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[RFC,00/25] arm64: realtek: Add Xnano X5 and implement TM1628/FD628/AiP1618 LED controllers

Message ID 20191212033952.5967-1-afaerber@suse.de (mailing list archive)
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Series arm64: realtek: Add Xnano X5 and implement TM1628/FD628/AiP1618 LED controllers | expand

Message

Andreas Färber Dec. 12, 2019, 3:39 a.m. UTC
Hello,

This patch series implements the LED controllers found in some RTD1295 based
TV set-top boxes.

Ever since I've had mainline Linux kernels booting on my Zidoo X9S TV box,
it's been bugging me that it kept displaying "boot" on its front display.
A hot lead was a TM1628 chip on the front display's daughterboard, which
English and Chinese datasheets were available for. The biggest hurdle
to overcome was whether and how this chip was connected to the SoC.
Confusingly the datasheet talks about "Serial Interface" and shows pins
DIO, SCLK and STB; whereas neither UART nor SPI DT nodes seemed to be in use
for this, no mention of such chipset in the binary vendor DT, and only one
seemingly unrelated exported GPIO. Sadly Zidoo have refused to share GPL
sourcecode with me, and the public GPL code drops from NAS and SBC vendors
didn't seem to include drivers for this chip. Last weekend, review of vendor
DT pinctrl nodes revealed a "spi@1" pinctrl node in use by the pinctrl node
itself, despite there being only one GSPI block on the SoC. debugfs under
Android revealed GPIO pins named "fp_stb", "fp_data" and "fp_clk" (on X5:
3x "vfdtest", unhelpfully). So I hereby present my first 3-wire SPI slave,
using standard spi-gpio driver.

This required to extend the spi-gpio driver with Little Endian support.

TM1628 and related chipsets have an internal Display RAM, from which they
control a two-dimensional array of LED components, often used for
seven-segment displays, i.e. clock display, but also for indicators.
Individual LEDs can be turned on/off, but brightness is applied globally.
Some chipsets also support polling a two-dimensional key pad.

This initial RFC implements a SPI slave driver within Linux leds subsystem
and lets DT expose individual LED components as two-state LEDs, allowing
to assign standard Linux LED triggers and to control them via sysfs.

It goes on to add a "text" attribute to the driver that enables DT-configured
seven-segment displays; I was expecting to find precedence in auxdisplay
subsystem but came up empty. So my driver currently integrates its own
generic (but incomplete) character-to-8-segments mapping, as well as in a
second step a combined-characters-to-8-segments mapping, which then gets
mapped to the chipset's available output lines. Doing this as sysfs device
attribute had the advantage of being able to test it quickly; it also leaves
timezone management to userspace and lets it choose between wall clock and
playback time as needed. LED triggers appeared to be per-LED; otherwise an
RTC-implemented interrupt based LED trigger would've been nice for RTD1195+,
since my pending irqchip driver exposes interrupts down to half-second that
would seem ideal for accurately driving such a display, with blinking colon.

Finally, it sketches how keypad handling could be integrated into the leds
driver, but I am lacking a test case for that functionality.
Distinguishing LEDs and key inputs in DT may get difficult...

For brightness control I am still investigating the backlight API and
defaulting to the chipset's default (lowest) brightness.

Prepended is a new DT for Xnano X5 OTT TV Box, featuring an FD628 display.

Displays connected to these controllers didn't have any model or vendor
usually, and for the lengthy numbers from my X9S, Google found no hits.
Therefore I've been unable to come up with compatible strings for those
displays and need to configure it per .dts, even though some may be using
the same, e.g., "88:88" type display model.
Whereas the same display might be connected to different LED controllers,
thus is orthogonal to the controller's compatible string.

Another aspect here is that the leds binding expects to have child nodes
per LED directly on the LED controller node. So I've gone to lengths to
shoehorn my display child node into that scheme via wildcard reg property.

The alternative would be to define some special child node, as done for the
SPI controller's "slave" node, to use as display. But in theory there might
be multiple displays connected to one controller (which is neglected here).
And in theory the same display might be wired up differently, so at most
the display model could tell us about layout and availability of LEDs, but
we'd still need a mapping from the LED controller's to the display's pins.
So far neither of the two displays tested actually use the segment lines
for the segments, but rather switch segment and grid lines.

So in theory we might consider the display as LED controller and implement
binding/driver on that level (moving it to DT root node like gpio-leds),
if we can hook it up to the actual LED controller in this case on SPI bus?
Assuming we can actually identify the display with some compatible string,
that is.
However, update efficiency has been a concern, with clock display in mind.
Thus, forcing two SPI commands (three SPI transfers) per LED segment, as the
the current LED API would entail, should better be avoided. This led to the
current design of having everything in tm1628 driver, so that we can easily
determine the scope of an update operation there (one per LED; all for text,
to be optimized through bit field of dirtied bytes).

Locking is completely missing still. We'll need at least a mutex to avoid,
e.g., a heartbeat LED trigger and a text update conflicting on SPI bus or
"hazards" becoming visible on the display during conflicting byte updates.

Module remove support is missing, too.

We may also need to revisit my error checking and either inline functions
or drop checks on the LED bit level, if it becomes a performance bottleneck.

On the cosmetic side, some lines are still beyond 80 characters.

