RFC: Drm-connector properties managed by another driver / privacy screen support

Jani Nikula jani.nikula at linux.intel.com
Fri Apr 17 11:55:33 UTC 2020


On Fri, 17 Apr 2020, Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen at gmail.com> wrote:
> On Wed, 15 Apr 2020 17:40:46 +0200
> Hans de Goede <hdegoede at redhat.com> wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>> 
>> On 4/15/20 5:28 PM, Jani Nikula wrote:
>> > On Wed, 15 Apr 2020, Hans de Goede <hdegoede at redhat.com> wrote:  
>> >> ii. Currently the "privacy-screen" property added by Rajat's
>> >> patch-set is an enum with 2 possible values:
>> >> "Enabled"
>> >> "Disabled"
>> >>
>> >> We could add a third value "Not Available", which would be the
>> >> default and then for internal panels always add the property
>> >> so that we avoid the problem that detecting if the laptop has
>> >> an internal privacy screen needs to be done before the connector
>> >> is registered. Then we can add some hooks which allow an
>> >> lcdshadow-driver to register itself against a connector later
>> >> (which is non trivial wrt probe order, but lets ignore that for now).  
>> > 
>> > I regret dropping the ball on Rajat's series (sorry!).
>> > 
>> > I do think having the connector property for this is the way to go.  
>> 
>> I 100% agree.
>> 
>> > Even
>> > if we couldn't necessarily figure out all the details on the kernel
>> > internal connections, can we settle on the property though, so we could
>> > move forward with Rajat's series?  
>> 
>> Yes please, this will also allow us to move forward with userspace
>> support even if for testing that we do some hacks for the kernel's
>> internal connections for now.
>> 
>> > Moreover, do we actually need two properties, one which could indicate
>> > userspace's desire for the property, and another that tells the hardware
>> > state?  
>> 
>> No I do not think so. I would expect there to just be one property,
>> I guess that if the state is (partly) firmware controlled then there
>> might be a race, but we will need a notification mechanism (*) for
>> firmware triggered state changes anyways, so shortly after loosing
>> the race userspace will process the notification and it will know
>> about it.
>> 
>> One thing which might be useful is a way to signal that the property
>> is read-only in case we ever hit hw where that is the case.
>> 
>> > I'd so very much like to have no in-kernel/in-firmware shortcuts
>> > to enable/disable the privacy screen, and instead have any hardware
>> > buttons just be events that the userspace could react to. However I
>> > don't think that'll be the case unfortunately.  
>> 
>> In my experience with keyboard-backlight support, we will (unfortunately)
>> see a mix and in some case we will get a notification that the firmware
>> has adjusted the state, rather then just getting a keypress and
>> dealing with that ourselves.  In some cases we may even be able to
>> choose, so the fw will deal with it by default but we can ask it
>> to just send a key-press.  But I do believe that we can *not* expect
>> that we will always just get a keypress for userspace to deal with.
>
> Hi,
>
> let's think about how userspace uses atomic KMS UAPI. The simplest way
> to use atomic correctly is that userspace will for every update send the
> full, complete set of all properties that exist, both known and unknown
> to userspace (to recover from temporarily VT-switching to another KMS
> program that changes unknown properties). Attempting to track which
> properties already have their correct values in the kernel is extra
> work for just extra bugs.
>
> Assuming the property is userspace-writable: if kernel goes and
> changes the property value on its own, it will very likely be just
> overwritten by userspace right after if userspace does not manage to
> process the uevent first. If that happens and userspace later
> processes the uevent, userspace queries the kernel for the current
> proprerty state which is now what userspace wrote, not what firmware
> set.
>
> Therefore you end up with the firmware hotkey working only randomly.
>
> It would be much better to have the hotkey events delivered to
> userspace so that userspace can control the privacy screen and
> everything will be reliable, both the hotkeys and any GUI for it.

I'd like this too. However I fear this is out of our control, and OEMs
have and will anyway fiddle with the privacy screen directly no matter
what we say, and we can't prevent that. From their POV it's easier for
them to do their value-add in components they have total control over. I
emphatize with that view, even if it's counter-productive from the Linux
ecosystem POV.

So we'll just have to deal with it.

> The other reliable option is that userspace must never be able to
> change privacy screen state, only the hardware hotkeys can.

That, in turn, discourages anyone from doing the right thing, and blocks
us from adding any nice additional features for privacy screens that
only the userspace is capable of managing. For example, controlling
privacy screen based on content, which seems like an obvious feature.

I suppose rf-kill is a bit similar.

You'd have a userspace controlled property to state what the userspace
wants, and a kernel controlled property to show the hardware
state. Userspace can ask for one or the other, and usually this happens,
but the hardware hotkey bypasses the whole thing.

It's not perfect. But I think just one property changed nilly-willy by
both the kernel and userspace (especially when it's really not in the
kernel's full control either) is going to be a PITA.

BR,
Jani.



>
>> 
>> Regards,
>> 
>> Hans
>> 
>> 
>> *) Some udev event I guess, I sorta assume there already is a
>> notification mechanism for property change notifications ?
>
> Yes, such mechanism has been discussed before, see the thread containing
> https://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/dri-devel/2019-May/217588.html
>
> TL;DR: the mechanism exists and is called the hotplug event. But the
> problem with the hotplug event is that it carries no information about
> what changed, so userspace is forced re-discover everything about the
> DRM device. That thread discusses extending the hotplug event to be
> able to signal changes in individual properties rather than "something
> maybe changed, you figure out what".
>
>
> Thanks,
> pq

-- 
Jani Nikula, Intel Open Source Graphics Center


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