linux/include/drm/drm_panic.h
Jocelyn Falempe bf9fb17c66 drm/panic: Add a drm panic handler
This module displays a user friendly message when a kernel panic
occurs. It currently doesn't contain any debug information,
but that can be added later.

v2
 * Use get_scanout_buffer() instead of the drm client API.
  (Thomas Zimmermann)
 * Add the panic reason to the panic message (Nerdopolis)
 * Add an exclamation mark (Nerdopolis)

v3
 * Rework the drawing functions, to write the pixels line by line and
 to use the drm conversion helper to support other formats.
 (Thomas Zimmermann)

v4
 * Use drm_fb_r1_to_32bit for fonts (Thomas Zimmermann)
 * Remove the default y to DRM_PANIC config option (Thomas Zimmermann)
 * Add foreground/background color config option
 * Fix the bottom lines not painted if the framebuffer height
   is not a multiple of the font height.
 * Automatically register the device to drm_panic, if the function
   get_scanout_buffer exists. (Thomas Zimmermann)

v5
 * Change the drawing API, use drm_fb_blit_from_r1() to draw the font.
 * Also add drm_fb_fill() to fill area with background color.
 * Add draw_pixel_xy() API for drivers that can't provide a linear buffer.
 * Add a flush() callback for drivers that needs to synchronize the buffer.
 * Add a void *private field, so drivers can pass private data to
   draw_pixel_xy() and flush().

v6
 * Fix sparse warning for panic_msg and logo.

v7
 * Add select DRM_KMS_HELPER for the color conversion functions.

v8
 * Register directly each plane to the panic notifier (Sima)
 * Add raw_spinlock to properly handle concurrency (Sima)
 * Register plane instead of device, to avoid looping through plane
   list, and simplify code.
 * Replace get_scanout_buffer() logic with drm_panic_set_buffer()
  (Thomas Zimmermann)
 * Removed the draw_pixel_xy() API, will see later if it can be added back.

v9
 * Revert to using get_scanout_buffer() (Sima)
 * Move get_scanout_buffer() and panic_flush() to the plane helper
   functions (Thomas Zimmermann)
 * Register all planes with get_scanout_buffer() to the panic notifier
 * Use drm_panic_lock() to protect against race (Sima)

v10
 * Move blit and fill functions back in drm_panic (Thomas Zimmermann).
 * Simplify the text drawing functions.
 * Use kmsg_dumper instead of panic_notifier (Sima).

v12
 * Use array for map and pitch in struct drm_scanout_buffer
   to support multi-planar format later. (Thomas Zimmermann)
 * Better indent struct drm_scanout_buffer declaration. (Thomas Zimmermann)

Signed-off-by: Jocelyn Falempe <jfalempe@redhat.com>
Link: https://patchwork.freedesktop.org/patch/msgid/20240409163432.352518-3-jfalempe@redhat.com
Acked-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
2024-04-15 16:12:49 +02:00

