On 1/14/19 6:06 PM, Mark Brown wrote:
On Fri, Jan 11, 2019 at 03:49:08PM -0600, Pierre-Louis Bossart wrote:
Adding some traces I can see that the the platform name we use doesn't seem compatible with your logic. All the Intel boards used a constant platform name matching the PCI ID, see e.g. [1], which IIRC is used to bind components. Liam, do you recall in more details if this is really required?
That's telling me that either snd_soc_find_components() isn't finding components in the same way that we do when we bind things which isn't good or we're binding links without having fully matched everything on the link which also isn't good.
Without a system that shows the issue I can't 100% confirm but I think it's the former - I'm fairly sure that those machines are relying on the component name being initialized to fmt_single_name() in snd_soc_component_initialize(). That is supposed to wind up using dev_name() (which would be the PCI address for a PCI device) as the basis of the name. What I can't currently see is how exactly that gets bound (or how any of the other links avoid trouble for that matter). We could revert and push this into cards but I would rather be confident that we understand what's going on, I'm not comfortable that we aren't just pushing the breakage around rather than fixing it. Can someone with an x86 system take a look and confirm exactly what's going on with binding these cards please?
I am actually not sure at all why we need the platform_name to be set in Intel machine drivers.
I ran a 5mn experiment with SOF and we completely ignore what is set by machine drivers, it's overridden by the component name:
dev_info(card->dev, "info: override FE DAI link %s\n", card->dai_link[i].name);
/* override platform component */ if (snd_soc_init_platform(card, dai_link) < 0) { dev_err(card->dev, "init platform error"); continue; } pr_err("plb: platform_name was %s, now %s\n", dai_link->platform->name, component->name);
dai_link->platform->name = component->name;
existing machine driver (info is incorrect btw, should be BE DAI link)
[ 36.628466] bxt-pcm512x bxt-pcm512x: info: override FE DAI link SSP5-Codec [ 36.628469] plb: platform_name was sof-audio, now sof-audio [ 36.628772] bxt-pcm512x bxt-pcm512x: info: override FE DAI link iDisp1 [ 36.628773] plb: platform_name was 0000:00:0e.0, now sof-audio [ 36.629111] bxt-pcm512x bxt-pcm512x: info: override FE DAI link iDisp2 [ 36.629112] plb: platform_name was 0000:00:0e.0, now sof-audio [ 36.629422] bxt-pcm512x bxt-pcm512x: info: override FE DAI link iDisp3 [ 36.629423] plb: platform_name was 0000:00:0e.0, now sof-audio
machine driver with all platform_name commented out, no regression at all.
[ 15.839652] sof-audio sof-audio: created machine bxt-pcm512x [ 15.846990] bxt-pcm512x bxt-pcm512x: info: override FE DAI link SSP5-Codec [ 15.846995] plb: platform_name was snd-soc-dummy, now sof-audio [ 15.847325] bxt-pcm512x bxt-pcm512x: info: override FE DAI link iDisp1 [ 15.847326] plb: platform_name was snd-soc-dummy, now sof-audio [ 15.847657] bxt-pcm512x bxt-pcm512x: info: override FE DAI link iDisp2 [ 15.847658] plb: platform_name was snd-soc-dummy, now sof-audio [ 15.847974] bxt-pcm512x bxt-pcm512x: info: override FE DAI link iDisp3 [ 15.847974] plb: platform_name was snd-soc-dummy, now sof-audio
I checked for a bit longer with the Skylake driver, I also couldn't see a difference with or without the platform_name set.
diff --git a/sound/soc/soc-core.c b/sound/soc/soc-core.c index 0462b3ec977a..0fdf99ec17cd 100644 --- a/sound/soc/soc-core.c +++ b/sound/soc/soc-core.c @@ -918,7 +918,7 @@ static int soc_bind_dai_link(struct snd_soc_card *card, if (!snd_soc_is_matching_component(dai_link->platform, component)) continue; - + pr_err("plb: binding with component_name %s \n", component->name); snd_soc_rtdcom_add(rtd, component); }
@@ -1041,6 +1041,8 @@ static int snd_soc_init_platform(struct snd_soc_card *card, if (!platform) return -ENOMEM;
+ pr_err("plb: %s: plaform->name set to %s\n", __func__, + dai_link->platform_name); dai_link->platform = platform; platform->name = dai_link->platform_name; platform->of_node = dai_link->platform_of_node;
[ 1.345143] plb: snd_soc_init_platform: plaform->name set to 0000:00:1f.3 [ 1.345148] skl_hda_dsp_generic skl_hda_dsp_generic: ASoC: binding CNL Audio [ 1.345151] plb: binding with component_name 0000:00:1f.3 [ 1.345153] plb: snd_soc_init_platform: plaform->name set to 0000:00:1f.3 [ 1.345154] skl_hda_dsp_generic skl_hda_dsp_generic: ASoC: binding CNL HDMI1 [ 1.345155] plb: binding with component_name 0000:00:1f.3 [ 1.345157] plb: snd_soc_init_platform: plaform->name set to 0000:00:1f.3 [ 1.345158] skl_hda_dsp_generic skl_hda_dsp_generic: ASoC: binding CNL HDMI2 [ 1.345159] plb: binding with component_name 0000:00:1f.3 [ 1.345161] plb: snd_soc_init_platform: plaform->name set to 0000:00:1f.3 [ 1.345162] skl_hda_dsp_generic skl_hda_dsp_generic: ASoC: binding CNL HDMI3 [ 1.345163] plb: binding with component_name 0000:00:1f.3
[ 1.349607] plb: snd_soc_init_platform: plaform->name set to (null) [ 1.349613] skl_hda_dsp_generic skl_hda_dsp_generic: ASoC: binding CNL Audio [ 1.349617] plb: binding with component_name snd-soc-dummy [ 1.349619] plb: binding with component_name snd-soc-dummy [ 1.349621] plb: snd_soc_init_platform: plaform->name set to (null) [ 1.349623] skl_hda_dsp_generic skl_hda_dsp_generic: ASoC: binding CNL HDMI1 [ 1.349625] plb: binding with component_name snd-soc-dummy [ 1.349626] plb: binding with component_name snd-soc-dummy [ 1.349628] plb: snd_soc_init_platform: plaform->name set to (null) [ 1.349631] skl_hda_dsp_generic skl_hda_dsp_generic: ASoC: binding CNL HDMI2 [ 1.349632] plb: binding with component_name snd-soc-dummy [ 1.349633] plb: binding with component_name snd-soc-dummy [ 1.349635] plb: snd_soc_init_platform: plaform->name set to (null) [ 1.349638] skl_hda_dsp_generic skl_hda_dsp_generic: ASoC: binding CNL HDMI3 [ 1.349639] plb: binding with component_name snd-soc-dummy [ 1.349641] plb: binding with component_name snd-soc-dummy
Audio playback works in both cases.
The funny thing is that the list of components is right in /sys/kernel/debug/asoc.
My guess is that the required PCI component is already added when the platform_name is used in soc_bind_dai_link() and snd_soc_rtdcom_add() does nothing for the back-end, so the dailink platform_name has actually zero influence on the outcome.
Another way to look at it is that we already provide the dai_link->cpu_dai_name which is enough for soc_bind_dai_link() to find the relevant component and as a result the dailink->platform_name seems redundant/unnecessary. I am using the conditional here since this part of the code (Intel driver included) seems to work by accident rather than by design, and we'd need a set of additional tests before removing these hard-coded initializations.
Does this help?