On 2014년 07월 14일 20:03, Thierry Reding wrote: > On Mon, Jul 14, 2014 at 07:45:28PM +0900, YoungJun Cho wrote: >> On 07/14/2014 06:41 PM, Thierry Reding wrote: > [...] >>> That said, I've been doing some research and it seems like we have a >>> somewhat similar feature on Tegra. What happens there is that there are >>> three GPIO pins that can be repurposed for TE signalling. But as opposed >>> to using them as interrupts the display controller can be configured to >>> use them, upon which it will automatically handle the TE signal by >>> sending the next frame. >> >> Could you explain more detail how the Tegra display controller could be >> configured with this GPIO pins? >> I have no idea except that the display controller registers this GPIO as an >> IRQ. > > On Tegra the display controller has a special register that can be > programmed to use one of the three GPIOs as TE signal. Then the display > controller can be configured in one-shot (non-continuous) mode, which > means that software needs to explicitly set a trigger bit to tell the > display controller to send a new frame. If TE signalling is enabled, > then the display controller will not immediately send a new frame when > triggered but wait for signalling of this GPIO. > >>> So we have at least two very different implementations of this on two >>> different SoCs. Further the specification explicitly recommends using >>> the BTA sequence and DSI protocol to wait for TE. So I still think that >>> controllers that provide an additional, non-spec compliant method to >>> signal TE should handle it separately rather than within DSI. Otherwise >>> we essentially need to make the DSI "core" aware of all these quirks, >>> and I'd rather avoid that. >> >> You mean, the DSI specification guides to use BTA, so it's better to use >> display controller rather than DSIM, right? > > What I'm saying is that there's nothing about a side-band TE wire in the > DSI spec. In fact the spec explicitly says that this mechanism of an > external TE wire from older protocols (DBI) was replaced by the BTA > sequence over the protocol. > > Now, my understanding is that using the BTA sequence over the DSI > protocol would introduce some latency and that forces some panel vendors > to still provide a side-band TE wire even in DSI compliant panels. But > since this is not part of the specification there is no standard way to > do this (as evidenced by Tegra and Exynos). Therefore putting such > functionality into the core DSI code is bad. > > But that doesn't mean that you have to put this functionality into the > display controller driver on Exynos. What I'm saying is that it should > be handled by the SoC driver rather than the core. Where exactly > probably depends on the particular case. > >>>> As Inki commented before, I'll try to use remote-endpoint property of DSI >>>> device node in exynos DSIM driver and call FIMD notifier. >>> >>> Sounds like it matches what I said above. I'm not a huge fan of >>> notifiers, but if it works for you I suppose that's fine. The >>> alternative would be to directly call a FIMD function, which is >>> somewhat more explicit than a notifier. >> >> Yes, I also like explicit call, so I want to use dsi_host_ops and calls it >> in panel. But there is an objection to use dis_host_ops, we think notifier >> in exynos dsim for fimd(display controller). > > There are other ways to explicitly call into the display controller. You > could for example get access to the CRTC that DSIM is currently > connected to (via exynos_dsi.encoder->crtc) and then cast that to a > struct exynos_drm_crtc and call a function to trigger a new frame to be > sent (for example exynos_drm_crtc_send_frame()). This assumes that you > can safely cast struct drm_crtc * to struct exynos_drm_crtc *, but that > shouldn't be a problem. > > With the above, you could make the DSIM handle the TE signal interrupts > and trigger the DC using the new exynos_drm_crtc_send_frame() function. > It seems better than the use of notifier. Actually, original patch used this way except TE event. Mr. Cho, let's use remote-endpoint property and this way instead of notifier. Thanks, Inki Dae > Thierry > -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-samsung-soc" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html