On Tue, Dec 08, 2015 at 07:38:46AM +0100, Takashi Iwai wrote:
On Tue, 08 Dec 2015 07:31:36 +0100, Vinod Koul wrote:
On Mon, Dec 07, 2015 at 05:18:06PM +0100, Takashi Iwai wrote:
On Mon, 07 Dec 2015 22:24:28 +0100,
sprintf(jack_name, "HDMI/DP, Pin=%d Jack", pin->nid);
Such a name makes sense only to be compatible for PA, and then this string isn't compatible. Note that it's not about pin but for PCM stream. You may wonder why it matters -- see the whole discussion on MST support.
So in our case we have added only one PCM Backend in DSP. In codec we have one DAI supported, thus creating a DAIlink
The Codec DAI is mapped to a stream which we fix to a CVT. Future we will add two more streams which are mapped to other two CVTs.
We use MUX controls to allow user to specfiy how CVT and PINs are connected togther, this way we can route stream to any pin.
Extending this concept, behind a pin for MST there may be different 'ports', right? Shouldn't that be another mux configuration :) So we can treat three streams coming to codec to be routed to any pin and then any port. Since we have only 3 CVTs we will have only 3 streams...
You can't do that easily. Remember that you may connect up to 64 different devices at the same time per pin, and this can switch on the fly. How would you implement a MUX?
somehow I was under impression that it is 3.. Btw even if 64 devices can be connected how many can we render to?
Though, the max number of converters is limited, thus what you can actually use is defined by this constraint. Due to this, we'll likely manage MST for the legacy HDA by assigning MST devs dynamically to pins in a certain procedure to make things compatible.
but how many MST devs are you going to create?
Back on present :), what do you recommend for us for jack name.
Depends on your purpose. If you want to keep it compatible, then use the compatible string.
Since compatible string would mean specfying PCM, which we don;t know and is per machine driver dailink defination, we would go ahead with logical "HDMI/DP, Pin=%d Jack" names.
Thanks