These parts were mainly for compute workloads, but they have
a display that was available for the console.  These chips
should support SG display, but I don't know that the support
was ever validated on Linux so disable it by default. It can
still be enabled by setting sg_display=1 for those that
want to play with it.  These systems also generally had large
carve outs so SG display was less of a factor.
Closes: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/drm/amd/-/issues/3356
Reviewed-by: Harry Wentland <harry.wentland@amd.com>
Signed-off-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
                else
                        init_data.flags.gpu_vm_support = (amdgpu_sg_display != 0);
        } else {
-               init_data.flags.gpu_vm_support = (amdgpu_sg_display != 0) && (adev->flags & AMD_IS_APU);
+               if (amdgpu_ip_version(adev, DCE_HWIP, 0) == IP_VERSION(2, 0, 3))
+                       init_data.flags.gpu_vm_support = (amdgpu_sg_display == 1);
+               else
+                       init_data.flags.gpu_vm_support =
+                               (amdgpu_sg_display != 0) && (adev->flags & AMD_IS_APU);
        }
 
        adev->mode_info.gpu_vm_support = init_data.flags.gpu_vm_support;