[PATCH 1/2] UBUNTU: SAUCE: i915_bpo: Fix DP link rate math

Timo Aaltonen tjaalton at ubuntu.com
Wed Jan 18 08:18:14 UTC 2017


From: Timo Aaltonen <timo.aaltonen at canonical.com>

BugLink: http://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1657353

We store DP link rates as link clock frequencies in kHz, just like all
other clock values. But, DP link rates in the DP Spec. are expressed in
Gbps/lane, which seems to have led to some confusion.

E.g., for HBR2
Max. data rate = 5.4 Gbps/lane x 4 lane x 8/10 x 1/8 = 2160000 kBps
where, 8/10 is for channel encoding and 1/8 is for bit to Byte conversion

Using link clock frequency, like we do
Max. data rate = 540000 kHz * 4 lanes = 2160000 kSymbols/s
Because, each symbol has 8 bit of data, this is 2160000 kBps
and there is no need to account for channel encoding here.

But, currently we do 540000 kHz * 4 lanes * (8/10) = 1728000 kBps

Similarly, while computing the required link bandwidth for a mode,
there is a mysterious 1/10 term.
This should simply be pixel_clock kHz * (bpp/8) to give the final result in
kBps

v2: Changed to DIV_ROUND_UP() and comment changes (Ville)

Signed-off-by: Dhinakaran Pandiyan <dhinakaran.pandiyan at intel.com>
Link: http://patchwork.freedesktop.org/patch/msgid/1479160220-17794-1-git-send-email-dhinakaran.pandiyan@intel.com
Signed-off-by: Ville Syrjälä <ville.syrjala at linux.intel.com>
(backported from drm-intel-next commit fd81c44eba9ca1e78d0601f37b5d7819df522aa7)
Signed-off-by: Timo Aaltonen <timo.aaltonen at canonical.com>
---
 ubuntu/i915/intel_dp.c | 35 +++++++++++++++--------------------
 1 file changed, 15 insertions(+), 20 deletions(-)

diff --git a/ubuntu/i915/intel_dp.c b/ubuntu/i915/intel_dp.c
index 94b3571..53772f2 100644
--- a/ubuntu/i915/intel_dp.c
+++ b/ubuntu/i915/intel_dp.c
@@ -166,33 +166,23 @@ static u8 intel_dp_max_lane_count(struct intel_dp *intel_dp)
 	return min(source_max, sink_max);
 }
 
-/*
- * The units on the numbers in the next two are... bizarre.  Examples will
- * make it clearer; this one parallels an example in the eDP spec.
- *
- * intel_dp_max_data_rate for one lane of 2.7GHz evaluates as:
- *
- *     270000 * 1 * 8 / 10 == 216000
- *
- * The actual data capacity of that configuration is 2.16Gbit/s, so the
- * units are decakilobits.  ->clock in a drm_display_mode is in kilohertz -
- * or equivalently, kilopixels per second - so for 1680x1050R it'd be
- * 119000.  At 18bpp that's 2142000 kilobits per second.
- *
- * Thus the strange-looking division by 10 in intel_dp_link_required, to
- * get the result in decakilobits instead of kilobits.
- */
-
 static int
 intel_dp_link_required(int pixel_clock, int bpp)
 {
-	return (pixel_clock * bpp + 9) / 10;
+	/* pixel_clock is in kHz, divide bpp by 8 for bit to Byte conversion */
+	return DIV_ROUND_UP(pixel_clock * bpp, 8);
 }
 
 static int
 intel_dp_max_data_rate(int max_link_clock, int max_lanes)
 {
-	return (max_link_clock * max_lanes * 8) / 10;
+	/* max_link_clock is the link symbol clock (LS_Clk) in kHz and not the
+	 * link rate that is generally expressed in Gbps. Since, 8 bits of data
+	 * is transmitted every LS_Clk per lane, there is no need to account for
+	 * the channel encoding that is done in the PHY layer here.
+	 */
+
+	return max_link_clock * max_lanes;
 }
 
 static enum drm_mode_status
@@ -3794,7 +3784,12 @@ intel_dp_get_dpcd(struct intel_dp *intel_dp)
 			if (val == 0)
 				break;
 
-			/* Value read is in kHz while drm clock is saved in deca-kHz */
+			/* Value read multiplied by 200kHz gives the per-lane
+			 * link rate in kHz. The source rates are, however,
+			 * stored in terms of LS_Clk kHz. The full conversion
+			 * back to symbols is
+			 * (val * 200kHz)*(8/10 ch. encoding)*(1/8 bit to Byte)
+			 */
 			intel_dp->sink_rates[i] = (val * 200) / 10;
 		}
 		intel_dp->num_sink_rates = i;
-- 
2.7.4





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