           <para> | 
 |             The <methodname>dumb_destroy</methodname> operation destroys a dumb | 
 |             object created by <methodname>dumb_create</methodname>. | 
 |           </para> | 
 |         </listitem> | 
 |         <listitem> | 
 |           <synopsis>int (*dumb_map_offset)(struct drm_file *file_priv, struct drm_device *dev, | 
 |                        uint32_t handle, uint64_t *offset);</synopsis> | 
 |           <para> | 
 |             The <methodname>dumb_map_offset</methodname> operation associates an | 
 |             mmap fake offset with the object given by the handle and returns | 
 |             it. Drivers must use the | 
 |             <function>drm_gem_create_mmap_offset</function> function to | 
 |             associate the fake offset as described in | 
 |             <xref linkend="drm-gem-objects-mapping"/>. | 
 |           </para> | 
 |         </listitem> | 
 |       </itemizedlist> | 
 |       <para> | 
 |         Note that dumb objects may not be used for gpu acceleration, as has been | 
 | 	attempted on some ARM embedded platforms. Such drivers really must have | 
 | 	a hardware-specific ioctl to allocate suitable buffer objects. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>Output Polling</title> | 
 |       <synopsis>void (*output_poll_changed)(struct drm_device *dev);</synopsis> | 
 |       <para> | 
 |         This operation notifies the driver that the status of one or more | 
 |         connectors has changed. Drivers that use the fb helper can just call the | 
 |         <function>drm_fb_helper_hotplug_event</function> function to handle this | 
 |         operation. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>Locking</title> | 
 |       <para> | 
 |         Beside some lookup structures with their own locking (which is hidden | 
 | 	behind the interface functions) most of the modeset state is protected | 
 | 	by the <code>dev-<mode_config.lock</code> mutex and additionally | 
 | 	per-crtc locks to allow cursor updates, pageflips and similar operations | 
 | 	to occur concurrently with background tasks like output detection. | 
 | 	Operations which cross domains like a full modeset always grab all | 
 | 	locks. Drivers there need to protect resources shared between crtcs with | 
 | 	additional locking. They also need to be careful to always grab the | 
 | 	relevant crtc locks if a modset functions touches crtc state, e.g. for | 
 | 	load detection (which does only grab the <code>mode_config.lock</code> | 
 | 	to allow concurrent screen updates on live crtcs). | 
 |       </para> | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |   </sect1> | 
 |  | 
 |   <!-- Internals: kms initialization and cleanup --> | 
 |  | 
 |   <sect1 id="drm-kms-init"> | 
 |     <title>KMS Initialization and Cleanup</title> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       A KMS device is abstracted and exposed as a set of planes, CRTCs, encoders | 
 |       and connectors. KMS drivers must thus create and initialize all those | 
 |       objects at load time after initializing mode setting. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>CRTCs (struct <structname>drm_crtc</structname>)</title> | 
 |       <para> | 
 |         A CRTC is an abstraction representing a part of the chip that contains a | 
 | 	pointer to a scanout buffer. Therefore, the number of CRTCs available | 
 | 	determines how many independent scanout buffers can be active at any | 
 | 	given time. The CRTC structure contains several fields to support this: | 
 | 	a pointer to some video memory (abstracted as a frame buffer object), a | 
 | 	display mode, and an (x, y) offset into the video memory to support | 
 | 	panning or configurations where one piece of video memory spans multiple | 
 | 	CRTCs. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |       <sect3> | 
 |         <title>CRTC Initialization</title> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           A KMS device must create and register at least one struct | 
 |           <structname>drm_crtc</structname> instance. The instance is allocated | 
 |           and zeroed by the driver, possibly as part of a larger structure, and | 
 |           registered with a call to <function>drm_crtc_init</function> with a | 
 |           pointer to CRTC functions. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |       </sect3> | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>Planes (struct <structname>drm_plane</structname>)</title> | 
 |       <para> | 
 |         A plane represents an image source that can be blended with or overlayed | 
 | 	on top of a CRTC during the scanout process. Planes are associated with | 
 | 	a frame buffer to crop a portion of the image memory (source) and | 
 | 	optionally scale it to a destination size. The result is then blended | 
 | 	with or overlayed on top of a CRTC. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |       <para> | 
 |       The DRM core recognizes three types of planes: | 
 |       <itemizedlist> | 
 |         <listitem> | 
 |         DRM_PLANE_TYPE_PRIMARY represents a "main" plane for a CRTC.  Primary | 
 |         planes are the planes operated upon by CRTC modesetting and flipping | 
 | 	operations described in the page_flip hook in <structname>drm_crtc_funcs</structname>. | 
 |         </listitem> | 
 |         <listitem> | 
 |         DRM_PLANE_TYPE_CURSOR represents a "cursor" plane for a CRTC.  Cursor | 
 |         planes are the planes operated upon by the DRM_IOCTL_MODE_CURSOR and | 
 |         DRM_IOCTL_MODE_CURSOR2 ioctls. | 
 |         </listitem> | 
 |         <listitem> | 
 |         DRM_PLANE_TYPE_OVERLAY represents all non-primary, non-cursor planes. | 
 |         Some drivers refer to these types of planes as "sprites" internally. | 
 |         </listitem> | 
 |       </itemizedlist> | 
 |       For compatibility with legacy userspace, only overlay planes are made | 
 |       available to userspace by default.  Userspace clients may set the | 
 |       DRM_CLIENT_CAP_UNIVERSAL_PLANES client capability bit to indicate that | 
 |       they wish to receive a universal plane list containing all plane types. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |       <sect3> | 
 |         <title>Plane Initialization</title> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           To create a plane, a KMS drivers allocates and | 
 |           zeroes an instances of struct <structname>drm_plane</structname> | 
 |           (possibly as part of a larger structure) and registers it with a call | 
 |           to <function>drm_universal_plane_init</function>. The function takes a bitmask | 
 |           of the CRTCs that can be associated with the plane, a pointer to the | 
 |           plane functions, a list of format supported formats, and the type of | 
 |           plane (primary, cursor, or overlay) being initialized. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           Cursor and overlay planes are optional.  All drivers should provide | 
 |           one primary plane per CRTC (although this requirement may change in | 
 |           the future); drivers that do not wish to provide special handling for | 
 |           primary planes may make use of the helper functions described in | 
 |           <xref linkend="drm-kms-planehelpers"/> to create and register a | 
 |           primary plane with standard capabilities. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |       </sect3> | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>Encoders (struct <structname>drm_encoder</structname>)</title> | 
 |       <para> | 
 |         An encoder takes pixel data from a CRTC and converts it to a format | 
 | 	suitable for any attached connectors. On some devices, it may be | 
 | 	possible to have a CRTC send data to more than one encoder. In that | 
 | 	case, both encoders would receive data from the same scanout buffer, | 
 | 	resulting in a "cloned" display configuration across the connectors | 
 | 	attached to each encoder. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |       <sect3> | 
 |         <title>Encoder Initialization</title> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           As for CRTCs, a KMS driver must create, initialize and register at | 
 |           least one struct <structname>drm_encoder</structname> instance. The | 
 |           instance is allocated and zeroed by the driver, possibly as part of a | 
 |           larger structure. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           Drivers must initialize the struct <structname>drm_encoder</structname> | 
 |           <structfield>possible_crtcs</structfield> and | 
 |           <structfield>possible_clones</structfield> fields before registering the | 
 |           encoder. Both fields are bitmasks of respectively the CRTCs that the | 
 |           encoder can be connected to, and sibling encoders candidate for cloning. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           After being initialized, the encoder must be registered with a call to | 
 |           <function>drm_encoder_init</function>. The function takes a pointer to | 
 |           the encoder functions and an encoder type. Supported types are | 
 |           <itemizedlist> | 
 |             <listitem> | 
 |               DRM_MODE_ENCODER_DAC for VGA and analog on DVI-I/DVI-A | 
 |               </listitem> | 
 |             <listitem> | 
 |               DRM_MODE_ENCODER_TMDS for DVI, HDMI and (embedded) DisplayPort | 
 |             </listitem> | 
 |             <listitem> | 
 |               DRM_MODE_ENCODER_LVDS for display panels | 
 |             </listitem> | 
 |             <listitem> | 
 |               DRM_MODE_ENCODER_TVDAC for TV output (Composite, S-Video, Component, | 
 |               SCART) | 
 |             </listitem> | 
 |             <listitem> | 
 |               DRM_MODE_ENCODER_VIRTUAL for virtual machine displays | 
 |             </listitem> | 
 |           </itemizedlist> | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           Encoders must be attached to a CRTC to be used. DRM drivers leave | 
 |           encoders unattached at initialization time. Applications (or the fbdev | 
 |           compatibility layer when implemented) are responsible for attaching the | 
 |           encoders they want to use to a CRTC. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |       </sect3> | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>Connectors (struct <structname>drm_connector</structname>)</title> | 
 |       <para> | 
 |         A connector is the final destination for pixel data on a device, and | 
 | 	usually connects directly to an external display device like a monitor | 
 | 	or laptop panel. A connector can only be attached to one encoder at a | 
 | 	time. The connector is also the structure where information about the | 
 | 	attached display is kept, so it contains fields for display data, EDID | 
 | 	data, DPMS & connection status, and information about modes | 
 | 	supported on the attached displays. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |       <sect3> | 
 |         <title>Connector Initialization</title> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           Finally a KMS driver must create, initialize, register and attach at | 
 |           least one struct <structname>drm_connector</structname> instance. The | 
 |           instance is created as other KMS objects and initialized by setting the | 
 |           following fields. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <variablelist> | 
 |           <varlistentry> | 
 |             <term><structfield>interlace_allowed</structfield></term> | 
 |             <listitem><para> | 
 |               Whether the connector can handle interlaced modes. | 
 |             </para></listitem> | 
 |           </varlistentry> | 
 |           <varlistentry> | 
 |             <term><structfield>doublescan_allowed</structfield></term> | 
 |             <listitem><para> | 
 |               Whether the connector can handle doublescan. | 
 |             </para></listitem> | 
 |           </varlistentry> | 
 |           <varlistentry> | 
 |             <term><structfield>display_info | 
 |             </structfield></term> | 
 |             <listitem><para> | 
 |               Display information is filled from EDID information when a display | 
 |               is detected. For non hot-pluggable displays such as flat panels in | 
 |               embedded systems, the driver should initialize the | 
 |               <structfield>display_info</structfield>.<structfield>width_mm</structfield> | 
 |               and | 
 |               <structfield>display_info</structfield>.<structfield>height_mm</structfield> | 
 |               fields with the physical size of the display. | 
 |             </para></listitem> | 
 |           </varlistentry> | 
 |           <varlistentry> | 
 |             <term id="drm-kms-connector-polled"><structfield>polled</structfield></term> | 
 |             <listitem><para> | 
 |               Connector polling mode, a combination of | 
 |               <variablelist> | 
 |                 <varlistentry> | 
 |                   <term>DRM_CONNECTOR_POLL_HPD</term> | 
 |                   <listitem><para> | 
 |                     The connector generates hotplug events and doesn't need to be | 
 |                     periodically polled. The CONNECT and DISCONNECT flags must not | 
 |                     be set together with the HPD flag. | 
 |                   </para></listitem> | 