Some more notes:
* Public TM1628 V1.1 datasheet is in Chinese only and differs from the
  unversioned English version found elsewhere on datasheet sites by
  documenting more display modes, included here (guessed from Arabic numbers).
* Public FD628 datasheet is Chinese only (guesses based on Arabic numbers).
  FD623 appears to have more output lines, which would fit current data types.
* AiP1618 links were all broken (404); try Google "site:szfdwdz.com" search
  to actually find the documents available on their site.
* Princeton PT6964 is another related LED controller with public datasheet
  that I did not encounter in my TV boxes yet, thus not included here.
  Datasheets are linked only for PT6959 and PT6967, but PT6964 V1.3 and V1.4
  are available elsewhere. PT6967 has more output lines, which my current
  data types could barely hold. Maybe bump them all to u32 type right away?
* TM1628 is also found on MeLE V9 TV box, to be tested.
* FD628 is also found on Amlogic S905X2 based Vontar X96 Max TV box,
  to be tested (once UART is soldered).
* AiP1618 was found on Ava and Lake I TV boxes, to be tested.
* It remained unclear to me which of these many similar chipsets was first.
  My driver name is therefore based on the chip I encountered first.

This series is based on my not-yet-posted RTD1295 pinctrl and GPIO drivers.

Latest experimental patches at:
https://github.com/afaerber/linux/commits/rtd1295-next

Have a lot of fun!

Cheers,
Andreas

Cc: linux-leds@vger.kernel.org
Cc: Jacek Anaszewski <jacek.anaszewski@gmail.com>
Cc: Pavel Machek <pavel@ucw.cz>
Cc: Dan Murphy <dmurphy@ti.com>

Cc: linux-rtc@vger.kernel.org
Cc: Alessandro Zummo <a.zummo@towertech.it>
Cc: Alexandre Belloni <alexandre.belloni@bootlin.com>

Cc: devicetree@vger.kernel.org
Cc: Rob Herring <robh+dt@kernel.org>

Cc: linux-spi@vger.kernel.org
Cc: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org>

Cc: linux-amlogic@lists.infradead.org

Cc: Roc He <hepeng@zidoo.tv>
# No email for Xnano

Cc: zypeng@titanmec.com
Cc: sales@fdhisi.com
# No email for szfdwdz.com
Cc: csd@princeton.com.tw

Andreas Färber (25):
  dt-bindings: vendor-prefixes: Add Xnano
  dt-bindings: arm: realtek: Add Xnano X5
  arm64: dts: realtek: rtd1295: Add Xnano X5
  spi: gpio: Implement LSB First bitbang support
  dt-bindings: vendor-prefixes: Add Titan Micro Electronics
  dt-bindings: leds: Add Titan Micro Electronics TM1628
  leds: Add Titan Micro Electronics TM1628
  arm64: dts: realtek: rtd129x-zidoo-x9s: Add TM1628 LED controller
  arm64: dts: realtek: rtd1295-zidoo-x9s: Add regular LEDs to TM1628
  dt-bindings: vendor-prefixes: Add Fuda Hisi Microelectronics
  dt-bindings: leds: tm1628: Add Fuda Hisi Microelectronics FD628
  leds: tm1628: Add Fuda Hisi Microelectronics FD628
  arm64: dts: realtek: rtd1295-xnano-x5: Add FD628 LED controller
  arm64: dts: realtek: rtd1295-xnano-x5: Add regular LEDs to FD628
  dt-bindings: vendor-prefixes: Add Fude Microelectronics
  dt-bindings: leds: tm1628: Add Fude Microelectronics AiP1618
  leds: tm1628: Prepare Fude Microelectronics AiP1618
  dt-bindings: leds: tm1628: Define display child nodes
  leds: tm1628: Add 7-segment display support
  arm64: dts: realtek: rtd1295-zidoo-x9s: Add display to TM1628
  arm64: dts: realtek: rtd1295-xnano-x5: Add display to FD628
  leds: tm1826: Add combined glyph support
  WIP: leds: tm1628: Prepare TM1628 keys
  WIP: leds: tm1628: Prepare FD628 keys
  WIP: leds: tm1628: Prepare AiP1618 keys

 Documentation/devicetree/bindings/arm/realtek.yaml |   1 +
 .../devicetree/bindings/leds/titanmec,tm1628.yaml  | 134 ++++
 .../devicetree/bindings/vendor-prefixes.yaml       |   8 +
 arch/arm64/boot/dts/realtek/Makefile               |   1 +
 arch/arm64/boot/dts/realtek/rtd1295-xnano-x5.dts   | 108 +++
 arch/arm64/boot/dts/realtek/rtd1295-zidoo-x9s.dts  |  36 +-
 drivers/leds/Kconfig                               |  12 +
 drivers/leds/Makefile                              |   1 +
 drivers/leds/leds-tm1628.c                         | 727 +++++++++++++++++++++
 drivers/spi/spi-bitbang-txrx.h                     |  68 +-
 drivers/spi/spi-gpio.c                             |  42 +-
 11 files changed, 1126 insertions(+), 12 deletions(-)
 create mode 100644 Documentation/devicetree/bindings/leds/titanmec,tm1628.yaml
 create mode 100644 arch/arm64/boot/dts/realtek/rtd1295-xnano-x5.dts
 create mode 100644 drivers/leds/leds-tm1628.c

