[Intel-gfx] [PATCH v4 03/17] drm/uAPI: Add "active bpc" as feedback channel for "max bpc" drm property
Werner Sembach
wse at tuxedocomputers.com
Wed Jul 14 18:18:57 UTC 2021
Am 01.07.21 um 13:30 schrieb Werner Sembach:
> Am 01.07.21 um 09:42 schrieb Pekka Paalanen:
>> On Wed, 30 Jun 2021 11:42:10 +0200
>> Werner Sembach <wse at tuxedocomputers.com> wrote:
>>
>>> Am 30.06.21 um 10:21 schrieb Pekka Paalanen:
>>>> On Tue, 29 Jun 2021 13:02:05 +0200
>>>> Werner Sembach <wse at tuxedocomputers.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> Am 28.06.21 um 19:03 schrieb Werner Sembach:
>>>>>> Am 18.06.21 um 11:11 schrieb Werner Sembach:
>>>>>>> Add a new general drm property "active bpc" which can be used by graphic
>>>>>>> drivers to report the applied bit depth per pixel back to userspace.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> While "max bpc" can be used to change the color depth, there was no way to
>>>>>>> check which one actually got used. While in theory the driver chooses the
>>>>>>> best/highest color depth within the max bpc setting a user might not be
>>>>>>> fully aware what his hardware is or isn't capable off. This is meant as a
>>>>>>> quick way to double check the setup.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> In the future, automatic color calibration for screens might also depend on
>>>>>>> this information being available.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Signed-off-by: Werner Sembach <wse at tuxedocomputers.com>
>>>>>>> ---
>>>>>>> drivers/gpu/drm/drm_connector.c | 51 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
>>>>>>> include/drm/drm_connector.h | 8 ++++++
>>>>>>> 2 files changed, 59 insertions(+)
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> diff --git a/drivers/gpu/drm/drm_connector.c b/drivers/gpu/drm/drm_connector.c
>>>>>>> index da39e7ff6965..943f6b61053b 100644
>>>>>>> --- a/drivers/gpu/drm/drm_connector.c
>>>>>>> +++ b/drivers/gpu/drm/drm_connector.c
>>>>>>> @@ -1197,6 +1197,14 @@ static const struct drm_prop_enum_list dp_colorspaces[] = {
>>>>>>> * drm_connector_attach_max_bpc_property() to create and attach the
>>>>>>> * property to the connector during initialization.
>>>>>>> *
>>>>>>> + * active bpc:
>>>>>>> + * This read-only range property tells userspace the pixel color bit depth
>>>>>>> + * actually used by the hardware display engine on "the cable" on a
>>>>>>> + * connector. The chosen value depends on hardware capabilities, both
>>>>>>> + * display engine and connected monitor, and the "max bpc" property.
>>>>>>> + * Drivers shall use drm_connector_attach_active_bpc_property() to install
>>>>>>> + * this property.
>>>>>>> + *
>>>>>> Regarding "on the cable" and dithering: As far as I can tell, what the dithering option does, is setting a hardware
>>>>>> register here:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> - https://elixir.bootlin.com/linux/v5.13/source/drivers/gpu/drm/i915/display/intel_display.c#L4534
>>>>>>
>>>>>> - https://elixir.bootlin.com/linux/v5.13/source/drivers/gpu/drm/i915/display/intel_display.c#L4571
>>>>>>
>>>>>> So dithering seems to be calculated by fixed purpose hardware/firmware outside of the driver?
>>>>>>
>>>>>> The Intel driver does not seem to set a target bpc/bpp for this hardware so I guess it defaults to 6 or 8 bpc?
>>>>> Never mind it does. This switch-case does affect the dithering output:
>>>>> https://elixir.bootlin.com/linux/v5.13/source/drivers/gpu/drm/i915/display/intel_display.c#L4537
>>>> Hi,
>>>>
>>>> I obviously do not know the intel driver or hardware at all, but
>>>> to me that just looks like translating from bits per pixel to bits per
>>>> channel in RGB mapping?
>>> No, if i understand the documentation correctly: Writing bit depth here
>>> with dithering enabled sets the dithering target bpc.
