Now that ipu_dc_disable_channel correctly waits for the channel to finish,
we can reorder the enable/disable order to first stop the DC and DI and
only then disable the IDMAC. Enabling is done the other way around: IDMAC
first, then DC, then DI.
This avoids an issue where sometimes the channel would not correctly start,
leading to non-working LVDS displays.
Signed-off-by: Philipp Zabel <p.zabel@pengutronix.de>
Signed-off-by: Russell King <rmk+kernel@arm.linux.org.uk>
if (ipu_crtc->enabled)
return;
- ipu_di_enable(ipu_crtc->di);
- ipu_dc_enable_channel(ipu_crtc->dc);
+ /* TODO: Enable DC module here, right now it is never disabled */
ipu_plane_enable(ipu_crtc->plane[0]);
+ /* Start DC channel and DI after IDMAC */
+ ipu_dc_enable_channel(ipu_crtc->dc);
+ ipu_di_enable(ipu_crtc->di);
ipu_crtc->enabled = 1;
}
if (!ipu_crtc->enabled)
return;
- ipu_plane_disable(ipu_crtc->plane[0]);
+ /* Stop DC channel and DI before IDMAC */
ipu_dc_disable_channel(ipu_crtc->dc);
ipu_di_disable(ipu_crtc->di);
+ ipu_plane_disable(ipu_crtc->plane[0]);
+ /* TODO: Disable DC module here */
ipu_crtc->enabled = 0;
}