diff mbox

[RFC,0/2] ACPI: Adding new acpi_driver type drivers ?

Message ID 20240218151533.5720-1-hdegoede@redhat.com
State New
Headers show

Commit Message

Hans de Goede Feb. 18, 2024, 3:15 p.m. UTC
Hi Rafael,

I recently learned that some Dell AIOs (1) use a backlight controller board
connected to an UART. Canonical even submitted a driver for this in 2017:
https://lkml.org/lkml/2017/10/26/78

This UART has a DELL0501 HID with CID set to PNP0501 so that the UART is
still handled by 8250_pnp.c. Unfortunately there is no separate ACPI device
with an UartSerialBusV2() resource to model the backlight-controller.

The RFC patch 2/2 in this series uses acpi_quirk_skip_serdev_enumeration()
to still create a serdev for this for a backlight driver to bind to
instead of creating a /dev/ttyS0.

Like other cases where the UartSerialBusV2() resource is missing or broken
this will only create the serdev-controller device and the serdev-device
itself will need to be instantiated by the consumer (the backlight driver).

Unlike existing other cases which use DMI modaliases to load on a specific
board to work around brokeness of that board's specific ACPI tables, the
intend here is to have a single driver for all Dell AIOs using the DELL0501
HID for their UART, without needing to maintain a list of DMI matches.

This means that the dell-uart-backlight driver will need something to bind
to. The original driver from 2017 used an acpi_driver for this matching on
and binding to the DELL0501 acpi_device.

AFAIK you are trying to get rid of having drivers bind directly to
acpi_device-s so I assume that you don't want me to introduce a new one.
So to get a device to bind to without introducing a new acpi_driver
patch 2/2 if this series creates a platform_device for this.

The creation of this platform_device is why this is marked as RFC,
if you are ok with this solution I guess you can merge this series
already as is. With the caveat that the matching dell-uart-backlight
driver is still under development (its progressing nicely and the
serdev-device instantation + binding a serdev driver to it already
works).

If you have a different idea how to handle this I'm certainly open
to suggestions.

Regards,

Hans

1) All In One a monitor with a PC builtin


p.s.

I also tried this approach, but that did not work:

This was an attempt to create both a pdev from acpi_default_enumeration()
by making the PNP scan handler attach() method return 0 rather then 1;
and get a pnp_device created for the UART driver as well by
making acpi_is_pnp_device() return true.

This approach does not work due to the following code in pnpacpi_add_device():

	/* Skip devices that are already bound */
	if (device->physical_node_count)
		return 0;

 
Hans de Goede (2):
  ACPI: x86: Move acpi_quirk_skip_serdev_enumeration() out of
    CONFIG_X86_ANDROID_TABLETS
  ACPI: x86: Add DELL0501 handling to
    acpi_quirk_skip_serdev_enumeration()

 drivers/acpi/x86/utils.c | 38 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++----
 include/acpi/acpi_bus.h  | 22 +++++++++++-----------
 2 files changed, 45 insertions(+), 15 deletions(-)

Comments

Rafael J. Wysocki Feb. 22, 2024, 10:10 a.m. UTC | #1
Hi Hans,

On Sun, Feb 18, 2024 at 4:15 PM Hans de Goede <hdegoede@redhat.com> wrote:
>
> Hi Rafael,
>
> I recently learned that some Dell AIOs (1) use a backlight controller board
> connected to an UART. Canonical even submitted a driver for this in 2017:
> https://lkml.org/lkml/2017/10/26/78
>
> This UART has a DELL0501 HID with CID set to PNP0501 so that the UART is
> still handled by 8250_pnp.c. Unfortunately there is no separate ACPI device
> with an UartSerialBusV2() resource to model the backlight-controller.
>
> The RFC patch 2/2 in this series uses acpi_quirk_skip_serdev_enumeration()
> to still create a serdev for this for a backlight driver to bind to
> instead of creating a /dev/ttyS0.
>
> Like other cases where the UartSerialBusV2() resource is missing or broken
> this will only create the serdev-controller device and the serdev-device
> itself will need to be instantiated by the consumer (the backlight driver).
>
> Unlike existing other cases which use DMI modaliases to load on a specific
> board to work around brokeness of that board's specific ACPI tables, the
> intend here is to have a single driver for all Dell AIOs using the DELL0501
> HID for their UART, without needing to maintain a list of DMI matches.
>
> This means that the dell-uart-backlight driver will need something to bind
> to. The original driver from 2017 used an acpi_driver for this matching on
> and binding to the DELL0501 acpi_device.
>
> AFAIK you are trying to get rid of having drivers bind directly to
> acpi_device-s so I assume that you don't want me to introduce a new one.
> So to get a device to bind to without introducing a new acpi_driver
> patch 2/2 if this series creates a platform_device for this.
>
> The creation of this platform_device is why this is marked as RFC,
> if you are ok with this solution I guess you can merge this series
> already as is.

