Merge tag 'md/3.17' of git://neil.brown.name/md
[deliverable/linux.git] / drivers / gpu / drm / vmwgfx / svga_reg.h
1 /**********************************************************
2 * Copyright 1998-2009 VMware, Inc. All rights reserved.
3 *
4 * Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person
5 * obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation
6 * files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without
7 * restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy,
8 * modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies
9 * of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
10 * furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
11 *
12 * The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be
13 * included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
14 *
15 * THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
16 * EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
17 * MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND
18 * NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS
19 * BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN
20 * ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN
21 * CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE
22 * SOFTWARE.
23 *
24 **********************************************************/
25
26 /*
27 * svga_reg.h --
28 *
29 * Virtual hardware definitions for the VMware SVGA II device.
30 */
31
32 #ifndef _SVGA_REG_H_
33 #define _SVGA_REG_H_
34
35 /*
36 * PCI device IDs.
37 */
38 #define PCI_VENDOR_ID_VMWARE 0x15AD
39 #define PCI_DEVICE_ID_VMWARE_SVGA2 0x0405
40
41 /*
42 * SVGA_REG_ENABLE bit definitions.
43 */
44 #define SVGA_REG_ENABLE_DISABLE 0
45 #define SVGA_REG_ENABLE_ENABLE 1
46 #define SVGA_REG_ENABLE_HIDE 2
47 #define SVGA_REG_ENABLE_ENABLE_HIDE (SVGA_REG_ENABLE_ENABLE |\
48 SVGA_REG_ENABLE_HIDE)
49
50 /*
51 * Legal values for the SVGA_REG_CURSOR_ON register in old-fashioned
52 * cursor bypass mode. This is still supported, but no new guest
53 * drivers should use it.
54 */
55 #define SVGA_CURSOR_ON_HIDE 0x0 /* Must be 0 to maintain backward compatibility */
56 #define SVGA_CURSOR_ON_SHOW 0x1 /* Must be 1 to maintain backward compatibility */
57 #define SVGA_CURSOR_ON_REMOVE_FROM_FB 0x2 /* Remove the cursor from the framebuffer because we need to see what's under it */
58 #define SVGA_CURSOR_ON_RESTORE_TO_FB 0x3 /* Put the cursor back in the framebuffer so the user can see it */
59
60 /*
61 * The maximum framebuffer size that can traced for e.g. guests in VESA mode.
62 * The changeMap in the monitor is proportional to this number. Therefore, we'd
63 * like to keep it as small as possible to reduce monitor overhead (using
64 * SVGA_VRAM_MAX_SIZE for this increases the size of the shared area by over
65 * 4k!).
66 *
67 * NB: For compatibility reasons, this value must be greater than 0xff0000.
68 * See bug 335072.
69 */
70 #define SVGA_FB_MAX_TRACEABLE_SIZE 0x1000000
71
72 #define SVGA_MAX_PSEUDOCOLOR_DEPTH 8
73 #define SVGA_MAX_PSEUDOCOLORS (1 << SVGA_MAX_PSEUDOCOLOR_DEPTH)
74 #define SVGA_NUM_PALETTE_REGS (3 * SVGA_MAX_PSEUDOCOLORS)
75
76 #define SVGA_MAGIC 0x900000UL
77 #define SVGA_MAKE_ID(ver) (SVGA_MAGIC << 8 | (ver))
78
79 /* Version 2 let the address of the frame buffer be unsigned on Win32 */
80 #define SVGA_VERSION_2 2
81 #define SVGA_ID_2 SVGA_MAKE_ID(SVGA_VERSION_2)
82
83 /* Version 1 has new registers starting with SVGA_REG_CAPABILITIES so
84 PALETTE_BASE has moved */
85 #define SVGA_VERSION_1 1
86 #define SVGA_ID_1 SVGA_MAKE_ID(SVGA_VERSION_1)
87
88 /* Version 0 is the initial version */
89 #define SVGA_VERSION_0 0
90 #define SVGA_ID_0 SVGA_MAKE_ID(SVGA_VERSION_0)
91
92 /* "Invalid" value for all SVGA IDs. (Version ID, screen object ID, surface ID...) */
93 #define SVGA_ID_INVALID 0xFFFFFFFF
94
95 /* Port offsets, relative to BAR0 */
96 #define SVGA_INDEX_PORT 0x0
97 #define SVGA_VALUE_PORT 0x1
98 #define SVGA_BIOS_PORT 0x2
99 #define SVGA_IRQSTATUS_PORT 0x8
100
101 /*
102 * Interrupt source flags for IRQSTATUS_PORT and IRQMASK.
103 *
104 * Interrupts are only supported when the
105 * SVGA_CAP_IRQMASK capability is present.
106 */
107 #define SVGA_IRQFLAG_ANY_FENCE 0x1 /* Any fence was passed */
108 #define SVGA_IRQFLAG_FIFO_PROGRESS 0x2 /* Made forward progress in the FIFO */
109 #define SVGA_IRQFLAG_FENCE_GOAL 0x4 /* SVGA_FIFO_FENCE_GOAL reached */
110
111 /*
112 * Registers
113 */
114
115 enum {
116 SVGA_REG_ID = 0,
117 SVGA_REG_ENABLE = 1,
118 SVGA_REG_WIDTH = 2,
119 SVGA_REG_HEIGHT = 3,
120 SVGA_REG_MAX_WIDTH = 4,
121 SVGA_REG_MAX_HEIGHT = 5,
122 SVGA_REG_DEPTH = 6,
123 SVGA_REG_BITS_PER_PIXEL = 7, /* Current bpp in the guest */
124 SVGA_REG_PSEUDOCOLOR = 8,
125 SVGA_REG_RED_MASK = 9,
126 SVGA_REG_GREEN_MASK = 10,
127 SVGA_REG_BLUE_MASK = 11,
128 SVGA_REG_BYTES_PER_LINE = 12,
129 SVGA_REG_FB_START = 13, /* (Deprecated) */
130 SVGA_REG_FB_OFFSET = 14,
131 SVGA_REG_VRAM_SIZE = 15,
132 SVGA_REG_FB_SIZE = 16,
133
134 /* ID 0 implementation only had the above registers, then the palette */
135
136 SVGA_REG_CAPABILITIES = 17,
137 SVGA_REG_MEM_START = 18, /* (Deprecated) */
138 SVGA_REG_MEM_SIZE = 19,
139 SVGA_REG_CONFIG_DONE = 20, /* Set when memory area configured */
140 SVGA_REG_SYNC = 21, /* See "FIFO Synchronization Registers" */
141 SVGA_REG_BUSY = 22, /* See "FIFO Synchronization Registers" */
142 SVGA_REG_GUEST_ID = 23, /* Set guest OS identifier */
143 SVGA_REG_CURSOR_ID = 24, /* (Deprecated) */
144 SVGA_REG_CURSOR_X = 25, /* (Deprecated) */
145 SVGA_REG_CURSOR_Y = 26, /* (Deprecated) */
146 SVGA_REG_CURSOR_ON = 27, /* (Deprecated) */
147 SVGA_REG_HOST_BITS_PER_PIXEL = 28, /* (Deprecated) */
148 SVGA_REG_SCRATCH_SIZE = 29, /* Number of scratch registers */
149 SVGA_REG_MEM_REGS = 30, /* Number of FIFO registers */
150 SVGA_REG_NUM_DISPLAYS = 31, /* (Deprecated) */
151 SVGA_REG_PITCHLOCK = 32, /* Fixed pitch for all modes */
152 SVGA_REG_IRQMASK = 33, /* Interrupt mask */
153
154 /* Legacy multi-monitor support */
155 SVGA_REG_NUM_GUEST_DISPLAYS = 34,/* Number of guest displays in X/Y direction */
156 SVGA_REG_DISPLAY_ID = 35, /* Display ID for the following display attributes */
157 SVGA_REG_DISPLAY_IS_PRIMARY = 36,/* Whether this is a primary display */
158 SVGA_REG_DISPLAY_POSITION_X = 37,/* The display position x */
159 SVGA_REG_DISPLAY_POSITION_Y = 38,/* The display position y */
160 SVGA_REG_DISPLAY_WIDTH = 39, /* The display's width */
161 SVGA_REG_DISPLAY_HEIGHT = 40, /* The display's height */
162
163 /* See "Guest memory regions" below. */
164 SVGA_REG_GMR_ID = 41,
165 SVGA_REG_GMR_DESCRIPTOR = 42,
166 SVGA_REG_GMR_MAX_IDS = 43,
167 SVGA_REG_GMR_MAX_DESCRIPTOR_LENGTH = 44,
168
169 SVGA_REG_TRACES = 45, /* Enable trace-based updates even when FIFO is on */
170 SVGA_REG_GMRS_MAX_PAGES = 46, /* Maximum number of 4KB pages for all GMRs */
