On Tue 05 Oct 19:06 PDT 2021, Stephen Boyd wrote:
Quoting Bjorn Andersson (2021-10-05 18:43:16)
On Tue 05 Oct 17:43 PDT 2021, Stephen Boyd wrote:
Quoting Bjorn Andersson (2021-10-05 16:13:21)
diff --git a/drivers/gpu/drm/msm/dp/dp_display.c b/drivers/gpu/drm/msm/dp/dp_display.c
index bdaf227f05dc..674cddfee5b0 100644
--- a/drivers/gpu/drm/msm/dp/dp_display.c
+++ b/drivers/gpu/drm/msm/dp/dp_display.c
@@ -1233,7 +1239,7 @@ static int dp_display_probe(struct platform_device *pdev)
if (!dp)
return -ENOMEM;
- desc = dp_display_get_desc(pdev);
+ desc = dp_display_get_desc(pdev, &dp->id);
I'm sad that dp->id has to match the number in the SoC specific
dpu_intf_cfg array in drivers/gpu/drm/msm/disp/dpu1/dpu_hw_catalog.c
still. Is there any way we can avoid that? Also, notice how those arrays
already have INTF_DP macros, which makes me think that it may be better
to connect this to those arrays instead of making an msm_dp_desc
structure and then make sure the 'type' member matches a connector
type number. Otherwise this code is super fragile.
I'm afraid I don't understand what you're proposing. Or which part you
consider fragile, the indices of the INTF_DP instances aren't going to
move around...
I have N instances of the DP driver that I need to match to N entries
from the platform specific intf array, I need some stable reference
between them. When I started this journey I figured I could rely on the
of_graph between the DPU and the interface controllers, but the values
used there today are just bogus, so that was a no go.
We can use whatever, as long as _dpu_kms_initialize_displayport() can
come up with an identifier to put in h_tile_instance[0] so that
dpu_encoder_setup_display() can find the relevant INTF.
To make it more concrete we can look at sc7180
static const struct dpu_intf_cfg sc7180_intf[] = {
INTF_BLK("intf_0", INTF_0, 0x6A000, INTF_DP, 0, 24,
INTF_SC7180_MASK, MDP_SSPP_TOP0_INTR, 24, 25),
^
|
intf0 is irrelevant. Also the address is irrelevant. But here we have a
zero, the number after INTF_DP, and that is very relevant. That number
needs to match the dp->id. Somewhere we have a match between
controller_id and dp->id in the code.
That number (the 0, not INTF_0) is what the code matches against dp->id
in _dpu_kms_initialize_displayport(), in order to figure out that this
is INTF_0 in dpu_encoder_setup_display().
I.e. look at the sc8180x patch:
INTF_BLK("intf_0", INTF_0, 0x6A000, INTF_DP, 0, 24, INTF_SC8180X_MASK, MDP_SSPP_TOP0_INTR, 24, 25),
INTF_BLK("intf_1", INTF_1, 0x6A800, INTF_DSI, 0, 24, INTF_SC8180X_MASK, MDP_SSPP_TOP0_INTR, 26, 27),
INTF_BLK("intf_2", INTF_2, 0x6B000, INTF_DSI, 1, 24, INTF_SC8180X_MASK, MDP_SSPP_TOP0_INTR, 28, 29),
/* INTF_3 is for MST, wired to INTF_DP 0 and 1, use dummy index until this is supported */
INTF_BLK("intf_3", INTF_3, 0x6B800, INTF_DP, 999, 24, INTF_SC8180X_MASK, MDP_SSPP_TOP0_INTR, 30, 31),
INTF_BLK("intf_4", INTF_4, 0x6C000, INTF_DP, 1, 24, INTF_SC8180X_MASK, MDP_SSPP_TOP0_INTR, 20, 21),
INTF_BLK("intf_5", INTF_5, 0x6C800, INTF_DP, 2, 24, INTF_SC8180X_MASK, MDP_SSPP_TOP0_INTR, 22, 23),
Where the DP driver defines the 3 controllers with dp->id of 0, 1 and 2,
which the DPU code will match against to INTF_0, INTF_4 and INTF_5.