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Ryujinx/Ryujinx.Graphics.Gpu/Image/Pool.cs

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Memory Read/Write Tracking using Region Handles (#1272) * WIP Range Tracking - Texture invalidation seems to have large problems - Buffer/Pool invalidation may have problems - Mirror memory tracking puts an additional `add` in compiled code, we likely just want to make HLE access slower if this is the final solution. - Native project is in the messiest possible location. - [HACK] JIT memory access always uses native "fast" path - [HACK] Trying some things with texture invalidation and views. It works :) Still a few hacks, messy things, slow things More work in progress stuff (also move to memory project) Quite a bit faster now. - Unmapping GPU VA and CPU VA will now correctly update write tracking regions, and invalidate textures for the former. - The Virtual range list is now non-overlapping like the physical one. - Fixed some bugs where regions could leak. - Introduced a weird bug that I still need to track down (consistent invalid buffer in MK8 ribbon road) Move some stuff. I think we'll eventually just put the dll and so for this in a nuget package. Fix rebase. [WIP] MultiRegionHandle variable size ranges - Avoid reprotecting regions that change often (needs some tweaking) - There's still a bug in buffers, somehow. - Might want different api for minimum granularity Fix rebase issue Commit everything needed for software only tracking. Remove native components. Remove more native stuff. Cleanup Use a separate window for the background context, update opentk. (fixes linux) Some experimental changes Should get things working up to scratch - still need to try some things with flush/modification and res scale. Include address with the region action. Initial work to make range tracking work Still a ton of bugs Fix some issues with the new stuff. * Fix texture flush instability There's still some weird behaviour, but it's much improved without this. (textures with cpu modified data were flushing over it) * Find the destination texture for Buffer->Texture full copy Greatly improves performance for nvdec videos (with range tracking) * Further improve texture tracking * Disable Memory Tracking for view parents This is a temporary approach to better match behaviour on master (where invalidations would be soaked up by views, rather than trigger twice) The assumption is that when views are created to a texture, they will cover all of its data anyways. Of course, this can easily be improved in future. * Introduce some tracking tests. WIP * Complete base tests. * Add more tests for multiregion, fix existing test. * Cleanup Part 1 * Remove unnecessary code from memory tracking * Fix some inconsistencies with 3D texture rule. * Add dispose tests. * Use a background thread for the background context. Rather than setting and unsetting a context as current, doing the work on a dedicated thread with signals seems to be a bit faster. Also nerf the multithreading test a bit. * Copy to texture with matching alignment This extends the copy to work for some videos with unusual size, such as tutorial videos in SMO. It will only occur if the destination texture already exists at XCount size. * Track reads for buffer copies. Synchronize new buffers before copying overlaps. * Remove old texture flushing mechanisms. Range tracking all the way, baby. * Wake the background thread when disposing. Avoids a deadlock when games are closed. * Address Feedback 1 * Separate TextureCopy instance for background thread Also `BackgroundContextWorker.InBackground` for a more sensible idenfifier for if we're in a background thread. * Add missing XML docs. * Address Feedback * Maybe I should start drinking coffee. * Some more feedback. * Remove flush warning, Refocus window after making background context
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using Ryujinx.Cpu.Tracking;
using Ryujinx.Graphics.Gpu.Memory;
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using System;
using System.Runtime.InteropServices;
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namespace Ryujinx.Graphics.Gpu.Image
{
/// <summary>
/// Represents a pool of GPU resources, such as samplers or textures.
