[PATCH v2 7/8] dt-bindings: display: allwinner: Split H616 DE33 layer reg space

Krzysztof Kozlowski krzk at kernel.org
Mon Jun 15 20:51:32 PDT 2026


On 15/06/2026 17:47, Jernej Škrabec wrote:
> Dne ponedeljek, 15. junij 2026 ob 06:28:54 Srednjeevropski poletni čas je Krzysztof Kozlowski napisal(a):
>> On 14/06/2026 16:08, Jernej Škrabec wrote:
>>> Dne ponedeljek, 25. maj 2026 ob 14:10:38 Srednjeevropski poletni čas je Krzysztof Kozlowski napisal(a):
>>>> On 24/05/2026 23:33, Chen-Yu Tsai wrote:
>>>>> Hi,
>>>>>
>>>>> (resent from new email)
>>>>>
>>>>> On Thu, May 14, 2026 at 2:04 PM Krzysztof Kozlowski <krzk at kernel.org> wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> On Sat, May 09, 2026 at 09:00:14PM +0200, Jernej Skrabec wrote:
>>>>>>> From: Jernej Skrabec <jernej.skrabec at gmail.com>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> As it turns out, current H616 DE33 binding was written based on
>>>>>>> incomplete understanding of DE33 design. Namely, planes are shared
>>>>>>> resource and not tied to specific mixer, which was the case for previous
>>>>>>> generations of Display Engine (DE3 and earlier).
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> This means that current DE33 binding doesn't properly reflect HW and
>>>>>>> using it would mean that second mixer (used for second display output)
>>>>>>> can't be supported.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Remove layer register space, which will be represented with additional
>>>>>>> node, and replace it with phandle, which will point to that new, shared
>>>>>>> node. That way, all mixers can share same layers.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> There is no user of this binding yet, so changes can be made safely,
>>>>>>> without breaking any backward compatibility.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> There is user. git grep gives me:
>>>>>> drivers/gpu/drm/sun4i/sun8i_mixer.c
>>>>>>
>>>>>> which means this is a released ABI. As I understood, the old code was
>>>>>
>>>>> We held off on merging the DT changes so that we could rework this.
>>>>> I can't find the actual request though. It was probably over IRC.
>>>>>
>>>>>> working fine but just did not support all use cases. Why this cannot be
>>>>>> kept backwards compatible?
>>>>>
>>>>> AFAIK the "planes" block is shared between two display mixers. As the
>>>>> commit message explains, this prevents using the second mixer, since
>>>>> only one of them can claim and map the register space. And on the H700
>>>>> (which is the same die as the H616 discussed here but with more exposed
>>>>> interfaces), there could actually be a use case for the second mixer.
>>>>
>>>> It explains why you want to make the changes but not why you cannot keep
>>>> it backwards compatible.
>>>
>>> I guess it can be backward compatible, but I don't think it makes sense.
>>> Yes, original driver implemented original DT bindings, but there is no node
>>> which uses that binding. If there is no user of that, why would driver
>>
>> Did you check all out of tree users of the ABI? All vendor kernels,
>> forks and all of them for which the ABI was made for?
> 
> Since when do we care about out of tree users? I understand that drivers

Since always? That is the meaning of ABI. Otherwise there is no point to
discuss ABI at all. Why would it exist if you had all DTS inside kernel
always matching the code?


> must support old device tree files. Once they work, compatibility must
> be carried forward. But that's not the case here.
> 
> In any case, vendor kernels have completely different DT structure. This
> was developed independently from them. Take a look at [1] how BSP DT looks
> like, specifically Display Engine node.
> 
> Of course there are some distros which grab WIP patches from mailing lists
> soon after they are available. For example, I know that Armbian carried old
> WIP patches which used old ABI. However, such distros generally don't care
> about exact solution and ditch patches as soon as proper solution is merged
> upstream or even when better WIP patches come around. DT files in such
> distros get updated alongside kernel, they are not hidden in firmware. 
> 

I am not talking about BSP. I am talking about out of tree users for
which we defined the ABI and called it that way.


Best regards,
Krzysztof



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