81dff4f752af786767f74ca54f89a879f57c18a6
As far as I can see, the intention of the requirement that we do so is to prevent instruction prefetch from wandering out into either unmapped memory or memory with a different caching type, and hanging the chip. The kernel makes sure that the page after your BO has a valid page of the same caching type, which meets this requirement, so there's no need to waste space between our programs (and in instruction cache) on this. Saves another 9kb instructions in l4d2 shaders. Acked-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
File: docs/README.WIN32 Last updated: 23 April 2011 Quick Start ----- ----- Windows drivers are build with SCons. Makefiles or Visual Studio projects are no longer shipped or supported. Run scons osmesa mesagdi to build classic mesa Windows GDI drivers; or scons libgl-gdi to build gallium based GDI driver. This will work both with MSVS or Mingw. Windows Drivers ------- ------- At this time, only the gallium GDI driver is known to work. Source code also exists in the tree for other drivers in src/mesa/drivers/windows, but the status of this code is unknown. General ------- After building, you can copy the above DLL files to a place in your PATH such as $SystemRoot/SYSTEM32. If you don't like putting things in a system directory, place them in the same directory as the executable(s). Be careful about accidentially overwriting files of the same name in the SYSTEM32 directory. The DLL files are built so that the external entry points use the stdcall calling convention. Static LIB files are not built. The LIB files that are built with are the linker import files associated with the DLL files. The si-glu sources are used to build the GLU libs. This was done mainly to get the better tessellator code. If you have a Windows-related build problem or question, please post to the mesa-dev or mesa-users list.
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