/// </summary>
/// <typeparam name="T1">Type of the GPU resource</typeparam>
/// <typeparam name="T2">Type of the descriptor</typeparam>
abstract class Pool<T1, T2> : IDisposable where T2 : unmanaged
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{
protected const int DescriptorSize = 0x20;
protected GpuContext Context;
protected PhysicalMemory PhysicalMemory;
Replace CacheResourceWrite with more general "precise" write (#2684) * Replace CacheResourceWrite with more general "precise" write The goal of CacheResourceWrite was to notify GPU resources when they were modified directly, by looking up the modified address/size in a structure and calling a method on each resource. The downside of this is that each resource cache has to be queried individually, they all have to implement their own way to do this, and it can only signal to resources using the same PhysicalMemory instance. This PR adds the ability to signal a write as "precise" on the tracking, which signals a special handler (if present) which can be used to avoid unnecessary flush actions, or maybe even more. For buffers, precise writes specifically do not flush, and instead punch a hole in the modified range list to indicate that the data on GPU has been replaced. The downside is that precise actions must ignore the page protection bits and always signal - as they need to notify the target resource to ignore the sequence number optimization. I had to reintroduce the sequence number increment after I2M, as removing it was causing issues in rabbids kingdom battle. However - all resources modified by I2M are notified directly to lower their sequence number, so the problem is likely that another unrelated resource is not being properly updated. Thankfully, doing this does not affect performance in the games I tested. This should fix regressions from #2624. Test any games that were broken by that. (RF4, rabbids kingdom battle) I've also added a sequence number increment to ThreedClass.IncrementSyncpoint, as it seems to fix buffer corruption in OpenGL homebrew. (this was a regression from removing sequence number increment from constant buffer update - another unrelated resource thing) * Add tests. * Add XML docs for GpuRegionHandle * Skip UpdateProtection if only precise actions were called This allows precise actions to skip reprotection costs.
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protected int SequenceNumber;
protected int ModifiedSequenceNumber;
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protected T1[] Items;
protected T2[] DescriptorCache;
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/// <summary>
/// The maximum ID value of resources on the pool (inclusive).
/// </summary>
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/// <remarks>
/// The maximum amount of resources on the pool is equal to this value plus one.
/// </remarks>
public int MaximumId { get; }
/// <summary>
/// The address of the pool in guest memory.
/// </summary>
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public ulong Address { get; }
/// <summary>
/// The size of the pool in bytes.
/// </summary>
public ulong Size { get; }
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Memory Read/Write Tracking using Region Handles (#1272) * WIP Range Tracking - Texture invalidation seems to have large problems - Buffer/Pool invalidation may have problems - Mirror memory tracking puts an additional `add` in compiled code, we likely just want to make HLE access slower if this is the final solution. - Native project is in the messiest possible location. - [HACK] JIT memory access always uses native "fast" path - [HACK] Trying some things with texture invalidation and views. It works :) Still a few hacks, messy things, slow things More work in progress stuff (also move to memory project) Quite a bit faster now. - Unmapping GPU VA and CPU VA will now correctly update write tracking regions, and invalidate textures for the former. - The Virtual range list is now non-overlapping like the physical one. - Fixed some bugs where regions could leak. - Introduced a weird bug that I still need to track down (consistent invalid buffer in MK8 ribbon road) Move some stuff. I think we'll eventually just put the dll and so for this in a nuget package. Fix rebase. [WIP] MultiRegionHandle variable size ranges - Avoid reprotecting regions that change often (needs some tweaking) - There's still a bug in buffers, somehow. - Might want different api for minimum granularity Fix rebase issue Commit everything needed for software only tracking. Remove native components. Remove more native stuff. Cleanup Use a separate window for the background context, update opentk. (fixes linux) Some experimental changes Should get things working up to scratch - still need to try some things with flush/modification and res scale. Include address with the region action. Initial work to make range tracking work Still a ton of bugs Fix some issues with the new stuff. * Fix texture flush instability There's still some weird behaviour, but it's much improved without this. (textures with cpu modified data were flushing over it) * Find the destination texture for Buffer->Texture full copy Greatly improves performance for nvdec videos (with range tracking) * Further improve texture tracking * Disable Memory Tracking for view parents This is a temporary approach to better match behaviour on master (where invalidations would be soaked up by views, rather than trigger twice) The assumption is that when views are created to a texture, they will cover all of its data anyways. Of course, this can easily be improved in future. * Introduce some tracking tests. WIP * Complete base tests. * Add more tests for multiregion, fix existing test. * Cleanup Part 1 * Remove unnecessary code from memory tracking * Fix some inconsistencies with 3D texture rule. * Add dispose tests. * Use a background thread for the background context. Rather than setting and unsetting a context as current, doing the work on a dedicated thread with signals seems to be a bit faster. Also nerf the multithreading test a bit. * Copy to texture with matching alignment This extends the copy to work for some videos with unusual size, such as tutorial videos in SMO. It will only occur if the destination texture already exists at XCount size. * Track reads for buffer copies. Synchronize new buffers before copying overlaps. * Remove old texture flushing mechanisms. Range tracking all the way, baby. * Wake the background thread when disposing. Avoids a deadlock when games are closed. * Address Feedback 1 * Separate TextureCopy instance for background thread Also `BackgroundContextWorker.InBackground` for a more sensible idenfifier for if we're in a background thread. * Add missing XML docs. * Address Feedback * Maybe I should start drinking coffee. * Some more feedback. * Remove flush warning, Refocus window after making background context
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private readonly CpuMultiRegionHandle _memoryTracking;
private readonly Action<ulong, ulong> _modifiedDelegate;
private int _modifiedSequenceOffset;
private bool _modified;
/// <summary>
/// Creates a new instance of the GPU resource pool.