171 SVGA_REG_MEMORY_SIZE = 47, /* Total dedicated device memory excluding FIFO */
172 SVGA_REG_COMMAND_LOW = 48, /* Lower 32 bits and submits commands */
173 SVGA_REG_COMMAND_HIGH = 49, /* Upper 32 bits of command buffer PA */
174 SVGA_REG_MAX_PRIMARY_BOUNDING_BOX_MEM = 50, /* Max primary memory */
175 SVGA_REG_SUGGESTED_GBOBJECT_MEM_SIZE_KB = 51, /* Suggested limit on mob mem */
176 SVGA_REG_DEV_CAP = 52, /* Write dev cap index, read value */
177 SVGA_REG_CMD_PREPEND_LOW = 53,
178 SVGA_REG_CMD_PREPEND_HIGH = 54,
179 SVGA_REG_SCREENTARGET_MAX_WIDTH = 55,
180 SVGA_REG_SCREENTARGET_MAX_HEIGHT = 56,
181 SVGA_REG_MOB_MAX_SIZE = 57,
182 SVGA_REG_TOP = 58, /* Must be 1 more than the last register */
183
184 SVGA_PALETTE_BASE = 1024, /* Base of SVGA color map */
185 /* Next 768 (== 256*3) registers exist for colormap */
186
187 SVGA_SCRATCH_BASE = SVGA_PALETTE_BASE + SVGA_NUM_PALETTE_REGS
188 /* Base of scratch registers */
189 /* Next reg[SVGA_REG_SCRATCH_SIZE] registers exist for scratch usage:
190 First 4 are reserved for VESA BIOS Extension; any remaining are for
191 the use of the current SVGA driver. */
192 };
193
194
195 /*
196 * Guest memory regions (GMRs):
197 *
198 * This is a new memory mapping feature available in SVGA devices
199 * which have the SVGA_CAP_GMR bit set. Previously, there were two
200 * fixed memory regions available with which to share data between the
201 * device and the driver: the FIFO ('MEM') and the framebuffer. GMRs
202 * are our name for an extensible way of providing arbitrary DMA
203 * buffers for use between the driver and the SVGA device. They are a
204 * new alternative to framebuffer memory, usable for both 2D and 3D
205 * graphics operations.
206 *
207 * Since GMR mapping must be done synchronously with guest CPU
208 * execution, we use a new pair of SVGA registers:
209 *
210 * SVGA_REG_GMR_ID --
211 *
212 * Read/write.
213 * This register holds the 32-bit ID (a small positive integer)
214 * of a GMR to create, delete, or redefine. Writing this register
215 * has no side-effects.
216 *
217 * SVGA_REG_GMR_DESCRIPTOR --
218 *
219 * Write-only.
220 * Writing this register will create, delete, or redefine the GMR
221 * specified by the above ID register. If this register is zero,
222 * the GMR is deleted. Any pointers into this GMR (including those
223 * currently being processed by FIFO commands) will be
224 * synchronously invalidated.
225 *
226 * If this register is nonzero, it must be the physical page
227 * number (PPN) of a data structure which describes the physical
228 * layout of the memory region this GMR should describe. The
229 * descriptor structure will be read synchronously by the SVGA
230 * device when this register is written. The descriptor need not
231 * remain allocated for the lifetime of the GMR.
232 *
233 * The guest driver should write SVGA_REG_GMR_ID first, then
234 * SVGA_REG_GMR_DESCRIPTOR.
235 *
236 * SVGA_REG_GMR_MAX_IDS --
237 *
238 * Read-only.
239 * The SVGA device may choose to support a maximum number of
240 * user-defined GMR IDs. This register holds the number of supported
241 * IDs. (The maximum supported ID plus 1)
242 *
243 * SVGA_REG_GMR_MAX_DESCRIPTOR_LENGTH --
244 *
245 * Read-only.
246 * The SVGA device may choose to put a limit on the total number
247 * of SVGAGuestMemDescriptor structures it will read when defining
248 * a single GMR.
249 *
250 * The descriptor structure is an array of SVGAGuestMemDescriptor
251 * structures. Each structure may do one of three things:
252 *
253 * - Terminate the GMR descriptor list.
254 * (ppn==0, numPages==0)
255 *
256 * - Add a PPN or range of PPNs to the GMR's virtual address space.
257 * (ppn != 0, numPages != 0)
258 *
259 * - Provide the PPN of the next SVGAGuestMemDescriptor, in order to
260 * support multi-page GMR descriptor tables without forcing the
261 * driver to allocate physically contiguous memory.
262 * (ppn != 0, numPages == 0)
263 *
264 * Note that each physical page of SVGAGuestMemDescriptor structures
265 * can describe at least 2MB of guest memory. If the driver needs to
266 * use more than one page of descriptor structures, it must use one of
267 * its SVGAGuestMemDescriptors to point to an additional page. The
268 * device will never automatically cross a page boundary.
269 *
270 * Once the driver has described a GMR, it is immediately available
271 * for use via any FIFO command that uses an SVGAGuestPtr structure.
272 * These pointers include a GMR identifier plus an offset into that
273 * GMR.
274 *
275 * The driver must check the SVGA_CAP_GMR bit before using the GMR
276 * registers.
277 */
278
279 /*
280 * Special GMR IDs, allowing SVGAGuestPtrs to point to framebuffer
281 * memory as well. In the future, these IDs could even be used to
282 * allow legacy memory regions to be redefined by the guest as GMRs.
283 *
284 * Using the guest framebuffer (GFB) at BAR1 for general purpose DMA
285 * is being phased out. Please try to use user-defined GMRs whenever
286 * possible.
287 */
288 #define SVGA_GMR_NULL ((uint32) -1)
289 #define SVGA_GMR_FRAMEBUFFER ((uint32) -2) /* Guest Framebuffer (GFB) */
290
291 typedef
292 struct SVGAGuestMemDescriptor {
293 uint32 ppn;
294 uint32 numPages;
295 } SVGAGuestMemDescriptor;
296
297 typedef
298 struct SVGAGuestPtr {
299 uint32 gmrId;
300 uint32 offset;
301 } SVGAGuestPtr;
302
303
304 /*
305 * SVGAGMRImageFormat --
306 *
307 * This is a packed representation of the source 2D image format
308 * for a GMR-to-screen blit. Currently it is defined as an encoding
309 * of the screen's color depth and bits-per-pixel, however, 16 bits
310 * are reserved for future use to identify other encodings (such as
311 * RGBA or higher-precision images).
312 *
313 * Currently supported formats:
314 *
315 * bpp depth Format Name
316 * --- ----- -----------
317 * 32 24 32-bit BGRX
318 * 24 24 24-bit BGR
319 * 16 16 RGB 5-6-5
320 * 16 15 RGB 5-5-5
321 *
322 */
323
324 typedef
325 struct SVGAGMRImageFormat {
326 union {
327 struct {
328 uint32 bitsPerPixel : 8;
329 uint32 colorDepth : 8;
330 uint32 reserved : 16; /* Must be zero */
331 };
332
333 uint32 value;
334 };
335 } SVGAGMRImageFormat;
336
337 typedef
338 struct SVGAGuestImage {
339 SVGAGuestPtr ptr;
340
341 /*
342 * A note on interpretation of pitch: This value of pitch is the
343 * number of bytes between vertically adjacent image
344 * blocks. Normally this is the number of bytes between the first
345 * pixel of two adjacent scanlines. With compressed textures,
346 * however, this may represent the number of bytes between
347 * compression blocks rather than between rows of pixels.
348 *
349 * XXX: Compressed textures currently must be tightly packed in guest memory.
350 *
351 * If the image is 1-dimensional, pitch is ignored.
352 *
353 * If 'pitch' is zero, the SVGA3D device calculates a pitch value
354 * assuming each row of blocks is tightly packed.
