Hi,Tested it on peach-pit using linux-next with this patch applied. Panel still works and "dmesg | grep panel" returns panel_simple instead of panel_edp.
On Tue, Sep 26, 2023 at 7:01 AM Doug Anderson <dianders@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Hi,I dug out a exynos5250-snow out of my pile and booted postmarket OS on
On Tue, Sep 26, 2023 at 1:06 AM AngeloGioacchino Del Regno
<angelogioacchino.delregno@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Il 26/09/23 00:00, Douglas Anderson ha scritto:Sure, except that leaves us with ... a breakage. :-P
In commit 5f04e7ce392d ("drm/panel-edp: Split eDP panels out ofWe could avoid backport breakages by avoiding to backport this to any kernel
panel-simple") I moved a pile of panels out of panel-simple driver
into the newly created panel-edp driver. One of those panels, however,
shouldn't have been moved.
As is clear from commit e35e305eff0f ("drm/panel: simple: Add AUO
B116XW03 panel support"), AUX B116XW03 is an LVDS panel. It's used in
exynos5250-snow and exynos5420-peach-pit where it's clear that the
panel is hooked up with LVDS. Furthermore, searching for datasheets I
found one that makes it clear that this panel is LVDS.
As far as I can tell, I got confused because in commit 88d3457ceb82
("drm/panel: auo,b116xw03: fix flash backlight when power on") Jitao
Shi added "DRM_MODE_CONNECTOR_eDP". That seems wrong. Looking at the
downstream ChromeOS trees, it seems like some Mediatek boards are
using a panel that they call "auo,b116xw03" that's an eDP panel. The
best I can guess is that they actually have a different panel that has
similar timing. If so then the proper panel should be used or they
should switch to the generic "edp-panel" compatible.
When moving this back to panel-edp, I wasn't sure what to use for
.bus_flags and .bus_format and whether to add the extra "enable" delay
from commit 88d3457ceb82 ("drm/panel: auo,b116xw03: fix flash
backlight when power on"). I've added formats/flags/delays based on my
(inexpert) analysis of the datasheet. These are untested.
NOTE: if/when this is backported to stable, we might run into some
trouble. Specifically, before 474c162878ba ("arm64: dts: mt8183:
jacuzzi: Move panel under aux-bus") this panel was used by
"mt8183-kukui-jacuzzi", which assumed it was an eDP panel. I don't
know what to suggest for that other than someone making up a bogus
panel for jacuzzi that's just for the stable channel.
Fixes: 88d3457ceb82 ("drm/panel: auo,b116xw03: fix flash backlight when power on")
Fixes: 5f04e7ce392d ("drm/panel-edp: Split eDP panels out of panel-simple")
Signed-off-by: Douglas Anderson <dianders@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
---
I haven't had a snow or peach-pit hooked up for debugging / testing
for years. I presume that they must be broken and hope that this fixes
them.
that doesn't contain commit 474c162878ba ("arm64: dts: mt8183: jacuzzi: Move
panel under aux-bus")... because creating a dummy panel to get two wrongs
right is definitely not ok.
Although I haven't tested it, I have a hard time believing that
exynos5250-snow and exynos5420-peach-pit will work properly with the
panel defined as an eDP panel. That means that they will be broken. If
someone cared to get those fixed in a stable backport then we'd be
stuck deciding who to break. If you have any brilliant ideas then I'm
all ears.
...then again, I presume this has been broken since commit
88d3457ceb82 ("drm/panel: auo,b116xw03: fix flash backlight when power
on"). That was a little over 3 years ago. Maybe I'm wrong and somehow
things still limp along and sorta work even though the panel is
defined incorrectly?
it, which was shockingly easy/pleasant (kudos to those involved!). I
found that it was booting a kernel based on 6.1.24. Digging into
sysfs, I found that indeed it appeared to be using the "panel-edp"
driver, so I guess it is limping along with the wrong driver and wrong
flags...
It wasn't totally clear for me how to build a new kernel and deploy it
for postmarket OS, so I wasn't able to confirm this change. I've CCed
the person listed on the postmarket OS wiki though to see if they have
any insight.
In any case, it sounds as if things are working well enough on older
OSes, so maybe we can just skip trying to do any stable backport on
this. It still seems like we should land it, though, since the current
state of the world seems pretty broken. Anyone willing to give a
Reviewed-by or Acked-by tag?
-Doug
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