On 08/06/2023 23:36, Marijn Suijten wrote:
Same title suggestion as earlier: s/adjust/reduce

On 2023-05-22 18:08:56, Jessica Zhang wrote:
Adjust the pclk rate to divide hdisplay by the compression ratio when DSC
is enabled.

Signed-off-by: Jessica Zhang <quic_jessz...@quicinc.com>
---
  drivers/gpu/drm/msm/dsi/dsi_host.c | 21 ++++++++++++++++++---
  1 file changed, 18 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)

diff --git a/drivers/gpu/drm/msm/dsi/dsi_host.c 
b/drivers/gpu/drm/msm/dsi/dsi_host.c
index a448931af804..88f370dd2ea1 100644
--- a/drivers/gpu/drm/msm/dsi/dsi_host.c
+++ b/drivers/gpu/drm/msm/dsi/dsi_host.c
@@ -561,7 +561,18 @@ void dsi_link_clk_disable_v2(struct msm_dsi_host *msm_host)
        clk_disable_unprepare(msm_host->byte_clk);
  }
-static unsigned long dsi_get_pclk_rate(const struct drm_display_mode *mode, bool is_bonded_dsi)
+static unsigned long dsi_adjust_compressed_pclk(const struct drm_display_mode 
*mode,

Nit: adjust_pclk_for_compression

As discussed before we realized that this change is more-or-less a hack,
since downstream calculates pclk quite differently - at least for
command-mode panels.  Do you still intend to land this patch this way,
or go the proper route by introducing the right math from the get-go?
Or is the math at least correct for video-mode panels?

Can we please postpone the cmd-vs-video discussion? Otherwise I will reserve myself a right to push a patch dropping CMD mode support until somebody comes with a proper way to handle CMD clock calculation.


It is off-topic for the sake of DSC 1.2 support. Yes, all CMD panel timings are a kind of a hack and should be improved. No, we can not do this as a part of this series. I think everybody agrees that with the current way of calculating CMD panel timings, this function does some kind of a trick.


This function requires a documentation comment to explain that all.

+               const struct drm_dsc_config *dsc)
+{
+       int new_hdisplay = DIV_ROUND_UP(mode->hdisplay * 
drm_dsc_get_bpp_int(dsc),

This sounds like a prime candidate for msm_dsc_get_bytes_per_line(), if
bits_per_component==8 is assumed.  In fact, it then becomes identical
to the following line in dsi_host.c which you added previously:

        hdisplay = DIV_ROUND_UP(msm_dsc_get_bytes_per_line(msm_host->dsc), 3);

This would imply a simple /3, but as far as I understand it is not correct here.


If not, what is the difference between these two calculations?  Maybe
they both need to be in a properly-named helper.

+                       dsc->bits_per_component * 3);

I hope to see a documentation patch to be posted, telling that this scales hdisplay and thus pclk by the factor of compressed_bpp / uncompressed_bpp.

This is not how it is usually done, but I would accept a separate documentation patch going over the calculation here and in dsi_timing_setup (and maybe other unobvious cases, if there is anything left).


As we established in the drm/msm issue [2] there is currently a
confusion whether this /3 (and the /3 in dsi_timing_setup) come from the
ratio between dsi_get_bpp() and dsc->bpp or something else.  Can you
clarify that with constants and comments?

[2]: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/drm/msm/-/issues/24

+
+       return (new_hdisplay + (mode->htotal - mode->hdisplay))
+                       * mode->vtotal * drm_mode_vrefresh(mode);

As clarified in [1] I was not necessarily suggesting to move this math
to a separate helper, but to also use a few more properly-named
intermediate variables to not have multi-line math and self-documenting
code.  These lines could be split to be much more clear.

I think it's fine more or less. One pair of parenthesis is unnecessary, but that's mostly it. Maybe `new_htotal' variable would make some sense.

Also, please excuse me if this was discussed somewhere. This calculation means that only the displayed data is compressed, but porches are not touched. Correct?


[1]: 
https://lore.kernel.org/linux-arm-msm/u4x2vldkzsokfcpbkz3dtwcllbdk4ljcz6kzuaxt5frx6g76o5@uku6abewvye7/

+}
+
+static unsigned long dsi_get_pclk_rate(const struct drm_display_mode *mode,
+               const struct drm_dsc_config *dsc, bool is_bonded_dsi)
  {
        unsigned long pclk_rate;
@@ -576,6 +587,10 @@ static unsigned long dsi_get_pclk_rate(const struct drm_display_mode *mode, bool
        if (is_bonded_dsi)
                pclk_rate /= 2;
+ /* If DSC is enabled, divide hdisplay by compression ratio */
+       if (dsc)
+               pclk_rate = dsi_adjust_compressed_pclk(mode, dsc);

Looking for the perfection, I'd also move the pclk adjustment to come before the is_bonded_dsi check.


The confusion with this comment (and the reason the aforementioned
discussion [2] carried on so long) stems from the fact a division makes
sense for a bit/byte clock, but not for a pixel clock: we still intend
to send the same number of pixels, just spending less bytes on them.  So
as you clarify the /3 above, can you also clarify that here or drop this
comment completely when the function is correctly documented instead?

- Marijn

+
        return pclk_rate;
  }
@@ -585,7 +600,7 @@ unsigned long dsi_byte_clk_get_rate(struct mipi_dsi_host *host, bool is_bonded_d
        struct msm_dsi_host *msm_host = to_msm_dsi_host(host);
        u8 lanes = msm_host->lanes;
        u32 bpp = dsi_get_bpp(msm_host->format);
-       unsigned long pclk_rate = dsi_get_pclk_rate(mode, is_bonded_dsi);
+       unsigned long pclk_rate = dsi_get_pclk_rate(mode, msm_host->dsc, 
is_bonded_dsi);
        unsigned long pclk_bpp;
if (lanes == 0) {
@@ -604,7 +619,7 @@ unsigned long dsi_byte_clk_get_rate(struct mipi_dsi_host 
*host, bool is_bonded_d
static void dsi_calc_pclk(struct msm_dsi_host *msm_host, bool is_bonded_dsi)
  {
-       msm_host->pixel_clk_rate = dsi_get_pclk_rate(msm_host->mode, 
is_bonded_dsi);
+       msm_host->pixel_clk_rate = dsi_get_pclk_rate(msm_host->mode, 
msm_host->dsc, is_bonded_dsi);
        msm_host->byte_clk_rate = dsi_byte_clk_get_rate(&msm_host->base, 
is_bonded_dsi,
                                                        msm_host->mode);
--
2.40.1


--
With best wishes
Dmitry

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