 |                 </varlistentry> | 
 |                 <varlistentry> | 
 |                   <term>DRM_CONNECTOR_POLL_CONNECT</term> | 
 |                   <listitem><para> | 
 |                     Periodically poll the connector for connection. | 
 |                   </para></listitem> | 
 |                 </varlistentry> | 
 |                 <varlistentry> | 
 |                   <term>DRM_CONNECTOR_POLL_DISCONNECT</term> | 
 |                   <listitem><para> | 
 |                     Periodically poll the connector for disconnection. | 
 |                   </para></listitem> | 
 |                 </varlistentry> | 
 |               </variablelist> | 
 |               Set to 0 for connectors that don't support connection status | 
 |               discovery. | 
 |             </para></listitem> | 
 |           </varlistentry> | 
 |         </variablelist> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           The connector is then registered with a call to | 
 |           <function>drm_connector_init</function> with a pointer to the connector | 
 |           functions and a connector type, and exposed through sysfs with a call to | 
 |           <function>drm_connector_register</function>. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           Supported connector types are | 
 |           <itemizedlist> | 
 |             <listitem>DRM_MODE_CONNECTOR_VGA</listitem> | 
 |             <listitem>DRM_MODE_CONNECTOR_DVII</listitem> | 
 |             <listitem>DRM_MODE_CONNECTOR_DVID</listitem> | 
 |             <listitem>DRM_MODE_CONNECTOR_DVIA</listitem> | 
 |             <listitem>DRM_MODE_CONNECTOR_Composite</listitem> | 
 |             <listitem>DRM_MODE_CONNECTOR_SVIDEO</listitem> | 
 |             <listitem>DRM_MODE_CONNECTOR_LVDS</listitem> | 
 |             <listitem>DRM_MODE_CONNECTOR_Component</listitem> | 
 |             <listitem>DRM_MODE_CONNECTOR_9PinDIN</listitem> | 
 |             <listitem>DRM_MODE_CONNECTOR_DisplayPort</listitem> | 
 |             <listitem>DRM_MODE_CONNECTOR_HDMIA</listitem> | 
 |             <listitem>DRM_MODE_CONNECTOR_HDMIB</listitem> | 
 |             <listitem>DRM_MODE_CONNECTOR_TV</listitem> | 
 |             <listitem>DRM_MODE_CONNECTOR_eDP</listitem> | 
 |             <listitem>DRM_MODE_CONNECTOR_VIRTUAL</listitem> | 
 |           </itemizedlist> | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           Connectors must be attached to an encoder to be used. For devices that | 
 |           map connectors to encoders 1:1, the connector should be attached at | 
 |           initialization time with a call to | 
 |           <function>drm_mode_connector_attach_encoder</function>. The driver must | 
 |           also set the <structname>drm_connector</structname> | 
 |           <structfield>encoder</structfield> field to point to the attached | 
 |           encoder. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           Finally, drivers must initialize the connectors state change detection | 
 |           with a call to <function>drm_kms_helper_poll_init</function>. If at | 
 |           least one connector is pollable but can't generate hotplug interrupts | 
 |           (indicated by the DRM_CONNECTOR_POLL_CONNECT and | 
 |           DRM_CONNECTOR_POLL_DISCONNECT connector flags), a delayed work will | 
 |           automatically be queued to periodically poll for changes. Connectors | 
 |           that can generate hotplug interrupts must be marked with the | 
 |           DRM_CONNECTOR_POLL_HPD flag instead, and their interrupt handler must | 
 |           call <function>drm_helper_hpd_irq_event</function>. The function will | 
 |           queue a delayed work to check the state of all connectors, but no | 
 |           periodic polling will be done. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |       </sect3> | 
 |       <sect3> | 
 |         <title>Connector Operations</title> | 
 |         <note><para> | 
 |           Unless otherwise state, all operations are mandatory. | 
 |         </para></note> | 
 |         <sect4> | 
 |           <title>DPMS</title> | 
 |           <synopsis>void (*dpms)(struct drm_connector *connector, int mode);</synopsis> | 
 |           <para> | 
 |             The DPMS operation sets the power state of a connector. The mode | 
 |             argument is one of | 
 |             <itemizedlist> | 
 |               <listitem><para>DRM_MODE_DPMS_ON</para></listitem> | 
 |               <listitem><para>DRM_MODE_DPMS_STANDBY</para></listitem> | 
 |               <listitem><para>DRM_MODE_DPMS_SUSPEND</para></listitem> | 
 |               <listitem><para>DRM_MODE_DPMS_OFF</para></listitem> | 
 |             </itemizedlist> | 
 |           </para> | 
 |           <para> | 
 |             In all but DPMS_ON mode the encoder to which the connector is attached | 
 |             should put the display in low-power mode by driving its signals | 
 |             appropriately. If more than one connector is attached to the encoder | 
 |             care should be taken not to change the power state of other displays as | 
 |             a side effect. Low-power mode should be propagated to the encoders and | 
 |             CRTCs when all related connectors are put in low-power mode. | 
 |           </para> | 
 |         </sect4> | 
 |         <sect4> | 
 |           <title>Modes</title> | 
 |           <synopsis>int (*fill_modes)(struct drm_connector *connector, uint32_t max_width, | 
 |                       uint32_t max_height);</synopsis> | 
 |           <para> | 
 |             Fill the mode list with all supported modes for the connector. If the | 
 |             <parameter>max_width</parameter> and <parameter>max_height</parameter> | 
 |             arguments are non-zero, the implementation must ignore all modes wider | 
 |             than <parameter>max_width</parameter> or higher than | 
 |             <parameter>max_height</parameter>. | 
 |           </para> | 
 |           <para> | 
 |             The connector must also fill in this operation its | 
 |             <structfield>display_info</structfield> | 
 |             <structfield>width_mm</structfield> and | 
 |             <structfield>height_mm</structfield> fields with the connected display | 
 |             physical size in millimeters. The fields should be set to 0 if the value | 
 |             isn't known or is not applicable (for instance for projector devices). | 
 |           </para> | 
 |         </sect4> | 
 |         <sect4> | 
 |           <title>Connection Status</title> | 
 |           <para> | 
 |             The connection status is updated through polling or hotplug events when | 
 |             supported (see <xref linkend="drm-kms-connector-polled"/>). The status | 
 |             value is reported to userspace through ioctls and must not be used | 
 |             inside the driver, as it only gets initialized by a call to | 
 |             <function>drm_mode_getconnector</function> from userspace. | 
 |           </para> | 
 |           <synopsis>enum drm_connector_status (*detect)(struct drm_connector *connector, | 
 |                                         bool force);</synopsis> | 
 |           <para> | 
 |             Check to see if anything is attached to the connector. The | 
 |             <parameter>force</parameter> parameter is set to false whilst polling or | 
 |             to true when checking the connector due to user request. | 
 |             <parameter>force</parameter> can be used by the driver to avoid | 
 |             expensive, destructive operations during automated probing. | 
 |           </para> | 
 |           <para> | 
 |             Return connector_status_connected if something is connected to the | 
 |             connector, connector_status_disconnected if nothing is connected and | 
 |             connector_status_unknown if the connection state isn't known. | 
 |           </para> | 
 |           <para> | 
 |             Drivers should only return connector_status_connected if the connection | 
 |             status has really been probed as connected. Connectors that can't detect | 
 |             the connection status, or failed connection status probes, should return | 
 |             connector_status_unknown. | 
 |           </para> | 
 |         </sect4> | 
 |       </sect3> | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>Cleanup</title> | 
 |       <para> | 
 |         The DRM core manages its objects' lifetime. When an object is not needed | 
 | 	anymore the core calls its destroy function, which must clean up and | 
 | 	free every resource allocated for the object. Every | 
 | 	<function>drm_*_init</function> call must be matched with a | 
 | 	corresponding <function>drm_*_cleanup</function> call to cleanup CRTCs | 
 | 	(<function>drm_crtc_cleanup</function>), planes | 
 | 	(<function>drm_plane_cleanup</function>), encoders | 
 | 	(<function>drm_encoder_cleanup</function>) and connectors | 
 | 	(<function>drm_connector_cleanup</function>). Furthermore, connectors | 
 | 	that have been added to sysfs must be removed by a call to | 
 | 	<function>drm_connector_unregister</function> before calling | 
 | 	<function>drm_connector_cleanup</function>. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |       <para> | 
 |         Connectors state change detection must be cleanup up with a call to | 
 | 	<function>drm_kms_helper_poll_fini</function>. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>Output discovery and initialization example</title> | 
 |       <programlisting><![CDATA[ | 
 | void intel_crt_init(struct drm_device *dev) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct drm_connector *connector; | 
 | 	struct intel_output *intel_output; | 
 |  | 
 | 	intel_output = kzalloc(sizeof(struct intel_output), GFP_KERNEL); | 
 | 	if (!intel_output) | 
 | 		return; | 
 |  | 
 | 	connector = &intel_output->base; | 
 | 	drm_connector_init(dev, &intel_output->base, | 
 | 			   &intel_crt_connector_funcs, DRM_MODE_CONNECTOR_VGA); | 
 |  | 
 | 	drm_encoder_init(dev, &intel_output->enc, &intel_crt_enc_funcs, | 
 | 			 DRM_MODE_ENCODER_DAC); | 
 |  | 
 | 	drm_mode_connector_attach_encoder(&intel_output->base, | 
 | 					  &intel_output->enc); | 
 |  | 
 | 	/* Set up the DDC bus. */ | 
 | 	intel_output->ddc_bus = intel_i2c_create(dev, GPIOA, "CRTDDC_A"); | 
 | 	if (!intel_output->ddc_bus) { | 
 | 		dev_printk(KERN_ERR, &dev->pdev->dev, "DDC bus registration " | 
 | 			   "failed.\n"); | 
 | 		return; | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	intel_output->type = INTEL_OUTPUT_ANALOG; | 
 | 	connector->interlace_allowed = 0; | 
 | 	connector->doublescan_allowed = 0; | 
 |  | 
 | 	drm_encoder_helper_add(&intel_output->enc, &intel_crt_helper_funcs); | 
 | 	drm_connector_helper_add(connector, &intel_crt_connector_helper_funcs); | 
 |  | 
 | 	drm_connector_register(connector); | 
 | }]]></programlisting> | 
 |       <para> | 
 |         In the example above (taken from the i915 driver), a CRTC, connector and | 
 |         encoder combination is created. A device-specific i2c bus is also | 
 |         created for fetching EDID data and performing monitor detection. Once | 
 |         the process is complete, the new connector is registered with sysfs to | 
 |         make its properties available to applications. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>KMS API Functions</title> | 
 | !Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_crtc.c | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>KMS Data Structures</title> | 
 | !Iinclude/drm/drm_crtc.h | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>KMS Locking</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/drm_modeset_lock.c kms locking | 
 | !Iinclude/drm/drm_modeset_lock.h | 
 | !Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_modeset_lock.c | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |   </sect1> | 
 |  | 
 |   <!-- Internals: kms helper functions --> | 
 |  | 
 |   <sect1> | 
 |     <title>Mode Setting Helper Functions</title> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       The plane, CRTC, encoder and connector functions provided by the drivers | 
 |       implement the DRM API. They're called by the DRM core and ioctl handlers | 
 |       to handle device state changes and configuration request. As implementing | 
 |       those functions often requires logic not specific to drivers, mid-layer | 
 |       helper functions are available to avoid duplicating boilerplate code. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       The DRM core contains one mid-layer implementation. The mid-layer provides | 
 |       implementations of several plane, CRTC, encoder and connector functions | 
 |       (called from the top of the mid-layer) that pre-process requests and call | 
 |       lower-level functions provided by the driver (at the bottom of the | 
 |       mid-layer). For instance, the | 
 |       <function>drm_crtc_helper_set_config</function> function can be used to | 
 |       fill the struct <structname>drm_crtc_funcs</structname> | 
 |       <structfield>set_config</structfield> field. When called, it will split | 
 |       the <methodname>set_config</methodname> operation in smaller, simpler | 
 |       operations and call the driver to handle them. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       To use the mid-layer, drivers call <function>drm_crtc_helper_add</function>, | 
 |       <function>drm_encoder_helper_add</function> and | 
 |       <function>drm_connector_helper_add</function> functions to install their | 
