The `[[gnu::packed]]` attribute apparently lowered the required
alignment of the structs, which caused the compiler to generate two
1 byte loads/stores on RISC-V. This caused the kernel to read/write
incorrect values, as the device only seems to accept 2 byte operations.
A bit old but a relatively uncomplicated device capable of outputting
1920x1080 video with 32-bit color. Tested with a Voodoo 3 3000 16MB
PCI card. Resolution switching from DisplaySettings also works.
If the requested mode contains timing information, it is used directly.
Otherwise, display timing values are selected from the EDID. First the
detailed timings are checked, and then standard and established
timings for which there is a matching DMT mode. The driver does not
(yet) read the actual EDID, so the generic EDID in DisplayConnector now
includes a set of common display modes to make this work.
The driver should also be compatible with the Voodoo Banshee, 4 and 5
but I don't have these cards to test this with. The PCI IDs of these
cards are included as a commented line in case someone wants to give it
a try.
Simplify core methods in the VirtIO bus handling code by ensuring proper
error propagation. This makes initialization of queues, handling changes
in device configuration, and other core patterns more readable as well.
It also allows us to remove the obnoxious pattern of checking for
boolean "success" and if we get false answer then returning an actual
errno code.
The VirtIO specification defines many types of devices with different
purposes, and it also defines 3 possible transport mediums where devices
could be connected to the host machine.
We only care about the PCIe transport, but this commit puts the actual
foundations for supporting the lean MMIO transport too in the future.
To ensure things are kept abstracted but still functional, the VirtIO
transport code is responsible for what is deemed as related to an actual
transport type - allocation of interrupt handlers and tinkering with low
level transport-related registers, etc.
Like the HID, Audio and Storage subsystem, the Graphics subsystem (which
handles GPUs technically) exposes unix device files (typically in /dev).
To ensure consistency across the repository, move all related files to a
new directory under Kernel/Devices called "GPU".
Also remove the redundant "GPU" word from the VirtIO driver directory,
and the word "Graphics" from GraphicsManagement.{h,cpp} filenames.