>>>>
>>>>> As found in this documentation p.548:
>>>>> https://01.org/sites/default/files/documentation/intel-gfx-prm-osrc-lkf-vol02c-commandreference-registers-part2.pdf
>>>>>
>>>>> So max bpc and active bpc are affecting/affected by the bpc after dithering.
>>>> By definition, if the cable carries N bpc, then dithering does not
>>>> change that. The cable still carries N bpc, but due to spatial or
>>>> temporal dithering, the *observed* color resolution may or may not be
>>>> higher than the cable bpc.
>>> Yes, and max bpc and active bpc tell the cable bpc ist not the
>>> *observed* bpc.
>>>> Of course, if the cable bpc is 8, and dithering targets 6 bpc, then 2
>>>> LSB on the cable are always zero, right?
>>> I would assume that in this case only 6 bpc are actually send? Isn't the
>>> whole thing of dithering that you can't send, for example, 8 bpc?
>>>> Maybe one would want to do that if the monitor has a 6 bit panel and it
>>>> simply ignored the 2 LSB, and the cable cannot go down to 6 bpc.
>>> Is there dithering actually doing this? aka is my assumption above wrong?
>>>
>>> AMD code that confused me before, is hinting that you might be right:
>>> https://elixir.bootlin.com/linux/v5.13/source/drivers/gpu/drm/amd/display/dc/dce/dce_transform.c#L826
>>>
>>> there is a set_clamp depth and a separate DCP_SPATIAL_DITHER_DEPTH_30BPP
>>>
>>>> So, what does "max bpc" mean right now?
>>>>
>>>> It seems like dither on/off is insufficient information, one would also
>>>> need to control the dithering target bpc. I suppose the driver has a
>>>> policy on how it chooses the target bpc, but what is that policy? Is
>>>> the dither target bpc the cable bpc or the sink bpc?
>>>>
>>>> Needless to say, I'm quite confused.
>>> ... We need someone who knows what dithering on intel and amd gpu
>>> actually means.
>>>
>>> But I don't want this to become a blocker for this patchset, because if
>>> there is no dithering, which seems to be the norm, the active bpc
>>> property is already really usefull as it is. So add a note to the docs
>>> that the value might be invalid when dithering is active for now?
>> Hi,
>>
>> not necessarily invalid. It all depends on how "max bpc" and "active
>> bpc" are defined.
>>
>> If they are defined and implemented as "on the cable", then they are
>> both well-defined and always valid, regardless of what dithering or bit
>> clamping does, so this is the semantics I'd would prefer. It's clear,
>> but of course does not tell full story.
>>
>> When better properties for dithering are added, those can then define
>> how it works on top of cable bpc, with no impact on "max bpc" or
>> "active bpc" properties.
>>
>> So if we cannot tell what "max bpc" is, then "active bpc" should just
>> be defined as the same thing as "max bpc" affects, and leave the
>> precise definition of both for later.
> But as long as I don't know exactly how dithering is affected by max bpc I can't tell for sure if active bpc is acting
> the same. That's why I wrote it is "undefined" to not run into a trap where the actual behavior have to change after the
> fact.
>> If the definition was observed bpc, then we would have problems and
>> would need to know everything right now. But you can't really make
>> promises of observed bpc anyway, because you don't know what the
>> monitor does to the video signal I suppose. Unless you define it "as if
>> observed through an ideal theoretical monitor" which then gets awkward
>> to explain.
> Yes, that's why I think describing the "raw" signal is the best and leave it to the user to know what his or her Monitor
> is making out of it.
>>
>> Thanks,
>> pq
New idea: Instead of the "active"-properties with various if cases in
the kernel code, there could just be blob properties exposing the hdmi
infoframes, hdmi general control packages, dp misc0 and misc1 and dp vsc
sdp.
Combined they have all the color information and it is made sure that
it's what is actually send to the monitor (I would consider sending
something differed then what is told in the infoframes a bug).
They also have built in version numbers, if in the future they contain
more information.
Only disadvantage: We leave parsing for human readable output to the
userspace.
Alternatively keep the "active"-properties but fill them from the
infoframes.
I'm not entirely sure where to do that on amd, because there the
infoframes are directly created in the dc code shortly before writing
them to the hardware registers and immediately forgotten afterwards. But
you still have access to the connector struct from that code so the
property could be updated directly there.
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