OK

> With the caveat that the matching dell-uart-backlight
> driver is still under development (its progressing nicely and the
> serdev-device instantation + binding a serdev driver to it already
> works).
>
> If you have a different idea how to handle this I'm certainly open
> to suggestions.

I agree with the approach, thanks!
Kai-Heng Feng May 8, 2024, 4:42 a.m. UTC | #2
[+Cc AceLan]

Hi Hans,

On Wed, Apr 24, 2024 at 5:58 PM Hans de Goede <hdegoede@redhat.com> wrote:
>
> Hi Kai-Heng Feng,
>
> On 4/24/24 10:04 AM, Kai-Heng Feng wrote:
> > Hi Hans,
> >
> > On Sun, Feb 18, 2024 at 11:15 PM Hans de Goede <hdegoede@redhat.com> wrote:
> >>
> >> Hi Rafael,
> >>
> >> I recently learned that some Dell AIOs (1) use a backlight controller board
> >> connected to an UART. Canonical even submitted a driver for this in 2017:
> >> https://lkml.org/lkml/2017/10/26/78
> >>
> >> This UART has a DELL0501 HID with CID set to PNP0501 so that the UART is
> >> still handled by 8250_pnp.c. Unfortunately there is no separate ACPI device
> >> with an UartSerialBusV2() resource to model the backlight-controller.
> >>
> >> The RFC patch 2/2 in this series uses acpi_quirk_skip_serdev_enumeration()
> >> to still create a serdev for this for a backlight driver to bind to
> >> instead of creating a /dev/ttyS0.
> >>
> >> Like other cases where the UartSerialBusV2() resource is missing or broken
> >> this will only create the serdev-controller device and the serdev-device
> >> itself will need to be instantiated by the consumer (the backlight driver).
> >>
> >> Unlike existing other cases which use DMI modaliases to load on a specific
> >> board to work around brokeness of that board's specific ACPI tables, the
> >> intend here is to have a single driver for all Dell AIOs using the DELL0501
> >> HID for their UART, without needing to maintain a list of DMI matches.
> >>
> >> This means that the dell-uart-backlight driver will need something to bind
> >> to. The original driver from 2017 used an acpi_driver for this matching on
> >> and binding to the DELL0501 acpi_device.
> >>
> >> AFAIK you are trying to get rid of having drivers bind directly to
> >> acpi_device-s so I assume that you don't want me to introduce a new one.
> >> So to get a device to bind to without introducing a new acpi_driver
> >> patch 2/2 if this series creates a platform_device for this.
> >>
> >> The creation of this platform_device is why this is marked as RFC,
> >> if you are ok with this solution I guess you can merge this series
> >> already as is. With the caveat that the matching dell-uart-backlight
> >> driver is still under development (its progressing nicely and the
> >> serdev-device instantation + binding a serdev driver to it already
> >> works).
> >
> > I was about to work on this and found you're already working on it.
> >
> > Please add me to Cc list when the driver is ready to be tested, thanks!
>
> I hope you have access to actual hw with such a backlight device ?
>
> The driver actually has been ready for testing for quite a while now,
> but the person who reported this backlight controller not being
> supported to me has been testing this on a AIO of a friend of theirs
> and this has been going pretty slow.
>
> So if you can test the driver (attached) then that would be great :)
>
> I even wrote an emulator to test it locally and that works, so
> assuming I got the protocol right from the original posting of
> the driver for this years ago then things should work.
>
> Note this depends on the kernel also having the patches from this
> RFC (which Rafael has already merged) applied.

