Am 12.05.20 um 23:12 schrieb Alex Deucher:
On Tue, May 12, 2020 at 4:52 PM Roy Spliet <nouv...@spliet.org> wrote:
Op 12-05-2020 om 14:36 schreef Alex Deucher:
On Tue, May 12, 2020 at 4:16 AM Michel Dänzer <mic...@daenzer.net> wrote:
On 2020-05-11 10:12 p.m., Alex Deucher wrote:
On Mon, May 11, 2020 at 1:17 PM Christian König
<ckoenig.leichtzumer...@gmail.com> wrote:
AGP is deprecated for 10+ years now and not used any more on modern hardware.

Old hardware should continue to work in PCI mode.
Might want to clarify that there is no loss of functionality here.
Something like:

"There is no loss of functionality here.  GPUs will continue to
function.  This just drops the use of the AGP MMU in the chipset in
favor of the MMU on the device which has proven to be much more
reliable.  Due to its unreliability, AGP support has been disabled on
PowerPC for years already so there is no change on PowerPC."
There's a difference between something being disabled by default or not
being available at all. We may decide it's worth it anyway, but let's do
it based on facts.

I didn't mean to imply that AGP GART support was already removed.  But
for the vast majority of users the end result is the same.  If you
knew enough re-enable AGP GART, you probably wouldn't have been as
confused about what this patch set does either.  To reiterate, this
patch set does not remove support for AGP cards, it only removes the
support for AGP GART.  The cards will still be functional using the
device GART.  There may be performance tradeoffs there in some cases.
I'll volunteer to be the one asking: how big is this performance
difference? Have any benchmarks been run before and after removal of AGP
GART code on affected nouveau/radeon systems? Or is this code being
dropped _just_ because it's cumbersome, with no regard for metrics that
determine the value of AGP GART support?

I don't think anyone has any solid numbers, just anecdotal from
memory.  I certainly don't have any functional AGP systems at this
point.  It's mostly just cumbersome and would allow us to clean ttm
and probably improve stability at the same time.  At least on the
radeon side, the only native AGP cards were r1xx, r2xx, and some of
the early r3xx boards.  Once we switched to pcie mid-way through r3xx,
everything was native pcie and the AGP cards used a pcie to AGP bridge
chip so they had a decent on chip MMU.  Those older cards topped out
at maybe 32 or 64 MB of vram, so they are going to be hard pressed to
deal with modern desktops anyway.  No idea what sort of GART
capabilities NV AGP hardware at this time had.

I could only test with an old x86 Mac and an r3xx generation hw and in this case making the switch didn't had any noticeable effect at all.

But I didn't do more than playing around with the desktop effects and playing a video.

I do have a PC x86 AGP board lying around somewhere here, going top give that one a try a well.

Christian.


Alex

Roy

Alex
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