On Wed, 2019-07-31 at 23:26 +0200, Karol Herbst wrote: > On Wed, Jul 31, 2019 at 11:18 PM Lukas Wunner <lukas@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Wed, Jul 31, 2019 at 04:19:27PM -0400, Lyude Paul wrote: > > > While this fixes audio for a number of users, this commit has the > > > sideaffect of breaking the BIOS workaround that's required to make the > > > GPU on the nvidia P50 work, by causing the GPU's PCI device function to > > > stop working after it's been set to multifunction mode. > > > > This is missing a reference to the commit introducing the P50 quirk, > > which is e0547c81bfcf ("PCI: Reset Lenovo ThinkPad P50 nvgpu at boot > > if necessary"). > > > > Please describe in more detail how the GPU's PCI function stops working. > > Does it respond with "all ones" when accessing MMIO? > > Do MMIO accesses cause the system to hang? > > > > Could you provide lspci -vvxx output for the GPU and its associated > > HDA controller with and without b516ea586d71? > > > > Does this machine have external display connectors via which audio > > can be streamed? > > > > > > > I'm not really holding my breath on this patch to being accepted: > > > there's a good chance there's a better solution for this (and I'm going > > > to continue investigating for one after sending this patch), this is > > > more just to start a conversation on what the proper way to fix this is. > > > > Posting as an RFC might have been more appropriate then. > > > > no, a revert is actually appropriate. If a commit fixes something, > but breaks something else, it gets either reverted or fixed. If nobody > fixes it, then revert it is. To answer Lukas's question btw: most of the details on how things break are back in the original commit (sorry for forgetting the reference!), there's a _lot_ of explanation there that I'd rather not retype, so just refer back to the commit and bug @ https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=75985 Additionally, there was some extra discussion providing some more detail in the email thread that I had with Bjorn: https://lkml.org/lkml/2019/2/12/1172 As for how this commit breaks the workaround: it seems that when we enable the HDA controller and put the GPU into multifunction mode, the function-level reset stops working and thus we can't reset the GPU anymore. Currently I can see a couple of solutions (again, please feel free to suggest more!): * Just revert the commit. We should do this if necessary, but of course I'd much rather try finding a fix first * Disable the HDA controller temporarily when a GPU reset is neded in quirk_reset_lenovo_thinkpad_p50_nvgpu(), then call the function level reset, then re-enable the HDA controller. I have no idea if this actually works yet, but I'm about to try this on my system * Get quirk_reset_lenovo_thinkpad_p50_nvgpu() to run before quirk_nvidia_hda(). This would probably be fine, but we would need to rework some stuff in the PCI subsystem (maybe it already has a way to do this? haven't checked yet) so that we could perform an flr probe early enough to perform the quirk > > > > So, I'm kind of confused about why exactly this was implemented as an > > > early boot quirk in the first place. If we're seeing the GPU's PCI > > > device, we already know the GPU is there. Shouldn't we be able to check > > > for the existence of the HDA device once we probe the GPU in nouveau? > > > > I think a motivation to keep this generic was to make it work with > > other drivers besides nouveau, specifically Nvidia's proprietary driver. > > nouveau might not even be enabled. > > > > > > > that still doesn't explain why this was implemented as an early quirk > > > > This isn't an early quirk. Those live in arch/x86/kernel/early-quirks.c. > > This is just a PCI quirk executed on device enumeration and on resume. > > Devices aren't necessarily enumerated only on boot, e.g. think > > Thunderbolt. > > > > Thanks, > > > > Lukas -- Cheers, Lyude Paul _______________________________________________ Nouveau mailing list Nouveau@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/nouveau