153 lines
5 KiB
C

/* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 or MIT */
#ifndef __DRM_PANIC_H__
#define __DRM_PANIC_H__
#include <linux/module.h>
#include <linux/types.h>
#include <linux/iosys-map.h>
#include <drm/drm_device.h>
#include <drm/drm_fourcc.h>
/*
* Copyright (c) 2024 Intel
*/
/**
* struct drm_scanout_buffer - DRM scanout buffer
*
* This structure holds the information necessary for drm_panic to draw the
* panic screen, and display it.
*/
struct drm_scanout_buffer {
/**
* @format:
*
* drm format of the scanout buffer.
*/
const struct drm_format_info *format;
/**
* @map:
*
* Virtual address of the scanout buffer, either in memory or iomem.
* The scanout buffer should be in linear format, and can be directly
* sent to the display hardware. Tearing is not an issue for the panic
* screen.
*/
struct iosys_map map[DRM_FORMAT_MAX_PLANES];
/**
* @width: Width of the scanout buffer, in pixels.
*/
unsigned int width;
/**
* @height: Height of the scanout buffer, in pixels.
*/
unsigned int height;
/**
* @pitch: Length in bytes between the start of two consecutive lines.
*/
unsigned int pitch[DRM_FORMAT_MAX_PLANES];
};
/**
* drm_panic_trylock - try to enter the panic printing critical section
* @dev: struct drm_device
* @flags: unsigned long irq flags you need to pass to the unlock() counterpart
*
* This function must be called by any panic printing code. The panic printing
* attempt must be aborted if the trylock fails.
*
* Panic printing code can make the following assumptions while holding the
* panic lock:
*
* - Anything protected by drm_panic_lock() and drm_panic_unlock() pairs is safe
* to access.
*
* - Furthermore the panic printing code only registers in drm_dev_unregister()
* and gets removed in drm_dev_unregister(). This allows the panic code to
* safely access any state which is invariant in between these two function
* calls, like the list of planes &drm_mode_config.plane_list or most of the
* struct drm_plane structure.
*
* Specifically thanks to the protection around plane updates in
* drm_atomic_helper_swap_state() the following additional guarantees hold:
*
* - It is safe to deference the drm_plane.state pointer.
*
* - Anything in struct drm_plane_state or the driver's subclass thereof which
* stays invariant after the atomic check code has finished is safe to access.
* Specifically this includes the reference counted pointers to framebuffer
* and buffer objects.
*
* - Anything set up by &drm_plane_helper_funcs.fb_prepare and cleaned up
* &drm_plane_helper_funcs.fb_cleanup is safe to access, as long as it stays
* invariant between these two calls. This also means that for drivers using
* dynamic buffer management the framebuffer is pinned, and therefer all
* relevant datastructures can be accessed without taking any further locks
* (which would be impossible in panic context anyway).
*
* - Importantly, software and hardware state set up by
* &drm_plane_helper_funcs.begin_fb_access and
* &drm_plane_helper_funcs.end_fb_access is not safe to access.
*
* Drivers must not make any assumptions about the actual state of the hardware,
* unless they explicitly protected these hardware access with drm_panic_lock()
* and drm_panic_unlock().
*
* Return:
* %0 when failing to acquire the raw spinlock, nonzero on success.
*/
#define drm_panic_trylock(dev, flags) \
raw_spin_trylock_irqsave(&(dev)->mode_config.panic_lock, flags)
/**
* drm_panic_lock - protect panic printing relevant state
* @dev: struct drm_device
* @flags: unsigned long irq flags you need to pass to the unlock() counterpart
*
* This function must be called to protect software and hardware state that the
* panic printing code must be able to rely on. The protected sections must be
* as small as possible. It uses the irqsave/irqrestore variant, and can be
* called from irq handler. Examples include:
*
* - Access to peek/poke or other similar registers, if that is the way the
* driver prints the pixels into the scanout buffer at panic time.
*
* - Updates to pointers like &drm_plane.state, allowing the panic handler to
* safely deference these. This is done in drm_atomic_helper_swap_state().
*
* - An state that isn't invariant and that the driver must be able to access
* during panic printing.
*/
#define drm_panic_lock(dev, flags) \
raw_spin_lock_irqsave(&(dev)->mode_config.panic_lock, flags)
/**
* drm_panic_unlock - end of the panic printing critical section
* @dev: struct drm_device
* @flags: irq flags that were returned when acquiring the lock
*
* Unlocks the raw spinlock acquired by either drm_panic_lock() or
* drm_panic_trylock().
*/
#define drm_panic_unlock(dev, flags) \
raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore(&(dev)->mode_config.panic_lock, flags)
#ifdef CONFIG_DRM_PANIC
void drm_panic_register(struct drm_device *dev);
void drm_panic_unregister(struct drm_device *dev);
#else
static inline void drm_panic_register(struct drm_device *dev) {}
static inline void drm_panic_unregister(struct drm_device *dev) {}
#endif
#endif /* __DRM_PANIC_H__ */