When a new HDMI/DP device is plugged in, hdmi_update_short_audio_desc()
is called for every SAD (Short Audio Descriptor) in the ELD data. For
LPCM coding type SAD defines the supported sample sizes. For several
other coding types (such as AC-3), a maximum bitrate is defined.
The maximum bitrate and sample size fields are not always cleared.
Therefore, if a device is unplugged and a different one is plugged in,
and the coding types of some SAD positions differ between the devices,
the old max_bitrate or sample_bits values will persist if the new SADs
do not define those values.
The leftover max_bitrate and sample_bits do not cause any issues other
than wrongly showing up in eld#X.Y procfs file and kernel log.
Fix that by always clearing sample_bits and max_bitrate when reading
SADs.
Signed-off-by: Anssi Hannula <anssi.hannula@iki.fi>
Signed-off-by: Takashi Iwai <tiwai@suse.de>
a->channels = GRAB_BITS(buf, 0, 0, 3);
a->channels++;
+ a->sample_bits = 0;
+ a->max_bitrate = 0;
+
a->format = GRAB_BITS(buf, 0, 3, 4);
switch (a->format) {
case AUDIO_CODING_TYPE_REF_STREAM_HEADER:
case AUDIO_CODING_TYPE_LPCM:
val = GRAB_BITS(buf, 2, 0, 3);
- a->sample_bits = 0;
for (i = 0; i < 3; i++)
if (val & (1 << i))
a->sample_bits |= cea_sample_sizes[i + 1];