Older DisplayPort to DVI-D Dual Link adapters designed by Bizlink have bugs
in their I2C over AUX implementation (fixed in newer revisions). They work
fine with Windows, but fail with Linux.
It turns out that they cannot keep an I2C transaction open unless the
previous read was 16 bytes; shorter reads can only be followed by a zero
byte transfer ending the I2C transaction.
Copy Windows's behaviour, and read 16 bytes at a time. If we get a short
reply, assume that there's a hardware bottleneck, and shrink our read size
to match. For this purpose, use the algorithm in the DisplayPort 1.2 spec,
in the hopes that it'll be closest to what Windows does.
Also provide an unsafe module parameter for testing smaller transfer sizes,
in case there are sinks out there that cannot work with Windows.
Note also that despite the previous comment in drm_dp_i2c_xfer, this speeds
up native DP EDID reads; Ville Syrjälä <ville.syrjala@linux.intel.com> found
the following changes in his testing:
Device under test: old -> with this patch
DP->DVI (OUI 001cf8): 40ms -> 35ms
DP->VGA (OUI 0022b9): 45ms -> 38ms
Zotac DP->2xHDMI: 25ms -> 4ms
Asus PB278 monitor: 22ms -> 3ms
A back of the envelope calculation shows that peak theoretical transfer rate
for 1 byte reads is around 60 kbit/s; with 16 byte reads, this increases to
around 500 kbit/s, which explains the increase in speed.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=55228 Tested-by: Aidan Marks <aidanamarks@gmail.com> (v3) Signed-off-by: Simon Farnsworth <simon.farnsworth@onelan.co.uk> Reviewed-by: Ville Syrjälä <ville.syrjala@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>