Re: [Nouveau] [PATCH v2] ALSA: hda: Continue to probe when codec probe fails

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Op 13-04-2021 om 10:48 schreef Karol Herbst:
On Tue, Apr 13, 2021 at 10:24 AM Roy Spliet <nouveau@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

Op 13-04-2021 om 01:10 schreef Karol Herbst:
On Mon, Apr 12, 2021 at 9:36 PM Roy Spliet <nouveau@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

Hello Aaron,

Thanks for your insights. A follow-up query and some observations in-line.

Op 12-04-2021 om 20:06 schreef Aaron Plattner:
On 4/10/21 1:48 PM, Roy Spliet wrote:
Op 10-04-2021 om 20:23 schreef Lukas Wunner:
On Sat, Apr 10, 2021 at 04:51:27PM +0100, Roy Spliet wrote:
Can I ask someone with more
technical knowledge of snd_hda_intel and vgaswitcheroo to brainstorm
about
the possible challenges of nouveau taking matters into its own hand
rather
than keeping this PCI quirk around?

It sounds to me like the HDA is not powered if no cable is plugged in.
What is reponsible then for powering it up or down, firmware code on
the GPU or in the host's BIOS?

Sometimes the BIOS, but definitely unconditionally the PCI quirk code:
https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/master/drivers/pci/quirks.c#L5289

(CC Aaron Plattner)

My basic understanding is that the audio function stops responding
whenever the graphics function is powered off. So the requirement here
is that the audio driver can't try to talk to the audio function while
the graphics function is asleep, and must trigger a graphics function
wakeup before trying to communicate with the audio function.

I believe that vgaswitcheroo takes care of this for us.


yeah, and also: why would the driver want to do stuff? If the GPU is
turned off, there is no point in communicating with the audio device
anyway. The driver should do the initial probe and leave the device be
unless it's actively used. Also there is no such thing as "use the
audio function, but not the graphics one"

I think
there are also requirements about the audio function needing to be awake
when the graphics driver is updating the ELD, but I'm not sure.


well, it's one physical device anyway, so technically the audio
function is powered on.

This is harder on Windows because the audio driver lives in its own
little world doing its own thing but on Linux we can do better.

Ideally, we should try to find out how to control HDA power from the
operating system rather than trying to cooperate with whatever firmware
is doing.  If we have that capability, the OS should power the HDA up
and down as it sees fit.

After system boot, I don't think there's any firmware involved, but I'm
not super familiar with the low-level details and it's possible the
situation changed since I last looked at it.

I think the problem with having nouveau write this quirk is that the
kernel will need to re-probe the PCI device to notice that it has
suddenly become a multi-function device with an audio function, and
hotplug the audio driver. I originally looked into trying to do that but
it was tricky because the PCI subsystem didn't really have a mechanism
for a single-function device to become a multi-function device on the
fly and it seemed easier to enable it early on during bus enumeration.
That way the kernel sees both functions all the time without anything
else having to be special about this configuration.

Well, we do have this pci/quirk.c thing, no? Nouveau does flip the
bit, but I am actually not sure if that's even doing something
anymore. Maybe in the runtime_resume case it's still relevant but not
sure _when_ DECLARE_PCI_FIXUP_CLASS_RESUME_EARLY is triggered, it does
seem to be called even in the runtime_resume case though.


Right, so for a little more context: a while ago I noticed that my
laptop (lucky me, Asus K501UB) has a 940M with HDA but no codec. Seems
legit, given how this GPU has no displays attached; they're all hooked
up to the Intel integrated GPU. That threw off the snd_hda_intel
mid-probe, and as a result didn't permit runpm, keeping the entire GPU,
PCIe bus and thus the CPU package awake. A bit of hackerly later we
decided to continue probing without a codec, and now my laptop is happy,
but...
A new problem popped up with several other NVIDIA GPUs that expose their
HDA subdevice, but somehow its inaccessible. Relevant lines from a
users' log:

[    3.031222] MXM: GUID detected in BIOS
[    3.031280] ACPI BIOS Error (bug): AE_AML_PACKAGE_LIMIT, Index
(0x000000003) is beyond end of object (length 0x0) (20200925/exoparg2-393)
[    3.031352] ACPI Error: Aborting method \_SB.PCI0.GFX0._DSM due to
previous error (AE_AML_PACKAGE_LIMIT) (20200925/psparse-529)
[    3.031419] ACPI: \_SB_.PCI0.GFX0: failed to evaluate _DSM (0x300b)
[    3.031424] ACPI Warning: \_SB.PCI0.GFX0._DSM: Argument #4 type
mismatch - Found [Buffer], ACPI requires [Package] (20200925/nsarguments-61)
[    3.031619] pci 0000:00:02.0: optimus capabilities: enabled, status
dynamic power,
[    3.031667] ACPI BIOS Error (bug): AE_AML_PACKAGE_LIMIT, Index
(0x000000003) is beyond end of object (length 0x0) (20200925/exoparg2-393)
[    3.031731] ACPI Error: Aborting method \_SB.PCI0.GFX0._DSM due to
previous error (AE_AML_PACKAGE_LIMIT) (20200925/psparse-529)
[    3.031791] ACPI Error: Aborting method \_SB.PCI0.PEG0.PEGP._DSM due
to previous error (AE_AML_PACKAGE_LIMIT) (20200925/psparse-529)
[    3.031856] ACPI: \_SB_.PCI0.PEG0.PEGP: failed to evaluate _DSM (0x300b)
[    3.031859] ACPI Warning: \_SB.PCI0.PEG0.PEGP._DSM: Argument #4 type
mismatch - Found [Buffer], ACPI requires [Package] (20200925/nsarguments-61)

If I am not wrong we are calling the _DSM method inside nouveau when
doing runpm on pre _PR3 systems. As this is all very vendor specific,
we might be doing something incorrectly.

