On Thu, Feb 28, 2019 at 04:35:29PM +0200, Jyri Sarha wrote: > On 28/02/2019 15:10, Russell King - ARM Linux admin wrote: > > On Thu, Feb 28, 2019 at 02:54:29PM +0200, Jyri Sarha wrote: > >> On 28/02/2019 14:15, Russell King - ARM Linux admin wrote: > >>> Hi all, > >>> > >>> While looking at hdmi-codec issues, I spotted this code: > >>> > >>> static int hdmi_codec_hw_params(struct snd_pcm_substream *substream, > >>> struct snd_pcm_hw_params *params, > >>> struct snd_soc_dai *dai) > >>> { > >>> ... > >>> if (params_width(params) > 24) > >>> params->msbits = 24; > >>> > >>> params->msbits is a parameter that is negotiated and refined by > >>> libasound, and is part of the ALSA constraint system. The "Writing an > >>> ALSA driver" documentation says about the hw_params callback: > >>> > >>> "This is called when the hardware parameter (``hw_params``) is set up > >>> by the application, that is, once when the buffer size, the period > >>> size, the format, etc. are defined for the pcm substream." > >>> > >>> which suggests we should only be reading the parameters, not writing > >>> to them. > >>> > >>> What's more is that the msbits is a parameter that is refined with > >>> userspace, so surely the above should be a declared constraint? > >>> > >> > >> Certainly not a constraint. While HDMI can only pass up to 24-bit per > >> sample audio the most (or at least the two I have worked with) encoders > >> can take 32-bit wide (and probably wider) samples trough i2s. So the > >> system can play 32-bit samples, just the 4 LSB is ignored. > > > > You have not explained why "not a constraint". From the explanation > > that Mark gave me on IRC, msbits is the number of bits that the codec > > respects, whereas the sample bits is the number of bits in the sample. > > If sample bits - msbits != 0, then that is the number of bits ignored. > > Mark basically described it as "feel free to send me more than 24 bits > > but I'm ignoring the LSBs". > > > > If the msbits is limited to 24, then userspace gets to know about that > > limitation when negotiating with ALSA if it is a constraint. If it > > isn't a constraint, userspace has no way to know. > > > >> Actually there is very little difference between the case of playing > >> 32-bit stereo audio with matching i2s bclk ratio, and playing 24-bit > >> stereo audio with 64-bit bclk ratio. Especially when the 4 LSB is anyway > >> ignored like in HDMI audio case. > > > > You mean 8 LSB throughout the above two paragraphs. > > > >>> Digging a bit deeper, ASoC passes a private copy of the params to each > >>> codec - a copy is made, then fixups for TDM slots are applied, followed > >>> by any topology fixups by the DAI link (be_hw_params_fixup) before the > >>> codec driver's hw_params() callback is made. Afterwards, ASoC reads > >>> back the rate, channels and physical (memory) width and stores them > >>> in the codec's DAI structure. The msbits are not read. > >>> > >>> hdmi-codec also seems to do nothing with the msbits parameter other > >>> than the above code. > >>> > >>> So, all in all, it seems that the above code limiting msbits is > >>> redundant - nothing will read this modified value. Can we kill it? > >>> > >> > >> It certainly looks that way, so yes. In any case struct > >> snd_soc_dai_driver .playback.sig_bits = 24 should be all that is needed. > > > > This sets a constraint to limit msbits to 24 for any sample width > > in core ASoC code, doing exactly what you said "certainly not" to > > above. > > > > It also means that the quoted code in hdmi-codec's hw_params() is > > redundant for another reason. > > > > See the description of: > > snd_pcm_hw_constraint_msbits() in sound/core/pcm_lib.c, > > soc_pcm_set_msb() and soc_pcm_apply_msb() in sound/soc/soc-pcm.c. > > > > Can you please clarify, because there seems to be some confusion. > > > > If I understand right, the only confusion here is around the term > "constraint". I did not follow that you meant in strictly alsa-term. Yes > we should set msbits pcm_lib constraint to 24 (as hdmi-codec aready > does), because HDMI interface can not deliver more than 24 bits per > sample, and any extra LSB bit will be ignored. Right, so we can remove the above code then? -- RMK's Patch system: https://www.armlinux.org.uk/developer/patches/ FTTC broadband for 0.8mile line in suburbia: sync at 12.1Mbps down 622kbps up According to speedtest.net: 11.9Mbps down 500kbps up _______________________________________________ Alsa-devel mailing list Alsa-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://mailman.alsa-project.org/mailman/listinfo/alsa-devel