1/*
2 * Created: Fri Jan 19 10:48:35 2001 by faith@acm.org
3 *
4 * Copyright 2001 VA Linux Systems, Inc., Sunnyvale, California.
5 * All Rights Reserved.
6 *
7 * Author Rickard E. (Rik) Faith <faith@valinux.com>
8 *
9 * Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a
10 * copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"),
11 * to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation
12 * the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense,
13 * and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the
14 * Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
15 *
16 * The above copyright notice and this permission notice (including the next
17 * paragraph) shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the
18 * Software.
19 *
20 * THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
21 * IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
22 * FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT.  IN NO EVENT SHALL
23 * PRECISION INSIGHT AND/OR ITS SUPPLIERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR
24 * OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE,
25 * ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER
26 * DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
27 */
28
29#include <linux/debugfs.h>
30#include <linux/fs.h>
31#include <linux/module.h>
32#include <linux/moduleparam.h>
33#include <linux/mount.h>
34#include <linux/pseudo_fs.h>
35#include <linux/slab.h>
36#include <linux/srcu.h>
37
38#include <drm/drm_client.h>
39#include <drm/drm_color_mgmt.h>
40#include <drm/drm_drv.h>
41#include <drm/drm_file.h>
42#include <drm/drm_managed.h>
43#include <drm/drm_mode_object.h>
44#include <drm/drm_print.h>
45
46#include "drm_crtc_internal.h"
47#include "drm_internal.h"
48#include "drm_legacy.h"
49
50MODULE_AUTHOR("Gareth Hughes, Leif Delgass, José Fonseca, Jon Smirl");
51MODULE_DESCRIPTION("DRM shared core routines");
52MODULE_LICENSE("GPL and additional rights");
53
54static DEFINE_SPINLOCK(drm_minor_lock);
55static struct idr drm_minors_idr;
56
57/*
58 * If the drm core fails to init for whatever reason,
59 * we should prevent any drivers from registering with it.
60 * It's best to check this at drm_dev_init(), as some drivers
61 * prefer to embed struct drm_device into their own device
62 * structure and call drm_dev_init() themselves.
63 */
64static bool drm_core_init_complete = false;
65
66static struct dentry *drm_debugfs_root;
67
68DEFINE_STATIC_SRCU(drm_unplug_srcu);
69
70/*
71 * DRM Minors
72 * A DRM device can provide several char-dev interfaces on the DRM-Major. Each
73 * of them is represented by a drm_minor object. Depending on the capabilities
74 * of the device-driver, different interfaces are registered.
75 *
76 * Minors can be accessed via dev->$minor_name. This pointer is either
77 * NULL or a valid drm_minor pointer and stays valid as long as the device is
78 * valid. This means, DRM minors have the same life-time as the underlying
79 * device. However, this doesn't mean that the minor is active. Minors are
80 * registered and unregistered dynamically according to device-state.
81 */
82
83static struct drm_minor **drm_minor_get_slot(struct drm_device *dev,
84					     unsigned int type)
85{
86	switch (type) {
87	case DRM_MINOR_PRIMARY:
88		return &dev->primary;
89	case DRM_MINOR_RENDER:
90		return &dev->render;
91	default:
92		BUG();
93	}
94}
95
96static void drm_minor_alloc_release(struct drm_device *dev, void *data)
97{
98	struct drm_minor *minor = data;
99	unsigned long flags;
100
101	WARN_ON(dev != minor->dev);
102
103	put_device(minor->kdev);
104
105	spin_lock_irqsave(&drm_minor_lock, flags);
106	idr_remove(&drm_minors_idr, minor->index);
107	spin_unlock_irqrestore(&drm_minor_lock, flags);
108}
109
110static int drm_minor_alloc(struct drm_device *dev, unsigned int type)
111{
112	struct drm_minor *minor;
113	unsigned long flags;
114	int r;
115
116	minor = drmm_kzalloc(dev, sizeof(*minor), GFP_KERNEL);
117	if (!minor)
118		return -ENOMEM;
119
120	minor->type = type;
121	minor->dev = dev;
122
123	idr_preload(GFP_KERNEL);
124	spin_lock_irqsave(&drm_minor_lock, flags);
125	r = idr_alloc(&drm_minors_idr,
126		      NULL,
127		      64 * type,
128		      64 * (type + 1),
129		      GFP_NOWAIT);
130	spin_unlock_irqrestore(&drm_minor_lock, flags);