There are newer AIO have UID other than 0, like "SIOBUAR2".

Once change the "0" to NULL in 'get_serdev_controller("DELL0501", "0",
0, "serial0");', everything works perfectly.

With that change,
Tested-by: Kai-Heng Feng <kai.heng.feng@canonical.com>

Kai-Heng

>
> Regards,
>
> Hans
>
>
>
>
>
>
> >> If you have a different idea how to handle this I'm certainly open
> >> to suggestions.
> >>
> >> Regards,
> >>
> >> Hans
> >>
> >> 1) All In One a monitor with a PC builtin
> >>
> >>
> >> p.s.
> >>
> >> I also tried this approach, but that did not work:
> >>
> >> This was an attempt to create both a pdev from acpi_default_enumeration()
> >> by making the PNP scan handler attach() method return 0 rather then 1;
> >> and get a pnp_device created for the UART driver as well by
> >> making acpi_is_pnp_device() return true.
> >>
> >> This approach does not work due to the following code in pnpacpi_add_device():
> >>
> >>         /* Skip devices that are already bound */
> >>         if (device->physical_node_count)
> >>                 return 0;
> >>
> >> diff --git a/drivers/acpi/acpi_pnp.c b/drivers/acpi/acpi_pnp.c
> >> index 01abf26764b0..847c08deea7b 100644
> >> --- a/drivers/acpi/acpi_pnp.c
> >> +++ b/drivers/acpi/acpi_pnp.c
> >> @@ -353,10 +353,17 @@ static bool acpi_pnp_match(const char *idstr, const struct acpi_device_id **matc
> >>   * given ACPI device object, the PNP scan handler will not attach to that
> >>   * object, because there is a proper non-PNP driver in the kernel for the
> >>   * device represented by it.
> >> + *
> >> + * The DELL0501 ACPI HID represents an UART (CID is set to PNP0501) with
> >> + * a backlight-controller attached. There is no separate ACPI device with
> >> + * an UartSerialBusV2() resource to model the backlight-controller.
> >> + * This setup requires instantiating both a pnp_device for the UART as well
> >> + * as a platform_device for the backlight-controller driver to bind too.
> >>   */
> >>  static const struct acpi_device_id acpi_nonpnp_device_ids[] = {
> >>         {"INTC1080"},
> >>         {"INTC1081"},
> >> +       {"DELL0501"},
> >>         {""},
> >>  };
> >>
> >> @@ -376,13 +383,16 @@ static struct acpi_scan_handler acpi_pnp_handler = {
> >>   * For CMOS RTC devices, the PNP ACPI scan handler does not work, because
> >>   * there is a CMOS RTC ACPI scan handler installed already, so we need to
> >>   * check those devices and enumerate them to the PNP bus directly.
> >> + * For DELL0501 devices the PNP ACPI scan handler is skipped to create
> >> + * a platform_device, see the acpi_nonpnp_device_ids[] comment.
> >>   */
> >> -static int is_cmos_rtc_device(struct acpi_device *adev)
> >> +static int is_special_pnp_device(struct acpi_device *adev)
> >>  {
> >>         static const struct acpi_device_id ids[] = {
> >>                 { "PNP0B00" },
> >>                 { "PNP0B01" },
> >>                 { "PNP0B02" },
> >> +               { "DELL0501" },
> >>                 {""},
> >>         };
> >>         return !acpi_match_device_ids(adev, ids);
> >> @@ -390,7 +400,7 @@ static int is_cmos_rtc_device(struct acpi_device *adev)
> >>
> >>  bool acpi_is_pnp_device(struct acpi_device *adev)
> >>  {
> >> -       return adev->handler == &acpi_pnp_handler || is_cmos_rtc_device(adev);
> >> +       return adev->handler == &acpi_pnp_handler || is_special_pnp_device(adev);
> >>  }
> >>  EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(acpi_is_pnp_device);
> >>
> >>
> >> Hans de Goede (2):
> >>   ACPI: x86: Move acpi_quirk_skip_serdev_enumeration() out of
> >>     CONFIG_X86_ANDROID_TABLETS
> >>   ACPI: x86: Add DELL0501 handling to
> >>     acpi_quirk_skip_serdev_enumeration()
> >>
> >>  drivers/acpi/x86/utils.c | 38 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++----
