Hi Daniel, On 30-05-2016 10:36, Daniel Vetter wrote: > On Mon, May 30, 2016 at 10:00:56AM +0100, Jose Abreu wrote: >> ++ Daniel >> >> >> On 30-05-2016 09:44, Jose Abreu wrote: >>> Hi Daniel, >>> >>> Thanks for your answer. >>> >>> On 26-05-2016 09:06, Daniel Vetter wrote: >>>> On Wed, May 25, 2016 at 04:46:15PM +0100, Jose Abreu wrote: >>>>> Hi all, >>>>> >>>>> Currently I am trying to develop a DRM driver that will use >>>>> Xilinx VDMA to transfer video data to a HDMI TX Phy and I am >>>>> facing a difficulty regarding the understanding of the DRM DMA >>>>> Engine. I looked at several sources and at the DRM core source >>>>> but the flow of creating and interfacing with the DMA controller >>>>> is still not clear to me. >>>>> >>>>> At DRI web page the X server is mentioned. Does it mean that the >>>>> channel creation and handling is done by the X server? If so, >>>>> what is the DRM driver responsible to do then and what exactly >>>>> does the DRM core do? As I am using Xilinx VDMA do you foresee >>>>> any special implementation details? >>>>> >>>>> Just for reference here is the description of the Xilinx VDMA: >>>>> "The Advanced eXtensible Interface Video Direct Memory Access >>>>> (AXI VDMA) core is a soft Xilinx Intellectual Property (IP) core >>>>> providing high-bandwidth direct memory access between memory and >>>>> AXI4-Stream video type target peripherals including peripherals >>>>> which support AXI4-Stream Video Protocol." The driver is >>>>> available at "drivers/dma/xilinx/xilinx_vdma.c". >>>>> >>>>> Another important point: I am using PCI Express connected to a >>>>> FPGA which has all the necessary components (Xilinx VDMA, I2S, >>>>> ...) and the HDMI TX Phy. >>>>> >>>>> Looking forward to you help. >>>> If your dma engine is just for HDMI display, forget all the stuff you find >>>> about DRI and X server on the various wikis. That's for opengl rendering. >>>> >>>> The only thing you need is a kernel-modesetting driver, and nowadays those >>>> are written using the atomic modeset framework. There's plenty of >>>> introductory talks and stuff all over the web (I suggest the latest >>>> version of Laurent Pinchart's talk as a good starting point). >>>> -Daniel >>> I watched the talk of Laurent and I already have a simple KMS >>> driver with an encoder (which is bridge dw-hdmi), a connector and >>> a crtc. My doubt now is how do I setup the video path so that >>> video samples are sent using the Xilinx VDMA to our hdmi phy. >>> >>> Sorry if I am making some mistake (I am quite new to DRM and DMA) >>> but here is my thoughts: >>> - A DMA channel or some kind of mapping must be done so that >>> the DRM driver knows where to send samples; >>> - The Xilinx VDMA driver must be instantiated (which I am >>> already doing); >>> - Some kind of association between the DRM DMA engine and >>> Xilinx VDMA must be done; >>> - A callback should exist that is called on each frame and >>> updates the data that is sent to Xilinx VDMA. >>> >>> Does this looks okay to you or am I missing something? I still >>> haven't figured out how should I associate the VDMA to the DRM >>> DMA engine and how should I map the DMA to the DRM driver. >>> >>> Can you give me some help or refer me to someone who can? Also, >>> is there a DRM driver that uses a similar architecture? > I assume that xilinx VDMA is the only way to feed pixel data into your > display pipeline. Under that assumption: > > drm_plane should map to Xilinx VDMA, and the drm_plane->drm_crtc link > would represent the dma channel. With atomic you can subclass > drm_plane/crtc_state structures to store all the runtime configuration in > there. > > The actual buffer itsel would be represented by a drm_framebuffer, which > either wraps a shmem gem or a cma gem object. > > If you want to know about the callbacks used by the atomic helpers to push > out plane updates, look at the hooks drm_atomic_helper_commit_planes() > (and the related functions, see kerneldoc) calls. > > I hope this helps a bit more. > -Daniel Thanks a lot! With your help I was able to implement all the needed logic. Sorry to bother you but I have one more question. Right now I can initialize and configure the vdma correctly but I can only send one frame. I guess when the dma completes transmission I need to ask drm for a new frame, right? Because the commit function starts the vdma correctly but then the dma halts waiting for a new descriptor. Best regards, Jose Miguel Abreu _______________________________________________ dri-devel mailing list dri-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/dri-devel