On 5/6/22 10:28, Cezary Rojewski wrote:
On 2022-05-06 4:56 PM, Pierre-Louis Bossart wrote:
On 5/6/22 08:39, Cezary Rojewski wrote:
...
Sorry for the late response, did not realize there is an unanswered comment here.
So, the rough list goes as:
- hdac_hda.c hardcodes codec capabilities rather than aligning with what
sound/pci/hda/ code does
- merges HDMI (i.e. Intel i915 audio component) and HDA DAIs together
whereas these are two separate devices
- because of above, implements custom search/matching mechanism for
PCM/DAI
- cont. because of above, its header hosts private data struct,
unnecessary complication
- follows HDA_DEV_ASOC convention rather than HDA_DEV_LEGACY causing
misalignments between sound/pci/hda and sound/soc/ behaviour
- has basic PM runtime support and does not survive scenarios where
resume/suspend + denylist + rmmod/modprobe are mixed together or invoked in unordered fashion between this module and several others in the audio stack
My suggestion is different: have all HD-Audio ASoC users switch to this implementation when possible and remove the existing code along with skylake-driver.
I am not against change and will agree that HDaudio support is far from perfect, but it's been released for multiple generations from dozens of OEMs and mostly works. All the issues reported to us are related to codec configurations that also don't work with the legacy HDaudio driver, DMIC configurations, CSME authentication or system hangs that have not been root-caused [1]. HDaudio/ASoC interfaces are not on our radar as problematic.
That's why aligning with sound/pci/hda behavior is better for both, ALSA and ASoC users -> one place to fix the problems, both clients happy.
Disrupting basic HDaudio support to do things better has to be handled with extreme caution and a ton of testing involving distro maintainers and community members, so we are talking about an opt-in transition, not an immediate switch. We've done a similar transition in the past to stop using a dedicated hdac_hdmi.c codec, see all references to the 'use_common_hdmi' parameter in the SOF code. That transition seems to go exactly against your second point above on HDMI and HDA being different devices, so this could be an interesting debate.
Changes to the HDAudio/ASoC support would need to be handled with a separate patchset anyways, and the SOF side changes done after we are finished with the IPC4 and MeteorLake upstreaming. No one in our team has any bandwidth to help with reviews or tests on this topic at the moment.
Agree. This won't be forced on anyone and that's why separate implementation needed to be provided. There is too much to cover if we were to refactor hdac_hda.c
I will also re-state that the removal of the skylake driver can only happen after a long period of deprecation, when firmware and topologies have been picked by distributions and all users are known to have switched, so it's very likely that any alignment between "all HD-Audio ASoC users" mentioned above does include the Skylake driver, doesn't it?
Nah, I don't believe we need to be saving skylake-driver here. By "all HD-Audio ASoC users" I meant sof-driver as it isn't going anywhere - what cannot be said about the skylake-driver :)
So to circle back: is there anything preventing the use of the existing hdac_hda.c codec in this "ASoC: Intel: avs: Machine boards and HDA codec support" series and can the HDaudio codec change be done "later" in a more organized way?
Yeah, all the pm scenarios will fail when paired with the avs-driver. The expectations are different. We'd have to fix probe() and remove() (and related) sequences for the hdac_hda.c, and given that its users did not notice prompts further problems with the refactor. This is very similar to the skylake-driver vs avs-driver case. We could have applied ~300 patches we had internally that prepare skylake-driver to be re-modeled and then apply patchsets which look more or less like the avs-driver series instead of providing a parallel driver.
But the reality shows that such approach applies too much pressure on the reviewers and leaves no fallback option for the end users if anything fails along the way.
I will stop commenting here to let others chime in, I don't have the background to provide useful technical feedback on this complicated HDaudio/ASoC interface.
I am however concerned about the lack of long-term plans and confusion coming having 3 different ways of dealing with HDaudio codecs on the same hardware platform (legacy, ASoC/SOF-Skylake, ASoC-AVS). 2 was already bad, I don't see how 3 is better?