On Tue, Apr 25, 2023 at 06:02:20PM +0200, Paweł Anikiel wrote: > On Fri, Apr 14, 2023 at 7:35 PM Mark Brown <broonie@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Fri, Apr 14, 2023 at 04:01:59PM +0200, Paweł Anikiel wrote: > > > Apply a workaround for what seems to be a hardware quirk: when using > > > an external MCLK signal, powering on Output and DAC for the first time > > > produces output distortions unless they're powered together with whole > > > chip power. > > This doesn't seem coherent, these are multiple register writes so > > clearly can't be done at the same moment as initial power on. Clearly > > there's some other constraint here. > The "at the same time" part is done by writing multiple bits at once > to SSM2602_PWR. But before that, SSM2602_ACTIVE has to be set, and > then the chip is reset (SSM2602_RESET) to power everything down again. So you need to power up the chip then do a register write sequence - that's noticably different to what the description says. > > > Here are some sequences run at the very start before a sw reset (and > > > later using one of the NOT OK sequences from above): > > > ssmset 0x09 0x01 # core > > > ssmset 0x06 0x07 # chip, out, dac > > > OK > > I can't tell what any of this is trying to say, especially given all the > > magic numbers, and obviously no actual use of the driver should be > > writing directly to the register map. > These are shell commands run from userspace (with no ssm2602 driver > present in the kernel). ssmset is a wrapper for the i2cset command: > ssmset() { > i2cset -y 0 0x1a $(($1*2)) $2 > } > I definitely should have made that more clear. > Do you think these logs are worth adding? If so, I'll improve the > explanation what these mean. Probably? Since I couldn't really follow what these were trying to tell me it's a bit hard to say. It looks like you worked this out yourself rather than using an erratum so documenting where the workaround comes from seems useful.
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