[RFC PATCH 3/5] HACK: ASoC: Tolerate N-cpus-to-M-codecs links

Martin Povišer povik at cutebit.org
Mon Apr 25 14:34:33 CEST 2022


> On 25. 4. 2022, at 14:25, Mark Brown <broonie at kernel.org> wrote:
> 
> On Fri, Apr 22, 2022 at 04:06:06PM +0200, Martin Povišer wrote:
>>> On 4. 4. 2022, at 14:28, Mark Brown <broonie at kernel.org> wrote:
> 
>>> We need to figure out an interface for describing which CODEC/CPU
>>> combinations are connected to each other.  I'm not seeing a great way to
>>> do that right now, probably some side data table is going to be needed,
>>> or perhaps the CPU DAI drivers can be persuaded to only have one DAI
>>> actually register and claim to support more channels?  I'm not sure how
>>> a configuraiton like this is going to work at userspace level if the
>>> multiple CPU DAIs end up being visible...
> 
>> To understand the issue better: How could the multiple CPU DAIs be
>> visible from userspace?
> 
> If you register two separate DAIs (well, links) with the API without
> doing anything else the API will just expose them to userspace as two
> separate things with no indication that they're related.

Sure, but what I am addressing here is a single DAI link with multiple
CPU DAIs, invoked in DT like this:

	dai-link at 0 {
		link-name = "Speakers";
		mclk-fs = <256>;

		cpu {
			sound-dai = <&mca 0>, <&mca 1>;
		};
		codec {
			sound-dai = <&speaker_left_woof1>,
				<&speaker_right_woof1>,
				<&speaker_left_tweet>,
				<&speaker_right_tweet>,
				<&speaker_left_woof2>,
				<&speaker_right_woof2>;
		};
	};

>> What about this interim solution: In case of N-to-M links we put in
>> the most restrictive condition for checking capture/playback stream
>> validity: we check all of the CPU DAIs. Whatever ends up being the
>> proper solution later can only be less restrictive than this.
> 
> That's not the issue here?

Well to me it looks like it is. Because if I invoke the DAI link like
I quoted above, and the platform driver supports it, the playback/capture
stream validity check is the only place it breaks down. Notwithstanding
this may be the wrong API as you wrote.

>> As a reminder what happens on the Macs: the platform driver drives
>> all the CPU-side I2S ports that belong to the link with the same data,
>> so the particular CPU/CODEC wiring doesn’t matter.
> 
> Oh, that's not something I was aware of.  In that case this is the wrong
> API - you should be using DPCM to map one front end onto multiple back
> ends (Kirkwood does something similar IIRC, there will be other examples
> but that's probably the simplest).  The back ends probably don't really
> need to know that they're on the same physical bus (if indeed they are).

I guess I need to look into that.



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