At Mon, 17 Sep 2012 12:15:23 +0200, David Henningsson wrote:
On 09/10/2012 03:01 PM, Takashi Iwai wrote:
Hi David,
as we discussed at Plumbers, I tried some hack to create/delete HDMI/DP PCM stream per hotplug/unplug. Test patches are found in sound-unstable git tree topic/hdmi-dynamic-pcm branch git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tiwai/sound-unstable.git
The patches are all small and easy, but it's still in a pretty rough cut. It won't handle some cases, e.g. unplug during suspend, or such, I'm afraid. After all, it's just a test.
With these patches, the PCM device appears and disappears properly upon HDMI/DP hotplug/unplug on my system. On mine, it appears as /dev/snd/pcmC0D8 as it's an Intel on-board. So far, so good.
Now the problem is that PA gets confused when this happens. It can switch to HDMI/DP, but then the analog output disappears from PA's profile. You cannot switch back to analog output after that, even after you unplug HDMI/DP cable.
Or, it might be my PA version... I'll check newer one. But it'd be good if you also check in your side.
Hmm.
As you probably know, PA does extensively test opening device strings at startup, and then never again. As such, I can understand that PA gets confused if you start adding and removing PCM devices, because that changes whether and how different device strings can be opened.
Looking forward, with HDMI, it's a reality that this will happen. And therefore we need to deal with it in PA somehow, even if this is non-trivial. So the first question would be - what notification mechanism should we have to trigger "reprobing"? Are we recommended to use the jack detection kcontrol API, or is there something else that tells us that suddenly "hdmi:1,2" will actually be worth trying again?
The kcontrol API is already implemented, so it's good to support for it.
If we do check the dynamic PCM probing for HDMI, I'd propose for adding a new PCM class SNDRV_PCM_CLASS_HDMI or such, and set this class in patch_hdmi.c. Then PA can check the sysfs entry and decide whether to reprobe the HDMI entry.
Takashi