Hi Inki,
On 07/15/2014 11:34 AM, Inki Dae wrote:
On 2014년 07월 14일 20:03, Thierry Reding wrote:
On Mon, Jul 14, 2014 at 07:45:28PM +0900, YoungJun Cho wrote:
On 07/14/2014 06:41 PM, Thierry Reding wrote:
[...]
That said, I've been doing some research and it seems like we have a
somewhat similar feature on Tegra. What happens there is that there are
three GPIO pins that can be repurposed for TE signalling. But as opposed
to using them as interrupts the display controller can be configured to
use them, upon which it will automatically handle the TE signal by
sending the next frame.
Could you explain more detail how the Tegra display controller could be
configured with this GPIO pins?
I have no idea except that the display controller registers this GPIO as an
IRQ.
On Tegra the display controller has a special register that can be
programmed to use one of the three GPIOs as TE signal. Then the display
controller can be configured in one-shot (non-continuous) mode, which
means that software needs to explicitly set a trigger bit to tell the
display controller to send a new frame. If TE signalling is enabled,
then the display controller will not immediately send a new frame when
triggered but wait for signalling of this GPIO.
So we have at least two very different implementations of this on two
different SoCs. Further the specification explicitly recommends using
the BTA sequence and DSI protocol to wait for TE. So I still think that
controllers that provide an additional, non-spec compliant method to
signal TE should handle it separately rather than within DSI. Otherwise
we essentially need to make the DSI "core" aware of all these quirks,
and I'd rather avoid that.
You mean, the DSI specification guides to use BTA, so it's better to use
display controller rather than DSIM, right?
What I'm saying is that there's nothing about a side-band TE wire in the
DSI spec. In fact the spec explicitly says that this mechanism of an
external TE wire from older protocols (DBI) was replaced by the BTA
sequence over the protocol.
Now, my understanding is that using the BTA sequence over the DSI
protocol would introduce some latency and that forces some panel vendors
to still provide a side-band TE wire even in DSI compliant panels. But
since this is not part of the specification there is no standard way to
do this (as evidenced by Tegra and Exynos). Therefore putting such
functionality into the core DSI code is bad.
But that doesn't mean that you have to put this functionality into the
display controller driver on Exynos. What I'm saying is that it should
be handled by the SoC driver rather than the core. Where exactly
probably depends on the particular case.
As Inki commented before, I'll try to use remote-endpoint property of DSI
device node in exynos DSIM driver and call FIMD notifier.
Sounds like it matches what I said above. I'm not a huge fan of
notifiers, but if it works for you I suppose that's fine. The
alternative would be to directly call a FIMD function, which is
somewhat more explicit than a notifier.
Yes, I also like explicit call, so I want to use dsi_host_ops and calls it
in panel. But there is an objection to use dis_host_ops, we think notifier
in exynos dsim for fimd(display controller).
There are other ways to explicitly call into the display controller. You
could for example get access to the CRTC that DSIM is currently
connected to (via exynos_dsi.encoder->crtc) and then cast that to a
struct exynos_drm_crtc and call a function to trigger a new frame to be
sent (for example exynos_drm_crtc_send_frame()). This assumes that you
can safely cast struct drm_crtc * to struct exynos_drm_crtc *, but that
shouldn't be a problem.
With the above, you could make the DSIM handle the TE signal interrupts
and trigger the DC using the new exynos_drm_crtc_send_frame() function.
It seems better than the use of notifier. Actually, original patch used
this way except TE event.
Mr. Cho, let's use remote-endpoint property and this way instead of
notifier.
The struct exynos_dsi has panel_node, which is valid by
exynos_dsi_host_attach() is called from panel, we could use it instead
of getting new remote-endpoint node.
So after called exynos_dsi_host_attach(), the dsi driver could know that
the panel supports mipi command mode or video mode,
and if the panel is for mipi command mode one, dsi driver gets panel te
gpio and registers its irq.
I'll try.
Thank you.
Best regards YJ
Thanks,
Inki Dae
Thierry
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe devicetree" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html