On 03/04/15 09:48, Jyri Sarha wrote:
On 03/03/2015 05:31 PM, Lars-Peter Clausen wrote:
On 03/03/2015 01:00 PM, Jyri Sarha wrote:
On 03/03/2015 01:30 PM, Mark Brown wrote:
On Tue, Mar 03, 2015 at 12:09:14PM +0200, Jyri Sarha wrote:
On 03/02/2015 09:58 PM, Lars-Peter Clausen wrote:
Can you include a description why this is needed and how and when it is supposed to be used?
Would this addition do:
These constraints help to disable the sample-format and sample-rate combinations that do not properly work on a specific HW.
Not entirely...
The reason why we need these is coming from limitations in McASP clock generation. With a simple divider one can only produce certain bit-clocks. With those bit-clocks we can only play/capture some sample-rate and sample-width combinations accurately.
The McASP driver could try to set the constraints automatically. However, since the constraint code can not select sample-width and sample-rate combinations there is a compromise to be made between them. Making such compromises automatically does not usually work that well.
...this is more the point. Perhaps the constraints language needs improvement here?
Improving constraint functionality would certainly help, however the way that code works is beyond my understanding and I do not believe such an improvement would be coming from anybody else any time soon either.
Restricting the available sample formats based on the sample rate and vice versa is possible with the current constraint framework. Take a look at what Peter Rosin recently did to the pcm512x driver. Your restrictions sound very similar to what he did.
Interesting. It indeed looks like the rule functionality could do what I want. I'll look into than. Thanks!
I went ahead and implemented in mcasp driver a similar rule to the one already found from pcm512x. The rule indeed forbids the sample-rate and fame-size combinations that can not be played accurately.
However, once a user tries to play a bad sample-rate and fame-size combination, aplay greets him with:
aplay: pcm_params.c:170: snd1_pcm_hw_param_get_min: Assertion `!snd_interval_empty(i)' failed.
And even worse, playing to plughw gives the same error. So in practice the rule is pretty useless. The user is in the same situation as before: His use-case does not work and he has no idea why.
I guess in the long run the ideal solution would making the user-space behave better in such a situation, but for now I thing a human selected constraints are the only proper way to solve the problem.
Putting the constraints into dts may not be the most elegant choice, so I look into adding a new compatible match for each new card and hard code the DAI-link configurations for each match in the code instead of dts.
I'll send the rule patch too (as soon as I have it cleaned it up) as it does hurt to have it, even if it is not enough to make all the configurations properly usable.
Best regards, Jyri