On 7/26/19 6:07 AM, Cezary Rojewski wrote:
On 2019-07-26 01:40, Pierre-Louis Bossart wrote:
This algorithm computes bus parameters like clock frequency, frame shape and port transport parameters based on active stream(s) running on the bus.
This implementation is optimal for Intel platforms. Developers can also implement their own .compute_params() callback for specific resource management algorithm.
Credits: this patch is based on an earlier internal contribution by Vinod Koul, Sanyog Kale, Shreyas Nc and Hardik Shah. All hard-coded values were removed from the initial contribution to use BIOS information instead.
FIXME: remove checkpatch report WARNING: Reusing the krealloc arg is almost always a bug + group->rates = krealloc(group->rates,
Signed-off-by: Pierre-Louis Bossart pierre-louis.bossart@linux.intel.com
Could you specify the requirements and limitations for this algorithm? Last year I written calc for Linux based on Windows (please don't burn me here) equivalent though said requirements/ limitiations might have changed and nothing is valid any longer.
The frame shape typically only changes by doubling the number of columns, and the priority is given to PDM streams which use columns. It's hard to document this on a public mailing list, it'd require making references to a spec that's only available to MIPI members.
I remember that some parts of specification overcomplicated the calculator and due to actual, realtime usecases it could be greatly simplified (that's why I mention that my work is probably no longer valid). However, these details would help me in reviewing your implementation and providing suggestions.
To the best of my knowledge, the algorithm follows a script that is used for both Windows and Linux. The code was initially written by Vinod and team, and I am not aware of simplifications. There a simplifications that are possible, e.g. we don't support PDM for now and the notion of grouping is not needed, but we have to carefully balance 'optimization' with 'introducing bugs'. if this algorithm craps out then the entire bus operation is in the weeds.
If we really want people to experiment and get a feel for the performance of the algorithm, we should really provide a UI where the stream parameters can be entered and visually check what the algorithm is doing. I have a solution that shows the bits based on the stream parameters (need to make it available e.g. in Python), if we connected it with the automatic bit allocation it'd be very useful.
And yes, "Frame shape calculator" probably suits this better. Though this might be just a preference thingy : )
Resource management is indeed a bit vague. But frame shape calculator is not quite right. The algorithm will find the frame shape that is required for the current bandwidth, but will also allocate the bitSlots in that frame. In MIPI circles we talk about bitSlot allocation.