131	idr_preload_end();
132
133	if (r < 0)
134		return r;
135
136	minor->index = r;
137
138	r = drmm_add_action_or_reset(dev, drm_minor_alloc_release, minor);
139	if (r)
140		return r;
141
142	minor->kdev = drm_sysfs_minor_alloc(minor);
143	if (IS_ERR(minor->kdev))
144		return PTR_ERR(minor->kdev);
145
146	*drm_minor_get_slot(dev, type) = minor;
147	return 0;
148}
149
150static int drm_minor_register(struct drm_device *dev, unsigned int type)
151{
152	struct drm_minor *minor;
153	unsigned long flags;
154	int ret;
155
156	DRM_DEBUG("\n");
157
158	minor = *drm_minor_get_slot(dev, type);
159	if (!minor)
160		return 0;
161
162	ret = drm_debugfs_init(minor, minor->index, drm_debugfs_root);
163	if (ret) {
164		DRM_ERROR("DRM: Failed to initialize /sys/kernel/debug/dri.\n");
165		goto err_debugfs;
166	}
167
168	ret = device_add(minor->kdev);
169	if (ret)
170		goto err_debugfs;
171
172	/* replace NULL with @minor so lookups will succeed from now on */
173	spin_lock_irqsave(&drm_minor_lock, flags);
174	idr_replace(&drm_minors_idr, minor, minor->index);
175	spin_unlock_irqrestore(&drm_minor_lock, flags);
176
177	DRM_DEBUG("new minor registered %d\n", minor->index);
178	return 0;
179
180err_debugfs:
181	drm_debugfs_cleanup(minor);
182	return ret;
183}
184
185static void drm_minor_unregister(struct drm_device *dev, unsigned int type)
186{
187	struct drm_minor *minor;
188	unsigned long flags;
189
190	minor = *drm_minor_get_slot(dev, type);
191	if (!minor || !device_is_registered(minor->kdev))
192		return;
193
194	/* replace @minor with NULL so lookups will fail from now on */
195	spin_lock_irqsave(&drm_minor_lock, flags);
196	idr_replace(&drm_minors_idr, NULL, minor->index);
197	spin_unlock_irqrestore(&drm_minor_lock, flags);
198
199	device_del(minor->kdev);
200	dev_set_drvdata(minor->kdev, NULL); /* safety belt */
201	drm_debugfs_cleanup(minor);
202}
203
204/*
205 * Looks up the given minor-ID and returns the respective DRM-minor object. The
206 * refence-count of the underlying device is increased so you must release this
207 * object with drm_minor_release().
208 *
209 * As long as you hold this minor, it is guaranteed that the object and the
210 * minor->dev pointer will stay valid! However, the device may get unplugged and
211 * unregistered while you hold the minor.
212 */
213struct drm_minor *drm_minor_acquire(unsigned int minor_id)
214{
215	struct drm_minor *minor;
216	unsigned long flags;
217
218	spin_lock_irqsave(&drm_minor_lock, flags);
219	minor = idr_find(&drm_minors_idr, minor_id);
220	if (minor)
221		drm_dev_get(minor->dev);
222	spin_unlock_irqrestore(&drm_minor_lock, flags);
223
224	if (!minor) {
225		return ERR_PTR(-ENODEV);
226	} else if (drm_dev_is_unplugged(minor->dev)) {
227		drm_dev_put(minor->dev);
228		return ERR_PTR(-ENODEV);
229	}
230
231	return minor;
232}
233
234void drm_minor_release(struct drm_minor *minor)
235{
236	drm_dev_put(minor->dev);
237}
238
239/**
240 * DOC: driver instance overview
241 *
242 * A device instance for a drm driver is represented by &struct drm_device. This
243 * is allocated and initialized with devm_drm_dev_alloc(), usually from
244 * bus-specific ->probe() callbacks implemented by the driver. The driver then
245 * needs to initialize all the various subsystems for the drm device like memory
246 * management, vblank handling, modesetting support and initial output
247 * configuration plus obviously initialize all the corresponding hardware bits.
248 * Finally when everything is up and running and ready for userspace the device
249 * instance can be published using drm_dev_register().
250 *
251 * There is also deprecated support for initalizing device instances using
252 * bus-specific helpers and the &drm_driver.load callback. But due to
253 * backwards-compatibility needs the device instance have to be published too
254 * early, which requires unpretty global locking to make safe and is therefore
255 * only support for existing drivers not yet converted to the new scheme.
256 *
257 * When cleaning up a device instance everything needs to be done in reverse:
258 * First unpublish the device instance with drm_dev_unregister(). Then clean up
259 * any other resources allocated at device initialization and drop the driver's
260 * reference to &drm_device using drm_dev_put().
