On Fri, Aug 25, 2017 at 07:42:51PM +0300, Andy Shevchenko wrote: > On Fri, 2017-08-25 at 17:05 +0100, John Keeping wrote: > > On Fri, 25 Aug 2017 10:24:26 -0400, Tom Rini wrote: > > > On Fri, Aug 25, 2017 at 04:56:47PM +0300, Andy Shevchenko wrote: > > > > > Apparently you are the one who tested the commit > > > > 89128534f925 ("ASoC: rt5677: Add ACPI support") > > > > year ago.   > > > > > > Yes. > > > > > > > The commit states that ACPI properties that are used in Chromebook > > > > Pixel > > > > 2015 is non-standard (not the same as for DT). > > > > > > > > However, DSDT shows the opposite!   > > > > > > Interesting.  I'm not an ACPI person, I just tested what John came > > > up > > > with. > > > > And the patch adding this was the first (and still only) time I've > > really looked at ACPI, so it's quite possible that I misunderstood > > something at the time. > > Maybe. > > > From memory, I think the particular problem I was referring to in the > > commit message was that certain GPIOs were only defined by index and > > not > > by property name (specifically "plug-det-gpios", "mic-present-gpios" > > and > > "headphone-enable-gpios"), and having dumped DSDT just now I do not > > see > > those strings appearing anywhere. > > Exactly, and this part of the patch I'm _not_ talking about (it's pretty > much good and working). > > What I'm talking about is a specific function called > > rt5677_read_acpi_properties() > > in the rt5677.c codec driver. > > The question is do we have _real publicly available_ hardware with that > kind of properties? > > Because now it's a mess (wrt to real DSDT attached to the thread). > > The proposed change to fix this is like > > diff --git a/sound/soc/codecs/rt5677.c b/sound/soc/codecs/rt5677.c > index 6448b7a00203..28bde5f50ed9 100644 > --- a/sound/soc/codecs/rt5677.c > +++ b/sound/soc/codecs/rt5677.c > @@ -5145,20 +5145,18 @@ static int rt5677_i2c_probe(struct i2c_client > *i2c) >   match_id = of_match_device(rt5677_of_match, &i2c->dev); >   if (match_id) >   rt5677->type = (enum rt5677_type)match_id- > >data; > - > - rt5677_read_device_properties(rt5677, &i2c->dev); >   } else if (ACPI_HANDLE(&i2c->dev)) { >   const struct acpi_device_id *acpi_id; >   >   acpi_id = acpi_match_device(rt5677_acpi_match, &i2c- > >dev); >   if (acpi_id) >   rt5677->type = (enum rt5677_type)acpi_id- > >driver_data; > - > - rt5677_read_acpi_properties(rt5677, &i2c->dev); >   } else { >   return -EINVAL; >   } >   > + rt5677_read_device_properties(rt5677, &i2c->dev); > + >   /* pow-ldo2 and reset are optional. The codec pins may be > statically >    * connected on the board without gpios. If the gpio device > property >    * isn't specified, devm_gpiod_get_optional returns NULL. > > + removing rt5677_read_acpi_properties() completely. > > Tom, if you can test it (basic test + might be quality of sound) on your > Chromebook, it would be nice! OK. I did the above manually (on top of the correct fix for the problem I originally reported from asoc-next), also removed rt5677_read_acpi_properties and gave the various THX/Dolby sound tests a spin and they sound good. As an unrelated request for help, the headphone jack isn't automatically detected and used, but I assume this is a user configuration issue. This is unchanged with your patch :) -- Tom