> >>  include/acpi/acpi_bus.h  | 22 +++++++++++-----------
> >>  2 files changed, 45 insertions(+), 15 deletions(-)
> >>
> >> --
> >> 2.43.0
> >>
> >
Andy Shevchenko May 8, 2024, 9:43 a.m. UTC | #3
On Wed, May 08, 2024 at 12:42:05PM +0800, Kai-Heng Feng wrote:
> [+Cc AceLan]
> On Wed, Apr 24, 2024 at 5:58 PM Hans de Goede <hdegoede@redhat.com> wrote:
> > On 4/24/24 10:04 AM, Kai-Heng Feng wrote:
> > > On Sun, Feb 18, 2024 at 11:15 PM Hans de Goede <hdegoede@redhat.com> wrote:
> > >>
> > >> Hi Rafael,
> > >>
> > >> I recently learned that some Dell AIOs (1) use a backlight controller board
> > >> connected to an UART. Canonical even submitted a driver for this in 2017:
> > >> https://lkml.org/lkml/2017/10/26/78
> > >>
> > >> This UART has a DELL0501 HID with CID set to PNP0501 so that the UART is
> > >> still handled by 8250_pnp.c. Unfortunately there is no separate ACPI device
> > >> with an UartSerialBusV2() resource to model the backlight-controller.
> > >>
> > >> The RFC patch 2/2 in this series uses acpi_quirk_skip_serdev_enumeration()
> > >> to still create a serdev for this for a backlight driver to bind to
> > >> instead of creating a /dev/ttyS0.
> > >>
> > >> Like other cases where the UartSerialBusV2() resource is missing or broken
> > >> this will only create the serdev-controller device and the serdev-device
> > >> itself will need to be instantiated by the consumer (the backlight driver).
> > >>
> > >> Unlike existing other cases which use DMI modaliases to load on a specific
> > >> board to work around brokeness of that board's specific ACPI tables, the
> > >> intend here is to have a single driver for all Dell AIOs using the DELL0501
> > >> HID for their UART, without needing to maintain a list of DMI matches.
> > >>
> > >> This means that the dell-uart-backlight driver will need something to bind
> > >> to. The original driver from 2017 used an acpi_driver for this matching on
> > >> and binding to the DELL0501 acpi_device.
> > >>
> > >> AFAIK you are trying to get rid of having drivers bind directly to
> > >> acpi_device-s so I assume that you don't want me to introduce a new one.
> > >> So to get a device to bind to without introducing a new acpi_driver
> > >> patch 2/2 if this series creates a platform_device for this.
> > >>
> > >> The creation of this platform_device is why this is marked as RFC,
> > >> if you are ok with this solution I guess you can merge this series
> > >> already as is. With the caveat that the matching dell-uart-backlight
> > >> driver is still under development (its progressing nicely and the
> > >> serdev-device instantation + binding a serdev driver to it already
> > >> works).
> > >
> > > I was about to work on this and found you're already working on it.
> > >
> > > Please add me to Cc list when the driver is ready to be tested, thanks!
> >
> > I hope you have access to actual hw with such a backlight device ?
> >
> > The driver actually has been ready for testing for quite a while now,
> > but the person who reported this backlight controller not being
> > supported to me has been testing this on a AIO of a friend of theirs
> > and this has been going pretty slow.
> >
> > So if you can test the driver (attached) then that would be great :)
> >
> > I even wrote an emulator to test it locally and that works, so
> > assuming I got the protocol right from the original posting of
> > the driver for this years ago then things should work.
> >
> > Note this depends on the kernel also having the patches from this
> > RFC (which Rafael has already merged) applied.
> 
> There are newer AIO have UID other than 0, like "SIOBUAR2".
> 
> Once change the "0" to NULL in 'get_serdev_controller("DELL0501", "0",
> 0, "serial0");', everything works perfectly.
> 
> With that change,
> Tested-by: Kai-Heng Feng <kai.heng.feng@canonical.com>

