Let's reorganize how we init and turn on the reference clock in the code to allow us to turn it on early (even before pre_enable()) so that we can read the EDID early. This is handy for eDP because: - We always assume that a panel is there. - Once we report that a panel is there we get asked to read the EDID. - Pre-enable isn't called until we know what pixel clock we want to use and we're ready to turn everything on. That's _after_ we get asked to read the EDID. NOTE: the above only works out OK if we "refclk" is provided. Though I don't have access to any hardware that uses ti-sn65dsi86 and _doesn't_ provide a "refclk", I believe that we'll have trouble reading the EDID at bootup in that case. Specifically I believe that if there's no "refclk" we need the MIPI source clock to be active before we can successfully read the EDID. My evidence here is that, in testing, I couldn't read the EDID until I turned on the DPPLL in the bridge chip and that the DPPLL needs the input clock to be active. Since this is hard to support, let's punt trying to handle this case if there's no "refclk". In that case we'll enable comms in pre_enable() like we always did. I don't believe there are any users of the ti-sn65dsi86 bridge chip that _don't_ use "refclk". The bridge chip is _very_ inflexible in that mode. The only time I've seen that mode used was for some really early prototype hardware that was thrown in the e-waste bin years ago when we realized how inflexible it was. Even if someone is using the bridge chip without the "refclk" they're in no worse shape than they were before the (fairly recent) commit 58074b08c04a ("drm/bridge: ti-sn65dsi86: Read EDID blob over DDC"). Signed-off-by: Douglas Anderson <dianders@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Reviewed-by: Bjorn Andersson <bjorn.andersson@xxxxxxxxxx> --- (no changes since v1) drivers/gpu/drm/bridge/ti-sn65dsi86.c | 129 +++++++++++++++++++------- 1 file changed, 94 insertions(+), 35 deletions(-) diff --git a/drivers/gpu/drm/bridge/ti-sn65dsi86.c b/drivers/gpu/drm/bridge/ti-sn65dsi86.c index db367793cdff..9dc3cd8e17df 100644 --- a/drivers/gpu/drm/bridge/ti-sn65dsi86.c +++ b/drivers/gpu/drm/bridge/ti-sn65dsi86.c @@ -132,6 +132,8 @@ * @dp_lanes: Count of dp_lanes we're using. * @ln_assign: Value to program to the LN_ASSIGN register. * @ln_polrs: Value for the 4-bit LN_POLRS field of SN_ENH_FRAME_REG. + * @comms_enabled: If true then communication over the aux channel is enabled. + * @comms_mutex: Protects modification of comms_enabled. * * @gchip: If we expose our GPIOs, this is used. * @gchip_output: A cache of whether we've set GPIOs to output. This @@ -162,6 +164,8 @@ struct ti_sn65dsi86 { int dp_lanes; u8 ln_assign; u8 ln_polrs; + bool comms_enabled; + struct mutex comms_mutex; #if defined(CONFIG_OF_GPIO) struct gpio_chip gchip; @@ -250,6 +254,47 @@ static void ti_sn_bridge_set_refclk_freq(struct ti_sn65dsi86 *pdata) REFCLK_FREQ(i)); } +static void ti_sn65dsi86_enable_comms(struct ti_sn65dsi86 *pdata) +{ + mutex_lock(&pdata->comms_mutex); + + /* configure bridge ref_clk */ + ti_sn_bridge_set_refclk_freq(pdata); + + /* + * HPD on this bridge chip is a bit useless. This is an eDP bridge + * so the HPD is an internal signal that's only there to signal that + * the panel is done powering up. ...but the bridge chip debounces + * this signal by between 100 ms and 400 ms (depending on process, + * voltage, and temperate--I measured it at about 200 ms). One + * particular panel asserted HPD 84 ms after it was powered on meaning + * that we saw HPD 284 ms after power on. ...but the same panel said + * that instead of looking at HPD you could just hardcode a delay of + * 200 ms. We'll assume that the panel driver will have the hardcoded + * delay in its prepare and always disable HPD. + * + * If HPD somehow makes sense on some future panel we'll have to + * change this to be conditional on someone specifying that HPD should + * be used. + */ + regmap_update_bits(pdata->regmap, SN_HPD_DISABLE_REG, HPD_DISABLE, + HPD_DISABLE); + + pdata->comms_enabled = true; + + mutex_unlock(&pdata->comms_mutex); +} + +static void ti_sn65dsi86_disable_comms(struct ti_sn65dsi86 *pdata) +{ + mutex_lock(&pdata->comms_mutex); + + pdata->comms_enabled = false; + clk_disable_unprepare(pdata->refclk); + + mutex_unlock(&pdata->comms_mutex); +} + static int __maybe_unused ti_sn65dsi86_resume(struct device *dev) { struct ti_sn65dsi86 *pdata = dev_get_drvdata(dev); @@ -263,6 +308,16 @@ static int __maybe_unused ti_sn65dsi86_resume(struct device *dev) gpiod_set_value(pdata->enable_gpio, 1); + /* + * If we have a reference clock we can enable communication w/ the + * panel (including the aux channel) w/out any need for an input