Jakob Bornecrantz | 632f611 | 2009-12-10 00:19:10 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 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 | * Legal values for the SVGA_REG_CURSOR_ON register in old-fashioned |
| 43 | * cursor bypass mode. This is still supported, but no new guest |
| 44 | * drivers should use it. |
| 45 | */ |
| 46 | #define SVGA_CURSOR_ON_HIDE 0x0 /* Must be 0 to maintain backward compatibility */ |
| 47 | #define SVGA_CURSOR_ON_SHOW 0x1 /* Must be 1 to maintain backward compatibility */ |
| 48 | #define SVGA_CURSOR_ON_REMOVE_FROM_FB 0x2 /* Remove the cursor from the framebuffer because we need to see what's under it */ |
| 49 | #define SVGA_CURSOR_ON_RESTORE_TO_FB 0x3 /* Put the cursor back in the framebuffer so the user can see it */ |
| 50 | |
| 51 | /* |
| 52 | * The maximum framebuffer size that can traced for e.g. guests in VESA mode. |
| 53 | * The changeMap in the monitor is proportional to this number. Therefore, we'd |
| 54 | * like to keep it as small as possible to reduce monitor overhead (using |
| 55 | * SVGA_VRAM_MAX_SIZE for this increases the size of the shared area by over |
| 56 | * 4k!). |
| 57 | * |
| 58 | * NB: For compatibility reasons, this value must be greater than 0xff0000. |
| 59 | * See bug 335072. |
| 60 | */ |
| 61 | #define SVGA_FB_MAX_TRACEABLE_SIZE 0x1000000 |
| 62 | |
| 63 | #define SVGA_MAX_PSEUDOCOLOR_DEPTH 8 |
| 64 | #define SVGA_MAX_PSEUDOCOLORS (1 << SVGA_MAX_PSEUDOCOLOR_DEPTH) |
| 65 | #define SVGA_NUM_PALETTE_REGS (3 * SVGA_MAX_PSEUDOCOLORS) |
| 66 | |
| 67 | #define SVGA_MAGIC 0x900000UL |
| 68 | #define SVGA_MAKE_ID(ver) (SVGA_MAGIC << 8 | (ver)) |
| 69 | |
| 70 | /* Version 2 let the address of the frame buffer be unsigned on Win32 */ |
| 71 | #define SVGA_VERSION_2 2 |
| 72 | #define SVGA_ID_2 SVGA_MAKE_ID(SVGA_VERSION_2) |
| 73 | |
| 74 | /* Version 1 has new registers starting with SVGA_REG_CAPABILITIES so |
| 75 | PALETTE_BASE has moved */ |
| 76 | #define SVGA_VERSION_1 1 |
| 77 | #define SVGA_ID_1 SVGA_MAKE_ID(SVGA_VERSION_1) |
| 78 | |
| 79 | /* Version 0 is the initial version */ |
| 80 | #define SVGA_VERSION_0 0 |
| 81 | #define SVGA_ID_0 SVGA_MAKE_ID(SVGA_VERSION_0) |
| 82 | |
| 83 | /* "Invalid" value for all SVGA IDs. (Version ID, screen object ID, surface ID...) */ |
| 84 | #define SVGA_ID_INVALID 0xFFFFFFFF |
| 85 | |
| 86 | /* Port offsets, relative to BAR0 */ |
| 87 | #define SVGA_INDEX_PORT 0x0 |
| 88 | #define SVGA_VALUE_PORT 0x1 |
| 89 | #define SVGA_BIOS_PORT 0x2 |
| 90 | #define SVGA_IRQSTATUS_PORT 0x8 |
| 91 | |
| 92 | /* |
| 93 | * Interrupt source flags for IRQSTATUS_PORT and IRQMASK. |
| 94 | * |
| 95 | * Interrupts are only supported when the |
| 96 | * SVGA_CAP_IRQMASK capability is present. |
| 97 | */ |
| 98 | #define SVGA_IRQFLAG_ANY_FENCE 0x1 /* Any fence was passed */ |
| 99 | #define SVGA_IRQFLAG_FIFO_PROGRESS 0x2 /* Made forward progress in the FIFO */ |
| 100 | #define SVGA_IRQFLAG_FENCE_GOAL 0x4 /* SVGA_FIFO_FENCE_GOAL reached */ |
| 101 | |
| 102 | /* |
| 103 | * Registers |
| 104 | */ |
| 105 | |
| 106 | enum { |
| 107 | SVGA_REG_ID = 0, |
| 108 | SVGA_REG_ENABLE = 1, |
| 109 | SVGA_REG_WIDTH = 2, |
| 110 | SVGA_REG_HEIGHT = 3, |
| 111 | SVGA_REG_MAX_WIDTH = 4, |
| 112 | SVGA_REG_MAX_HEIGHT = 5, |
| 113 | SVGA_REG_DEPTH = 6, |
| 114 | SVGA_REG_BITS_PER_PIXEL = 7, /* Current bpp in the guest */ |
| 115 | SVGA_REG_PSEUDOCOLOR = 8, |
| 116 | SVGA_REG_RED_MASK = 9, |
| 117 | SVGA_REG_GREEN_MASK = 10, |
| 118 | SVGA_REG_BLUE_MASK = 11, |
| 119 | SVGA_REG_BYTES_PER_LINE = 12, |
| 120 | SVGA_REG_FB_START = 13, /* (Deprecated) */ |
| 121 | SVGA_REG_FB_OFFSET = 14, |
| 122 | SVGA_REG_VRAM_SIZE = 15, |
| 123 | SVGA_REG_FB_SIZE = 16, |
| 124 | |
| 125 | /* ID 0 implementation only had the above registers, then the palette */ |
| 126 | |
| 127 | SVGA_REG_CAPABILITIES = 17, |
| 128 | SVGA_REG_MEM_START = 18, /* (Deprecated) */ |
| 129 | SVGA_REG_MEM_SIZE = 19, |
| 130 | SVGA_REG_CONFIG_DONE = 20, /* Set when memory area configured */ |
| 131 | SVGA_REG_SYNC = 21, /* See "FIFO Synchronization Registers" */ |
| 132 | SVGA_REG_BUSY = 22, /* See "FIFO Synchronization Registers" */ |
| 133 | SVGA_REG_GUEST_ID = 23, /* Set guest OS identifier */ |
| 134 | SVGA_REG_CURSOR_ID = 24, /* (Deprecated) */ |
| 135 | SVGA_REG_CURSOR_X = 25, /* (Deprecated) */ |
| 136 | SVGA_REG_CURSOR_Y = 26, /* (Deprecated) */ |
| 137 | SVGA_REG_CURSOR_ON = 27, /* (Deprecated) */ |
| 138 | SVGA_REG_HOST_BITS_PER_PIXEL = 28, /* (Deprecated) */ |
| 139 | SVGA_REG_SCRATCH_SIZE = 29, /* Number of scratch registers */ |
| 140 | SVGA_REG_MEM_REGS = 30, /* Number of FIFO registers */ |
| 141 | SVGA_REG_NUM_DISPLAYS = 31, /* (Deprecated) */ |
| 142 | SVGA_REG_PITCHLOCK = 32, /* Fixed pitch for all modes */ |
| 143 | SVGA_REG_IRQMASK = 33, /* Interrupt mask */ |
| 144 | |
| 145 | /* Legacy multi-monitor support */ |
| 146 | SVGA_REG_NUM_GUEST_DISPLAYS = 34,/* Number of guest displays in X/Y direction */ |
| 147 | SVGA_REG_DISPLAY_ID = 35, /* Display ID for the following display attributes */ |
| 148 | SVGA_REG_DISPLAY_IS_PRIMARY = 36,/* Whether this is a primary display */ |
| 149 | SVGA_REG_DISPLAY_POSITION_X = 37,/* The display position x */ |
| 150 | SVGA_REG_DISPLAY_POSITION_Y = 38,/* The display position y */ |
| 151 | SVGA_REG_DISPLAY_WIDTH = 39, /* The display's width */ |
| 152 | SVGA_REG_DISPLAY_HEIGHT = 40, /* The display's height */ |
| 153 | |
| 154 | /* See "Guest memory regions" below. */ |
| 155 | SVGA_REG_GMR_ID = 41, |
| 156 | SVGA_REG_GMR_DESCRIPTOR = 42, |
| 157 | SVGA_REG_GMR_MAX_IDS = 43, |
| 158 | SVGA_REG_GMR_MAX_DESCRIPTOR_LENGTH = 44, |
| 159 | |
| 160 | SVGA_REG_TRACES = 45, /* Enable trace-based updates even when FIFO is on */ |
| 161 | SVGA_REG_TOP = 46, /* Must be 1 more than the last register */ |
| 162 | |
| 163 | SVGA_PALETTE_BASE = 1024, /* Base of SVGA color map */ |
| 164 | /* Next 768 (== 256*3) registers exist for colormap */ |
| 165 | |
| 166 | SVGA_SCRATCH_BASE = SVGA_PALETTE_BASE + SVGA_NUM_PALETTE_REGS |
| 167 | /* Base of scratch registers */ |
| 168 | /* Next reg[SVGA_REG_SCRATCH_SIZE] registers exist for scratch usage: |
| 169 | First 4 are reserved for VESA BIOS Extension; any remaining are for |
| 170 | the use of the current SVGA driver. */ |
| 171 | }; |
| 172 | |
| 173 | |
| 174 | /* |
| 175 | * Guest memory regions (GMRs): |
| 176 | * |
| 177 | * This is a new memory mapping feature available in SVGA devices |
| 178 | * which have the SVGA_CAP_GMR bit set. Previously, there were two |
| 179 | * fixed memory regions available with which to share data between the |
| 180 | * device and the driver: the FIFO ('MEM') and the framebuffer. GMRs |
| 181 | * are our name for an extensible way of providing arbitrary DMA |
