On Thu, Jan 09, 2025 at 05:32:18PM +0100, Konrad Dybcio wrote: > On 9.01.2025 4:45 PM, Stephan Gerhold wrote: > > On Thu, Jan 09, 2025 at 03:00:01PM +0100, Konrad Dybcio wrote: > >> On 9.01.2025 2:29 PM, Stephan Gerhold wrote: > >>> On Thu, Jan 09, 2025 at 01:57:17PM +0100, Konrad Dybcio wrote: > >>>> On 9.01.2025 10:32 AM, Stephan Gerhold wrote: > >>>>> On Wed, Jan 08, 2025 at 05:07:47PM -0600, Bjorn Andersson wrote: > >>>>>> On Thu, Dec 05, 2024 at 07:46:28PM +0100, Stephan Gerhold wrote: > >>>>>>> On Thu, Dec 05, 2024 at 06:11:47PM +0100, Konrad Dybcio wrote: > >>>>>>>> On 4.12.2024 9:33 AM, Stephan Gerhold wrote: > >>>>>>>>> On Wed, Dec 04, 2024 at 08:20:15AM +0100, Krzysztof Kozlowski wrote: > >>>>>>>>>> On 03/12/2024 18:44, Stephan Gerhold wrote: > >>>>>>>>>>> The WCD938x codec provides two controls for each of the MIC_BIASn outputs: > >>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>> - "MIC BIASn" enables an internal regulator to generate the output > >>>>>>>>>>> with a configurable voltage (qcom,micbiasN-microvolt). > >>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>> - "VA MIC BIASn" enables "pull-up mode" that bypasses the internal > >>>>>>>>>>> regulator and directly outputs fixed 1.8V from the VDD_PX pin. > >>>>>>>>>>> This is intended for low-power VA (voice activation) use cases. > >>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>> The audio-routing setup for the X1E80100 CRD currently specifies both > >>>>>>>>>>> as power supplies for the DMICs, but only one of them can be active > >>>>>>>>>>> at the same time. In practice, only the internal regulator is used > >>>>>>>>>>> with the current setup because the driver prefers it over pull-up mode. > >>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>> Make this more clear by dropping the redundant routes to the pull-up > >>>>>>>>>>> "VA MIC BIASn" supply. There is no functional difference except that we > >>>>>>>>>>> skip briefly switching to pull-up mode when shutting down the microphone. > >>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>> Fixes: 4442a67eedc1 ("arm64: dts: qcom: x1e80100-crd: add sound card") > >>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>> If there is no functional difference and this is just redundant, then > >>>>>>>>>> there is nothing to fix, so drop the tag. But the point is that users > >>>>>>>>>> might want the low-power VA. You claim they don't want... sure, I am > >>>>>>>>>> fine with that but there is nothing to fix in such case. > >>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>> The fix here is that two mutually exclusive power supplies for the DMIC > >>>>>>>>> are specified in the device tree. You can only have one of them active > >>>>>>>>> at the same time. The Linux driver handles that gracefully, but the > >>>>>>>>> device tree is still wrong and IMO deserves a fixes tag. > >>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>> The functional difference is that we skip briefly switching to pull-up > >>>>>>>>> mode when shutting down the microphone. Users won't notice that, but > >>>>>>>>> it's not the intended behavior. > >>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>> I don't claim that users don't want to switch to the low-power pull-up > >>>>>>>>> mode (VA MIC BIASn). However, we would need a different mechanism to > >>>>>>>>> give them the option to switch at runtime. "audio-routing" just > >>>>>>>>> specifies static routes, so the current description does not allow > >>>>>>>>> switching between the two modes either. > >>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>> Is there no existing mechanism to alter this at runtime? > >>>>>>>> > >>>>>>> > >>>>>>> I don't think so... Since it's currently exposed as two separate DAPM > >>>>>>> supplies (instead of a mux or similar) you can only choose between one > >>>>>>> of them in the static routes specified by "audio-routing" in the DT. > >>>>>>> > >>>>>>> I tried looking at how downstream handles this, but this left me even > >>>>>>> more confused than I was before. :-) On CRD we currently have the > >>>>>>> following routes in DT: > >>>>>>> > >>>>>>> "VA DMIC0", "MIC BIAS3", > >>>>>>> "VA DMIC1", "MIC BIAS3", > >>>>>>> "VA DMIC2", "MIC BIAS1", > >>>>>>> "VA DMIC3", "MIC BIAS1", > >>>>>>> "VA DMIC0", "VA MIC BIAS3", > >>>>>>> "VA DMIC1", "VA MIC BIAS3", > >>>>>>> "VA DMIC2", "VA MIC BIAS1", > >>>>>>> "VA DMIC3", "VA MIC BIAS1", > >>>>>>> > >>>>>>> MIC BIAS and VA MIC BIAS are mutually exclusive, so this is not correct. > >>>>>>> But if you look at e.g. SM8550 downstream they have: > >>>>>>> > >>>>>>> "TX DMIC0", "MIC BIAS3", > >>>>>>> "TX DMIC1", "MIC BIAS3", > >>>>>>> "TX DMIC2", "MIC BIAS1", > >>>>>>> "TX DMIC3", "MIC BIAS1", > >>>>>>> "VA DMIC0", "VA MIC BIAS3", > >>>>>>> "VA DMIC1", "VA MIC BIAS3", > >>>>>>> "VA DMIC2", "VA MIC BIAS1", > >>>>>>> "VA DMIC3", "VA MIC BIAS1"; > >>>>>>> > >>>>>>> Note the TX DMIC vs VA DMIC. So they specify one of the supplies