Quoting Dmitry Baryshkov (2024-09-20 02:38:53) > On Sat, Aug 31, 2024 at 09:06:53PM GMT, Stephen Boyd wrote: > > Based on our disccusions at LPC, here are several DT examples that seem > sensible to implement this case and several related cases from other > ChromeBooks. (Apologies for getting back to this late. I've been brewing on this topic for a month; only appropriate for Halloween.) This is the Trogdor case, one DP controller with 2 lanes DP coming out that is steered with an analog mux controlled by the EC: > > typec { > compatible = "google,cros-ec-typec"; > > port { > typec_dp_in: endpoint { > remote-endpoint = <&usb_1_qmp_phy_out_dp>; > }; > }; > > usb_c0: connector@0 { > compatible = "usb-c-connector"; > reg = <0>; > > ports { > port@0 { > reg = <0>; > usb_c0_hs_in: endpoint { > remote-endpoint = <&usb_hub_dfp1_hs>; > }; > }; > > port@1 { > reg = <1>; > usb_c0_ss_in: endpoint { > remote-endpoint = <&usb_hub_dfp1_ss>; > }; > }; > }; > }; > > usb_c1: connector@1 { > compatible = "usb-c-connector"; > reg = <1>; > > ports { > port@0 { > reg = <0>; > usb_c1_hs_in: endpoint { > remote-endpoint = <&usb_hub_dfp2_hs>; > }; > }; > > port@1 { > reg = <1>; > usb_c1_ss_in: endpoint { > remote-endpoint = <&usb_hub_dfp2_ss>; > }; > }; > }; > }; > }; > > &usb_1_qmpphy { > ports { > port@0 { > endpoint@0 { > data-lanes = <0 1>; > // this might go to USB-3 hub > }; > > usb_1_qmp_phy_out_dp: endpoint@1 { > remote-endpoint = <&typec_dp_in>; > data-lanes = <2 3>; > }; > } > }; > }; > > ------- This is one Corsola case, one DP controller (IT6505) that's an external bridge that has 4 lanes DP but only 2 lanes of DP are usable at a time because 2 physical lanes are wired to one usb-c-connector while the other 2 physical lanes are wired to the other usb-c-connector. I say "one Corsola case" because there's also a DP bridge (ANX7625) on some Corsola variants that only has two DP lanes with a crosspoint switch that can send those DP lanes out of one of two pairs of lanes. The other two lanes are for USB3 output data if the part is connected to USB3 on the input side. I suspect this ANX7625 case can be described in the same way as below with two output endpoints and data-lanes describing which lanes are used for either DP endpoint. > > typec { > connector@0 { > port@1 { > endpoint@0 { > remtoe = <&usb_hub_0>; > }; > > endpoint@1 { > remote = <&dp_bridge_out_0>; > }; (TL;DR: I think I have a plan with the last paragraph in this section, so I'll hack on it for a bit to see what happens.) I'm not thrilled about having two endpoints in the SuperSpeed port@1 to hold both signals in the Corsola case but not the Trogdor case. The problem is that there's only one DP endpoint on Trogdor and we can't have two remote-endpoint properties in there pointing to either usb-c-connector. But then on Corsola we have two DP endpoints and they both can't go to one DP input node in the typec node's graph. To harmonize this the typec graph can have one DP input endpoint on Trogdor while the typec graph can have two DP input endpoints on Corsola. In both cases, the typec graph would have two USB input endpoints, and then we can connect output endpoints to each usb-c-connector node. It would be similar to my existing binding in this series, except now the typec DP port can have multiple input endpoints. I understand from our discussions at LPC that I should use drm_connector_oob_hotplug_event() from the displayport altmode driver (drivers/usb/typec/altmodes/displayport.c) to tell the DP bridge like ANX7625 or IT6505 which output endpoint should be displaying DP. I think dp_altmode_probe() looks at the usb-c-connector node's parent, e.g. typec in the examples above, for the drm_bridge. That means we'll need to register a drm_bridge in the cros-ec-typec compatible node? Or we need to use the 'displayport' property in cros-ec-typec to point at the drm_bridge node? Either way the problem seems to be that I need to associate one drm_bridge with two displayport altmode drivers