On Thu, Apr 12, 2018 at 10:15:41PM +0800, Kai-Heng Feng wrote:
at 6:59 PM, Pali Rohár pali.rohar@gmail.com wrote:
On Thursday 12 April 2018 12:50:02 Takashi Iwai wrote:
+#if IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_DELL_LAPTOP) +static bool check_dell_switchable_gfx(struct pci_dev *pdev) +{
- bool (*dell_switchable_gfx_is_enabled_func)(void);
- bool enabled;
- /* Only need to check for Dell laptops and AIOs */
- if (!dmi_find_device(DMI_DEV_TYPE_OEM_STRING, "Dell System", NULL) ||
!(dmi_match(DMI_CHASSIS_TYPE, "10") ||
dmi_match(DMI_CHASSIS_TYPE, "13")) ||
!(pdev->vendor == PCI_VENDOR_ID_ATI ||
pdev->vendor == PCI_VENDOR_ID_NVIDIA))
return false;
...
@@ -1711,6 +1745,11 @@ static int azx_create(struct snd_card *card, struct pci_dev *pci, if (err < 0) return err;
- if (check_dell_switchable_gfx(pci)) {
pci_disable_device(pci);
Hi!
Now looking at it again... This code disables all ATI and NVIDIA sound cards available in any Dell System (laptop or AIO) if system says that SG is enabled, right?
Yes.
It means that also any external ATI or NVIDIA PCI card with audio device connected to Thunderbolt (e.g. via PCI <--> TB bridge) is always unconditionally disabled too?
I never thought of this case, thanks for bringing this up. Do you have any suggestion to check if it connects to the system via Thunderbolt?
Is there any kind of indicator for a PCI device if it is a removable device? Only disabling those PCI devices which are wholly integrated with the platform would be ideal.
Failing that, is there an indicator in the PCI configuration which will distinguish such devices? Are the integrated devices using specific lanes, are the external devices behind a switch? etc. And can we do this in a generic way for all relevant platforms.