op 23-07-14 10:20, Christian K?nig schreef:
> Am 23.07.2014 10:07, schrieb Daniel Vetter:
>> On Wed, Jul 23, 2014 at 9:58 AM, Christian K?nig
>> <deathsimple at vodafone.de> wrote:
>>> Just imagine an application using prime is locking up Radeon and because of
>>> that gets killed by the user. Nothing else in the system would use the
>>> Radeon hardware any more and so radeon gets only called by another driver
>>> waiting patiently for radeon to finish rendering which never happens because
>>> the whole thing is locked up and we don't get a chance to recover.
>> But isn't that possible already without fences? X hangs radeon, user
>> crashes X for unrelated reasons before radeon will notice the hang.
>> Then no one uses radeon any longer and the hang stays undetected.
>
> Yeah, especially with multimedia application. But I don't really care about 
> this problem because the next time an application tries to use the block in 
> question we actually do the reset and everything is fine.
>
> In your example we would do the reset when the next X server starts, before 
> that point nobody would care because nobody uses the hardware.
>
> An additional problem here is that resets are something perfect normal for 
> radeon. For example UVD can "crash" when you feed it with invalid bitstream 
> data, (ok actually it send an interrupt and stops any processing for the 
> driver to investigate). To continue processing you need to go through a 
> rather complicated reset procedure.
In this case if the sync was to i915 the i915 lockup procedure would take care 
of itself. It wouldn't fix radeon, but it would at least unblock your intel 
card again. I haven't specifically added a special case to attempt to unblock 
external fences, but I've considered it. :-)

~Maarten

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