Comments

Robin Murphy Dec. 12, 2019, 1:14 p.m. UTC | #1
Hi Andreas,

On 12/12/2019 3:39 am, Andreas Färber wrote:
> Hello,
> 
> This patch series implements the LED controllers found in some RTD1295 based
> TV set-top boxes.
> 
> Ever since I've had mainline Linux kernels booting on my Zidoo X9S TV box,
> it's been bugging me that it kept displaying "boot" on its front display.
> A hot lead was a TM1628 chip on the front display's daughterboard, which
> English and Chinese datasheets were available for. The biggest hurdle
> to overcome was whether and how this chip was connected to the SoC.
> Confusingly the datasheet talks about "Serial Interface" and shows pins
> DIO, SCLK and STB; whereas neither UART nor SPI DT nodes seemed to be in use
> for this, no mention of such chipset in the binary vendor DT, and only one
> seemingly unrelated exported GPIO. Sadly Zidoo have refused to share GPL
> sourcecode with me, and the public GPL code drops from NAS and SBC vendors
> didn't seem to include drivers for this chip. Last weekend, review of vendor
> DT pinctrl nodes revealed a "spi@1" pinctrl node in use by the pinctrl node
> itself, despite there being only one GSPI block on the SoC. debugfs under
> Android revealed GPIO pins named "fp_stb", "fp_data" and "fp_clk" (on X5:
> 3x "vfdtest", unhelpfully). So I hereby present my first 3-wire SPI slave,
> using standard spi-gpio driver.
> 
> This required to extend the spi-gpio driver with Little Endian support.
> 
> TM1628 and related chipsets have an internal Display RAM, from which they
> control a two-dimensional array of LED components, often used for
> seven-segment displays, i.e. clock display, but also for indicators.
> Individual LEDs can be turned on/off, but brightness is applied globally.
> Some chipsets also support polling a two-dimensional key pad.
> 
> This initial RFC implements a SPI slave driver within Linux leds subsystem
> and lets DT expose individual LED components as two-state LEDs, allowing
> to assign standard Linux LED triggers and to control them via sysfs.
> 
> It goes on to add a "text" attribute to the driver that enables DT-configured
> seven-segment displays; I was expecting to find precedence in auxdisplay
> subsystem but came up empty. So my driver currently integrates its own
> generic (but incomplete) character-to-8-segments mapping, as well as in a
> second step a combined-characters-to-8-segments mapping, which then gets
> mapped to the chipset's available output lines. Doing this as sysfs device
> attribute had the advantage of being able to test it quickly; it also leaves
> timezone management to userspace and lets it choose between wall clock and
> playback time as needed. LED triggers appeared to be per-LED; otherwise an
> RTC-implemented interrupt based LED trigger would've been nice for RTD1195+,
> since my pending irqchip driver exposes interrupts down to half-second that
> would seem ideal for accurately driving such a display, with blinking colon.
> 
> Finally, it sketches how keypad handling could be integrated into the leds
> driver, but I am lacking a test case for that functionality.
> Distinguishing LEDs and key inputs in DT may get difficult...
> 
> For brightness control I am still investigating the backlight API and
> defaulting to the chipset's default (lowest) brightness.
> 
> Prepended is a new DT for Xnano X5 OTT TV Box, featuring an FD628 display.
> 
> Displays connected to these controllers didn't have any model or vendor
> usually, and for the lengthy numbers from my X9S, Google found no hits.
> Therefore I've been unable to come up with compatible strings for those
> displays and need to configure it per .dts, even though some may be using
> the same, e.g., "88:88" type display model.
> Whereas the same display might be connected to different LED controllers,
> thus is orthogonal to the controller's compatible string.
> 
> Another aspect here is that the leds binding expects to have child nodes
> per LED directly on the LED controller node. So I've gone to lengths to
> shoehorn my display child node into that scheme via wildcard reg property.
> 
> The alternative would be to define some special child node, as done for the
> SPI controller's "slave" node, to use as display. But in theory there might
> be multiple displays connected to one controller (which is neglected here).
> And in theory the same display might be wired up differently, so at most
> the display model could tell us about layout and availability of LEDs, but
> we'd still need a mapping from the LED controller's to the display's pins.
> So far neither of the two displays tested actually use the segment lines
> for the segments, but rather switch segment and grid lines.
> 
> So in theory we might consider the display as LED controller and implement
> binding/driver on that level (moving it to DT root node like gpio-leds),
> if we can hook it up to the actual LED controller in this case on SPI bus?
> Assuming we can actually identify the display with some compatible string,
> that is.
> However, update efficiency has been a concern, with clock display in mind.
> Thus, forcing two SPI commands (three SPI transfers) per LED segment, as the
> the current LED API would entail, should better be avoided. This led to the
> current design of having everything in tm1628 driver, so that we can easily
> determine the scope of an update operation there (one per LED; all for text,
> to be optimized through bit field of dirtied bytes).
> 
> Locking is completely missing still. We'll need at least a mutex to avoid,
> e.g., a heartbeat LED trigger and a text update conflicting on SPI bus or
> "hazards" becoming visible on the display during conflicting byte updates.
> 
> Module remove support is missing, too.
> 
> We may also need to revisit my error checking and either inline functions
> or drop checks on the LED bit level, if it becomes a performance bottleneck.
> 
> On the cosmetic side, some lines are still beyond 80 characters.
> 
> Some more notes:
> * Public TM1628 V1.1 datasheet is in Chinese only and differs from the
>    unversioned English version found elsewhere on datasheet sites by
>    documenting more display modes, included here (guessed from Arabic numbers).
> * Public FD628 datasheet is Chinese only (guesses based on Arabic numbers).
>    FD623 appears to have more output lines, which would fit current data types.
> * AiP1618 links were all broken (404); try Google "site:szfdwdz.com" search
>    to actually find the documents available on their site.
> * Princeton PT6964 is another related LED controller with public datasheet
>    that I did not encounter in my TV boxes yet, thus not included here.
>    Datasheets are linked only for PT6959 and PT6967, but PT6964 V1.3 and V1.4
>    are available elsewhere. PT6967 has more output lines, which my current
>    data types could barely hold. Maybe bump them all to u32 type right away?
> * TM1628 is also found on MeLE V9 TV box, to be tested.
> * FD628 is also found on Amlogic S905X2 based Vontar X96 Max TV box,
>    to be tested (once UART is soldered).
> * AiP1618 was found on Ava and Lake I TV boxes, to be tested.
> * It remained unclear to me which of these many similar chipsets was first.
>    My driver name is therefore based on the chip I encountered first.

