On Tue, May 11, 2021 at 12:52 PM Rafael J. Wysocki <rafael@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Mon, May 10, 2021 at 9:08 PM Stephen Boyd <swboyd@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > [cut] > > > > > > > > > > I will try it, but then I wonder about things like system wide > > > > suspend/resume too. The drm encoder chain would need to reimplement the > > > > logic for system wide suspend/resume so that any PM ops attached to the > > > > msm device run in the correct order. Right now the bridge PM ops will > > > > run, the i2c bus PM ops will run, and then the msm PM ops will run. > > > > After this change, the msm PM ops will run, the bridge PM ops will run, > > > > and then the i2c bus PM ops will run. It feels like that could be a > > > > problem if we're suspending the DSI encoder while the bridge is still > > > > active. > > > > > > Yup suspend/resume has the exact same problem as shutdown. > > > > I think suspend/resume has the exact opposite problem. At least I think > > the correct order is to suspend the bridge, then the encoder, i.e. DSI, > > like is happening today. It looks like drm_atomic_helper_shutdown() > > operates from the top down when we want bottom up? I admit I have no > > idea what is supposed to happen here. > > Why would the system-wide suspend ordering be different from the > shutdown ordering? At least my point was that both shutdown and suspend/resume have the same problem, and the righ fix is (I think at least) to add these hooks to the component.c aggregate ops structure. Hence just adding new callbacks for shutdown will be an incomplete solution. I don't feel like changing the global device order is the right approach, since essentially that's what component was meant to fix. Except it's incomplete since it only provides a solution for bind/unbind and not for shutdown or suspend/resume as other global state changes. I think some drivers "fixed" this by putting stuff like drm_atomic_helper_shutdown/suspend/resume into early/late hooks, to make sure that everything is ready with that trick. But that doesn't compose very well :-/ -Daniel -- Daniel Vetter Software Engineer, Intel Corporation http://blog.ffwll.ch