| has a higher precedence than ?. Therefore, the calculation doesn't do
at all what you would expect. Thanks to Ken for convincing me that this
was indeed the issue. Send me back to C programmer school, please.
I'm sort of surprised PSR was continuing to work for people. It should
be broken IMO (and it was broken for me, but I had assumed it never
worked).
Regression from:
commit
ed8546ac1f99b850879f07b1e9b06b42fb0a36d9
Author: Ben Widawsky <benjamin.widawsky@intel.com>
Date: Mon Nov 4 22:45:05 2013 -0800
drm/i915/bdw: Support eDP PSR
Cc: Rodrigo Vivi <rodrigo.vivi@gmail.com>
Cc: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth.w.graunke@intel.com>
Cc: Art Runyan <arthur.j.runyan@intel.com>
Reported-by: "Kumar, Kiran S" <kiran.s.kumar@intel.com>
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org [v3.13+]
Signed-off-by: Ben Widawsky <ben@bwidawsk.net>
Signed-off-by: Jani Nikula <jani.nikula@intel.com>
val |= EDP_PSR_LINK_DISABLE;
I915_WRITE(EDP_PSR_CTL(dev), val |
- IS_BROADWELL(dev) ? 0 : link_entry_time |
+ (IS_BROADWELL(dev) ? 0 : link_entry_time) |
max_sleep_time << EDP_PSR_MAX_SLEEP_TIME_SHIFT |
idle_frames << EDP_PSR_IDLE_FRAME_SHIFT |
EDP_PSR_ENABLE);