 |       mid-layer bottom operations handlers, and fill the | 
 |       <structname>drm_crtc_funcs</structname>, | 
 |       <structname>drm_encoder_funcs</structname> and | 
 |       <structname>drm_connector_funcs</structname> structures with pointers to | 
 |       the mid-layer top API functions. Installing the mid-layer bottom operation | 
 |       handlers is best done right after registering the corresponding KMS object. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       The mid-layer is not split between CRTC, encoder and connector operations. | 
 |       To use it, a driver must provide bottom functions for all of the three KMS | 
 |       entities. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>Atomic Modeset Helper Functions Reference</title> | 
 |       <sect3> | 
 | 	<title>Overview</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/drm_atomic_helper.c overview | 
 |       </sect3> | 
 |       <sect3> | 
 | 	<title>Implementing Asynchronous Atomic Commit</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/drm_atomic_helper.c implementing async commit | 
 |       </sect3> | 
 |       <sect3> | 
 | 	<title>Atomic State Reset and Initialization</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/drm_atomic_helper.c atomic state reset and initialization | 
 |       </sect3> | 
 | !Iinclude/drm/drm_atomic_helper.h | 
 | !Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_atomic_helper.c | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>Modeset Helper Reference for Common Vtables</title> | 
 | !Iinclude/drm/drm_modeset_helper_vtables.h | 
 | !Pinclude/drm/drm_modeset_helper_vtables.h overview | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>Legacy CRTC/Modeset Helper Functions Reference</title> | 
 | !Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_crtc_helper.c | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/drm_crtc_helper.c overview | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>Output Probing Helper Functions Reference</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/drm_probe_helper.c output probing helper overview | 
 | !Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_probe_helper.c | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>fbdev Helper Functions Reference</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/drm_fb_helper.c fbdev helpers | 
 | !Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_fb_helper.c | 
 | !Iinclude/drm/drm_fb_helper.h | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>Framebuffer CMA Helper Functions Reference</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/drm_fb_cma_helper.c framebuffer cma helper functions | 
 | !Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_fb_cma_helper.c | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>Display Port Helper Functions Reference</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/drm_dp_helper.c dp helpers | 
 | !Iinclude/drm/drm_dp_helper.h | 
 | !Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_dp_helper.c | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>Display Port Dual Mode Adaptor Helper Functions Reference</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/drm_dp_dual_mode_helper.c dp dual mode helpers | 
 | !Iinclude/drm/drm_dp_dual_mode_helper.h | 
 | !Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_dp_dual_mode_helper.c | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>Display Port MST Helper Functions Reference</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/drm_dp_mst_topology.c dp mst helper | 
 | !Iinclude/drm/drm_dp_mst_helper.h | 
 | !Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_dp_mst_topology.c | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>MIPI DSI Helper Functions Reference</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/drm_mipi_dsi.c dsi helpers | 
 | !Iinclude/drm/drm_mipi_dsi.h | 
 | !Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_mipi_dsi.c | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>EDID Helper Functions Reference</title> | 
 | !Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_edid.c | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>Rectangle Utilities Reference</title> | 
 | !Pinclude/drm/drm_rect.h rect utils | 
 | !Iinclude/drm/drm_rect.h | 
 | !Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_rect.c | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>Flip-work Helper Reference</title> | 
 | !Pinclude/drm/drm_flip_work.h flip utils | 
 | !Iinclude/drm/drm_flip_work.h | 
 | !Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_flip_work.c | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>HDMI Infoframes Helper Reference</title> | 
 |       <para> | 
 | 	Strictly speaking this is not a DRM helper library but generally useable | 
 | 	by any driver interfacing with HDMI outputs like v4l or alsa drivers. | 
 | 	But it nicely fits into the overall topic of mode setting helper | 
 | 	libraries and hence is also included here. | 
 |       </para> | 
 | !Iinclude/linux/hdmi.h | 
 | !Edrivers/video/hdmi.c | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title id="drm-kms-planehelpers">Plane Helper Reference</title> | 
 | !Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_plane_helper.c | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/drm_plane_helper.c overview | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 | 	  <title>Tile group</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/drm_crtc.c Tile group | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>Bridges</title> | 
 |       <sect3> | 
 |         <title>Overview</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/drm_bridge.c overview | 
 |       </sect3> | 
 |       <sect3> | 
 |         <title>Default bridge callback sequence</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/drm_bridge.c bridge callbacks | 
 |       </sect3> | 
 | !Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_bridge.c | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>Panel Helper Reference</title> | 
 | !Iinclude/drm/drm_panel.h | 
 | !Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_panel.c | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/drm_panel.c drm panel | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |   </sect1> | 
 |  | 
 |   <!-- Internals: kms properties --> | 
 |  | 
 |   <sect1 id="drm-kms-properties"> | 
 |     <title>KMS Properties</title> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       Drivers may need to expose additional parameters to applications than | 
 |       those described in the previous sections. KMS supports attaching | 
 |       properties to CRTCs, connectors and planes and offers a userspace API to | 
 |       list, get and set the property values. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       Properties are identified by a name that uniquely defines the property | 
 |       purpose, and store an associated value. For all property types except blob | 
 |       properties the value is a 64-bit unsigned integer. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       KMS differentiates between properties and property instances. Drivers | 
 |       first create properties and then create and associate individual instances | 
 |       of those properties to objects. A property can be instantiated multiple | 
 |       times and associated with different objects. Values are stored in property | 
 |       instances, and all other property information are stored in the property | 
 |       and shared between all instances of the property. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       Every property is created with a type that influences how the KMS core | 
 |       handles the property. Supported property types are | 
 |       <variablelist> | 
 |         <varlistentry> | 
 |           <term>DRM_MODE_PROP_RANGE</term> | 
 |           <listitem><para>Range properties report their minimum and maximum | 
 |             admissible values. The KMS core verifies that values set by | 
 |             application fit in that range.</para></listitem> | 
 |         </varlistentry> | 
 |         <varlistentry> | 
 |           <term>DRM_MODE_PROP_ENUM</term> | 
 |           <listitem><para>Enumerated properties take a numerical value that | 
 |             ranges from 0 to the number of enumerated values defined by the | 
 |             property minus one, and associate a free-formed string name to each | 
 |             value. Applications can retrieve the list of defined value-name pairs | 
 |             and use the numerical value to get and set property instance values. | 
 |             </para></listitem> | 
 |         </varlistentry> | 
 |         <varlistentry> | 
 |           <term>DRM_MODE_PROP_BITMASK</term> | 
 |           <listitem><para>Bitmask properties are enumeration properties that | 
 |             additionally restrict all enumerated values to the 0..63 range. | 
 |             Bitmask property instance values combine one or more of the | 
 |             enumerated bits defined by the property.</para></listitem> | 
 |         </varlistentry> | 
 |         <varlistentry> | 
 |           <term>DRM_MODE_PROP_BLOB</term> | 
 |           <listitem><para>Blob properties store a binary blob without any format | 
 |             restriction. The binary blobs are created as KMS standalone objects, | 
 |             and blob property instance values store the ID of their associated | 
 |             blob object.</para> | 
 | 	    <para>Blob properties are only used for the connector EDID property | 
 | 	    and cannot be created by drivers.</para></listitem> | 
 |         </varlistentry> | 
 |       </variablelist> | 
 |     </para> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       To create a property drivers call one of the following functions depending | 
 |       on the property type. All property creation functions take property flags | 
 |       and name, as well as type-specific arguments. | 
 |       <itemizedlist> | 
 |         <listitem> | 
 |           <synopsis>struct drm_property *drm_property_create_range(struct drm_device *dev, int flags, | 
 |                                                const char *name, | 
 |                                                uint64_t min, uint64_t max);</synopsis> | 
 |           <para>Create a range property with the given minimum and maximum | 
 |             values.</para> | 
 |         </listitem> | 
 |         <listitem> | 
 |           <synopsis>struct drm_property *drm_property_create_enum(struct drm_device *dev, int flags, | 
 |                                               const char *name, | 
 |                                               const struct drm_prop_enum_list *props, | 
 |                                               int num_values);</synopsis> | 
 |           <para>Create an enumerated property. The <parameter>props</parameter> | 
 |             argument points to an array of <parameter>num_values</parameter> | 
 |             value-name pairs.</para> | 
 |         </listitem> | 
 |         <listitem> | 
 |           <synopsis>struct drm_property *drm_property_create_bitmask(struct drm_device *dev, | 
 |                                                  int flags, const char *name, | 
 |                                                  const struct drm_prop_enum_list *props, | 
 |                                                  int num_values);</synopsis> | 
 |           <para>Create a bitmask property. The <parameter>props</parameter> | 
 |             argument points to an array of <parameter>num_values</parameter> | 
 |             value-name pairs.</para> | 
 |         </listitem> | 
 |       </itemizedlist> | 
 |     </para> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       Properties can additionally be created as immutable, in which case they | 
 |       will be read-only for applications but can be modified by the driver. To | 
 |       create an immutable property drivers must set the DRM_MODE_PROP_IMMUTABLE | 
 |       flag at property creation time. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       When no array of value-name pairs is readily available at property | 
 |       creation time for enumerated or range properties, drivers can create | 
 |       the property using the <function>drm_property_create</function> function | 
 |       and manually add enumeration value-name pairs by calling the | 
 |       <function>drm_property_add_enum</function> function. Care must be taken to | 
 |       properly specify the property type through the <parameter>flags</parameter> | 
 |       argument. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       After creating properties drivers can attach property instances to CRTC, | 
 |       connector and plane objects by calling the | 
 |       <function>drm_object_attach_property</function>. The function takes a | 
 |       pointer to the target object, a pointer to the previously created property | 
 |       and an initial instance value. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 | 	<title>Existing KMS Properties</title> | 
 | 	<para> | 
 | 	The following table gives description of drm properties exposed by various | 
 | 	modules/drivers. | 
 | 	</para> | 
 | 	<table border="1" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0"> | 
 | 	<tbody> | 
