tree: 0bee3b29e5ebf4e3575465c8ccce9f3d3e1ef3de [path history] [tgz]
  1. files/
  2. mesa-freedreno-21.3.0_pre-r61.ebuild
  3. mesa-freedreno-9999.ebuild
  4. metadata.xml
  5. OWNERS
  6. README.md
media-libs/mesa-freedreno/README.md

ChromeOS freedreno development

Ebuild workflow

The ebuild for mesa-freedreno uses a downstream branch called chromeos-freedreno, which the repo tool will checkout under src/third_party/mesa-freedreno. The ebuild is a cros_workon ebuild and builds off of the mesa-freedreno repo. Rebasing to newer upstream is done by merging in a more recent upstream master. Downstream changes are committed directly to the branch, using the kernel repo convention for commit message prefixes.

Rebasing to new upstream

Rebasing the mesa-freedreno package is done by merging the upstream master branch into chromeos-freedreno. The ChromeOS mesa repo tracks upstream mesa master as cros/master, but it's also possible to just add a remote for the upstream repo to the mesa-freedreno repo.

Even if the merge could fast-forward, always create a merge commit so that we can push it to gerrit. As it is, chromeos-freedreno is already diverged form upstream master, and so git merge will always create a merge commit.

$ git merge --no-ff cros/master

Then push to gerrit:

$ git push cros HEAD:refs/for/chromeos-freedreno

which should result in a merge CL like http://crrev.com/c/1692972

Downstream changes

Downstream changes should be kept to a minimum. To fix a bug or regression, ideally we fix the issue upstream, then rebase chromeos-freedreno to a master commit with the fix in question. Then, if required, cherry-pick the patch back to a chromeos release branch of the chromeos-freedreno branch (for example release-R76-12239.B-chromeos-freedreno).

Downstream commits follow the convention of https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromiumos/docs/+/master/kernel_faq.md, in particular, using the CHROMIUM:, FROMLIST: etc commit message prefixes to highlight that a commit is downstream and identify the type of downstream commit.

$ git cherry-pick $HASH

Edit commit message, add TEST= and BUG= fields, prefix commit message with UPSTREAM: or other appropriate label, then

$ git push cros HEAD:refs/for/release-R76-12239.B-chromeos-freedreno

Ultimately, there may be cases were we have to carry a downstream modification that can't go upstream for some reason, in which case we will have to commit the change to chromeos-freedreno. Implement downstream modification, commit with CHROMIUM: prefix and push to gerrit as:

$ git push cros HEAD:refs/for/chromeos-freedreno

Result should be a CL something like http://crrev.com/c/1693031.

Viewing downstream delta

One downside to the chromeos-freedreno branch workflow is that it can be difficult to see the amount of changes we have downstream. There are a few git commands that can help visualize that. To get a list of commits that are only downstream use:

$ git log HEAD ^cros/master --oneline
8abe41b2fdd (HEAD) Merge remote-tracking branch 'cros/master' into HEAD
da35bf4b1d8 UPSTREAM: nir/lower_io_to_temporaries: Fix hash table leak
10721ef0b38 (m/master, cros/chromeos-freedreno) mesa-freedreno: Add OWNERS file

and to show the total diff between upstream and downstream use:

$ git diff cros/master...HEAD
diff --git a/OWNERS b/OWNERS
new file mode 100644
index 00000000000..b0ead24fa9d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/OWNERS
@@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
+astrachan@google.com
+basni@chromium.org
+chadversary@chromium.org
+cstout@chromium.org
diff --git a/src/compiler/nir/nir_lower_io_to_temporaries.c b/src/compiler/nir/nir_lower_io_to_temporaries.c
index c865c7de10c..f92489b9d51 100644
--- a/src/compiler/nir/nir_lower_io_to_temporaries.c
+++ b/src/compiler/nir/nir_lower_io_to_temporaries.c
@@ -364,4 +364,6 @@ nir_lower_io_to_temporaries(nir_shader *shader, nir_function_impl *entrypoint,
    exec_list_append(&shader->globals, &state.old_outputs);
 
    nir_fixup_deref_modes(shader);
+
+   _mesa_hash_table_destroy(state.input_map, NULL);
 }

Notice the triple-dot syntax cros/master...HEAD, shows the diff between cros/master as of when it was most recently merged into HEAD and current HEAD.

Upstream Development

This section documents a few workflows useful for developing upstream freedreno within the chromeos infrastructure.

Set up .local_mounts

The cros_sdk tool can bind mount a directory from the host filesystem into the SDK chroot. This is useful when editing source code outside the SDK and compiling it inside. Edit src/scripts/.local_mounts to something like:

/usr/local/google/home/hoegsberg/workspace /home/hoegsberg/workspace

to map the directory workspace from your host home directory to the home directory in the SDK.

