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dl lud, 02/22/2019 11:50 PM
llvmpipe: comparison with swrast and softpipe .


Research on free graphics-related software

On this page, information is collected that could help solving graphics issues in Replicant (see #1539). Besides evaluating free implementations that are relevant for currently supported devices, other implementations should also be listed if they are useful for potential future target devices.

external resources:
Wikipedia
Debian Mobile

Multiple backends

See https://notabug.org/JeremyRand/frameworks_native for work in progress to enable to switch the OpenGL library for individual applications.

Software rendering

Software rendering uses the CPU and not a dedicated graphics processor for graphics rendering. It is slower than per-GPU implementations and is usually used when it is not possible to make use of the GPU. An advantage is that the same software renderer can work across many different types of hardware, so working on improving a software renderer benefits many different devices, regardless of the SOC and graphics unit that is used. Furthermore, a software renderer doesn't require a kernel driver which makes it easier to work on mainline Linux kernel support for a device until the graphics driver is in mainline.

Android software renderer

source code: https://git.replicant.us/replicant/frameworks_native/tree/opengl/libagl

The Android software renderer is currently used on all Replicant-supported devices and it is the fastest software renderer that is available for Replicant devices. It is a software renderer that was developed specifically for Android and it is part of the AOSP source code. The renderer includes optimizations for ARM via libpixelflinger and codeflinger that do JIT compilation into platform optimized code. Development ceased in 2013 and no work was done to support newer OpenGL ES (GLES) versions (which causes #705).

Until ca. 2011 (Android 4.0), another library with the name libagl2 existed and surfaceflinger2 was developed based on Mesa. The source code was later removed and no further development is known. At the time, the work was done to support a newer GLES version for the software renderer. It was abandoned later, probably when Google made it mandatory for Android 4.0 and later devices to pack their own hardware GPU with OpenGL ES 2.0 support. It is questionable if it is worth it to port the old libagl2 library to a recent Replicant version, also given that we would be the only ones using and maintaining the code.

Mesa's llvmpipe

Replicant llvmpipe support source code: https://git.replicant.us/replicant/external_mesa3d
Replicant documentation: Graphics
Upstream documentation: https://www.mesa3d.org/llvmpipe.html
Upstream performance improvement documentation: https://www.mesa3d.org/perf.html

For the needs in Replicant, llvmpipe has a GLES implementation that is complete enough. Although, some apps don't work due to minor bugs which seem fixable or which might already be fixed in more recent upstream versions.

Besides llvmpipe, Mesa has two other software rasterizers: swrast/swr and softpipe, but both are of no interest. swrast's GLES implementation is incomplete and this driver is mostly deprecated in favor of those built upon Gallium (softpipe and llvmpipe). softpipe on the other hand, is as complete as llvmpipe but is slower than it.

The Android-x86 project is using llvmpipe and quite a few of their Android-specific frameworks patches are applied in Replicant 6.0. Their Mesa source code fork is also used in Replicant 6.0. A lot of porting work of llvmpipe to Android was done by Jide while Intel is contributing as well. So there is an interest from different parties to have llvmpipe working on Android. Android patches are upstreamed to mainline Mesa.

However, llvmpipe is still not ported to ARM which makes it slow. Also for Android, it is mostly used on the x86 platform in other projects. See #705 for more information. Optimizing llvmpipe for ARM seems currently the most promising approach to fix graphics-related issues with Replicant.

kms_swrast

kms_swrast is a Mesa driver, built upon Gallium, that uses DRM nodes for memory allocation and to present images on the display, but does the actual OpenGL rendering through a Mesa software renderer such as llvmpipe or softpipe.
It may allow noticeable performance improvements by avoiding expensive memory copy operations between the software renderer and DRM.

Exynos based devices have a working free-software DRM driver that can be used with kms_swrast. Devices that do not have DRM driver can still benefit from kms_swrast by usage of the VGEM (Virtual GEM) driver.

SwiftShader

source code: https://swiftshader.googlesource.com/SwiftShader

Google released SwiftShader as free software in mid 2016. It supports x86 (32 bit and 64 bit) and 32 bit ARM architectures with SDIV/UDIV support. It is used in the Chromium project but also with Android, for example in the Android-x86 project. Swiftshader doesn't seem to depend on any external libraries besides what are provided in its Git repository, therefore it is very easy to compile it and use it as a software renderer for Replicant. All the Android build files are provided so you just need to the add the following packages to PRODUCT_PACKAGES in order to be able to use it:

  • libGLESv2_swiftshader
  • libEGL_swiftshader

Per-GPU implementations

In the following, free software implementations are listed that should make it possible to use the respective GPU with free software.

ARM Mali-4xx (Utgard) with Lima

Supported devices that use Mali 400: Galaxy S 2, Galaxy S 3, Galaxy S 3 4G, Galaxy Note, Galaxy Note 2

Project page: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/lima/web/wikis/home

Lima is still unfinished as of January 2019 but development is going on at a fast pace. The detailed implementation status can be checked with the piglit test suite.