 | 	<tr style="font-weight: bold;"> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Owner Module/Drivers</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Group</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Property Name</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Type</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Property Values</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Object attached</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Description/Restrictions</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td rowspan="42" valign="top" >DRM</td> | 
 | 	<td rowspan="2" valign="top" >Generic</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“rotation”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >BITMASK</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >{ 0, "rotate-0" }, | 
 | 	{ 1, "rotate-90" }, | 
 | 	{ 2, "rotate-180" }, | 
 | 	{ 3, "rotate-270" }, | 
 | 	{ 4, "reflect-x" }, | 
 | 	{ 5, "reflect-y" }</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >CRTC, Plane</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >rotate-(degrees) rotates the image by the specified amount in degrees | 
 | 	in counter clockwise direction. reflect-x and reflect-y reflects the | 
 | 	image along the specified axis prior to rotation</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“scaling mode”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >ENUM</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >{ "None", "Full", "Center", "Full aspect" }</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Supported by: amdgpu, gma500, i915, nouveau and radeon.</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td rowspan="5" valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“EDID”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >BLOB | IMMUTABLE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >0</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Contains id of edid blob ptr object.</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“DPMS”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >ENUM</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >{ “On”, “Standby”, “Suspend”, “Off” }</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Contains DPMS operation mode value.</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“PATH”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >BLOB | IMMUTABLE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >0</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Contains topology path to a connector.</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“TILE”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >BLOB | IMMUTABLE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >0</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Contains tiling information for a connector.</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“CRTC_ID”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >OBJECT</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >DRM_MODE_OBJECT_CRTC</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >CRTC that connector is attached to (atomic)</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td rowspan="11" valign="top" >Plane</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“type”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >ENUM | IMMUTABLE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >{ "Overlay", "Primary", "Cursor" }</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Plane</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Plane type</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“SRC_X”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=UINT_MAX</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Plane</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Scanout source x coordinate in 16.16 fixed point (atomic)</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“SRC_Y”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=UINT_MAX</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Plane</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Scanout source y coordinate in 16.16 fixed point (atomic)</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“SRC_W”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=UINT_MAX</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Plane</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Scanout source width in 16.16 fixed point (atomic)</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“SRC_H”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=UINT_MAX</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Plane</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Scanout source height in 16.16 fixed point (atomic)</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“CRTC_X”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >SIGNED_RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=INT_MIN, Max=INT_MAX</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Plane</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Scanout CRTC (destination) x coordinate (atomic)</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“CRTC_Y”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >SIGNED_RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=INT_MIN, Max=INT_MAX</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Plane</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Scanout CRTC (destination) y coordinate (atomic)</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“CRTC_W”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=UINT_MAX</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Plane</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Scanout CRTC (destination) width (atomic)</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“CRTC_H”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=UINT_MAX</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Plane</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Scanout CRTC (destination) height (atomic)</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“FB_ID”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >OBJECT</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >DRM_MODE_OBJECT_FB</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Plane</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Scanout framebuffer (atomic)</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“CRTC_ID”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >OBJECT</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >DRM_MODE_OBJECT_CRTC</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Plane</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >CRTC that plane is attached to (atomic)</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td rowspan="2" valign="top" >DVI-I</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“subconnector”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >ENUM</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >{ “Unknown”, “DVI-D”, “DVI-A” }</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“select subconnector”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >ENUM</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >{ “Automatic”, “DVI-D”, “DVI-A” }</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td rowspan="13" valign="top" >TV</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“subconnector”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >ENUM</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >{ "Unknown", "Composite", "SVIDEO", "Component", "SCART" }</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“select subconnector”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >ENUM</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >{ "Automatic", "Composite", "SVIDEO", "Component", "SCART" }</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“mode”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >ENUM</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >{ "NTSC_M", "NTSC_J", "NTSC_443", "PAL_B" } etc.</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“left margin”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=100</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“right margin”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=100</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“top margin”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=100</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“bottom margin”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=100</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“brightness”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=100</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“contrast”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=100</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“flicker reduction”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=100</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“overscan”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=100</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“saturation”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=100</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“hue”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=100</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td rowspan="2" valign="top" >Virtual GPU</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“suggested X”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=0xffffffff</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >property to suggest an X offset for a connector</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“suggested Y”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=0xffffffff</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >property to suggest an Y offset for a connector</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td rowspan="7" valign="top" >Optional</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >"aspect ratio"</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >ENUM</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >{ "None", "4:3", "16:9" }</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TDB</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“dirty”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >ENUM | IMMUTABLE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >{ "Off", "On", "Annotate" }</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“DEGAMMA_LUT”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >BLOB</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >0</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >CRTC</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >DRM property to set the degamma lookup table | 
 | 		(LUT) mapping pixel data from the framebuffer before it is | 
 | 		given to the transformation matrix. The data is an interpreted | 
 | 		as an array of struct drm_color_lut elements. Hardware might | 
 | 		choose not to use the full precision of the LUT elements nor | 
 | 		use all the elements of the LUT (for example the hardware | 
 | 		might choose to interpolate between LUT[0] and LUT[4]). </td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“DEGAMMA_LUT_SIZE”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE | IMMUTABLE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=UINT_MAX</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >CRTC</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >DRM property to gives the size of the lookup | 
 | 		table to be set on the DEGAMMA_LUT property (the size depends | 
 | 		on the underlying hardware).</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“CTM”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >BLOB</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >0</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >CRTC</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >DRM property to set the current | 
 | 		transformation matrix (CTM) apply to pixel data after the | 
 | 		lookup through the degamma LUT and before the lookup through | 
 | 		the gamma LUT. The data is an interpreted as a struct | 
 | 		drm_color_ctm.</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“GAMMA_LUT”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >BLOB</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >0</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >CRTC</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >DRM property to set the gamma lookup table | 
 | 		(LUT) mapping pixel data after to the transformation matrix to | 
 | 		data sent to the connector. The data is an interpreted as an | 
 | 		array of struct drm_color_lut elements. Hardware might choose | 
 | 		not to use the full precision of the LUT elements nor use all | 
 | 		the elements of the LUT (for example the hardware might choose | 
 | 		to interpolate between LUT[0] and LUT[4]).</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“GAMMA_LUT_SIZE”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE | IMMUTABLE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=UINT_MAX</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >CRTC</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >DRM property to gives the size of the lookup | 
 | 		table to be set on the GAMMA_LUT property (the size depends on | 
 | 		the underlying hardware).</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td rowspan="20" valign="top" >i915</td> | 
 | 	<td rowspan="2" valign="top" >Generic</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >"Broadcast RGB"</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >ENUM</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >{ "Automatic", "Full", "Limited 16:235" }</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >When this property is set to Limited 16:235 | 