Do we have tables with _UID set to 0?
If so, we would need more complex approach.
Kai-Heng Feng May 8, 2024, 10:41 a.m. UTC | #4
On Wed, May 8, 2024 at 5:44 PM Andy Shevchenko <andy@kernel.org> wrote:
>
> On Wed, May 08, 2024 at 12:42:05PM +0800, Kai-Heng Feng wrote:
> > [+Cc AceLan]
> > On Wed, Apr 24, 2024 at 5:58 PM Hans de Goede <hdegoede@redhat.com> wrote:
> > > On 4/24/24 10:04 AM, Kai-Heng Feng wrote:
> > > > On Sun, Feb 18, 2024 at 11:15 PM Hans de Goede <hdegoede@redhat.com> wrote:
> > > >>
> > > >> Hi Rafael,
> > > >>
> > > >> I recently learned that some Dell AIOs (1) use a backlight controller board
> > > >> connected to an UART. Canonical even submitted a driver for this in 2017:
> > > >> https://lkml.org/lkml/2017/10/26/78
> > > >>
> > > >> This UART has a DELL0501 HID with CID set to PNP0501 so that the UART is
> > > >> still handled by 8250_pnp.c. Unfortunately there is no separate ACPI device
> > > >> with an UartSerialBusV2() resource to model the backlight-controller.
> > > >>
> > > >> The RFC patch 2/2 in this series uses acpi_quirk_skip_serdev_enumeration()
> > > >> to still create a serdev for this for a backlight driver to bind to
> > > >> instead of creating a /dev/ttyS0.
> > > >>
> > > >> Like other cases where the UartSerialBusV2() resource is missing or broken
> > > >> this will only create the serdev-controller device and the serdev-device
> > > >> itself will need to be instantiated by the consumer (the backlight driver).
> > > >>
> > > >> Unlike existing other cases which use DMI modaliases to load on a specific
> > > >> board to work around brokeness of that board's specific ACPI tables, the
> > > >> intend here is to have a single driver for all Dell AIOs using the DELL0501
> > > >> HID for their UART, without needing to maintain a list of DMI matches.
> > > >>
> > > >> This means that the dell-uart-backlight driver will need something to bind
> > > >> to. The original driver from 2017 used an acpi_driver for this matching on
> > > >> and binding to the DELL0501 acpi_device.
> > > >>
> > > >> AFAIK you are trying to get rid of having drivers bind directly to
> > > >> acpi_device-s so I assume that you don't want me to introduce a new one.
> > > >> So to get a device to bind to without introducing a new acpi_driver
> > > >> patch 2/2 if this series creates a platform_device for this.
> > > >>
> > > >> The creation of this platform_device is why this is marked as RFC,
> > > >> if you are ok with this solution I guess you can merge this series
> > > >> already as is. With the caveat that the matching dell-uart-backlight
> > > >> driver is still under development (its progressing nicely and the
> > > >> serdev-device instantation + binding a serdev driver to it already
> > > >> works).
> > > >
> > > > I was about to work on this and found you're already working on it.
> > > >
> > > > Please add me to Cc list when the driver is ready to be tested, thanks!
> > >
> > > I hope you have access to actual hw with such a backlight device ?
> > >
> > > The driver actually has been ready for testing for quite a while now,
> > > but the person who reported this backlight controller not being
> > > supported to me has been testing this on a AIO of a friend of theirs
> > > and this has been going pretty slow.
> > >
> > > So if you can test the driver (attached) then that would be great :)
> > >
> > > I even wrote an emulator to test it locally and that works, so
> > > assuming I got the protocol right from the original posting of
> > > the driver for this years ago then things should work.
> > >
> > > Note this depends on the kernel also having the patches from this
> > > RFC (which Rafael has already merged) applied.
> >
> > There are newer AIO have UID other than 0, like "SIOBUAR2".
> >
> > Once change the "0" to NULL in 'get_serdev_controller("DELL0501", "0",
> > 0, "serial0");', everything works perfectly.
> >
> > With that change,
> > Tested-by: Kai-Heng Feng <kai.heng.feng@canonical.com>
>
> Do we have tables with _UID set to 0?
> If so, we would need more complex approach.

