On Mon, Feb 29, 2016 at 11:12 AM, Daniel Vetter <daniel@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Wed, Feb 24, 2016 at 08:03:04AM +0530, Thulasimani, Sivakumar wrote: >> >> >> On 2/24/2016 3:41 AM, Lyude wrote: >> >As it turns out, resuming DP MST is racey since we don't make sure MST >> >is ready before we start modesetting, it just usually happens to be >> >ready in time. This isn't the case on all systems, particularly a >> >ThinkPad T560 with displays connected through the dock. On these >> >systems, resuming the laptop while connected to the dock usually results >> >in blank monitors. Making sure MST is ready before doing any kind of >> >modesetting fixes this issue. >> basic question since i haven't worked on MST much. MST should work like any >> other digital panel on resume. i.e detect followed by modeset. in the >> modified >> commit mentioned below is it failing to detect the panel or failing at the >> modeset ? >> if we are depending on the intel_display_resume, how about moving the >> intel_dp_mst_resume just above intel_display_resume? >> >> >> Generic question to others in mail list on i915_drm_resume >> we are doing a modeset and then doing the detect/hpd init. >> shouldn't this be the other way round ? almost all displays >> will pass a modeset even if display is not connected so we >> are spending time on modeset even for displays that were >> removed during the suspend state. if this is to simply >> drm_state being saved and restored, > > We must restore anyway, we're not really allowed to shut down a display > without userspace's consent. DP mst breaks this, and it's not fun really. well, that isn't completely true.. I mean, if the user unplugs (for example) an hdmi monitor, it isn't with userspace's consent.. I wonder if we could just have flag per connector, ie. connector->no_auto_resume and just automatically send unplug events for those to userspace (followed shortly by a plug event if it is still connected and the normal hpd mechanism kicks in? I mean, for all we know, the user unplugged the DP monitor/hub/etc and plugged in a different one while we were suspended.. BR, -R > So for hotunplug the flow should always be: > 1. kernel notices something has changed in the output config. > 2. kernel sends out uevent > 3. userspace figures out what changed, and what needs to be done > 4. userspace asks the kernel to change display configuration through > setCrtc and Atomic ioctl calls. > > Irrespective of hotunplug handling, the kernel also _must_ restore the > entire display configuration before userspace resumes. We can do that > asynchronously (and there's plans for that), but even then we must stall > userspace on the first KMS ioclt to keep up the illusion that a system s/r > is transparent. > > In short, even if we do hpd processing before resuming the display, > nothing will be faster - we must wait for userspace to make up its mind, > and that can only happen once we've restored the display config. > > And again, mst is kinda breaking this, since and mst unplug results in a > force-disable. Which can upset userspace and in general results in the > need for lots of fragile error handling all over. > >> >We originally changed the resume order in >> > >> > commit e7d6f7d70829 ("drm/i915: resume MST after reading back hw state") >> > >> >to fix a ton of WARN_ON's after resume, but this doesn't seem to be an >> >issue now anyhow. >> > >> >CC: stable@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx >> >Signed-off-by: Lyude <cpaul@xxxxxxxxxx> > > Wrt the patch itself: I think only in 4.6 we've actually fixed up all > these mst WARN_ON. Cc: stable seems extremely risky on this one. Also, the > modeset state readout for mst is still not entirely correct (it still > relies on software state), so I'm not sure we've actually managed to shut > up all the WARNINGs. Iirc the way to repro them is to hot-unplug something > while suspended. In short the get_hw_state functions for mst should not > rely on any mst software state, but instead just look at hw registers and > dp aux registers to figure out what's going on. But not sure whether this > will result on WARNINGs on resume, since generally the bios doesn't enable > anything in that case. > > Furthermore MST still does a force-modeset when processing a hotunplug. > Doing that before we've resumed the display is likely a very bad idea. > What we need to fix that part is to separate the dp mst connector > hotplug/unplugging from actually updating the modeset change. This needs > reference-counting on drm_connector (so that we can lazily free > drm_connector structs after hot-unplug), and is a major change. > > In short: I'm scared about this patch ;-) > > Thanks, Daniel > > >> >--- >> > drivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_drv.c | 10 ++++++++-- >> > 1 file changed, 8 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) >> > >> >diff --git a/drivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_drv.c b/drivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_drv.c >> >index f357058..4dcf3dd 100644 >> >--- a/drivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_drv.c >> >+++ b/drivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_drv.c >> >@@ -733,6 +733,14 @@ static int i915_drm_resume(struct drm_device *dev) >> > intel_opregion_setup(dev); >> > intel_init_pch_refclk(dev); >> >+ >> >+ /* >> >+ * We need to make sure that we resume MST before doing anything >> >+ * display related, otherwise we risk trying to bring up a display on >> >+ * MST before the hub is actually ready >> >+ */ >> >+ intel_dp_mst_resume(dev); >> >+ >> This does not look proper. if the CD clock is turned off during suspend >> our dpcd read itself might fail till we enable CD Clock. >> >> regards, >> Sivakumar >> > drm_mode_config_reset(dev); >> > /* >> >@@ -765,8 +773,6 @@ static int i915_drm_resume(struct drm_device *dev) >> > intel_display_resume(dev); >> > drm_modeset_unlock_all(dev); >> >- intel_dp_mst_resume(dev); >> >- >> > /* >> > * ... but also need to make sure that hotplug processing >> > * doesn't cause havoc. Like in the driver load code we don't >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Intel-gfx mailing list >> Intel-gfx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx >> https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/intel-gfx > > -- > Daniel Vetter > Software Engineer, Intel Corporation > http://blog.ffwll.ch > _______________________________________________ > Intel-gfx mailing list > Intel-gfx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/intel-gfx -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe stable" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html