[PATCH v2 1/7] drm/exynos: add super device support

Tomasz Figa tomasz.figa at gmail.com
Mon Apr 7 07:24:39 PDT 2014


Hi Andrzej,

On 07.04.2014 16:18, Andrzej Hajda wrote:
> Hi Inki and Tomasz,
>
> On 04/06/2014 05:15 AM, Inki Dae wrote:
>
> (...)
>> The code creating the list of components to wait for
>> (exynos_drm_add_components()) doesn't seem to consider which sub-drivers are
>> actually enabled in kernel config.
>>
>> Are you sure?
>>
>> exynos_drm_add_components() will try to attach components *added to
>> component_lists. And these components will be added by only
>> corresponding sub drivers to the component_lists and
>> master->components.
>>
>> So in this case, if users disabled HDMI support then a commponent
>> object for HDMI sub driver doesn't exists in the component_lists and
>> master->components. This means that a component object for HDMI sub
>> driver *cannot be attached to master object*.
>>
>> As a result, component_bind_add() will ignor component_bind call for
>> HDMI sub driver so HDMI driver will not be bounded. The only
>> components added by sub drivers will be bound, component->ops->bind().
>>
>> For more understanding, it seems like you need to look into below codes,
>>
>> static int exynos_drm_add_components(...)
>> {
>>          ...
>>          for (i == 0;; i++) {
>>                  ...
>>                  node = of_parse_phandle(np, "ports", i);
>>                  ...
>>                  ret = component_master_add_child(m, compare_of, node);
>>                  ...
>>          }
>> }
>
> Hmm, In case HDMI driver is not present, HDMI device is not probed and
> HDMI component is not added, so component_master_add_child returns
> an error when it tries to add hdmi component and master is never brought
> up, am I correct?
>

This is my thought here as well.

>>
>>
>> And below codes,
>>
>> int component_master_add_child(...)
>> {
>>          list_for_each_entry(c, &component_list, node) {
>>                  if (c->master)
>>                          continue;
>>
>>                  if (compare(...)) {
>>                           component_attach_master(master, c);
>>                           ...
>>                  }
>>          }
>> }
>>
>> And below codes,
>>
>> static void component_attach_master(master, c)
>> {
>>          c->master = master;
>>          list_add_tail(&c->master_node, &master->comonents);
>> }
>>
>>
>> As you can see above, the only components added to component_list can
>> be attached to master. And the important thing is that components can
>> be added by sub drivers to the component_list.
>>
>> And below codes that actually tries to bind each sub drivers,
>>
>> int component_bind_add(...)
>> {
>>          ....
>>          list_for_each_entry(c, &master->components, master_node) {
>>                     ret = component_bind(c, master, data);
>>                     ...
>>          }
>>          ...
>> }
>>
>> The hdmi driver users disabled doesn't exist to master->components list.
>> How Exynos DRM cannot be initialized?
>>
>> Of course, there may be my missing point, but I think I see them
>> correctly. Anyway I will test them tomorrow.
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Inki Dae
>>
>>>>> register, which is completely wrong. Users should be able to select which
>>>>> drivers should be compiled into their kernels.
>>>>
>>>> So users are be able to select drivers they want to use, and will be
>>>> compiled correctly. So no, the only thing users can disable is each
>>>> sub driver, not core module.
>>>>
>>>>> 3) Such approach leads to complete integration of all Exynos DRM drivers,
>>>>> without possibility of loading some sub-drivers as modules. I know that
>>>>> current driver design doesn't support it either, but if this series is
>>>>
>>>> No, current drm driver *must also be built* as one integrated single
>>>> drm driver without super device approach.
>>>
>>> As I wrote, I know that current design before this patch isn't modular
>>> either, but this is not my concern here. See below.
>>>
>>>
>>>> So the super device approach
>>>> *has no any effect on existing design*,  and what the super device
>>>> approch tries to do is to resolve the probe order issue to sub drivers
>>>> *without some codes specific to Exynos drm*.
>>>
>>> My concern is that the supernode design is actually carving such broken
>>> non-modular design in stone. Remember that we are currently heading towards
>>> a fully multi-platform kernel where it is critical for such subsystems to be
>>> modular, because the same zImage is going to be running on completely
>>> different machines.
>>>
>>>
>>>>> claimed to improve things, it should really do so.
>>>>>
>>>>> 4) Exactly the same can be achieved without changing the DT bindings at
>>>>> all.
>>>>> In fact even without adding any new single property or node to DT. We
>>>>> discussed this with Andrzej and Marek today and came to a solution in
>>>>> which
>>>>> just by adding a little bit of code to Exynos DRM subdrivers, you could
>>>>> guarantee correct registration of Exynos DRM platform and also get rid of
>>>>> #ifdeffery in exynos_drm_drv.c. Andrzej will send an RFC after the
>>>>> weekend.
>>>>
>>>> I'm not sure but I had implemented below prototype codes for that, see
>>>> the below link,
>>>>
>>>> https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/daeinki/drm-exynos.git/commit/?h=exynos-bridge-test&id=2860ad02d736e300034ddeabce3da92614922b4e
>>>>
>>>> I guess what you said would be similler approach.
>>>
>>> Not exactly. The approach we found does mostly the same as componentized
>>> subsystem framework but without _any_ extra data in Device Tree. Just based
>>> on the list of subsystem sub-drivers that is already available to the master
>>> driver.
>
> I am not so sure which approach is better, anyway I hope to post RFC soon,
> as some material for discussion.
>

Great. Looking forward for it.

>>>
>>>
>>>> And I still think the use of the component framework would be the best
>>>> solution and *Linux generic way* for resolving the probe order issue
>>>> without any specific codes. So I'm not advocating the compoent
>>>> framework but I tend not to want to use specific codes.
>>>>
>>> I understand your concern. I also believe that generic frameworks should be
>>> reused wherever possible. However the componentized subsystem framework is a
>>> bit of overkill for this simple problem. Moreover, Device Tree is not a
>>> trash can where any data that can be thought of can be thrown as you go, but
>>> rather a hardware description that is supposed to be a stable ABI and needs
>>> to be well-thought. So, if something can be done in a way that doesn't
>>> require additional data, it's better to do it that way.
>>>
>>>
>>>>> 5) This series seems to break DPI display support with runtime PM
>>>>> enabled.
>>>>> Universal C210 just hangs on second FIMD probe, after first one fails
>>>>> with
>>>>> probe deferral. This needs more investigation, though.
>
> If we are talking about the same issue, it is a problem of panel
> initialization sequence on some
> panels. I will post fix for it.

That's possible.

I'm not saying that it's a problem of this series itself, but it has 
been introduced/triggered by this series. My intention was to point that 
such issues need to be investigated before pushing the patches upstream.

Best regards,
Tomasz



More information about the linux-arm-kernel mailing list