Re: [PATCH 1/2] drm/rockchip: dw_hdmi: relax mode_valid hook

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On 25/08/2022 12:40 pm, Sascha Hauer wrote:
On Wed, Aug 24, 2022 at 05:07:50PM +0100, Robin Murphy wrote:
On 2022-08-22 16:20, Sascha Hauer wrote:
The driver checks if the pixel clock of the given mode matches an entry
in the mpll config table. The frequencies in the mpll table are meant as
a frequency range up to which the entry works, not as a frequency that
must match the pixel clock. Return MODE_OK when the pixelclock is
smaller than one of the mpll frequencies to allow for more display
resolutions.

Has the issue been fixed that this table is also used to validate modes on
RK3328, which doesn't even *have* the Synopsys phy? Last time I looked, that
tended to lead to complete display breakage when the proper phy driver later
decides it doesn't like a pixel clock that mode_valid already said was OK.

The more general concern is that these known-good clock rates are good, but
others may not be even when nominally supported, which I suspect is the
dirty secret of why it was implemented this way to begin with. I would
really really love this patch so my RK3399 board can drive my 1920x1200
monitor at native resolution, but on the other hand my RK3288 box generates
such a crap 154MHz clock for that mode that - unless that's been improved in
the meantime too - patch #2 might be almost be considered a regression if it
means such a setup would start defaulting to an unusably glitchy display
instead of falling back to 1920x1080 which does at least work perfectly
(even if the slightly squished aspect ratio is ugly).

I could limit the change to rk3568 only. Would that be an option?
Not sure if I should rk3399 as well then as this would work, at least in
your setup.

I think for now it might be enough to force an exact match if hdmi->plat_data.phy_force_vendor is set, with a big fat comment that it's to preserve the previous behaviour until vendor phy support can be sorted out properly. Beyond that, given that RK3288 and RK3399 do nominally support 4K as well, I don't think we actually have to leave them out, I just wanted to flag up that untested non-standard clock rates are a known source of potential issues once we open the door to them.

Cheers,
Robin.



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