and pass some fwnode handle to drm_connector_oob_hotplug_event() in a way that we can map that back to the right output endpoint in the DP bridge graph. That seems to imply that we need to pass the fwnode for the usb-c-connector in addition to the fwnode for the drm_bridge, so that the drm_bridge code can look at its DT graph and find the remote node connected. Basically something like this: void drm_connector_oob_hotplug_event(struct fwnode_handle *connector_fwnode, struct fwnode_handle *usb_connector_fwnode, enum drm_connector_status status) (We might as well also pass the number of lanes here) Corsola could work with this design, but we'll need to teach dp_altmode_probe() to look for the drm_bridge elsewhere besides as the parent of the usb-c-connector node. That implies using the 'displayport' property in the cros-ec-typec node or teaching dp_altmode_probe() to look for the port@1/endpoint@1 remote-endpoint handle in the usb-c-connector graph. Assuming the bindings you've presented here are fine and good and I got over the differences between Trogdor and Corsola, then I can make mostly everything work with the drm_connector_oob_hotplug_event() signature change from above and some tweaks to dp_altmode_probe() to look for port@1/endpoint@1 first because that's the "logical" DP input endpoint in the usb-c-connector binding's graph. Great! The final roadblock I'm at is that HPD doesn't work on Trogdor, so I can't signal HPD through the typec framework. This series fixes that problem by "capturing" HPD state from the upstream drm_bridge, e.g. msm_dp, by hooking the struct drm_bridge_funcs::hpd_notify() path and injecting HPD into the typec messages received from the EC. That's a workaround to make the typec framework see HPD state changes that are otherwise invisible to the kernel. Newer firmwares actually tell us the state of HPD properly, but even then we have to read a gpio mux controlled by the EC to figure out which usb-c-connector is actually muxing DP when HPD changes on either typec_port. Having a drm_bridge in cros-ec-typec helped here because we could hook this path and signal HPD if we knew the firmware was fixed. If we don't have the drm_bridge anymore, I'm lost how to do this. Maybe the right answer here is to introduce a drm_connector_dp_typec structure that is created by the TCPM (cros-ec-typec) that sets a new DRM_BRIDGE_OP_DP_TYPEC bridge op flag? And then teach drm_bridge_connector about this new flag, similar to the HDMI one. The drm_bridge could implement some function that maps the typec_port (usb-c-connector) to the upstream drm_bridge (ANX7625) graph port, possibly all in drm_bridge_connector_oob_hotplug_event() so that nothing else really changes. It could also let us keep hooking the hpd_notify() path for the workaround needed on Trogdor. And finally it may let us harmonize the two DT bindings so that we only have one port@1/endpoint node in the usb-c-connector. > }; > }; > > connector@1 { > port@1 { > endpoint@0 { > remtoe = <&usb_hub_1>; > }; > > endpoint@1 { > remote = <&dp_bridge_out_1>; > }; > }; > }; > }; > > dp_bridge { > ports { > port@1 { > dp_bridge_out_0: endpoint@0 { > remote = <usb_c0_ss_dp>; > data-lanes = <0 1>; > }; > > dp_bridge_out_1: endpoint@1 { > remote = <usb_c1_ss_dp>; > data-lanes = <2 3>; > }; > }; > }; > }; > > ------- > > This one is really tough example, we didn't reach a conclusion here. > If the EC doesn't handle lane remapping, dp_bridge has to get > orientation-switch and mode-switch properties (as in the end it is the > dp_bridge that handles reshuffling of the lanes for the Type-C). Per the > DisplayPort standard the lanes are fixed (e.g. DPCD 101h explicitly > names lane 0, lanes 0-1, lanes 0-1-2-3). Are those logical or physical lanes? I think we'll punt on this one anyway though. We don't have any plans to do this orientation control mechanism so far. Previous attempts failed and we put an extra orientation switch control on the board to do the orientation flipping.