| 182 | * buffers for use between the driver and the SVGA device. They are a |
| 183 | * new alternative to framebuffer memory, usable for both 2D and 3D |
| 184 | * graphics operations. |
| 185 | * |
| 186 | * Since GMR mapping must be done synchronously with guest CPU |
| 187 | * execution, we use a new pair of SVGA registers: |
| 188 | * |
| 189 | * SVGA_REG_GMR_ID -- |
| 190 | * |
| 191 | * Read/write. |
| 192 | * This register holds the 32-bit ID (a small positive integer) |
| 193 | * of a GMR to create, delete, or redefine. Writing this register |
| 194 | * has no side-effects. |
| 195 | * |
| 196 | * SVGA_REG_GMR_DESCRIPTOR -- |
| 197 | * |
| 198 | * Write-only. |
| 199 | * Writing this register will create, delete, or redefine the GMR |
| 200 | * specified by the above ID register. If this register is zero, |
| 201 | * the GMR is deleted. Any pointers into this GMR (including those |
| 202 | * currently being processed by FIFO commands) will be |
| 203 | * synchronously invalidated. |
| 204 | * |
| 205 | * If this register is nonzero, it must be the physical page |
| 206 | * number (PPN) of a data structure which describes the physical |
| 207 | * layout of the memory region this GMR should describe. The |
| 208 | * descriptor structure will be read synchronously by the SVGA |
| 209 | * device when this register is written. The descriptor need not |
| 210 | * remain allocated for the lifetime of the GMR. |
| 211 | * |
| 212 | * The guest driver should write SVGA_REG_GMR_ID first, then |
| 213 | * SVGA_REG_GMR_DESCRIPTOR. |
| 214 | * |
| 215 | * SVGA_REG_GMR_MAX_IDS -- |
| 216 | * |
| 217 | * Read-only. |
| 218 | * The SVGA device may choose to support a maximum number of |
| 219 | * user-defined GMR IDs. This register holds the number of supported |
| 220 | * IDs. (The maximum supported ID plus 1) |
| 221 | * |
| 222 | * SVGA_REG_GMR_MAX_DESCRIPTOR_LENGTH -- |
| 223 | * |
| 224 | * Read-only. |
| 225 | * The SVGA device may choose to put a limit on the total number |
| 226 | * of SVGAGuestMemDescriptor structures it will read when defining |
| 227 | * a single GMR. |
| 228 | * |
| 229 | * The descriptor structure is an array of SVGAGuestMemDescriptor |
| 230 | * structures. Each structure may do one of three things: |
| 231 | * |
| 232 | * - Terminate the GMR descriptor list. |
| 233 | * (ppn==0, numPages==0) |
| 234 | * |
| 235 | * - Add a PPN or range of PPNs to the GMR's virtual address space. |
| 236 | * (ppn != 0, numPages != 0) |
| 237 | * |
| 238 | * - Provide the PPN of the next SVGAGuestMemDescriptor, in order to |
| 239 | * support multi-page GMR descriptor tables without forcing the |
| 240 | * driver to allocate physically contiguous memory. |
| 241 | * (ppn != 0, numPages == 0) |
| 242 | * |
| 243 | * Note that each physical page of SVGAGuestMemDescriptor structures |
| 244 | * can describe at least 2MB of guest memory. If the driver needs to |
| 245 | * use more than one page of descriptor structures, it must use one of |
| 246 | * its SVGAGuestMemDescriptors to point to an additional page. The |
| 247 | * device will never automatically cross a page boundary. |
| 248 | * |
| 249 | * Once the driver has described a GMR, it is immediately available |
| 250 | * for use via any FIFO command that uses an SVGAGuestPtr structure. |
| 251 | * These pointers include a GMR identifier plus an offset into that |
| 252 | * GMR. |
| 253 | * |
| 254 | * The driver must check the SVGA_CAP_GMR bit before using the GMR |
| 255 | * registers. |
| 256 | */ |
| 257 | |
| 258 | /* |
| 259 | * Special GMR IDs, allowing SVGAGuestPtrs to point to framebuffer |
| 260 | * memory as well. In the future, these IDs could even be used to |
| 261 | * allow legacy memory regions to be redefined by the guest as GMRs. |
| 262 | * |
| 263 | * Using the guest framebuffer (GFB) at BAR1 for general purpose DMA |
| 264 | * is being phased out. Please try to use user-defined GMRs whenever |
| 265 | * possible. |
| 266 | */ |
| 267 | #define SVGA_GMR_NULL ((uint32) -1) |
| 268 | #define SVGA_GMR_FRAMEBUFFER ((uint32) -2) // Guest Framebuffer (GFB) |
| 269 | |
| 270 | typedef |
| 271 | struct SVGAGuestMemDescriptor { |
| 272 | uint32 ppn; |
| 273 | uint32 numPages; |
| 274 | } SVGAGuestMemDescriptor; |
| 275 | |
| 276 | typedef |
| 277 | struct SVGAGuestPtr { |
| 278 | uint32 gmrId; |
| 279 | uint32 offset; |
| 280 | } SVGAGuestPtr; |
| 281 | |
| 282 | |
| 283 | /* |
| 284 | * SVGAGMRImageFormat -- |
| 285 | * |
| 286 | * This is a packed representation of the source 2D image format |
| 287 | * for a GMR-to-screen blit. Currently it is defined as an encoding |
| 288 | * of the screen's color depth and bits-per-pixel, however, 16 bits |
| 289 | * are reserved for future use to identify other encodings (such as |
| 290 | * RGBA or higher-precision images). |
| 291 | * |
| 292 | * Currently supported formats: |
| 293 | * |
| 294 | * bpp depth Format Name |
| 295 | * --- ----- ----------- |
| 296 | * 32 24 32-bit BGRX |
| 297 | * 24 24 24-bit BGR |
| 298 | * 16 16 RGB 5-6-5 |
| 299 | * 16 15 RGB 5-5-5 |
| 300 | * |
| 301 | */ |
| 302 | |
| 303 | typedef |
| 304 | struct SVGAGMRImageFormat { |
| 305 | union { |
| 306 | struct { |
| 307 | uint32 bitsPerPixel : 8; |
| 308 | uint32 colorDepth : 8; |
| 309 | uint32 reserved : 16; // Must be zero |
| 310 | }; |
| 311 | |
| 312 | uint32 value; |
| 313 | }; |
| 314 | } SVGAGMRImageFormat; |
| 315 | |
| 316 | /* |
| 317 | * SVGAColorBGRX -- |
| 318 | * |
| 319 | * A 24-bit color format (BGRX), which does not depend on the |
| 320 | * format of the legacy guest framebuffer (GFB) or the current |
| 321 | * GMRFB state. |
| 322 | */ |
| 323 | |
| 324 | typedef |
| 325 | struct SVGAColorBGRX { |
| 326 | union { |
| 327 | struct { |
| 328 | uint32 b : 8; |
| 329 | uint32 g : 8; |
| 330 | uint32 r : 8; |
| 331 | uint32 x : 8; // Unused |
| 332 | }; |
| 333 | |
| 334 | uint32 value; |
| 335 | }; |
| 336 | } SVGAColorBGRX; |
| 337 | |
| 338 | |
| 339 | /* |
| 340 | * SVGASignedRect -- |
| 341 | * SVGASignedPoint -- |
| 342 | * |
| 343 | * Signed rectangle and point primitives. These are used by the new |
| 344 | * 2D primitives for drawing to Screen Objects, which can occupy a |
| 345 | * signed virtual coordinate space. |
| 346 | * |
| 347 | * SVGASignedRect specifies a half-open interval: the (left, top) |
| 348 | * pixel is part of the rectangle, but the (right, bottom) pixel is |
| 349 | * not. |
| 350 | */ |
| 351 | |
| 352 | typedef |
| 353 | struct SVGASignedRect { |
| 354 | int32 left; |
| 355 | int32 top; |
| 356 | int32 right; |
| 357 | int32 bottom; |
| 358 | } SVGASignedRect; |
| 359 | |
| 360 | typedef |
| 361 | struct SVGASignedPoint { |
| 362 | int32 x; |