It's pretty cool to see this! My Rockchip box has an AiP1618-driven 
display that I've also spent a bit of time hacking around with - I did 
get some way into writing an LED driver, but ultimately gave up and 
wrote a simple thing to bit-bang the GPIO chardev from userspace (and 
since there are enough clocks in my house, I now have a cpufreq display!)

In case it helps, in my research I found that ARTSCHIP are another 
vendor of these things with accessible datasheets[1], and as far as I 
could tell the command set appears to derive from (or is at least common 
to) some old Holtek VFD controllers.

If I can figure out the DT parts (which was one of the areas that 
stalled my attempt) I'll try to have a play with this series over the 
holidays. One thought to ponder is that I have an "88:88" display where 
the entire middle grid is reserved for the colon (which is wired to just 
one segment) - I'm not sure how that could be sanely described :/

Robin.

[1] 
http://www.artschip.com/products.asp?lx=small&anid=779&ParentName=Signal%20management%20_I_O%20Extender

> This series is based on my not-yet-posted RTD1295 pinctrl and GPIO drivers.
> 
> Latest experimental patches at:
> https://github.com/afaerber/linux/commits/rtd1295-next
> 
> Have a lot of fun!
> 
> Cheers,
> Andreas
> 
> Cc: linux-leds@vger.kernel.org
> Cc: Jacek Anaszewski <jacek.anaszewski@gmail.com>
> Cc: Pavel Machek <pavel@ucw.cz>
> Cc: Dan Murphy <dmurphy@ti.com>
> 
> Cc: linux-rtc@vger.kernel.org
> Cc: Alessandro Zummo <a.zummo@towertech.it>
> Cc: Alexandre Belloni <alexandre.belloni@bootlin.com>
> 
> Cc: devicetree@vger.kernel.org
> Cc: Rob Herring <robh+dt@kernel.org>
> 
> Cc: linux-spi@vger.kernel.org
> Cc: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org>
> 
> Cc: linux-amlogic@lists.infradead.org
> 
> Cc: Roc He <hepeng@zidoo.tv>
> # No email for Xnano
> 
> Cc: zypeng@titanmec.com
> Cc: sales@fdhisi.com
> # No email for szfdwdz.com
> Cc: csd@princeton.com.tw
> 
> Andreas Färber (25):
>    dt-bindings: vendor-prefixes: Add Xnano
>    dt-bindings: arm: realtek: Add Xnano X5
>    arm64: dts: realtek: rtd1295: Add Xnano X5
>    spi: gpio: Implement LSB First bitbang support
>    dt-bindings: vendor-prefixes: Add Titan Micro Electronics
>    dt-bindings: leds: Add Titan Micro Electronics TM1628
>    leds: Add Titan Micro Electronics TM1628
>    arm64: dts: realtek: rtd129x-zidoo-x9s: Add TM1628 LED controller
>    arm64: dts: realtek: rtd1295-zidoo-x9s: Add regular LEDs to TM1628
>    dt-bindings: vendor-prefixes: Add Fuda Hisi Microelectronics
>    dt-bindings: leds: tm1628: Add Fuda Hisi Microelectronics FD628
>    leds: tm1628: Add Fuda Hisi Microelectronics FD628
>    arm64: dts: realtek: rtd1295-xnano-x5: Add FD628 LED controller
>    arm64: dts: realtek: rtd1295-xnano-x5: Add regular LEDs to FD628
>    dt-bindings: vendor-prefixes: Add Fude Microelectronics
>    dt-bindings: leds: tm1628: Add Fude Microelectronics AiP1618
>    leds: tm1628: Prepare Fude Microelectronics AiP1618
>    dt-bindings: leds: tm1628: Define display child nodes
>    leds: tm1628: Add 7-segment display support
>    arm64: dts: realtek: rtd1295-zidoo-x9s: Add display to TM1628
>    arm64: dts: realtek: rtd1295-xnano-x5: Add display to FD628
>    leds: tm1826: Add combined glyph support
>    WIP: leds: tm1628: Prepare TM1628 keys
>    WIP: leds: tm1628: Prepare FD628 keys
>    WIP: leds: tm1628: Prepare AiP1618 keys
> 
>   Documentation/devicetree/bindings/arm/realtek.yaml |   1 +
>   .../devicetree/bindings/leds/titanmec,tm1628.yaml  | 134 ++++
>   .../devicetree/bindings/vendor-prefixes.yaml       |   8 +
>   arch/arm64/boot/dts/realtek/Makefile               |   1 +
>   arch/arm64/boot/dts/realtek/rtd1295-xnano-x5.dts   | 108 +++
>   arch/arm64/boot/dts/realtek/rtd1295-zidoo-x9s.dts  |  36 +-
>   drivers/leds/Kconfig                               |  12 +
>   drivers/leds/Makefile                              |   1 +
>   drivers/leds/leds-tm1628.c                         | 727 +++++++++++++++++++++
>   drivers/spi/spi-bitbang-txrx.h                     |  68 +-
>   drivers/spi/spi-gpio.c                             |  42 +-
>   11 files changed, 1126 insertions(+), 12 deletions(-)
>   create mode 100644 Documentation/devicetree/bindings/leds/titanmec,tm1628.yaml
>   create mode 100644 arch/arm64/boot/dts/realtek/rtd1295-xnano-x5.dts
>   create mode 100644 drivers/leds/leds-tm1628.c
>
Andreas Färber Dec. 12, 2019, 8:55 p.m. UTC | #2
Hi Robin,

