[alsa-devel] firewire amdtp details
Hi Clemens
One of the reasons why we are working on snd_dice is because we experienced (rare but unacceptable nevertheless) audio dropouts with the original driver. The DICE PLL lost lock in such cases. Investigations showed that this varies with the hardware/temperature/sun spots/snowfall. This led me to the conclusion that the device buffering/SYT-timing must be somehow close to its limits (late/early). In such a case just little node clock differences (induced by temperature and alike) can cause the system to drop out of the PLL's locking range.
During capture mode SYT implementation/review I re-read the SYT code and found the following:
from amdtp_stream_set_parameters:
/* default buffering in the device */ s->transfer_delay = TRANSFER_DELAY_TICKS - TICKS_PER_CYCLE; if (s->flags & CIP_BLOCKING) /* additional buffering needed to adjust for no-data packets */ s->transfer_delay += TICKS_PER_SECOND * amdtp_syt_intervals[sfc] / rate;
which sets a global transfer delay. But later in calculate_syt I get the impression that (not exactly) the same operations are performed again accidentally:
if (syt_offset < TICKS_PER_CYCLE) { syt_offset += TRANSFER_DELAY_TICKS - TICKS_PER_CYCLE; if (s->flags & CIP_BLOCKING) syt_offset += s->transfer_delay; syt = (cycle + syt_offset / TICKS_PER_CYCLE) << 12; syt += syt_offset % TICKS_PER_CYCLE;
return syt & 0xffff; }
When I interpret the code from set_parameters as some sort of precomputation, the code in calculate_syt should be something like this:
if (syt_offset < TICKS_PER_CYCLE) { syt_offset += s->transfer_delay; syt = (cycle + syt_offset / TICKS_PER_CYCLE) << 12; syt += syt_offset % TICKS_PER_CYCLE;
return syt & 0xffff; }
This could explain that the stream gets delayed too much - resulting in late timing (to be verified though).
Therefore I'm a bit curious if you could enlighten me about this as s->transfer_delay isn't used in any other place.
Additionally I appreciate any justifications for the subtraction of TICKS_PER_CYCLE from the global transfer delay. This would help me to get a better understanding of snd_dice's SYT mechanics.
Regards Uli
Uli Franke wrote:
from amdtp_stream_set_parameters:
/* default buffering in the device */ s->transfer_delay = TRANSFER_DELAY_TICKS - TICKS_PER_CYCLE; if (s->flags & CIP_BLOCKING) /* additional buffering needed to adjust for no-data packets */ s->transfer_delay += TICKS_PER_SECOND * amdtp_syt_intervals[sfc] / rate;
which sets a global transfer delay. But later in calculate_syt I get the impression that (not exactly) the same operations are performed again accidentally:
if (syt_offset < TICKS_PER_CYCLE) { syt_offset += TRANSFER_DELAY_TICKS - TICKS_PER_CYCLE; if (s->flags & CIP_BLOCKING) syt_offset += s->transfer_delay; syt = (cycle + syt_offset / TICKS_PER_CYCLE) << 12; syt += syt_offset % TICKS_PER_CYCLE;
return syt & 0xffff;
}
When I interpret the code from set_parameters as some sort of precomputation, the code in calculate_syt should be something like this:
if (syt_offset < TICKS_PER_CYCLE) { syt_offset += s->transfer_delay; syt = (cycle + syt_offset / TICKS_PER_CYCLE) << 12; syt += syt_offset % TICKS_PER_CYCLE;
return syt & 0xffff;
}
Yes; the latter code is correct.
Therefore I'm a bit curious if you could enlighten me about this
This is the code in the current kernel (non-blocking only, without precomputation): http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/sound/firewire/amdtp.c#n249
if (syt_offset < TICKS_PER_CYCLE) { syt_offset += TRANSFER_DELAY_TICKS - TICKS_PER_CYCLE; syt = (cycle + syt_offset / TICKS_PER_CYCLE) << 12; syt += syt_offset % TICKS_PER_CYCLE;
return syt & 0xffff; }
This is my current development code, after the introduction of blocking mode: http://git.alsa-project.org/?p=alsa-kprivate.git;a=commitdiff;h=7365ec51bd8653d141bc98b5632f2c53580d2b36
if (syt_offset < TICKS_PER_CYCLE) { syt_offset += s->transfer_delay; syt = (cycle + syt_offset / TICKS_PER_CYCLE) << 12; syt += syt_offset % TICKS_PER_CYCLE;
return syt & 0xffff; }
I've never before seen the code you have. It looks like a wrong merge.
Additionally I appreciate any justifications for the subtraction of TICKS_PER_CYCLE from the global transfer delay.
The standard's TRANSFER_DELAY is defined as the interval between the time when a sample arrives at the transmitter (i.e., is captured by some ADC) and the time when this sample is to be played by the receiver.
This driver does not have arrival time stamps; instead it calculates the SYT based on the start time of the cycle in which the packet is scheduled to be transferred ("cycle"). The first half of calculate_syt() computes a syt_offset value that is measured from the start of a cycle _forwards_; to get an assumed timestamp that lies _before_ the cycle start, we have to subtract one cycle.
BTW: I'm planning to submit the playback-only Weiss-only driver (more or less the current state of the firewire-kernel-streaming branch) to the kernel this weekend. I guess the driver you're working on will not be ready before the 3.13 merge window (about mid-November)?
Regards, Clemens
participants (2)
-
Clemens Ladisch
-
Uli Franke