Hi Sylwester, Am 21.08.2013 23:42, schrieb Sylwester Nawrocki: > Hi Frank, > > On 08/21/2013 10:39 PM, Frank Schäfer wrote: >> Am 20.08.2013 18:34, schrieb Frank Schäfer: >>> Am 20.08.2013 15:38, schrieb Laurent Pinchart: >>>> Hi Mauro, >>>> >>>> On Sunday 18 August 2013 12:20:08 Mauro Carvalho Chehab wrote: >>>>> Em Sun, 18 Aug 2013 13:40:25 +0200 Frank Schäfer escreveu: >>>>>> Am 17.08.2013 12:51, schrieb Guennadi Liakhovetski: >>>>>>> Hi Frank, >>>>>>> As I mentioned on the list, I'm currently on a holiday, so, >>>>>>> replying >>>>>>> briefly. >>>>>> Sorry, I missed that (can't read all mails on the list). >>>>>> >>>>>>> Since em28xx is a USB device, I conclude, that it's supplying >>>>>>> clock to >>>>>>> its components including the ov2640 sensor. So, yes, I think the >>>>>>> driver >>>>>>> should export a V4L2 clock. >>>>>> Ok, so it's mandatory on purpose ? >>>>>> I'll take a deeper into the v4l2-clk code and the >>>>>> em28xx/ov2640/soc-camera interaction this week. >>>>>> Have a nice holiday ! >>>>> commit 9aea470b399d797e88be08985c489855759c6c60 >>>>> Author: Guennadi Liakhovetski<g.liakhovetski@xxxxxx> >>>>> Date: Fri Dec 21 13:01:55 2012 -0300 >>>>> >>>>> [media] soc-camera: switch I2C subdevice drivers to use v4l2-clk >>>>> >>>>> Instead of centrally enabling and disabling subdevice master >>>>> clocks in >>>>> soc-camera core, let subdevice drivers do that themselves, >>>>> using the >>>>> V4L2 clock API and soc-camera convenience wrappers. >>>>> >>>>> Signed-off-by: Guennadi Liakhovetski<g.liakhovetski@xxxxxx> >>>>> Acked-by: Hans Verkuil<hans.verkuil@xxxxxxxxx> >>>>> Acked-by: Laurent Pinchart<laurent.pinchart@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> >>>>> Signed-off-by: Mauro Carvalho Chehab<mchehab@xxxxxxxxxx> >>>>> >>>>> (c/c the ones that acked with this broken changeset) >>>>> >>>>> We need to fix it ASAP or to revert the ov2640 changes, as some >>>>> em28xx >>>>> cameras are currently broken on 3.10. >>>>> >>>>> I'll also reject other ports to the async API if the drivers are >>>>> used outside an embedded driver, as no PC driver currently defines >>>>> any clock source. The same applies to regulators. >>>>> >>>>> Guennadi, >>>>> >>>>> Next time, please check if the i2c drivers are used outside >>>>> soc_camera >>>>> and apply the fixes where needed, as no regressions are allowed. >>>> We definitely need to check all users of our sensor drivers when >>>> making such a >>>> change. Mistakes happen, so let's fix them. >>>> >>>> Guennadi is on holidays until the end of this week. Would that be >>>> too late to >>>> fix the issue (given that 3.10 is already broken) ? The fix >>>> shouldn't be too >>>> complex, registering a dummy V4L2 clock in the em28xx driver should >>>> be enough. >>> I would prefer either a) making the clock optional in the senor >>> driver(s) or b) implementing a real V4L2 clock. >>> >>> Reading the soc-camera code, it looks like NULL-pointers for struct >>> v4l2_clk are handled correctly. so a) should be pretty simple: >>> >>> priv->clk = v4l2_clk_get(&client->dev, "mclk"); >>> - if (IS_ERR(priv->clk)) { >>> - ret = PTR_ERR(priv->clk); >>> - goto eclkget; >>> - } >>> + if (IS_ERR(priv->clk)) >>> + priv->clk = NULL; >>> >>> Some additional NULL-pointer checks might be necessary, e.g. before >>> calling v4l2_clk_put(). >> >> Tested and that works. >> Patch follows. > > That patch breaks subdevs registration through the v4l2-async. See commit > > ef6672ea35b5bb64ab42e18c1a1ffc717c31588a > [media] V4L2: mt9m111: switch to asynchronous subdevice probing > > Sensor probe() callback must return EPROBE_DEFER when the clock is not > found. This cause the sensor's probe() callback to be called again by > the driver core after some other driver has probed, e.g. the one that > registers v4l2_clk. If specific error code is not returned from probe() > the whole registration process breaks. Urgh... great. :/ So the presence of a clock is used as indicator if the device is ready ? Honestly, that sounds like a misuse... Is there no other way to check if the device is ready ? Please don't get me wrong, I noticed you've been working on the async subdevice registration patches for quite a long time and I'm sure it wasn't an easy task. Btw: only 2 of the 14 drivers return -EPROBE_DEFER when no clock is found: imx074, mt9m111m. All others return the error code from v4l2_clk_get(), usually -ENODEV. > >>> Concerning b): I'm not yet sure if it is really needed/makes sense... >>> Who is supposed to configure/enable/disable the clock in a >>> constellation >>> like em28xx+ov2640 ? >>> For UXGA for example, the clock needs to be switched to 12MHz, while >>> 24MHz is used for smaller reolutions. >>> But I'm not sure if it is a good idea to let the sensor driver do the >>> switch (to define fixed bindings between resoultions and clock >>> frequencies). >>> Btw, what if a frequency is requested which isn't supported ? Set the >>> clock to the next nearest supported frequency ? >>> >>> Regards, >>> Frank >> >> I tried to implement a v4l2_clk for the em28xx driver (not yet beeing >> sure if it really makes sense) and I noticed the following problem: >> The ov2640 driver (as well as all other sensor drivers) seems to have >> specific expectations for the names of the clock. >> The name must me "mclk" and dev_name must be the device name of the i2c >> client device. >> Is "mclk" supposed to be a clock type ? Wouldn't an enum be a better >> choice in this case ? > > This is made similar to the common clock API, a string is an identifier > of a clock for the device. I can't see anything unusual in that, it will > also make it easier to phase out the v4l2-clk API and replace it with > the common clock API once that is more widely available. > > The name is supposed to come from the datasheet and usually be different > for each sensor, but since we mostly deal with just one clock a common > "mclk" name was chosen for simplicity. Hmm... the common clock API probably needs to be more flexible. An enum would be safer to use, that's my though. Anyway, let's focus on the main issue. > >> Anyway, the sensor subdevices are registered using >> v4l2_i2c_new_subdev_board(), which sets up an i2c client, loads the >> module and returns v4l2_subdev. >> The v4l2_clock needs to be registered before (otherwise no clock is >> found during sensor probing), but at this point the device name of the >> i2c_client isn't known yet... > [...] > > snprintf(clk_name, sizeof(clk_name), "%d-%04x", > dev->i2c_adap[dev->def_i2c_bus].nr, ov2640_info.addr); That's a joke, isn't it ? ;) So people have to grub through half of the kernel to figure out which specific string the subdev driver expects and duplicate the code that creates this compound string to be able to use the driver ? > > clk = v4l2_clk_register(&em28xx_sensor_clk_ops, clk_name, "mclk", > icd); > if (IS_ERR(icd->clk)) { > ... > } > ////////////////////////////////////////////////////// > > subdev = > v4l2_i2c_new_subdev_board(&dev->v4l2_dev, > &dev->i2c_adap[dev->def_i2c_bus], > &ov2640_info, NULL); > ... > > Alternatively all sensors modified by changeset 9aea470b399d797e88be > "[media] soc-camera: switch I2C subdevice drivers to use v4l2-clk" could > receive a platform data flag that would be set for drivers like em28xx, > and which would be indicating if the clock should be used or not. It > probably should has been done originally if it wasn't clear which bridge > drivers use that modified sensors and that regressions were possible. Yes, but not using a clock would still break the async subdevice registration (although drivers like the em28xx likely don't need/use it at the moment). Regards, Frank > > -- > Regards, > Sylwester -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-media" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html