| 363 | int32 y; |
| 364 | } SVGASignedPoint; |
| 365 | |
| 366 | |
| 367 | /* |
| 368 | * Capabilities |
| 369 | * |
| 370 | * Note the holes in the bitfield. Missing bits have been deprecated, |
| 371 | * and must not be reused. Those capabilities will never be reported |
| 372 | * by new versions of the SVGA device. |
| 373 | */ |
| 374 | |
| 375 | #define SVGA_CAP_NONE 0x00000000 |
| 376 | #define SVGA_CAP_RECT_COPY 0x00000002 |
| 377 | #define SVGA_CAP_CURSOR 0x00000020 |
| 378 | #define SVGA_CAP_CURSOR_BYPASS 0x00000040 // Legacy (Use Cursor Bypass 3 instead) |
| 379 | #define SVGA_CAP_CURSOR_BYPASS_2 0x00000080 // Legacy (Use Cursor Bypass 3 instead) |
| 380 | #define SVGA_CAP_8BIT_EMULATION 0x00000100 |
| 381 | #define SVGA_CAP_ALPHA_CURSOR 0x00000200 |
| 382 | #define SVGA_CAP_3D 0x00004000 |
| 383 | #define SVGA_CAP_EXTENDED_FIFO 0x00008000 |
| 384 | #define SVGA_CAP_MULTIMON 0x00010000 // Legacy multi-monitor support |
| 385 | #define SVGA_CAP_PITCHLOCK 0x00020000 |
| 386 | #define SVGA_CAP_IRQMASK 0x00040000 |
| 387 | #define SVGA_CAP_DISPLAY_TOPOLOGY 0x00080000 // Legacy multi-monitor support |
| 388 | #define SVGA_CAP_GMR 0x00100000 |
| 389 | #define SVGA_CAP_TRACES 0x00200000 |
| 390 | |
| 391 | |
| 392 | /* |
| 393 | * FIFO register indices. |
| 394 | * |
| 395 | * The FIFO is a chunk of device memory mapped into guest physmem. It |
| 396 | * is always treated as 32-bit words. |
| 397 | * |
| 398 | * The guest driver gets to decide how to partition it between |
| 399 | * - FIFO registers (there are always at least 4, specifying where the |
| 400 | * following data area is and how much data it contains; there may be |
| 401 | * more registers following these, depending on the FIFO protocol |
| 402 | * version in use) |
| 403 | * - FIFO data, written by the guest and slurped out by the VMX. |
| 404 | * These indices are 32-bit word offsets into the FIFO. |
| 405 | */ |
| 406 | |
| 407 | enum { |
| 408 | /* |
| 409 | * Block 1 (basic registers): The originally defined FIFO registers. |
| 410 | * These exist and are valid for all versions of the FIFO protocol. |
| 411 | */ |
| 412 | |
| 413 | SVGA_FIFO_MIN = 0, |
| 414 | SVGA_FIFO_MAX, /* The distance from MIN to MAX must be at least 10K */ |
| 415 | SVGA_FIFO_NEXT_CMD, |
| 416 | SVGA_FIFO_STOP, |
| 417 | |
| 418 | /* |
| 419 | * Block 2 (extended registers): Mandatory registers for the extended |
| 420 | * FIFO. These exist if the SVGA caps register includes |
| 421 | * SVGA_CAP_EXTENDED_FIFO; some of them are valid only if their |
| 422 | * associated capability bit is enabled. |
| 423 | * |
| 424 | * Note that when originally defined, SVGA_CAP_EXTENDED_FIFO implied |
| 425 | * support only for (FIFO registers) CAPABILITIES, FLAGS, and FENCE. |
| 426 | * This means that the guest has to test individually (in most cases |
| 427 | * using FIFO caps) for the presence of registers after this; the VMX |
| 428 | * can define "extended FIFO" to mean whatever it wants, and currently |
| 429 | * won't enable it unless there's room for that set and much more. |
| 430 | */ |
| 431 | |
| 432 | SVGA_FIFO_CAPABILITIES = 4, |
| 433 | SVGA_FIFO_FLAGS, |
| 434 | // Valid with SVGA_FIFO_CAP_FENCE: |
| 435 | SVGA_FIFO_FENCE, |
| 436 | |
| 437 | /* |
| 438 | * Block 3a (optional extended registers): Additional registers for the |
| 439 | * extended FIFO, whose presence isn't actually implied by |
| 440 | * SVGA_CAP_EXTENDED_FIFO; these exist if SVGA_FIFO_MIN is high enough to |
| 441 | * leave room for them. |
| 442 | * |
| 443 | * These in block 3a, the VMX currently considers mandatory for the |
| 444 | * extended FIFO. |
| 445 | */ |
| 446 | |
| 447 | // Valid if exists (i.e. if extended FIFO enabled): |
| 448 | SVGA_FIFO_3D_HWVERSION, /* See SVGA3dHardwareVersion in svga3d_reg.h */ |
| 449 | // Valid with SVGA_FIFO_CAP_PITCHLOCK: |
| 450 | SVGA_FIFO_PITCHLOCK, |
| 451 | |
| 452 | // Valid with SVGA_FIFO_CAP_CURSOR_BYPASS_3: |
| 453 | SVGA_FIFO_CURSOR_ON, /* Cursor bypass 3 show/hide register */ |
| 454 | SVGA_FIFO_CURSOR_X, /* Cursor bypass 3 x register */ |
| 455 | SVGA_FIFO_CURSOR_Y, /* Cursor bypass 3 y register */ |
| 456 | SVGA_FIFO_CURSOR_COUNT, /* Incremented when any of the other 3 change */ |
| 457 | SVGA_FIFO_CURSOR_LAST_UPDATED,/* Last time the host updated the cursor */ |
| 458 | |
| 459 | // Valid with SVGA_FIFO_CAP_RESERVE: |
| 460 | SVGA_FIFO_RESERVED, /* Bytes past NEXT_CMD with real contents */ |
| 461 | |
| 462 | /* |
| 463 | * Valid with SVGA_FIFO_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT: |
| 464 | * |
| 465 | * By default this is SVGA_ID_INVALID, to indicate that the cursor |
| 466 | * coordinates are specified relative to the virtual root. If this |
| 467 | * is set to a specific screen ID, cursor position is reinterpreted |
| 468 | * as a signed offset relative to that screen's origin. This is the |
| 469 | * only way to place the cursor on a non-rooted screen. |
| 470 | */ |
| 471 | SVGA_FIFO_CURSOR_SCREEN_ID, |
| 472 | |
| 473 | /* |
| 474 | * XXX: The gap here, up until SVGA_FIFO_3D_CAPS, can be used for new |
| 475 | * registers, but this must be done carefully and with judicious use of |
| 476 | * capability bits, since comparisons based on SVGA_FIFO_MIN aren't |
| 477 | * enough to tell you whether the register exists: we've shipped drivers |
| 478 | * and products that used SVGA_FIFO_3D_CAPS but didn't know about some of |
| 479 | * the earlier ones. The actual order of introduction was: |
| 480 | * - PITCHLOCK |
| 481 | * - 3D_CAPS |
| 482 | * - CURSOR_* (cursor bypass 3) |
| 483 | * - RESERVED |
| 484 | * So, code that wants to know whether it can use any of the |
| 485 | * aforementioned registers, or anything else added after PITCHLOCK and |
| 486 | * before 3D_CAPS, needs to reason about something other than |
| 487 | * SVGA_FIFO_MIN. |
| 488 | */ |
| 489 | |
| 490 | /* |
| 491 | * 3D caps block space; valid with 3D hardware version >= |
| 492 | * SVGA3D_HWVERSION_WS6_B1. |
| 493 | */ |
| 494 | SVGA_FIFO_3D_CAPS = 32, |
| 495 | SVGA_FIFO_3D_CAPS_LAST = 32 + 255, |
| 496 | |
| 497 | /* |
| 498 | * End of VMX's current definition of "extended-FIFO registers". |
| 499 | * Registers before here are always enabled/disabled as a block; either |
| 500 | * the extended FIFO is enabled and includes all preceding registers, or |
| 501 | * it's disabled entirely. |
| 502 | * |
| 503 | * Block 3b (truly optional extended registers): Additional registers for |
| 504 | * the extended FIFO, which the VMX already knows how to enable and |
| 505 | * disable with correct granularity. |
| 506 | * |
| 507 | * Registers after here exist if and only if the guest SVGA driver |
| 508 | * sets SVGA_FIFO_MIN high enough to leave room for them. |
