On Fri, 25 Oct 2024 at 15:03, Miaoqing Pan <quic_miaoqing@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > On 10/25/2024 6:20 PM, Dmitry Baryshkov wrote: > > On Fri, 25 Oct 2024 at 10:23, Miaoqing Pan <quic_miaoqing@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> > >> > >> > >> On 10/25/2024 2:01 PM, Dmitry Baryshkov wrote: > >>> On Fri, Oct 25, 2024 at 10:56:02AM +0800, Miaoqing Pan wrote: > >>>> > >>>> > >>>> On 10/25/2024 3:39 AM, Dmitry Baryshkov wrote: > >>>>> On Thu, Oct 24, 2024 at 08:25:14AM +0800, Miaoqing Pan wrote: > >>>>>> QCA6698AQ IP core is the same as WCN6855 hw2.1, but it has different RF, > >>>>>> IPA, thermal, RAM size and etc, so new firmware files used. This change > >>>>>> allows board DT files to override the subdir of the firmware directory > >>>>>> used to lookup the amss.bin and m3.bin. > >>>>> > >>>>> I have slight concerns regarding the _board_ DT files overriding the > >>>>> subdir. This opens a can of worms, allowing per-board firmware sets, > >>>>> which (as far as I understand) is far from being what driver maintainers > >>>>> would like to see. This was required for ath10k-snoc devices, since > >>>>> firmware for those platforms is signed by the vendor keys and it is > >>>>> limited to a particular SoC or SoC family. For ath11k-pci there is no > >>>>> such limitation. > >>>>> > >>>>> Would it be possible to use PCI subvendor / subdev to identify affected > >>>>> cards? PCI Revision? Any other way to identify the device? Please > >>>>> provide lspci -nnvv for the affected device kind. Is there a way to > >>>>> identify the RF part somehow? > >>>> > >>>> It's rather difficult, for WCN685x, there are multiple evolved subseries for > >>>> customized products. e.g. > >>>> > >>>> QCA6698AQ/hw2.1 > >>>> QCA2066/hw2.1 > >>>> WCN6855/hw2.0/hw2.1 > >>>> WCN6856/hw2.1 > >>>> > >>>> They have the same PCIe ID (17cb:1103), the commit 5dc9d1a55e95 ("wifi: > >>>> ath11k: add support for QCA2066") reads TCSR_SOC_HW_SUB_VER to enumerate all > >>>> QCA2066 cards, it lacks of flexibility, as the list will become longer and > >>>> longer. But it's the only choice for QCA2066, as it's customized for X86 > >>>> platform which without DT files. > >>> > >>> I guess, this is closer to Kalle's expectations: being able to detect > >>> the hardware instead of adding DT properties. > >>> > >>>> So for MSM those have DT file platforms, like SA8775P-RIDE/QCS8300-RIDE both > >>>> attached to QCA6698AQ, we can specify the correct firmware to > >>>> 'ath11k/WCN6855/hw2.1/qca6698aq', so it's not per-board firmware, it depends > >>>> on the type of the products(x86 windows, IoT products or AUTO). > >>> > >>> No-no-no and no. The firmware used must not be specific to the product > >>> type. This is what everybody here is trying to avoid. Please try > >>> following the QCA2066 approach instead. And note that it could use new > >>> TLD as it perfectly shows itself as a different hardware kind. > >> > >> Actually, TCSR_SOC_HW_SUB_VER is not SOC register, it's a TLMM hw > >> revision register in BAR0 space, it's hard to maintain the list. > > > > How is it so? > > I think QCA2066 approach is just a workaround. Different batches of chip > manufacture has different value in TCSR_SOC_HW_SUB_VER. Ok. So, subvendor / subdevice? > > > > > And if it is hard, can we please get to the _normal_ way how vendors > > handle PCI hardware differences: the subvendor and subdevice? This is > > a usual way to describe that the PCIe device is the same, but the > > analog / tuner / RF / etc parts are different. > > > > > >> We're going to have another problem to enable NFA765 m.2 card for IoT > >> platforms, which has different feature sets with X86 platform, so also > >> new firmware should be used. In this case, QCA2066 approach not works. > >> Seems DT approach is only choice. > >> > >> Could you advice ? > > > > Hmm, The first question is _why_ does it have different feature sets? > > What exactly is different? > > Yeah, for IoT device will support SAP/TWT/UL-OFDMA/BSS color and etc new > features, and the existing x86 firmware mainly for STA mode. > > What if the user plugs a normal (laptop) > > M.2 card into their IoT device? > > If there is no DT file to specify the firmware, IoT device will load the > default firmware, it will affect SAP and WiFi-6 advanced features. Can we get all those nice features into x86 world instead? > > > > > >>> > >>>> 0000:01:00.0 Network controller [0280]: Qualcomm QCNFA765 Wireless Network > >>>> Adapter [17cb:1103] (rev 01) > >>>> Subsystem: Qualcomm QCNFA765 Wireless Network Adapter [17cb:0108] > >>>> Device tree node: /sys/firmware/devicetree/base/pci@1c00000/pcie@0/wifi@0 > >>>> > >>>> > >>>>> > >>>>> Could you possibly clarify, how this situation is handled in Windows > >>>>> world? > >>>> > >>>> X86 platforms use standard m.2 PCIe card, and it will only use the default > >>>> main firmware files, as they without DT files. > >>> > >>> So QCA6698AQ cannot appear on an M.2 PCIe card? > >> > >> No, but no m.2 PCIe card so far. It depends on power sequencing module > >> to do power up. > > > > You are describing software (power sequencing module), while I was > > talking about the hardware. Nothing prevents OEM from adding fixed > > regulators to drive necessary voltages from the PCIe slot. > > > -- With best wishes Dmitry