261 *
262 * Note that any allocation or resource which is visible to userspace must be
263 * released only when the final drm_dev_put() is called, and not when the
264 * driver is unbound from the underlying physical struct &device. Best to use
265 * &drm_device managed resources with drmm_add_action(), drmm_kmalloc() and
266 * related functions.
267 *
268 * devres managed resources like devm_kmalloc() can only be used for resources
269 * directly related to the underlying hardware device, and only used in code
270 * paths fully protected by drm_dev_enter() and drm_dev_exit().
271 *
272 * Display driver example
273 * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
274 *
275 * The following example shows a typical structure of a DRM display driver.
276 * The example focus on the probe() function and the other functions that is
277 * almost always present and serves as a demonstration of devm_drm_dev_alloc().
278 *
279 * .. code-block:: c
280 *
281 *	struct driver_device {
282 *		struct drm_device drm;
283 *		void *userspace_facing;
284 *		struct clk *pclk;
285 *	};
286 *
287 *	static struct drm_driver driver_drm_driver = {
288 *		[...]
289 *	};
290 *
291 *	static int driver_probe(struct platform_device *pdev)
292 *	{
293 *		struct driver_device *priv;
294 *		struct drm_device *drm;
295 *		int ret;
296 *
297 *		priv = devm_drm_dev_alloc(&pdev->dev, &driver_drm_driver,
298 *					  struct driver_device, drm);
299 *		if (IS_ERR(priv))
300 *			return PTR_ERR(priv);
301 *		drm = &priv->drm;
302 *
303 *		ret = drmm_mode_config_init(drm);
304 *		if (ret)
305 *			return ret;
306 *
307 *		priv->userspace_facing = drmm_kzalloc(..., GFP_KERNEL);
308 *		if (!priv->userspace_facing)
309 *			return -ENOMEM;
310 *
311 *		priv->pclk = devm_clk_get(dev, "PCLK");
312 *		if (IS_ERR(priv->pclk))
313 *			return PTR_ERR(priv->pclk);
314 *
315 *		// Further setup, display pipeline etc
316 *
317 *		platform_set_drvdata(pdev, drm);
318 *
319 *		drm_mode_config_reset(drm);
320 *
321 *		ret = drm_dev_register(drm);
322 *		if (ret)
323 *			return ret;
324 *
325 *		drm_fbdev_generic_setup(drm, 32);
326 *
327 *		return 0;
328 *	}
329 *
330 *	// This function is called before the devm_ resources are released
331 *	static int driver_remove(struct platform_device *pdev)
332 *	{
333 *		struct drm_device *drm = platform_get_drvdata(pdev);
334 *
335 *		drm_dev_unregister(drm);
336 *		drm_atomic_helper_shutdown(drm)
337 *
338 *		return 0;
339 *	}
340 *
341 *	// This function is called on kernel restart and shutdown
342 *	static void driver_shutdown(struct platform_device *pdev)
343 *	{
344 *		drm_atomic_helper_shutdown(platform_get_drvdata(pdev));
345 *	}
346 *
347 *	static int __maybe_unused driver_pm_suspend(struct device *dev)
348 *	{
349 *		return drm_mode_config_helper_suspend(dev_get_drvdata(dev));
350 *	}
351 *
352 *	static int __maybe_unused driver_pm_resume(struct device *dev)
353 *	{
354 *		drm_mode_config_helper_resume(dev_get_drvdata(dev));
355 *
356 *		return 0;
357 *	}
358 *
359 *	static const struct dev_pm_ops driver_pm_ops = {
360 *		SET_SYSTEM_SLEEP_PM_OPS(driver_pm_suspend, driver_pm_resume)
361 *	};
362 *
363 *	static struct platform_driver driver_driver = {
364 *		.driver = {
365 *			[...]
366 *			.pm = &driver_pm_ops,
367 *		},
368 *		.probe = driver_probe,
369 *		.remove = driver_remove,
370 *		.shutdown = driver_shutdown,
371 *	};
372 *	module_platform_driver(driver_driver);
373 *
374 * Drivers that want to support device unplugging (USB, DT overlay unload) should
375 * use drm_dev_unplug() instead of drm_dev_unregister(). The driver must protect
376 * regions that is accessing device resources to prevent use after they're
377 * released. This is done using drm_dev_enter() and drm_dev_exit(). There is one
378 * shortcoming however, drm_dev_unplug() marks the drm_device as unplugged before
379 * drm_atomic_helper_shutdown() is called. This means that if the disable code
380 * paths are protected, they will not run on regular driver module unload,
381 * possibily leaving the hardware enabled.
382 */
383
384/**
385 * drm_put_dev - Unregister and release a DRM device
386 * @dev: DRM device
387 *
388 * Called at module unload time or when a PCI device is unplugged.
