README revision 1.1 1
2
3 This file is NOT up to date for the New Design!
4
5
6
7
8 ============== old (pre-ND) contents below ==============
9
10 "I just thought it would be usefull if we had some kind of TODO and BUGS
11 files in the distribution as it would make it easier to see what is needed
12 to be done and what could be done better, instead of browsing through the
13 sourcecode. And we whould be able to se the progress literally by the ever
14 decreasing TODO file :-)"
15
16
17 ## BUGS:
18
19 All Tseng cards:
20
21 * We definitely NEED to fix that color-expansion problem. See Appendix A
22 below for a detailed explanation.
23
24 * There are still some problems with the HW-cursor. The error message about
25 "wrong color selected" is disabled, and the limitation documented. Better
26 would be to have a way to dynamically switch to software-cursor mode if the
27 color can not be made. HW cursor doesn't work in DoubleScan modes yet (only
28 half of the cursor displayed)
29
30 * text font sometimes corrupted when going back to text mode. This may be
31 related to the order in which registers are restored: the ARK driver first
32 restores extended registers before restoring the standard registers for
33 excactly this reason.
34
35 * The code needs to be heavily reworked to fix all sorts of data type
36 problems. The current code will certainly not run on an Alpha. The first
37 step is to replace all hardware related variables by CARD8/CARD16/CARD32
38 types.
39
40
41 ET6000:
42
43 * The trapezoid code is disabled because it doesn't comply with the way the
44 non-accelerated ("cfb") code does things. This needs to be fixed.
45
46
47 ET-4000(W32):
48
49 * Hardware cursor support for the W32 is still lacking color support. We
50 need to reserve color cells #0 and #255 to make this work. From discussions
51 on the development list, it seems the best solution is to allocate these cells
52 read-write, and then use them for the HW cursor. We MUST however document
53 that this will break some clients which depend on a fixed color in cell #0,
54 and some others that rely on the presence of 256 color cells. It will also
55 cause cursor color problems when someone uses a local color map.
56
57
58 ## TODO:
59
60 All cards:
61
62 * The accelerator on the Tseng devices is capable of much more. Especially
63 the pattern support is not used most of the time: It can render a pattern in
64 just about every accelerated operation. This means patterned lines, bitblts,
65 screencopies, etc. are possible. However, operations like these are very
66 uncommon in normal server use, so the speed benefit would go largely unnoticed.
67
68
69 ET4000:
70
71 * support needs to be added for several clockchips and RAMDACs:
72 - 8-bit RAMDAC support for >8bpp modes: Sierra DACs and possibly others
73 - AT&T 20C49x RAMDAC support is not correct.
74
75 * SuperProbe could use an update. It doesn't detect some of the RAMDACs that
76 are detected by the driver.
77
78 * Several of the color expansion-related accelerations are still only 8bpp.
79 It should be easy to use the same trick on those as on the standard color
80 expand code (use intermediate buffer, expand data before blitting).
81
82 * many of the operations that the W32 family can't support natively (e.g.
83 FillRectSolid for 24bpp) can be performed using CPU-to-screen operations,
84 feeding the correct (color) information through the ACL aperture.
85
86
87 ET6000:
88
89 * someone might want to look at how the bitBLT engine of the ET6000 is
90 constructed, and come up with some fancy ways of abusing it. We're still
91 only using a small part of it (I'm thinking about the compare map and the
92 extensions to the MIX hardware compared to the ET4000).
93
94 * Mclk support is still lacking (that would also allow MClk-dependent
95 maximum bandwidth).
96
97 * Apart from the things mentionned above, I think the ET6000 server is
98 pretty complete. Some optimisations could possibly be added. Like for
99 example some assembler code for calculating a framebuffer address from X/Y
100 coordinates. That would help to speed up small blits.
101
102
103 =======================================================================
104 APPENDIX A: the color expansion problem
105 ----------------------------------------
106
107 As suggested in the data book, we're doing font rendering using the
108 color-expansion (MIX map) capabilities of the Tseng accelerator.
109
110 We're using a ping-pong buffer scheme (triple buffering actually) in
111 off-screen memory to store one scanline worth of font data at a time. each
112 of these scanlines is "blitted" to on-screen memory using the accelerator.
113 The scanline is the MIX map, and there's also a 4x1 solid foreground color
114 (SRC map), and a 4x1 solid background color (PAT map).
115
116 Basically, the flow is as follows:
117
118 - setup accelerator for font-expansion
119
120 - store scanline 1 in off-screen memory buffer 1
121
122 - start operation
123
124 - store scanline 2 in off-screen memory buffer 2
125
126 - start operation
127
128 - store scanline 3 in off-screen memory buffer 3
129
130 - start operation
131
132 - store scanline 4 in off-screen memory buffer 1
133
134 - start operation
135
136 ... etc, until the whole line of text is drawn.
