diff options
author | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-04-27 10:05:51 +0000 |
---|---|---|
committer | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-04-27 10:05:51 +0000 |
commit | 5d1646d90e1f2cceb9f0828f4b28318cd0ec7744 (patch) | |
tree | a94efe259b9009378be6d90eb30d2b019d95c194 /Documentation/leds | |
parent | Initial commit. (diff) | |
download | linux-upstream/5.10.209.tar.xz linux-upstream/5.10.209.zip |
Adding upstream version 5.10.209.upstream/5.10.209upstream
Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
Diffstat (limited to '')
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/leds/index.rst | 28 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/leds/leds-blinkm.rst | 84 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/leds/leds-class-flash.rst | 90 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/leds/leds-class-multicolor.rst | 86 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/leds/leds-class.rst | 189 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/leds/leds-el15203000.rst | 140 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/leds/leds-lm3556.rst | 137 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/leds/leds-lp3944.rst | 59 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/leds/leds-lp5521.rst | 115 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/leds/leds-lp5523.rst | 147 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/leds/leds-lp5562.rst | 137 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/leds/leds-lp55xx.rst | 224 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/leds/leds-mlxcpld.rst | 118 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/leds/leds-sc27xx.rst | 27 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/leds/ledtrig-oneshot.rst | 44 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/leds/ledtrig-transient.rst | 160 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/leds/ledtrig-usbport.rst | 46 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/leds/uleds.rst | 37 |
18 files changed, 1868 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/leds/index.rst b/Documentation/leds/index.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000..e5d63b940 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/leds/index.rst @@ -0,0 +1,28 @@ +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 + +==== +LEDs +==== + +.. toctree:: + :maxdepth: 1 + + leds-class + leds-class-flash + leds-class-multicolor + ledtrig-oneshot + ledtrig-transient + ledtrig-usbport + + uleds + + leds-blinkm + leds-el15203000 + leds-lm3556 + leds-lp3944 + leds-lp5521 + leds-lp5523 + leds-lp5562 + leds-lp55xx + leds-mlxcpld + leds-sc27xx diff --git a/Documentation/leds/leds-blinkm.rst b/Documentation/leds/leds-blinkm.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000..c74b5bc87 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/leds/leds-blinkm.rst @@ -0,0 +1,84 @@ +================== +Leds BlinkM driver +================== + +The leds-blinkm driver supports the devices of the BlinkM family. + +They are RGB-LED modules driven by a (AT)tiny microcontroller and +communicate through I2C. The default address of these modules is +0x09 but this can be changed through a command. By this you could +dasy-chain up to 127 BlinkMs on an I2C bus. + +The device accepts RGB and HSB color values through separate commands. +Also you can store blinking sequences as "scripts" in +the controller and run them. Also fading is an option. + +The interface this driver provides is 2-fold: + +a) LED class interface for use with triggers +############################################ + +The registration follows the scheme:: + + blinkm-<i2c-bus-nr>-<i2c-device-nr>-<color> + + $ ls -h /sys/class/leds/blinkm-6-* + /sys/class/leds/blinkm-6-9-blue: + brightness device max_brightness power subsystem trigger uevent + + /sys/class/leds/blinkm-6-9-green: + brightness device max_brightness power subsystem trigger uevent + + /sys/class/leds/blinkm-6-9-red: + brightness device max_brightness power subsystem trigger uevent + +(same is /sys/bus/i2c/devices/6-0009/leds) + +We can control the colors separated into red, green and blue and +assign triggers on each color. + +E.g.:: + + $ cat blinkm-6-9-blue/brightness + 05 + + $ echo 200 > blinkm-6-9-blue/brightness + $ + + $ modprobe ledtrig-heartbeat + $ echo heartbeat > blinkm-6-9-green/trigger + $ + + +b) Sysfs group to control rgb, fade, hsb, scripts ... +##################################################### + +This extended interface is available as folder blinkm +in the sysfs folder of the I2C device. +E.g. below /sys/bus/i2c/devices/6-0009/blinkm + + $ ls -h /sys/bus/i2c/devices/6-0009/blinkm/ + blue green red test + +Currently supported is just setting red, green, blue +and a test sequence. + +E.g.:: + + $ cat * + 00 + 00 + 00 + #Write into test to start test sequence!# + + $ echo 1 > test + $ + + $ echo 255 > red + $ + + + +as of 6/2012 + +dl9pf <at> gmx <dot> de diff --git a/Documentation/leds/leds-class-flash.rst b/Documentation/leds/leds-class-flash.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000..6ec12c5a1 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/leds/leds-class-flash.rst @@ -0,0 +1,90 @@ +============================== +Flash LED handling under Linux +============================== + +Some LED devices provide two modes - torch and flash. In the LED subsystem +those modes are supported by LED class (see Documentation/leds/leds-class.rst) +and LED Flash class respectively. The torch mode related features are enabled +by default and the flash ones only if a driver declares it by setting +LED_DEV_CAP_FLASH flag. + +In order to enable the support for flash LEDs CONFIG_LEDS_CLASS_FLASH symbol +must be defined in the kernel config. A LED Flash class driver must be +registered in the LED subsystem with led_classdev_flash_register function. + +Following sysfs attributes are exposed for controlling flash LED devices: +(see Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-class-led-flash) + + - flash_brightness + - max_flash_brightness + - flash_timeout + - max_flash_timeout + - flash_strobe + - flash_fault + + +V4L2 flash wrapper for flash LEDs +================================= + +A LED subsystem driver can be controlled also from the level of VideoForLinux2 +subsystem. In order to enable this CONFIG_V4L2_FLASH_LED_CLASS symbol has to +be defined in the kernel config. + +The driver must call the v4l2_flash_init function to get registered in the +V4L2 subsystem. The function takes six arguments: + +- dev: + flash device, e.g. an I2C device +- of_node: + of_node of the LED, may be NULL if the same as device's +- fled_cdev: + LED flash class device to wrap +- iled_cdev: + LED flash class device representing indicator LED associated with + fled_cdev, may be NULL +- ops: + V4L2 specific ops + + * external_strobe_set + defines the source of the flash LED strobe - + V4L2_CID_FLASH_STROBE control or external source, typically + a sensor, which makes it possible to synchronise the flash + strobe start with exposure start, + * intensity_to_led_brightness and led_brightness_to_intensity + perform + enum led_brightness <-> V4L2 intensity conversion in a device + specific manner - they can be used for devices with non-linear + LED current scale. +- config: + configuration for V4L2 Flash sub-device + + * dev_name + the name of the media entity, unique in the system, + * flash_faults + bitmask of flash faults that the LED flash class + device can report; corresponding LED_FAULT* bit definitions are + available in <linux/led-class-flash.h>, + * torch_intensity + constraints for the LED in TORCH mode + in microamperes, + * indicator_intensity + constraints for the indicator LED + in microamperes, + * has_external_strobe + determines whether the flash strobe source + can be switched to external, + +On remove the v4l2_flash_release function has to be called, which takes one +argument - struct v4l2_flash pointer returned previously by v4l2_flash_init. +This function can be safely called with NULL or error pointer argument. + +Please refer to drivers/leds/leds-max77693.c for an exemplary usage of the +v4l2 flash wrapper. + +Once the V4L2 sub-device is registered by the driver which created the Media +controller device, the sub-device node acts just as a node of a native V4L2 +flash API device would. The calls are simply routed to the LED flash API. + +Opening the V4L2 flash sub-device makes the LED subsystem sysfs interface +unavailable. The interface is re-enabled after the V4L2 flash sub-device +is closed. diff --git a/Documentation/leds/leds-class-multicolor.rst b/Documentation/leds/leds-class-multicolor.