Hi Doug, On Thu, Jun 08, 2023 at 07:38:58AM -0700, Doug Anderson wrote: > On Thu, Jun 8, 2023 at 12:17 AM Maxime Ripard <mripard@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > Hi Douglas, > > > > On Wed, Jun 07, 2023 at 02:49:22PM -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. > > > > > > Assuming that people think this patch series looks OK, we'll have to > > > figure out the right way to land it. The panel patches and i2c-hid > > > patches will go through very different trees and so either we'll need > > > an Ack from one side or the other or someone to create a tag for the > > > other tree to pull in. This will _probably_ require the true drm-misc > > > maintainers to get involved, not a lowly committer. ;-) > > > > > > Version 2 of this patch series doesn't change too much. At a high level: > > > * I added all the forgotten "static" to functions. > > > * I've hopefully made the bindings better. > > > * I've integrated into fw_devlink. > > > * I cleaned up a few descriptions / comments. > > > > > > This still needs someone to say that the idea looks OK or to suggest > > > an alternative that solves the problems. ;-) > > > > Thanks for working on this. > > > > I haven't seen in any of your commit messages how the panels were > > actually "packaged" together? > > > > Do a panel model typically come together with the i2c-hid support, or is > > it added at manufacture time? > > > > If it's the latter, it's indeed a fairly loose connection and we need > > your work. > > > > If it's the former though and we don't expect a given panel reference to > > always (or never) come with a touchscreen attached, > > Thanks for your reply. Let me see what I can do to bring clarity. > > In at least some of the cases, I believe that the panel and the > touchscreen _are_ logically distinct components, even if they've been > glued together at some stage in manufacturing. Even on one of the > "poster child" boards that I talk about in patch #3, the early > versions of "homestar", I believe this to be the case. However, even > if the panel and touchscreen are separate components then they still > could be connected to the main board in a way that they share power > and/or reset signals. In my experience, in every case where they do > the EEs expect that the panel is power sequenced first and then the > touchscreen is power sequenced second. The EEs look at the power > sequencing requirements of the panel and touchscreen, see that there > is a valid power sequence protocol where they can share rails, and > design the board that way. Even if the touchscreen and panel are > logically separate, the moment the board designers hook them up to the > same power rails and/or reset signals they become tied. This is well > supported by my patch series. > > The case that really motivated my patch series, though, is the case > that Cong Yang recently has been working on. I think most of the > discussion is in his original patch series [1]. Cong Yang's patch > series is largely focused on supporting the "ILI9882T" chip and some > panels that it's used with. I found a datasheet for that, and the > title from the first page is illustrative: "In-cell IC Integrates TFT > LCD Driver and Capacitive Touch Controller into a Two Chip Cascade". > This is an integrated solution that's designed to handle both the LCD > and the touchscreen. > > [1] https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20230519032316.3464732-1-yangcong5@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx/ Ok, I think we're on the same page at the hardware level then :) > > I guess we can have > > something much simpler with a bunch of helpers that would register a > > i2c-hid device and would be called by the panel driver itself. > > > > And then, since everything is self-contained managing the power state > > becomes easier as well. > > Can you give me more details about how you think this would work? > > When you say that the panel would register an i2c-hid device itself, > do you mean that we'd do something like give a phandle to the i2c bus > to the panel and then the panel would manually instantiate the i2c-hid > device on it? ...and I guess it would need to be a "subclass" of > i2c-hid that knew about the connection to the panel code? This > subclass and the panel code would communicate with each other about > power sequencing needs through some private API (like MFD devices > usually do?). Assuming I'm understanding correctly, I think that could > work. I guess what I had in mind is to do something similar to what we're doing with hdmi-codec already for example. We have several logical components already, in separate drivers, that still need some cooperation. If the panel and touchscreen are on the same i2c bus, I think we could even just get a reference to the panel i2c adapter, get a reference, and pass that to i2c-hid (with a nice layer of helpers). What I'm trying to say is: could we just make it work by passing a bunch of platform_data, 2-3 callbacks and a device registration from the panel driver directly? > Is it cleaner than my current approach, though? "cleaner" is subjective, really, but it's a more "mainstream" approach that one can follow more easily through function calls. > I guess, alternatively, we could put the "panel" directly under the > i2c bus in this case. That would probably work for Cong Yang's current > needs, but we'd end up in trouble if we ever had a similar situation > with an eDP panel since eDP panels need to be under the DP-AUX bus. I don't know DP-AUX very well, what is the issue that you're mentioning? > I guess overall, though, while I think this approach could solve Cong > Yang's needs, I still feel like it's worth solving the case where > board designers have made panel and touchscreens "coupled" by having > them rely on the same power rails and/or reset signals. Sure, I definitely want that too :) Maxime
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