On 11.12.2019 15:28, Peter Rosin wrote: > EXTERNAL EMAIL: Do not click links or open attachments unless you know the > content is safe > > On 2019-12-11 12:45, claudiu.bez...@microchip.com wrote: >> >> >> On 10.12.2019 19:22, Peter Rosin wrote: >>> EXTERNAL EMAIL: Do not click links or open attachments unless you know the >>> content is safe >>> >>> On 2019-12-10 15:59, claudiu.bez...@microchip.com wrote: >>>> >>>> >>>> On 10.12.2019 16:11, Peter Rosin wrote: >>>>> On 2019-12-10 14:24, Claudiu Beznea wrote: >>>>>> This reverts commit f6f7ad3234613f6f7f27c25036aaf078de07e9b0. >>>>>> ("drm/atmel-hlcdc: allow selecting a higher pixel-clock than requested") >>>>>> because allowing selecting a higher pixel clock may overclock >>>>>> LCD devices, not all of them being capable of this. >>>>> >>>>> Without this patch, there are panels that are *severly* underclocked (on >>>>> the >>>>> magnitude of 40MHz instead of 65MHz or something like that, I don't >>>>> remember >>>>> the exact figures). >>>> >>>> With patch that switches by default to 2xsystem clock for pixel clock, if >>>> using 133MHz system clock (as you specified in the patch I proposed for >>>> revert here) that would go, without this patch at 53MHz if 65MHz is >>>> requested. Correct me if I'm wrong. >>> >>> It might have been 53MHz, whatever it was it was too low for things to work. >>> >>>>> And they are of course not capable of that. All panels >>>>> have *some* slack as to what frequencies are supported, and the patch was >>>>> written under the assumption that the preferred frequency of the panel was >>>>> requested, which should leave at least a *little* headroom. >>>> >>>> I see, but from my point of view, the upper layers should decide what >>>> frequency settings should be done on the LCD controller and not let this at >>>> the driver's latitude. >>> >>> Right, but the upper layers do not support negotiating a frequency from >>> ranges. At least the didn't when the patch was written, and implementing >>> *that* seemed like a huge undertaking. >>> >>>>> >>>>> So, I'm curious as to what panel regressed. Or rather, what pixel-clock >>>>> it needs >>>>> and what it gets with/without the patch? >>>> >>>> I have 2 use cases: >>>> 1/ system clock = 200MHz and requested pixel clock (mode_rate) ~71MHz. With >>>> the reverted patch the resulted computed pixel clock would be 80MHz. >>>> Previously it was at 66MHz >>> >>> I don't see how that's possible. >>> >>> [doing some calculation by hand] >>> >>> Arrgh. *blush* >>> >>> The code does not do what I intended for it to do. >>> Can you please try this instead of reverting? >>> >>> Cheers, >>> Peter >>> >>> From b3e86d55b8d107a5c07e98f879c67f67120c87a6 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 >>> From: Peter Rosin <p...@axentia.se> >>> Date: Tue, 10 Dec 2019 18:11:28 +0100 >>> Subject: [PATCH] drm/atmel-hlcdc: prefer a lower pixel-clock than requested >>> >>> The intention was to only select a higher pixel-clock rate than the >>> requested, if a slight overclocking would result in a rate significantly >>> closer to the requested rate than if the conservative lower pixel-clock >>> rate is selected. The fixed patch has the logic the other way around and >>> actually prefers the higher frequency. Fix that. >>> >>> Fixes: f6f7ad323461 ("drm/atmel-hlcdc: allow selecting a higher pixel-clock >>> than requested") >>> Reported-by: Claudiu Beznea <claudiu.bez...@microchip.com> >>> Signed-off-by: Peter Rosin <p...@axentia.se> >>> --- >>> drivers/gpu/drm/atmel-hlcdc/atmel_hlcdc_crtc.c | 4 ++-- >>> 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) >>> >>> diff --git a/drivers/gpu/drm/atmel-hlcdc/atmel_hlcdc_crtc.c >>> b/drivers/gpu/drm/atmel-hlcdc/atmel_hlcdc_crtc.c >>> index 9e34bce089d0..03691845d37a 100644 >>> --- a/drivers/gpu/drm/atmel-hlcdc/atmel_hlcdc_crtc.c >>> +++ b/drivers/gpu/drm/atmel-hlcdc/atmel_hlcdc_crtc.c >>> @@ -120,8 +120,8 @@ static void atmel_hlcdc_crtc_mode_set_nofb(struct >>> drm_crtc *c) >>> int div_low = prate / mode_rate; >>> >>> if (div_low >= 2 && >>> - ((prate / div_low - mode_rate) < >>> - 10 * (mode_rate - prate / div))) >>> + (10 * (prate / div_low - mode_rate) < >>> + (mode_rate - prate / div))) >> >> I tested it on my setup (I have only one of those specified above) and it >> is OK. Doing some math for the other setup it should also be OK. > > Glad to hear it, and thanks for testing/verifying! > >> As a whole, I'm OK with this at the moment (let's hope it will work for all >> use-cases) but still I am not OK with selecting here, in the driver, >> something that might work. > > The driver has to select *something*. If it can deliver the exact requested > frequency, fine. Otherwise? What should it do? Bail out? Why is 53MHz better > and more likely to produce a picture than 66MHz, when 65MHz is requested? > That's of course an impossible question for the driver to answer. > > So, if you are not ok with that, you need to implement something that uses > the min/max fields from the various fields inside struct display_timing > instead of only looking at the typ field. E.g. the panel_lvds driver calls > videomode_from_timings() and the result is a single possible mode with only > the typical timings, with no negotiation of the best option within the > given ranges with the other drivers involved with the pipe. I think the > panel-simple driver also makes this one-sided decision of only making use > of the typ field for each given timing range. Having dabbled a bit in what > the sound stack does to negotiate the sample rate, sample format and > channel count etc, I can only predict that retrofitting something like that > for video modes will be ... interesting. Which is probably why it's not > done at all, at least not in the general case. > > And yes, I agree, the current mechanics are less than ideal. But I have no > time to do anything about it. > >> Although I am not familiar with how other DRM >> drivers are handling this kind of scenarios. Maybe you and/or other DRM >> guys knows more about it. > > I don't know (and I mean it literally), but maybe these chips are special > as they typically end up with very small dividers and thus large frequency > steps? BTW, I do not consider myself a DRM guy, I have only tried to > fix that which did not work out for our needs... > >> Just as a notice, it may worth adding a print message saying what was >> frequency was requested and what frequency has been setup by driver. > > I have no problem with that. Hi Peter, I intend to prepare my v2 of this series. How would you like to proceed with the patch you provided? Are you OK if I add it to my v2 of this series or would you prefer to send it on your own? Thank you, Claudiu Beznea > > Cheers, > Peter > >> >>> /* >>> * At least 10 times better when using a higher >>> * frequency than requested, instead of a lower. >>> -- >>> 2.20.1 >>> > _______________________________________________ dri-devel mailing list dri-devel@lists.freedesktop.org https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/dri-devel