I'm happy to announce a call for testers for the 4.6 update of drm and i915. The driver has been successfully tested on IvyBridge, Haswell, Broadwell and Skylake. At least basic HW 3D acceleration should work, VGA and DP out are known to work. Video decode has only been tried once and that did not work. At this point I'm most interested in taking an inventory of what is broken where. My priorities are common sense: a) stability b) fixing 2D artifacts c) fixing 3D problems d) video decode d) output support e) other features At this time "prime" (needed for switching between GPUs, compute APIs, and DRI3) is not yet supported. All the pieces are in place but support existing functionality is a higher priority. Userptr (mapping user memory in to the driver) requires VM changes. Support is planned, but likely post-11. A few caveats are in order: - The only reported test on Sandy Bridge indicated severe artifacts. - Arrandale (pre-Sandy Bridge) and earlier are not yet supported by this update. The intel_i810 code has been heavily localized for FreeBSD making it more difficult to integrate. Thus there are holes in the gmch support. - This update is 64-bit only. There is no good reason to be running in 32-bit mode on any of the hardware supported by this driver. - Although it works fine for me on my Skylake the one other tester I have reports from indicates that the driver isn't actually attaching and creating aliases for the drm device nodes. Please send issue/success reports to the freebsd-x11 mailing list. I may be preoccupied with work matters for periods of time. Sending it to the list makes sure that the messages don't get lost. If you encounter problems with startx, please try loading the i915 kmod in isolation and make sure that it switches correctly to vt_fb. If you're not running efifb you'll notice a change in resolution. If it works but is slow or has artifacts you may try switching to UXA by removing /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d/20-intel.conf (if you're using the USB image). If you've built from source, try configuring SNA instead. SNA is much better behaved for me. The usual rules apply for kernel debugging. There should be copious information on that in the handbook and elsewhere. If that proves to be problematic for people I will send out a follow up mail. A couple observations: - The FreeBSD PTB insist that a debugger be in tree but that it pre-date GPL2, consequently kernels are, by default compiled with DWARF2 which is very poor at retain debug information in the presence of any optimization. If this is a problem, either recompile everything with -O0 (add CFLAGS += -O0 in drm2 and i915kms Makefiles, and pass COPTFLAGS=-O0 to buildkernel) or install a newer kgdb from ports. - The purpose of encrypted swap is that the data on disk be unrecoverable. This is somewhat at cross purposes with savecore. So don't do that. Now that this is out I will be switching gears to bringing up amdgpu and radeon support. I have no hardware that uses the radeon driver so I will have to rely on Jean for testing and support there. Those of you wishing to try your hand at testing from source can fetch our repo from github at: https://github.com/iotamudelta/freebsd-base-graphics Make sure to check out the drm-next-4.6 branch. If you'd rather just try it on a usb pen driver you can also obtain a prebuilt memstick image with this branch installed along with xorg and some commonly used ports at: http://www.bsddesktop.com/images/disk_YYMMDDHH.img.xz There is no root password and the user/pw is joeuser/joeuser. If you're curious about what's on it, the script used to create the image is here: http://www.bsddesktop.com/images/usbcreate.sh If you'd like to help out with collecting data on what laptops are supported please run Warren Block's notebookstats script: http://www.bsddesktop.com/images/notebookstats It's also installed under /usr/local/bin on the image. If I've missed anything please let me know and I will follow up. -MReceived on Sun May 22 2016 - 05:20:39 UTC
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