Hi,
On 5/12/2022 3:44 PM, Doug Anderson wrote:
Hi,
On Thu, May 12, 2022 at 3:34 PM Abhinav Kumar quic_abhinavk@quicinc.com wrote:
On 5/12/2022 3:16 PM, Dmitry Baryshkov wrote:
On 13/05/2022 01:00, Douglas Anderson wrote:
Commit 7d8e9a90509f ("drm/msm/dsi: move DSI host powerup to modeset time") caused sc7180 Chromebooks that use the parade-ps8640 bridge chip to fail to turn the display back on after it turns off.
Unfortunately, it doesn't look easy to fix the parade-ps8640 driver to handle the new power sequence. The Linux driver has almost nothing in it and most of the logic for this bridge chip is in black-box firmware that the bridge chip uses.
Also unfortunately, reverting the patch will break "tc358762".
The long term solution here is probably Dave Stevenson's series [1] that would give more flexibility. However, that is likely not a quick fix.
For the short term, we'll look at the compatible of the next bridge in the chain and go back to the old way for the Parade PS8640 bridge chip. If it's found that other bridge chips also need this workaround then we can add them to the list or consider inverting the condition.
[1] https://lore.kernel.org/r/cover.1646406653.git.dave.stevenson@raspberrypi.co...
Fixes: 7d8e9a90509f ("drm/msm/dsi: move DSI host powerup to modeset time") Suggested-by: Rob Clark robdclark@gmail.com Signed-off-by: Douglas Anderson dianders@chromium.org
Reviewed-by: Dmitry Baryshkov dmitry.baryshkov@linaro.org
Yes, I think this is a better solution than a full revert
Reviewed-by: Abhinav Kumar quic_abhinavk@quicinc.com
I am curious to know why this doesnt work for parade but will not hold this patch back for that. We are initializing and turning on DSI PHY now before turning on the bridge chip which is actually better as we are putting PHY in a good state.
So this should have been better, but somehow doesn't work.
I can't really explain it, but mostly because the Parade chip is just a big black box. There have been several times when an OEM using this bridge chip had one problem or another with getting the display to turn on, then the parade FAE would make some magic tweak to the firmware and it would be fixed. The current way that the Linux driver is working is with pretty much zero configuration so I think this chip bakes in a bunch of assumptions about the timings / signal coming from the MIPI DSI side. It doesn't surprise me that changing the order like this would confuse it.
In theory I believe the Parade chip can run in a less "automatic" mode where everything is configured and controlled by Linux. I'd really have preferred if we could have gotten that done, but it didn't end up happening. :(
-Doug
Again this is not to block this change (you already have my ack) but perhaps to help you debug this for future reference as we wont know what change can break parade even in the future if this happens again and the compatible check for parade will keep growing.
One suggestion I can give is can we read any status bits out of the parade chip in the power_on() method as its right after the new method to check why its not in good status or what error bits it throws and perhaps share those error bits with the FAE to see when this error can come to decode this black box a bit :)
From those bits, we can narrow down why this timing or sequence change is affecting them. Like some things could be somehow this is delaying the video pixels from transmitting, it expects PHY to be in some state etc and we can kind-of reverse engineer why this change broke it.
Like-wise, it is highly possible at the moment we have identified only parade not to work but if there is something wrong with this change we can atleast know what and address it.
Thanks
Abhinav