1ACPI video extensions 2~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3 4This driver implement the ACPI Extensions For Display Adapters for 5integrated graphics devices on motherboard, as specified in ACPI 2.0 6Specification, Appendix B, allowing to perform some basic control like 7defining the video POST device, retrieving EDID information or to 8setup a video output, etc. Note that this is an ref. implementation 9only. It may or may not work for your integrated video device. 10 11The ACPI video driver does 3 things regarding backlight control: 12 131 Export a sysfs interface for user space to control backlight level 14 15If the ACPI table has a video device, and acpi_backlight=vendor kernel 16command line is not present, the driver will register a backlight device 17and set the required backlight operation structure for it for the sysfs 18interface control. For every registered class device, there will be a 19directory named acpi_videoX under /sys/class/backlight. 20 21The backlight sysfs interface has a standard definition here: 22Documentation/ABI/stable/sysfs-class-backlight. 23 24And what ACPI video driver does is: 25actual_brightness: on read, control method _BQC will be evaluated to 26get the brightness level the firmware thinks it is at; 27bl_power: not implemented, will set the current brightness instead; 28brightness: on write, control method _BCM will run to set the requested 29brightness level; 30max_brightness: Derived from the _BCL package(see below); 31type: firmware 32 33Note that ACPI video backlight driver will always use index for 34brightness, actual_brightness and max_brightness. So if we have 35the following _BCL package: 36 37Method (_BCL, 0, NotSerialized) 38{ 39 Return (Package (0x0C) 40 { 41 0x64, 42 0x32, 43 0x0A, 44 0x14, 45 0x1E, 46 0x28, 47 0x32, 48 0x3C, 49 0x46, 50 0x50, 51 0x5A, 52 0x64 53 }) 54} 55 56The first two levels are for when laptop are on AC or on battery and are 57not used by Linux currently. The remaining 10 levels are supported levels 58that we can choose from. The applicable index values are from 0 (that 59corresponds to the 0x0A brightness value) to 9 (that corresponds to the 600x64 brightness value) inclusive. Each of those index values is regarded 61as a "brightness level" indicator. Thus from the user space perspective 62the range of available brightness levels is from 0 to 9 (max_brightness) 63inclusive. 64 652 Notify user space about hotkey event 66 67There are generally two cases for hotkey event reporting: 68i) For some laptops, when user presses the hotkey, a scancode will be 69 generated and sent to user space through the input device created by 70 the keyboard driver as a key type input event, with proper remap, the 71 following key code will appear to user space: 72 73 EV_KEY, KEY_BRIGHTNESSUP 74 EV_KEY, KEY_BRIGHTNESSDOWN 75 etc. 76 77For this case, ACPI video driver does not need to do anything(actually, 78it doesn't even know this happened). 79 80ii) For some laptops, the press of the hotkey will not generate the 81 scancode, instead, firmware will notify the video device ACPI node 82 about the event. The event value is defined in the ACPI spec. ACPI 83 video driver will generate an key type input event according to the 84 notify value it received and send the event to user space through the 85 input device it created: 86 87 event keycode 88 0x86 KEY_BRIGHTNESSUP 89 0x87 KEY_BRIGHTNESSDOWN 90 etc. 91 92so this would lead to the same effect as case i) now. 93 94Once user space tool receives this event, it can modify the backlight 95level through the sysfs interface. 96 973 Change backlight level in the kernel 98 99This works for machines covered by case ii) in Section 2. Once the driver 100received a notification, it will set the backlight level accordingly. This does 101not affect the sending of event to user space, they are always sent to user 102space regardless of whether or not the video module controls the backlight level 103directly. This behaviour can be controlled through the brightness_switch_enabled 104module parameter as documented in kernel-parameters.txt. It is recommended to 105disable this behaviour once a GUI environment starts up and wants to have full 106control of the backlight level. 107