 | 		and CTM is set, the hardware will be programmed with the | 
 | 		result of the multiplication of CTM by the limited range | 
 | 		matrix to ensure the pixels normaly in the range 0..1.0 are | 
 | 		remapped to the range 16/255..235/255.</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“audio”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >ENUM</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >{ "force-dvi", "off", "auto", "on" }</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td rowspan="17" valign="top" >SDVO-TV</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“mode”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >ENUM</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >{ "NTSC_M", "NTSC_J", "NTSC_443", "PAL_B" } etc.</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >"left_margin"</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max= SDVO dependent</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >"right_margin"</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max= SDVO dependent</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >"top_margin"</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max= SDVO dependent</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >"bottom_margin"</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max= SDVO dependent</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“hpos”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max= SDVO dependent</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“vpos”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max= SDVO dependent</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“contrast”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max= SDVO dependent</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“saturation”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max= SDVO dependent</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“hue”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max= SDVO dependent</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“sharpness”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max= SDVO dependent</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“flicker_filter”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max= SDVO dependent</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“flicker_filter_adaptive”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max= SDVO dependent</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“flicker_filter_2d”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max= SDVO dependent</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“tv_chroma_filter”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max= SDVO dependent</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“tv_luma_filter”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max= SDVO dependent</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“dot_crawl”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=1</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >SDVO-TV/LVDS</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“brightness”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max= SDVO dependent</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td rowspan="2" valign="top" >CDV gma-500</td> | 
 | 	<td rowspan="2" valign="top" >Generic</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >"Broadcast RGB"</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >ENUM</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >{ “Full”, “Limited 16:235” }</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >"Broadcast RGB"</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >ENUM</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >{ “off”, “auto”, “on” }</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td rowspan="19" valign="top" >Poulsbo</td> | 
 | 	<td rowspan="1" valign="top" >Generic</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“backlight”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=100</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td rowspan="17" valign="top" >SDVO-TV</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“mode”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >ENUM</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >{ "NTSC_M", "NTSC_J", "NTSC_443", "PAL_B" } etc.</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >"left_margin"</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max= SDVO dependent</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >"right_margin"</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max= SDVO dependent</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >"top_margin"</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max= SDVO dependent</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >"bottom_margin"</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max= SDVO dependent</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“hpos”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max= SDVO dependent</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“vpos”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max= SDVO dependent</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“contrast”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max= SDVO dependent</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“saturation”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max= SDVO dependent</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“hue”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max= SDVO dependent</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“sharpness”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max= SDVO dependent</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“flicker_filter”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max= SDVO dependent</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“flicker_filter_adaptive”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max= SDVO dependent</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“flicker_filter_2d”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max= SDVO dependent</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“tv_chroma_filter”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max= SDVO dependent</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“tv_luma_filter”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max= SDVO dependent</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“dot_crawl”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=1</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >SDVO-TV/LVDS</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“brightness”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max= SDVO dependent</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td rowspan="11" valign="top" >armada</td> | 
 | 	<td rowspan="2" valign="top" >CRTC</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >"CSC_YUV"</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >ENUM</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >{ "Auto" , "CCIR601", "CCIR709" }</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >CRTC</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >"CSC_RGB"</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >ENUM</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >{ "Auto", "Computer system", "Studio" }</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >CRTC</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td rowspan="9" valign="top" >Overlay</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >"colorkey"</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=0xffffff</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Plane</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >"colorkey_min"</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=0xffffff</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Plane</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >"colorkey_max"</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=0xffffff</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Plane</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >"colorkey_val"</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=0xffffff</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Plane</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >"colorkey_alpha"</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=0xffffff</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Plane</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >"colorkey_mode"</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >ENUM</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >{ "disabled", "Y component", "U component" | 
 | 	, "V component", "RGB", “R component", "G component", "B component" }</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Plane</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >"brightness"</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=256 + 255</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Plane</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >"contrast"</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=0x7fff</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Plane</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >"saturation"</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=0x7fff</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Plane</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td rowspan="2" valign="top" >exynos</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >CRTC</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“mode”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >ENUM</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >{ "normal", "blank" }</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >CRTC</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Overlay</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“zpos”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=MAX_PLANE-1</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Plane</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td rowspan="2" valign="top" >i2c/ch7006_drv</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Generic</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“scale”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=2</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td rowspan="1" valign="top" >TV</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“mode”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >ENUM</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >{ "PAL", "PAL-M","PAL-N"}, ”PAL-Nc" | 
 | 	, "PAL-60", "NTSC-M", "NTSC-J" }</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td rowspan="15" valign="top" >nouveau</td> | 
 | 	<td rowspan="6" valign="top" >NV10 Overlay</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >"colorkey"</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=0x01ffffff</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Plane</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“contrast”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=8192-1</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Plane</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“brightness”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=1024</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Plane</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“hue”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=359</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Plane</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“saturation”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=8192-1</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Plane</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“iturbt_709”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=1</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Plane</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td rowspan="2" valign="top" >Nv04 Overlay</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“colorkey”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=0x01ffffff</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Plane</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“brightness”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=1024</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Plane</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td rowspan="7" valign="top" >Display</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“dithering mode”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >ENUM</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >{ "auto", "off", "on" }</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“dithering depth”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >ENUM</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >{ "auto", "off", "on", "static 2x2", "dynamic 2x2", "temporal" }</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“underscan”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >ENUM</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >{ "auto", "6 bpc", "8 bpc" }</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“underscan hborder”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=128</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“underscan vborder”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=128</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“vibrant hue”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=180</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“color vibrance”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=200</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >omap</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Generic</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“zorder”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=3</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >CRTC, Plane</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >qxl</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Generic</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“hotplug_mode_update"</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=1</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td rowspan="9" valign="top" >radeon</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >DVI-I</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“coherent”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=1</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >DAC enable load detect</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“load detection”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=1</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TV Standard</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >"tv standard"</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >ENUM</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >{ "ntsc", "pal", "pal-m", "pal-60", "ntsc-j" | 