[- Roc He, + linux-rockchip]

Am 12.12.19 um 14:14 schrieb Robin Murphy:
> On 12/12/2019 3:39 am, Andreas Färber wrote:
>> This patch series implements the LED controllers found in some RTD1295
>> based
>> TV set-top boxes.
[...]
>> TM1628 and related chipsets have an internal Display RAM, from which they
>> control a two-dimensional array of LED components, often used for
>> seven-segment displays, i.e. clock display, but also for indicators.
>> Individual LEDs can be turned on/off, but brightness is applied globally.
>> Some chipsets also support polling a two-dimensional key pad.
[...]
>> Some more notes:
>> * Public TM1628 V1.1 datasheet is in Chinese only and differs from the
>>    unversioned English version found elsewhere on datasheet sites by
>>    documenting more display modes, included here (guessed from Arabic
>> numbers).
>> * Public FD628 datasheet is Chinese only (guesses based on Arabic
>> numbers).
>>    FD623 appears to have more output lines, which would fit current
>> data types.
>> * AiP1618 links were all broken (404); try Google "site:szfdwdz.com"
>> search
>>    to actually find the documents available on their site.
>> * Princeton PT6964 is another related LED controller with public
>> datasheet
>>    that I did not encounter in my TV boxes yet, thus not included here.
>>    Datasheets are linked only for PT6959 and PT6967, but PT6964 V1.3
>> and V1.4
>>    are available elsewhere. PT6967 has more output lines, which my
>> current
>>    data types could barely hold. Maybe bump them all to u32 type right
>> away?
>> * TM1628 is also found on MeLE V9 TV box, to be tested.
>> * FD628 is also found on Amlogic S905X2 based Vontar X96 Max TV box,
>>    to be tested (once UART is soldered).
>> * AiP1618 was found on Ava and Lake I TV boxes, to be tested.
>> * It remained unclear to me which of these many similar chipsets was
>> first.
>>    My driver name is therefore based on the chip I encountered first.
> 
> It's pretty cool to see this!

Glad someone else finds it useful. :)

> My Rockchip box has an AiP1618-driven
> display [...]

You don't mention the model: Does it have a mainline .dts we can extend?
If not, I'd ask you to get that merged into -next, then I can happily
pick up patches adding the LED controller for your TV box into this
series as it evolves. (I'm expecting at least two more RFC iterations.)

Similarly, I'm planning to drop Xnano X5 in v2, if it doesn't require a
respin, so that no Realtek-specific parts other than .dts node additions
remain here.

> In case it helps, in my research I found that ARTSCHIP are another
> vendor of these things with accessible datasheets[1],

Thanks, their HT1628 indeed looks compatible.

Sunmoon Microelectronics SM1628 also looks compatible.
http://www.chinaasic.com/product.jsp#item=other#style=27#id=138

> and as far as I
> could tell the command set appears to derive from (or is at least common
> to) some old Holtek VFD controllers.

Hmm, HT16515 looks similar and has more lines, RAM and mode bits than I
prepared here.
https://www.holtek.com/productdetail/-/vg/ht16515

So I'd need to make more numbers model-dependent and allocate the
Display RAM buffer dynamically.

Whereas HT16D35A seems incompatible command-wise, and HT16528 appears to
be out of scope, for dot displays and with fancy embedded character map.

No Holtek email alias that I can quickly spot.

But given that I'm proposing vendor-specific compatibles just in case,
the main decisions will be the Kconfig symbol and module name. The
driver code itself we could always refactor after merging, and renaming
the schema file (as opposed to compatible) should also be possible.

> If I can figure out the DT parts (which was one of the areas that
> stalled my attempt) I'll try to have a play with this series over the
> holidays.

That reminded me that I forgot to push - done in the meantime. :)

> One thought to ponder is that I have an "88:88" display where
> the entire middle grid is reserved for the colon (which is wired to just
> one segment) - I'm not sure how that could be sanely described :/

Well, that sounds exactly like my bindings example and X9S. You'll find
the colon configured as LED, separate from the four digits, which don't
need to be contiguous due to separate reg entries per digit.

While it may be possible to put more cleverness into text_store() to set
the colon as part of five-char "88:88" text, we'd likely want to blink
it every half second, which we should better do without updating the
full display text from "88:88" to "88 88". "8888" updated every minute
sounds less problematic.

Ugly with the colon LED is that the redone LED bindings don't yet have a
function defined for this, so I'm currently misusing whatever was there.
I should prepare a bindings addition, if we want to use an LED node.