137
138 There is no explicit "waiting" for the accelerator to finish an operation
139 before starting a new one, because it has been set up to add "wait-states"
140 when the queue is full. We're aiming to use concurrency between the
141 accelerator and the storing of scanlines in the buffers. Anyway, waiting
142 after each operation doesn't help.
143
144 Now, in 99% of all cases, text is rendered OK. But in some cases, we're
145 seeing severe font corruption.
146
147 What we're seeing is this: sometimes, exactly 32 pixels of a scanline are
148 rendered with the scanline data that was there BEFORE, instead of the one
149 that was just written into the scanline buffer. In other words, 32 pixels of
150 line 2 (for example) are rendered at line 5. The rest of the scanline can be
151 OK (i.e. data from scanline 5 is actually written there).
152
153 Here's an attempt at showing you what _should_ have been rendered:
154
155 1
156 2 #####################################################################
157 3
158 4
159 5
160 6 #####################################################################
161 7
162 8
163 9
164 10 #####################################################################
165 11
166 12
167 13
168 14 #####################################################################
169 15
170
171
172
173 and what _is_ rendered sometimes (only an example):
174
175 1
176 2 #####################################################################
177 3
178 4
179 5
180 6 ######################## #############
181 7
182 8
183 9
184 10 #####################################################################
185 11
186 12
187 13 ########################
188 14 #####################################################################
189 15
190
191 At line 6, 32 pixels of the "black" scanline data from line 3 is rendered
192 instead of the actual full-white that would normally have to be there. At
193 line 13, the opposite happened (data from line 10 rendered at line 13). This
194 32-pixel width of the "bug" is independent of the color depth: we're seeing
195 this at 8bpp as well as at 16bpp, 24bpp and 32bpp. 32 pixels each time.
196
197 Remember, we're talking triple-buffering here, so the "wrongly" rendered
198 data is in fact the data that was in the scanline-buffer from the PREVIOUS
199 operation that used that buffer.
200
201 In fact, my best explanation is that sometimes, a whole DWORD (32 bits) of
202 data isn't in the video memory yet by the time the accelerator starts
203 rendering with it.
204
205 But the data _is_ being written to there by the driver software, because if
206 you restart the scanline-operation again, without writing any more data to
207 the scanline buffers (only the MIX address and the destination address are
208 reprogrammed to restart the scanline color expansion operation -- see code
209 in tseng_acl.c), data _is_ rendered correctly.
210
211
212
213 I have investigated this as far as I possibly can. I checked if the data was
214 actually written in video memory. It was. I checked all kinds of PCI-related
215 things, like write-gathering or write-reordering of the PCI chipset, etc. I
216 disabled all possible enhanced features, both on the PCI chipset, inside the
217 CPU, and on the ET6000.
218
219 What strikes me, is that the exact same problems are seen on ET4000W32p as
220 on the ET6000. This immediately rules out any special features that were
221 only added with the ET6000, like problems with the MDRAM cache buffers, etc.
222 It seems to be a generic problem to all Tseng accelerators.
223
224 The exact same higher-level code is being used for other chipsets as well
225 (i.e. the system of writing scanlines of data to off-screen memory and
226 making the accelerator expand it into on-screen memory), and there are no
227 problems on these other chipsets. The acceleration architecture we're using
228 is completely device-independent up to the point where each chip needs to
229 provide a
230
231 SetupForScanlineScreenToScreenColorExpand()
232
233 and a
234
235 SubsequentScanlineScreenToScreenColorExpand()
236 function.
237
238 Since the higher-level code is being used by other chip drivers as well, it
239 seems to be OK.
240
241 So the problem is either in those device-dependent functions, or in the
242 hardware itself.
243
244
245 I have found one kludge to work around this problem, and it should (?) tell
246 you a lot about the problem: if I start each scanline-colorexpand operation
247 TWICE, rendering is suddenly perfect (at least there are so little rendering
248 errors that I haven't seen any yet).
249
250
251 I am including the two device-depending functions so that you may be able to
252 follow what I'm saying here:
253
254
255
256 One entire line of text is drawn by calling the Setup() function ONCE. All
257 scanlines of text (16 of them in case of a 8x16 font) are drawn by filling
258 the off-screen scanline buffers and calling the Subsequent() function.
259
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262
263
264 $XFree86: xc/programs/Xserver/hw/xfree86/drivers/tseng/README,v 1.12 2000/08/08 08:58:06 eich Exp $
265