Yes, some tables have _UID set to 0 and some have other _UID values.

Kai-Heng

>
> --
> With Best Regards,
> Andy Shevchenko
>
>
Hans de Goede May 12, 2024, 3:55 p.m. UTC | #5
Hi Andy,

On 5/8/24 11:43 AM, Andy Shevchenko wrote:
> On Wed, May 08, 2024 at 12:42:05PM +0800, Kai-Heng Feng wrote:
>> [+Cc AceLan]
>> On Wed, Apr 24, 2024 at 5:58 PM Hans de Goede <hdegoede@redhat.com> wrote:
>>> On 4/24/24 10:04 AM, Kai-Heng Feng wrote:
>>>> On Sun, Feb 18, 2024 at 11:15 PM Hans de Goede <hdegoede@redhat.com> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> Hi Rafael,
>>>>>
>>>>> I recently learned that some Dell AIOs (1) use a backlight controller board
>>>>> connected to an UART. Canonical even submitted a driver for this in 2017:
>>>>> https://lkml.org/lkml/2017/10/26/78
>>>>>
>>>>> This UART has a DELL0501 HID with CID set to PNP0501 so that the UART is
>>>>> still handled by 8250_pnp.c. Unfortunately there is no separate ACPI device
>>>>> with an UartSerialBusV2() resource to model the backlight-controller.
>>>>>
>>>>> The RFC patch 2/2 in this series uses acpi_quirk_skip_serdev_enumeration()
>>>>> to still create a serdev for this for a backlight driver to bind to
>>>>> instead of creating a /dev/ttyS0.
>>>>>
>>>>> Like other cases where the UartSerialBusV2() resource is missing or broken
>>>>> this will only create the serdev-controller device and the serdev-device
>>>>> itself will need to be instantiated by the consumer (the backlight driver).
>>>>>
>>>>> Unlike existing other cases which use DMI modaliases to load on a specific
>>>>> board to work around brokeness of that board's specific ACPI tables, the
>>>>> intend here is to have a single driver for all Dell AIOs using the DELL0501
>>>>> HID for their UART, without needing to maintain a list of DMI matches.
>>>>>
>>>>> This means that the dell-uart-backlight driver will need something to bind
>>>>> to. The original driver from 2017 used an acpi_driver for this matching on
>>>>> and binding to the DELL0501 acpi_device.
>>>>>
>>>>> AFAIK you are trying to get rid of having drivers bind directly to
>>>>> acpi_device-s so I assume that you don't want me to introduce a new one.
>>>>> So to get a device to bind to without introducing a new acpi_driver
>>>>> patch 2/2 if this series creates a platform_device for this.
>>>>>
>>>>> The creation of this platform_device is why this is marked as RFC,
>>>>> if you are ok with this solution I guess you can merge this series
>>>>> already as is. With the caveat that the matching dell-uart-backlight
>>>>> driver is still under development (its progressing nicely and the
>>>>> serdev-device instantation + binding a serdev driver to it already
>>>>> works).
>>>>
>>>> I was about to work on this and found you're already working on it.
>>>>
>>>> Please add me to Cc list when the driver is ready to be tested, thanks!
>>>
>>> I hope you have access to actual hw with such a backlight device ?
>>>
>>> The driver actually has been ready for testing for quite a while now,
>>> but the person who reported this backlight controller not being
>>> supported to me has been testing this on a AIO of a friend of theirs
>>> and this has been going pretty slow.
>>>
>>> So if you can test the driver (attached) then that would be great :)
>>>
>>> I even wrote an emulator to test it locally and that works, so
>>> assuming I got the protocol right from the original posting of
>>> the driver for this years ago then things should work.
>>>
>>> Note this depends on the kernel also having the patches from this
>>> RFC (which Rafael has already merged) applied.
>>
>> There are newer AIO have UID other than 0, like "SIOBUAR2".
>>
>> Once change the "0" to NULL in 'get_serdev_controller("DELL0501", "0",
>> 0, "serial0");', everything works perfectly.
>>
>> With that change,
>> Tested-by: Kai-Heng Feng <kai.heng.feng@canonical.com>
> 
> Do we have tables with _UID set to 0?
> If so, we would need more complex approach.