355 */
356 uint32 pitch;
357 } SVGAGuestImage;
358
359 /*
360 * SVGAColorBGRX --
361 *
362 * A 24-bit color format (BGRX), which does not depend on the
363 * format of the legacy guest framebuffer (GFB) or the current
364 * GMRFB state.
365 */
366
367 typedef
368 struct SVGAColorBGRX {
369 union {
370 struct {
371 uint32 b : 8;
372 uint32 g : 8;
373 uint32 r : 8;
374 uint32 x : 8; /* Unused */
375 };
376
377 uint32 value;
378 };
379 } SVGAColorBGRX;
380
381
382 /*
383 * SVGASignedRect --
384 * SVGASignedPoint --
385 *
386 * Signed rectangle and point primitives. These are used by the new
387 * 2D primitives for drawing to Screen Objects, which can occupy a
388 * signed virtual coordinate space.
389 *
390 * SVGASignedRect specifies a half-open interval: the (left, top)
391 * pixel is part of the rectangle, but the (right, bottom) pixel is
392 * not.
393 */
394
395 typedef
396 struct SVGASignedRect {
397 int32 left;
398 int32 top;
399 int32 right;
400 int32 bottom;
401 } SVGASignedRect;
402
403 typedef
404 struct SVGASignedPoint {
405 int32 x;
406 int32 y;
407 } SVGASignedPoint;
408
409
410 /*
411 * Capabilities
412 *
413 * Note the holes in the bitfield. Missing bits have been deprecated,
414 * and must not be reused. Those capabilities will never be reported
415 * by new versions of the SVGA device.
416 *
417 * SVGA_CAP_GMR2 --
418 * Provides asynchronous commands to define and remap guest memory
419 * regions. Adds device registers SVGA_REG_GMRS_MAX_PAGES and
420 * SVGA_REG_MEMORY_SIZE.
421 *
422 * SVGA_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT_2 --
423 * Allow screen object support, and require backing stores from the
424 * guest for each screen object.
425 */
426
427 #define SVGA_CAP_NONE 0x00000000
428 #define SVGA_CAP_RECT_COPY 0x00000002
429 #define SVGA_CAP_CURSOR 0x00000020
430 #define SVGA_CAP_CURSOR_BYPASS 0x00000040 /* Legacy (Use Cursor Bypass 3 instead) */
431 #define SVGA_CAP_CURSOR_BYPASS_2 0x00000080 /* Legacy (Use Cursor Bypass 3 instead) */
432 #define SVGA_CAP_8BIT_EMULATION 0x00000100
433 #define SVGA_CAP_ALPHA_CURSOR 0x00000200
434 #define SVGA_CAP_3D 0x00004000
435 #define SVGA_CAP_EXTENDED_FIFO 0x00008000
436 #define SVGA_CAP_MULTIMON 0x00010000 /* Legacy multi-monitor support */
437 #define SVGA_CAP_PITCHLOCK 0x00020000
438 #define SVGA_CAP_IRQMASK 0x00040000
439 #define SVGA_CAP_DISPLAY_TOPOLOGY 0x00080000 /* Legacy multi-monitor support */
440 #define SVGA_CAP_GMR 0x00100000
441 #define SVGA_CAP_TRACES 0x00200000
442 #define SVGA_CAP_GMR2 0x00400000
443 #define SVGA_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT_2 0x00800000
444 #define SVGA_CAP_COMMAND_BUFFERS 0x01000000
445 #define SVGA_CAP_DEAD1 0x02000000
446 #define SVGA_CAP_CMD_BUFFERS_2 0x04000000
447 #define SVGA_CAP_GBOBJECTS 0x08000000
448
449 /*
450 * FIFO register indices.
451 *
452 * The FIFO is a chunk of device memory mapped into guest physmem. It
453 * is always treated as 32-bit words.
454 *
455 * The guest driver gets to decide how to partition it between
456 * - FIFO registers (there are always at least 4, specifying where the
457 * following data area is and how much data it contains; there may be
458 * more registers following these, depending on the FIFO protocol
459 * version in use)
460 * - FIFO data, written by the guest and slurped out by the VMX.
461 * These indices are 32-bit word offsets into the FIFO.
462 */
463
464 enum {
465 /*
466 * Block 1 (basic registers): The originally defined FIFO registers.
467 * These exist and are valid for all versions of the FIFO protocol.
468 */
469
470 SVGA_FIFO_MIN = 0,
471 SVGA_FIFO_MAX, /* The distance from MIN to MAX must be at least 10K */
472 SVGA_FIFO_NEXT_CMD,
473 SVGA_FIFO_STOP,
474
475 /*
476 * Block 2 (extended registers): Mandatory registers for the extended
477 * FIFO. These exist if the SVGA caps register includes
478 * SVGA_CAP_EXTENDED_FIFO; some of them are valid only if their
479 * associated capability bit is enabled.
480 *
481 * Note that when originally defined, SVGA_CAP_EXTENDED_FIFO implied
482 * support only for (FIFO registers) CAPABILITIES, FLAGS, and FENCE.
483 * This means that the guest has to test individually (in most cases
484 * using FIFO caps) for the presence of registers after this; the VMX
485 * can define "extended FIFO" to mean whatever it wants, and currently
486 * won't enable it unless there's room for that set and much more.
487 */
488
489 SVGA_FIFO_CAPABILITIES = 4,
490 SVGA_FIFO_FLAGS,
491 /* Valid with SVGA_FIFO_CAP_FENCE: */
492 SVGA_FIFO_FENCE,
493
494 /*
495 * Block 3a (optional extended registers): Additional registers for the
496 * extended FIFO, whose presence isn't actually implied by
497 * SVGA_CAP_EXTENDED_FIFO; these exist if SVGA_FIFO_MIN is high enough to
498 * leave room for them.
499 *
500 * These in block 3a, the VMX currently considers mandatory for the
501 * extended FIFO.
502 */
503
504 /* Valid if exists (i.e. if extended FIFO enabled): */
505 SVGA_FIFO_3D_HWVERSION, /* See SVGA3dHardwareVersion in svga3d_reg.h */
506 /* Valid with SVGA_FIFO_CAP_PITCHLOCK: */
507 SVGA_FIFO_PITCHLOCK,
508
509 /* Valid with SVGA_FIFO_CAP_CURSOR_BYPASS_3: */
510 SVGA_FIFO_CURSOR_ON, /* Cursor bypass 3 show/hide register */
511 SVGA_FIFO_CURSOR_X, /* Cursor bypass 3 x register */
512 SVGA_FIFO_CURSOR_Y, /* Cursor bypass 3 y register */
513 SVGA_FIFO_CURSOR_COUNT, /* Incremented when any of the other 3 change */
514 SVGA_FIFO_CURSOR_LAST_UPDATED,/* Last time the host updated the cursor */
515
516 /* Valid with SVGA_FIFO_CAP_RESERVE: */
517 SVGA_FIFO_RESERVED, /* Bytes past NEXT_CMD with real contents */
518
519 /*
520 * Valid with SVGA_FIFO_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT or SVGA_FIFO_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT_2:
521 *
522 * By default this is SVGA_ID_INVALID, to indicate that the cursor
523 * coordinates are specified relative to the virtual root. If this
524 * is set to a specific screen ID, cursor position is reinterpreted
525 * as a signed offset relative to that screen's origin.
526 */
527 SVGA_FIFO_CURSOR_SCREEN_ID,
528
529 /*
530 * Valid with SVGA_FIFO_CAP_DEAD
531 *
532 * An arbitrary value written by the host, drivers should not use it.
533 */
534 SVGA_FIFO_DEAD,
535
536 /*
537 * Valid with SVGA_FIFO_CAP_3D_HWVERSION_REVISED:
538 *
539 * Contains 3D HWVERSION (see SVGA3dHardwareVersion in svga3d_reg.h)
540 * on platforms that can enforce graphics resource limits.