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000..c57b98bfd --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/leds/leds-class-multicolor.rst @@ -0,0 +1,86 @@ +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 + +==================================== +Multicolor LED handling under Linux +==================================== + +Description +=========== +The multicolor class groups monochrome LEDs and allows controlling two +aspects of the final combined color: hue and lightness. The former is +controlled via the multi_intensity array file and the latter is controlled +via brightness file. + +Multicolor Class Control +======================== +The multicolor class presents files that groups the colors as indexes in an +array. These files are children under the LED parent node created by the +led_class framework. The led_class framework is documented in led-class.rst +within this documentation directory. + +Each colored LED will be indexed under the multi_* files. The order of the +colors will be arbitrary. The multi_index file can be read to determine the +color name to indexed value. + +The multi_index file is an array that contains the string list of the colors as +they are defined in each multi_* array file. + +The multi_intensity is an array that can be read or written to for the +individual color intensities. All elements within this array must be written in +order for the color LED intensities to be updated. + +Directory Layout Example +======================== +root:/sys/class/leds/multicolor:status# ls -lR +-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 4096 Oct 19 16:16 brightness +-r--r--r-- 1 root root 4096 Oct 19 16:16 max_brightness +-r--r--r-- 1 root root 4096 Oct 19 16:16 multi_index +-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 4096 Oct 19 16:16 multi_intensity + +Multicolor Class Brightness Control +=================================== +The brightness level for each LED is calculated based on the color LED +intensity setting divided by the global max_brightness setting multiplied by +the requested brightness. + +led_brightness = brightness * multi_intensity/max_brightness + +Example: +A user first writes the multi_intensity file with the brightness levels +for each LED that are necessary to achieve a certain color output from a +multicolor LED group. + +cat /sys/class/leds/multicolor:status/multi_index +green blue red + +echo 43 226 138 > /sys/class/leds/multicolor:status/multi_intensity + +red - + intensity = 138 + max_brightness = 255 +green - + intensity = 43 + max_brightness = 255 +blue - + intensity = 226 + max_brightness = 255 + +The user can control the brightness of that multicolor LED group by writing the +global 'brightness' control. Assuming a max_brightness of 255 the user +may want to dim the LED color group to half. The user would write a value of +128 to the global brightness file then the values written to each LED will be +adjusted base on this value. + +cat /sys/class/leds/multicolor:status/max_brightness +255 +echo 128 > /sys/class/leds/multicolor:status/brightness + +adjusted_red_value = 128 * 138/255 = 69 +adjusted_green_value = 128 * 43/255 = 21 +adjusted_blue_value = 128 * 226/255 = 113 + +Reading the global brightness file will return the current brightness value of +the color LED group. + +cat /sys/class/leds/multicolor:status/brightness +128 diff --git a/Documentation/leds/leds-class.rst b/Documentation/leds/leds-class.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000..a0708d3f3 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/leds/leds-class.rst @@ -0,0 +1,189 @@ +======================== +LED handling under Linux +======================== + +In its simplest form, the LED class just allows control of LEDs from +userspace. LEDs appear in /sys/class/leds/. The maximum brightness of the +LED is defined in max_brightness file. The brightness file will set the brightness +of the LED (taking a value 0-max_brightness). Most LEDs don't have hardware +brightness support so will just be turned on for non-zero brightness settings. + +The class also introduces the optional concept of an LED trigger. A trigger +is a kernel based source of led events. Triggers can either be simple or +complex. A simple trigger isn't configurable and is designed to slot into +existing subsystems with minimal additional code. Examples are the disk-activity, +nand-disk and sharpsl-charge triggers. With led triggers disabled, the code +optimises away. + +Complex triggers while available to all LEDs have LED specific +parameters and work on a per LED basis. The timer trigger is an example. +The timer trigger will periodically change the LED brightness between +LED_OFF and the current brightness setting. The "on" and "off" time can +be specified via /sys/class/leds/<device>/delay_{on,off} in milliseconds. +You can change the brightness value of a LED independently of the timer +trigger. However, if you set the brightness value to LED_OFF it will +also disable the timer trigger. + +You can change triggers in a similar manner to the way an IO scheduler +is chosen (via /sys/class/leds/<device>/trigger). Trigger specific +parameters can appear in /sys/class/leds/<device> once a given trigger is +selected. + + +Design Philosophy +================= + +The underlying design philosophy is simplicity. LEDs are simple devices +and the aim is to keep a small amount of code giving as much functionality +as possible. Please keep this in mind when suggesting enhancements. + + +LED Device Naming +================= + +Is currently of the form: + + "devicename:color:function" + +- devicename: + it should refer to a unique identifier created by the kernel, + like e.g. phyN for network devices or inputN for input devices, rather + than to the hardware; the information related to the product and the bus + to which given device is hooked is available in sysfs and can be + retrieved using get_led_device_info.sh script from tools/leds; generally + this section is expected mostly for LEDs that are somehow associated with + other devices. + +- color: + one of LED_COLOR_ID_* definitions from the header + include/dt-bindings/leds/common.h. + +- function: + one of LED_FUNCTION_* definitions from the header + include/dt-bindings/leds/common.h. + +If required color or function is missing, please submit a patch +to linux-leds@vger.kernel.org. + +It is possible that more than one LED with the same color and function will +be required for given platform, differing only with an ordinal number. +In this case it is preferable to just concatenate the predefined LED_FUNCTION_* +name with required "-N" suffix in the driver. fwnode based drivers can use +function-enumerator property for that and then the concatenation will be handled +automatically by the LED core upon LED class device registration. + +LED subsystem has also a protection against name clash, that may occur +when LED class device is created by a driver of hot-pluggable device and +it doesn't provide unique devicename section. In this case numerical +suffix (e.g. "_1", "_2", "_3" etc.) is added to the requested LED class +device name. + +There