Clone upstream mesa

With the shared workspace set up, clone mesa into it:

$ cd ~/workspace
$ git clone https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/mesa/mesa.git

Configure

In the mesa repository, create the file meson.armv7a-cros-linux-gnueabihf with this content:

[binaries]
ar = ['armv7a-cros-linux-gnueabihf-ar']
c = ['armv7a-cros-linux-gnueabihf-clang']
cpp = ['armv7a-cros-linux-gnueabihf-clang++']
fortran = ['gfortran']
llvm-config = 'llvm-config'
objc = ['cc']
objcpp = ['armv7a-cros-linux-gnueabihf-c++']
pkgconfig = '/build/cheza-freedreno/build/bin/pkg-config'
strip = ['armv7a-cros-linux-gnueabihf-strip']

[properties]
c_args = ['-O2', '-pipe', '-march=armv8-a+crc', '-mtune=cortex-a57.cortex-a53', '-mfpu=crypto-neon-fp-armv8', '-mfloat-abi=hard', '-g', '-fno-exceptions', '-fno-unwind-tables', '-fno-asynchronous-unwind-tables', '-UENABLE_SHADER_CACHE']
c_link_args = ['-O2', '-pipe', '-march=armv8-a+crc', '-mtune=cortex-a57.cortex-a53', '-mfpu=crypto-neon-fp-armv8', '-mfloat-abi=hard', '-g', '-fno-exceptions', '-fno-unwind-tables', '-fno-asynchronous-unwind-tables', '-Wl,-O2', '-Wl,--as-needed']
cpp_args = ['-O2', '-pipe', '-march=armv8-a+crc', '-mtune=cortex-a57.cortex-a53', '-mfpu=crypto-neon-fp-armv8', '-mfloat-abi=hard', '-g', '-fno-exceptions', '-fno-unwind-tables', '-fno-asynchronous-unwind-tables', '-std=gnu++11', '-UENABLE_SHADER_CACHE']
cpp_link_args = ['-O2', '-pipe', '-march=armv8-a+crc', '-mtune=cortex-a57.cortex-a53', '-mfpu=crypto-neon-fp-armv8', '-mfloat-abi=hard', '-g', '-fno-exceptions', '-fno-unwind-tables', '-fno-asynchronous-unwind-tables', '-std=gnu++11', '-Wl,-O2', '-Wl,--as-needed']
fortran_args = ['-O2']
fortran_link_args = ['-O2', '-Wl,-O2', '-Wl,--as-needed']
objc_args = ['-UENABLE_SHADER_CACHE']
objc_link_args = ['-Wl,-O2', '-Wl,--as-needed']
objcpp_args = ['-UENABLE_SHADER_CACHE']
objcpp_link_args = ['-Wl,-O2', '-Wl,--as-needed']

[host_machine]
system = 'linux'
cpu_family = 'arm'
cpu = 'armv7a'
endian = 'little'

This is a snapshot from the meson cross file generated by emerge-cheza-freedreno and may get out of date as the ChromeOS toolchain and build settings change over time. When building mesa with emerge, the cross file can be found in /build/cheza-freedreno/tmp/portage/media-libs/mesa-freedreno-9999/temp/meson.armv7a-cros-linux-gnueabihf.arm.

Then configure mesa for cross compiling the main ChromeOS GLES and Vulkan drivers using:

$ meson --buildtype debug --wrap-mode nodownload --cross-file meson.armv7a-cros-linux-gnueabihf \
    -Dllvm=false -Ddri3=false -Dglx=disabled -Degl=true -Dgbm=false -Dgles1=false -Dgles2=true \
	-Dshared-glapi=true -Ddri-drivers= -Dgallium-drivers=freedreno -Dgallium-vdpau=false \
	-Dgallium-xa=false -Dplatforms=surfaceless -Dvulkan-drivers=freedreno -DI-love-half-baked-turnips=true . build-debug

Building

Now we should be ready to compile mesa using ninja:

$ SYSROOT=/build/cheza-freedreno ninja -C build-debug

To compile mesa from outside the SDK (for example, from an editor or IDE), this script (fast-sdk.sh) enters an active SDK and runs the given command:

#!/bin/sh

set -x -e -u
set -o pipefail

board=cheza-freedreno
cros_sdk_pid=$(pgrep -f 'python2 /work/chromiumos/chromite/bin/cros_sdk' -n)
if [ -d /build/${board} ]; then
   echo Already in SDK
   SYSROOT=/build/${board} exec "$@"
else
   exec sudo nsenter -a -t $cros_sdk_pid chroot /work/chromiumos/chroot \
      sudo -u ${USER} -i SYSROOT=/build/${board} "$@"  |
      sed -e "s#/home/${USER}#${HOME}#g" 2>&1
fi

which can then be used to compile mesa from outside the SDK like so:

$ ./fast_sdk.sh ninja -C /home/hoegsberg/workspace/mesa-work/build-debug

Deploy to target

This script will rsync the built driver and libraries to a device. It unconditionally overwrites whatever other driver currently on the device, so use with caution.

#!/bin/bash

set -e

dir=$(readlink -f $1)
shift

DESTDIR=$dir/build-debug/install ninja -C $dir install

files=$dir/install/usr/local/lib*.so*
driver=$dir/install/usr/local/lib/dri/msm_dri.so

for host in "$@"; do
    echo deploy to host $host
    ssh -n $host "mount -o rw,remount /" &&
    rsync -a --info=name2 $files $host:/usr/lib &&
    rsync -a --info=name2 $driver $host:/usr/lib/dri/msm_dri.so &
done

wait

Another approach is to copy the libraries and DRI driver to a /tmp subdirectory and set up LD_LIBRARY_PATH and LIBGL_DRIVERS_PATH to point to that location.