On 14/02/18 16:46, Tim Harvey wrote:
On Wed, Feb 14, 2018 at 6:08 AM, Hans Verkuil hverkuil@xs4all.nl wrote:
Hi Tim,
On 12/02/18 23:27, Tim Harvey wrote:
On Fri, Feb 9, 2018 at 12:08 AM, Hans Verkuil hverkuil@xs4all.nl wrote:
Hi Tim,
We're almost there. Two more comments:
On 02/09/2018 07:32 AM, Tim Harvey wrote:
+static int +tda1997x_detect_std(struct tda1997x_state *state,
struct v4l2_dv_timings *timings)
+{
struct v4l2_subdev *sd = &state->sd;
u32 vper;
u16 hper;
u16 hsper;
int i;
/*
* Read the FMT registers
* REG_V_PER: Period of a frame (or two fields) in MCLK(27MHz) cycles
* REG_H_PER: Period of a line in MCLK(27MHz) cycles
* REG_HS_WIDTH: Period of horiz sync pulse in MCLK(27MHz) cycles
*/
vper = io_read24(sd, REG_V_PER) & MASK_VPER;
hper = io_read16(sd, REG_H_PER) & MASK_HPER;
hsper = io_read16(sd, REG_HS_WIDTH) & MASK_HSWIDTH;
if (!vper || !hper || !hsper)
return -ENOLINK;
See my comment for g_input_status below. This condition looks more like a ENOLCK.
Or perhaps it should be:
if (!vper && !hper && !hsper) return -ENOLINK; if (!vper || !hper || !hsper) return -ENOLCK;
I would recommend that you test a bit with no signal and a bad signal (perhaps one that uses a pixelclock that is too high for this device?).
I can't figure out how to produce a signal that can't be locked onto with what I have available.
Are you using a signal generator or just a laptop or something similar as the source?
Without a good signal generator it is tricky to test this. A very long HDMI cable would likely do it. But for 1080p60 you probably need 20 meters or more.
I'm using a Marshall V-SG4K-HDI (http://www.lcdracks.com/racks/DLW/V-SG4K-HDI-signal-generator.php). It does support 'user defined timings' (see http://www.lcdracks.com/racks/pdf-pages/instruction_sheets/V-SG4K-HDI_Manual... Timings Details Menu page) and it looks like the max pixel-clock is 300MHz so perhaps I can create a timing that can't be locked onto that way.
Yeah, that's what I usually do: try with a signal that's too high/too low.
The TDA19971 datasheet (http://tharvey/src/nxp/tda1997x/TDA19971-datasheet-rev3.pdf) says it supports:
- All HDTV formats up to 1920x1080p at 50/60 Hz with support for
reduced blanking
- 3D formats including all primary formats up to 1920x1080p at 30 Hz
Frame Packing and 1920x1080p at 60 Hz Side-by-Side and Top-and-Bottom
- PC formats up to UXGA (1600x1200p at 60 Hz) and WUXGA (1920x1200p at 60 Hz)
The max pixelclock is probably around 170 MHz. So something above that should do it.
<snip> >>> >>>> +static int >>>> +tda1997x_g_input_status(struct v4l2_subdev *sd, u32 *status) >>>> +{ >>>> + struct tda1997x_state *state = to_state(sd); >>>> + u32 vper; >>>> + u16 hper; >>>> + u16 hsper; >>>> + >>>> + mutex_lock(&state->lock); >>>> + v4l2_dbg(1, debug, sd, "inputs:%d/%d\n", >>>> + state->input_detect[0], state->input_detect[1]); >>>> + if (state->input_detect[0] || state->input_detect[1]) >>> >>> I'm confused. This device has two HDMI inputs? >>> >>> Does 'detecting input' equate to 'I see a signal and I am locked'? >>> I gather from the irq function that sets these values that it is closer >>> to 'I see a signal' and that 'I am locked' is something you would test >>> by looking at the vper/hper/hsper. >> >> The TDA19972 and/or TDA19973 has an A and B input but only a single >> output. I'm not entirely clear if/how to select between the two and I >> don't have proper documentation for the three chips. >> >> The TDA19971 which I have on my board only has 1 input which is >> reported as the 'A' input. I can likely nuke the stuff looking at the >> B input and/or put some qualifiers around it but I didn't want to >> remove code that was derived from some vendor code that might help >> support the other chips in the future. So I would rather like to leave >> the 'if A or B' stuff. > > OK. Can you add a comment somewhere in the driver about this? > > It sounds like it is similar to what the adv7604 has: several inputs but > only one is used for streaming. But the EDID is made available on both inputs. >
sure, I will comment about it. I believe that is the way the it works as well.
*status = 0;
else {
vper = io_read24(sd, REG_V_PER) & MASK_VPER;
hper = io_read16(sd, REG_H_PER) & MASK_HPER;
hsper = io_read16(sd, REG_HS_WIDTH) & MASK_HSWIDTH;
v4l2_dbg(1, debug, sd, "timings:%d/%d/%d\n", vper, hper, hsper);
if (!vper || !hper || !hsper)
*status |= V4L2_IN_ST_NO_SYNC;
else
*status |= V4L2_IN_ST_NO_SIGNAL;
So if we have valid vper, hper and hsper, then there is no signal? That doesn't make sense.
I'd expect to see something like this:
if (!input_detect[0] && !input_detect[1]) // no signal else if (!vper || !hper || !vsper) // no sync else // have signal and sync
sure... reads a bit cleaner. I can't guarantee that any of vper/hper/vsper will be 0 if a signal can't be locked onto without proper documentation or ability to generate such a signal. I do know if I yank the source I get non-zero random values and must rely on the input_detect logic.
Add a comment about this as well. It's good to be clear that this code is partially guesswork and partially based on testing.
ok
I'm not sure about the precise meaning of input_detect, so I might be wrong about that bit.
ya... me either. I'm trying my hardest to get this driver up to shape but the documentation I have is utter crap and I'm doing some guessing as well as to what all the registers are and what the meaning of the very obfuscated vendor code does.
would you object to detecting timings and displaying via v4l2_dbg when a resolution change is detected (just not 'using' those timings for anything?):
No, not at all. Also useful is to log the detected timings in the log_status call. It is *very* handy when testing.
I.e. if 'v4l2-ctl --log-status' gives you both the configured timings and the detected timings, then that makes it much easier to debug the driver.
ok
@@ -1384,6 +1386,7 @@ static void tda1997x_irq_sus(struct tda1997x_state *state, u8 *flags) v4l_err(state->client, "BAD SUS STATUS\n"); return; }
if (debug)
tda1997x_detect_std(state, NULL); /* notify user of change in resolution */ v4l2_subdev_notify_event(&state->sd, &tda1997x_ev_fmt); }
@@ -1140,16 +1140,18 @@ tda1997x_detect_std(struct tda1997x_state *state, /* hsmatch matches the hswidth */ hsmatch = ((hsper <= hsmax) && (hsper >= hsmin)) ? 1 : 0; if (hmatch && vmatch && hsmatch) {
*timings = v4l2_dv_timings_presets[i]; v4l2_print_dv_timings(sd->name, "Detected format: ",
timings, false);
&v4l2_dv_timings_presets[i],
false);
if (timings)
*timings = v4l2_dv_timings_presets[i]; return 0; } }
It seems to make sense to me to be seeing a kernel message when timings change and what they change to without having to query :)
Right.
I'll wait for v11 and I'll make a pull request for it.
hopefully I'll get to v11 later today.
Thanks!
Tim
Regards,
Hans