On Mon, Sep 28, 2015 at 04:48:32PM +0000, R, Durgadoss wrote: > Hi Daniel, > > >-----Original Message----- > >From: Daniel Vetter [mailto:daniel.vetter@xxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Daniel Vetter > >Sent: Monday, September 28, 2015 1:50 PM > >To: R, Durgadoss > >Cc: Daniel Vetter; Jani Nikula; intel-gfx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > >Subject: Re: [RFC DP-typeC 0/2] Support USB typeC based DP on BXT > > > >On Fri, Sep 25, 2015 at 12:22:42PM +0000, R, Durgadoss wrote: > >> Hi Daniel, > >> > >> Thanks for having a look at it.. > >> > >> >-----Original Message----- > >> >From: Daniel Vetter [mailto:daniel.vetter@xxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Daniel Vetter > >> >Sent: Wednesday, September 23, 2015 3:14 PM > >> >To: R, Durgadoss > >> >Cc: Jani Nikula; intel-gfx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > >> >Subject: Re: [RFC DP-typeC 0/2] Support USB typeC based DP on BXT > >> > > >> >On Wed, Sep 16, 2015 at 10:57:45AM +0000, R, Durgadoss wrote: > >> >> Hi Jani, > >> >> > >> >> >-----Original Message----- > >> >> >From: Jani Nikula [mailto:jani.nikula@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] > >> >> >Sent: Wednesday, September 16, 2015 3:18 PM > >> >> >To: R, Durgadoss; intel-gfx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > >> >> >Cc: R, Durgadoss > >> >> >Subject: Re: [RFC DP-typeC 0/2] Support USB typeC based DP on BXT > >> >> > > >> >> >On Tue, 15 Sep 2015, Durgadoss R <durgadoss.r@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> >> >> This is an RFC series to start the review/discussion on approach > >> >> >> to support USB type C based DP panel. > >> >> >> > >> >> >> To support USB type C alternate DP mode, the display driver needs to > >> >> >> know the number of lanes required by the DP panel as well as number > >> >> >> of lanes that can be supported by the type-C cable. Sometimes, the > >> >> >> type-C cable may limit the bandwidth even if Panel can support > >> >> >> more lanes. > >> >> >> > >> >> >> The goal is to find out the number of lanes which can be supported > >> >> >> using a particular cable so that we can cap 'max_available_lanes' > >> >> >> to that number during modeset. > >> >> >> > >> >> >> These two patches are based on 4.2-rc2 and tested only on > >> >> >> a BXT A1 platform for now. > >> >> >> > >> >> >> Brief summary of the approach taken: > >> >> >> ----------------------------------- > >> >> >> 1.As soon as DP-hotplug is detected, driver starts link training > >> >> >> with highest number of lanes/bandwidth possible. If it fails, > >> >> >> driver retries link training with lane/2 for same bandwidth. > >> >> >> We continue this procedure until we find a working configuration > >> >> >> of lane/bandwidth values. This 'number of lanes' is then > >> >> >> set as the 'max_available_lanes', so that the following > >> >> >> intel_dp_compute_config() during modeset picks it up as > >> >> >> max_lane_count (instead of 4 always, from DPCD). > >> >> > > >> >> >Would all of this work automatically if our link training sequence > >> >> >followed the DP spec to the letter wrt degrading the link on failures? > >> >> > >> >> That is one part of it. > >> >> > >> >> Our intention is also to filter out the modes that cannot be set > >> >> with 'max_available_lanes' through connector->mode_valid > >> >> callback, which uses these variables. Otherwise, we risk failing > >> >> a modeset that uses higher resolutions than possible. > >> >> > >> >> Sorry, I should have also added this as part of the commit message. > >> > > >> >One approach to implement DP link training to the spec is that if things > >> >fail we enable the pipe anyway (since anything else would seriously > >> >surprise userspace, especially for async modesets, and lead to hangs in > >> >userspace if vblank interrupts don't happen). And then we generate a > >> >hotplug event to inform userspace that something change with the monitor > >> >configuration, to give userspace a chance to look at the filtered mode > >> >list and select a new config it likes. > >> > > >> >That approach would fit rather well into the overall framework of how > >> >detection/mode-config changes are done currently by keeping all the policy > >> >for selecting the precise mode config in userspace. Downside is that for > >> >usb type-C it would cause flicker since if we only have 2 lanes we'll > >> >always first try the high-res mode and fail. So I think in the end we need > >> > >> Yes, agreed. > >> > >> >both approaches. Wrt the rfc it would be great if we can make it at least > >> >somewhat platform-agnostic - anything on big core since hsw+ supports > >> > >> By platform-agnostic, > >> > >> do you mean to try and implement _upfront_link_train() > >> for few more platforms since HSW+ to see how we can re-use common code > >> if any ? > >> > >> If it is something else, please elaborate a bit more.. > >> > >> >enabling the DP port without enabling a pipe (because dp mst needs that), > >> >so could support your approach here too. > >> > >> We have this kind of implementation tested in CHV and BXT. > >> Can I consider at least the BXT part as a sample for HSW+ platforms ? > > > >Yeah, bxt works like hsw+ for ddi ports. So the idea is that extract the > >link training for all of those with a high-level intel_* function used by > >the upfront link training code. I did not know that we can enable the port > >without a pipe on CHV though, do you have the code for that already? > > Yes, we have a similar implementation working on CHV also. > I chose to post BXT code since it is on a recent kernel (4.2-rc2) whereas > our CHV implementation was on 3.14.. Would be interesting to post them all. Just to understand what the overall requirements are. -Daniel -- Daniel Vetter Software Engineer, Intel Corporation http://blog.ffwll.ch _______________________________________________ Intel-gfx mailing list Intel-gfx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/intel-gfx