This is a collection of tools for development and testing of the Intel DRM driver. There are many macro-level test suites that get used against our driver, including xtest, rendercheck, piglit, and oglconform, but failures from those can be difficult to track down to kernel changes, and many require complicated build procedures or specific testing environments to get useful results. Thus, intel-graphics-tools was a project I started to collect some low-level tools I intended to build. benchmarks/ This should be a collection of useful microbenchmarks. The hope is that people can use these to tune some pieces of DRM code in relevant ways. The benchmarks require KMS to be enabled. When run with an X Server running, they must be run as root to avoid the authentication requirement. Note that a few other microbenchmarks are in tests (like gem_gtt_speed). tests/ This is a set of automated tests to run against the DRM to validate changes. Hopefully this can cover the relevant cases we need to worry about, including backwards compatibility. Note: The old automake based testrunner had to be scraped due to upstream changes which broke dynamic creation of the test list. Of course it is still possible to directly run tests, even when not always limiting tests to specific subtests (like piglit does). The more comfortable way to run tests is with piglit. First grab piglit from: git://anongit.freedesktop.org/piglit and build it (no need to install anything). Then we need to link up the i-g-t sources with piglit piglit-sources $ cd bin piglit-sources/bin $ ln $i-g-t-sources igt -s The tests in the i-g-t sources need to have been built already. Then we can run the testcases with (as usual as root, no other drm clients running): piglit-sources # ./piglit-run.py tests/igt.tests The testlist is built at runtime, so no need to update anything in piglit when adding new tests. See piglit-sources $ ./piglit-run.py -h for some useful options. Piglit only runs a default set of tests and is useful for regression testing. Other tests not run are: - tests that might hang the gpu, see HANG in Makefile.am - gem_stress, a stress test suite. Look at the source for all the various options. - testdisplay is only run in the default mode. testdisplay has tons of options to test different kms functionality, again read the source for the details. When creating new tests or subtests please read and follow tests/NAMING-CONVENTION. lib/ Common helper functions and headers used by the other tools. man/ Manpages, unfortunately rather incomplete. tools/ This is a collection of debugging tools that had previously been built with the 2D driver but not shipped. Some distros were hacking up the 2D build to ship them. Instead, here's a separate package for people debugging the driver. These tools generally must be run as root, safe for the ones that just decode dumps. tools/quick_dump Quick dumper is a python tool built with SWIG bindings to important libraries exported by the rest of the tool suite. The tool itself is quite straight forward, and should also be a useful example for others wishing to write python based i915 tools. Note to package maintainers: It is not recommended to package this directory, as the tool is not yet designed for wide usage. If the package is installed via "make install" the users will have to set their python library path appropriately. Use --disable-dumper debugger/ This tool is to be used to do shader debugging. It acts like a debug server accepting connections from debug clients such as mesa. The connections is made with unix domain sockets, and at some point it would be nice if this directory contained a library for initiating connections with debug clients.. The debugger must be run as root: "sudo debugger/eudb" DEPENDENCIES This is a non-exchaustive list of package dependencies required for building everything: libpciaccess-dev libdrm-dev xutils-dev libcairo2-dev swig2.0 libpython3.3-dev x11proto-dri2-dev