[Intel-gfx] [PATCH] drm/i915/ddi: Avoid long delays during system suspend / eDP disabling

Ville Syrjälä ville.syrjala at linux.intel.com
Thu Jun 1 13:58:50 UTC 2017


On Thu, Jun 01, 2017 at 03:55:13PM +0300, Jani Nikula wrote:
> On Wed, 31 May 2017, Ville Syrjälä <ville.syrjala at linux.intel.com> wrote:
> > On Wed, May 31, 2017 at 08:05:35PM +0300, Imre Deak wrote:
> >> Atm disabling either DP or eDP outputs can generate a spurious short
> >> pulse interrupt. The reason is that after disabling the port the source
> >> will stop sending a valid stream data, while the sink expects either a
> >> valid stream or the idle pattern. Since neither of this is sent the sink
> >> assumes (after an arbitrary delay) that the link is lost and requests
> >> for link retraining with a short pulse.
> >> 
> >> The spurious pulse is a real problem at least for eDP panels with long
> >> power-off / power-cycle delays: as part of disabling the output we
> >> disable the panel power. The subsequent spurious short pulse handling
> >> will have to turn the power back on, which means the driver has to do a
> >> redundant wait for the power-off and power-cycle delays. During system
> >> suspend this leads to an unnecessary delay up to ~1s on systems with
> >> such panels as reported by Rui.
> >> 
> >> To fix this put the sink to DPMS D3 state before turning off the port.
> >> According to the DP spec in this state the sink should not request
> >> retraining. This is also what we do already on pre-ddi platforms.
> >> 
> >> As an alternative I also tried configuring the port to send idle pattern
> >> - which is against BSPec - and leave the port in normal mode before
> >> turning off the port. Neither of these resolved the problem.
> >> 
> >> Cc: Zhang Rui <rui.zhang at intel.com>
> >> Cc: David Weinehall <david.weinehall at linux.intel.com>
> >> Cc: Ville Syrjälä <ville.syrjala at linux.intel.com>
> >> Reported-and-tested-by: Zhang Rui <rui.zhang at intel.com>
> >> Signed-off-by: Imre Deak <imre.deak at intel.com>
> >
> > Makes sense to me.
> 
> I wonder if we should write D0 on hotplug.

D0 is the default power state IIRC, so when you plug something in it
should automagically go into D0. That's actually a slight problem
power-wise if there's no subsequent modeset to drop it into D3.

-- 
Ville Syrjälä
Intel OTC


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