 | 	, "scart-pal", "pal-cn", "secam" }</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >legacy TMDS PLL detect</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >"tmds_pll"</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >ENUM</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >{ "driver", "bios" }</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >-</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td rowspan="3" valign="top" >Underscan</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >"underscan"</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >ENUM</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >{ "off", "on", "auto" }</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >"underscan hborder"</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=128</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >"underscan vborder"</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=128</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Audio</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“audio”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >ENUM</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >{ "off", "on", "auto" }</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >FMT Dithering</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >“dither”</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >ENUM</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >{ "off", "on" }</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Connector</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td rowspan="3" valign="top" >rcar-du</td> | 
 | 	<td rowspan="3" valign="top" >Generic</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >"alpha"</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=255</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Plane</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >"colorkey"</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=0, Max=0x01ffffff</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Plane</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	<tr> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >"zpos"</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >RANGE</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Min=1, Max=7</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >Plane</td> | 
 | 	<td valign="top" >TBD</td> | 
 | 	</tr> | 
 | 	</tbody> | 
 | 	</table> | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |   </sect1> | 
 |  | 
 |   <!-- Internals: vertical blanking --> | 
 |  | 
 |   <sect1 id="drm-vertical-blank"> | 
 |     <title>Vertical Blanking</title> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       Vertical blanking plays a major role in graphics rendering. To achieve | 
 |       tear-free display, users must synchronize page flips and/or rendering to | 
 |       vertical blanking. The DRM API offers ioctls to perform page flips | 
 |       synchronized to vertical blanking and wait for vertical blanking. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       The DRM core handles most of the vertical blanking management logic, which | 
 |       involves filtering out spurious interrupts, keeping race-free blanking | 
 |       counters, coping with counter wrap-around and resets and keeping use | 
 |       counts. It relies on the driver to generate vertical blanking interrupts | 
 |       and optionally provide a hardware vertical blanking counter. Drivers must | 
 |       implement the following operations. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |     <itemizedlist> | 
 |       <listitem> | 
 |         <synopsis>int (*enable_vblank) (struct drm_device *dev, int crtc); | 
 | void (*disable_vblank) (struct drm_device *dev, int crtc);</synopsis> | 
 |         <para> | 
 | 	  Enable or disable vertical blanking interrupts for the given CRTC. | 
 | 	</para> | 
 |       </listitem> | 
 |       <listitem> | 
 |         <synopsis>u32 (*get_vblank_counter) (struct drm_device *dev, int crtc);</synopsis> | 
 |         <para> | 
 | 	  Retrieve the value of the vertical blanking counter for the given | 
 | 	  CRTC. If the hardware maintains a vertical blanking counter its value | 
 | 	  should be returned. Otherwise drivers can use the | 
 | 	  <function>drm_vblank_count</function> helper function to handle this | 
 | 	  operation. | 
 | 	</para> | 
 |       </listitem> | 
 |     </itemizedlist> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       Drivers must initialize the vertical blanking handling core with a call to | 
 |       <function>drm_vblank_init</function> in their | 
 |       <methodname>load</methodname> operation. The function will set the struct | 
 |       <structname>drm_device</structname> | 
 |       <structfield>vblank_disable_allowed</structfield> field to 0. This will | 
 |       keep vertical blanking interrupts enabled permanently until the first mode | 
 |       set operation, where <structfield>vblank_disable_allowed</structfield> is | 
 |       set to 1. The reason behind this is not clear. Drivers can set the field | 
 |       to 1 after <function>calling drm_vblank_init</function> to make vertical | 
 |       blanking interrupts dynamically managed from the beginning. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       Vertical blanking interrupts can be enabled by the DRM core or by drivers | 
 |       themselves (for instance to handle page flipping operations). The DRM core | 
 |       maintains a vertical blanking use count to ensure that the interrupts are | 
 |       not disabled while a user still needs them. To increment the use count, | 
 |       drivers call <function>drm_vblank_get</function>. Upon return vertical | 
 |       blanking interrupts are guaranteed to be enabled. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       To decrement the use count drivers call | 
 |       <function>drm_vblank_put</function>. Only when the use count drops to zero | 
 |       will the DRM core disable the vertical blanking interrupts after a delay | 
 |       by scheduling a timer. The delay is accessible through the vblankoffdelay | 
 |       module parameter or the <varname>drm_vblank_offdelay</varname> global | 
 |       variable and expressed in milliseconds. Its default value is 5000 ms. | 
 |       Zero means never disable, and a negative value means disable immediately. | 
 |       Drivers may override the behaviour by setting the | 
 |       <structname>drm_device</structname> | 
 |       <structfield>vblank_disable_immediate</structfield> flag, which when set | 
 |       causes vblank interrupts to be disabled immediately regardless of the | 
 |       drm_vblank_offdelay value. The flag should only be set if there's a | 
 |       properly working hardware vblank counter present. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       When a vertical blanking interrupt occurs drivers only need to call the | 
 |       <function>drm_handle_vblank</function> function to account for the | 
 |       interrupt. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       Resources allocated by <function>drm_vblank_init</function> must be freed | 
 |       with a call to <function>drm_vblank_cleanup</function> in the driver | 
 |       <methodname>unload</methodname> operation handler. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>Vertical Blanking and Interrupt Handling Functions Reference</title> | 
 | !Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_irq.c | 
 | !Finclude/drm/drmP.h drm_crtc_vblank_waitqueue | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |   </sect1> | 
 |  | 
 |   <!-- Internals: open/close, file operations and ioctls --> | 
 |  | 
 |   <sect1> | 
 |     <title>Open/Close, File Operations and IOCTLs</title> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>Open and Close</title> | 
 |       <synopsis>int (*firstopen) (struct drm_device *); | 
 | void (*lastclose) (struct drm_device *); | 
 | int (*open) (struct drm_device *, struct drm_file *); | 
 | void (*preclose) (struct drm_device *, struct drm_file *); | 
 | void (*postclose) (struct drm_device *, struct drm_file *);</synopsis> | 
 |       <abstract>Open and close handlers. None of those methods are mandatory. | 
 |       </abstract> | 
 |       <para> | 
 |         The <methodname>firstopen</methodname> method is called by the DRM core | 
 | 	for legacy UMS (User Mode Setting) drivers only when an application | 
 | 	opens a device that has no other opened file handle. UMS drivers can | 
 | 	implement it to acquire device resources. KMS drivers can't use the | 
 | 	method and must acquire resources in the <methodname>load</methodname> | 
 | 	method instead. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |       <para> | 
 | 	Similarly the <methodname>lastclose</methodname> method is called when | 
 | 	the last application holding a file handle opened on the device closes | 
 | 	it, for both UMS and KMS drivers. Additionally, the method is also | 
 | 	called at module unload time or, for hot-pluggable devices, when the | 
 | 	device is unplugged. The <methodname>firstopen</methodname> and | 
 | 	<methodname>lastclose</methodname> calls can thus be unbalanced. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |       <para> | 
 |         The <methodname>open</methodname> method is called every time the device | 
 | 	is opened by an application. Drivers can allocate per-file private data | 
 | 	in this method and store them in the struct | 
 | 	<structname>drm_file</structname> <structfield>driver_priv</structfield> | 
 | 	field. Note that the <methodname>open</methodname> method is called | 
 | 	before <methodname>firstopen</methodname>. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |       <para> | 
 |         The close operation is split into <methodname>preclose</methodname> and | 
 | 	<methodname>postclose</methodname> methods. Drivers must stop and | 
 | 	cleanup all per-file operations in the <methodname>preclose</methodname> | 
 | 	method. For instance pending vertical blanking and page flip events must | 
 | 	be cancelled. No per-file operation is allowed on the file handle after | 
 | 	returning from the <methodname>preclose</methodname> method. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |       <para> | 
 |         Finally the <methodname>postclose</methodname> method is called as the | 
 | 	last step of the close operation, right before calling the | 
 | 	<methodname>lastclose</methodname> method if no other open file handle | 
 | 	exists for the device. Drivers that have allocated per-file private data | 
 | 	in the <methodname>open</methodname> method should free it here. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |       <para> | 
 |         The <methodname>lastclose</methodname> method should restore CRTC and | 
 | 	plane properties to default value, so that a subsequent open of the | 
 | 	device will not inherit state from the previous user. It can also be | 
 | 	used to execute delayed power switching state changes, e.g. in | 
 | 	conjunction with the vga_switcheroo infrastructure (see | 
 | 	<xref linkend="vga_switcheroo"/>). Beyond that KMS drivers should not | 
 | 	do any further cleanup. Only legacy UMS drivers might need to clean up | 
 | 	device state so that the vga console or an independent fbdev driver | 
 | 	could take over. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>File Operations</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/drm_fops.c file operations | 
 | !Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_fops.c | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>IOCTLs</title> | 
 |       <synopsis>struct drm_ioctl_desc *ioctls; | 
 | int num_ioctls;</synopsis> | 
 |       <abstract>Driver-specific ioctls descriptors table.</abstract> | 
 |       <para> | 
 |         Driver-specific ioctls numbers start at DRM_COMMAND_BASE. The ioctls | 
 | 	descriptors table is indexed by the ioctl number offset from the base | 
 | 	value. Drivers can use the DRM_IOCTL_DEF_DRV() macro to initialize the | 
 | 	table entries. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |       <para> | 
 |         <programlisting>DRM_IOCTL_DEF_DRV(ioctl, func, flags)</programlisting> | 
 | 	<para> | 
 | 	  <parameter>ioctl</parameter> is the ioctl name. Drivers must define | 
 | 	  the DRM_##ioctl and DRM_IOCTL_##ioctl macros to the ioctl number | 
 | 	  offset from DRM_COMMAND_BASE and the ioctl number respectively. The | 
 | 	  first macro is private to the device while the second must be exposed | 
 | 	  to userspace in a public header. | 
 | 	</para> | 
 | 	<para> | 
 | 	  <parameter>func</parameter> is a pointer to the ioctl handler function | 
 | 	  compatible with the <type>drm_ioctl_t</type> type. | 
 | 	  <programlisting>typedef int drm_ioctl_t(struct drm_device *dev, void *data, | 
 | 		struct drm_file *file_priv);</programlisting> | 
 | 	</para> | 
 | 	<para> | 
 | 	  <parameter>flags</parameter> is a bitmask combination of the following | 
 | 	  values. It restricts how the ioctl is allowed to be called. | 
 | 	  <itemizedlist> | 
 | 	    <listitem><para> | 
 | 	      DRM_AUTH - Only authenticated callers allowed | 
 | 	    </para></listitem> | 
 | 	    <listitem><para> | 
 | 	      DRM_MASTER - The ioctl can only be called on the master file | 
 | 	      handle | 
 | 	    </para></listitem> | 
 |             <listitem><para> | 
 | 	      DRM_ROOT_ONLY - Only callers with the SYSADMIN capability allowed | 
 | 	    </para></listitem> | 
 |             <listitem><para> | 
 | 	      DRM_CONTROL_ALLOW - The ioctl can only be called on a control | 
 | 	      device | 
 | 	    </para></listitem> | 
 |             <listitem><para> | 
 | 	      DRM_UNLOCKED - The ioctl handler will be called without locking | 
 | 	      the DRM global mutex. This is the enforced default for kms drivers | 
 | 	      (i.e. using the DRIVER_MODESET flag) and hence shouldn't be used | 
 | 	      any more for new drivers. | 
 | 	    </para></listitem> | 
 | 	  </itemizedlist> | 
 | 	</para> | 
 |       </para> | 
 | !Edrivers/gpu/drm/drm_ioctl.c | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |   </sect1> | 
 |   <sect1> | 
 |     <title>Legacy Support Code</title> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       The section very briefly covers some of the old legacy support code which | 
 |       is only used by old DRM drivers which have done a so-called shadow-attach | 
 |       to the underlying device instead of registering as a real driver. This | 
 |       also includes some of the old generic buffer management and command | 
 |       submission code. Do not use any of this in new and modern drivers. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |  | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>Legacy Suspend/Resume</title> | 
 |       <para> | 
 | 	The DRM core provides some suspend/resume code, but drivers wanting full | 
 | 	suspend/resume support should provide save() and restore() functions. | 
 | 	These are called at suspend, hibernate, or resume time, and should perform | 
 | 	any state save or restore required by your device across suspend or | 
 | 	hibernate states. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |       <synopsis>int (*suspend) (struct drm_device *, pm_message_t state); | 
 |   int (*resume) (struct drm_device *);</synopsis> | 
 |       <para> | 
 | 	Those are legacy suspend and resume methods which | 
 | 	<emphasis>only</emphasis> work with the legacy shadow-attach driver | 
 | 	registration functions. New driver should use the power management | 
 | 	interface provided by their bus type (usually through | 
 | 	the struct <structname>device_driver</structname> dev_pm_ops) and set | 
 | 	these methods to NULL. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |  | 
 |     <sect2> | 
 |       <title>Legacy DMA Services</title> | 
 |       <para> | 
 | 	This should cover how DMA mapping etc. is supported by the core. | 
 | 	These functions are deprecated and should not be used. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |     </sect2> | 
 |   </sect1> | 
 |   </chapter> | 
 |  | 
 | <!-- TODO | 
 |  | 
 | - Add a glossary | 
 | - Document the struct_mutex catch-all lock | 
 | - Document connector properties | 
 |  | 
 | - Why is the load method optional? | 
 | - What are drivers supposed to set the initial display state to, and how? | 
 |   Connector's DPMS states are not initialized and are thus equal to | 
 |   DRM_MODE_DPMS_ON. The fbcon compatibility layer calls | 
 |   drm_helper_disable_unused_functions(), which disables unused encoders and | 
 |   CRTCs, but doesn't touch the connectors' DPMS state, and | 
 |   drm_helper_connector_dpms() in reaction to fbdev blanking events. Do drivers | 
 |   that don't implement (or just don't use) fbcon compatibility need to call | 
 |   those functions themselves? | 
 | - KMS drivers must call drm_vblank_pre_modeset() and drm_vblank_post_modeset() | 
 |   around mode setting. Should this be done in the DRM core? | 
 | - vblank_disable_allowed is set to 1 in the first drm_vblank_post_modeset() | 
 |   call and never set back to 0. It seems to be safe to permanently set it to 1 | 
 |   in drm_vblank_init() for KMS driver, and it might be safe for UMS drivers as | 
 |   well. This should be investigated. | 
 | - crtc and connector .save and .restore operations are only used internally in | 
 |   drivers, should they be removed from the core? | 
 | - encoder mid-layer .save and .restore operations are only used internally in | 
 |   drivers, should they be removed from the core? | 
 | - encoder mid-layer .detect operation is only used internally in drivers, | 
 |   should it be removed from the core? | 
 | --> | 
 |  | 
 |   <!-- External interfaces --> | 
 |  | 
 |   <chapter id="drmExternals"> | 
 |     <title>Userland interfaces</title> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       The DRM core exports several interfaces to applications, | 
 |       generally intended to be used through corresponding libdrm | 
 |       wrapper functions.  In addition, drivers export device-specific | 
 |       interfaces for use by userspace drivers & device-aware | 
 |       applications through ioctls and sysfs files. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       External interfaces include: memory mapping, context management, | 
 |       DMA operations, AGP management, vblank control, fence | 
 |       management, memory management, and output management. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       Cover generic ioctls and sysfs layout here.  We only need high-level | 
 |       info, since man pages should cover the rest. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |  | 
 |   <!-- External: render nodes --> | 
 |  | 
 |     <sect1> | 
 |       <title>Render nodes</title> | 
 |       <para> | 
 |         DRM core provides multiple character-devices for user-space to use. | 
 |         Depending on which device is opened, user-space can perform a different | 
 |         set of operations (mainly ioctls). The primary node is always created | 
 |         and called card<num>. Additionally, a currently | 
 |         unused control node, called controlD<num> is also | 
 |         created. The primary node provides all legacy operations and | 
 |         historically was the only interface used by userspace. With KMS, the | 
 |         control node was introduced. However, the planned KMS control interface | 
 |         has never been written and so the control node stays unused to date. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |       <para> | 
 |         With the increased use of offscreen renderers and GPGPU applications, | 
 |         clients no longer require running compositors or graphics servers to | 
 |         make use of a GPU. But the DRM API required unprivileged clients to | 
 |         authenticate to a DRM-Master prior to getting GPU access. To avoid this | 
 |         step and to grant clients GPU access without authenticating, render | 
 |         nodes were introduced. Render nodes solely serve render clients, that | 
 |         is, no modesetting or privileged ioctls can be issued on render nodes. | 
 |         Only non-global rendering commands are allowed. If a driver supports | 
 |         render nodes, it must advertise it via the DRIVER_RENDER | 
 |         DRM driver capability. If not supported, the primary node must be used | 
 |         for render clients together with the legacy drmAuth authentication | 
 |         procedure. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |       <para> | 
 |         If a driver advertises render node support, DRM core will create a | 
 |         separate render node called renderD<num>. There will | 
 |         be one render node per device. No ioctls except  PRIME-related ioctls | 
 |         will be allowed on this node. Especially GEM_OPEN will be | 
 |         explicitly prohibited. Render nodes are designed to avoid the | 
 |         buffer-leaks, which occur if clients guess the flink names or mmap | 
 |         offsets on the legacy interface. Additionally to this basic interface, | 
 |         drivers must mark their driver-dependent render-only ioctls as | 
 |         DRM_RENDER_ALLOW so render clients can use them. Driver | 
 |         authors must be careful not to allow any privileged ioctls on render | 
 |         nodes. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |       <para> | 
 |         With render nodes, user-space can now control access to the render node | 
 |         via basic file-system access-modes. A running graphics server which | 
 |         authenticates clients on the privileged primary/legacy node is no longer | 
 |         required. Instead, a client can open the render node and is immediately | 
 |         granted GPU access. Communication between clients (or servers) is done | 
 |         via PRIME. FLINK from render node to legacy node is not supported. New | 
 |         clients must not use the insecure FLINK interface. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |       <para> | 
 |         Besides dropping all modeset/global ioctls, render nodes also drop the | 
 |         DRM-Master concept. There is no reason to associate render clients with | 
 |         a DRM-Master as they are independent of any graphics server. Besides, | 
 |         they must work without any running master, anyway. | 
 |         Drivers must be able to run without a master object if they support | 
 |         render nodes. If, on the other hand, a driver requires shared state | 
 |         between clients which is visible to user-space and accessible beyond | 
 |         open-file boundaries, they cannot support render nodes. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |     </sect1> | 
 |  | 
 |   <!-- External: vblank handling --> | 
 |  | 
 |     <sect1> | 
 |       <title>VBlank event handling</title> | 
 |       <para> | 
 |         The DRM core exposes two vertical blank related ioctls: | 
 |         <variablelist> | 
 |           <varlistentry> | 
 |             <term>DRM_IOCTL_WAIT_VBLANK</term> | 
 |             <listitem> | 
 |               <para> | 
 |                 This takes a struct drm_wait_vblank structure as its argument, | 
 |                 and it is used to block or request a signal when a specified | 
 |                 vblank event occurs. | 
 |               </para> | 
 |             </listitem> | 
 |           </varlistentry> | 
 |           <varlistentry> | 
 |             <term>DRM_IOCTL_MODESET_CTL</term> | 
 |             <listitem> | 
 |               <para> | 
 | 		This was only used for user-mode-settind drivers around | 
 | 		modesetting changes to allow the kernel to update the vblank | 
 | 		interrupt after mode setting, since on many devices the vertical | 
 | 		blank counter is reset to 0 at some point during modeset. Modern | 
 | 		drivers should not call this any more since with kernel mode | 
 | 		setting it is a no-op. | 
 |               </para> | 
 |             </listitem> | 
 |           </varlistentry> | 
 |         </variablelist> | 
 |       </para> | 
 |     </sect1> | 
 |  | 
 |   </chapter> | 
 | </part> | 
 | <part id="drmDrivers"> | 
 |   <title>DRM Drivers</title> | 
 |  | 
 |   <partintro> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       This second part of the GPU Driver Developer's Guide documents driver | 
 |       code, implementation details and also all the driver-specific userspace | 
 |       interfaces. Especially since all hardware-acceleration interfaces to | 
 |       userspace are driver specific for efficiency and other reasons these | 
 |       interfaces can be rather substantial. Hence every driver has its own | 
 |       chapter. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |   </partintro> | 
 |  | 
 |   <chapter id="drmI915"> | 
 |     <title>drm/i915 Intel GFX Driver</title> | 
 |     <para> | 
 |       The drm/i915 driver supports all (with the exception of some very early | 
 |       models) integrated GFX chipsets with both Intel display and rendering | 
 |       blocks. This excludes a set of SoC platforms with an SGX rendering unit, | 
 |       those have basic support through the gma500 drm driver. | 
 |     </para> | 
 |     <sect1> | 
 |       <title>Core Driver Infrastructure</title> | 
 |       <para> | 
 | 	This section covers core driver infrastructure used by both the display | 
 | 	and the GEM parts of the driver. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |       <sect2> | 
 |         <title>Runtime Power Management</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_runtime_pm.c runtime pm | 
 | !Idrivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_runtime_pm.c | 
