Hi Eric, On Wednesday 07 Dec 2016 11:16:32 Eric Anholt wrote: > Maxime Ripard <maxime.ripard@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: > > [ Unknown signature status ] > > > > On Thu, Nov 24, 2016 at 07:22:31PM +0800, Chen-Yu Tsai wrote: > >> The panels shipped with Allwinner devices are very "generic", i.e. > >> they do not have model numbers or reliable sources of information > >> for the timings (that we know of) other than the fex files shipped > >> on them. The dot clock frequency provided in the fex files have all > >> been rounded to the nearest MHz, as that is the unit used in them. > >> > >> We were using the simple panel "urt,umsh-8596md-t" as a substitute > >> for the A13 Q8 tablets in the absence of a specific model for what > >> may be many different but otherwise timing compatible panels. This > >> was usable without any visual artifacts or side effects, until the > >> dot clock rate check was added in commit bb43d40d7c83 ("drm/sun4i: > >> rgb: Validate the clock rate"). > >> > >> The reason this check fails is because the dotclock frequency for > >> this model is 33.26 MHz, which is not achievable with our dot clock > >> hardware, and the rate returned by clk_round_rate deviates slightly, > >> causing the driver to reject the display mode. > >> > >> The LCD panels have some tolerance on the dot clock frequency, even > >> if it's not specified in their datasheets. > >> > >> This patch adds a 5% tolerence to the dot clock check. > > > > As we discussed already, I really believe this is just as arbitrary as > > the current behaviour. > > > > Some panels require an exact frequency, some have a minimal frequency > > but no maximum, some have a maximum frequency but no minimal, and I > > guess most of them deviates by how much exactly they can take (and > > possibly can take more easily a higher frequency, but are less > > tolerant if you take a frequency lower than the nominal. > > > > And we cannot remove that check entirely, since some bridges will > > report out of range frequencies for higher modes that we know we > > cannot reach. > > > > We could just try to see if the screen pixel clock frequency is out of > > the pixel clock range we can generate, but then we will loop back on > > how much out of range is it exactly, and is it within the screen > > tolerancy. > > > > We have an API to deal with the panel tolerancies in the DRM panel > > framework, we can (and should) use it. > > > > I'm not sure how others usually deal with this though. I think I > > remember Eric telling me that for the RPi they just adjusted the > > timings a bit, but they only really had a single panel to deal with. > > For RPi, you just adjust the pixel clock of the panel's mode to be > whatever the platform can support, and expand the blanking intervals to > get the refresh rate back to desired. This is nothing like what the > datasheet says, but it's not important what the datasheet says, it's > important what makes the product work. > > Our clock driver looks for the best matching clock that's not over the > target rate. This is somewhat unfortunate, as you end up slightly > inflating your requested clocks so that a possible clock lands under > that. I'd rather we chose the closest matching clock, but then people > get worried about what if selected clock rate is 1% higher than expected > (the answer is "nothing"). But if the closest match is 10% off and higher results could be different, in which case a lower match that is 11% off might be better. The hard part is to decide where to set the limit, and I'm afraid the answer is likely system- dependent. > I think this patch is a fine solution, and the alternative would be to > just drop the mode high/low check and say that if you're pairing a panel > with some display hardware, it's up to you to make sure that the panel's > mode actually scans out successfully. Then, since compatible strings > are cheap, you can use a new one if necessary to attach better modes to > the panel for a particular clock driver by adjusting your timings to get > closer to the refresh rates you want. Given that timings tolerance can be system-dependent and not only panel- dependent, it would make sense to specify them in DT (possibly an optional properties with reasonable default values computed by drivers). -- Regards, Laurent Pinchart _______________________________________________ dri-devel mailing list dri-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/dri-devel