/// </summary>
/// <param name="context">GPU context that the pool belongs to</param>
/// <param name="physicalMemory">Physical memory where the resource descriptors are mapped</param>
/// <param name="address">Address of the pool in physical memory</param>
/// <param name="maximumId">Maximum index of an item on the pool (inclusive)</param>
public Pool(GpuContext context, PhysicalMemory physicalMemory, ulong address, int maximumId)
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{
Context = context;
PhysicalMemory = physicalMemory;
MaximumId = maximumId;
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int count = maximumId + 1;
ulong size = (ulong)(uint)count * DescriptorSize;
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Items = new T1[count];
DescriptorCache = new T2[count];
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Address = address;
Size = size;
_memoryTracking = physicalMemory.BeginGranularTracking(address, size);
Replace CacheResourceWrite with more general "precise" write (#2684) * Replace CacheResourceWrite with more general "precise" write The goal of CacheResourceWrite was to notify GPU resources when they were modified directly, by looking up the modified address/size in a structure and calling a method on each resource. The downside of this is that each resource cache has to be queried individually, they all have to implement their own way to do this, and it can only signal to resources using the same PhysicalMemory instance. This PR adds the ability to signal a write as "precise" on the tracking, which signals a special handler (if present) which can be used to avoid unnecessary flush actions, or maybe even more. For buffers, precise writes specifically do not flush, and instead punch a hole in the modified range list to indicate that the data on GPU has been replaced. The downside is that precise actions must ignore the page protection bits and always signal - as they need to notify the target resource to ignore the sequence number optimization. I had to reintroduce the sequence number increment after I2M, as removing it was causing issues in rabbids kingdom battle. However - all resources modified by I2M are notified directly to lower their sequence number, so the problem is likely that another unrelated resource is not being properly updated. Thankfully, doing this does not affect performance in the games I tested. This should fix regressions from #2624. Test any games that were broken by that. (RF4, rabbids kingdom battle) I've also added a sequence number increment to ThreedClass.IncrementSyncpoint, as it seems to fix buffer corruption in OpenGL homebrew. (this was a regression from removing sequence number increment from constant buffer update - another unrelated resource thing) * Add tests. * Add XML docs for GpuRegionHandle * Skip UpdateProtection if only precise actions were called This allows precise actions to skip reprotection costs.
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_memoryTracking.RegisterPreciseAction(address, size, PreciseAction);
_modifiedDelegate = RegionModified;
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}
/// <summary>
/// Gets the descriptor for a given ID.
/// </summary>
/// <param name="id">ID of the descriptor. This is effectively a zero-based index</param>
/// <returns>The descriptor</returns>
public T2 GetDescriptor(int id)
{
return PhysicalMemory.Read<T2>(Address + (ulong)id * DescriptorSize);
}
/// <summary>
/// Gets a reference to the descriptor for a given ID.
/// </summary>
/// <param name="id">ID of the descriptor. This is effectively a zero-based index</param>
/// <returns>A reference to the descriptor</returns>
public ref readonly T2 GetDescriptorRef(int id)
{
return ref MemoryMarshal.Cast<byte, T2>(PhysicalMemory.GetSpan(Address + (ulong)id * DescriptorSize, DescriptorSize))[0];
}
/// <summary>
/// Gets the GPU resource with the given ID.
/// </summary>
/// <param name="id">ID of the resource. This is effectively a zero-based index</param>
/// <returns>The GPU resource with the given ID</returns>
public abstract T1 Get(int id);
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/// <summary>
/// Checks if a given ID is valid and inside the range of the pool.
/// </summary>
/// <param name="id">ID of the descriptor. This is effectively a zero-based index</param>
/// <returns>True if the specified ID is valid, false otherwise</returns>
public bool IsValidId(int id)
{
return (uint)id <= MaximumId;
}
/// <summary>
/// Synchronizes host memory with guest memory.