 | !Idrivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_uncore.c | 
 |       </sect2> | 
 |       <sect2> | 
 |         <title>Interrupt Handling</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_irq.c interrupt handling | 
 | !Fdrivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_irq.c intel_irq_init intel_irq_init_hw intel_hpd_init | 
 | !Fdrivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_irq.c intel_runtime_pm_disable_interrupts | 
 | !Fdrivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_irq.c intel_runtime_pm_enable_interrupts | 
 |       </sect2> | 
 |       <sect2> | 
 |         <title>Intel GVT-g Guest Support(vGPU)</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_vgpu.c Intel GVT-g guest support | 
 | !Idrivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_vgpu.c | 
 |       </sect2> | 
 |     </sect1> | 
 |     <sect1> | 
 |       <title>Display Hardware Handling</title> | 
 |       <para> | 
 |         This section covers everything related to the display hardware including | 
 |         the mode setting infrastructure, plane, sprite and cursor handling and | 
 |         display, output probing and related topics. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |       <sect2> | 
 |         <title>Mode Setting Infrastructure</title> | 
 |         <para> | 
 |           The i915 driver is thus far the only DRM driver which doesn't use the | 
 |           common DRM helper code to implement mode setting sequences. Thus it | 
 |           has its own tailor-made infrastructure for executing a display | 
 |           configuration change. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |       </sect2> | 
 |       <sect2> | 
 |         <title>Frontbuffer Tracking</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_frontbuffer.c frontbuffer tracking | 
 | !Idrivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_frontbuffer.c | 
 | !Fdrivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_gem.c i915_gem_track_fb | 
 |       </sect2> | 
 |       <sect2> | 
 |         <title>Display FIFO Underrun Reporting</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_fifo_underrun.c fifo underrun handling | 
 | !Idrivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_fifo_underrun.c | 
 |       </sect2> | 
 |       <sect2> | 
 |         <title>Plane Configuration</title> | 
 |         <para> | 
 | 	  This section covers plane configuration and composition with the | 
 | 	  primary plane, sprites, cursors and overlays. This includes the | 
 | 	  infrastructure to do atomic vsync'ed updates of all this state and | 
 | 	  also tightly coupled topics like watermark setup and computation, | 
 | 	  framebuffer compression and panel self refresh. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |       </sect2> | 
 |       <sect2> | 
 |         <title>Atomic Plane Helpers</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_atomic_plane.c atomic plane helpers | 
 | !Idrivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_atomic_plane.c | 
 |       </sect2> | 
 |       <sect2> | 
 |         <title>Output Probing</title> | 
 |         <para> | 
 | 	  This section covers output probing and related infrastructure like the | 
 | 	  hotplug interrupt storm detection and mitigation code. Note that the | 
 | 	  i915 driver still uses most of the common DRM helper code for output | 
 | 	  probing, so those sections fully apply. | 
 |         </para> | 
 |       </sect2> | 
 |       <sect2> | 
 |         <title>Hotplug</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_hotplug.c Hotplug | 
 | !Idrivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_hotplug.c | 
 |       </sect2> | 
 |       <sect2> | 
 | 	<title>High Definition Audio</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_audio.c High Definition Audio over HDMI and Display Port | 
 | !Idrivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_audio.c | 
 | !Iinclude/drm/i915_component.h | 
 |       </sect2> | 
 |       <sect2> | 
 | 	<title>Panel Self Refresh PSR (PSR/SRD)</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_psr.c Panel Self Refresh (PSR/SRD) | 
 | !Idrivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_psr.c | 
 |       </sect2> | 
 |       <sect2> | 
 | 	<title>Frame Buffer Compression (FBC)</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_fbc.c Frame Buffer Compression (FBC) | 
 | !Idrivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_fbc.c | 
 |       </sect2> | 
 |       <sect2> | 
 |         <title>Display Refresh Rate Switching (DRRS)</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_dp.c Display Refresh Rate Switching (DRRS) | 
 | !Fdrivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_dp.c intel_dp_set_drrs_state | 
 | !Fdrivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_dp.c intel_edp_drrs_enable | 
 | !Fdrivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_dp.c intel_edp_drrs_disable | 
 | !Fdrivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_dp.c intel_edp_drrs_invalidate | 
 | !Fdrivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_dp.c intel_edp_drrs_flush | 
 | !Fdrivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_dp.c intel_dp_drrs_init | 
 |  | 
 |       </sect2> | 
 |       <sect2> | 
 |         <title>DPIO</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_reg.h DPIO | 
 |       </sect2> | 
 |  | 
 |       <sect2> | 
 |        <title>CSR firmware support for DMC</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_csr.c csr support for dmc | 
 | !Idrivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_csr.c | 
 |       </sect2> | 
 |       <sect2> | 
 | 	<title>Video BIOS Table (VBT)</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_bios.c Video BIOS Table (VBT) | 
 | !Idrivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_bios.c | 
 | !Idrivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_vbt_defs.h | 
 |       </sect2> | 
 |     </sect1> | 
 |  | 
 |     <sect1> | 
 |       <title>Memory Management and Command Submission</title> | 
 |       <para> | 
 | 	This sections covers all things related to the GEM implementation in the | 
 | 	i915 driver. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |       <sect2> | 
 |         <title>Batchbuffer Parsing</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_cmd_parser.c batch buffer command parser | 
 | !Idrivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_cmd_parser.c | 
 |       </sect2> | 
 |       <sect2> | 
 |         <title>Batchbuffer Pools</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_gem_batch_pool.c batch pool | 
 | !Idrivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_gem_batch_pool.c | 
 |       </sect2> | 
 |       <sect2> | 
 |         <title>Logical Rings, Logical Ring Contexts and Execlists</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_lrc.c Logical Rings, Logical Ring Contexts and Execlists | 
 | !Idrivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_lrc.c | 
 |       </sect2> | 
 |       <sect2> | 
 |         <title>Global GTT views</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_gem_gtt.c Global GTT views | 
 | !Idrivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_gem_gtt.c | 
 |       </sect2> | 
 |       <sect2> | 
 |         <title>GTT Fences and Swizzling</title> | 
 | !Idrivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_gem_fence.c | 
 |         <sect3> | 
 |           <title>Global GTT Fence Handling</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_gem_fence.c fence register handling | 
 |         </sect3> | 
 |         <sect3> | 
 |           <title>Hardware Tiling and Swizzling Details</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_gem_fence.c tiling swizzling details | 
 |         </sect3> | 
 |       </sect2> | 
 |       <sect2> | 
 |         <title>Object Tiling IOCTLs</title> | 
 | !Idrivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_gem_tiling.c | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_gem_tiling.c buffer object tiling | 
 |       </sect2> | 
 |       <sect2> | 
 |         <title>Buffer Object Eviction</title> | 
 | 	<para> | 
 | 	  This section documents the interface functions for evicting buffer | 
 | 	  objects to make space available in the virtual gpu address spaces. | 
 | 	  Note that this is mostly orthogonal to shrinking buffer objects | 
 | 	  caches, which has the goal to make main memory (shared with the gpu | 
 | 	  through the unified memory architecture) available. | 
 | 	</para> | 
 | !Idrivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_gem_evict.c | 
 |       </sect2> | 
 |       <sect2> | 
 |         <title>Buffer Object Memory Shrinking</title> | 
 | 	<para> | 
 | 	  This section documents the interface function for shrinking memory | 
 | 	  usage of buffer object caches. Shrinking is used to make main memory | 
 | 	  available.  Note that this is mostly orthogonal to evicting buffer | 
 | 	  objects, which has the goal to make space in gpu virtual address | 
 | 	  spaces. | 
 | 	</para> | 
 | !Idrivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_gem_shrinker.c | 
 |       </sect2> | 
 |     </sect1> | 
 |     <sect1> | 
 |       <title>GuC</title> | 
 |       <sect2> | 
 |         <title>GuC-specific firmware loader</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_guc_loader.c GuC-specific firmware loader | 
 | !Idrivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_guc_loader.c | 
 |       </sect2> | 
 |       <sect2> | 
 |         <title>GuC-based command submission</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_guc_submission.c GuC-based command submission | 
 | !Idrivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_guc_submission.c | 
 |       </sect2> | 
 |       <sect2> | 
 |         <title>GuC Firmware Layout</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/i915/intel_guc_fwif.h GuC Firmware Layout | 
 |       </sect2> | 
 |     </sect1> | 
 |  | 
 |     <sect1> | 
 |       <title> Tracing </title> | 
 |       <para> | 
 |     This sections covers all things related to the tracepoints implemented in | 
 |     the i915 driver. | 
 |       </para> | 
 |       <sect2> | 
 |         <title> i915_ppgtt_create and i915_ppgtt_release </title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_trace.h i915_ppgtt_create and i915_ppgtt_release tracepoints | 
 |       </sect2> | 
 |       <sect2> | 
 |         <title> i915_context_create and i915_context_free </title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_trace.h i915_context_create and i915_context_free tracepoints | 
 |       </sect2> | 
 |       <sect2> | 
 |         <title> switch_mm </title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_trace.h switch_mm tracepoint | 
 |       </sect2> | 
 |     </sect1> | 
 |  | 
 |   </chapter> | 
 | !Cdrivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_irq.c | 
 | </part> | 
 |  | 
 | <part id="vga_switcheroo"> | 
 |   <title>vga_switcheroo</title> | 
 |   <partintro> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/vga/vga_switcheroo.c Overview | 
 |   </partintro> | 
 |  | 
 |   <chapter id="modes_of_use"> | 
 |     <title>Modes of Use</title> | 
 |     <sect1> | 
 |       <title>Manual switching and manual power control</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/vga/vga_switcheroo.c Manual switching and manual power control | 
 |     </sect1> | 
 |     <sect1> | 
 |       <title>Driver power control</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/gpu/vga/vga_switcheroo.c Driver power control | 
 |     </sect1> | 
 |   </chapter> | 
 |  | 
 |   <chapter id="api"> | 
 |     <title>API</title> | 
 |     <sect1> | 
 |       <title>Public functions</title> | 
 | !Edrivers/gpu/vga/vga_switcheroo.c | 
 |     </sect1> | 
 |     <sect1> | 
 |       <title>Public structures</title> | 
 | !Finclude/linux/vga_switcheroo.h vga_switcheroo_handler | 
 | !Finclude/linux/vga_switcheroo.h vga_switcheroo_client_ops | 
 |     </sect1> | 
 |     <sect1> | 
 |       <title>Public constants</title> | 
 | !Finclude/linux/vga_switcheroo.h vga_switcheroo_handler_flags_t | 
 | !Finclude/linux/vga_switcheroo.h vga_switcheroo_client_id | 
 | !Finclude/linux/vga_switcheroo.h vga_switcheroo_state | 
 |     </sect1> | 
 |     <sect1> | 
 |       <title>Private structures</title> | 
 | !Fdrivers/gpu/vga/vga_switcheroo.c vgasr_priv | 
 | !Fdrivers/gpu/vga/vga_switcheroo.c vga_switcheroo_client | 
 |     </sect1> | 
 |   </chapter> | 
 |  | 
 |   <chapter id="handlers"> | 
 |     <title>Handlers</title> | 
 |     <sect1> | 
 |       <title>apple-gmux Handler</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/platform/x86/apple-gmux.c Overview | 
 | !Pdrivers/platform/x86/apple-gmux.c Interrupt | 
 |       <sect2> | 
 |         <title>Graphics mux</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/platform/x86/apple-gmux.c Graphics mux | 
 |       </sect2> | 
 |       <sect2> | 
 |         <title>Power control</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/platform/x86/apple-gmux.c Power control | 
 |       </sect2> | 
 |       <sect2> | 
 |         <title>Backlight control</title> | 
 | !Pdrivers/platform/x86/apple-gmux.c Backlight control | 
 |       </sect2> | 
 |       <sect2> | 
 |         <title>Public functions</title> | 
 | !Iinclude/linux/apple-gmux.h | 
 |       </sect2> | 
 |     </sect1> | 
 |   </chapter> | 
 |  | 
 | !Cdrivers/gpu/vga/vga_switcheroo.c | 
 | !Cinclude/linux/vga_switcheroo.h | 
 | !Cdrivers/platform/x86/apple-gmux.c | 
 | </part> | 
 |  | 
 | </book> |