Regards,
Andreas

> [1]
> http://www.artschip.com/products.asp?lx=small&anid=779&ParentName=Signal%20management%20_I_O%20Extender
> 
>> This series is based on my not-yet-posted RTD1295 pinctrl and GPIO
>> drivers.
>>
>> Latest experimental patches at:
>> https://github.com/afaerber/linux/commits/rtd1295-next
[snip]
Robin Murphy Dec. 13, 2019, 2:07 p.m. UTC | #3
On 12/12/2019 8:55 pm, Andreas Färber wrote:
> Hi Robin,
> 
> [- Roc He, + linux-rockchip]
> 
> Am 12.12.19 um 14:14 schrieb Robin Murphy:
>> On 12/12/2019 3:39 am, Andreas Färber wrote:
>>> This patch series implements the LED controllers found in some RTD1295
>>> based
>>> TV set-top boxes.
> [...]
>>> TM1628 and related chipsets have an internal Display RAM, from which they
>>> control a two-dimensional array of LED components, often used for
>>> seven-segment displays, i.e. clock display, but also for indicators.
>>> Individual LEDs can be turned on/off, but brightness is applied globally.
>>> Some chipsets also support polling a two-dimensional key pad.
> [...]
>>> Some more notes:
>>> * Public TM1628 V1.1 datasheet is in Chinese only and differs from the
>>>     unversioned English version found elsewhere on datasheet sites by
>>>     documenting more display modes, included here (guessed from Arabic
>>> numbers).
>>> * Public FD628 datasheet is Chinese only (guesses based on Arabic
>>> numbers).
>>>     FD623 appears to have more output lines, which would fit current
>>> data types.
>>> * AiP1618 links were all broken (404); try Google "site:szfdwdz.com"
>>> search
>>>     to actually find the documents available on their site.
>>> * Princeton PT6964 is another related LED controller with public
>>> datasheet
>>>     that I did not encounter in my TV boxes yet, thus not included here.
>>>     Datasheets are linked only for PT6959 and PT6967, but PT6964 V1.3
>>> and V1.4
>>>     are available elsewhere. PT6967 has more output lines, which my
>>> current
>>>     data types could barely hold. Maybe bump them all to u32 type right
>>> away?
>>> * TM1628 is also found on MeLE V9 TV box, to be tested.
>>> * FD628 is also found on Amlogic S905X2 based Vontar X96 Max TV box,
>>>     to be tested (once UART is soldered).
>>> * AiP1618 was found on Ava and Lake I TV boxes, to be tested.
>>> * It remained unclear to me which of these many similar chipsets was
>>> first.
>>>     My driver name is therefore based on the chip I encountered first.
>>
>> It's pretty cool to see this!
> 
> Glad someone else finds it useful. :)
> 
>> My Rockchip box has an AiP1618-driven
>> display [...]
> 
> You don't mention the model: Does it have a mainline .dts we can extend?
> If not, I'd ask you to get that merged into -next, then I can happily
> pick up patches adding the LED controller for your TV box into this
> series as it evolves. (I'm expecting at least two more RFC iterations.)

It's the Beelink A1, which we have indeed just landed a DT for - I'll 
certainly share whatever patch I come up with. I also have one of the 
H96 Max boxes (which I picked up out of curiosity for the mysterious 
RK3318) with an FD6551, although I've not attacked that one with the 
logic analyser yet to see how similar it is.

> Similarly, I'm planning to drop Xnano X5 in v2, if it doesn't require a
> respin, so that no Realtek-specific parts other than .dts node additions
> remain here.
> 
>> In case it helps, in my research I found that ARTSCHIP are another
>> vendor of these things with accessible datasheets[1],
> 
> Thanks, their HT1628 indeed looks compatible.
> 
> Sunmoon Microelectronics SM1628 also looks compatible.
> http://www.chinaasic.com/product.jsp#item=other#style=27#id=138
> 
>> and as far as I
>> could tell the command set appears to derive from (or is at least common
>> to) some old Holtek VFD controllers.
> 
> Hmm, HT16515 looks similar and has more lines, RAM and mode bits than I
> prepared here.
> https://www.holtek.com/productdetail/-/vg/ht16515
> 
> So I'd need to make more numbers model-dependent and allocate the
> Display RAM buffer dynamically.
> 
> Whereas HT16D35A seems incompatible command-wise, and HT16528 appears to
> be out of scope, for dot displays and with fancy embedded character map.
> 
> No Holtek email alias that I can quickly spot.
> 
> But given that I'm proposing vendor-specific compatibles just in case,
> the main decisions will be the Kconfig symbol and module name. The
> driver code itself we could always refactor after merging, and renaming
> the schema file (as opposed to compatible) should also be possible.

Yeah, I'm not sure that it really matters, as I doubt there are many 
Linux-capable devices with a real VFD anyway; it just seemed like an 
interesting datapoint that fell out of scouring the web trying to find 
any evidence for which the "canonical" 1618 might be (and the Holtek 
connection was actually a coincidence from a misidentification of the 
ARTSCHIP part number).

>> If I can figure out the DT parts (which was one of the areas that
>> stalled my attempt) I'll try to have a play with this series over the
>> holidays.
> 
> That reminded me that I forgot to push - done in the meantime. :)
> 
>> One thought to ponder is that I have an "88:88" display where
>> the entire middle grid is reserved for the colon (which is wired to just
>> one segment) - I'm not sure how that could be sanely described :/
> 
> Well, that sounds exactly like my bindings example and X9S. You'll find
> the colon configured as LED, separate from the four digits, which don't
> need to be contiguous due to separate reg entries per digit.

