The kernel side is responsible for the acknowledgement of the test requests and setup of the required parameters. It also handles the necessary AUX transactions for reading the EDID and DPCD as well as writing response codes or checksums as necessary. Performing these operations in userspace would add unnecessary delays and complicate the interface more than necessary. The userspace application then handles the large motions - frame buffer management, mode sets and link configuration. The following is an overview of the basic event handling for compliance testing inside the kernel: - The test device signals the DUT with an HPD pulse. This can be a short or long pulse, depending on circumstances. - The interrupt generated by the HPD pulse invokes the test handler, which reads the test device DPCD to determine what actions are necessary. - Once the test handler determines which test has been requested, it invokes the kernel-side handler function and then signals the userspace app. If no userspace app has been registered, the signal is ignored. - Test responses and status is written out / reported as necessary and normal operation is resumed. The userspace support application and additional documentation will be posted to the list for review soon. _______________________________________________ Intel-gfx mailing list Intel-gfx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/intel-gfx