Previously, framebuffers were stored as fb_current and fb_pending.
In this scheme, current was the last buffer that the kernel/hardware had
acknowledged displaying: a framebuffer would be created, set as
fb_pending, and Weston would request the kernel display it. When the
kernel signals that the request was completed and the hardware had made
the buffer current (i.e. page_flip_handler / vblank_handler), we would
unreference the old fb_current, and promote fb_pending to fb_current.
In other words, the view is 'which buffer has turned to light?'.
This patch changes them to a tristate of fb_last, fb_current and
fb_pending, based around the kernel's view of the current state.
fb_pending is used purely as a staging area for request construction;
when the kernel acknowledges a request (e.g. drmModePageFlip returns 0),
the previous buffer is moved to fb_last, and this new buffer to
fb_current. When the kernel signals that the request has completed and
the hardware has made the buffer current, we simply unreference and
clear fb_last, without touching fb_current/fb_pending.
The view here is now 'which state is current in the kernel?'.
As all state changes are incremental on the last state submitted to the
kernel, even if the hardware has not yet been able to make it current,
this simplifies state tracking: all state submissions will always be
relative to fb_current, rather than the previous
(fb_pending) ? fb_pending : fb_current.
The use of fb_pending is strictly bounded between a repaint cycle
(including a grouped set of repaints) beginning, and those repaints
being flushed to the kernel.
fb_current will always be valid between an output's first repaint
flush, and when a disable/destroy request has been processed. For a
plane, it will be valid when a repaint cycle enabling that plane has
been flushed, and when a repaint cycle disabling that plane has been
flushed.
fb_last is only present when a repaint request for the output/plane has
been submitted, but not yet completed by the hardware.
This is the same set of constructs which will be used for storing
plane/output state objects in future patches.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniels@collabora.com>
Reviewed-by: Pekka Paalanen <pekka.paalanen@collabora.co.uk>