Aha, yes, I should have engaged the brain a bit more on that one :)

> While it may be possible to put more cleverness into text_store() to set
> the colon as part of five-char "88:88" text, we'd likely want to blink
> it every half second, which we should better do without updating the
> full display text from "88:88" to "88 88". "8888" updated every minute
> sounds less problematic.

Sure - perhaps at that point text_store() could also grow some caching 
and partial update logic to decide if writing individual grids is 
cheaper than clocking out the whole display for a given change, but this 
initial approach does seem good enough to start with. Lumping colons in 
with the other miscellaneous indicators many of these displays have does 
at least have a self-consistent logic in terms of "things that aren't 
7-segment grids".

Thanks,
Robin.

> Ugly with the colon LED is that the redone LED bindings don't yet have a
> function defined for this, so I'm currently misusing whatever was there.
> I should prepare a bindings addition, if we want to use an LED node.
> 
> Regards,
> Andreas
> 
>> [1]
>> http://www.artschip.com/products.asp?lx=small&anid=779&ParentName=Signal%20management%20_I_O%20Extender
>>
>>> This series is based on my not-yet-posted RTD1295 pinctrl and GPIO
>>> drivers.
>>>
>>> Latest experimental patches at:
>>> https://github.com/afaerber/linux/commits/rtd1295-next
> [snip]
>
Geert Uytterhoeven Dec. 13, 2019, 2:36 p.m. UTC | #4
Hi Robin,

On Fri, Dec 13, 2019 at 3:08 PM Robin Murphy <robin.murphy@arm.com> wrote:
> On 12/12/2019 8:55 pm, Andreas Färber wrote:
> > Am 12.12.19 um 14:14 schrieb Robin Murphy:
> >> and as far as I
> >> could tell the command set appears to derive from (or is at least common
> >> to) some old Holtek VFD controllers.
> >
> > Hmm, HT16515 looks similar and has more lines, RAM and mode bits than I
> > prepared here.
> > https://www.holtek.com/productdetail/-/vg/ht16515
> >
> > So I'd need to make more numbers model-dependent and allocate the
> > Display RAM buffer dynamically.
> >
> > Whereas HT16D35A seems incompatible command-wise, and HT16528 appears to
> > be out of scope, for dot displays and with fancy embedded character map.
> >
> > No Holtek email alias that I can quickly spot.
> >
> > But given that I'm proposing vendor-specific compatibles just in case,
> > the main decisions will be the Kconfig symbol and module name. The
> > driver code itself we could always refactor after merging, and renaming
> > the schema file (as opposed to compatible) should also be possible.
>
> Yeah, I'm not sure that it really matters, as I doubt there are many
> Linux-capable devices with a real VFD anyway; it just seemed like an
> interesting datapoint that fell out of scouring the web trying to find
> any evidence for which the "canonical" 1618 might be (and the Holtek
> connection was actually a coincidence from a misidentification of the
> ARTSCHIP part number).

My Sony Blu-Ray/Home Theatre has a nice one (14-segment!), also driven
by an HT16515.  While the specific model predates the arrival of Linux
in the next stepping of the hardware, it should be sufficiently powerful
to run Linux.

Unfortunately it's in active use, so hacking experiments would be vetoed by
the family ;-)

Gr{oetje,eeting}s,

                        Geert
Pavel Machek Dec. 21, 2019, 6:20 p.m. UTC | #5
Hi!

> This patch series implements the LED controllers found in some RTD1295 based
> TV set-top boxes.
> 
> Ever since I've had mainline Linux kernels booting on my Zidoo X9S TV box,
> it's been bugging me that it kept displaying "boot" on its front display.
> A hot lead was a TM1628 chip on the front display's daughterboard, which
> English and Chinese datasheets were available for. The biggest
> hurdle

Fun :-).

> It goes on to add a "text" attribute to the driver that enables DT-configured
> seven-segment displays; I was expecting to find precedence in auxdisplay
> subsystem but came up empty. So my driver currently integrates its own
> generic (but incomplete) character-to-8-segments mapping, as well as in a
> second step a combined-characters-to-8-segments mapping, which then gets
> mapped to the chipset's available output lines. Doing this as sysfs
> device

I did not investigate this in great detail; but if it is displaying
characters, auxdisplay is probably right subsystem to handle that. I
guess LEDs can still take the low-level parts...

Oh, and common dimming for many LEDs is seen on other hardware, too
(Turris routers). Not sure how to handle that, either :-(.

Best regards,
									Pavel
Andreas Färber Dec. 21, 2019, 9:07 p.m. UTC | #6
Hi Pavel,

[- Roc He, - chipset vendors]

Am 21.12.19 um 19:20 schrieb Pavel Machek:
>> It goes on to add a "text" attribute to the driver that enables DT-configured
>> seven-segment displays; I was expecting to find precedence in auxdisplay
>> subsystem but came up empty. So my driver currently integrates its own
>> generic (but incomplete) character-to-8-segments mapping, as well as in a
>> second step a combined-characters-to-8-segments mapping, which then gets
>> mapped to the chipset's available output lines. Doing this as sysfs
>> device
> 
> I did not investigate this in great detail; but if it is displaying
> characters, auxdisplay is probably right subsystem to handle that.

ausdisplay does not have any common API AFAICS. Most of them are 
high-level displays with some parallel interface to set text and 
metadata. Half of them hardcode the text to Linux or maybe offer a 
Kconfig option to override it; the other half implements their own 
character device file with ABI specific to that driver.

