Brian Norris <briannorris@xxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: Hello Brian, > Hi Javier, > > On Thu, Sep 12, 2024 at 06:33:58PM +0200, Javier Martinez Canillas wrote: >> That's a very good point. I'm actually not familiar with Coreboot and I >> used an educated guess (in the case of DT for example, that's the main >> source of truth and I didn't know if a Core table was in a similar vein). >> >> Maybe something like the following (untested) patch then? > > Julius is more familiar with the Coreboot + payload ecosystem than me, > but his explanations make sense to me, as does this patch. > >> From de1c32017006f4671d91b695f4d6b4e99c073ab2 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 >> From: Javier Martinez Canillas <javierm@xxxxxxxxxx> >> Date: Thu, 12 Sep 2024 18:31:55 +0200 >> Subject: [PATCH] firmware: coreboot: Don't register a pdev if screen_info data >> is available >> >> On Coreboot platforms, a system framebuffer may be provided to the Linux >> kernel by filling a LB_TAG_FRAMEBUFFER entry in the Coreboot table. But >> a Coreboot payload (e.g: SeaBIOS) could also provide this information to >> the Linux kernel. >> >> If that the case, early arch x86 boot code will fill the global struct >> screen_info data and that data used by the Generic System Framebuffers >> (sysfb) framework to add a platform device with platform data about the >> system framebuffer. > > Normally, these sorts of "early" and "later" ordering descriptions would > set alarm bells when talking about independent drivers. But I suppose > the "early arch" code has better ordering guaranteeds than drivers, so > this should be fine. > Yes, I didn't want to imply ordering here but just mentioning what code was registering a "simple-framebuffer" platform_device, that conflicted with this driver. >> But later then the framebuffer_coreboot driver will try to do the same >> framebuffer (using the information from the Coreboot table), which will >> lead to an error due a simple-framebuffer.0 device already registered: >> [...] >> >> + /* >> + * If the global screen_info data has been filled, the Generic >> + * System Framebuffers (sysfb) will already register a platform > > Did you mean 'platform_device'? > Ups, yeah I forgot to write device there. >> + * and pass the screen_info as platform_data to a driver that >> + * could scan-out using the system provided framebuffer. >> + * >> + * On Coreboot systems, the advertise LB_TAG_FRAMEBUFFER entry > > s/advertise/advertised/ ? > Ok. >> + * in the Coreboot table should only be used if the payload did >> + * not set video mode info and passed it to the Linux kernel. > > s/passed/pass/ > Ok. >> + */ >> + if (si->orig_video_isVGA == VIDEO_TYPE_VLFB || >> + si->orig_video_isVGA == VIDEO_TYPE_EFI) > > This line is using spaces for indentation. It should use a tab, and then > spaces for alignment. But presumably this will change based on Thomas's > suggestions anyway. > Yes, I usually run checkpatch --strict before posting but didn't in this case because just shared the patch as a response. >> + return -EINVAL; > > Is EINVAL right? IIUC, that will print a noisier error to the logs. I > believe the "expected" sorts of return codes are ENODEV or ENXIO. (See > call_driver_probe().) ENODEV seems like a fine choice, similar to > several of the other return codes already used here. > You are right, -ENODEV is indeed a more suitable error code for this. > Anyway, this seems along the right track. Thanks for tackling, and feel > free to carry a: > > Reviewed-by: Brian Norris <briannorris@xxxxxxxxxxxx> > Thanks and for your comments. -- Best regards, Javier Martinez Canillas Core Platforms Red Hat