/// This causes invalidation of pool entries,
/// if a modification of entries by the CPU is detected.
/// </summary>
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public void SynchronizeMemory()
{
_modified = false;
_memoryTracking.QueryModified(_modifiedDelegate);
if (_modified)
{
UpdateModifiedSequence();
}
}
/// <summary>
/// Indicate that a region of the pool was modified, and must be loaded from memory.
/// </summary>
/// <param name="mAddress">Start address of the modified region</param>
/// <param name="mSize">Size of the modified region</param>
private void RegionModified(ulong mAddress, ulong mSize)
{
_modified = true;
if (mAddress < Address)
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{
mAddress = Address;
}
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ulong maxSize = Address + Size - mAddress;
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if (mSize > maxSize)
{
mSize = maxSize;
}
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InvalidateRangeImpl(mAddress, mSize);
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}
/// <summary>
/// Updates the modified sequence number using the current sequence number and offset,
/// indicating that it has been modified.
/// </summary>
protected void UpdateModifiedSequence()
{
ModifiedSequenceNumber = SequenceNumber + _modifiedSequenceOffset;
}
Replace CacheResourceWrite with more general "precise" write (#2684) * Replace CacheResourceWrite with more general "precise" write The goal of CacheResourceWrite was to notify GPU resources when they were modified directly, by looking up the modified address/size in a structure and calling a method on each resource. The downside of this is that each resource cache has to be queried individually, they all have to implement their own way to do this, and it can only signal to resources using the same PhysicalMemory instance. This PR adds the ability to signal a write as "precise" on the tracking, which signals a special handler (if present) which can be used to avoid unnecessary flush actions, or maybe even more. For buffers, precise writes specifically do not flush, and instead punch a hole in the modified range list to indicate that the data on GPU has been replaced. The downside is that precise actions must ignore the page protection bits and always signal - as they need to notify the target resource to ignore the sequence number optimization. I had to reintroduce the sequence number increment after I2M, as removing it was causing issues in rabbids kingdom battle. However - all resources modified by I2M are notified directly to lower their sequence number, so the problem is likely that another unrelated resource is not being properly updated. Thankfully, doing this does not affect performance in the games I tested. This should fix regressions from #2624. Test any games that were broken by that. (RF4, rabbids kingdom battle) I've also added a sequence number increment to ThreedClass.IncrementSyncpoint, as it seems to fix buffer corruption in OpenGL homebrew. (this was a regression from removing sequence number increment from constant buffer update - another unrelated resource thing) * Add tests. * Add XML docs for GpuRegionHandle * Skip UpdateProtection if only precise actions were called This allows precise actions to skip reprotection costs.
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/// <summary>
/// An action to be performed when a precise memory access occurs to this resource.
/// Makes sure that the dirty flags are checked.
/// </summary>
/// <param name="address">Address of the memory action</param>
/// <param name="size">Size in bytes</param>
/// <param name="write">True if the access was a write, false otherwise</param>
private bool PreciseAction(ulong address, ulong size, bool write)
{
if (write && Context.SequenceNumber == SequenceNumber)
{
if (ModifiedSequenceNumber == SequenceNumber + _modifiedSequenceOffset)
{
// The modified sequence number is offset when PreciseActions occur so that
// users checking it will see an increment and know the pool has changed since
// their last look, even though the main SequenceNumber has not been changed.
_modifiedSequenceOffset++;
}
// Force the pool to be checked again the next time it is used.
Replace CacheResourceWrite with more general "precise" write (#2684) * Replace CacheResourceWrite with more general "precise" write The goal of CacheResourceWrite was to notify GPU resources when they were modified directly, by looking up the modified address/size in a structure and calling a method on each resource. The downside of this is that each resource cache has to be queried individually, they all have to implement their own way to do this, and it can only signal to resources using the same PhysicalMemory instance. This PR adds the ability to signal a write as "precise" on the tracking, which signals a special handler (if present) which can be used to avoid unnecessary flush actions, or maybe even more. For buffers, precise writes specifically do not flush, and instead punch a hole in the modified range list to indicate that the data on GPU has been replaced. The downside is that precise actions must ignore the page protection bits and always signal - as they need to notify the target resource to ignore the sequence number optimization. I had to reintroduce the sequence number increment after I2M, as removing it was causing issues in rabbids kingdom battle. However - all resources modified by I2M are notified directly to lower their sequence number, so the problem is likely that another unrelated resource is not being properly updated. Thankfully, doing this does not affect performance in the games I tested. This should fix regressions from #2624. Test any games that were broken by that. (RF4, rabbids kingdom battle) I've also added a sequence number increment to ThreedClass.IncrementSyncpoint, as it seems to fix buffer corruption in OpenGL homebrew. (this was a regression from removing sequence number increment from constant buffer update - another unrelated resource thing) * Add tests. * Add XML docs for GpuRegionHandle * Skip UpdateProtection if only precise actions were called This allows precise actions to skip reprotection costs.