passing NULL as uid argument to get_serdev_controller() makes it skip
the UID check altogether and there is no reaosn to expect the special
"DELL0501" HID to be attached to more then 1 uart, so this should be fine.

Regards,

Hans
Hans de Goede May 12, 2024, 3:58 p.m. UTC | #6
Hi Kai-Heng Feng,

On 5/8/24 6:42 AM, Kai-Heng Feng wrote:
> [+Cc AceLan]
> 
> Hi Hans,
> 
> On Wed, Apr 24, 2024 at 5:58 PM Hans de Goede <hdegoede@redhat.com> wrote:
>>
>> Hi Kai-Heng Feng,
>>
>> On 4/24/24 10:04 AM, Kai-Heng Feng wrote:
>>> Hi Hans,
>>>
>>> On Sun, Feb 18, 2024 at 11:15 PM Hans de Goede <hdegoede@redhat.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Hi Rafael,
>>>>
>>>> I recently learned that some Dell AIOs (1) use a backlight controller board
>>>> connected to an UART. Canonical even submitted a driver for this in 2017:
>>>> https://lkml.org/lkml/2017/10/26/78
>>>>
>>>> This UART has a DELL0501 HID with CID set to PNP0501 so that the UART is
>>>> still handled by 8250_pnp.c. Unfortunately there is no separate ACPI device
>>>> with an UartSerialBusV2() resource to model the backlight-controller.
>>>>
>>>> The RFC patch 2/2 in this series uses acpi_quirk_skip_serdev_enumeration()
>>>> to still create a serdev for this for a backlight driver to bind to
>>>> instead of creating a /dev/ttyS0.
>>>>
>>>> Like other cases where the UartSerialBusV2() resource is missing or broken
>>>> this will only create the serdev-controller device and the serdev-device
>>>> itself will need to be instantiated by the consumer (the backlight driver).
>>>>
>>>> Unlike existing other cases which use DMI modaliases to load on a specific
>>>> board to work around brokeness of that board's specific ACPI tables, the
>>>> intend here is to have a single driver for all Dell AIOs using the DELL0501
>>>> HID for their UART, without needing to maintain a list of DMI matches.
>>>>
>>>> This means that the dell-uart-backlight driver will need something to bind
>>>> to. The original driver from 2017 used an acpi_driver for this matching on
>>>> and binding to the DELL0501 acpi_device.
>>>>
>>>> AFAIK you are trying to get rid of having drivers bind directly to
>>>> acpi_device-s so I assume that you don't want me to introduce a new one.
>>>> So to get a device to bind to without introducing a new acpi_driver
>>>> patch 2/2 if this series creates a platform_device for this.
>>>>
>>>> The creation of this platform_device is why this is marked as RFC,
>>>> if you are ok with this solution I guess you can merge this series
>>>> already as is. With the caveat that the matching dell-uart-backlight
>>>> driver is still under development (its progressing nicely and the
>>>> serdev-device instantation + binding a serdev driver to it already
>>>> works).
>>>
>>> I was about to work on this and found you're already working on it.
>>>
>>> Please add me to Cc list when the driver is ready to be tested, thanks!
>>
>> I hope you have access to actual hw with such a backlight device ?
>>
>> The driver actually has been ready for testing for quite a while now,
>> but the person who reported this backlight controller not being
>> supported to me has been testing this on a AIO of a friend of theirs
>> and this has been going pretty slow.
>>
>> So if you can test the driver (attached) then that would be great :)
>>
>> I even wrote an emulator to test it locally and that works, so
>> assuming I got the protocol right from the original posting of
>> the driver for this years ago then things should work.
>>
>> Note this depends on the kernel also having the patches from this
>> RFC (which Rafael has already merged) applied.
> 
> There are newer AIO have UID other than 0, like "SIOBUAR2".
> 
> Once change the "0" to NULL in 'get_serdev_controller("DELL0501", "0",
> 0, "serial0");', everything works perfectly.
> 
> With that change,
> Tested-by: Kai-Heng Feng <kai.heng.feng@canonical.com>