541 */
542 SVGA_FIFO_3D_HWVERSION_REVISED,
543
544 /*
545 * XXX: The gap here, up until SVGA_FIFO_3D_CAPS, can be used for new
546 * registers, but this must be done carefully and with judicious use of
547 * capability bits, since comparisons based on SVGA_FIFO_MIN aren't
548 * enough to tell you whether the register exists: we've shipped drivers
549 * and products that used SVGA_FIFO_3D_CAPS but didn't know about some of
550 * the earlier ones. The actual order of introduction was:
551 * - PITCHLOCK
552 * - 3D_CAPS
553 * - CURSOR_* (cursor bypass 3)
554 * - RESERVED
555 * So, code that wants to know whether it can use any of the
556 * aforementioned registers, or anything else added after PITCHLOCK and
557 * before 3D_CAPS, needs to reason about something other than
558 * SVGA_FIFO_MIN.
559 */
560
561 /*
562 * 3D caps block space; valid with 3D hardware version >=
563 * SVGA3D_HWVERSION_WS6_B1.
564 */
565 SVGA_FIFO_3D_CAPS = 32,
566 SVGA_FIFO_3D_CAPS_LAST = 32 + 255,
567
568 /*
569 * End of VMX's current definition of "extended-FIFO registers".
570 * Registers before here are always enabled/disabled as a block; either
571 * the extended FIFO is enabled and includes all preceding registers, or
572 * it's disabled entirely.
573 *
574 * Block 3b (truly optional extended registers): Additional registers for
575 * the extended FIFO, which the VMX already knows how to enable and
576 * disable with correct granularity.
577 *
578 * Registers after here exist if and only if the guest SVGA driver
579 * sets SVGA_FIFO_MIN high enough to leave room for them.
580 */
581
582 /* Valid if register exists: */
583 SVGA_FIFO_GUEST_3D_HWVERSION, /* Guest driver's 3D version */
584 SVGA_FIFO_FENCE_GOAL, /* Matching target for SVGA_IRQFLAG_FENCE_GOAL */
585 SVGA_FIFO_BUSY, /* See "FIFO Synchronization Registers" */
586
587 /*
588 * Always keep this last. This defines the maximum number of
589 * registers we know about. At power-on, this value is placed in
590 * the SVGA_REG_MEM_REGS register, and we expect the guest driver
591 * to allocate this much space in FIFO memory for registers.
592 */
593 SVGA_FIFO_NUM_REGS
594 };
595
596
597 /*
598 * Definition of registers included in extended FIFO support.
599 *
600 * The guest SVGA driver gets to allocate the FIFO between registers
601 * and data. It must always allocate at least 4 registers, but old
602 * drivers stopped there.
603 *
604 * The VMX will enable extended FIFO support if and only if the guest
605 * left enough room for all registers defined as part of the mandatory
606 * set for the extended FIFO.
607 *
608 * Note that the guest drivers typically allocate the FIFO only at
609 * initialization time, not at mode switches, so it's likely that the
610 * number of FIFO registers won't change without a reboot.
611 *
612 * All registers less than this value are guaranteed to be present if
613 * svgaUser->fifo.extended is set. Any later registers must be tested
614 * individually for compatibility at each use (in the VMX).
615 *
616 * This value is used only by the VMX, so it can change without
617 * affecting driver compatibility; keep it that way?
618 */
619 #define SVGA_FIFO_EXTENDED_MANDATORY_REGS (SVGA_FIFO_3D_CAPS_LAST + 1)
620
621
622 /*
623 * FIFO Synchronization Registers
624 *
625 * This explains the relationship between the various FIFO
626 * sync-related registers in IOSpace and in FIFO space.
627 *
628 * SVGA_REG_SYNC --
629 *
630 * The SYNC register can be used in two different ways by the guest:
631 *
632 * 1. If the guest wishes to fully sync (drain) the FIFO,
633 * it will write once to SYNC then poll on the BUSY
634 * register. The FIFO is sync'ed once BUSY is zero.
635 *
636 * 2. If the guest wants to asynchronously wake up the host,
637 * it will write once to SYNC without polling on BUSY.
638 * Ideally it will do this after some new commands have
639 * been placed in the FIFO, and after reading a zero
640 * from SVGA_FIFO_BUSY.
641 *
642 * (1) is the original behaviour that SYNC was designed to
643 * support. Originally, a write to SYNC would implicitly
644 * trigger a read from BUSY. This causes us to synchronously
645 * process the FIFO.
646 *
647 * This behaviour has since been changed so that writing SYNC
648 * will *not* implicitly cause a read from BUSY. Instead, it
649 * makes a channel call which asynchronously wakes up the MKS
650 * thread.
651 *
652 * New guests can use this new behaviour to implement (2)
653 * efficiently. This lets guests get the host's attention
654 * without waiting for the MKS to poll, which gives us much
655 * better CPU utilization on SMP hosts and on UP hosts while
656 * we're blocked on the host GPU.
657 *
658 * Old guests shouldn't notice the behaviour change. SYNC was
659 * never guaranteed to process the entire FIFO, since it was
660 * bounded to a particular number of CPU cycles. Old guests will
661 * still loop on the BUSY register until the FIFO is empty.
662 *
663 * Writing to SYNC currently has the following side-effects:
664 *
665 * - Sets SVGA_REG_BUSY to TRUE (in the monitor)
666 * - Asynchronously wakes up the MKS thread for FIFO processing
667 * - The value written to SYNC is recorded as a "reason", for
668 * stats purposes.
669 *
670 * If SVGA_FIFO_BUSY is available, drivers are advised to only
671 * write to SYNC if SVGA_FIFO_BUSY is FALSE. Drivers should set
672 * SVGA_FIFO_BUSY to TRUE after writing to SYNC. The MKS will
673 * eventually set SVGA_FIFO_BUSY on its own, but this approach
674 * lets the driver avoid sending multiple asynchronous wakeup
675 * messages to the MKS thread.
676 *
677 * SVGA_REG_BUSY --
678 *
679 * This register is set to TRUE when SVGA_REG_SYNC is written,
680 * and it reads as FALSE when the FIFO has been completely
681 * drained.
682 *
683 * Every read from this register causes us to synchronously
684 * process FIFO commands. There is no guarantee as to how many
685 * commands each read will process.
686 *
687 * CPU time spent processing FIFO commands will be billed to
688 * the guest.
689 *
690 * New drivers should avoid using this register unless they
691 * need to guarantee that the FIFO is completely drained. It
692 * is overkill for performing a sync-to-fence. Older drivers
693 * will use this register for any type of synchronization.
694 *
695 * SVGA_FIFO_BUSY --
696 *
697 * This register is a fast way for the guest driver to check
698 * whether the FIFO is already being processed. It reads and
699 * writes at normal RAM speeds, with no monitor intervention.
700 *
701 * If this register reads as TRUE, the host is guaranteeing that
702 * any new commands written into the FIFO will be noticed before
703 * the MKS goes back to sleep.
704 *
705 * If this register reads as FALSE, no such guarantee can be
706 * made.
707 *
708 * The guest should use this register to quickly determine
709 * whether or not it needs to wake up the host. If the guest
710 * just wrote a command or group of commands that it would like
711 * the host to begin processing, it should:
712 *
713 * 1. Read SVGA_FIFO_BUSY. If it reads as TRUE, no further
714 * action is necessary.
715 *
716 * 2. Write TRUE to SVGA_FIFO_BUSY. This informs future guest
717 * code that we've already sent a SYNC to the host and we
718 * don't need to send a duplicate.
719 *
720 * 3. Write a reason to SVGA_REG_SYNC. This will send an
721 * asynchronous wakeup to the MKS thread.
722 */
723
724
725 /*
726 * FIFO Capabilities
727 *
728 * Fence -- Fence register and command are supported
729 * Accel Front -- Front buffer only commands are supported
730 * Pitch Lock -- Pitch lock register is supported
731 * Video -- SVGA Video overlay units are supported
732 * Escape -- Escape command is supported
733 *
734 * XXX: Add longer descriptions for each capability, including a list
735 * of the new features that each capability provides.
736 *
737 * SVGA_FIFO_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT --
738 *
739 * Provides dynamic multi-screen rendering, for improved Unity and
740 * multi-monitor modes. With Screen Object, the guest can
741 * dynamically create and destroy 'screens', which can represent
742 * Unity windows or virtual monitors. Screen Object also provides
743 * strong guarantees that DMA operations happen only when
744 * guest-initiated. Screen Object deprecates the BAR1 guest
745 * framebuffer (GFB) and all commands that work only with the GFB.
