I thought we had concluded previously that this change was acceptable, which is 
why I'm surprised that it's come up yet again.

The performance cost of creating two fb objects per buffer is irrelevant - it 
will be a one shot hit on buffer creation, and from that point forward it's 
just selecting which of the two fb's to use at any point in time. Given that 
I'm told that the memory cost kernel side per fb is small, the number isn't a 
big deal either. Hence, I'm not sure why you were expecting a performance 
analysis.

The two things I object to are:

1) Having to tell the kernel that there is no aux buffer on an allocation that 
actually has an aux buffer in order to indicate that at this point in time the 
buffer is uncompressed. This is completely non intuitive from a caller 
perspective - especially as it's called an aux buffer, not a compression buffer.

2) Having to use a fb object to manage dynamic state. The fb for a particular 
buffer will change over the course of a frame. Any debug for a frame at entry 
to the HWC will have a different fb to the debug at frame exit which makes it 
hard to track.

Thanks
Gary


-----Original Message-----
From: Daniel Stone [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Tuesday, March 22, 2016 1:37 PM
To: Smith, Gary K <[email protected]>
Cc: Kannan, Vandana <[email protected]>; intel-gfx 
<[email protected]>; Daniel Vetter <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [PATCH 2/2] drm/i915: Render decompression support for Gen9 and 
above

On 22 March 2016 at 13:30, Daniel Stone <[email protected]> wrote:
> Exactly the same as the last time we discussed it

I should add that I understand your previous objection that creating 
framebuffers on the fly is not performant enough, and you object to the effort 
of managing 100 rather than 50 framebuffers upfront (though honestly, if you 
get to 50 framebuffers you're already having to do some clever setup/management 
anyway). But in the last thread, Daniel Vetter asked for some performance 
numbers to bear out your objection that framebuffer creation is too costly, 
leading to getting it fixed if this is in fact the case (since other userspace 
relies on it being fast), but this performance analysis never arrived.

I'd still be interested in seeing that.

Cheers,
Daniel
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