Lima saw first light with the reverse-engineering efforts by Luc Verhaegen, that produced an experimental driver with it's original page at
https://limadriver.org . Luc's development stopped around 2014, but in 2017 Qiang Yu took on the task and started development on top of Mesa's Gallium3D driver as reported by Phoronix.
The code is now hosted at freedesktop.org's GitLab and is getting contributions by many developers besides Qiang Yu.

Imagination PowerVR

supported devices that use PowerVR SGX540: Nexus S, Galaxy S, Galaxy Nexus, Galaxy Tab 2 7.0, Galaxy Tab 2 10.1
supported devices that use PowerVR SGX530: GTA04

A reverse-engineering project exists:
website
mailing list
Libreplanet group

Despite initial reverse-engineering progress until 2013, no further development updates seem to be available. The project website provides documentation.

ARM Mali-T6xx/T7xx/T8xx (Midgard) and G7x (Bifrost) with Panfrost

not used by a supported device
Used on several Samsung Galaxy S series phones that are now supported by LineageOs and may be potential targets for Replicant ports: S6
(Mali T760MP8), S7 (Mali-T880 MP12) and S9 (Mali-G72 MP18).

Project page: https://panfrost.freedesktop.org/
Source code: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/panfrost

Panfrost is another reverse-engineered driver for ARM Mali GPUs, but aimed at the latest architectures (Midgard and Bifrost). It is still experimental but under active development with a strong community (as of January 2019). It's main focus are the ARM SoCs present on some laptops and single-board computers (SBC), but it is Intended to work on as many SoCs as possible to make everyone's lives easier.
Panfrost is developed by Alyssa Rosenzweig and Lyude Paul, and recently attracted other contributors such as Tomeu Vizoso.
Development can be followed on Alyssas's blog.

Qualcomm Adreno with freedreno

not used by a supported device

wiki: https://github.com/freedreno/freedreno/wiki

freedreno is actively developed. Linux kernel component is available in mainline since version 3.12. It needs to be investigated how well freedreno could work on potential target devices. However, even when using freedreno, non-free firmware is very likely still needed.

Generally speaking, Qualcomm devices have a lot of blobs and no modem isolation which is the reason why no Qualcomm-based device is yet supported by Replicant. See TargetsEvaluation for some analysis. We have not yet identified a Qualcomm-based device that would be a promising target for Replicant and where freedreno could be used on.

Vivante GCxxxx with Etnaviv

not used by a supported device

For some Vivante GCxxxx GPU variants, a free driver, Etnaviv, exists. See wikipedia for some details. It would be interesting to investigate devices using such a GPU if they would be good Replicant targets. It also needs to be checked if non-free firmware needs to be loaded to the GPU.

Gralloc

In order to have a working software rendering on Replicant 9 we will need a gralloc (graphics memory allocator) library that:
  • Implements the Android Gralloc HAL API version 1.
  • Is compatible with drm-hwcomposer (a libre implementation, based on Linux's DRM, of Android's Hardware Composer HAL).
  • Is compatible with Mesa and particularly its llvmpipe software renderer.
  • (optional) Is compatible with SwiftShader.
There are currently 3 free-software grallocs under evaluation:
  • drm_gralloc - Directly uses Linux DRM for buffer allocation. Built by the Android-x86 team and now getting phased out in favor of gbm_gralloc.
  • gbm_gralloc - Uses Mesa's GBM (Generic Buffer Management) for buffer allocation through libgbm. GBM itself will then call DRM. Originally by Rob Herring, but now maintained by Android-x86.
  • minigbm - Uses its own embedded GBM implementation. Does not depend on Mesa. Built by Intel for their Android-IA project now dubbed Project Celadon. Also used by Google in ChromiumOS.

The table bellow summarizes the capabilities of these 3 gralloc implementations (sourced from the slides of Mauro's Rossi talk at XDC 2018):

project API version GEM/flink names PRIME fd binderization
drm_gralloc 0 Yes incomplete No
gbm_gralloc 0 N/A Yes Yes
minigbm 0, 1 N/A Yes Yes
Key:
  • project: the implementation name.
  • API version: lists the supported versions of Android's gralloc HAL.
  • GEM/flink names: whether there is support for GEM (Graphics Execution Manager) object sharing through GEM names. GEM names are unique 32 bit integers, created via the flink operation, that point to a unique GEM object inside a DRM device. GEM names are mostly deprecated due to security reasons.
  • PRIME fd: whether there is support for buffer sharing between different DRM drivers through PRIME, the successor of GEM names. PRIME allows the conversion of local GEM handles to DMA-BUF file descriptors and vice-versa, via the DMA Buffer Sharing API.
  • binderization: whether there is support for using a binder, a structure that allows memory sharing between different processes on the same machine (for instance a Queue).

Updated by dl lud almost 6 years ago · 32 revisions

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