Dove DT and HDMI on v3.16-rc1 (was: Re: [PATCH RFC 0/5] Dove PMU support)
From: Russell King - ARM Linux <hidden>
Date: 2014-06-18 15:01:03
On Wed, Jun 18, 2014 at 11:34:48AM -0300, Ezequiel Garcia wrote:
On 18 Jun 04:11 PM, Sebastian Hesselbarth wrote:quoted
Using your libdrm-armada and xf86-video-armada on Ubuntu raring armhf, I can run Xfce4 on 1920x1080p60 on Dove Cubox without any blanking issues. Using xrandr -s <mode> will fail after 2-3 times but that shouldn't be related to the issues you see. Please test above branch with kernel config at https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/59928252/config-dove-v3.16-rc1-hdmi and report back if issues are still there. Anyone having a Dove CuBox ready, please also test. Russell has a git branch for the required video lib and drivers.Can you point me at those?
Beware - the machine is rather aged and slow by todays standards ((c)git is rather heavy weight): http://ftp.arm.linux.org.uk/cgit/ The xf86-video-armada.git tree is not trivial to build as there's dependencies on the Vivante galcore libraries - and even if you have them, there's then there's non-trivial changes to the kernel-side driver to support dmabuf imports. Welcome to the world of closed source graphics libraries making open source hard... I've been wishing for etnaviv for a while now... Even though the kernel side is supposed to be GPL, I'm really not happy distributing it or publishing changes as there are a number of files with headers which seem to be GPL-incompatible (which I've eliminated from my tree through updates) but the problem is wonderful git keeps them as history... and in my tree it's a massive 93 patches, against an old version of the code (0.8.0.1998) which I then sort-of updated to the version OLPC were carrying towards the start of 2013. It's probably best if Sebastian walks you through getting it up and running as my experience is with my kernels and userspace, which has all the necessary hacks in. -- FTTC broadband for 0.8mile line: now at 9.7Mbps down 460kbps up... slowly improving, and getting towards what was expected from it.