Hi Rob,
On Sun, Jun 30, 2019 at 02:05:21PM -0700, Rob Clark wrote:
On Sun, Jun 30, 2019 at 1:47 PM Laurent Pinchart wrote:
On Sun, Jun 30, 2019 at 01:36:04PM -0700, Rob Clark wrote:
From: Rob Clark robdclark@chromium.org
Now that we can deal gracefully with bootloader (firmware) initialized display on aarch64 laptops[1], the next step is to deal with the fact that the same model of laptop can have one of multiple different panels. (For the yoga c630 that I have, I know of at least two possible panels, there might be a third.)
I have to ask the obvious question: why doesn't the boot loader just pass a correct DT to Linux ? There's no point in passing a list of panels that are not there, this seems quite a big hack to me. A proper boot loader should construct the DT based on hardware detection.
Hi Laurent,
Actually the bootloader on these devices is passing *no* dt (they boot ACPI, we are loading dtb from grub currently)
Ah, the broken promises of ACPI on ARM64. I wonder how long it will take before a public acknowledgement that it was a bad idea. Bad ideas happen and can be forgiven, but stubborness in claiming it was the right decision is another story.
(Not that you can be blamed for this of course :-))
I think normally a device built w/ dt in mind would populate /chosen/panel-id directly (rather than the way it is currently populated based on reading an efi variable prior to ExitBootServices). But that is considerably easier ask than having it re-write of_graph bindings. Either way, we aren't in control of the bootloader on these devices,
If you can't control the initial boot loader, then I see two options, none of which you will like I'm afraid.
- As you pass the DT to Linux from grub, there's your intermediate boot loader where you can construct a valid DT.
- If the ACPI cult needs to be venerated, then drivers should be converted to support ACPI without the need for DT.
A possible a middleground could be a platform driver (in drivers/firmware/efi/ ? in drivers/platform/ ?) that will patch the DT to instantiate the right panel based on the information retrieved from the boot loader. We will need something similar for the Intel IPU3 camera driver, as Intel decided to come up with two different ACPI "bindings", one for Windows and one for Chrome OS, leaving Windows machine impossible to handle from a kernel driver due to required information being hardcoded in Windows drivers shipped by Intel. This is thus an option that may (unfortunately) need to become more widespread for ACPI-based systems.
so it is a matter of coming up with something that works on actual hw that we don't like rather than idealized hw that we don't have ;-)
That doesn't however justify not going for the best solution we can achieve. What do you like best in the above ? :-)