On Wed, 29 Apr 2020 17:27:17 +0200, Nicholas Johnson wrote:
On Wed, Apr 29, 2020 at 09:37:41AM +0200, Takashi Iwai wrote:
On Tue, 28 Apr 2020 16:48:45 +0200, Nicholas Johnson wrote:
> > FWIW, I have a fiji board in a desktop system and it worked fine when > this code was enabled.
Is the new DC code used for Fiji boards? IIRC, the audio component binding from amdgpu is enabled only for DC, and without the audio component binding the runtime PM won't be linked up, hence you can't power up GPU from the audio side access automatically.
Yes, DC is enabled by default for all cards with runtime pm enabled.
OK, thanks, I found that amdgpu got bound via component in the dmesg output, too:
[ 21.294927] snd_hda_intel 0000:08:00.1: bound 0000:08:00.0 (ops amdgpu_dm_audio_component_bind_ops [amdgpu])
This is the place soon after amdgpu driver gets initialized. Then we see later another initialization phase:
[ 26.904127] rfkill: input handler enabled [ 37.264152] [drm] PCIE GART of 1024M enabled (table at 0x000000F400000000).
here shows 10 seconds between them. Then, it complained something:
[ 37.363287] [drm] UVD initialized successfully. [ 37.473340] [drm] VCE initialized successfully. [ 37.477942] amdgpu 0000:08:00.0: [drm] Cannot find any crtc or sizes
The above would be me hitting WindowsKey+P to change screens, but with no DisplayPort attached to Fiji, hence it unable to find crtc.
... and go further, and hitting HD-audio error:
That would be me having attached the DisplayPort and done WindowsKey+P again.
[ 38.936624] [drm] fb mappable at 0x4B0696000 [ 38.936626] [drm] vram apper at 0x4B0000000 [ 38.936626] [drm] size 33177600 [ 38.936627] [drm] fb depth is 24 [ 38.936627] [drm] pitch is 15360 [ 38.936673] amdgpu 0000:08:00.0: fb1: amdgpudrmfb frame buffer device [ 40.092223] snd_hda_intel 0000:08:00.1: azx_get_response timeout, switching to polling mode: last cmd=0x00170500
After this point, HD-audio communication was screwed up.
This lastcmd in the above message is AC_SET_POWER_STATE verb for the root node to D0, so the very first command to power up the codec. The rest commands are also about the power up of each node, so the whole error indicate that the power up at runtime resume failed.
So, this looks to me as if the device gets runtime-resumed at the bad moment?
It does. However, this is not going to be easy to pin down.
I moved from Arch to Ubuntu, and it behaves differently. I cannot trigger the bug in Ubuntu. Plus, it puts the GPUs asleep, even if attached at boot, unlike Arch. I will continue to try to trigger it. But even if this is a problem with the Linux distribution, it should not be able to trigger a kernel mode bug, so we should persist with finding it.
Sure, that's a bug to be fixed.
This made me thinking what happens if we load the HD-audio driver very late. Could you try to blacklist snd-hda-intel module, then load it manually after plugging the DP monitor and activating it?
Attached dmesg-blacklist-*
It is interesting. If I enable the monitor with the module unloaded, and then load the module, I cannot trigger the bug, even if disabling the monitor, waiting for GPU to sleep, and then waking again.
Even if I wake monitor up, put to sleep again, and then insmod when sleeping, it does not cause bug when waking again.
Thanks, that's a good news, at least.
Is there anything special about the first time the monitor is used?
My wild guess is that the audio controller got powered up too early before the graphics side became ready. Basically HD-audio PCI controller for HDMI audio is a shadow component of the graphics chip, so it can't work before GPU is set up properly.
Also, could you track who called the problematic power-up sequence, e.g. by adding WARN_ON_ONCE()?
Attached dmesg-warning
This showed that it's triggered by the runtime PM resume from opening the PCM device. That said, a desktop application (most likely PulseAudio) tried to open the stream because it detected something.
This implies a doubt that PA received a false-positive notification about the HDMI audio connection, so...
Last but not least, please check /proc/asound/card1/eld#* files (there are both card0 and card1 or such that contain eld#* files, and one is for i915 and another for amdgpu) before and after plugging. This shows whether the audio connection was recognized or not.
Before plugging: card not yet attached, so the sysfs for that card not yet created
After plugging (and insmod snd-hda-intel.ko): codec#0 codec#2 eld#2.0 eld#2.1 eld#2.2 eld#2.3 eld#2.4 eld#2.5 eld#2.6 eld#2.7 eld#2.8 id pcm0c pcm0p pcm10p pcm3p pcm7p pcm8p pcm9p
... here comes the question again. What's interesting here is the contents of eld#* proc files. If, at the moment the problem appears, any of eld#* files shows the state as connected wrongly, it may confuse the user-space to trigger the opening of PCM stream.
Note that you should have multiple /proc/asound/card[0-9]* directories and one of them is for i915 and another for amdgpu. The interesting information is only about the latter.
thanks,
Takashi