> I
> guess LEDs can still take the low-level parts...

I'd hope so, but I believe we're missing multiple things there:

1) A bulk-update API for setting multiple LEDs at once. 
.brightness_set[_blocking]() is all we have on the device side, which 
here results in two SPI commands. led_set_brightness[_sync]() is all I 
see on the API side. We'd need an API that takes an array of LEDs and 
brightness values and allows a common driver rather than individual 
devices to update the Display RAM via SPI from an internal buffer.

2) DT is currently limited to one node per LED device. We'd need 
#led-cells, with current LED nodes defaulting to zero. That way we could 
address LEDs from an external, e.g., auxdisplay driver via a two-cell 
index for these LED controllers, without needing to have DT nodes for 
each and every display segment.

3) Better LED device names. More "function" values, or a reversal of the 
label deprecation. Or an alternative API to register LEDs with manual name.

4) LED triggers controlling more than one LED. linux,default-trigger 
seems to assign one per LED, so that two heartbeats are quickly out of 
sync. Doing it from code would probably be simpler than finding a way to 
model this in DT, but I don't yet see how.

Alternatively we could expose those LED output lines as a gpiochip, 
which we can already index in DT, and consider the display GPIO-based, 
but then we're in the situation again that GregKH was telling people to 
either go screw themselves in userspace or move things into leds, which 
now you're against.

Also, if you don't allow displays in leds, then we can't have LED 
triggers for them either.

> 
> Oh, and common dimming for many LEDs is seen on other hardware, too
> (Turris routers). Not sure how to handle that, either :-(.

That part I have indeed successfully solved with a backlight device.

My current problem (WIP blocking a push) is the key input handling - not 
sure how to model both LEDs and keys as DT child nodes - do we need a 
compatible to distinguish between them? Unit addresses and reg values 
would be in different ranges, making this awkward, not to mention the 
problem of naming a compatible, given the incredible diverse chipsets.

Regards,
Andreas
Andreas Färber Jan. 15, 2020, 1:34 p.m. UTC | #7
Am 12.12.19 um 04:39 schrieb Andreas Färber:
> Prepended is a new DT for Xnano X5 OTT TV Box, featuring an FD628 display.
[...]
> Andreas Färber (25):
>    dt-bindings: vendor-prefixes: Add Xnano
>    dt-bindings: arm: realtek: Add Xnano X5
>    arm64: dts: realtek: rtd1295: Add Xnano X5
[snip]

Applied these three to linux-realtek.git v5.6/dt:

https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/afaerber/linux-realtek.git/log/?h=v5.6/dt

Thanks,
Andreas
Ezra Buehler Feb. 25, 2020, 9:42 p.m. UTC | #8
Hi Robin,
Hi Andreas,

> On 13 Dec 2019, at 15:07, Robin Murphy <robin.murphy@arm.com> wrote:
> 
> I also have one of the H96 Max boxes (which I picked up out of curiosity
> for the mysterious RK3318) with an FD6551, although I've not attacked
> that one with the logic analyser yet to see how similar it is.

I have a T9 (RK3328) TV box with the same chip in it. The FD6551 uses an
I2C-like protocol. Every digit (and the symbols) have an I2C address,
but, the display does not signal ACK. AFAIK the FD650 and FD655 which
are used in other boxes (Amlogic) are very similar.

So far, I have whipped up a proof-of-cocept driver that uses i2c-gpio.
The digits seem to be rotated by 180 degrees. So, in order to use
map_to_7segment.h I had to define the BIT_SEG7_* constants differently.
My display also has multiple symbols (WIFI, network, pause, play, USB,
alarm) that are controlled by writing to the same address as for the
colon.

I’d love to work on a driver (similar to Andreas’ SPI based driver) for
these I2C connected chips.

Cheers,
Ezra.
Pavel Machek Feb. 26, 2020, 1:03 p.m. UTC | #9
Hi!

> > On 13 Dec 2019, at 15:07, Robin Murphy <robin.murphy@arm.com> wrote:
> > 
> > I also have one of the H96 Max boxes (which I picked up out of curiosity
> > for the mysterious RK3318) with an FD6551, although I've not attacked
> > that one with the logic analyser yet to see how similar it is.
> 
> I have a T9 (RK3328) TV box with the same chip in it. The FD6551 uses an
> I2C-like protocol. Every digit (and the symbols) have an I2C address,
> but, the display does not signal ACK. AFAIK the FD650 and FD655 which
> are used in other boxes (Amlogic) are very similar.
> 
> So far, I have whipped up a proof-of-cocept driver that uses i2c-gpio.
> The digits seem to be rotated by 180 degrees. So, in order to use
> map_to_7segment.h I had to define the BIT_SEG7_* constants differently.
> My display also has multiple symbols (WIFI, network, pause, play, USB,
> alarm) that are controlled by writing to the same address as for the
> colon.
> 
> I’d love to work on a driver (similar to Andreas’ SPI based driver) for
> these I2C connected chips.

Create a driver in drivers/auxdisplay for alphanumeric parts. You can
then export any remaining symbols as LEDs if it will provide benefits.

Best regards,
									Pavel