Great thank you for testing. Luck has it that the user for who's
Dell AOI I started working on this also just reported back that
the driver works for them :)

So I'm going to send out the patch series for this now with
the following diff squashed in vs what I send you:

diff --git a/drivers/platform/x86/dell/dell-uart-backlight.c b/drivers/platform/x86/dell/dell-uart-backlight.c
index da4a640c0d88..3882bb7d6c71 100644
--- a/drivers/platform/x86/dell/dell-uart-backlight.c
+++ b/drivers/platform/x86/dell/dell-uart-backlight.c
@@ -352,7 +352,7 @@ static int dell_uart_bl_pdev_probe(struct platform_device *pdev)
 	struct device *ctrl_dev;
 	int ret;
 
-	ctrl_dev = get_serdev_controller("DELL0501", "0", 0, "serial0");
+	ctrl_dev = get_serdev_controller("DELL0501", NULL, 0, "serial0");
 	if (IS_ERR(ctrl_dev))
 		return PTR_ERR(ctrl_dev);
 
Regards,

Hans
diff mbox

Patch

diff --git a/drivers/acpi/acpi_pnp.c b/drivers/acpi/acpi_pnp.c
index 01abf26764b0..847c08deea7b 100644
--- a/drivers/acpi/acpi_pnp.c
+++ b/drivers/acpi/acpi_pnp.c
@@ -353,10 +353,17 @@  static bool acpi_pnp_match(const char *idstr, const struct acpi_device_id **matc
  * given ACPI device object, the PNP scan handler will not attach to that
  * object, because there is a proper non-PNP driver in the kernel for the
  * device represented by it.
+ *
+ * The DELL0501 ACPI HID represents an UART (CID is set to PNP0501) with
+ * a backlight-controller attached. There is no separate ACPI device with
+ * an UartSerialBusV2() resource to model the backlight-controller.
+ * This setup requires instantiating both a pnp_device for the UART as well
+ * as a platform_device for the backlight-controller driver to bind too.
  */
 static const struct acpi_device_id acpi_nonpnp_device_ids[] = {
 	{"INTC1080"},
 	{"INTC1081"},
+	{"DELL0501"},
 	{""},
 };
 
@@ -376,13 +383,16 @@  static struct acpi_scan_handler acpi_pnp_handler = {
  * For CMOS RTC devices, the PNP ACPI scan handler does not work, because
  * there is a CMOS RTC ACPI scan handler installed already, so we need to
  * check those devices and enumerate them to the PNP bus directly.
+ * For DELL0501 devices the PNP ACPI scan handler is skipped to create
+ * a platform_device, see the acpi_nonpnp_device_ids[] comment.
  */
-static int is_cmos_rtc_device(struct acpi_device *adev)
+static int is_special_pnp_device(struct acpi_device *adev)
 {
 	static const struct acpi_device_id ids[] = {
 		{ "PNP0B00" },
 		{ "PNP0B01" },
 		{ "PNP0B02" },
+		{ "DELL0501" },
 		{""},
 	};
 	return !acpi_match_device_ids(adev, ids);
@@ -390,7 +400,7 @@  static int is_cmos_rtc_device(struct acpi_device *adev)
 
 bool acpi_is_pnp_device(struct acpi_device *adev)
 {
-	return adev->handler == &acpi_pnp_handler || is_cmos_rtc_device(adev);
+	return adev->handler == &acpi_pnp_handler || is_special_pnp_device(adev);
 }
 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(acpi_is_pnp_device);