On Mon, Feb 28, 2022 at 10:12:34PM +0200, Imre Deak wrote: > At least some DELL monitors (P2715Q) with DPCD_REV 1.2 return corrupted > DPCD register values when reading from the 0xF0000- LTTPR range with an > AUX transaction block size bigger than 1. The DP standard requires 0 to > be returned - as for any other reserved/invalid addresses - but these > monitors return the DPCD_REV register value repeated in each byte of the > read buffer. This will in turn corrupt the values returned by the LTTPRs > between the source and the monitor: LTTPRs must adjust the values they > read from the downstream DPRX, for instance left-shift/init the > downstream DP_PHY_REPEATER_CNT value. Since the value returned by the > monitor's DPRX is non-zero the adjusted values will be corrupt. > > Reading the LTTPR registers one-by-one instead of reading all of them > with a single AUX transfer works around the issue. > > According to the DP standard's 0xF0000 register description: > "LTTPR-related registers at DPCD Addresses F0000h through F02FFh are > valid only for DPCD r1.4 (or higher)." While it's unclear if DPCD r1.4 > refers to the DPCD_REV or to the > LT_TUNABLE_PHY_REPEATER_FIELD_DATA_STRUCTURE_REV register (tickets filed > at the VESA site to clarify this haven't been addressed), one > possibility is that it's a restriction due to non-compliant monitors > described above. Disabling the non-transparent LTTPR mode for all such > monitors is not a viable solution: the transparent LTTPR mode has its > own issue causing link training failures and this would affect a lot of > monitors in use with DPCD_REV < 1.4. Instead this patch works around > the problem by reading the LTTPR common and PHY cap registers one-by-one > for any monitor with a DPCD_REV < 1.4. > > The standard requires the DPCD capabilites to be read after the LTTPR > common capabilities are read, so re-read the DPCD capabilities after > the LTTPR common and PHY caps were read out. > > Closes: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/drm/intel/-/issues/4531 > Signed-off-by: Imre Deak <imre.deak@xxxxxxxxx> > --- > drivers/gpu/drm/dp/drm_dp.c | 58 ++++++++++++------- > .../drm/i915/display/intel_dp_link_training.c | 30 +++++++--- > include/drm/dp/drm_dp_helper.h | 2 + > 3 files changed, 59 insertions(+), 31 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/drivers/gpu/drm/dp/drm_dp.c b/drivers/gpu/drm/dp/drm_dp.c > index 703972ae14c64..f3950d42980f9 100644 > --- a/drivers/gpu/drm/dp/drm_dp.c > +++ b/drivers/gpu/drm/dp/drm_dp.c > @@ -2390,9 +2390,36 @@ int drm_dp_dsc_sink_supported_input_bpcs(const u8 dsc_dpcd[DP_DSC_RECEIVER_CAP_S > } > EXPORT_SYMBOL(drm_dp_dsc_sink_supported_input_bpcs); > > +static int drm_dp_read_lttpr_regs(struct drm_dp_aux *aux, const u8 dpcd[DP_RECEIVER_CAP_SIZE], int address, > + u8 *buf, int buf_size) > +{ > + /* > + * Some monitors with a DPCD_REV < 0x14 return corrupted values when > + * reading from the 0xF0000- range with a block size bigger than 1. > + */ This sounds really scary. Have we checked what other registers might end up corrupted? Eg. couple of rounds of comparing full dd bs=1 vs. dd bs=16. > + int block_size = dpcd[DP_DPCD_REV] < 0x14 ? 1 : buf_size; > + int offset = 0; > + int ret; > + > + while (offset < buf_size) { Can we use a for loop? > + ret = drm_dp_dpcd_read(aux, > + address + offset, > + &buf[offset], block_size); > + if (ret < 0) > + return ret; > + > + WARN_ON(ret != block_size); > + > + offset += block_size; > + } > + > + return 0; > +} > + -- Ville Syrjälä Intel