might be still LED class drivers around using vendor or product name +for devicename, but this approach is now deprecated as it doesn't convey +any added value. Product information can be found in other places in sysfs +(see tools/leds/get_led_device_info.sh). + +Examples of proper LED names: + + - "red:disk" + - "white:flash" + - "red:indicator" + - "phy1:green:wlan" + - "phy3::wlan" + - ":kbd_backlight" + - "input5::kbd_backlight" + - "input3::numlock" + - "input3::scrolllock" + - "input3::capslock" + - "mmc1::status" + - "white:status" + +get_led_device_info.sh script can be used for verifying if the LED name +meets the requirements pointed out here. It performs validation of the LED class +devicename sections and gives hints on expected value for a section in case +the validation fails for it. So far the script supports validation +of associations between LEDs and following types of devices: + + - input devices + - ieee80211 compliant USB devices + +The script is open to extensions. + +There have been calls for LED properties such as color to be exported as +individual led class attributes. As a solution which doesn't incur as much +overhead, I suggest these become part of the device name. The naming scheme +above leaves scope for further attributes should they be needed. If sections +of the name don't apply, just leave that section blank. + + +Brightness setting API +====================== + +LED subsystem core exposes following API for setting brightness: + + - led_set_brightness: + it is guaranteed not to sleep, passing LED_OFF stops + blinking, + + - led_set_brightness_sync: + for use cases when immediate effect is desired - + it can block the caller for the time required for accessing + device registers and can sleep, passing LED_OFF stops hardware + blinking, returns -EBUSY if software blink fallback is enabled. + + +LED registration API +==================== + +A driver wanting to register a LED classdev for use by other drivers / +userspace needs to allocate and fill a led_classdev struct and then call +`[devm_]led_classdev_register`. If the non devm version is used the driver +must call led_classdev_unregister from its remove function before +free-ing the led_classdev struct. + +If the driver can detect hardware initiated brightness changes and thus +wants to have a brightness_hw_changed attribute then the LED_BRIGHT_HW_CHANGED +flag must be set in flags before registering. Calling +led_classdev_notify_brightness_hw_changed on a classdev not registered with +the LED_BRIGHT_HW_CHANGED flag is a bug and will trigger a WARN_ON. + +Hardware accelerated blink of LEDs +================================== + +Some LEDs can be programmed to blink without any CPU interaction. To +support this feature, a LED driver can optionally implement the +blink_set() function (see <linux/leds.h>). To set an LED to blinking, +however, it is better to use the API function led_blink_set(), as it +will check and implement software fallback if necessary. + +To turn off blinking, use the API function led_brightness_set() +with brightness value LED_OFF, which should stop any software +timers that may have been required for blinking. + +The blink_set() function should choose a user friendly blinking value +if it is called with `*delay_on==0` && `*delay_off==0` parameters. In this +case the driver should give back the chosen value through delay_on and +delay_off parameters to the leds subsystem. + +Setting the brightness to zero with brightness_set() callback function +should completely turn off the LED and cancel the previously programmed +hardware blinking function, if any. + + +Known Issues +============ + +The LED Trigger core cannot be a module as the simple trigger functions +would cause nightmare dependency issues. I see this as a minor issue +compared to the benefits the simple trigger functionality brings. The +rest of the LED subsystem can be modular. + + +Future Development +================== + +At the moment, a trigger can't be created specifically for a single LED. +There are a number of cases where a trigger might only be mappable to a +particular LED (ACPI?). The addition of triggers provided by the LED driver +should cover this option and be possible to add without breaking the +current interface. diff --git a/Documentation/leds/leds-el15203000.rst b/Documentation/leds/leds-el15203000.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000..12c23d797 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/leds/leds-el15203000.rst @@ -0,0 +1,140 @@ +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 + +================================== +Kernel driver for Crane EL15203000 +================================== + +/sys/class/leds/<led>/hw_pattern +-------------------------------- + +Specify a hardware pattern for the EL15203000 LED. + +The LEDs board supports only predefined patterns by firmware +for specific LEDs. + +Breathing mode for Screen frame light tube:: + + "0 4000 1 4000" + + ^ + | + Max-| --- + | / \ + | / \ + | / \ / + | / \ / + Min-|- --- + | + 0------4------8--> time (sec) + +Cascade mode for Pipe LED:: + + "1 800 2 800 4 800 8 800 16 800" + + ^ + | + 0 On -|----+ +----+ +--- + | | | | | + Off-| +-------------------+ +-------------------+ + | + 1 On -| +----+ +----+ + | | | | | + Off |----+ +-------------------+ +------------------ + | + 2 On -| +----+ +----+ + | | | | | + Off-|---------+ +-------------------+ +------------- + | + 3 On -| +----+ +----+ + | | | | | + Off-|--------------+ +-------------------+ +-------- + | + 4 On -| +----+ +----+ + | | | | | + Off-|-------------------+ +-------------------+ +--- + | + 0---0.8--1.6--2.4--3.2---4---4.8--5.6--6.4--7.2---8--> time (sec) + +Inverted cascade mode for Pipe LED:: + + "30 800 29 800 27 800 23 800 15 800" + + ^ + | + 0 On -| +-------------------+ +-------------------+ + | | | | | + Off-|----+ +----+ +--- + | + 1 On -|----+ +-------------------+ +------------------ + | | | | | + Off | +----+ +----+ + | + 2 On -|---------+ +-------------------+ +------------- + | | | | | + Off-| +----+ +----+ + | + 3 On -|--------------+ +-------------------+ +-------- + | | | | | + Off-| +----+ +----+ + | + 4 On -|-------------------+ +-------------------+ +--- + | | | | | + Off-| +----+ +----+ + | + 0---0.8--1.6--2.4--3.2---4---4.8--5.6--6.4--7.2---8--> time (sec) + +Bounce mode for Pipe LED:: + + "1 800 2 800 4 800 8 800 16 800 16 800 8 800 4 800 2 800 1 800" + + ^ + | + 0 On -|----+ +-------- + | | | + Off-| +---------------------------------------+ + | + 1 On -| +----+ +----+ + | | | | | + Off |----+ +-----------------------------+ +-------- + | + 2 On -| +----+ +----+ + | | | | | + Off-|---------+ +-------------------+ +------------- + | + 3 On -| +----+ +----+ + | | | | | + Off-|--------------+ +---------+ +------------------ + | + 4 On -| +---------+ + | | | + Off-|-------------------+ +----------------------- + | + 0---0.8--1.6--2.4--3.2---4---4.8--5.6--6.4--7.2---8--> time (sec) + +Inverted bounce mode for Pipe LED:: + + "30 800 29 800 27 800 23 800 15 800 15 800 23 800 27 800 29 800 30 800" + + ^ + | + 0 On -| +---------------------------------------+ + | | | + Off-|----+ +-------- + | + 1 On -|----+ +-----------------------------+ +-------- + | | | | | + Off | +----+ +----+ + | + 2 On -|---------+ +-------------------+ +------------- + | | | | | + Off-| +----+ +----+ + | + 3 On -|--------------+ +---------+ +------------------ + | | | | | + Off-| +----+ +----+ + | + 4 On -|-------------------+ +----------------------- + | | | + Off-| +---------+ + | + 0---0.8--1.6--2.4--3.2---4---4.8--5.6--6.4--7.2---8--> time (sec) diff --git a/Documentation/leds/leds-lm3556.rst b/Documentation/leds/leds-lm3556.