389 *
390 * Cleans up all DRM device, calling drm_lastclose().
391 *
392 * Note: Use of this function is deprecated. It will eventually go away
393 * completely.  Please use drm_dev_unregister() and drm_dev_put() explicitly
394 * instead to make sure that the device isn't userspace accessible any more
395 * while teardown is in progress, ensuring that userspace can't access an
396 * inconsistent state.
397 */
398void drm_put_dev(struct drm_device *dev)
399{
400	DRM_DEBUG("\n");
401
402	if (!dev) {
403		DRM_ERROR("cleanup called no dev\n");
404		return;
405	}
406
407	drm_dev_unregister(dev);
408	drm_dev_put(dev);
409}
410EXPORT_SYMBOL(drm_put_dev);
411
412/**
413 * drm_dev_enter - Enter device critical section
414 * @dev: DRM device
415 * @idx: Pointer to index that will be passed to the matching drm_dev_exit()
416 *
417 * This function marks and protects the beginning of a section that should not
418 * be entered after the device has been unplugged. The section end is marked
419 * with drm_dev_exit(). Calls to this function can be nested.
420 *
421 * Returns:
422 * True if it is OK to enter the section, false otherwise.
423 */
424bool drm_dev_enter(struct drm_device *dev, int *idx)
425{
426	*idx = srcu_read_lock(&drm_unplug_srcu);
427
428	if (dev->unplugged) {
429		srcu_read_unlock(&drm_unplug_srcu, *idx);
430		return false;
431	}
432
433	return true;
434}
435EXPORT_SYMBOL(drm_dev_enter);
436
437/**
438 * drm_dev_exit - Exit device critical section
439 * @idx: index returned from drm_dev_enter()
440 *
441 * This function marks the end of a section that should not be entered after
442 * the device has been unplugged.
443 */
444void drm_dev_exit(int idx)
445{
446	srcu_read_unlock(&drm_unplug_srcu, idx);
447}
448EXPORT_SYMBOL(drm_dev_exit);
449
450/**
451 * drm_dev_unplug - unplug a DRM device
452 * @dev: DRM device
453 *
454 * This unplugs a hotpluggable DRM device, which makes it inaccessible to
455 * userspace operations. Entry-points can use drm_dev_enter() and
456 * drm_dev_exit() to protect device resources in a race free manner. This
457 * essentially unregisters the device like drm_dev_unregister(), but can be
458 * called while there are still open users of @dev.
459 */
460void drm_dev_unplug(struct drm_device *dev)
461{
462	/*
463	 * After synchronizing any critical read section is guaranteed to see
464	 * the new value of ->unplugged, and any critical section which might
465	 * still have seen the old value of ->unplugged is guaranteed to have
466	 * finished.
467	 */
468	dev->unplugged = true;
469	synchronize_srcu(&drm_unplug_srcu);
470
471	drm_dev_unregister(dev);
472}
473EXPORT_SYMBOL(drm_dev_unplug);
474
475/*
476 * DRM internal mount
477 * We want to be able to allocate our own "struct address_space" to control
478 * memory-mappings in VRAM (or stolen RAM, ...). However, core MM does not allow
479 * stand-alone address_space objects, so we need an underlying inode. As there
480 * is no way to allocate an independent inode easily, we need a fake internal
481 * VFS mount-point.
482 *
483 * The drm_fs_inode_new() function allocates a new inode, drm_fs_inode_free()
484 * frees it again. You are allowed to use iget() and iput() to get references to
485 * the inode. But each drm_fs_inode_new() call must be paired with exactly one
486 * drm_fs_inode_free() call (which does not have to be the last iput()).
487 * We use drm_fs_inode_*() to manage our internal VFS mount-point and share it
488 * between multiple inode-users. You could, technically, call
489 * iget() + drm_fs_inode_free() directly after alloc and sometime later do an
490 * iput(), but this way you'd end up with a new vfsmount for each inode.