clock + * so we can do it in resume which lets us read the EDID before + * pre_enable(). Without a reference clock we need the MIPI reference + * clock so reading early doesn't work. + */ + if (pdata->refclk) + ti_sn65dsi86_enable_comms(pdata); + return ret; } @@ -271,6 +326,9 @@ static int __maybe_unused ti_sn65dsi86_suspend(struct device *dev) struct ti_sn65dsi86 *pdata = dev_get_drvdata(dev); int ret; + if (pdata->refclk) + ti_sn65dsi86_disable_comms(pdata); + gpiod_set_value(pdata->enable_gpio, 0); ret = regulator_bulk_disable(SN_REGULATOR_SUPPLY_NUM, pdata->supplies); @@ -844,27 +902,8 @@ static void ti_sn_bridge_pre_enable(struct drm_bridge *bridge) pm_runtime_get_sync(pdata->dev); - /* configure bridge ref_clk */ - ti_sn_bridge_set_refclk_freq(pdata); - - /* - * HPD on this bridge chip is a bit useless. This is an eDP bridge - * so the HPD is an internal signal that's only there to signal that - * the panel is done powering up. ...but the bridge chip debounces - * this signal by between 100 ms and 400 ms (depending on process, - * voltage, and temperate--I measured it at about 200 ms). One - * particular panel asserted HPD 84 ms after it was powered on meaning - * that we saw HPD 284 ms after power on. ...but the same panel said - * that instead of looking at HPD you could just hardcode a delay of - * 200 ms. We'll assume that the panel driver will have the hardcoded - * delay in its prepare and always disable HPD. - * - * If HPD somehow makes sense on some future panel we'll have to - * change this to be conditional on someone specifying that HPD should - * be used. - */ - regmap_update_bits(pdata->regmap, SN_HPD_DISABLE_REG, HPD_DISABLE, - HPD_DISABLE); + if (!pdata->refclk) + ti_sn65dsi86_enable_comms(pdata); drm_panel_prepare(pdata->panel); } @@ -875,7 +914,8 @@ static void ti_sn_bridge_post_disable(struct drm_bridge *bridge) drm_panel_unprepare(pdata->panel); - clk_disable_unprepare(pdata->refclk); + if (!pdata->refclk) + ti_sn65dsi86_disable_comms(pdata); pm_runtime_put_sync(pdata->dev); } @@ -909,6 +949,20 @@ static ssize_t ti_sn_aux_transfer(struct drm_dp_aux *aux, if (len > SN_AUX_MAX_PAYLOAD_BYTES) return -EINVAL; + pm_runtime_get_sync(pdata->dev); + mutex_lock(&pdata->comms_mutex); + + /* + * If someone tries to do a DDC over AUX transaction before pre_enable() + * on a device without a dedicated reference clock then we just can't + * do it. Fail right away. This prevents non-refclk users from reading + * the EDID before enabling the panel but such is life. + */ + if (!pdata->comms_enabled) { + ret = -EIO; + goto exit; + } + switch (request) { case DP_AUX_NATIVE_WRITE: case DP_AUX_I2C_WRITE: @@ -919,7 +973,8 @@ static ssize_t ti_sn_aux_transfer(struct drm_dp_aux *aux, msg->reply = 0; break; default: - return -EINVAL; + ret = -EINVAL; + goto exit; } BUILD_BUG_ON(sizeof(addr_len) != sizeof(__be32)); @@ -943,11 +998,11 @@ static ssize_t ti_sn_aux_transfer(struct drm_dp_aux *aux, ret = regmap_read_poll_timeout(pdata->regmap, SN_AUX_CMD_REG, val, !(val & AUX_CMD_SEND), 0, 50 * 1000); if (ret) - return ret; + goto exit; ret = regmap_read(pdata->regmap, SN_AUX_CMD_STATUS_REG, &val); if (ret) - return ret; + goto exit; if (val & AUX_IRQ_STATUS_AUX_RPLY_TOUT) { /* @@ -955,13 +1010,14 @@ static ssize_t ti_sn_aux_transfer(struct drm_dp_aux *aux, * but it hit a timeout. We ignore defers here because they're * handled in hardware. */ - return -ETIMEDOUT; + ret = -ETIMEDOUT; + goto exit; } if (val & AUX_IRQ_STATUS_AUX_SHORT) { ret = regmap_read(pdata->regmap, SN_AUX_LENGTH_REG, &len); if (ret) - return ret; + goto exit; } else if (val & AUX_IRQ_STATUS_NAT_I2C_FAIL) { switch (request) { case DP_AUX_I2C_WRITE: @@ -973,18 +1029,19 @@ static ssize_t ti_sn_aux_transfer(struct drm_dp_aux *aux, msg->reply |= DP_AUX_NATIVE_REPLY_NACK; break; } - return 0; + len = 0; + goto exit; } - if (request == DP_AUX_NATIVE_WRITE || request == DP_AUX_I2C_WRITE || - len == 0) - return len; + if (request != DP_AUX_NATIVE_WRITE && request != DP_AUX_I2C_WRITE && len != 0) + ret = regmap_bulk_read(pdata->regmap, SN_AUX_RDATA_REG(0), buf, len); - ret = regmap_bulk_read(pdata->regmap, SN_AUX_RDATA_REG(0), buf, len); - if (ret) - return ret; +exit: + mutex_unlock(&pdata->comms_mutex); + pm_runtime_mark_last_busy(pdata->dev); + pm_runtime_put_autosuspend(pdata->dev); - return len; + return ret ? ret : len; } static int ti_sn_bridge_parse_dsi_host(struct ti_sn65dsi86 *pdata) @@ -1390,6 +1447,8 @@ static int ti_sn65dsi86_probe(struct i2c_client *client, dev_set_drvdata(dev, pdata); pdata->dev = dev; + mutex_init(&pdata->comms_mutex); + pdata->regmap = devm_regmap_init_i2c(client, &ti_sn65dsi86_regmap_config); if (IS_ERR(pdata->regmap)) { -- 2.31.1.498.g6c1eba8ee3d-goog