From: Richard Fitzgerald <rf@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> [ Upstream commit 8af49868e51ed1ba117b74728af12abe1eda82e5 ] If the ASP1 DAI is hooked up by the machine driver the ASP TX mixer sources should be initialized to disconnected. There aren't currently any available products using the ASP so this doesn't affect any existing systems. The cs35l56 does not have any fixed default for the mixer source registers. When the cs35l56 boots, its firmware patches these registers to setup a system-specific routing; this is so that Windows can use generic SDCA drivers instead of needing knowledge of chip-specific registers. The setup varies between end-products, which each have customized firmware, and so the default register state varies between end-products. It can also change if the firmware on an end-product is upgraded - for example if a change was needed to the routing for Windows use-cases. It must be emphasized that the settings applied by the firmware are not internal magic tuning; they are statically implementing use-case setup that on Linux would be done via ALSA controls. The driver is currently syncing the mixer controls with whatever initial state the firmware wrote to the registers, so that they report the actual audio routing. But if the ASP DAI is hooked up this can create a powered-up DAPM graph without anything intentionally setting up a path. This can lead to parts of the audio system powering up unexpectedly. For example when cs35l56 is connected to cs42l43 using a codec-codec link, this can create a complete DAPM graph which then powers-up cs42l43. But the cs42l43 can only be clocked from its SoundWire bus so this causes a bunch of errors in the kernel log where cs42l43 is unexpectedly powered-up without a clock. If the host is taking ownership of the ASP (either directly or as a codec-to-codec link) there is no need to keep the mixer settings that the firmware wrote. The driver has ALSA controls for setting these using standard Linux mechanisms. So if the machine driver hooks up the ASP the ASP mixers are initialized to "None" (no input). This prevents unintended DAPM-graph power-ups, and means the initial state of the mixers is always going to be None. Since the initial state of the mixers can vary from system to system and potentially between firmware upgrades, no use-case manager can currently assume that cs35l56 has a known initial state. The firmware could just as easily default them to "None" as to any input source. So defaulting them to "None" in the driver is not increasing the entropy of the system. Signed-off-by: Richard Fitzgerald <rf@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240613132527.46537-1-rf@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <broonie@xxxxxxxxxx> Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin <sashal@xxxxxxxxxx> --- sound/soc/codecs/cs35l56-shared.c | 4 ++++ 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+) diff --git a/sound/soc/codecs/cs35l56-shared.c b/sound/soc/codecs/cs35l56-shared.c index fd02b621da52c..d29878af2a80d 100644 --- a/sound/soc/codecs/cs35l56-shared.c +++ b/sound/soc/codecs/cs35l56-shared.c @@ -214,6 +214,10 @@ static const struct reg_sequence cs35l56_asp1_defaults[] = { REG_SEQ0(CS35L56_ASP1_FRAME_CONTROL5, 0x00020100), REG_SEQ0(CS35L56_ASP1_DATA_CONTROL1, 0x00000018), REG_SEQ0(CS35L56_ASP1_DATA_CONTROL5, 0x00000018), + REG_SEQ0(CS35L56_ASP1TX1_INPUT, 0x00000000), + REG_SEQ0(CS35L56_ASP1TX2_INPUT, 0x00000000), + REG_SEQ0(CS35L56_ASP1TX3_INPUT, 0x00000000), + REG_SEQ0(CS35L56_ASP1TX4_INPUT, 0x00000000), }; /* -- 2.43.0