746 *
747 * New registers:
748 * FIFO_CURSOR_SCREEN_ID, VIDEO_DATA_GMRID, VIDEO_DST_SCREEN_ID
749 *
750 * New 2D commands:
751 * DEFINE_SCREEN, DESTROY_SCREEN, DEFINE_GMRFB, BLIT_GMRFB_TO_SCREEN,
752 * BLIT_SCREEN_TO_GMRFB, ANNOTATION_FILL, ANNOTATION_COPY
753 *
754 * New 3D commands:
755 * BLIT_SURFACE_TO_SCREEN
756 *
757 * New guarantees:
758 *
759 * - The host will not read or write guest memory, including the GFB,
760 * except when explicitly initiated by a DMA command.
761 *
762 * - All DMA, including legacy DMA like UPDATE and PRESENT_READBACK,
763 * is guaranteed to complete before any subsequent FENCEs.
764 *
765 * - All legacy commands which affect a Screen (UPDATE, PRESENT,
766 * PRESENT_READBACK) as well as new Screen blit commands will
767 * all behave consistently as blits, and memory will be read
768 * or written in FIFO order.
769 *
770 * For example, if you PRESENT from one SVGA3D surface to multiple
771 * places on the screen, the data copied will always be from the
772 * SVGA3D surface at the time the PRESENT was issued in the FIFO.
773 * This was not necessarily true on devices without Screen Object.
774 *
775 * This means that on devices that support Screen Object, the
776 * PRESENT_READBACK command should not be necessary unless you
777 * actually want to read back the results of 3D rendering into
778 * system memory. (And for that, the BLIT_SCREEN_TO_GMRFB
779 * command provides a strict superset of functionality.)
780 *
781 * - When a screen is resized, either using Screen Object commands or
782 * legacy multimon registers, its contents are preserved.
783 *
784 * SVGA_FIFO_CAP_GMR2 --
785 *
786 * Provides new commands to define and remap guest memory regions (GMR).
787 *
788 * New 2D commands:
789 * DEFINE_GMR2, REMAP_GMR2.
790 *
791 * SVGA_FIFO_CAP_3D_HWVERSION_REVISED --
792 *
793 * Indicates new register SVGA_FIFO_3D_HWVERSION_REVISED exists.
794 * This register may replace SVGA_FIFO_3D_HWVERSION on platforms
795 * that enforce graphics resource limits. This allows the platform
796 * to clear SVGA_FIFO_3D_HWVERSION and disable 3D in legacy guest
797 * drivers that do not limit their resources.
798 *
799 * Note this is an alias to SVGA_FIFO_CAP_GMR2 because these indicators
800 * are codependent (and thus we use a single capability bit).
801 *
802 * SVGA_FIFO_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT_2 --
803 *
804 * Modifies the DEFINE_SCREEN command to include a guest provided
805 * backing store in GMR memory and the bytesPerLine for the backing
806 * store. This capability requires the use of a backing store when
807 * creating screen objects. However if SVGA_FIFO_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT
808 * is present then backing stores are optional.
809 *
810 * SVGA_FIFO_CAP_DEAD --
811 *
812 * Drivers should not use this cap bit. This cap bit can not be
813 * reused since some hosts already expose it.
814 */
815
816 #define SVGA_FIFO_CAP_NONE 0
817 #define SVGA_FIFO_CAP_FENCE (1<<0)
818 #define SVGA_FIFO_CAP_ACCELFRONT (1<<1)
819 #define SVGA_FIFO_CAP_PITCHLOCK (1<<2)
820 #define SVGA_FIFO_CAP_VIDEO (1<<3)
821 #define SVGA_FIFO_CAP_CURSOR_BYPASS_3 (1<<4)
822 #define SVGA_FIFO_CAP_ESCAPE (1<<5)
823 #define SVGA_FIFO_CAP_RESERVE (1<<6)
824 #define SVGA_FIFO_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT (1<<7)
825 #define SVGA_FIFO_CAP_GMR2 (1<<8)
826 #define SVGA_FIFO_CAP_3D_HWVERSION_REVISED SVGA_FIFO_CAP_GMR2
827 #define SVGA_FIFO_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT_2 (1<<9)
828 #define SVGA_FIFO_CAP_DEAD (1<<10)
829
830
831 /*
832 * FIFO Flags
833 *
834 * Accel Front -- Driver should use front buffer only commands
835 */
836
837 #define SVGA_FIFO_FLAG_NONE 0
838 #define SVGA_FIFO_FLAG_ACCELFRONT (1<<0)
839 #define SVGA_FIFO_FLAG_RESERVED (1<<31) /* Internal use only */
840
841 /*
842 * FIFO reservation sentinel value
843 */
844
845 #define SVGA_FIFO_RESERVED_UNKNOWN 0xffffffff
846
847
848 /*
849 * Video overlay support
850 */
851
852 #define SVGA_NUM_OVERLAY_UNITS 32
853
854
855 /*
856 * Video capabilities that the guest is currently using
857 */
858
859 #define SVGA_VIDEO_FLAG_COLORKEY 0x0001
860
861
862 /*
863 * Offsets for the video overlay registers
864 */
865
866 enum {
867 SVGA_VIDEO_ENABLED = 0,
868 SVGA_VIDEO_FLAGS,
869 SVGA_VIDEO_DATA_OFFSET,
870 SVGA_VIDEO_FORMAT,
871 SVGA_VIDEO_COLORKEY,
872 SVGA_VIDEO_SIZE, /* Deprecated */
873 SVGA_VIDEO_WIDTH,
874 SVGA_VIDEO_HEIGHT,
875 SVGA_VIDEO_SRC_X,
876 SVGA_VIDEO_SRC_Y,
877 SVGA_VIDEO_SRC_WIDTH,
878 SVGA_VIDEO_SRC_HEIGHT,
879 SVGA_VIDEO_DST_X, /* Signed int32 */
880 SVGA_VIDEO_DST_Y, /* Signed int32 */
881 SVGA_VIDEO_DST_WIDTH,
882 SVGA_VIDEO_DST_HEIGHT,
883 SVGA_VIDEO_PITCH_1,
884 SVGA_VIDEO_PITCH_2,
885 SVGA_VIDEO_PITCH_3,
886 SVGA_VIDEO_DATA_GMRID, /* Optional, defaults to SVGA_GMR_FRAMEBUFFER */
887 SVGA_VIDEO_DST_SCREEN_ID, /* Optional, defaults to virtual coords (SVGA_ID_INVALID) */
888 SVGA_VIDEO_NUM_REGS
889 };
890
891
892 /*
893 * SVGA Overlay Units
894 *
895 * width and height relate to the entire source video frame.
896 * srcX, srcY, srcWidth and srcHeight represent subset of the source
897 * video frame to be displayed.
898 */
899
900 typedef struct SVGAOverlayUnit {
901 uint32 enabled;
902 uint32 flags;
903 uint32 dataOffset;
904 uint32 format;
905 uint32 colorKey;
906 uint32 size;
907 uint32 width;
908 uint32 height;
909 uint32 srcX;
910 uint32 srcY;
911 uint32 srcWidth;
912 uint32 srcHeight;
913 int32 dstX;
914 int32 dstY;
915 uint32 dstWidth;
916 uint32 dstHeight;
917 uint32 pitches[3];
918 uint32 dataGMRId;
919 uint32 dstScreenId;
920 } SVGAOverlayUnit;
921
922
923 /*
924 * SVGAScreenObject --
925 *
926 * This is a new way to represent a guest's multi-monitor screen or
927 * Unity window. Screen objects are only supported if the
928 * SVGA_FIFO_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT capability bit is set.
929 *
930 * If Screen Objects are supported, they can be used to fully
931 * replace the functionality provided by the framebuffer registers
932 * (SVGA_REG_WIDTH, HEIGHT, etc.) and by SVGA_CAP_DISPLAY_TOPOLOGY.
933 *
934 * The screen object is a struct with guaranteed binary
935 * compatibility. New flags can be added, and the struct may grow,
936 * but existing fields must retain their meaning.
937 *
938 * Added with SVGA_FIFO_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT_2 are required fields of
939 * a SVGAGuestPtr that is used to back the screen contents. This
940 * memory must come from the GFB. The guest is not allowed to
941 * access the memory and doing so will have undefined results. The
942 * backing store is required to be page aligned and the size is
943 * padded to the next page boundry. The number of pages is:
944 * (bytesPerLine * size.width * 4 + PAGE_SIZE - 1) / PAGE_SIZE
945 *
946 * The pitch in the backingStore is required to be at least large
947 * enough to hold a 32bbp scanline. It is recommended that the
948 * driver pad bytesPerLine for a potential performance win.