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000..1ef17d7d8 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/leds/leds-lm3556.rst @@ -0,0 +1,137 @@ +======================== +Kernel driver for lm3556 +======================== + +* Texas Instrument: + 1.5 A Synchronous Boost LED Flash Driver w/ High-Side Current Source +* Datasheet: http://www.national.com/ds/LM/LM3556.pdf + +Authors: + - Daniel Jeong + + Contact:Daniel Jeong(daniel.jeong-at-ti.com, gshark.jeong-at-gmail.com) + +Description +----------- +There are 3 functions in LM3556, Flash, Torch and Indicator. + +Flash Mode +^^^^^^^^^^ + +In Flash Mode, the LED current source(LED) provides 16 target current levels +from 93.75 mA to 1500 mA.The Flash currents are adjusted via the CURRENT +CONTROL REGISTER(0x09).Flash mode is activated by the ENABLE REGISTER(0x0A), +or by pulling the STROBE pin HIGH. + +LM3556 Flash can be controlled through sys/class/leds/flash/brightness file + +* if STROBE pin is enabled, below example control brightness only, and + ON / OFF will be controlled by STROBE pin. + +Flash Example: + +OFF:: + + #echo 0 > sys/class/leds/flash/brightness + +93.75 mA:: + + #echo 1 > sys/class/leds/flash/brightness + +... + +1500 mA:: + + #echo 16 > sys/class/leds/flash/brightness + +Torch Mode +^^^^^^^^^^ + +In Torch Mode, the current source(LED) is programmed via the CURRENT CONTROL +REGISTER(0x09).Torch Mode is activated by the ENABLE REGISTER(0x0A) or by the +hardware TORCH input. + +LM3556 torch can be controlled through sys/class/leds/torch/brightness file. +* if TORCH pin is enabled, below example control brightness only, +and ON / OFF will be controlled by TORCH pin. + +Torch Example: + +OFF:: + + #echo 0 > sys/class/leds/torch/brightness + +46.88 mA:: + + #echo 1 > sys/class/leds/torch/brightness + +... + +375 mA:: + + #echo 8 > sys/class/leds/torch/brightness + +Indicator Mode +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +Indicator pattern can be set through sys/class/leds/indicator/pattern file, +and 4 patterns are pre-defined in indicator_pattern array. + +According to N-lank, Pulse time and N Period values, different pattern wiill +be generated.If you want new patterns for your own device, change +indicator_pattern array with your own values and INDIC_PATTERN_SIZE. + +Please refer datasheet for more detail about N-Blank, Pulse time and N Period. + +Indicator pattern example: + +pattern 0:: + + #echo 0 > sys/class/leds/indicator/pattern + +... + +pattern 3:: + + #echo 3 > sys/class/leds/indicator/pattern + +Indicator brightness can be controlled through +sys/class/leds/indicator/brightness file. + +Example: + +OFF:: + + #echo 0 > sys/class/leds/indicator/brightness + +5.86 mA:: + + #echo 1 > sys/class/leds/indicator/brightness + +... + +46.875mA:: + + #echo 8 > sys/class/leds/indicator/brightness + +Notes +----- +Driver expects it is registered using the i2c_board_info mechanism. +To register the chip at address 0x63 on specific adapter, set the platform data +according to include/linux/platform_data/leds-lm3556.h, set the i2c board info + +Example:: + + static struct i2c_board_info board_i2c_ch4[] __initdata = { + { + I2C_BOARD_INFO(LM3556_NAME, 0x63), + .platform_data = &lm3556_pdata, + }, + }; + +and register it in the platform init function + +Example:: + + board_register_i2c_bus(4, 400, + board_i2c_ch4, ARRAY_SIZE(board_i2c_ch4)); diff --git a/Documentation/leds/leds-lp3944.rst b/Documentation/leds/leds-lp3944.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000..c2f87dc1a --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/leds/leds-lp3944.rst @@ -0,0 +1,59 @@ +==================== +Kernel driver lp3944 +==================== + + * National Semiconductor LP3944 Fun-light Chip + + Prefix: 'lp3944' + + Addresses scanned: None (see the Notes section below) + + Datasheet: + + Publicly available at the National Semiconductor website + http://www.national.com/pf/LP/LP3944.html + +Authors: + Antonio Ospite <ospite@studenti.unina.it> + + +Description +----------- +The LP3944 is a helper chip that can drive up to 8 leds, with two programmable +DIM modes; it could even be used as a gpio expander but this driver assumes it +is used as a led controller. + +The DIM modes are used to set _blink_ patterns for leds, the pattern is +specified supplying two parameters: + + - period: + from 0s to 1.6s + - duty cycle: + percentage of the period the led is on, from 0 to 100 + +Setting a led in DIM0 or DIM1 mode makes it blink according to the pattern. +See the datasheet for details. + +LP3944 can be found on Motorola A910 smartphone, where it drives the rgb +leds, the camera flash light and the lcds power. + + +Notes +----- +The chip is used mainly in embedded contexts, so this driver expects it is +registered using the i2c_board_info mechanism. + +To register the chip at address 0x60 on adapter 0, set the platform data +according to include/linux/leds-lp3944.h, set the i2c board info:: + + static struct i2c_board_info a910_i2c_board_info[] __initdata = { + { + I2C_BOARD_INFO("lp3944", 0x60), + .platform_data = &a910_lp3944_leds, + }, + }; + +and register it in the platform init function:: + + i2c_register_board_info(0, a910_i2c_board_info, + ARRAY_SIZE(a910_i2c_board_info)); diff --git a/Documentation/leds/leds-lp5521.rst b/Documentation/leds/leds-lp5521.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000..0432615b0 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/leds/leds-lp5521.rst @@ -0,0 +1,115 @@ +======================== +Kernel driver for lp5521 +======================== + +* National Semiconductor LP5521 led driver chip +* Datasheet: http://www.national.com/pf/LP/LP5521.html + +Authors: Mathias Nyman, Yuri Zaporozhets, Samu Onkalo + +Contact: Samu Onkalo (samu.p.onkalo-at-nokia.com) + +Description +----------- + +LP5521 can drive up to 3 channels. Leds can be controlled directly via +the led class control interface. Channels have generic names: +lp5521:channelx, where x is 0 .. 2 + +All three channels can be also controlled using the engine micro programs. +More details of the instructions can be found from the public data sheet. + +LP5521 has the internal program memory for running various LED patterns. +There are two ways to run LED patterns. + +1) Legacy interface - enginex_mode and enginex_load + Control interface for the engines: + + x is 1 .. 3 + + enginex_mode: + disabled, load, run + enginex_load: + store program (visible only in engine load mode) + + Example (start to blink the channel 2 led):: + + cd /sys/class/leds/lp5521:channel2/device + echo "load" > engine3_mode + echo "037f4d0003ff6000" > engine3_load + echo "run" > engine3_mode + + To stop the engine:: + + echo "disabled" > engine3_mode + +2) Firmware interface - LP55xx common interface + +For the details, please refer to 'firmware' section in leds-lp55xx.txt + +sysfs contains a selftest entry. + +The test communicates with the chip and checks that +the clock mode is automatically set to the requested one. + +Each channel has its own led current settings. + +- /sys/class/leds/lp5521:channel0/led_current - RW +- /sys/class/leds/lp5521:channel0/max_current - RO + +Format: 10x mA i.e 10 means 1.0 mA + +example platform data:: + + static struct lp55xx_led_config lp5521_led_config[] = { + { + .name = "red", + .chan_nr = 0, + .led_current = 50, + .max_current = 130, + }, { + .name = "green", + .chan_nr = 1, + .led_current = 0, + .max_current = 130, + }, { + .name = "blue", + .chan_nr = 2, + .led_current = 0, + .max_current = 130, + } + }; + + static int lp5521_setup(void) + { + /* setup HW resources */ + } + + static void lp5521_release(void) + { + /* Release HW resources */ + } + + static void lp5521_enable(bool state) + { + /* Control of chip enable signal */ + } + + static struct lp55xx_platform_data lp5521_platform_data = { + .led_config = lp5521_led_config, + .num_channels = ARRAY_SIZE(lp5521_led_config), + .clock_mode = LP55XX_CLOCK_EXT, + .setup_resources = lp5521_setup, + .release_resources = lp5521_release, + .enable = lp5521_enable, + }; + +Note: + chan_nr can have values between 0 and 2. + The name of each channel can be configurable. + If the name field is not defined, the default name will be set to 'xxxx:channelN' + (XXXX : pdata->label or i2c client name, N : channel number) + + +If the current is set to 0 in the platform data, that channel is +disabled and it is not visible in the sysfs. diff --git a/Documentation/leds/leds-lp5523.rst b/Documentation/leds/leds-lp5523.