[    3.032058] pci 0000:01:00.0: optimus capabilities: enabled, status
dynamic power,
[    3.032061] VGA switcheroo: detected Optimus DSM method
\_SB_.PCI0.PEG0.PEGP handle
[    3.032323] checking generic (d0000000 410000) vs hw (f6000000 1000000)
[    3.032325] checking generic (d0000000 410000) vs hw (e0000000 10000000)
[    3.032326] checking generic (d0000000 410000) vs hw (f0000000 2000000)
[    3.032410] nouveau 0000:01:00.0: NVIDIA GK107 (0e71f0a2)
[    3.042385] nouveau 0000:01:00.0: bios: version 80.07.a0.00.11
--- snip ---
[    8.951478] snd_hda_intel 0000:01:00.1: can't change power state from
D3cold to D0 (config space inaccessible)
[    8.951509] snd_hda_intel 0000:01:00.1: can't change power state from
D3hot to D0 (config space inaccessible)

This is actually a little bad, because it means that the device
doesn't come back up from D3. It's a bit weird it's D3cold and D3hot
in the messages, but maybe the device just takes quite some time to
wake up. But it does look like the device gets woken up.

[    8.951608] snd_hda_intel 0000:01:00.1: Disabling MSI
[    8.951621] snd_hda_intel 0000:01:00.1: Handle vga_switcheroo audio
client
[    8.952461] snd_hda_intel 0000:00:1b.0: bound 0000:00:02.0 (ops
i915_audio_component_bind_ops [i915])
[    8.952642] snd_hda_intel 0000:01:00.1: number of I/O streams is 30,
forcing separate stream tags

Now I don't know what's going on, but the snd_hda_intel messages are
ominous. And so are the ACPI warnings. But I don't know how much these
two are related.


What is the actual problem though? Seems like everything is fine
despite those messages.

The problem, as stated a few e-mails earlier, is that the HDA errors
currently prevent snd_hda_intel from properly probing the device and
registering it with vgaswitcheroo. As a result, the GPU always stays in
DynPwr rather than DynOff even when it's unused, keeping the PCIe bus
and the CPU package powered. Basically burning through a charged battery
a lot quicker than need be.

That's not the result of those errors, just the result of having no codecs, no?

If it was just a case of no codecs, Takashi and my patches from last year would have fixed it. This one seems a bit more hairy.


If we go back a mile on the e-mail thread, I think the problem was
narrowed down to snd_hda_intel reading an invalid codec mask on the
config space, and using it anyway. That being said, I believe there are
also reports of users that don't get HDMI audio unless the cable was
plugged in at boot-time, with similar messages in their logs. The codec
might in such cases be hiding themselves until a cable is plugged in?
@Aaron Plattner: does that latter observation sound right to you?


yeah, I think that's the thing we should focus on, everything else
just seems unrelated at this point until we have more information
(like, codecs hide, because the _DSM calls failed or something)


Sure, but the option of not exposing the HDA device in the first place had to be explored, even if it just led to rejecting the idea like it seems to have. I'm in favour of pushing forward the original fix that makes snd_hda_intel not fail on reading an invalid codec mask, and have it register the device with vgaswitcheroo so we can send it to DynOff. With the current snd_hda_intel architecture that seems simpler than failing to probe and unmapping the driver from the device. However, the issue of no HDMI sound unless plugged in as boot is/might be related, and needs to be on someone's agenda.


You say that it is desirable to switch on HDA at boot-time because the
PCI subsystem doesn't play nicely with changing a device to
multi-function. That rules out the option of only enabling the HDA
device once a cable is plugged in. Are there any other trap doors that

yeah, we can absolutely not do that. We do quirk the device to put the
GPU into multi function state asap and the intel_hda_snd driver should
deal with it.

snd_hda_intel needs to navigate around to make this work fault free on
all hardware, such as:
- Codecs not revealing themselves until a display is plugged in,
requiring perhaps a "codec reprobe" and "codec remove" event from
nouveau/rm to snd_hda_intel,

we could trigger the reprobe from within nouveau as we are dealing
with display hotplug events anyway.

Right. Are there situations where nouveau needs to? Or is this a
misunderstanding of the problem from my end?


nouveau has to do some configuration anyway, like connecting the audio
stream with the port used etc...that's the ELD part. We have some
drm_audio bits though, so maybe we can solve this more general and
maybe the radeon drivers already have something here? Might be worth
to take a look there as well.


- Borked BIOSes just blindly assigning the MMIO space of the HDA device
to another device, or nothing at all,

that exists? *sigh*

- ... other things that might give any of us nightmares and heart burn?


hopefully there are none :p

Thanks!

Roy


-- Aaron

Thanks,

Lukas








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