949 *
950 * The cloneCount field is treated as a hint from the guest that
951 * the user wants this display to be cloned, countCount times. A
952 * value of zero means no cloning should happen.
953 */
954
955 #define SVGA_SCREEN_MUST_BE_SET (1 << 0) /* Must be set or results undefined */
956 #define SVGA_SCREEN_HAS_ROOT SVGA_SCREEN_MUST_BE_SET /* Deprecated */
957 #define SVGA_SCREEN_IS_PRIMARY (1 << 1) /* Guest considers this screen to be 'primary' */
958 #define SVGA_SCREEN_FULLSCREEN_HINT (1 << 2) /* Guest is running a fullscreen app here */
959
960 /*
961 * Added with SVGA_FIFO_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT_2. When the screen is
962 * deactivated the base layer is defined to lose all contents and
963 * become black. When a screen is deactivated the backing store is
964 * optional. When set backingPtr and bytesPerLine will be ignored.
965 */
966 #define SVGA_SCREEN_DEACTIVATE (1 << 3)
967
968 /*
969 * Added with SVGA_FIFO_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT_2. When this flag is set
970 * the screen contents will be outputted as all black to the user
971 * though the base layer contents is preserved. The screen base layer
972 * can still be read and written to like normal though the no visible
973 * effect will be seen by the user. When the flag is changed the
974 * screen will be blanked or redrawn to the current contents as needed
975 * without any extra commands from the driver. This flag only has an
976 * effect when the screen is not deactivated.
977 */
978 #define SVGA_SCREEN_BLANKING (1 << 4)
979
980 typedef
981 struct SVGAScreenObject {
982 uint32 structSize; /* sizeof(SVGAScreenObject) */
983 uint32 id;
984 uint32 flags;
985 struct {
986 uint32 width;
987 uint32 height;
988 } size;
989 struct {
990 int32 x;
991 int32 y;
992 } root;
993
994 /*
995 * Added and required by SVGA_FIFO_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT_2, optional
996 * with SVGA_FIFO_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT.
997 */
998 SVGAGuestImage backingStore;
999 uint32 cloneCount;
1000 } SVGAScreenObject;
1001
1002
1003 /*
1004 * Commands in the command FIFO:
1005 *
1006 * Command IDs defined below are used for the traditional 2D FIFO
1007 * communication (not all commands are available for all versions of the
1008 * SVGA FIFO protocol).
1009 *
1010 * Note the holes in the command ID numbers: These commands have been
1011 * deprecated, and the old IDs must not be reused.
1012 *
1013 * Command IDs from 1000 to 1999 are reserved for use by the SVGA3D
1014 * protocol.
1015 *
1016 * Each command's parameters are described by the comments and
1017 * structs below.
1018 */
1019
1020 typedef enum {
1021 SVGA_CMD_INVALID_CMD = 0,
1022 SVGA_CMD_UPDATE = 1,
1023 SVGA_CMD_RECT_COPY = 3,
1024 SVGA_CMD_DEFINE_CURSOR = 19,
1025 SVGA_CMD_DEFINE_ALPHA_CURSOR = 22,
1026 SVGA_CMD_UPDATE_VERBOSE = 25,
1027 SVGA_CMD_FRONT_ROP_FILL = 29,
1028 SVGA_CMD_FENCE = 30,
1029 SVGA_CMD_ESCAPE = 33,
1030 SVGA_CMD_DEFINE_SCREEN = 34,
1031 SVGA_CMD_DESTROY_SCREEN = 35,
1032 SVGA_CMD_DEFINE_GMRFB = 36,
1033 SVGA_CMD_BLIT_GMRFB_TO_SCREEN = 37,
1034 SVGA_CMD_BLIT_SCREEN_TO_GMRFB = 38,
1035 SVGA_CMD_ANNOTATION_FILL = 39,
1036 SVGA_CMD_ANNOTATION_COPY = 40,
1037 SVGA_CMD_DEFINE_GMR2 = 41,
1038 SVGA_CMD_REMAP_GMR2 = 42,
1039 SVGA_CMD_MAX
1040 } SVGAFifoCmdId;
1041
1042 #define SVGA_CMD_MAX_ARGS 64
1043
1044
1045 /*
1046 * SVGA_CMD_UPDATE --
1047 *
1048 * This is a DMA transfer which copies from the Guest Framebuffer
1049 * (GFB) at BAR1 + SVGA_REG_FB_OFFSET to any screens which
1050 * intersect with the provided virtual rectangle.
1051 *
1052 * This command does not support using arbitrary guest memory as a
1053 * data source- it only works with the pre-defined GFB memory.
1054 * This command also does not support signed virtual coordinates.
1055 * If you have defined screens (using SVGA_CMD_DEFINE_SCREEN) with
1056 * negative root x/y coordinates, the negative portion of those
1057 * screens will not be reachable by this command.
1058 *
1059 * This command is not necessary when using framebuffer
1060 * traces. Traces are automatically enabled if the SVGA FIFO is
1061 * disabled, and you may explicitly enable/disable traces using
1062 * SVGA_REG_TRACES. With traces enabled, any write to the GFB will
1063 * automatically act as if a subsequent SVGA_CMD_UPDATE was issued.
1064 *
1065 * Traces and SVGA_CMD_UPDATE are the only supported ways to render
1066 * pseudocolor screen updates. The newer Screen Object commands
1067 * only support true color formats.
1068 *
1069 * Availability:
1070 * Always available.
1071 */
1072
1073 typedef
1074 struct SVGAFifoCmdUpdate {
1075 uint32 x;
1076 uint32 y;
1077 uint32 width;
1078 uint32 height;
1079 } SVGAFifoCmdUpdate;
1080
1081
1082 /*
1083 * SVGA_CMD_RECT_COPY --
1084 *
1085 * Perform a rectangular DMA transfer from one area of the GFB to
1086 * another, and copy the result to any screens which intersect it.
1087 *
1088 * Availability:
1089 * SVGA_CAP_RECT_COPY
1090 */
1091
1092 typedef
1093 struct SVGAFifoCmdRectCopy {
1094 uint32 srcX;
1095 uint32 srcY;
1096 uint32 destX;
1097 uint32 destY;
1098 uint32 width;
1099 uint32 height;
1100 } SVGAFifoCmdRectCopy;
1101
1102
1103 /*
1104 * SVGA_CMD_DEFINE_CURSOR --
1105 *
1106 * Provide a new cursor image, as an AND/XOR mask.
1107 *
1108 * The recommended way to position the cursor overlay is by using
1109 * the SVGA_FIFO_CURSOR_* registers, supported by the
1110 * SVGA_FIFO_CAP_CURSOR_BYPASS_3 capability.
1111 *
1112 * Availability:
1113 * SVGA_CAP_CURSOR
1114 */
1115
1116 typedef
1117 struct SVGAFifoCmdDefineCursor {
1118 uint32 id; /* Reserved, must be zero. */
1119 uint32 hotspotX;
1120 uint32 hotspotY;
1121 uint32 width;
1122 uint32 height;
1123 uint32 andMaskDepth; /* Value must be 1 or equal to BITS_PER_PIXEL */
1124 uint32 xorMaskDepth; /* Value must be 1 or equal to BITS_PER_PIXEL */
1125 /*
1126 * Followed by scanline data for AND mask, then XOR mask.
1127 * Each scanline is padded to a 32-bit boundary.
1128 */
1129 } SVGAFifoCmdDefineCursor;
1130
1131
1132 /*
1133 * SVGA_CMD_DEFINE_ALPHA_CURSOR --
1134 *
1135 * Provide a new cursor image, in 32-bit BGRA format.
1136 *
1137 * The recommended way to position the cursor overlay is by using
1138 * the SVGA_FIFO_CURSOR_* registers, supported by the
1139 * SVGA_FIFO_CAP_CURSOR_BYPASS_3 capability.
