Hi,
On Friday 16 July 2010 13:24:05 ext Mark Brown wrote:
On Fri, Jul 16, 2010 at 01:17:08PM +0300, Peter Ujfalusi wrote:
There were 'holes' in the DB_RANGE and SCALE_ITEM mapping, which results failure, when user space requests dB value in these holes, since alsa-lib will fail to find a range, and can not round the requested dB to raw value.
Fixing the drivers I'm maintaining to correctly fill the tlv struct.
This seems like a bug in alsa-lib to be honest
I did considered to improve alsa-lib as well, but fixing the snd_tlv_convert_from_dB is a bit harder IMHO.
- it doesn't seem right to specify two values for the indexes at the edge of
each range,
Sort of. The tlv struct is a lookup table for the dB mapping. Query the raw value, and it will return the associated dB. If you ask for dB value, it will go through the table, and try to find the best matching raw value (with up or down rounding).
There are drivers, which using overlapping table: pci/es1938.c soc/codecs/wm8753.c and now the twl, and tpa driver,
The rest is using non overlapping mapping for dB ranges.
especially when one of those values is going to be inaccurate.
The dB values are matching at the important points (raw values).
Let's see... We have the following gain control: 0: -10dB 1: -5dB 2: 0dB 3: 2dB 4: 4dB
in non overlapping (A): static const unsigned int nonoverlapping_tlv[] = { TLV_DB_RANGE_HEAD(2), 0, 2, TLV_DB_SCALE_ITEM(-1000, 500, 0), 3, 4, TLV_DB_SCALE_ITEM(200, 200, 0), };
in overlapping (B): static const unsigned int overlapping_tlv[] = { TLV_DB_RANGE_HEAD(2), 0, 2, TLV_DB_SCALE_ITEM(-1000, 500, 0), 2, 4, TLV_DB_SCALE_ITEM(0, 200, 0), };
In both cases, if you query based on raw value, you get the same dB. In both cases, if you ask for -10, -5, 0, 2, or 4 dB, you get the same raw. In both case, if you ask for less than -10dB, than you get 0 as raw In both case, if you ask for bigger than 4dB, than it is not changing the volume (I think this is really a bug, it should pick 4).
But right now if you ask for dB in the range 0 .. 2 dB: A: will not find it, since none of the two SCALE range covers it. B: will find it and rounds it either up or down. the 0 - 2 dB range is in the second SCALE.
I do think that these patches are carrying correct fix...
Probably alsa-lib can be fixed somehow to look in between the ranges, when it is looking for certain dB value, but at first look it is not that straight forward.
Thanks, Péter