On Wednesday 30 October 2013 11:32:24 Sean Paul wrote: > On Tue, Oct 29, 2013 at 4:50 PM, Tomasz Figa wrote: > > On Tuesday 29 of October 2013 16:36:47 Sean Paul wrote: [snip] > >> An example: exynos_drm_drv would be a platform_driver which implements > >> drm_driver. On drm_load, it would enumerate the various dt nodes for > >> its IP blocks and initialize them with direct calls (like > >> exynos_drm_fimd_initialize). If the board uses a bridge (say for > >> eDP->LVDS), that bridge driver would be a real driver with its own > >> probe. > >> > >> I think the ideal situation would be for the drm layer to manage the > >> standalone drivers in a way that is transparent to the main driver, > >> such that it doesn't need to know which type of hardware can hang off > >> it. It will need to know if one exists since it might need to forego > >> creating a connector, but it need not know anything else about it. > >> > >> To accomplish this, I think we need: > >> (1) Some way for drm to enumerate the standalone drivers, so it can > >> know when all of them have been probed > >> > >> (2) A drm registration function that's called by the standalone > >> drivers once they're probed, and a hook with drm_device pointer called > >> during drm_load for them to register their drm_* implementations > >> > >> (3) Something that will allow for deferred probe if the main driver > >> kicks off before the standalones are in, it would need to be called > >> before drm_platform/pci_init > >> > >> I think we'll need to expand on the media bindings to achieve (1). > > > > Could you elaborate on why you think so? > > > > I believe the video interface bindings contain everything needed for this > > case, except, of course, some device/bus specific parts, but those are to > > be defined by separate device/bus specific bindings. > > AFAICT, there is no way for drm to enumerate all of the pieces that > need probing before it loads (ie: how do you enumerate all device > nodes with pipe {} subnode[s]). I've given this more thought, and I > think the following could work without forcing unified/split drivers > (ie: it can be left to the driver author to choose). > > If there was some way for drm to know all of the pieces that need to > be probed/initialized before calling drm_load, it could provide an API > for various drivers to "claim" nodes. This API would accept the > device_node being claimed as well as an initialize hook that will be > called back to give the standalone driver a pointer to the drm_device. > > The main drm driver, which is responsible for calling > drm_platform/pci_init, would claim the nodes it plans on implementing > in the probe. It would then check drm to see if all requred nodes had > been claimed. If they have not been claimed, that probe would defer > and try again later. > > Once all required nodes have been "claimed", the main driver's probe > would call drm_platform/pci_init to kick off load(). After load() has > finished, the drm layer would then call the various standalone driver > hooks that were previously registered when it claimed its node. These > hooks would allow the driver to register its > crtc/encoder/bridge/connector. > > Multi-driver solutions could work within this framework, as could > integrated ones. This would also allow things like bridge drivers to > be completely transparent. Have you all configured your spam filters to reject anything that is or has been related to CDF ? Split in two patches, the first one adding the infrastructure, the second one adding OF support. http://git.linuxtv.org/pinchartl/fbdev.git/commitdiff/2d19e74ab8d86aaf5d54c34c6bc940508f793512 http://git.linuxtv.org/pinchartl/fbdev.git/commitdiff/e8c4380ca4a6a62fa9d8bc340a6dcbd123b4f674 The code can be extracted as a stand-alone solution, either specific to DRM, or at the struct device level. As the problem is not DRM-specific, the later would probably make more sense (if I'm not mistaken Grant Likely - CCed- mentioned during the kernel summit was in favor of adding the code in the device core). We've solved the exact same problem in V4L, do we *really* need to adopt the NIH approach and reinvent the wheel ? > I hope that made sense ;) -- Regards, Laurent Pinchart _______________________________________________ dri-devel mailing list dri-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/dri-devel