for the > >>>>>>> TX macro DMIC, and the low-power one for the VA macro DMIC. That would > >>>>>>> be fine. > >>>>>>> > >>>>>>> Now the question is: If we can use the DMIC through both the TX and the > >>>>>>> VA macro, and we're not doing voice activation, why are we using the VA > >>>>>>> macro in the first place? > >>>>>>> > >>>>>>> @Srini: Do you remember why? > >>>>>>> > >>>>>> > >>>>>> What's the verdict regarding this? > >>>>>> > >>>>> > >>>>> We started discussing this, but did not come to a conclusion yet if we > >>>>> should be recording from the DMICs using the TX macro instead of the VA > >>>>> macro. > >>>>> > >>>>> The patch I submitted is still valid though, independent of that > >>>>> question. Since we're not doing voice activation we want to have the > >>>>> "full quality" MIC BIAS supply, not the low-power one. > >>>> > >>>> Can/should we discuss a new sound API to make this toggleable? > >>>> > >>>> Do these microphones physically connect to muxable inputs, or does this > >>>> depend on board wiring? > >>>> > >>> > >>> The WCD938x codec has 4 MIC_BIAS output pins that are typically used as > >>> power supply for microphones. Inside the codec there is an option to > >>> drive these output pins in one of two modes: > >>> > >>> 1. Internal regulator to generate the output with a configurable > >>> voltage (qcom,micbiasN-microvolt). Exposed as "MIC BIASn" supply in > >>> the Linux driver. > >>> > >>> 2. "Pull-up mode" that bypasses the internal regulator and directly > >>> outputs fixed 1.8V from the VDD_PX pin. Exposed as "VA MIC BIASn" > >>> supply in the Linux driver. > >>> > >>> The board-specific part here is only which microphone is wired to which > >>> MIC BIAS pin (e.g. DMIC0 -> MIC BIAS3, DMIC2 -> MIC BIAS1 etc). > >>> > >>> Both options will work if the microphone can operate at 1.8V. In that > >>> case, I think generally we want (1) for normal audio use cases and (2) > >>> for low-power use cases (like "voice activation"). > >>> > >>> Apparently the same applies for the "macro" to use. TX macro should be > >>> used for normal audio, and VA macro only for low-power use cases. With > >>> that there is a clear mapping: > >>> > >>> - TX macro DMICs -> full power "MIC BIAS" supply > >>> - VA macro DMICs -> low-power "VA MIC BIAS" supply > >>> > >>> I don't see why someone would want to change this mapping, so I don't > >>> think it's worth making this user configurable. > >>> > >>> Given that we're currently using the VA macro for normal audio, we > >>> should describe VA macro DMICs -> full power "MIC BIAS" supply for now > >>> and ideally migrate to using the TX macro later. > >> > >> So, in short, if I understood you correctly, audio comes in through a > >> hardwired connection to a given macro, but the bias pins can be configured > >> to output the bias voltage through any of the macros. > >> > > > > That's not entirely right. In our case here, the digital data from the > > DMIC goes directly to both the TX and VA macro. The power supply comes > > directly from the WCD983x codec. So the macro isn't involved in the bias > > voltage at all. Perhaps a picture will help: > > > > +------+ > > Data | | Power > > +--+ DMIC |<----------------+ > > | | | | > > | +------+ | > > +---------------------+---+ +------------------+------+ > > | SoC +----------+ | | | WCD983x MIC_BIAS1 | > > | | TX Macro |<--+ | | ^ | > > | +----------+ | | | +-----------+ | | > > | +----------+ | | | | Regulator +----X--+ | > > | | VA Macro |<--+ | | +-----------+ | | > > | +----------+ | | ^ VDD_PX | > > +-------------------------+ +-------+-----------------+ > > | ^ > > | | > > > > X inside the WCD983x is where we can make the choice, if we want to use > > the internal regulator or output VDD_PX on MIC_BIAS1 directly. > > > > We can also choose to consume the microphone data either via the TX > > macro or the VA macro. IIRC there is no mux for this, the data just ends > > up in both at the same time. > > > > Does that help explain it? > > I think that's a "sadly, yes" ;) > > Because that means we can switch the mics to e.g. the VA macro for > low power always-listening usecases at runtime (e.g. screen off), but we > may want to push it back to the RX macro for $reasons. And I'm assuming > there's probably $reasons2 to use the matching bias output from WCD.. > > Unless both $reasons are bogus, in which case we should probably stick > to keeping the bias and consuming macro paired to make the DT look sane I think both $reasons boil down to saving power. If you do always-listening use cases you likely care more about power than perfect quality or functionality. So you either pick - Quality + functionality => Internal MIC bias regulator + TX macro, or - Low-power => Pull-up MIC BIAS + VA macro _Maybe_ someone wants one of the other combinations, but I don't think those are useful enough to warrant refactoring of the driver and potentially breaking DTB compatibility. Thanks, Stephan