Hi, On Tue, May 23, 2023 at 2:39 PM Dmitry Torokhov <dmitry.torokhov@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Hi Doug, > > On Tue, May 23, 2023 at 12:27:54PM -0700, Douglas Anderson wrote: > > > > The big motivation for this patch series is mostly described in the patch > > ("drm/panel: Add a way for other devices to follow panel state"), but to > > quickly summarize here: for touchscreens that are connected to a panel we > > need the ability to power sequence the two device together. This is not a > > new need, but so far we've managed to get by through a combination of > > inefficiency, added costs, or perhaps just a little bit of brokenness. > > It's time to do better. This patch series allows us to do better. > > This seems to grow a new way of building relationship between panels and > associated devices. Can we make device_link_*() work for us? If you know of a way to make it work, that'd be great. ...but I don't _think_ it would be that easy. I haven't spent much time with the device_link APIs, though, so please correct me if I'm wrong. I guess my main issue with device_link would be that that ordering feels backward. Specifically, the device we're acting on (the one we're turning off and on) is the panel. We typically turn the panel off and on at times (during a modeset, when the lid is closed, or just if the system is idle). When this happens we'd like to remove power from both the panel and the touchscreen. Userspace is just not setup to power off touchscreens in tandem with the panel and sometimes (like in the case of a modeset) it might not even know it needs to. With device_link I believe that the "child" device is in charge of powering the parent. I think that would mean that to use device_link we'd need to make the panel be the child of the touchscreen. Then, I guess we'd tell the touchscreen not to power itself on if it had children and just wait for a child to power it on? It feels really awkward partly because the panel doesn't feel like it should be a child of the touchscreen and partially because it seems weird that the touchscreen would somehow need to know not to request power for itself when it has a child. ...if we're willing to accept the backwardness as described above and we can find a hack to keep the touchscreen from powering itself up, then I think things could be made to work OK-ish. I can try to investigate that route if it doesn't feel too ugly. ...oh, except for another problem. The initial power up of the i2c-hid device would also be a problem here. I guess with device_link we'd need to put all the power up work into "runtime resume". The problem is that upon initial power up we create "HID" sub-devices and (as far as I could tell) you can't do that during a runtime resume. :( We could put a special case to power the touchscreen up before the panel at probe time, but that could have other consequences? If we don't go with the backwardness then I think we're a bit stuck with some of the original problems. Specifically it means that unless userspace knows to turn off the touchscreen that the touchscreen would force the panel to never be power cycled. There's at least one panel (the one on sc7180-trogdor-homestar) where that's known to be a problem. It also means that we're back to drawing extra power if the touchscreen is left "on" but the panel power is turned off. Let me know if I'm misunderstanding. -Doug