| 509 | */ |
| 510 | |
| 511 | // Valid if register exists: |
| 512 | SVGA_FIFO_GUEST_3D_HWVERSION, /* Guest driver's 3D version */ |
| 513 | SVGA_FIFO_FENCE_GOAL, /* Matching target for SVGA_IRQFLAG_FENCE_GOAL */ |
| 514 | SVGA_FIFO_BUSY, /* See "FIFO Synchronization Registers" */ |
| 515 | |
| 516 | /* |
| 517 | * Always keep this last. This defines the maximum number of |
| 518 | * registers we know about. At power-on, this value is placed in |
| 519 | * the SVGA_REG_MEM_REGS register, and we expect the guest driver |
| 520 | * to allocate this much space in FIFO memory for registers. |
| 521 | */ |
| 522 | SVGA_FIFO_NUM_REGS |
| 523 | }; |
| 524 | |
| 525 | |
| 526 | /* |
| 527 | * Definition of registers included in extended FIFO support. |
| 528 | * |
| 529 | * The guest SVGA driver gets to allocate the FIFO between registers |
| 530 | * and data. It must always allocate at least 4 registers, but old |
| 531 | * drivers stopped there. |
| 532 | * |
| 533 | * The VMX will enable extended FIFO support if and only if the guest |
| 534 | * left enough room for all registers defined as part of the mandatory |
| 535 | * set for the extended FIFO. |
| 536 | * |
| 537 | * Note that the guest drivers typically allocate the FIFO only at |
| 538 | * initialization time, not at mode switches, so it's likely that the |
| 539 | * number of FIFO registers won't change without a reboot. |
| 540 | * |
| 541 | * All registers less than this value are guaranteed to be present if |
| 542 | * svgaUser->fifo.extended is set. Any later registers must be tested |
| 543 | * individually for compatibility at each use (in the VMX). |
| 544 | * |
| 545 | * This value is used only by the VMX, so it can change without |
| 546 | * affecting driver compatibility; keep it that way? |
| 547 | */ |
| 548 | #define SVGA_FIFO_EXTENDED_MANDATORY_REGS (SVGA_FIFO_3D_CAPS_LAST + 1) |
| 549 | |
| 550 | |
| 551 | /* |
| 552 | * FIFO Synchronization Registers |
| 553 | * |
| 554 | * This explains the relationship between the various FIFO |
| 555 | * sync-related registers in IOSpace and in FIFO space. |
| 556 | * |
| 557 | * SVGA_REG_SYNC -- |
| 558 | * |
| 559 | * The SYNC register can be used in two different ways by the guest: |
| 560 | * |
| 561 | * 1. If the guest wishes to fully sync (drain) the FIFO, |
| 562 | * it will write once to SYNC then poll on the BUSY |
| 563 | * register. The FIFO is sync'ed once BUSY is zero. |
| 564 | * |
| 565 | * 2. If the guest wants to asynchronously wake up the host, |
| 566 | * it will write once to SYNC without polling on BUSY. |
| 567 | * Ideally it will do this after some new commands have |
| 568 | * been placed in the FIFO, and after reading a zero |
| 569 | * from SVGA_FIFO_BUSY. |
| 570 | * |
| 571 | * (1) is the original behaviour that SYNC was designed to |
| 572 | * support. Originally, a write to SYNC would implicitly |
| 573 | * trigger a read from BUSY. This causes us to synchronously |
| 574 | * process the FIFO. |
| 575 | * |
| 576 | * This behaviour has since been changed so that writing SYNC |
| 577 | * will *not* implicitly cause a read from BUSY. Instead, it |
| 578 | * makes a channel call which asynchronously wakes up the MKS |
| 579 | * thread. |
| 580 | * |
| 581 | * New guests can use this new behaviour to implement (2) |
| 582 | * efficiently. This lets guests get the host's attention |
| 583 | * without waiting for the MKS to poll, which gives us much |
| 584 | * better CPU utilization on SMP hosts and on UP hosts while |
| 585 | * we're blocked on the host GPU. |
| 586 | * |
| 587 | * Old guests shouldn't notice the behaviour change. SYNC was |
| 588 | * never guaranteed to process the entire FIFO, since it was |
| 589 | * bounded to a particular number of CPU cycles. Old guests will |
| 590 | * still loop on the BUSY register until the FIFO is empty. |
| 591 | * |
| 592 | * Writing to SYNC currently has the following side-effects: |
| 593 | * |
| 594 | * - Sets SVGA_REG_BUSY to TRUE (in the monitor) |
| 595 | * - Asynchronously wakes up the MKS thread for FIFO processing |
| 596 | * - The value written to SYNC is recorded as a "reason", for |
| 597 | * stats purposes. |
| 598 | * |
| 599 | * If SVGA_FIFO_BUSY is available, drivers are advised to only |
| 600 | * write to SYNC if SVGA_FIFO_BUSY is FALSE. Drivers should set |
| 601 | * SVGA_FIFO_BUSY to TRUE after writing to SYNC. The MKS will |
| 602 | * eventually set SVGA_FIFO_BUSY on its own, but this approach |
| 603 | * lets the driver avoid sending multiple asynchronous wakeup |
| 604 | * messages to the MKS thread. |
| 605 | * |
| 606 | * SVGA_REG_BUSY -- |
| 607 | * |
| 608 | * This register is set to TRUE when SVGA_REG_SYNC is written, |
| 609 | * and it reads as FALSE when the FIFO has been completely |
| 610 | * drained. |
| 611 | * |
| 612 | * Every read from this register causes us to synchronously |
| 613 | * process FIFO commands. There is no guarantee as to how many |
| 614 | * commands each read will process. |
| 615 | * |
| 616 | * CPU time spent processing FIFO commands will be billed to |
| 617 | * the guest. |
| 618 | * |
| 619 | * New drivers should avoid using this register unless they |
| 620 | * need to guarantee that the FIFO is completely drained. It |
| 621 | * is overkill for performing a sync-to-fence. Older drivers |
| 622 | * will use this register for any type of synchronization. |
| 623 | * |
| 624 | * SVGA_FIFO_BUSY -- |
| 625 | * |
| 626 | * This register is a fast way for the guest driver to check |
| 627 | * whether the FIFO is already being processed. It reads and |
| 628 | * writes at normal RAM speeds, with no monitor intervention. |
| 629 | * |
| 630 | * If this register reads as TRUE, the host is guaranteeing that |
| 631 | * any new commands written into the FIFO will be noticed before |
| 632 | * the MKS goes back to sleep. |
| 633 | * |
| 634 | * If this register reads as FALSE, no such guarantee can be |
| 635 | * made. |
| 636 | * |
| 637 | * The guest should use this register to quickly determine |
| 638 | * whether or not it needs to wake up the host. If the guest |
| 639 | * just wrote a command or group of commands that it would like |
| 640 | * the host to begin processing, it should: |
| 641 | * |
| 642 | * 1. Read SVGA_FIFO_BUSY. If it reads as TRUE, no further |
| 643 | * action is necessary. |
| 644 | * |
| 645 | * 2. Write TRUE to SVGA_FIFO_BUSY. This informs future guest |
| 646 | * code that we've already sent a SYNC to the host and we |
| 647 | * don't need to send a duplicate. |
| 648 | * |
| 649 | * 3. Write a reason to SVGA_REG_SYNC. This will send an |
| 650 | * asynchronous wakeup to the MKS thread. |
| 651 | */ |
| 652 | |
| 653 | |
| 654 | /* |
