Thanks Jani so much for the detailed explanation. I was able to write the code for this, but I am facing one problem, see below. On Fri, Mar 6, 2020 at 2:15 AM Jani Nikula <jani.nikula@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Thu, 05 Mar 2020, Rajat Jain <rajatja@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > OK, will do. In order to do that I may need to introduce driver level > > hooks that i915 driver can populate and drm core can call (or may be > > some functions to add privacy screen property that drm core exports > > and i915 driver will call). > > The latter. Look at drm_connector_attach_*() functions in > drm_connector.c. i915 (or any other driver) can create and attach the > property as needed. drm_atomic_connector_{get,set}_property in > drm_atomic_uapi.c need to handle the properties, but *only* to get/set > the value in drm_connector_state, nothing more. How that value is > actually used is up to the drivers, but the userspace interface will be > the same instead of being driver specific. Understood, done. > > >> > @@ -93,15 +97,18 @@ int intel_digital_connector_atomic_set_property(struct drm_connector *connector, > >> > struct drm_i915_private *dev_priv = to_i915(dev); > >> > struct intel_digital_connector_state *intel_conn_state = > >> > to_intel_digital_connector_state(state); > >> > + struct intel_connector *intel_connector = to_intel_connector(connector); > >> > > >> > if (property == dev_priv->force_audio_property) { > >> > intel_conn_state->force_audio = val; > >> > return 0; > >> > - } > >> > - > >> > - if (property == dev_priv->broadcast_rgb_property) { > >> > + } else if (property == dev_priv->broadcast_rgb_property) { > >> > intel_conn_state->broadcast_rgb = val; > >> > return 0; > >> > + } else if (property == intel_connector->privacy_screen_property) { > >> > + intel_privacy_screen_set_val(intel_connector, val); > >> > >> I think this part should only change the connector state. The driver > >> would then do the magic at commit stage according to the property value. > > Also, this would be the part that's done in drm core level. > Yup. > > Can you please point me to some code reference as to where in code > > does the "commit stage" apply the changes? > > Look at, say, drm_connector_attach_scaling_mode_property(). In the > getter/setter code it'll just read/change state->scaling_mode. You can > use the value in encoder ->enable, ->disable, and ->update_pipe > hooks. Enable should enable the privacy screen if desired, disable > should probably unconditionally disable the privacy screen while > disabling the display, and update should just change the state according > to the value. Update is called if there isn't a full modeset. (Scaling > mode is a bit more indirect than that, affecting other things in the > encoder ->compute_config hook, leading to similar effects.) For my testing purposes, I'm testing this using the proptest utility in our distribution (I think from https://github.com/CPFL/drm/blob/master/tests/proptest/proptest.c). I notice that when I change the value of the property from userspace, even though the drm_connector_state->privacy_screen_status gets updated and reflects the change, the encoder->update_pipe() is not getting called. Just wanted to ask if this is expected since you seem to imply this update_pipe() might *not* get called if there *is* a full modeset? (What is the hook that gets called for a full modeset where i915 driver should commit this property change to the hardware?) Thanks & Best Regards, Rajat > > Ville, anything I missed? > > BR, > Jani. > > > -- > Jani Nikula, Intel Open Source Graphics Center _______________________________________________ Intel-gfx mailing list Intel-gfx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/intel-gfx