Le 29/07/2024 à 15:28, Yanjun Yang a écrit :
On Fri, Jul 26, 2024 at 09:55:35AM +0200, Philippe CORNU wrote:
On 7/22/24 10:38, Yanjun Yang wrote:
This patch (commit id:185f99b614427360) seems to break the dsi of
stm32f469 chip.
I'm not familiar with the drm and the clock framework, maybe it's
because there is no
"ck_dsi_phy" defined for stm32f469.
PS: Sorry for receiving multiple copies of this email, I forgot to
use plain text mode last time.
Hi,
Thank you for letting us know that there was this error. We should have
detected this before merging, really sorry for the problems caused by this
patch. We will investigate the issue and get back to you as soon as
possible. In the meantime, I think you can revert this patch in your git
tree.
Philippe :-)
Hi,
Hi,
FYI
DSI clock tree for stm32f469 can be found here:
https://www.st.com/resource/en/reference_manual/rm0386-stm32f469xx-and-stm32f479xx-advanced-armbased-32bit-mcus-stmicroelectronics.pdf
Refer to Figure 17: DSI clock tree.
After some research I think "ck_dsi_phy" was introduced in stm32h7
platforms. There is a mux which interfaces between various clocks (among
ck_hse) and the byte lane clock. stm32f469 has a much simpler clock tree
in which we did not bother to implement this "go-between" clock, even
though they is an equivalent of the mux.
After some testing, the reason behind my problem is the parent's name of
'clk_dsi_phy' for stm32f4 is 'clk-hse' other than 'ck_hse'. I don't
know which is the better why to fix it:
1. Change "ck_hse" to "clk-hse" in where "clk_dsi_phy" is defined.
Doing so will definitely break other platforms.
2. Use "pll_in_khz = clk_get_rate(dsi->pllref_clk) / 1000" instead of
"pll_in_khz = (unsigned int)(parent_rate / 1000)" when get the clock
rate.
dsi->pllref_clk refers to the HSE clock if you take a look in the
device-tree. This is the reason why this work on your setup. I doubt
nevertheless that it wouldn't work on other platforms. But this would be
a semantic nonsense, since the DSI byte lane clock is not always derived
from HSE clock on other platforms.
Looking again at the clk-stm32f4 driver and the DSI clock tree linked,
we can maybe implement the desired clock even if it is not represented
on the diagram.
Eventually if this solution does not work we will go to the second
solution you suggested and we will test it on all platforms.
@Philippe, @Yannick
Do you agree with this workflow ?
Regards,
Raphaël
Both method can fix my problem. The first one might break other
platforms. Maybe I should change the clock name of 'clk-hse'. However,
I can't find the defination of this clock name for stm32f4.