On Fri, 30 Nov 2018 00:57:37 +0100, Ayman Bagabas wrote: > > This driver adds support for missing hotkeys on some Huawei laptops. > Laptops such as the Matebook X have non functioning hotkeys. Whereas > newer laptops such as the Matebook X Pro come with working hotkeys out > of the box. > > Old laptops, such as the Matebook X, report hotkey events through ACPI > device "\WMI0". However, new laptops, such as the Matebook X Pro, > does not have this WMI device. > > All the hotkeys on the Matebook X Pro work fine > without this patch except (micmute, wlan, and huawei key). These keys > and the brightness keys report events to "\AMW0" ACPI device. One > problem is that brightness keys on the Matebook X Pro work without this > patch. This results in reporting two brightness key press > events one is captured by ACPI and another by this driver. > > A solution would be to check if such event came from the "\AMW0" WMI driver > then skip reporting event. Another solution would be to leave this to user-space to handle. Which > can be achieved by using "hwdb" tables and remap those keys to "unknown". > This solution seems more natural to me because it leaves the decision to > user-space. > > Signed-off-by: Ayman Bagabas <ayman.bagabas@xxxxxxxxx> The new patch looks much better than the previous one, thanks for working on it. Just a few comments: > +struct huawei_wmi_priv { > + struct input_dev *idev; > + struct led_classdev cdev; > + acpi_handle handle; Is this handle set in anywhere? I couldn't see it in your patch. If it's supposed to be NULL, passing NULL explicitly makes your intention clearer. > +static int huawei_wmi_leds_setup(struct wmi_device *wdev) > +{ > + struct huawei_wmi_priv *priv = dev_get_drvdata(&wdev->dev); > + acpi_status status; > + > + // Skip registering LED subsystem if no ACPI method was found. > + status = acpi_get_handle(priv->handle, "\\_SB.PCI0.LPCB.EC0", &priv->handle); > + if (ACPI_FAILURE(status)) > + return 0; > + > + if (acpi_has_method(priv->handle, "SPIN")) > + priv->acpi_method = "SPIN"; > + else if (acpi_has_method(priv->handle, "WPIN")) > + priv->acpi_method = "WPIN"; > + else > + return 0; > + > + priv->cdev.name = "platform::micmute"; > + priv->cdev.max_brightness = 1; > + priv->cdev.brightness_set_blocking = huawei_wmi_micmute_led_set; > + priv->cdev.default_trigger = "audio-micmute"; > + priv->cdev.brightness = ledtrig_audio_get(LED_AUDIO_MICMUTE); > + priv->cdev.dev = &wdev->dev; What about suspend/resume? When the driver is bound wit HD-audio, the HD-audio will restore the state at resume, so it would work. But, by providing the LED class device, it is supposed to work even without HD-audio, so it might make sense to pass LED_CORE_SUSPENDRESUME, too. > +static int __init huawei_wmi_init(void) > +{ > + if (!(wmi_has_guid(WMI0_EVENT_GUID) || wmi_has_guid(AMW0_EVENT_GUID))) { > + pr_debug("Compatible WMI GUID not found\n"); > + return -ENODEV; > + } This is superfluous when you implement with wmi_driver. In theory, the supported GUID can be added dynamically via sysfs, too. thanks, Takashi _______________________________________________ Alsa-devel mailing list Alsa-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://mailman.alsa-project.org/mailman/listinfo/alsa-devel