Re: [PATCH v2 00/16] drm/exynos: Convert driver to drm bridge

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 




20. 11. 10. 오후 5:13에 Michael Tretter 이(가) 쓴 글:
> On Mon, 09 Nov 2020 12:15:39 +0900, Inki Dae wrote:
>> 20. 9. 11. 오후 10:53에 Michael Tretter 이(가) 쓴 글:
>>> This is v2 of the series to convert the Exynos MIPI DSI driver into a drm
>>> bridge and make it usable with other drivers. Although the driver is
>>> converted, it still supports the component framework API to stay compliant
>>> with the Exynos DRM driver.
>>>
>>> The Exynos MIPI DSI Phy is also found on the i.MX8M Mini. However, on the
>>> i.MX8M Mini, the bridge is driven by an LCDIF display controller instead of
>>> the Exynos Decon. The driver for the LCDIF does not use the component
>>> framework, but uses drm bridges.
>>>
>>> I don't have any Exynos SoC to actually test the series. I build a dummy to
>>> test the bridge with a component driver, to make sure that at least the
>>> initialization is working. Furthermore, tested the driver as a bridge with a
>>> few additional unfinished patches on the i.MX8M Mini EVK. However, somebody
>>> should verify that the driver is still working on Exynos hardware.
>>>
>>> I also changed the order of the patches to first make the driver more platform
>>> independent (patches 2 to 8), then convert to a drm bridge driver (patches 10
>>
>> Just a fundamental question, A MIPI-DSI(Display Serial Interface) bus device
>> would be one of an encoder type of devices not bridge such as DSI to LVDS
>> and LVDS to DSI bridge devices, and also image enhancer and image compressor
>> in case of Exynos.
> 
> I don't understand, why the MIPI-DSI bus device would be an encoder type and
> DSI to LVDS or MIPI-DSI to HDMI would be bridges. For example, the device tree
> documentation for the DSIM states that the DSIM receives RGB video as input
> and produces MIPI-DSI as output. Thus, the DSIM is basically a parallel RGB to

MIPI-DSI receives RGB video as input and encodes it to MIPI packet and then transfers the packet to MIPI panel.
And finally, MIPI panel decodes the packet and updates it - RGB data - on its SRAM.

MIPI-DSI driver programs how the RGB video should be made as MIPI packet. For more detail, you could refer to MIPI-DSI spec.
This would be why we handle MIPI-DSI driver as an encoder like other ARM SoC DRM drivers did.

> MIPI-DSI bridge and the encoder is the LCD controller that encodes the video
> data as parallel RGB.
> 
> On the i.MX8MM, the LCDIF is already the encoder. On Exynos, the series
> implements the encoder in the platform glue, but in the end the encoder can
> probably be moved to the DECON.

As you know, Display controller can transfer RGB video to various devices such as RGB panel, CPU panel, LVDS panel via LVDS bridge, MIPI panel via MIPI-DSI bus device, and so on like below,

Display Controller --> RGB panel or CPU panel.
Display Controller --> LVDS bridge --> LVDS panel.
Display Controller --> MIPI DSI bus device --> MIPI Panel.
...

Display controller drivers such as FIMD and DECON series in case of Exynos don't create an encoder driver-internally instead of it depends on Display pipeline configuration - what kind of Display panel is used.
In fact, if the Display pipeline uses RGB panel or CPU panel without Display bus device such as MIPI-DSI, then FIMD and DECON drivers create an encoder for it internally - just we separated the code to consider other type of panels.

On the I.MX8MM, could you share how to handle an encoder if some board has only MIPI-DSI panel, and in this case, where is an encoder for it created? I looked into I.MX8MM DRM driver but didn't find MIPI-DSI driver.
Seems that they support only parallel display, HDMI and LVDS panel.

Thanks,
Inki Dae

> 
>> Why do you want to convert such MIPI-DSI driver to bridge type of driver?
>> Seems not sensible. The reason would be just to share MIPI-DSI phy driver
>> for Exynos with i.MX8M Mini?
> 
> Yes, the reason is that the driver should be shared between Exynos and
> i.MX8MM. It is the same IP and I don't see a reason why we should introduce
> another driver for the same IP if the driver works for both SoCs.
> 
> Michael
> 



[Index of Archives]     [Linux SoC Development]     [Linux Rockchip Development]     [Linux for Synopsys ARC Processors]    
  • [Linux on Unisoc (RDA Micro) SoCs]     [Linux Actions SoC]     [Linux USB Development]     [Video for Linux]     [Linux Audio Users]     [Linux SCSI]     [Yosemite News]

  •   Powered by Linux