On 22-06-2023 17:37, Mark Brown wrote:
On Thu, Jun 22, 2023 at 05:04:10PM +0530, Sameer Pujar wrote:
From: Sheetal sheetal@nvidia.com
Byte mask for channel-1 of stream-1 is not getting enabled and this causes failures during AMX use cases. The enable bit is not set during put() callback of byte map mixer control.
This happens because the byte map value 0 matches the initial state of byte map array and put() callback returns without doing anything.
Fix the put() callback by actually looking at the byte mask array to identify if any change is needed and update the fields accordingly.
I'm not quite sure I follow the logic here - I'd have expected this to mean that there's a bootstrapping issue and that we should be doing some more initialisation during startup such that the existing code which checks if there is a change will be doing the right thing?
The issue can happen in subsequent cycles as well if once the user disables the byte map by putting 256. It happens because of following reason where 256 value is reset to 0 since the byte map array is tightly packed and it can't store 256 value.
static int tegra210_amx_put_byte_map() { ... if (value >= 0 && value <= 255) mask_val |= (1 << (reg % 32)); else mask_val &= ~(1 << (reg % 32));
if (mask_val == amx->byte_mask[reg / 32]) return 0;
/* Update byte map and slot */ ==> bytes_map[reg] = value % 256; amx->byte_mask[reg / 32] = mask_val;
return 1; }
Also update get() callback to return 256 if the byte map is disabled.
This will be a user visible change. It's not clear to me why it's needed - it seems like it's a hack to push users to do an update in the case where they want to use channel 1 stream 1?
Though it looks like 256 value is forced, but actually the user sees whatever value is set before. The 256 value storage is linked to byte mask value.
I must admit that this is not easily readable. If you suggest to simplify this, I can check if storage space increase for byte map value can make it more readable. Thanks for your feedback.