1140 *
1141 * Availability:
1142 * SVGA_CAP_ALPHA_CURSOR
1143 */
1144
1145 typedef
1146 struct SVGAFifoCmdDefineAlphaCursor {
1147 uint32 id; /* Reserved, must be zero. */
1148 uint32 hotspotX;
1149 uint32 hotspotY;
1150 uint32 width;
1151 uint32 height;
1152 /* Followed by scanline data */
1153 } SVGAFifoCmdDefineAlphaCursor;
1154
1155
1156 /*
1157 * SVGA_CMD_UPDATE_VERBOSE --
1158 *
1159 * Just like SVGA_CMD_UPDATE, but also provide a per-rectangle
1160 * 'reason' value, an opaque cookie which is used by internal
1161 * debugging tools. Third party drivers should not use this
1162 * command.
1163 *
1164 * Availability:
1165 * SVGA_CAP_EXTENDED_FIFO
1166 */
1167
1168 typedef
1169 struct SVGAFifoCmdUpdateVerbose {
1170 uint32 x;
1171 uint32 y;
1172 uint32 width;
1173 uint32 height;
1174 uint32 reason;
1175 } SVGAFifoCmdUpdateVerbose;
1176
1177
1178 /*
1179 * SVGA_CMD_FRONT_ROP_FILL --
1180 *
1181 * This is a hint which tells the SVGA device that the driver has
1182 * just filled a rectangular region of the GFB with a solid
1183 * color. Instead of reading these pixels from the GFB, the device
1184 * can assume that they all equal 'color'. This is primarily used
1185 * for remote desktop protocols.
1186 *
1187 * Availability:
1188 * SVGA_FIFO_CAP_ACCELFRONT
1189 */
1190
1191 #define SVGA_ROP_COPY 0x03
1192
1193 typedef
1194 struct SVGAFifoCmdFrontRopFill {
1195 uint32 color; /* In the same format as the GFB */
1196 uint32 x;
1197 uint32 y;
1198 uint32 width;
1199 uint32 height;
1200 uint32 rop; /* Must be SVGA_ROP_COPY */
1201 } SVGAFifoCmdFrontRopFill;
1202
1203
1204 /*
1205 * SVGA_CMD_FENCE --
1206 *
1207 * Insert a synchronization fence. When the SVGA device reaches
1208 * this command, it will copy the 'fence' value into the
1209 * SVGA_FIFO_FENCE register. It will also compare the fence against
1210 * SVGA_FIFO_FENCE_GOAL. If the fence matches the goal and the
1211 * SVGA_IRQFLAG_FENCE_GOAL interrupt is enabled, the device will
1212 * raise this interrupt.
1213 *
1214 * Availability:
1215 * SVGA_FIFO_FENCE for this command,
1216 * SVGA_CAP_IRQMASK for SVGA_FIFO_FENCE_GOAL.
1217 */
1218
1219 typedef
1220 struct {
1221 uint32 fence;
1222 } SVGAFifoCmdFence;
1223
1224
1225 /*
1226 * SVGA_CMD_ESCAPE --
1227 *
1228 * Send an extended or vendor-specific variable length command.
1229 * This is used for video overlay, third party plugins, and
1230 * internal debugging tools. See svga_escape.h
1231 *
1232 * Availability:
1233 * SVGA_FIFO_CAP_ESCAPE
1234 */
1235
1236 typedef
1237 struct SVGAFifoCmdEscape {
1238 uint32 nsid;
1239 uint32 size;
1240 /* followed by 'size' bytes of data */
1241 } SVGAFifoCmdEscape;
1242
1243
1244 /*
1245 * SVGA_CMD_DEFINE_SCREEN --
1246 *
1247 * Define or redefine an SVGAScreenObject. See the description of
1248 * SVGAScreenObject above. The video driver is responsible for
1249 * generating new screen IDs. They should be small positive
1250 * integers. The virtual device will have an implementation
1251 * specific upper limit on the number of screen IDs
1252 * supported. Drivers are responsible for recycling IDs. The first
1253 * valid ID is zero.
1254 *
1255 * - Interaction with other registers:
1256 *
1257 * For backwards compatibility, when the GFB mode registers (WIDTH,
1258 * HEIGHT, PITCHLOCK, BITS_PER_PIXEL) are modified, the SVGA device
1259 * deletes all screens other than screen #0, and redefines screen
1260 * #0 according to the specified mode. Drivers that use
1261 * SVGA_CMD_DEFINE_SCREEN should destroy or redefine screen #0.
1262 *
1263 * If you use screen objects, do not use the legacy multi-mon
1264 * registers (SVGA_REG_NUM_GUEST_DISPLAYS, SVGA_REG_DISPLAY_*).
1265 *
1266 * Availability:
1267 * SVGA_FIFO_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT or SVGA_FIFO_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT_2
1268 */
1269
1270 typedef
1271 struct {
1272 SVGAScreenObject screen; /* Variable-length according to version */
1273 } SVGAFifoCmdDefineScreen;
1274
1275
1276 /*
1277 * SVGA_CMD_DESTROY_SCREEN --
1278 *
1279 * Destroy an SVGAScreenObject. Its ID is immediately available for
1280 * re-use.
1281 *
1282 * Availability:
1283 * SVGA_FIFO_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT or SVGA_FIFO_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT_2
1284 */
1285
1286 typedef
1287 struct {
1288 uint32 screenId;
1289 } SVGAFifoCmdDestroyScreen;
1290
1291
1292 /*
1293 * SVGA_CMD_DEFINE_GMRFB --
1294 *
1295 * This command sets a piece of SVGA device state called the
1296 * Guest Memory Region Framebuffer, or GMRFB. The GMRFB is a
1297 * piece of light-weight state which identifies the location and
1298 * format of an image in guest memory or in BAR1. The GMRFB has
1299 * an arbitrary size, and it doesn't need to match the geometry
1300 * of the GFB or any screen object.
1301 *
1302 * The GMRFB can be redefined as often as you like. You could
1303 * always use the same GMRFB, you could redefine it before
1304 * rendering from a different guest screen, or you could even
1305 * redefine it before every blit.
1306 *
1307 * There are multiple ways to use this command. The simplest way is
1308 * to use it to move the framebuffer either to elsewhere in the GFB
1309 * (BAR1) memory region, or to a user-defined GMR. This lets a
1310 * driver use a framebuffer allocated entirely out of normal system
1311 * memory, which we encourage.
1312 *
1313 * Another way to use this command is to set up a ring buffer of
1314 * updates in GFB memory. If a driver wants to ensure that no
1315 * frames are skipped by the SVGA device, it is important that the
1316 * driver not modify the source data for a blit until the device is
1317 * done processing the command. One efficient way to accomplish
1318 * this is to use a ring of small DMA buffers. Each buffer is used
1319 * for one blit, then we move on to the next buffer in the
1320 * ring. The FENCE mechanism is used to protect each buffer from
1321 * re-use until the device is finished with that buffer's
1322 * corresponding blit.
1323 *
1324 * This command does not affect the meaning of SVGA_CMD_UPDATE.
1325 * UPDATEs always occur from the legacy GFB memory area. This
1326 * command has no support for pseudocolor GMRFBs. Currently only
1327 * true-color 15, 16, and 24-bit depths are supported. Future
1328 * devices may expose capabilities for additional framebuffer
1329 * formats.
1330 *
1331 * The default GMRFB value is undefined. Drivers must always send
1332 * this command at least once before performing any blit from the
1333 * GMRFB.
1334 *
1335 * Availability:
1336 * SVGA_FIFO_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT or SVGA_FIFO_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT_2
1337 */
1338
1339 typedef
1340 struct {
1341 SVGAGuestPtr ptr;
1342 uint32 bytesPerLine;
1343 SVGAGMRImageFormat format;
1344 } SVGAFifoCmdDefineGMRFB;
1345
1346
1347 /*
1348 * SVGA_CMD_BLIT_GMRFB_TO_SCREEN --
1349 *
1350 * This is a guest-to-host blit. It performs a DMA operation to
1351 * copy a rectangular region of pixels from the current GMRFB to
1352 * one or more Screen Objects.
1353 *
1354 * The destination coordinate may be specified relative to a
1355 * screen's origin (if a screen ID is specified) or relative to the
1356 * virtual coordinate system's origin (if the screen ID is
1357 * SVGA_ID_INVALID). The actual destination may span zero or more
1358 * screens, in the case of a virtual destination rect or a rect
1359 * which extends off the edge of the specified screen.