491 */
492
493static int drm_fs_cnt;
494static struct vfsmount *drm_fs_mnt;
495
496static int drm_fs_init_fs_context(struct fs_context *fc)
497{
498	return init_pseudo(fc, 0x010203ff) ? 0 : -ENOMEM;
499}
500
501static struct file_system_type drm_fs_type = {
502	.name		= "drm",
503	.owner		= THIS_MODULE,
504	.init_fs_context = drm_fs_init_fs_context,
505	.kill_sb	= kill_anon_super,
506};
507
508static struct inode *drm_fs_inode_new(void)
509{
510	struct inode *inode;
511	int r;
512
513	r = simple_pin_fs(&drm_fs_type, &drm_fs_mnt, &drm_fs_cnt);
514	if (r < 0) {
515		DRM_ERROR("Cannot mount pseudo fs: %d\n", r);
516		return ERR_PTR(r);
517	}
518
519	inode = alloc_anon_inode(drm_fs_mnt->mnt_sb);
520	if (IS_ERR(inode))
521		simple_release_fs(&drm_fs_mnt, &drm_fs_cnt);
522
523	return inode;
524}
525
526static void drm_fs_inode_free(struct inode *inode)
527{
528	if (inode) {
529		iput(inode);
530		simple_release_fs(&drm_fs_mnt, &drm_fs_cnt);
531	}
532}
533
534/**
535 * DOC: component helper usage recommendations
536 *
537 * DRM drivers that drive hardware where a logical device consists of a pile of
538 * independent hardware blocks are recommended to use the :ref:`component helper
539 * library<component>`. For consistency and better options for code reuse the
540 * following guidelines apply:
541 *
542 *  - The entire device initialization procedure should be run from the
543 *    &component_master_ops.master_bind callback, starting with
544 *    devm_drm_dev_alloc(), then binding all components with
545 *    component_bind_all() and finishing with drm_dev_register().
546 *
547 *  - The opaque pointer passed to all components through component_bind_all()
548 *    should point at &struct drm_device of the device instance, not some driver
549 *    specific private structure.
550 *
551 *  - The component helper fills the niche where further standardization of
552 *    interfaces is not practical. When there already is, or will be, a
553 *    standardized interface like &drm_bridge or &drm_panel, providing its own
554 *    functions to find such components at driver load time, like
555 *    drm_of_find_panel_or_bridge(), then the component helper should not be
556 *    used.
557 */
558
559static void drm_dev_init_release(struct drm_device *dev, void *res)
560{
561	drm_legacy_ctxbitmap_cleanup(dev);
562	drm_legacy_remove_map_hash(dev);
563	drm_fs_inode_free(dev->anon_inode);
564
565	put_device(dev->dev);
566	/* Prevent use-after-free in drm_managed_release when debugging is
567	 * enabled. Slightly awkward, but can't really be helped. */
568	dev->dev = NULL;
569	mutex_destroy(&dev->master_mutex);
570	mutex_destroy(&dev->clientlist_mutex);
571	mutex_destroy(&dev->filelist_mutex);
572	mutex_destroy(&dev->struct_mutex);
573	drm_legacy_destroy_members(dev);
574}
575
576static int drm_dev_init(struct drm_device *dev,
577			struct drm_driver *driver,
578			struct device *parent)
579{
580	struct inode *inode;
581	int ret;
582
583	if (!drm_core_init_complete) {
584		DRM_ERROR("DRM core is not initialized\n");
585		return -ENODEV;
586	}
587
588	if (WARN_ON(!parent))
589		return -EINVAL;
590
591	kref_init(&dev->ref);
592	dev->dev = get_device(parent);
593	dev->driver = driver;
594
595	INIT_LIST_HEAD(&dev->managed.resources);
596	spin_lock_init(&dev->managed.lock);
597
598	/* no per-device feature limits by default */
599	dev->driver_features = ~0u;
600
601	drm_legacy_init_members(dev);
602	INIT_LIST_HEAD(&dev->filelist);
603	INIT_LIST_HEAD(&dev->filelist_internal);
604	INIT_LIST_HEAD(&dev->clientlist);
605	INIT_LIST_HEAD(&dev->vblank_event_list);
606
607	spin_lock_init(&dev->event_lock);
608	mutex_init(&dev->struct_mutex);
609	mutex_init(&dev->filelist_mutex);
610	mutex_init(&dev->clientlist_mutex);
611	mutex_init(&dev->master_mutex);
612
613	ret = drmm_add_action_or_reset(dev, drm_dev_init_release, NULL);
614	if (ret)
615		return ret;
616
617	inode = drm_fs_inode_new();
618	if (IS_ERR(inode)) {
619		ret = PTR_ERR(inode);
620		DRM_ERROR("Cannot allocate anonymous inode: %d\n", ret);
621		goto err;
622	}
623
624	dev->anon_inode = inode;
625
626	if (drm_core_check_feature(dev, DRIVER_RENDER)) {
627		ret = drm_minor_alloc(dev, DRM_MINOR_RENDER);
628		if (ret)
629			goto err;
630	}
631
632	ret = drm_minor_alloc(dev, DRM_MINOR_PRIMARY);
633	if (ret)