| 655 | * FIFO Capabilities |
| 656 | * |
| 657 | * Fence -- Fence register and command are supported |
| 658 | * Accel Front -- Front buffer only commands are supported |
| 659 | * Pitch Lock -- Pitch lock register is supported |
| 660 | * Video -- SVGA Video overlay units are supported |
| 661 | * Escape -- Escape command is supported |
| 662 | * |
| 663 | * XXX: Add longer descriptions for each capability, including a list |
| 664 | * of the new features that each capability provides. |
| 665 | * |
| 666 | * SVGA_FIFO_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT -- |
| 667 | * |
| 668 | * Provides dynamic multi-screen rendering, for improved Unity and |
| 669 | * multi-monitor modes. With Screen Object, the guest can |
| 670 | * dynamically create and destroy 'screens', which can represent |
| 671 | * Unity windows or virtual monitors. Screen Object also provides |
| 672 | * strong guarantees that DMA operations happen only when |
| 673 | * guest-initiated. Screen Object deprecates the BAR1 guest |
| 674 | * framebuffer (GFB) and all commands that work only with the GFB. |
| 675 | * |
| 676 | * New registers: |
| 677 | * FIFO_CURSOR_SCREEN_ID, VIDEO_DATA_GMRID, VIDEO_DST_SCREEN_ID |
| 678 | * |
| 679 | * New 2D commands: |
| 680 | * DEFINE_SCREEN, DESTROY_SCREEN, DEFINE_GMRFB, BLIT_GMRFB_TO_SCREEN, |
| 681 | * BLIT_SCREEN_TO_GMRFB, ANNOTATION_FILL, ANNOTATION_COPY |
| 682 | * |
| 683 | * New 3D commands: |
| 684 | * BLIT_SURFACE_TO_SCREEN |
| 685 | * |
| 686 | * New guarantees: |
| 687 | * |
| 688 | * - The host will not read or write guest memory, including the GFB, |
| 689 | * except when explicitly initiated by a DMA command. |
| 690 | * |
| 691 | * - All DMA, including legacy DMA like UPDATE and PRESENT_READBACK, |
| 692 | * is guaranteed to complete before any subsequent FENCEs. |
| 693 | * |
| 694 | * - All legacy commands which affect a Screen (UPDATE, PRESENT, |
| 695 | * PRESENT_READBACK) as well as new Screen blit commands will |
| 696 | * all behave consistently as blits, and memory will be read |
| 697 | * or written in FIFO order. |
| 698 | * |
| 699 | * For example, if you PRESENT from one SVGA3D surface to multiple |
| 700 | * places on the screen, the data copied will always be from the |
| 701 | * SVGA3D surface at the time the PRESENT was issued in the FIFO. |
| 702 | * This was not necessarily true on devices without Screen Object. |
| 703 | * |
| 704 | * This means that on devices that support Screen Object, the |
| 705 | * PRESENT_READBACK command should not be necessary unless you |
| 706 | * actually want to read back the results of 3D rendering into |
| 707 | * system memory. (And for that, the BLIT_SCREEN_TO_GMRFB |
| 708 | * command provides a strict superset of functionality.) |
| 709 | * |
| 710 | * - When a screen is resized, either using Screen Object commands or |
| 711 | * legacy multimon registers, its contents are preserved. |
| 712 | */ |
| 713 | |
| 714 | #define SVGA_FIFO_CAP_NONE 0 |
| 715 | #define SVGA_FIFO_CAP_FENCE (1<<0) |
| 716 | #define SVGA_FIFO_CAP_ACCELFRONT (1<<1) |
| 717 | #define SVGA_FIFO_CAP_PITCHLOCK (1<<2) |
| 718 | #define SVGA_FIFO_CAP_VIDEO (1<<3) |
| 719 | #define SVGA_FIFO_CAP_CURSOR_BYPASS_3 (1<<4) |
| 720 | #define SVGA_FIFO_CAP_ESCAPE (1<<5) |
| 721 | #define SVGA_FIFO_CAP_RESERVE (1<<6) |
| 722 | #define SVGA_FIFO_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT (1<<7) |
| 723 | |
| 724 | |
| 725 | /* |
| 726 | * FIFO Flags |
| 727 | * |
| 728 | * Accel Front -- Driver should use front buffer only commands |
| 729 | */ |
| 730 | |
| 731 | #define SVGA_FIFO_FLAG_NONE 0 |
| 732 | #define SVGA_FIFO_FLAG_ACCELFRONT (1<<0) |
| 733 | #define SVGA_FIFO_FLAG_RESERVED (1<<31) // Internal use only |
| 734 | |
| 735 | /* |
| 736 | * FIFO reservation sentinel value |
| 737 | */ |
| 738 | |
| 739 | #define SVGA_FIFO_RESERVED_UNKNOWN 0xffffffff |
| 740 | |
| 741 | |
| 742 | /* |
| 743 | * Video overlay support |
| 744 | */ |
| 745 | |
| 746 | #define SVGA_NUM_OVERLAY_UNITS 32 |
| 747 | |
| 748 | |
| 749 | /* |
| 750 | * Video capabilities that the guest is currently using |
| 751 | */ |
| 752 | |
| 753 | #define SVGA_VIDEO_FLAG_COLORKEY 0x0001 |
| 754 | |
| 755 | |
| 756 | /* |
| 757 | * Offsets for the video overlay registers |
| 758 | */ |
| 759 | |
| 760 | enum { |
| 761 | SVGA_VIDEO_ENABLED = 0, |
| 762 | SVGA_VIDEO_FLAGS, |
| 763 | SVGA_VIDEO_DATA_OFFSET, |
| 764 | SVGA_VIDEO_FORMAT, |
| 765 | SVGA_VIDEO_COLORKEY, |
| 766 | SVGA_VIDEO_SIZE, // Deprecated |
| 767 | SVGA_VIDEO_WIDTH, |
| 768 | SVGA_VIDEO_HEIGHT, |
| 769 | SVGA_VIDEO_SRC_X, |
| 770 | SVGA_VIDEO_SRC_Y, |
| 771 | SVGA_VIDEO_SRC_WIDTH, |
| 772 | SVGA_VIDEO_SRC_HEIGHT, |
| 773 | SVGA_VIDEO_DST_X, // Signed int32 |
| 774 | SVGA_VIDEO_DST_Y, // Signed int32 |
| 775 | SVGA_VIDEO_DST_WIDTH, |
| 776 | SVGA_VIDEO_DST_HEIGHT, |
| 777 | SVGA_VIDEO_PITCH_1, |
| 778 | SVGA_VIDEO_PITCH_2, |
| 779 | SVGA_VIDEO_PITCH_3, |
| 780 | SVGA_VIDEO_DATA_GMRID, // Optional, defaults to SVGA_GMR_FRAMEBUFFER |
| 781 | SVGA_VIDEO_DST_SCREEN_ID, // Optional, defaults to virtual coords (SVGA_ID_INVALID) |
| 782 | SVGA_VIDEO_NUM_REGS |
| 783 | }; |
| 784 | |
| 785 | |
| 786 | /* |
| 787 | * SVGA Overlay Units |
| 788 | * |
| 789 | * width and height relate to the entire source video frame. |
| 790 | * srcX, srcY, srcWidth and srcHeight represent subset of the source |
| 791 | * video frame to be displayed. |
| 792 | */ |
| 793 | |
| 794 | typedef struct SVGAOverlayUnit { |
| 795 | uint32 enabled; |
| 796 | uint32 flags; |
| 797 | uint32 dataOffset; |
| 798 | uint32 format; |
| 799 | uint32 colorKey; |
| 800 | uint32 size; |
| 801 | uint32 width; |
| 802 | uint32 height; |
| 803 | uint32 srcX; |
| 804 | uint32 srcY; |
| 805 | uint32 srcWidth; |
| 806 | uint32 srcHeight; |
| 807 | int32 dstX; |
| 808 | int32 dstY; |
| 809 | uint32 dstWidth; |
| 810 | uint32 dstHeight; |
| 811 | uint32 pitches[3]; |
| 812 | uint32 dataGMRId; |
| 813 | uint32 dstScreenId; |
| 814 | } SVGAOverlayUnit; |
| 815 | |
| 816 | |
| 817 | /* |
| 818 | * SVGAScreenObject -- |
| 819 | * |
| 820 | * This is a new way to represent a guest's multi-monitor screen or |
| 821 | * Unity window. Screen objects are only supported if the |
| 822 | * SVGA_FIFO_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT capability bit is set. |
| 823 | * |
| 824 | * If Screen Objects are supported, they can be used to fully |
| 825 | * replace the functionality provided by the framebuffer registers |
| 826 | * (SVGA_REG_WIDTH, HEIGHT, etc.) and by SVGA_CAP_DISPLAY_TOPOLOGY. |
| 827 | * |
| 828 | * The screen object is a struct with guaranteed binary |
| 829 | * compatibility. New flags can be added, and the struct may grow, |