1360 *
1361 * This command writes to the screen's "base layer": the underlying
1362 * framebuffer which exists below any cursor or video overlays. No
1363 * action is necessary to explicitly hide or update any overlays
1364 * which exist on top of the updated region.
1365 *
1366 * The SVGA device is guaranteed to finish reading from the GMRFB
1367 * by the time any subsequent FENCE commands are reached.
1368 *
1369 * This command consumes an annotation. See the
1370 * SVGA_CMD_ANNOTATION_* commands for details.
1371 *
1372 * Availability:
1373 * SVGA_FIFO_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT or SVGA_FIFO_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT_2
1374 */
1375
1376 typedef
1377 struct {
1378 SVGASignedPoint srcOrigin;
1379 SVGASignedRect destRect;
1380 uint32 destScreenId;
1381 } SVGAFifoCmdBlitGMRFBToScreen;
1382
1383
1384 /*
1385 * SVGA_CMD_BLIT_SCREEN_TO_GMRFB --
1386 *
1387 * This is a host-to-guest blit. It performs a DMA operation to
1388 * copy a rectangular region of pixels from a single Screen Object
1389 * back to the current GMRFB.
1390 *
1391 * Usage note: This command should be used rarely. It will
1392 * typically be inefficient, but it is necessary for some types of
1393 * synchronization between 3D (GPU) and 2D (CPU) rendering into
1394 * overlapping areas of a screen.
1395 *
1396 * The source coordinate is specified relative to a screen's
1397 * origin. The provided screen ID must be valid. If any parameters
1398 * are invalid, the resulting pixel values are undefined.
1399 *
1400 * This command reads the screen's "base layer". Overlays like
1401 * video and cursor are not included, but any data which was sent
1402 * using a blit-to-screen primitive will be available, no matter
1403 * whether the data's original source was the GMRFB or the 3D
1404 * acceleration hardware.
1405 *
1406 * Note that our guest-to-host blits and host-to-guest blits aren't
1407 * symmetric in their current implementation. While the parameters
1408 * are identical, host-to-guest blits are a lot less featureful.
1409 * They do not support clipping: If the source parameters don't
1410 * fully fit within a screen, the blit fails. They must originate
1411 * from exactly one screen. Virtual coordinates are not directly
1412 * supported.
1413 *
1414 * Host-to-guest blits do support the same set of GMRFB formats
1415 * offered by guest-to-host blits.
1416 *
1417 * The SVGA device is guaranteed to finish writing to the GMRFB by
1418 * the time any subsequent FENCE commands are reached.
1419 *
1420 * Availability:
1421 * SVGA_FIFO_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT or SVGA_FIFO_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT_2
1422 */
1423
1424 typedef
1425 struct {
1426 SVGASignedPoint destOrigin;
1427 SVGASignedRect srcRect;
1428 uint32 srcScreenId;
1429 } SVGAFifoCmdBlitScreenToGMRFB;
1430
1431
1432 /*
1433 * SVGA_CMD_ANNOTATION_FILL --
1434 *
1435 * This is a blit annotation. This command stores a small piece of
1436 * device state which is consumed by the next blit-to-screen
1437 * command. The state is only cleared by commands which are
1438 * specifically documented as consuming an annotation. Other
1439 * commands (such as ESCAPEs for debugging) may intervene between
1440 * the annotation and its associated blit.
1441 *
1442 * This annotation is a promise about the contents of the next
1443 * blit: The video driver is guaranteeing that all pixels in that
1444 * blit will have the same value, specified here as a color in
1445 * SVGAColorBGRX format.
1446 *
1447 * The SVGA device can still render the blit correctly even if it
1448 * ignores this annotation, but the annotation may allow it to
1449 * perform the blit more efficiently, for example by ignoring the
1450 * source data and performing a fill in hardware.
1451 *
1452 * This annotation is most important for performance when the
1453 * user's display is being remoted over a network connection.
1454 *
1455 * Availability:
1456 * SVGA_FIFO_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT or SVGA_FIFO_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT_2
1457 */
1458
1459 typedef
1460 struct {
1461 SVGAColorBGRX color;
1462 } SVGAFifoCmdAnnotationFill;
1463
1464
1465 /*
1466 * SVGA_CMD_ANNOTATION_COPY --
1467 *
1468 * This is a blit annotation. See SVGA_CMD_ANNOTATION_FILL for more
1469 * information about annotations.
1470 *
1471 * This annotation is a promise about the contents of the next
1472 * blit: The video driver is guaranteeing that all pixels in that
1473 * blit will have the same value as those which already exist at an
1474 * identically-sized region on the same or a different screen.
1475 *
1476 * Note that the source pixels for the COPY in this annotation are
1477 * sampled before applying the anqnotation's associated blit. They
1478 * are allowed to overlap with the blit's destination pixels.
1479 *
1480 * The copy source rectangle is specified the same way as the blit
1481 * destination: it can be a rectangle which spans zero or more
1482 * screens, specified relative to either a screen or to the virtual
1483 * coordinate system's origin. If the source rectangle includes
1484 * pixels which are not from exactly one screen, the results are
1485 * undefined.
1486 *
1487 * Availability:
1488 * SVGA_FIFO_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT or SVGA_FIFO_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT_2
1489 */
1490
1491 typedef
1492 struct {
1493 SVGASignedPoint srcOrigin;
1494 uint32 srcScreenId;
1495 } SVGAFifoCmdAnnotationCopy;
1496
1497
1498 /*
1499 * SVGA_CMD_DEFINE_GMR2 --
1500 *
1501 * Define guest memory region v2. See the description of GMRs above.
1502 *
1503 * Availability:
1504 * SVGA_CAP_GMR2
1505 */
1506
1507 typedef
1508 struct {
1509 uint32 gmrId;
1510 uint32 numPages;
1511 } SVGAFifoCmdDefineGMR2;
1512
1513
1514 /*
1515 * SVGA_CMD_REMAP_GMR2 --
1516 *
1517 * Remap guest memory region v2. See the description of GMRs above.
1518 *
1519 * This command allows guest to modify a portion of an existing GMR by
1520 * invalidating it or reassigning it to different guest physical pages.
1521 * The pages are identified by physical page number (PPN). The pages
1522 * are assumed to be pinned and valid for DMA operations.
1523 *
1524 * Description of command flags:
1525 *
1526 * SVGA_REMAP_GMR2_VIA_GMR: If enabled, references a PPN list in a GMR.
1527 * The PPN list must not overlap with the remap region (this can be
1528 * handled trivially by referencing a separate GMR). If flag is
1529 * disabled, PPN list is appended to SVGARemapGMR command.
1530 *
1531 * SVGA_REMAP_GMR2_PPN64: If set, PPN list is in PPN64 format, otherwise
1532 * it is in PPN32 format.
1533 *
1534 * SVGA_REMAP_GMR2_SINGLE_PPN: If set, PPN list contains a single entry.
1535 * A single PPN can be used to invalidate a portion of a GMR or
1536 * map it to to a single guest scratch page.
1537 *
1538 * Availability:
1539 * SVGA_CAP_GMR2
1540 */
1541
1542 typedef enum {
1543 SVGA_REMAP_GMR2_PPN32 = 0,
1544 SVGA_REMAP_GMR2_VIA_GMR = (1 << 0),
1545 SVGA_REMAP_GMR2_PPN64 = (1 << 1),
1546 SVGA_REMAP_GMR2_SINGLE_PPN = (1 << 2),
1547 } SVGARemapGMR2Flags;
1548
1549 typedef
1550 struct {
1551 uint32 gmrId;
1552 SVGARemapGMR2Flags flags;
1553 uint32 offsetPages; /* offset in pages to begin remap */
1554 uint32 numPages; /* number of pages to remap */
1555 /*
1556 * Followed by additional data depending on SVGARemapGMR2Flags.
1557 *
1558 * If flag SVGA_REMAP_GMR2_VIA_GMR is set, single SVGAGuestPtr follows.
1559 * Otherwise an array of page descriptors in PPN32 or PPN64 format
1560 * (according to flag SVGA_REMAP_GMR2_PPN64) follows. If flag
1561 * SVGA_REMAP_GMR2_SINGLE_PPN is set, array contains a single entry.
1562 */
1563 } SVGAFifoCmdRemapGMR2;
1564
1565 #endif
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