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SequenceNumber--;
}
return false;
}
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protected abstract void InvalidateRangeImpl(ulong address, ulong size);
protected abstract void Delete(T1 item);
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/// <summary>
/// Performs the disposal of all resources stored on the pool.
/// It's an error to try using the pool after disposal.
/// </summary>
public virtual void Dispose()
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{
if (Items != null)
{
for (int index = 0; index < Items.Length; index++)
{
Delete(Items[index]);
}
Items = null;
}
Memory Read/Write Tracking using Region Handles (#1272) * WIP Range Tracking - Texture invalidation seems to have large problems - Buffer/Pool invalidation may have problems - Mirror memory tracking puts an additional `add` in compiled code, we likely just want to make HLE access slower if this is the final solution. - Native project is in the messiest possible location. - [HACK] JIT memory access always uses native "fast" path - [HACK] Trying some things with texture invalidation and views. It works :) Still a few hacks, messy things, slow things More work in progress stuff (also move to memory project) Quite a bit faster now. - Unmapping GPU VA and CPU VA will now correctly update write tracking regions, and invalidate textures for the former. - The Virtual range list is now non-overlapping like the physical one. - Fixed some bugs where regions could leak. - Introduced a weird bug that I still need to track down (consistent invalid buffer in MK8 ribbon road) Move some stuff. I think we'll eventually just put the dll and so for this in a nuget package. Fix rebase. [WIP] MultiRegionHandle variable size ranges - Avoid reprotecting regions that change often (needs some tweaking) - There's still a bug in buffers, somehow. - Might want different api for minimum granularity Fix rebase issue Commit everything needed for software only tracking. Remove native components. Remove more native stuff. Cleanup Use a separate window for the background context, update opentk. (fixes linux) Some experimental changes Should get things working up to scratch - still need to try some things with flush/modification and res scale. Include address with the region action. Initial work to make range tracking work Still a ton of bugs Fix some issues with the new stuff. * Fix texture flush instability There's still some weird behaviour, but it's much improved without this. (textures with cpu modified data were flushing over it) * Find the destination texture for Buffer->Texture full copy Greatly improves performance for nvdec videos (with range tracking) * Further improve texture tracking * Disable Memory Tracking for view parents This is a temporary approach to better match behaviour on master (where invalidations would be soaked up by views, rather than trigger twice) The assumption is that when views are created to a texture, they will cover all of its data anyways. Of course, this can easily be improved in future. * Introduce some tracking tests. WIP * Complete base tests. * Add more tests for multiregion, fix existing test. * Cleanup Part 1 * Remove unnecessary code from memory tracking * Fix some inconsistencies with 3D texture rule. * Add dispose tests. * Use a background thread for the background context. Rather than setting and unsetting a context as current, doing the work on a dedicated thread with signals seems to be a bit faster. Also nerf the multithreading test a bit. * Copy to texture with matching alignment This extends the copy to work for some videos with unusual size, such as tutorial videos in SMO. It will only occur if the destination texture already exists at XCount size. * Track reads for buffer copies. Synchronize new buffers before copying overlaps. * Remove old texture flushing mechanisms. Range tracking all the way, baby. * Wake the background thread when disposing. Avoids a deadlock when games are closed. * Address Feedback 1 * Separate TextureCopy instance for background thread Also `BackgroundContextWorker.InBackground` for a more sensible idenfifier for if we're in a background thread. * Add missing XML docs. * Address Feedback * Maybe I should start drinking coffee. * Some more feedback. * Remove flush warning, Refocus window after making background context
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_memoryTracking.Dispose();
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}
}
}