| 830 | * but existing fields must retain their meaning. |
| 831 | * |
| 832 | */ |
| 833 | |
| 834 | #define SVGA_SCREEN_HAS_ROOT (1 << 0) // Screen is present in the virtual coord space |
| 835 | #define SVGA_SCREEN_IS_PRIMARY (1 << 1) // Guest considers this screen to be 'primary' |
| 836 | #define SVGA_SCREEN_FULLSCREEN_HINT (1 << 2) // Guest is running a fullscreen app here |
| 837 | |
| 838 | typedef |
| 839 | struct SVGAScreenObject { |
| 840 | uint32 structSize; // sizeof(SVGAScreenObject) |
| 841 | uint32 id; |
| 842 | uint32 flags; |
| 843 | struct { |
| 844 | uint32 width; |
| 845 | uint32 height; |
| 846 | } size; |
| 847 | struct { |
| 848 | int32 x; |
| 849 | int32 y; |
| 850 | } root; // Only used if SVGA_SCREEN_HAS_ROOT is set. |
| 851 | } SVGAScreenObject; |
| 852 | |
| 853 | |
| 854 | /* |
| 855 | * Commands in the command FIFO: |
| 856 | * |
| 857 | * Command IDs defined below are used for the traditional 2D FIFO |
| 858 | * communication (not all commands are available for all versions of the |
| 859 | * SVGA FIFO protocol). |
| 860 | * |
| 861 | * Note the holes in the command ID numbers: These commands have been |
| 862 | * deprecated, and the old IDs must not be reused. |
| 863 | * |
| 864 | * Command IDs from 1000 to 1999 are reserved for use by the SVGA3D |
| 865 | * protocol. |
| 866 | * |
| 867 | * Each command's parameters are described by the comments and |
| 868 | * structs below. |
| 869 | */ |
| 870 | |
| 871 | typedef enum { |
| 872 | SVGA_CMD_INVALID_CMD = 0, |
| 873 | SVGA_CMD_UPDATE = 1, |
| 874 | SVGA_CMD_RECT_COPY = 3, |
| 875 | SVGA_CMD_DEFINE_CURSOR = 19, |
| 876 | SVGA_CMD_DEFINE_ALPHA_CURSOR = 22, |
| 877 | SVGA_CMD_UPDATE_VERBOSE = 25, |
| 878 | SVGA_CMD_FRONT_ROP_FILL = 29, |
| 879 | SVGA_CMD_FENCE = 30, |
| 880 | SVGA_CMD_ESCAPE = 33, |
| 881 | SVGA_CMD_DEFINE_SCREEN = 34, |
| 882 | SVGA_CMD_DESTROY_SCREEN = 35, |
| 883 | SVGA_CMD_DEFINE_GMRFB = 36, |
| 884 | SVGA_CMD_BLIT_GMRFB_TO_SCREEN = 37, |
| 885 | SVGA_CMD_BLIT_SCREEN_TO_GMRFB = 38, |
| 886 | SVGA_CMD_ANNOTATION_FILL = 39, |
| 887 | SVGA_CMD_ANNOTATION_COPY = 40, |
| 888 | SVGA_CMD_MAX |
| 889 | } SVGAFifoCmdId; |
| 890 | |
| 891 | #define SVGA_CMD_MAX_ARGS 64 |
| 892 | |
| 893 | |
| 894 | /* |
| 895 | * SVGA_CMD_UPDATE -- |
| 896 | * |
| 897 | * This is a DMA transfer which copies from the Guest Framebuffer |
| 898 | * (GFB) at BAR1 + SVGA_REG_FB_OFFSET to any screens which |
| 899 | * intersect with the provided virtual rectangle. |
| 900 | * |
| 901 | * This command does not support using arbitrary guest memory as a |
| 902 | * data source- it only works with the pre-defined GFB memory. |
| 903 | * This command also does not support signed virtual coordinates. |
| 904 | * If you have defined screens (using SVGA_CMD_DEFINE_SCREEN) with |
| 905 | * negative root x/y coordinates, the negative portion of those |
| 906 | * screens will not be reachable by this command. |
| 907 | * |
| 908 | * This command is not necessary when using framebuffer |
| 909 | * traces. Traces are automatically enabled if the SVGA FIFO is |
| 910 | * disabled, and you may explicitly enable/disable traces using |
| 911 | * SVGA_REG_TRACES. With traces enabled, any write to the GFB will |
| 912 | * automatically act as if a subsequent SVGA_CMD_UPDATE was issued. |
| 913 | * |
| 914 | * Traces and SVGA_CMD_UPDATE are the only supported ways to render |
| 915 | * pseudocolor screen updates. The newer Screen Object commands |
| 916 | * only support true color formats. |
| 917 | * |
| 918 | * Availability: |
| 919 | * Always available. |
| 920 | */ |
| 921 | |
| 922 | typedef |
| 923 | struct { |
| 924 | uint32 x; |
| 925 | uint32 y; |
| 926 | uint32 width; |
| 927 | uint32 height; |
| 928 | } SVGAFifoCmdUpdate; |
| 929 | |
| 930 | |
| 931 | /* |
| 932 | * SVGA_CMD_RECT_COPY -- |
| 933 | * |
| 934 | * Perform a rectangular DMA transfer from one area of the GFB to |
| 935 | * another, and copy the result to any screens which intersect it. |
| 936 | * |
| 937 | * Availability: |
| 938 | * SVGA_CAP_RECT_COPY |
| 939 | */ |
| 940 | |
| 941 | typedef |
| 942 | struct { |
| 943 | uint32 srcX; |
| 944 | uint32 srcY; |
| 945 | uint32 destX; |
| 946 | uint32 destY; |
| 947 | uint32 width; |
| 948 | uint32 height; |
| 949 | } SVGAFifoCmdRectCopy; |
| 950 | |
| 951 | |
| 952 | /* |
| 953 | * SVGA_CMD_DEFINE_CURSOR -- |
| 954 | * |
| 955 | * Provide a new cursor image, as an AND/XOR mask. |
| 956 | * |
| 957 | * The recommended way to position the cursor overlay is by using |
| 958 | * the SVGA_FIFO_CURSOR_* registers, supported by the |
| 959 | * SVGA_FIFO_CAP_CURSOR_BYPASS_3 capability. |
| 960 | * |
| 961 | * Availability: |
| 962 | * SVGA_CAP_CURSOR |
| 963 | */ |
| 964 | |
| 965 | typedef |
| 966 | struct { |
| 967 | uint32 id; // Reserved, must be zero. |
| 968 | uint32 hotspotX; |
| 969 | uint32 hotspotY; |
| 970 | uint32 width; |
| 971 | uint32 height; |
| 972 | uint32 andMaskDepth; // Value must be 1 or equal to BITS_PER_PIXEL |
| 973 | uint32 xorMaskDepth; // Value must be 1 or equal to BITS_PER_PIXEL |
| 974 | /* |
| 975 | * Followed by scanline data for AND mask, then XOR mask. |
| 976 | * Each scanline is padded to a 32-bit boundary. |
| 977 | */ |
| 978 | } SVGAFifoCmdDefineCursor; |
| 979 | |
| 980 | |
| 981 | /* |
| 982 | * SVGA_CMD_DEFINE_ALPHA_CURSOR -- |
| 983 | * |
| 984 | * Provide a new cursor image, in 32-bit BGRA format. |
| 985 | * |
| 986 | * The recommended way to position the cursor overlay is by using |
| 987 | * the SVGA_FIFO_CURSOR_* registers, supported by the |
| 988 | * SVGA_FIFO_CAP_CURSOR_BYPASS_3 capability. |
| 989 | * |
| 990 | * Availability: |
| 991 | * SVGA_CAP_ALPHA_CURSOR |
| 992 | */ |
| 993 | |
| 994 | typedef |
| 995 | struct { |
| 996 | uint32 id; // Reserved, must be zero. |
| 997 | uint32 hotspotX; |
| 998 | uint32 hotspotY; |
| 999 | uint32 width; |
| 1000 | uint32 height; |
| 1001 | /* Followed by scanline data */ |
| 1002 | } SVGAFifoCmdDefineAlphaCursor; |
| 1003 | |
| 1004 | |
| 1005 | /* |
| 1006 | * SVGA_CMD_UPDATE_VERBOSE -- |
| 1007 | * |
| 1008 | * Just like SVGA_CMD_UPDATE, but also provide a per-rectangle |
| 1009 | * 'reason' value, an opaque cookie which is used by internal |
| 1010 | * debugging tools. Third party drivers should not use this |
| 1011 | * command. |
| 1012 | * |
| 1013 | * Availability: |
| 1014 | * SVGA_CAP_EXTENDED_FIFO |
| 1015 | */ |
| 1016 | |
| 1017 | typedef |
| 1018 | struct { |
| 1019 | uint32 x; |
| 1020 | uint32 y; |
| 1021 | uint32 width; |
| 1022 | uint32 height; |
| 1023 | uint32 reason; |
| 1024 | } SVGAFifoCmdUpdateVerbose; |
| 1025 | |
| 1026 | |
| 1027 | /* |
| 1028 | * SVGA_CMD_FRONT_ROP_FILL -- |
| 1029 | * |
| 1030 | * This is a hint which tells the SVGA device that the driver has |
| 1031 | * just filled a rectangular region of the GFB with a solid |
| 1032 | * color. Instead of reading these pixels from the GFB, the device |
| 1033 | * can assume that they all equal 'color'. This is primarily used |
| 1034 | * for remote desktop protocols. |
| 1035 | * |
| 1036 | * Availability: |
| 1037 | * SVGA_FIFO_CAP_ACCELFRONT |
| 1038 | */ |
| 1039 | |
| 1040 | #define SVGA_ROP_COPY 0x03 |
| 1041 | |
| 1042 | typedef |
| 1043 | struct { |
| 1044 | uint32 color; // In the same format as the GFB |
| 1045 | uint32 x; |
| 1046 | uint32 y; |
| 1047 | uint32 width; |
| 1048 | uint32 height; |
| 1049 | uint32 rop; // Must be SVGA_ROP_COPY |
| 1050 | } SVGAFifoCmdFrontRopFill; |
| 1051 | |
| 1052 | |
| 1053 | /* |
| 1054 | * SVGA_CMD_FENCE -- |
| 1055 | * |
| 1056 | * Insert a synchronization fence. When the SVGA device reaches |
| 1057 | * this command, it will copy the 'fence' value into the |
| 1058 | * SVGA_FIFO_FENCE register. It will also compare the fence against |
| 1059 | * SVGA_FIFO_FENCE_GOAL. If the fence matches the goal and the |
| 1060 | * SVGA_IRQFLAG_FENCE_GOAL interrupt is enabled, the device will |
| 1061 | * raise this interrupt. |
| 1062 | * |
| 1063 | * Availability: |
| 1064 | * SVGA_FIFO_FENCE for this command, |
| 1065 | * SVGA_CAP_IRQMASK for SVGA_FIFO_FENCE_GOAL. |
| 1066 | */ |
| 1067 | |
| 1068 | typedef |
| 1069 | struct { |
| 1070 | uint32 fence; |
| 1071 | } SVGAFifoCmdFence; |
| 1072 | |
| 1073 | |
| 1074 | /* |
| 1075 | * SVGA_CMD_ESCAPE -- |
| 1076 | * |
| 1077 | * Send an extended or vendor-specific variable length command. |
| 1078 | * This is used for video overlay, third party plugins, and |
| 1079 | * internal debugging tools. See svga_escape.h |
| 1080 | * |
| 1081 | * Availability: |
| 1082 | * SVGA_FIFO_CAP_ESCAPE |
| 1083 | */ |
| 1084 | |
| 1085 | typedef |
| 1086 | struct { |
| 1087 | uint32 nsid; |
| 1088 | uint32 size; |
| 1089 | /* followed by 'size' bytes of data */ |
| 1090 | } SVGAFifoCmdEscape; |
| 1091 | |
| 1092 | |
| 1093 | /* |
| 1094 | * SVGA_CMD_DEFINE_SCREEN -- |
| 1095 | * |
| 1096 | * Define or redefine an SVGAScreenObject. See the description of |
| 1097 | * SVGAScreenObject above. The video driver is responsible for |
| 1098 | * generating new screen IDs. They should be small positive |
| 1099 | * integers. The virtual device will have an implementation |
| 1100 | * specific upper limit on the number of screen IDs |
| 1101 | * supported. Drivers are responsible for recycling IDs. The first |
| 1102 | * valid ID is zero. |
| 1103 | * |
| 1104 | * - Interaction with other registers: |
| 1105 | * |
| 1106 | * For backwards compatibility, when the GFB mode registers (WIDTH, |
| 1107 | * HEIGHT, PITCHLOCK, BITS_PER_PIXEL) are modified, the SVGA device |
| 1108 | * deletes all screens other than screen #0, and redefines screen |
| 1109 | * #0 according to the specified mode. Drivers that use |
| 1110 | * SVGA_CMD_DEFINE_SCREEN should destroy or redefine screen #0. |
| 1111 | * |
| 1112 | * If you use screen objects, do not use the legacy multi-mon |
| 1113 | * registers (SVGA_REG_NUM_GUEST_DISPLAYS, SVGA_REG_DISPLAY_*). |
| 1114 | * |
| 1115 | * Availability: |
| 1116 | * SVGA_FIFO_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT |
| 1117 | */ |
| 1118 | |
| 1119 | typedef |
| 1120 | struct { |
| 1121 | SVGAScreenObject screen; // Variable-length according to version |
| 1122 | } SVGAFifoCmdDefineScreen; |
| 1123 | |
| 1124 | |
| 1125 | /* |
| 1126 | * SVGA_CMD_DESTROY_SCREEN -- |
| 1127 | * |
| 1128 | * Destroy an SVGAScreenObject. Its ID is immediately available for |
| 1129 | * re-use. |
| 1130 | * |
| 1131 | * Availability: |
| 1132 | * SVGA_FIFO_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT |
| 1133 | */ |
| 1134 | |
| 1135 | typedef |
| 1136 | struct { |
| 1137 | uint32 screenId; |
| 1138 | } SVGAFifoCmdDestroyScreen; |
| 1139 | |
| 1140 | |
| 1141 | /* |
| 1142 | * SVGA_CMD_DEFINE_GMRFB -- |
| 1143 | * |
| 1144 | * This command sets a piece of SVGA device state called the |
| 1145 | * Guest Memory Region Framebuffer, or GMRFB. The GMRFB is a |
| 1146 | * piece of light-weight state which identifies the location and |
| 1147 | * format of an image in guest memory or in BAR1. The GMRFB has |
| 1148 | * an arbitrary size, and it doesn't need to match the geometry |
| 1149 | * of the GFB or any screen object. |
| 1150 | * |
| 1151 | * The GMRFB can be redefined as often as you like. You could |
| 1152 | * always use the same GMRFB, you could redefine it before |
| 1153 | * rendering from a different guest screen, or you could even |
| 1154 | * redefine it before every blit. |
| 1155 | * |
| 1156 | * There are multiple ways to use this command. The simplest way is |
| 1157 | * to use it to move the framebuffer either to elsewhere in the GFB |
| 1158 | * (BAR1) memory region, or to a user-defined GMR. This lets a |
| 1159 | * driver use a framebuffer allocated entirely out of normal system |
| 1160 | * memory, which we encourage. |
| 1161 | * |
| 1162 | * Another way to use this command is to set up a ring buffer of |
| 1163 | * updates in GFB memory. If a driver wants to ensure that no |
| 1164 | * frames are skipped by the SVGA device, it is important that the |
| 1165 | * driver not modify the source data for a blit until the device is |
| 1166 | * done processing the command. One efficient way to accomplish |
| 1167 | * this is to use a ring of small DMA buffers. Each buffer is used |
| 1168 | * for one blit, then we move on to the next buffer in the |
| 1169 | * ring. The FENCE mechanism is used to protect each buffer from |
| 1170 | * re-use until the device is finished with that buffer's |
| 1171 | * corresponding blit. |
| 1172 | * |
| 1173 | * This command does not affect the meaning of SVGA_CMD_UPDATE. |
| 1174 | * UPDATEs always occur from the legacy GFB memory area. This |
| 1175 | * command has no support for pseudocolor GMRFBs. Currently only |
| 1176 | * true-color 15, 16, and 24-bit depths are supported. Future |
| 1177 | * devices may expose capabilities for additional framebuffer |
| 1178 | * formats. |
| 1179 | * |
| 1180 | * The default GMRFB value is undefined. Drivers must always send |
| 1181 | * this command at least once before performing any blit from the |
| 1182 | * GMRFB. |
| 1183 | * |
| 1184 | * Availability: |
| 1185 | * SVGA_FIFO_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT |
| 1186 | */ |
| 1187 | |
| 1188 | typedef |
| 1189 | struct { |
| 1190 | SVGAGuestPtr ptr; |
| 1191 | uint32 bytesPerLine; |
| 1192 | SVGAGMRImageFormat format; |
| 1193 | } SVGAFifoCmdDefineGMRFB; |
| 1194 | |
| 1195 | |
| 1196 | /* |
| 1197 | * SVGA_CMD_BLIT_GMRFB_TO_SCREEN -- |
| 1198 | * |
