09:10eric_engestrom: a630 keeps crashing and blocking random MRs, eg. https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/mesa/mesa/-/pipelines/1052921
09:11eric_engestrom: daniels: is this one of yours, or do you know whose it is?
09:12eric_engestrom: I think I'll `.` the a630 jobs until someone can make it stable and re-enable it
09:45eric_engestrom: I decided to move them from pre-merge to nightly instead of disabling them
09:45eric_engestrom: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/mesa/mesa/-/merge_requests/26609
11:16daniels: eric_engestrom: a630 is robclark
11:19DavidHeidelberg: eric_engestrom: it's just hitting the 20 min timeout. It happend few times when upreving to 6.6, so it seems one of the tests maybe takes longer. The difference was 17 min - 21min.
11:19DavidHeidelberg: I would suggest setting 25m workaround for a630 until it gets figured out.
11:19DavidHeidelberg: *timeout: 25m
11:38mupuf: DavidHeidelberg: if you make the MR, I'll Ack it :)
12:07DavidHeidelberg: mupuf: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/mesa/mesa/-/merge_requests/26611
12:10mupuf: DavidHeidelberg: thanks!
17:00pinchartl: trying to tap into collective knowledge: does anyone know of a remote-controllable USB-C PD power supply ? something with a connection to mains on one side, 1+ USB-C PD ports on the other side, and a USB or ethernet port for control
17:26__tim: not sure if this would do what you want, but have you considered a "smart plug" for lamps and such in connection with a normal charger? could be remote controlled via bluetooth or wifi and such then with standard protocols, and should be fairly cheap and easy to come by
17:29pinchartl: __tim: I don't want to switch the mains side
17:43pinchartl: https://www.mikroe.com/usb-c-source-click seems interesting, but not necessarily easy to integrate
17:43DavidHeidelberg: pinchartl: usually cheaper to get is 240V power plug or extension cord
17:47pinchartl: DavidHeidelberg: the trouble with switching mains is that most USB power blocks don't have a earth connection on the mains side. that creates lots of issues with ground loops
17:48pinchartl: and it's surprisingly difficult to find cheap, reliable, controllable power sockets with standard open protocols
17:49pinchartl: I have a https://energenie.com/item.aspx?id=7415&lang=en
17:50pinchartl: I retired that solution when I ended up with 230V on the shielf of the HDMI and USB connectors on the development boards
17:52pinchartl: (fortunately that was 230V with very low current, but still enough to make it uncomfortable to touch the boards, and to reduce their lifespan)
18:06DavidHeidelberg: pinchartl: gosund p1 (you have to flash it w/ Tasmota, if you're not in Germany where you can buy thwm preflashed)
18:06DavidHeidelberg: My favorite
18:08lumag: DavidHeidelberg, don't they a have a single relay for all USB ports?
18:23pinchartl: and it doesn't seem to support USB PD
18:24pinchartl: and no wifi please :-)
19:03DavidHeidelberg: pinchartl: you control 3x 240V; 1x 3A 5v (with 3 ports). WiFi on secondary channel, reliable
19:03DavidHeidelberg: well, then you're life will be hard. I originally wanted controlled usb-pd too..
19:07pinchartl: I really can't believe this is an unsolved problem
19:08pinchartl: after so many years
19:08pinchartl: https://www.mikroe.com/usb-c-source-click may be part of a solution
19:08pinchartl: and I know my life will be hard. it already is :-)
19:17DavidHeidelberg: while it looks tempting, $24.96 for one device control vs ~ $ 8.3 per any 240V device (+ extra usb control 4free), it's better deal
19:18DavidHeidelberg: thou if you use it, I would be interested how the integration look and maybe find some use for it too :P
19:24pinchartl: I'm comparing it to "professional" solutions priced at $1200 for 6 ports :-)
19:51DavidHeidelberg: what a deal! :D
19:58pinchartl: well, ideally, I'd go for https://www.linux-automation.com/en/products/lxa-tac.html
20:00pinchartl: it's a very nice design
20:01pinchartl:wonders what kernelCI uses
20:12DavidHeidelberg: is it USB-PD? Doesn't look like it
20:12DavidHeidelberg:is kinda suprised that LabGrid is that popular...
20:32lumag: pinchartl, the PoE thing looks really nice. But I don't think it's sold anymore
20:48pinchartl: lumag: which one ?
20:49lumag: pinchartl, LXA-TAC
20:49lumag: at least I couldn't find it in their shop
20:50pinchartl: it's not sold yet :-)
21:32mupuf: pinchartl: do you consider SNMP as an open protocol?
21:34mupuf: If so, APC PDUs from eBay are relatively cheap: ~250€ for 8 ports
21:34mupuf: Doesn't solve your ground issue though
21:35mupuf: But if you plug it to a PC via a serial adapter, it should get grounded through there, no?
21:37mupuf: And BTW, if you wanna come over to my office, I could show you how I did it for Valve
21:38mupuf: As for Kernel CI, check out pdu-daemon, that's what they use
21:39mupuf: Most of the drivers use serial or telnet to navigate through menus to turn ON/OFF ports :D
21:39mupuf: And last I checked, it was write-only
21:39mupuf: No way to check the state
21:52pinchartl: SNMP is semi-open I suppose
21:53pinchartl: I can ground the boards "manually" indeed
21:53pinchartl: and I could give your office a visit, sure
23:25DavidHeidelberg: Yes, but separate for the 3x 240v