The primary goal of this series is to try to properly fix EDID reading for eDP panels using the ti-sn65dsi86 bridge. Previously we had a patch that added EDID reading but it turned out not to work at bootup. This caused some extra churn at bootup as we tried (and failed) to read the EDID several times and also ended up forcing us to use the hardcoded mode at boot. With this patch series I believe EDID reading is reliable at boot now and we never use the hardcoded mode. This series is the logical successor to the 3-part series containing the patch ("drm/bridge: ti-sn65dsi86: Properly get the EDID, but only if refclk") [1]. At v6 now, this patch series is smaller as I have landed most of the cleanup patches. I've previously sent out a summary [2]. Now it just has the i2c fix and some of the more controversial parts. This patch was developed agains linuxnext (next-20210416) with drm-misc-next (as of 20210503) merged in on a sc7180-trogdor-lazor device. To get things booting for me, I had to use Stephen's patch [3] to keep from crashing but otherwise all the patches I needed were here. Primary change between v2 and v3 is to stop doing the EDID caching in the core. I also added Andrzej's review tags. Between v3 and v4 this series grew a whole lot. I changed it so that the EDID reading is actually driven by the panel driver now as was suggested by Andrzej. While I still believe that the old approach wasn't too bad I'm still switching. Why? The main reason is that I think it's useful in general for the panel code to have access to the DDC bus and to be able to read the EDID. This may allow us to more easily have the panel code support multiple sources of panels--it can read the EDID and possibly adjust timings based on the model ID. It also allows the panel code (or perhaps backlight code?) to send DDC commands if they are need for a particular panel. At the moment, once the panel is provided the DDC bus then existing code will assume that it should be in charge of reading the EDID. While it doesn't have to work that way, it seems sane to build on what's already there. In order to expose the DDC bus to the panel, I had to solve a bunch of chicken-and-egg problems in terms of probe ordering between the bridge and the panel. I've broken the bridge driver into several sub drivers to make this happen. At the moment the sub-drivers are just there to solve the probe problem, but conceivably someone could use them to break the driver up in the future if need be. Between v4 and v5, high-level view of changes. - Some of the early patches landed, so dropped from series. - New pm_runtime_disable() fix (fixed a patch that already landed). - Added Bjorn's tags to most patches - Fixed problems when building as a module. - Reordered debugfs patch and fixed error handling there. - Dropped last patch. I'm not convinced it's safe w/out more work. Between v5 and v6 this patch added the patch ("drm/dp: Allow an early call to register DDC i2c bus") and only includes the patches that haven't already landed. [1] https://lore.kernel.org/r/20210304155144.3.I60a7fb23ce4589006bc95c64ab8d15c74b876e68@changeid/ [2] https://lore.kernel.org/dri-devel/CAD=FV=Vzn0ih_RqR_ySJzFtq0B0x_4a-Uwjk56GeLyUZtTEXrQ@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx/ [3] https://lore.kernel.org/r/161706912161.3012082.17313817257247946143@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx/ Changes in v6: - ("drm/dp: Allow an early call to register DDC i2c bus") new for v6. - Use new drm_dp_aux_register_ddc() calls. Douglas Anderson (5): i2c: i2c-core-of: Fix corner case of finding adapter by node drm/dp: Allow an early call to register DDC i2c bus drm/bridge: ti-sn65dsi86: Promote the AUX channel to its own sub-dev drm/bridge: ti-sn65dsi86: Don't read EDID blob over DDC arm64: dts: qcom: Link the panel to the bridge's DDC bus arch/arm64/boot/dts/qcom/sc7180-trogdor.dtsi | 1 + drivers/gpu/drm/bridge/ti-sn65dsi86.c | 99 +++++++++++++------- drivers/gpu/drm/drm_dp_helper.c | 67 ++++++++++--- drivers/i2c/i2c-core-of.c | 17 ++-- include/drm/drm_dp_helper.h | 2 + 5 files changed, 134 insertions(+), 52 deletions(-) -- 2.31.1.527.g47e6f16901-goog