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000..7d7362a1d --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/leds/leds-lp5523.rst @@ -0,0 +1,147 @@ +======================== +Kernel driver for lp5523 +======================== + +* National Semiconductor LP5523 led driver chip +* Datasheet: http://www.national.com/pf/LP/LP5523.html + +Authors: Mathias Nyman, Yuri Zaporozhets, Samu Onkalo +Contact: Samu Onkalo (samu.p.onkalo-at-nokia.com) + +Description +----------- +LP5523 can drive up to 9 channels. Leds can be controlled directly via +the led class control interface. +The name of each channel is configurable in the platform data - name and label. +There are three options to make the channel name. + +a) Define the 'name' in the platform data + +To make specific channel name, then use 'name' platform data. + +- /sys/class/leds/R1 (name: 'R1') +- /sys/class/leds/B1 (name: 'B1') + +b) Use the 'label' with no 'name' field + +For one device name with channel number, then use 'label'. +- /sys/class/leds/RGB:channelN (label: 'RGB', N: 0 ~ 8) + +c) Default + +If both fields are NULL, 'lp5523' is used by default. +- /sys/class/leds/lp5523:channelN (N: 0 ~ 8) + +LP5523 has the internal program memory for running various LED patterns. +There are two ways to run LED patterns. + +1) Legacy interface - enginex_mode, enginex_load and enginex_leds + + Control interface for the engines: + + x is 1 .. 3 + + enginex_mode: + disabled, load, run + enginex_load: + microcode load + enginex_leds: + led mux control + + :: + + cd /sys/class/leds/lp5523:channel2/device + echo "load" > engine3_mode + echo "9d80400004ff05ff437f0000" > engine3_load + echo "111111111" > engine3_leds + echo "run" > engine3_mode + + To stop the engine:: + + echo "disabled" > engine3_mode + +2) Firmware interface - LP55xx common interface + +For the details, please refer to 'firmware' section in leds-lp55xx.txt + +LP5523 has three master faders. If a channel is mapped to one of +the master faders, its output is dimmed based on the value of the master +fader. + +For example:: + + echo "123000123" > master_fader_leds + +creates the following channel-fader mappings:: + + channel 0,6 to master_fader1 + channel 1,7 to master_fader2 + channel 2,8 to master_fader3 + +Then, to have 25% of the original output on channel 0,6:: + + echo 64 > master_fader1 + +To have 0% of the original output (i.e. no output) channel 1,7:: + + echo 0 > master_fader2 + +To have 100% of the original output (i.e. no dimming) on channel 2,8:: + + echo 255 > master_fader3 + +To clear all master fader controls:: + + echo "000000000" > master_fader_leds + +Selftest uses always the current from the platform data. + +Each channel contains led current settings. +- /sys/class/leds/lp5523:channel2/led_current - RW +- /sys/class/leds/lp5523:channel2/max_current - RO + +Format: 10x mA i.e 10 means 1.0 mA + +Example platform data:: + + static struct lp55xx_led_config lp5523_led_config[] = { + { + .name = "D1", + .chan_nr = 0, + .led_current = 50, + .max_current = 130, + }, + ... + { + .chan_nr = 8, + .led_current = 50, + .max_current = 130, + } + }; + + static int lp5523_setup(void) + { + /* Setup HW resources */ + } + + static void lp5523_release(void) + { + /* Release HW resources */ + } + + static void lp5523_enable(bool state) + { + /* Control chip enable signal */ + } + + static struct lp55xx_platform_data lp5523_platform_data = { + .led_config = lp5523_led_config, + .num_channels = ARRAY_SIZE(lp5523_led_config), + .clock_mode = LP55XX_CLOCK_EXT, + .setup_resources = lp5523_setup, + .release_resources = lp5523_release, + .enable = lp5523_enable, + }; + +Note + chan_nr can have values between 0 and 8. diff --git a/Documentation/leds/leds-lp5562.rst b/Documentation/leds/leds-lp5562.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000..79bbb2487 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/leds/leds-lp5562.rst @@ -0,0 +1,137 @@ +======================== +Kernel driver for lp5562 +======================== + +* TI LP5562 LED Driver + +Author: Milo(Woogyom) Kim <milo.kim@ti.com> + +Description +=========== + + LP5562 can drive up to 4 channels. R/G/B and White. + LEDs can be controlled directly via the led class control interface. + + All four channels can be also controlled using the engine micro programs. + LP5562 has the internal program memory for running various LED patterns. + For the details, please refer to 'firmware' section in leds-lp55xx.txt + +Device attribute +================ + +engine_mux + 3 Engines are allocated in LP5562, but the number of channel is 4. + Therefore each channel should be mapped to the engine number. + + Value: RGB or W + + This attribute is used for programming LED data with the firmware interface. + Unlike the LP5521/LP5523/55231, LP5562 has unique feature for the engine mux, + so additional sysfs is required + + LED Map + + ===== === =============================== + Red ... Engine 1 (fixed) + Green ... Engine 2 (fixed) + Blue ... Engine 3 (fixed) + White ... Engine 1 or 2 or 3 (selective) + ===== === =============================== + +How to load the program data using engine_mux +============================================= + + Before loading the LP5562 program data, engine_mux should be written between + the engine selection and loading the firmware. + Engine mux has two different mode, RGB and W. + RGB is used for loading RGB program data, W is used for W program data. + + For example, run blinking green channel pattern:: + + echo 2 > /sys/bus/i2c/devices/xxxx/select_engine # 2 is for green channel + echo "RGB" > /sys/bus/i2c/devices/xxxx/engine_mux # engine mux for RGB + echo 1 > /sys/class/firmware/lp5562/loading + echo "4000600040FF6000" > /sys/class/firmware/lp5562/data + echo 0 > /sys/class/firmware/lp5562/loading + echo 1 > /sys/bus/i2c/devices/xxxx/run_engine + + To run a blinking white pattern:: + + echo 1 or 2 or 3 > /sys/bus/i2c/devices/xxxx/select_engine + echo "W" > /sys/bus/i2c/devices/xxxx/engine_mux + echo 1 > /sys/class/firmware/lp5562/loading + echo "4000600040FF6000" > /sys/class/firmware/lp5562/data + echo 0 > /sys/class/firmware/lp5562/loading + echo 1 > /sys/bus/i2c/devices/xxxx/run_engine + +How to load the predefined patterns +=================================== + + Please refer to 'leds-lp55xx.txt" + +Setting Current of Each Channel +=============================== + + Like LP5521 and LP5523/55231, LP5562 provides LED current settings. + The 'led_current' and 'max_current' are used. + +Example of Platform data +======================== + +:: + + static struct lp55xx_led_config lp5562_led_config[] = { + { + .name = "R", + .chan_nr = 0, + .led_current = 20, + .max_current = 40, + }, + { + .name = "G", + .chan_nr = 1, + .led_current = 20, + .max_current = 40, + }, + { + .name = "B", + .chan_nr = 2, + .led_current = 20, + .max_current = 40, + }, + { + .name = "W", + .chan_nr = 3, + .led_current = 20, + .max_current = 40, + }, + }; + + static int lp5562_setup(void) + { + /* setup HW resources */ + } + + static void lp5562_release(void) + { + /* Release HW resources */ + } + + static void lp5562_enable(bool state) + { + /* Control of chip enable signal */ + } + + static struct lp55xx_platform_data lp5562_platform_data = { + .led_config = lp5562_led_config, + .num_channels = ARRAY_SIZE(lp5562_led_config), + .setup_resources = lp5562_setup, + .release_resources = lp5562_release, + .enable = lp5562_enable, + }; + +To configure the platform specific data, lp55xx_platform_data structure is used + + +If the current is set to 0 in the platform data, that channel is +disabled and it is not visible in the sysfs. diff --git a/Documentation/leds/leds-lp55xx.rst b/Documentation/leds/leds-lp55xx.