4K at 60 YCbCr420 missing mode in usermode

Michel Dänzer michel at daenzer.net
Tue Jun 26 16:23:04 UTC 2018


On 2018-06-26 05:43 PM, Emil Velikov wrote:
> Hi Jerry,
> 
> On 25 June 2018 at 22:45, Zuo, Jerry <Jerry.Zuo at amd.com> wrote:
>> Hello all:
>>
>>
>>
>> We are working on an issue affecting 4K at 60 HDMI display not to light up, but
>> only showing up 4K at 30 from:
>> https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=106959 and others.
>>
>>
>>
>> Some displays (e.g., ASUS PA328) HDMI port shows YCbCr420 CEA extension
>> block with 4K at 60 supported. Such HDMI 4K at 60 is not real HDMI 2.0, but still
>> following HDMI 1.4 spec. with maximum TMDS clock of 300MHz instead of
>> 600MHz.
>>
>> To get such 4K at 60 supported, it needs to limit the bandwidth by reducing the
>> color space to YCbCr420 only. We’ve already raised YCbCr420 only flag
>> (attached patch) from kernel side to pass the mode validation, and expose it
>> to user space.
>>
>>
>>
>>     We think that one of the issues that causes this problem is due to
>> usermode pruning the 4K at 60 mode from the modelist (attached Xorg.0.log). It
>> seems like when usermode receives all the modes, it doesn't take in account
>> the 4K at 60 YCbCr4:2:0 specific mode. In order to pass validation of being
>> added to usermode modelist, its pixel clk needs to be divided by 2 so that
>> it won't exceed TMDS max physical pixel clk (300MHz). That might explain the
>> difference in modes between our usermode and modeset.
>>
>>
>>
>>     Such YCbCr4:2:0 4K at 60 special mode is marked in DRM by raising a flag
>> (y420_vdb_modes) inside connector's display_info which can be seen in
>> do_y420vdb_modes(). Usermode could rely on that flag to pick up such mode
>> and halve the required pclk to prevent such mode getting pruned out.
>>
>>
>>
>> We were hoping for someone helps to look at it from usermode perspective.
>> Thanks a lot.
>>
> Just some observations, while going through some coffee. Take them
> with a pinch of salt.
> 
> Currently the kernel edid parser (in drm core) handles the
> EXT_VIDEO_DATA_BLOCK_420 extended block.
> Additionally, the kernel allows such modes only as the (per connector)
> ycbcr_420_allowed bool is set by the driver.
> 
> Quick look shows that it's only enabled by i915 on gen10 && geminilake hardware.
> 
> At the same time, X does it's own fairly partial edid parsing and
> doesn't handle any(?) extended blocks.
> 
> One solution is to update the X parser, although it seems like a
> endless game of cat and mouse.
> IMHO a much better approach is to not use edid codepaths for KMS
> drivers (where AMDGPU is one).
> On those, the supported modes is advertised by the kernel module via
> drmModeGetConnector.

We are getting the modes from the kernel; the issue is they are then
pruned (presumably by xf86ProbeOutputModes => xf86ValidateModesClocks)
due to violating the clock limits, as described by Jerry above.


-- 
Earthling Michel Dänzer               |               http://www.amd.com
Libre software enthusiast             |             Mesa and X developer


More information about the xorg-devel mailing list