On Wed, Jul 30, 2014 at 08:01:44PM +0530, Ajay kumar wrote: > On Wed, Jul 30, 2014 at 4:49 PM, Thierry Reding > <thierry.reding@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Sat, Jul 26, 2014 at 12:52:08AM +0530, Ajay Kumar wrote: > >> This patch tries to seperate drm_bridge implementation > >> into 2 parts, a drm part and a non_drm part. > >> > >> A set of helper functions are defined in this patch to make > >> bridge driver probe independent of the drm flow. > >> > >> The bridge devices register themselves on a lookup table > >> when they get probed by calling "drm_bridge_add_for_lookup". > >> > >> The parent encoder driver waits till the bridge is available in the > >> lookup table(by calling "of_drm_find_bridge") and then continues with > >> its initialization. > >> > >> The encoder driver should call "drm_bridge_attach_encoder" to pass on > >> the drm_device and the encoder pointers to the bridge object. > >> > >> Now that the drm_device pointer is available, the encoder then calls > >> "bridge->funcs->post_encoder_init" to allow the bridge to continue > >> registering itself with the drm core. > >> > >> Also, non driver model based ptn3460 driver is removed in this patch. > > > > Why is it removed in this patch? Can't you do this incrementally rather > > than remove the driver in this patch and add it again later? If you do > > it this way then we'll always have this one commit where devices that > > have a ptn3460 don't work, so it becomes impossible to bisect across > > this commit. > Ok. I will try to modify ptn3460 to support driver model in this patch itself. > And then, adding panel support, converting it to gpiod interface and other > cleanups should follow. I think it should even be possible to do this in more separate steps. For example you could add the new bridge infrastructure without touching any of the existing drivers (so that they are completely unaffected by the changes) and then start converting one by one. For some of the changes this may be difficult (such as the dev -> drm_dev rename to make room for the new struct device *dev). But that could for example be done in a preparatory patch that first renames the field, so that the "infrastructure" patch can add the new field without renaming any fields and therefore needing changes to drivers directly. The goal of that whole exercise is to allow display drivers to keep working with the existing API (ptn3460_init()) while we convert the bridge drivers to register with the new framework. Then we can more safely convert each display driver individually to make use of the new framework and once all drivers have been converted the old API can simply be removed. That way there should be no impact on existing functionality at any point. > >> diff --git a/drivers/gpu/drm/drm_crtc.c b/drivers/gpu/drm/drm_crtc.c > > [...] > > > > Maybe since you're introducing a new drm_bridge.c file above already it > > would make sense to move out existing drm_bridge related code in a > > preparatory patch? > > > > Maybe Sean or Rob can comment on whether there was a specific reason to > > include it in drm_crtc.c in the first place. > > > >> @@ -1012,8 +1010,7 @@ int drm_bridge_init(struct drm_device *dev, struct drm_bridge *bridge, > >> if (ret) > >> goto out; > >> > >> - bridge->dev = dev; > >> - bridge->funcs = funcs; > >> + bridge->drm_dev = dev; > > > > This sets ->drm_dev, but it was already set in drm_bridge_attach(), so I > > think that's one more argument to call this function when attaching. > Point accepted. I forgot to mention earlier. drm_dev seems redundant to me. I'd go with just "drm". > >> diff --git a/include/drm/drm_crtc.h b/include/drm/drm_crtc.h > >> index e529b68..e5a41ad 100644 > >> --- a/include/drm/drm_crtc.h > >> +++ b/include/drm/drm_crtc.h > >> @@ -619,6 +619,7 @@ struct drm_plane { > >> > >> /** > >> * drm_bridge_funcs - drm_bridge control functions > >> + * @post_encoder_init: called by the parent encoder > > > > Maybe rename this to "attach" to make it more obvious when exactly it's > > called? > "post_encoder_attach"? "post_encoder_" doesn't contain much information, or even ambiguous information. What does "post" "encoder" mean? A bridge is always attached to an encoder, so "encoder" can be dropped. Now "post" has implications as to the time when it is called, but does it mean after the encoder has been initialized, or after the encoder has been removed? Simply "attach" means it's called by the parent encoder to initialize the bridge once it's been attached to an encoder. So obviously it's after the encoder has been initialized. "attach" has all he information required. Any prefix is redundant in my opinion and removing prefixes gives shorter names and reduces the number of keypresses. > >> * @mode_fixup: Try to fixup (or reject entirely) proposed mode for this bridge > >> * @disable: Called right before encoder prepare, disables the bridge > >> * @post_disable: Called right after encoder prepare, for lockstepped disable > >> @@ -628,6 +629,7 @@ struct drm_plane { > >> * @destroy: make object go away > >> */ > >> struct drm_bridge_funcs { > >> + int (*post_encoder_init)(struct drm_bridge *bridge); > >> bool (*mode_fixup)(struct drm_bridge *bridge, > >> const struct drm_display_mode *mode, > >> struct drm_display_mode *adjusted_mode); > >> @@ -648,15 +650,19 @@ struct drm_bridge_funcs { > >> * @base: base mode object > >> * @funcs: control functions > >> * @driver_private: pointer to the bridge driver's internal context > >> + * @connector_polled: polled flag needed for registering connector > > > > Can you explain why this new field is needed? It seems like a completely > > unrelated change. > How do I select this flag for the bridge chip? > Assume if I did select DRM_CONNECTOR_POLL_HPD, where to call > drm_helper_hpd_irq_event in the driver? Is post_encoder_init a right place? > > Without the polled flag, I get display very late. > Please throw some light on this! I just don't understand why it's necessary to implement this field in the drm_bridge. Every bridge driver will already implement a connector, in which case it can simply set the connector's .polled field, can't it? It seems like the only reason you have it in drm_bridge is so that the encoder driver can set it. But I don't see why it should be doing that. The polled state is a property of the connector, and the encoder driver doesn't know anything about it. So if the bridge has a way to detect HPD then it should be setting up the connector to properly report it. For example if the bridge has an input pin to detect it, then it could use a GPIO to receive interrupts and call drm_helper_hpd_irq_event() in the interrupt handler. Perhaps you can explain the exact setup where you need this (or point me at the code since I can't seem to find the relevant location) so that I can gain a better understanding. Thierry
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