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000..632e41cec --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/leds/leds-lp55xx.rst @@ -0,0 +1,224 @@ +================================================= +LP5521/LP5523/LP55231/LP5562/LP8501 Common Driver +================================================= + +Authors: Milo(Woogyom) Kim <milo.kim@ti.com> + +Description +----------- +LP5521, LP5523/55231, LP5562 and LP8501 have common features as below. + + Register access via the I2C + Device initialization/deinitialization + Create LED class devices for multiple output channels + Device attributes for user-space interface + Program memory for running LED patterns + +The LP55xx common driver provides these features using exported functions. + + lp55xx_init_device() / lp55xx_deinit_device() + lp55xx_register_leds() / lp55xx_unregister_leds() + lp55xx_regsister_sysfs() / lp55xx_unregister_sysfs() + +( Driver Structure Data ) + +In lp55xx common driver, two different data structure is used. + +* lp55xx_led + control multi output LED channels such as led current, channel index. +* lp55xx_chip + general chip control such like the I2C and platform data. + +For example, LP5521 has maximum 3 LED channels. +LP5523/55231 has 9 output channels:: + + lp55xx_chip for LP5521 ... lp55xx_led #1 + lp55xx_led #2 + lp55xx_led #3 + + lp55xx_chip for LP5523 ... lp55xx_led #1 + lp55xx_led #2 + . + . + lp55xx_led #9 + +( Chip Dependent Code ) + +To support device specific configurations, special structure +'lpxx_device_config' is used. + + - Maximum number of channels + - Reset command, chip enable command + - Chip specific initialization + - Brightness control register access + - Setting LED output current + - Program memory address access for running patterns + - Additional device specific attributes + +( Firmware Interface ) + +LP55xx family devices have the internal program memory for running +various LED patterns. + +This pattern data is saved as a file in the user-land or +hex byte string is written into the memory through the I2C. + +LP55xx common driver supports the firmware interface. + +LP55xx chips have three program engines. + +To load and run the pattern, the programming sequence is following. + + (1) Select an engine number (1/2/3) + (2) Mode change to load + (3) Write pattern data into selected area + (4) Mode change to run + +The LP55xx common driver provides simple interfaces as below. + +select_engine: + Select which engine is used for running program +run_engine: + Start program which is loaded via the firmware interface +firmware: + Load program data + +In case of LP5523, one more command is required, 'enginex_leds'. +It is used for selecting LED output(s) at each engine number. +In more details, please refer to 'leds-lp5523.txt'. + +For example, run blinking pattern in engine #1 of LP5521:: + + echo 1 > /sys/bus/i2c/devices/xxxx/select_engine + echo 1 > /sys/class/firmware/lp5521/loading + echo "4000600040FF6000" > /sys/class/firmware/lp5521/data + echo 0 > /sys/class/firmware/lp5521/loading + echo 1 > /sys/bus/i2c/devices/xxxx/run_engine + +For example, run blinking pattern in engine #3 of LP55231 + +Two LEDs are configured as pattern output channels:: + + echo 3 > /sys/bus/i2c/devices/xxxx/select_engine + echo 1 > /sys/class/firmware/lp55231/loading + echo "9d0740ff7e0040007e00a0010000" > /sys/class/firmware/lp55231/data + echo 0 > /sys/class/firmware/lp55231/loading + echo "000001100" > /sys/bus/i2c/devices/xxxx/engine3_leds + echo 1 > /sys/bus/i2c/devices/xxxx/run_engine + +To start blinking patterns in engine #2 and #3 simultaneously:: + + for idx in 2 3 + do + echo $idx > /sys/class/leds/red/device/select_engine + sleep 0.1 + echo 1 > /sys/class/firmware/lp5521/loading + echo "4000600040FF6000" > /sys/class/firmware/lp5521/data + echo 0 > /sys/class/firmware/lp5521/loading + done + echo 1 > /sys/class/leds/red/device/run_engine + +Here is another example for LP5523. + +Full LED strings are selected by 'engine2_leds':: + + echo 2 > /sys/bus/i2c/devices/xxxx/select_engine + echo 1 > /sys/class/firmware/lp5523/loading + echo "9d80400004ff05ff437f0000" > /sys/class/firmware/lp5523/data + echo 0 > /sys/class/firmware/lp5523/loading + echo "111111111" > /sys/bus/i2c/devices/xxxx/engine2_leds + echo 1 > /sys/bus/i2c/devices/xxxx/run_engine + +As soon as 'loading' is set to 0, registered callback is called. +Inside the callback, the selected engine is loaded and memory is updated. +To run programmed pattern, 'run_engine' attribute should be enabled. + +The pattern sequence of LP8501 is similar to LP5523. + +However pattern data is specific. + +Ex 1) Engine 1 is used:: + + echo 1 > /sys/bus/i2c/devices/xxxx/select_engine + echo 1 > /sys/class/firmware/lp8501/loading + echo "9d0140ff7e0040007e00a001c000" > /sys/class/firmware/lp8501/data + echo 0 > /sys/class/firmware/lp8501/loading + echo 1 > /sys/bus/i2c/devices/xxxx/run_engine + +Ex 2) Engine 2 and 3 are used at the same time:: + + echo 2 > /sys/bus/i2c/devices/xxxx/select_engine + sleep 1 + echo 1 > /sys/class/firmware/lp8501/loading + echo "9d0140ff7e0040007e00a001c000" > /sys/class/firmware/lp8501/data + echo 0 > /sys/class/firmware/lp8501/loading + sleep 1 + echo 3 > /sys/bus/i2c/devices/xxxx/select_engine + sleep 1 + echo 1 > /sys/class/firmware/lp8501/loading + echo "9d0340ff7e0040007e00a001c000" > /sys/class/firmware/lp8501/data + echo 0 > /sys/class/firmware/lp8501/loading + sleep 1 + echo 1 > /sys/class/leds/d1/device/run_engine + +( 'run_engine' and 'firmware_cb' ) + +The sequence of running the program data is common. + +But each device has own specific register addresses for commands. + +To support this, 'run_engine' and 'firmware_cb' are configurable in each driver. + +run_engine: + Control the selected engine +firmware_cb: + The callback function after loading the firmware is done. + + Chip specific commands for loading and updating program memory. + +( Predefined pattern data ) + +Without the firmware interface, LP55xx driver provides another method for +loading a LED pattern. That is 'predefined' pattern. + +A predefined pattern is defined in the platform data and load it(or them) +via the sysfs if needed. + +To use the predefined pattern concept, 'patterns' and 'num_patterns' should be +configured. + +Example of predefined pattern data:: + + /* mode_1: blinking data */ + static const u8 mode_1[] = { + 0x40, 0x00, 0x60, 0x00, 0x40, 0xFF, 0x60, 0x00, + }; + + /* mode_2: always on */ + static const u8 mode_2[] = { 0x40, 0xFF, }; + + struct lp55xx_predef_pattern board_led_patterns[] = { + { + .r = mode_1, + .size_r = ARRAY_SIZE(mode_1), + }, + { + .b = mode_2, + .size_b = ARRAY_SIZE(mode_2), + }, + } + + struct lp55xx_platform_data lp5562_pdata = { + ... + .patterns = board_led_patterns, + .num_patterns = ARRAY_SIZE(board_led_patterns), + }; + +Then, mode_1 and mode_2 can be run via through the sysfs:: + + echo 1 > /sys/bus/i2c/devices/xxxx/led_pattern # red blinking LED pattern + echo 2 > /sys/bus/i2c/devices/xxxx/led_pattern # blue LED always on + +To stop running pattern:: + + echo 0 > /sys/bus/i2c/devices/xxxx/led_pattern diff --git a/Documentation/leds/leds-mlxcpld.rst b/Documentation/leds/leds-mlxcpld.