On Fri, Apr 05, 2024 at 01:22:41PM +0200, Manuel Lauss wrote:
On Mon, Apr 1, 2024 at 10:11 PM Oswald Buddenhagen oswald.buddenhagen@gmx.de wrote:
Is this right? The comment on the field says "fifo entries of AC97/I2S PSC", which doesn't suggest bytes. The data sheet speaks of "words" and "byte masks", but without digging into it I can't tell how it would behave with different sample widths and channel counts (which the driver does not seem to limit _at all_? what am I missing?).
Each fifo entry contains a sample; wordsize is configured in register 0x08[24:21]. The fifo is 16 samples deep, so you can have 8 stereo frames or 16 mono frames queued up.
ok, so i'm apparently onto something, though the patch is wrong.
But the fifo isn't managed by hand, dma transfers are used instead and the amount of transmitted bytes is extracted from DMA information, so I think this change is pointless.
not *quite* pointless - that field is used for calculating latencies which are reported to user space. this doesn't really matter except for pro audio equipment. it also isn't very precise if converter latencies (which can be rather substantial for delta-sigma convs) are not also taken into account. it's even more "interesting" when a single pcm stream is connected to multiple ports with different latencies (e.g., s/pdif and analog).
HDA has the proper framework for tracking the entire path's latency and the driver seems to support that, but from the drivers i surveyed that was the only one which takes the matter seriously. most (legacy?) drivers just set it explicitly to zero or leave it at the zero default, which is a somewhat clear expression of "no clue / don't care".
so if you don't want to bother with getting it right or it is hopeless due to inaccessible variables, just deleting the code is an option. or simply ignoring the problem ...
i'm sure the alsa maints will correct me if i got anything wrong. ^^