634		goto err;
635
636	ret = drm_legacy_create_map_hash(dev);
637	if (ret)
638		goto err;
639
640	drm_legacy_ctxbitmap_init(dev);
641
642	if (drm_core_check_feature(dev, DRIVER_GEM)) {
643		ret = drm_gem_init(dev);
644		if (ret) {
645			DRM_ERROR("Cannot initialize graphics execution manager (GEM)\n");
646			goto err;
647		}
648	}
649
650	ret = drm_dev_set_unique(dev, dev_name(parent));
651	if (ret)
652		goto err;
653
654	return 0;
655
656err:
657	drm_managed_release(dev);
658
659	return ret;
660}
661
662static void devm_drm_dev_init_release(void *data)
663{
664	drm_dev_put(data);
665}
666
667static int devm_drm_dev_init(struct device *parent,
668			     struct drm_device *dev,
669			     struct drm_driver *driver)
670{
671	int ret;
672
673	ret = drm_dev_init(dev, driver, parent);
674	if (ret)
675		return ret;
676
677	ret = devm_add_action(parent, devm_drm_dev_init_release, dev);
678	if (ret)
679		devm_drm_dev_init_release(dev);
680
681	return ret;
682}
683
684void *__devm_drm_dev_alloc(struct device *parent, struct drm_driver *driver,
685			   size_t size, size_t offset)
686{
687	void *container;
688	struct drm_device *drm;
689	int ret;
690
691	container = kzalloc(size, GFP_KERNEL);
692	if (!container)
693		return ERR_PTR(-ENOMEM);
694
695	drm = container + offset;
696	ret = devm_drm_dev_init(parent, drm, driver);
697	if (ret) {
698		kfree(container);
699		return ERR_PTR(ret);
700	}
701	drmm_add_final_kfree(drm, container);
702
703	return container;
704}
705EXPORT_SYMBOL(__devm_drm_dev_alloc);
706
707/**
708 * drm_dev_alloc - Allocate new DRM device
709 * @driver: DRM driver to allocate device for
710 * @parent: Parent device object
711 *
712 * This is the deprecated version of devm_drm_dev_alloc(), which does not support
713 * subclassing through embedding the struct &drm_device in a driver private
714 * structure, and which does not support automatic cleanup through devres.
715 *
716 * RETURNS:
717 * Pointer to new DRM device, or ERR_PTR on failure.
718 */
719struct drm_device *drm_dev_alloc(struct drm_driver *driver,
720				 struct device *parent)
721{
722	struct drm_device *dev;
723	int ret;
724
725	dev = kzalloc(sizeof(*dev), GFP_KERNEL);
726	if (!dev)
727		return ERR_PTR(-ENOMEM);
728
729	ret = drm_dev_init(dev, driver, parent);
730	if (ret) {
731		kfree(dev);
732		return ERR_PTR(ret);
733	}
734
735	drmm_add_final_kfree(dev, dev);
736
737	return dev;
738}
739EXPORT_SYMBOL(drm_dev_alloc);
740
741static void drm_dev_release(struct kref *ref)
742{
743	struct drm_device *dev = container_of(ref, struct drm_device, ref);
744
745	if (dev->driver->release)
746		dev->driver->release(dev);
747
748	drm_managed_release(dev);
749
750	kfree(dev->managed.final_kfree);
751}
752
753/**
754 * drm_dev_get - Take reference of a DRM device
755 * @dev: device to take reference of or NULL
756 *
757 * This increases the ref-count of @dev by one. You *must* already own a
758 * reference when calling this. Use drm_dev_put() to drop this reference
759 * again.
760 *
761 * This function never fails. However, this function does not provide *any*
762 * guarantee whether the device is alive or running. It only provides a
763 * reference to the object and the memory associated with it.
764 */
765void drm_dev_get(struct drm_device *dev)
766{
767	if (dev)
768		kref_get(&dev->ref);
769}
770EXPORT_SYMBOL(drm_dev_get);
771
772/**
773 * drm_dev_put - Drop reference of a DRM device
774 * @dev: device to drop reference of or NULL
775 *
776 * This decreases the ref-count of @dev by one. The device is destroyed if the
777 * ref-count drops to zero.
778 */
779void drm_dev_put(struct drm_device *dev)
780{
781	if (dev)
782		kref_put(&dev->ref, drm_dev_release);
783}
784EXPORT_SYMBOL(drm_dev_put);
785
786static int create_compat_control_link(struct drm_device *dev)
787{
788	struct drm_minor *minor;
789	char *name;
790	int ret;
791
792	if (!drm_core_check_feature(dev, DRIVER_MODESET))
793		return 0;
794
795	minor = *drm_minor_get_slot(dev, DRM_MINOR_PRIMARY);
796	if (!minor)
797		return 0;
798
799	/*
800	 * Some existing userspace out there uses the existing of the controlD*
801	 * sysfs files to figure out whether it's a modeset driver. It only does
802	 * readdir, hence a symlink is sufficient (and the least confusing
803	 * option). Otherwise controlD* is entirely unused.