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000..528582429 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/leds/leds-mlxcpld.rst @@ -0,0 +1,118 @@ +======================================= +Kernel driver for Mellanox systems LEDs +======================================= + +Provide system LED support for the nex Mellanox systems: +"msx6710", "msx6720", "msb7700", "msn2700", "msx1410", +"msn2410", "msb7800", "msn2740", "msn2100". + +Description +----------- +Driver provides the following LEDs for the systems "msx6710", "msx6720", +"msb7700", "msn2700", "msx1410", "msn2410", "msb7800", "msn2740": + + - mlxcpld:fan1:green + - mlxcpld:fan1:red + - mlxcpld:fan2:green + - mlxcpld:fan2:red + - mlxcpld:fan3:green + - mlxcpld:fan3:red + - mlxcpld:fan4:green + - mlxcpld:fan4:red + - mlxcpld:psu:green + - mlxcpld:psu:red + - mlxcpld:status:green + - mlxcpld:status:red + + "status" + - CPLD reg offset: 0x20 + - Bits [3:0] + + "psu" + - CPLD reg offset: 0x20 + - Bits [7:4] + + "fan1" + - CPLD reg offset: 0x21 + - Bits [3:0] + + "fan2" + - CPLD reg offset: 0x21 + - Bits [7:4] + + "fan3" + - CPLD reg offset: 0x22 + - Bits [3:0] + + "fan4" + - CPLD reg offset: 0x22 + - Bits [7:4] + + Color mask for all the above LEDs: + + [bit3,bit2,bit1,bit0] or + [bit7,bit6,bit5,bit4]: + + - [0,0,0,0] = LED OFF + - [0,1,0,1] = Red static ON + - [1,1,0,1] = Green static ON + - [0,1,1,0] = Red blink 3Hz + - [1,1,1,0] = Green blink 3Hz + - [0,1,1,1] = Red blink 6Hz + - [1,1,1,1] = Green blink 6Hz + +Driver provides the following LEDs for the system "msn2100": + + - mlxcpld:fan:green + - mlxcpld:fan:red + - mlxcpld:psu1:green + - mlxcpld:psu1:red + - mlxcpld:psu2:green + - mlxcpld:psu2:red + - mlxcpld:status:green + - mlxcpld:status:red + - mlxcpld:uid:blue + + "status" + - CPLD reg offset: 0x20 + - Bits [3:0] + + "fan" + - CPLD reg offset: 0x21 + - Bits [3:0] + + "psu1" + - CPLD reg offset: 0x23 + - Bits [3:0] + + "psu2" + - CPLD reg offset: 0x23 + - Bits [7:4] + + "uid" + - CPLD reg offset: 0x24 + - Bits [3:0] + + Color mask for all the above LEDs, excepted uid: + + [bit3,bit2,bit1,bit0] or + [bit7,bit6,bit5,bit4]: + + - [0,0,0,0] = LED OFF + - [0,1,0,1] = Red static ON + - [1,1,0,1] = Green static ON + - [0,1,1,0] = Red blink 3Hz + - [1,1,1,0] = Green blink 3Hz + - [0,1,1,1] = Red blink 6Hz + - [1,1,1,1] = Green blink 6Hz + + Color mask for uid LED: + [bit3,bit2,bit1,bit0]: + + - [0,0,0,0] = LED OFF + - [1,1,0,1] = Blue static ON + - [1,1,1,0] = Blue blink 3Hz + - [1,1,1,1] = Blue blink 6Hz + +Driver supports HW blinking at 3Hz and 6Hz frequency (50% duty cycle). +For 3Hz duty cylce is about 167 msec, for 6Hz is about 83 msec. diff --git a/Documentation/leds/leds-sc27xx.rst b/Documentation/leds/leds-sc27xx.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000..6bdf6ba3c --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/leds/leds-sc27xx.rst @@ -0,0 +1,27 @@ +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 + +=================================== +Kernel driver for Spreadtrum SC27XX +=================================== + +/sys/class/leds/<led>/hw_pattern +-------------------------------- + +Specify a hardware pattern for the SC27XX LED. For the SC27XX +LED controller, it only supports 4 stages to make a single +hardware pattern, which is used to configure the rise time, +high time, fall time and low time for the breathing mode. + +For the breathing mode, the SC27XX LED only expects one brightness +for the high stage. To be compatible with the hardware pattern +format, we should set brightness as 0 for rise stage, fall +stage and low stage. + +- Min stage duration: 125 ms +- Max stage duration: 31875 ms + +Since the stage duration step is 125 ms, the duration should be +a multiplier of 125, like 125ms, 250ms, 375ms, 500ms ... 31875ms. + +Thus the format of the hardware pattern values should be: +"0 rise_duration brightness high_duration 0 fall_duration 0 low_duration". diff --git a/Documentation/leds/ledtrig-oneshot.rst b/Documentation/leds/ledtrig-oneshot.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000..69fa3ea1d --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/leds/ledtrig-oneshot.rst @@ -0,0 +1,44 @@ +==================== +One-shot LED Trigger +==================== + +This is a LED trigger useful for signaling the user of an event where there are +no clear trap points to put standard led-on and led-off settings. Using this +trigger, the application needs only to signal the trigger when an event has +happened, than the trigger turns the LED on and than keeps it off for a +specified amount of time. + +This trigger is meant to be usable both for sporadic and dense events. In the +first case, the trigger produces a clear single controlled blink for each +event, while in the latter it keeps blinking at constant rate, as to signal +that the events are arriving continuously. + +A one-shot LED only stays in a constant state when there are no events. An +additional "invert" property specifies if the LED has to stay off (normal) or +on (inverted) when not rearmed. + +The trigger can be activated from user space on led class devices as shown +below:: + + echo oneshot > trigger + +This adds sysfs attributes to the LED that are documented in: +Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-class-led-trigger-oneshot + +Example use-case: network devices, initialization:: + + echo oneshot > trigger # set trigger for this led + echo 33 > delay_on # blink at 1 / (33 + 33) Hz on continuous traffic + echo 33 > delay_off + +interface goes up:: + + echo 1 > invert # set led as normally-on, turn the led on + +packet received/transmitted:: + + echo 1 > shot # led starts blinking, ignored if already blinking + +interface goes down:: + + echo 0 > invert # set led as normally-off, turn the led off diff --git a/Documentation/leds/ledtrig-transient.rst b/Documentation/leds/ledtrig-transient.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000..63072f310 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/leds/ledtrig-transient.rst @@ -0,0 +1,160 @@ +===================== +LED Transient Trigger +===================== + +The leds timer trigger does not currently have an interface to activate +a one shot timer. The current support allows for setting two timers, one for +specifying how long a state to be on, and the second for how long the state +to be off. The delay_on value specifies the time period an LED should stay +in on state, followed by a delay_off value that specifies how long the LED +should stay in off state. The on and off cycle repeats until the trigger +gets deactivated. There is no provision for one time activation to implement +features that require an on or off state to be held just once and then stay in +the original state forever. + +Without one shot timer interface, user space can still use timer trigger to +set a timer to hold a state, however when user space application crashes or +goes away without deactivating the timer, the hardware will be left in that +state permanently. + +Transient trigger addresses the need for one shot timer activation. The +transient trigger can be enabled and disabled just like the other leds +triggers. + +When an led class device driver registers itself, it can specify all leds +triggers it supports and a default trigger. During registration, activation +routine for the default trigger gets called. During registration of an led +class device, the LED state does not change. + +When the driver unregisters, deactivation routine for the currently active +trigger will be called, and LED state is changed to LED_OFF. + +Driver suspend changes the LED state to LED_OFF and resume doesn't change +the state. Please note that there is no explicit interaction between the +suspend and resume actions and the currently enabled trigger. LED state +changes are suspended while the driver is in suspend state. Any timers +that are active at the time driver gets suspended, continue to run, without +being able to actually change the LED state. Once driver is resumed, triggers +start functioning again. + +LED state changes are controlled using brightness which is a common led +class device property. When brightness is set to 0 from user space via +echo 0 > brightness, it will result in deactivating the current trigger. + +Transient trigger uses standard register and unregister interfaces. During +trigger registration, for each led class device that specifies this trigger +as its default trigger, trigger activation