| 1199 | * This is a guest-to-host blit. It performs a DMA operation to |
| 1200 | * copy a rectangular region of pixels from the current GMRFB to |
| 1201 | * one or more Screen Objects. |
| 1202 | * |
| 1203 | * The destination coordinate may be specified relative to a |
| 1204 | * screen's origin (if a screen ID is specified) or relative to the |
| 1205 | * virtual coordinate system's origin (if the screen ID is |
| 1206 | * SVGA_ID_INVALID). The actual destination may span zero or more |
| 1207 | * screens, in the case of a virtual destination rect or a rect |
| 1208 | * which extends off the edge of the specified screen. |
| 1209 | * |
| 1210 | * This command writes to the screen's "base layer": the underlying |
| 1211 | * framebuffer which exists below any cursor or video overlays. No |
| 1212 | * action is necessary to explicitly hide or update any overlays |
| 1213 | * which exist on top of the updated region. |
| 1214 | * |
| 1215 | * The SVGA device is guaranteed to finish reading from the GMRFB |
| 1216 | * by the time any subsequent FENCE commands are reached. |
| 1217 | * |
| 1218 | * This command consumes an annotation. See the |
| 1219 | * SVGA_CMD_ANNOTATION_* commands for details. |
| 1220 | * |
| 1221 | * Availability: |
| 1222 | * SVGA_FIFO_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT |
| 1223 | */ |
| 1224 | |
| 1225 | typedef |
| 1226 | struct { |
| 1227 | SVGASignedPoint srcOrigin; |
| 1228 | SVGASignedRect destRect; |
| 1229 | uint32 destScreenId; |
| 1230 | } SVGAFifoCmdBlitGMRFBToScreen; |
| 1231 | |
| 1232 | |
| 1233 | /* |
| 1234 | * SVGA_CMD_BLIT_SCREEN_TO_GMRFB -- |
| 1235 | * |
| 1236 | * This is a host-to-guest blit. It performs a DMA operation to |
| 1237 | * copy a rectangular region of pixels from a single Screen Object |
| 1238 | * back to the current GMRFB. |
| 1239 | * |
| 1240 | * Usage note: This command should be used rarely. It will |
| 1241 | * typically be inefficient, but it is necessary for some types of |
| 1242 | * synchronization between 3D (GPU) and 2D (CPU) rendering into |
| 1243 | * overlapping areas of a screen. |
| 1244 | * |
| 1245 | * The source coordinate is specified relative to a screen's |
| 1246 | * origin. The provided screen ID must be valid. If any parameters |
| 1247 | * are invalid, the resulting pixel values are undefined. |
| 1248 | * |
| 1249 | * This command reads the screen's "base layer". Overlays like |
| 1250 | * video and cursor are not included, but any data which was sent |
| 1251 | * using a blit-to-screen primitive will be available, no matter |
| 1252 | * whether the data's original source was the GMRFB or the 3D |
| 1253 | * acceleration hardware. |
| 1254 | * |
| 1255 | * Note that our guest-to-host blits and host-to-guest blits aren't |
| 1256 | * symmetric in their current implementation. While the parameters |
| 1257 | * are identical, host-to-guest blits are a lot less featureful. |
| 1258 | * They do not support clipping: If the source parameters don't |
| 1259 | * fully fit within a screen, the blit fails. They must originate |
| 1260 | * from exactly one screen. Virtual coordinates are not directly |
| 1261 | * supported. |
| 1262 | * |
| 1263 | * Host-to-guest blits do support the same set of GMRFB formats |
| 1264 | * offered by guest-to-host blits. |
| 1265 | * |
| 1266 | * The SVGA device is guaranteed to finish writing to the GMRFB by |
| 1267 | * the time any subsequent FENCE commands are reached. |
| 1268 | * |
| 1269 | * Availability: |
| 1270 | * SVGA_FIFO_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT |
| 1271 | */ |
| 1272 | |
| 1273 | typedef |
| 1274 | struct { |
| 1275 | SVGASignedPoint destOrigin; |
| 1276 | SVGASignedRect srcRect; |
| 1277 | uint32 srcScreenId; |
| 1278 | } SVGAFifoCmdBlitScreenToGMRFB; |
| 1279 | |
| 1280 | |
| 1281 | /* |
| 1282 | * SVGA_CMD_ANNOTATION_FILL -- |
| 1283 | * |
| 1284 | * This is a blit annotation. This command stores a small piece of |
| 1285 | * device state which is consumed by the next blit-to-screen |
| 1286 | * command. The state is only cleared by commands which are |
| 1287 | * specifically documented as consuming an annotation. Other |
| 1288 | * commands (such as ESCAPEs for debugging) may intervene between |
| 1289 | * the annotation and its associated blit. |
| 1290 | * |
| 1291 | * This annotation is a promise about the contents of the next |
| 1292 | * blit: The video driver is guaranteeing that all pixels in that |
| 1293 | * blit will have the same value, specified here as a color in |
| 1294 | * SVGAColorBGRX format. |
| 1295 | * |
| 1296 | * The SVGA device can still render the blit correctly even if it |
| 1297 | * ignores this annotation, but the annotation may allow it to |
| 1298 | * perform the blit more efficiently, for example by ignoring the |
| 1299 | * source data and performing a fill in hardware. |
| 1300 | * |
| 1301 | * This annotation is most important for performance when the |
| 1302 | * user's display is being remoted over a network connection. |
| 1303 | * |
| 1304 | * Availability: |
| 1305 | * SVGA_FIFO_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT |
| 1306 | */ |
| 1307 | |
| 1308 | typedef |
| 1309 | struct { |
| 1310 | SVGAColorBGRX color; |
| 1311 | } SVGAFifoCmdAnnotationFill; |
| 1312 | |
| 1313 | |
| 1314 | /* |
| 1315 | * SVGA_CMD_ANNOTATION_COPY -- |
| 1316 | * |
| 1317 | * This is a blit annotation. See SVGA_CMD_ANNOTATION_FILL for more |
| 1318 | * information about annotations. |
| 1319 | * |
| 1320 | * This annotation is a promise about the contents of the next |
| 1321 | * blit: The video driver is guaranteeing that all pixels in that |
| 1322 | * blit will have the same value as those which already exist at an |
| 1323 | * identically-sized region on the same or a different screen. |
| 1324 | * |
| 1325 | * Note that the source pixels for the COPY in this annotation are |
| 1326 | * sampled before applying the anqnotation's associated blit. They |
| 1327 | * are allowed to overlap with the blit's destination pixels. |
| 1328 | * |
| 1329 | * The copy source rectangle is specified the same way as the blit |
| 1330 | * destination: it can be a rectangle which spans zero or more |
| 1331 | * screens, specified relative to either a screen or to the virtual |
| 1332 | * coordinate system's origin. If the source rectangle includes |
| 1333 | * pixels which are not from exactly one screen, the results are |
| 1334 | * undefined. |
| 1335 | * |
| 1336 | * Availability: |
| 1337 | * SVGA_FIFO_CAP_SCREEN_OBJECT |
| 1338 | */ |
| 1339 | |
| 1340 | typedef |
| 1341 | struct { |
| 1342 | SVGASignedPoint srcOrigin; |
| 1343 | uint32 srcScreenId; |
| 1344 | } SVGAFifoCmdAnnotationCopy; |
| 1345 | |
| 1346 | #endif |