804	 *
805	 * Old controlD chardev have been allocated in the range
806	 * 64-127.
807	 */
808	name = kasprintf(GFP_KERNEL, "controlD%d", minor->index + 64);
809	if (!name)
810		return -ENOMEM;
811
812	ret = sysfs_create_link(minor->kdev->kobj.parent,
813				&minor->kdev->kobj,
814				name);
815
816	kfree(name);
817
818	return ret;
819}
820
821static void remove_compat_control_link(struct drm_device *dev)
822{
823	struct drm_minor *minor;
824	char *name;
825
826	if (!drm_core_check_feature(dev, DRIVER_MODESET))
827		return;
828
829	minor = *drm_minor_get_slot(dev, DRM_MINOR_PRIMARY);
830	if (!minor)
831		return;
832
833	name = kasprintf(GFP_KERNEL, "controlD%d", minor->index + 64);
834	if (!name)
835		return;
836
837	sysfs_remove_link(minor->kdev->kobj.parent, name);
838
839	kfree(name);
840}
841
842/**
843 * drm_dev_register - Register DRM device
844 * @dev: Device to register
845 * @flags: Flags passed to the driver's .load() function
846 *
847 * Register the DRM device @dev with the system, advertise device to user-space
848 * and start normal device operation. @dev must be initialized via drm_dev_init()
849 * previously.
850 *
851 * Never call this twice on any device!
852 *
853 * NOTE: To ensure backward compatibility with existing drivers method this
854 * function calls the &drm_driver.load method after registering the device
855 * nodes, creating race conditions. Usage of the &drm_driver.load methods is
856 * therefore deprecated, drivers must perform all initialization before calling
857 * drm_dev_register().
858 *
859 * RETURNS:
860 * 0 on success, negative error code on failure.
861 */
862int drm_dev_register(struct drm_device *dev, unsigned long flags)
863{
864	struct drm_driver *driver = dev->driver;
865	int ret;
866
867	if (!driver->load)
868		drm_mode_config_validate(dev);
869
870	WARN_ON(!dev->managed.final_kfree);
871
872	if (drm_dev_needs_global_mutex(dev))
873		mutex_lock(&drm_global_mutex);
874
875	ret = drm_minor_register(dev, DRM_MINOR_RENDER);
876	if (ret)
877		goto err_minors;
878
879	ret = drm_minor_register(dev, DRM_MINOR_PRIMARY);
880	if (ret)
881		goto err_minors;
882
883	ret = create_compat_control_link(dev);
884	if (ret)
885		goto err_minors;
886
887	dev->registered = true;
888
889	if (dev->driver->load) {
890		ret = dev->driver->load(dev, flags);
891		if (ret)
892			goto err_minors;
893	}
894
895	if (drm_core_check_feature(dev, DRIVER_MODESET)) {
896		ret = drm_modeset_register_all(dev);
897		if (ret)
898			goto err_unload;
899	}
900
901	ret = 0;
902
903	DRM_INFO("Initialized %s %d.%d.%d %s for %s on minor %d\n",
904		 driver->name, driver->major, driver->minor,
905		 driver->patchlevel, driver->date,
906		 dev->dev ? dev_name(dev->dev) : "virtual device",
907		 dev->primary->index);
908
909	goto out_unlock;
910
911err_unload:
912	if (dev->driver->unload)
913		dev->driver->unload(dev);
914err_minors:
915	remove_compat_control_link(dev);
916	drm_minor_unregister(dev, DRM_MINOR_PRIMARY);
917	drm_minor_unregister(dev, DRM_MINOR_RENDER);
918out_unlock:
919	if (drm_dev_needs_global_mutex(dev))
920		mutex_unlock(&drm_global_mutex);
921	return ret;
922}
923EXPORT_SYMBOL(drm_dev_register);
924
925/**
926 * drm_dev_unregister - Unregister DRM device
927 * @dev: Device to unregister
928 *
929 * Unregister the DRM device from the system. This does the reverse of
930 * drm_dev_register() but does not deallocate the device. The caller must call
931 * drm_dev_put() to drop their final reference.
932 *
933 * A special form of unregistering for hotpluggable devices is drm_dev_unplug(),
934 * which can be called while there are still open users of @dev.
935 *
936 * This should be called first in the device teardown code to make sure
937 * userspace can't access the device instance any more.