routine will get called. During +registration, the LED state does not change, unless there is another trigger +active, in which case LED state changes to LED_OFF. + +During trigger unregistration, LED state gets changed to LED_OFF. + +Transient trigger activation routine doesn't change the LED state. It +creates its properties and does its initialization. Transient trigger +deactivation routine, will cancel any timer that is active before it cleans +up and removes the properties it created. It will restore the LED state to +non-transient state. When driver gets suspended, irrespective of the transient +state, the LED state changes to LED_OFF. + +Transient trigger can be enabled and disabled from user space on led class +devices, that support this trigger as shown below:: + + echo transient > trigger + echo none > trigger + +NOTE: + Add a new property trigger state to control the state. + +This trigger exports three properties, activate, state, and duration. When +transient trigger is activated these properties are set to default values. + +- duration allows setting timer value in msecs. The initial value is 0. +- activate allows activating and deactivating the timer specified by + duration as needed. The initial and default value is 0. This will allow + duration to be set after trigger activation. +- state allows user to specify a transient state to be held for the specified + duration. + + activate + - one shot timer activate mechanism. + 1 when activated, 0 when deactivated. + default value is zero when transient trigger is enabled, + to allow duration to be set. + + activate state indicates a timer with a value of specified + duration running. + deactivated state indicates that there is no active timer + running. + + duration + - one shot timer value. When activate is set, duration value + is used to start a timer that runs once. This value doesn't + get changed by the trigger unless user does a set via + echo new_value > duration + + state + - transient state to be held. It has two values 0 or 1. 0 maps + to LED_OFF and 1 maps to LED_FULL. The specified state is + held for the duration of the one shot timer and then the + state gets changed to the non-transient state which is the + inverse of transient state. + If state = LED_FULL, when the timer runs out the state will + go back to LED_OFF. + If state = LED_OFF, when the timer runs out the state will + go back to LED_FULL. + Please note that current LED state is not checked prior to + changing the state to the specified state. + Driver could map these values to inverted depending on the + default states it defines for the LED in its brightness_set() + interface which is called from the led brightness_set() + interfaces to control the LED state. + +When timer expires activate goes back to deactivated state, duration is left +at the set value to be used when activate is set at a future time. This will +allow user app to set the time once and activate it to run it once for the +specified value as needed. When timer expires, state is restored to the +non-transient state which is the inverse of the transient state: + + ================= =============================================== + echo 1 > activate starts timer = duration when duration is not 0. + echo 0 > activate cancels currently running timer. + echo n > duration stores timer value to be used upon next + activate. Currently active timer if + any, continues to run for the specified time. + echo 0 > duration stores timer value to be used upon next + activate. Currently active timer if any, + continues to run for the specified time. + echo 1 > state stores desired transient state LED_FULL to be + held for the specified duration. + echo 0 > state stores desired transient state LED_OFF to be + held for the specified duration. + ================= =============================================== + +What is not supported +===================== + +- Timer activation is one shot and extending and/or shortening the timer + is not supported. + +Examples +======== + +use-case 1:: + + echo transient > trigger + echo n > duration + echo 1 > state + +repeat the following step as needed:: + + echo 1 > activate - start timer = duration to run once + echo 1 > activate - start timer = duration to run once + echo none > trigger + +This trigger is intended to be used for the following example use cases: + + - Use of LED by user space app as activity indicator. + - Use of LED by user space app as a kind of watchdog indicator -- as + long as the app is alive, it can keep the LED illuminated, if it dies + the LED will be extinguished automatically. + - Use by any user space app that needs a transient GPIO output. diff --git a/Documentation/leds/ledtrig-usbport.rst b/Documentation/leds/ledtrig-usbport.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000..37c2505bf --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/leds/ledtrig-usbport.rst @@ -0,0 +1,46 @@ +==================== +USB port LED trigger +==================== + +This LED trigger can be used for signalling to the user a presence of USB device +in a given port. It simply turns on LED when device appears and turns it off +when it disappears. + +It requires selecting USB ports that should be observed. All available ones are +listed as separated entries in a "ports" subdirectory. Selecting is handled by +echoing "1" to a chosen port. + +Please note that this trigger allows selecting multiple USB ports for a single +LED. + +This can be useful in two cases: + +1) Device with single USB LED and few physical ports +==================================================== + +In such a case LED will be turned on as long as there is at least one connected +USB device. + +2) Device with a physical port handled by few controllers +========================================================= + +Some devices may have one controller per PHY standard. E.g. USB 3.0 physical +port may be handled by ohci-platform, ehci-platform and xhci-hcd. If there is +only one LED user will most likely want to assign ports from all 3 hubs. + + +This trigger can be activated from user space on led class devices as shown +below:: + + echo usbport > trigger + +This adds sysfs attributes to the LED that are documented in: +Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-class-led-trigger-usbport + +Example use-case:: + + echo usbport > trigger + echo 1 > ports/usb1-port1 + echo 1 > ports/usb2-port1 + cat ports/usb1-port1 + echo 0 > ports/usb1-port1 diff --git a/Documentation/leds/uleds.rst b/Documentation/leds/uleds.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000..832210980 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/leds/uleds.rst @@ -0,0 +1,37 @@ +============== +Userspace LEDs +============== + +The uleds driver supports userspace LEDs. This can be useful for testing +triggers and can also be used to implement virtual LEDs. + + +Usage +===== + +When the driver is loaded, a character device is created at /dev/uleds. To +create a new LED class device, open /dev/uleds and write a uleds_user_dev +structure to it (found in kernel public header file linux/uleds.h):: + + #define LED_MAX_NAME_SIZE 64 + + struct uleds_user_dev { + char name[LED_MAX_NAME_SIZE]; + }; + +A new LED class device will be created with the name given. The name can be +any valid sysfs device node name, but consider using the LED class naming +convention of "devicename:color:function". + +The current brightness is found by reading a single byte from the character +device. Values are unsigned: 0 to 255. Reading will block until the brightness +changes. The device node can also be polled to notify when the brightness value +changes. + +The LED class device will be removed when the open file handle to /dev/uleds +is closed. + +Multiple LED class devices are created by opening additional file handles to +/dev/uleds. + +See tools/leds/uledmon.c for an example userspace program. |