Re: Switchable graphics and radeon PX runtime

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At Fri, 14 Nov 2014 10:40:08 -0500,
Alex Deucher wrote:
> 
> On Fri, Nov 14, 2014 at 5:09 AM, Takashi Iwai <tiwai@xxxxxxx> wrote:
> > At Fri, 14 Nov 2014 19:33:00 +1000,
> > Dave Airlie wrote:
> >>
> >> On 14 November 2014 18:12, Takashi Iwai <tiwai@xxxxxxx> wrote:
> >> > Hi Alex,
> >> >
> >> > we've got a few bug reports about the behavior of radeon driver on
> >> > machines with Intel+AMD "switchable graphics" (no Muxless).  So far,
> >> > it seems that the sane only way to make the machine working is to get
> >> > back to the old vgaswitcheroo behavior via radeon.runpm=0.  Without
> >> > it, radeon GPU gives a spurious output as connected, eventually
> >> > crashes GNOME.  (Also, from the nature of the switchable graphics,
> >> > vgaswitcheroo looks more intuitive to me.)
> >>
> >> vgaswitcheroo only matters if there is a MUX, the point of it is to drive
> >> the MUX.
> >>
> >> dynamic poweroff makes more sense, switcheroo on/off switch was
> >> just a hack.
> >
> > Well, I find the current form fairly unintuitive, at least, for the
> > switchable (not optimus) graphics.
> > With dynamic PM, the card is activated on demand.  So you may enable
> > outputs of both cards at any time, right?
> >
> > Currently, all outputs from both cards are exposed in Xrandr,
> > e.g. LVDS1 DP1, HDMI1, VGA1, LVDS-1-1, HDMI-1-2, DisplayPort-1-2, and
> > VGA-1-1.  How can user-space know which one should be activated and
> > which not, when you can use effectively only a single card?
> >
> >> > How are such machines supposed to work with the recent system?  Is PX
> >> > wrongly detected on them, or something else missing?
> >>
> >> It sounds like the connector is wrongly detected and that should be what
> >> is fixed.
> >
> > Yeah, that's a problem indeed.  In the bug report, both LVDS1 and
> > LVDS-1-1 are reported to be connected at the same time while the
> > latter doesn't get any real size and position.  We didn't trace
> > whether this is the culprit of crash of GNOME, but at least, it looks
> > fairly weird.
> >
> > I forgot to give the original bug report:
> >   http://bugzilla.opensuse.org/show_bug.cgi?id=904417
> >
> > and the xrandr output is found at
> >   http://bugzilla.opensuse.org/show_bug.cgi?id=904417#c18
> 
> It's not clear to me from the bug report what that problem is.  What
> exactly is gnome complaining about?

It simply crashes by some reason, showing a sad face and complaining
something is wrong.  (And it's GNOME, not easy to get a proper log
like kernel :)
Some users complained about blank output, but I'm not sure whether
this is the same cause.

> The X logs look fine.

I couldn't see any errors there, too.  So it's just a wild guess, so
far...

> From the
> xrandr output, LVDS1 (connected to the intel) is connected and active.
> LVDS-1-1 (connected to the radeon) is connected but not active.  That
> should be a perfectly reasonable configuration.  If LVDS-1-1 is not
> active, the radeon kernel driver will power down the GPU until the
> user either activates the panel or uses the dGPU as an offscreen
> renderer.

Note that the xrandr output was taken on icewm or else.  So, right,
this might be non-issue.  But, I guess now that the issue will happen
when LVDS-1-1 is activated at the same time with LVDS.  GNOME tries to
activate all connected outputs at the same time as default.

> There are plenty of cases when you may have a secondary GPU with
> attached displays that are not active. If gnome barfs on this it
> should be fixed in gnome.
 
Yeah, GNOME has definitely a problem about it.  At least, it shouldn't
crash badly.

But, it's still not clear to me how the activation of the radeon GPU
is supposed to work in switchable graphics case.  For PX or Otpimus,
it's clear.  But for switchable case, there is no offload rendering.
If you enable the output on radeon GPU while Intel output is being
used, what's going on?  Shouldn't they be handled exclusively, as user
expected?

> Setting radeon.runpm=0 does not disable PX, it just stops the kernel
> driver from dynamically turning the dGPU on and off on demand.

Yes.  The user seem more happy with explicit power control.  At least,
better than this kind of surprises...


thanks,

Takashi
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