Call for an EDID parsing library
Carsten Haitzler
raster at rasterman.com
Wed Apr 7 08:55:17 UTC 2021
On Wed, 7 Apr 2021 11:44:04 +0300 Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen at gmail.com> said:
> Hi all,
>
> with display servers proliferating thanks to Wayland, and the Linux
> kernel exposing only a very limited set of information based on EDID
> (rightfully so!), the need to interpret EDID blobs is spreading even
> more. I would like to start the discussion about starting a project to
> develop a shared library for parsing EDID blobs. This is not the first
> time either, other people have suggested it years and years ago already,
> but apparently it didn't quite materialise as far as I know.
>
> Right now, it seems that more or less every display server and other
> KMS application is hand-rolling its own EDID parsing code, even for the
> most trivial information (monitor make, model, and serial number). With
> HDR and color management support coming to Wayland, the need to parse
> more things out of EDID will only increase. These things are not
> exposed by the kernel, and most of these things have no use for the
> kernel either.
>
> My personal motivation for this is that I don't want to be developing
> or reviewing yet another partial EDID parser implementation in Weston.
>
> I recall ponderings about sharing the same EDID parsing code between
> the kernel and userspace, but I got the feeling that it would be a
> hindrance in process more than a benefit from sharing code. It would
> need to live in the kernel tree, to be managed with the kernel
> development process, use the kernel "standard libraries", and adhere to
> kernel programming style - all which are good and fine, but maybe also
> more restricting than useful in this case. Therefore I would suggest a
> userspace-only library.
>
> Everyone hand-rolling their own parsing code has the obvious
> disadvantages. In the opposite, I would expect a new shared EDID
> parsing library and project to:
> - be hosted under gitlab.freedesktop.org
> - be MIT licensed
> - offer at least a C ABI
> - employ mandatory Gitlab CI to ensure with sample EDID blobs that it
> cannot regress
>
> Prior art can be found in various places. I believe Xorg xserver has
> its battle-tested EDID parsing code. Ajax once played with the idea in
> https://cgit.freedesktop.org/~ajax/libminitru/ . Then we have
> https://git.linuxtv.org/edid-decode.git too which has code and test
> data but not a C ABI (right?).
>
> It does not necessarily need to be a new project. Would edid-decode
> project be open to adding a C library ABI?
>
> edid-decode is already MIT licensed and seems to have a lot of code,
> too, but that's all I know for now.
>
> Would there be anyone interested to take lead or work on a project like
> this?
>
> Personally I don't think I'd be working on it, but I would be really
> happy to use it in Weston.
>
> Should it be a new project, or grow inside edid-decode or something
> else?
>
> I believe MIT license is important to have wide adoption of it. C ABI
> similarly. Also that it would be a "small" library without heavy
> dependencies.
I'd say it needs nothing more than libc - I can't see the justification for
more than that. If this is the case along with the above you have given, then I
see no reason for it to not be used by everyone other than the usual user
complaint of "too many dependencies (of a compositor)". :)
I'd definitely consider using it.
> What do you think? Could anyone spare their time for this?
>
> Who would be interested in using it if this library appeared?
>
>
> Thanks,
> pq
--
------------- Codito, ergo sum - "I code, therefore I am" --------------
Carsten Haitzler - raster at rasterman.com
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