From: Chris Wilson chris@chris-wilson.co.uk
Requests within a timeline are ordered by that timeline, so awaiting for the start of a request within the timeline is a no-op. This used to work by falling out of the mutex_trylock() as the signaler and waiter had the same timeline and not returning an error.
Fixes: 6a79d848403d ("drm/i915: Lock signaler timeline while navigating") Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson chris@chris-wilson.co.uk Cc: Tvrtko Ursulin tvrtko.ursulin@linux.intel.com Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org # v5.5+ Reviewed-by: Tvrtko Ursulin tvrtko.ursulin@intel.com Link: https://patchwork.freedesktop.org/patch/msgid/20200305134822.2750496-1-chris... (cherry picked from commit ab7a69020fb5d5c7ba19fba60f62fd6f9ca9f779) --- drivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_request.c | 4 ++-- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
diff --git a/drivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_request.c b/drivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_request.c index 4143d0c6b343..1efc82f78f44 100644 --- a/drivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_request.c +++ b/drivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_request.c @@ -767,8 +767,8 @@ i915_request_await_start(struct i915_request *rq, struct i915_request *signal) struct dma_fence *fence; int err;
- GEM_BUG_ON(i915_request_timeline(rq) == - rcu_access_pointer(signal->timeline)); + if (i915_request_timeline(rq) == rcu_access_pointer(signal->timeline)) + return 0;
fence = NULL; rcu_read_lock();