Julius Werner <jwer...@chromium.org> writes: Hello Julius,
>> On Coreboot platforms, a system framebuffer may be provided to the Linux >> kernel by filling a LB_TAG_FRAMEBUFFER entry in the Coreboot table. But >> it seems SeaBIOS payload can also provide a VGA mode in the boot params. >> >> [...] >> >> To prevent the issue, make the framebuffer_core driver to disable sysfb >> if there is system framebuffer data in the Coreboot table. That way only >> this driver will register a device and sysfb would not attempt to do it >> (or remove its registered device if was already executed before). > > I wonder if the priority should be the other way around? coreboot's > framebuffer is generally only valid when coreboot exits to the payload > (e.g. SeaBIOS). Only if the payload doesn't touch the display > controller or if there is no payload and coreboot directly hands off > to a kernel does the kernel driver for LB_TAG_FRAMEBUFFER make sense. > But if there is some other framebuffer information passed to the > kernel from a firmware component running after coreboot, most likely > that one is more up to date and the framebuffer described by the > coreboot table doesn't work anymore (because the payload usually > doesn't modify the coreboot tables again, even if it changes hardware > state). So if there are two drivers fighting over which firmware > framebuffer description is the correct one, the coreboot driver should > probably give way. > That's a very good point. I'm actually not familiar with Coreboot and I used an educated guess (in the case of DT for example, that's the main source of truth and I didn't know if a Core table was in a similar vein). Maybe something like the following (untested) patch then? >From de1c32017006f4671d91b695f4d6b4e99c073ab2 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Javier Martinez Canillas <javi...@redhat.com> Date: Thu, 12 Sep 2024 18:31:55 +0200 Subject: [PATCH] firmware: coreboot: Don't register a pdev if screen_info data is available On Coreboot platforms, a system framebuffer may be provided to the Linux kernel by filling a LB_TAG_FRAMEBUFFER entry in the Coreboot table. But a Coreboot payload (e.g: SeaBIOS) could also provide this information to the Linux kernel. If that the case, early arch x86 boot code will fill the global struct screen_info data and that data used by the Generic System Framebuffers (sysfb) framework to add a platform device with platform data about the system framebuffer. But later then the framebuffer_coreboot driver will try to do the same framebuffer (using the information from the Coreboot table), which will lead to an error due a simple-framebuffer.0 device already registered: sysfs: cannot create duplicate filename '/bus/platform/devices/simple-framebuffer.0' ... coreboot: could not register framebuffer framebuffer coreboot8: probe with driver framebuffer failed with error -17 To prevent the issue, make the framebuffer_core driver to not register a platform device if the global struct screen_info data has been filled. Reported-by: Brian Norris <briannor...@chromium.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/all/ZuCG-DggNThuF4pj@b20ea791c01f/T/#ma7fb65acbc1a56042258adac910992bb225a20d2 Suggested-by: Julius Werner <jwer...@chromium.org> Signed-off-by: Javier Martinez Canillas <javi...@redhat.com> --- drivers/firmware/google/framebuffer-coreboot.c | 16 ++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 16 insertions(+) diff --git a/drivers/firmware/google/framebuffer-coreboot.c b/drivers/firmware/google/framebuffer-coreboot.c index daadd71d8ddd..4e50da17cd7e 100644 --- a/drivers/firmware/google/framebuffer-coreboot.c +++ b/drivers/firmware/google/framebuffer-coreboot.c @@ -15,6 +15,7 @@ #include <linux/module.h> #include <linux/platform_data/simplefb.h> #include <linux/platform_device.h> +#include <linux/screen_info.h> #include "coreboot_table.h" @@ -27,6 +28,7 @@ static int framebuffer_probe(struct coreboot_device *dev) int i; u32 length; struct lb_framebuffer *fb = &dev->framebuffer; + struct screen_info *si = &screen_info; struct platform_device *pdev; struct resource res; struct simplefb_platform_data pdata = { @@ -36,6 +38,20 @@ static int framebuffer_probe(struct coreboot_device *dev) .format = NULL, }; + /* + * If the global screen_info data has been filled, the Generic + * System Framebuffers (sysfb) will already register a platform + * and pass the screen_info as platform_data to a driver that + * could scan-out using the system provided framebuffer. + * + * On Coreboot systems, the advertise LB_TAG_FRAMEBUFFER entry + * in the Coreboot table should only be used if the payload did + * not set video mode info and passed it to the Linux kernel. + */ + if (si->orig_video_isVGA == VIDEO_TYPE_VLFB || + si->orig_video_isVGA == VIDEO_TYPE_EFI) + return -EINVAL; + if (!fb->physical_address) return -ENODEV; -- Best regards, Javier Martinez Canillas Core Platforms Red Hat