938 */
939void drm_dev_unregister(struct drm_device *dev)
940{
941	if (drm_core_check_feature(dev, DRIVER_LEGACY))
942		drm_lastclose(dev);
943
944	dev->registered = false;
945
946	drm_client_dev_unregister(dev);
947
948	if (drm_core_check_feature(dev, DRIVER_MODESET))
949		drm_modeset_unregister_all(dev);
950
951	if (dev->driver->unload)
952		dev->driver->unload(dev);
953
954	if (dev->agp)
955		drm_pci_agp_destroy(dev);
956
957	drm_legacy_rmmaps(dev);
958
959	remove_compat_control_link(dev);
960	drm_minor_unregister(dev, DRM_MINOR_PRIMARY);
961	drm_minor_unregister(dev, DRM_MINOR_RENDER);
962}
963EXPORT_SYMBOL(drm_dev_unregister);
964
965/**
966 * drm_dev_set_unique - Set the unique name of a DRM device
967 * @dev: device of which to set the unique name
968 * @name: unique name
969 *
970 * Sets the unique name of a DRM device using the specified string. This is
971 * already done by drm_dev_init(), drivers should only override the default
972 * unique name for backwards compatibility reasons.
973 *
974 * Return: 0 on success or a negative error code on failure.
975 */
976int drm_dev_set_unique(struct drm_device *dev, const char *name)
977{
978	drmm_kfree(dev, dev->unique);
979	dev->unique = drmm_kstrdup(dev, name, GFP_KERNEL);
980
981	return dev->unique ? 0 : -ENOMEM;
982}
983EXPORT_SYMBOL(drm_dev_set_unique);
984
985/*
986 * DRM Core
987 * The DRM core module initializes all global DRM objects and makes them
988 * available to drivers. Once setup, drivers can probe their respective
989 * devices.
990 * Currently, core management includes:
991 *  - The "DRM-Global" key/value database
992 *  - Global ID management for connectors
993 *  - DRM major number allocation
994 *  - DRM minor management
995 *  - DRM sysfs class
996 *  - DRM debugfs root
997 *
998 * Furthermore, the DRM core provides dynamic char-dev lookups. For each
999 * interface registered on a DRM device, you can request minor numbers from DRM
1000 * core. DRM core takes care of major-number management and char-dev
1001 * registration. A stub ->open() callback forwards any open() requests to the
1002 * registered minor.
1003 */
1004
1005static int drm_stub_open(struct inode *inode, struct file *filp)
1006{
1007	const struct file_operations *new_fops;
1008	struct drm_minor *minor;
1009	int err;
1010
1011	DRM_DEBUG("\n");
1012
1013	minor = drm_minor_acquire(iminor(inode));
1014	if (IS_ERR(minor))
1015		return PTR_ERR(minor);
1016
1017	new_fops = fops_get(minor->dev->driver->fops);
1018	if (!new_fops) {
1019		err = -ENODEV;
1020		goto out;
1021	}
1022
1023	replace_fops(filp, new_fops);
1024	if (filp->f_op->open)
1025		err = filp->f_op->open(inode, filp);
1026	else
1027		err = 0;
1028
1029out:
1030	drm_minor_release(minor);
1031
1032	return err;
1033}
1034
1035static const struct file_operations drm_stub_fops = {
1036	.owner = THIS_MODULE,
1037	.open = drm_stub_open,
1038	.llseek = noop_llseek,
1039};
1040
1041static void drm_core_exit(void)
1042{
1043	unregister_chrdev(DRM_MAJOR, "drm");
1044	debugfs_remove(drm_debugfs_root);
1045	drm_sysfs_destroy();
1046	idr_destroy(&drm_minors_idr);
1047	drm_connector_ida_destroy();
1048}
1049
1050static int __init drm_core_init(void)
1051{
1052	int ret;
1053
1054	drm_connector_ida_init();
1055	idr_init(&drm_minors_idr);
1056
1057	ret = drm_sysfs_init();
1058	if (ret < 0) {
1059		DRM_ERROR("Cannot create DRM class: %d\n", ret);
1060		goto error;
1061	}
1062
1063	drm_debugfs_root = debugfs_create_dir("dri", NULL);
1064
1065	ret = register_chrdev(DRM_MAJOR, "drm", &drm_stub_fops);
1066	if (ret < 0)
1067		goto error;
1068
1069	drm_core_init_complete = true;
1070
1071	DRM_DEBUG("Initialized\n");
1072	return 0;
1073
1074error:
1075	drm_core_exit();
1076	return ret;
1077}
1078
1079module_init(drm_core_init);
1080module_exit(drm_core_exit);
1081