drm/doc: Document ioctl errno value patterns

We're not super-consistent about these, but I think it's worth to
document at least the commmon patterns.

v2:
- Add a not about ENOTTY (it's just a confusing name, but used
exactly what it's meant for in DRM) (Chris).
- Unconfuse the text for ENODEV (Daniel)
- Move text undert the IOCTL heading (Chris).
- typos

Cc: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org>
Cc: Joonas Lahtinen <joonas.lahtinen@linux.intel.com>
Cc: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Cc: "Zhang, Tina" <tina.zhang@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@intel.com>
Link: https://patchwork.freedesktop.org/patch/msgid/20170818174328.6386-1-daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch
This commit is contained in:
Daniel Vetter 2017-08-18 19:43:28 +02:00
parent 25a8ef26fd
commit 371cadd8c4
1 changed files with 55 additions and 0 deletions

View File

@ -168,6 +168,61 @@ IOCTL Support on Device Nodes
.. kernel-doc:: drivers/gpu/drm/drm_ioctl.c
:doc: driver specific ioctls
Recommended IOCTL Return Values
-------------------------------
In theory a driver's IOCTL callback is only allowed to return very few error
codes. In practice it's good to abuse a few more. This section documents common
practice within the DRM subsystem:
ENOENT:
Strictly this should only be used when a file doesn't exist e.g. when
calling the open() syscall. We reuse that to signal any kind of object
lookup failure, e.g. for unknown GEM buffer object handles, unknown KMS
object handles and similar cases.
ENOSPC:
Some drivers use this to differentiate "out of kernel memory" from "out
of VRAM". Sometimes also applies to other limited gpu resources used for
rendering (e.g. when you have a special limited compression buffer).
Sometimes resource allocation/reservation issues in command submission
IOCTLs are also signalled through EDEADLK.
Simply running out of kernel/system memory is signalled through ENOMEM.
EPERM/EACCESS:
Returned for an operation that is valid, but needs more privileges.
E.g. root-only or much more common, DRM master-only operations return
this when when called by unpriviledged clients. There's no clear
difference between EACCESS and EPERM.
ENODEV:
Feature (like PRIME, modesetting, GEM) is not supported by the driver.
ENXIO:
Remote failure, either a hardware transaction (like i2c), but also used
when the exporting driver of a shared dma-buf or fence doesn't support a
feature needed.
EINTR:
DRM drivers assume that userspace restarts all IOCTLs. Any DRM IOCTL can
return EINTR and in such a case should be restarted with the IOCTL
parameters left unchanged.
EIO:
The GPU died and couldn't be resurrected through a reset. Modesetting
hardware failures are signalled through the "link status" connector
property.
EINVAL:
Catch-all for anything that is an invalid argument combination which
cannot work.
IOCTL also use other error codes like ETIME, EFAULT, EBUSY, ENOTTY but their
usage is in line with the common meanings. The above list tries to just document
DRM specific patterns. Note that ENOTTY has the slightly unintuitive meaning of
"this IOCTL does not exist", and is used exactly as such in DRM.
.. kernel-doc:: include/drm/drm_ioctl.h
:internal: