Hi Pekka, Thanks for the reply - On 10/08/2020 09:43, Pekka Paalanen wrote: > On Fri, 7 Aug 2020 16:07:35 +0200 > Merlijn Wajer <merlijn@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> Hi, >> >> Is it possible to have X handle input events, but not actually unblank >> the screen upon input events when dpms is enabled? > > Hi, > > by "blanking", do you mean that the CRTC turns off (as opposed to the > display turning off) so that it no longer produces a video stream > regardless of whether the display is actually receiving it or not? Right - the idea is that the LCD display of the phone turns off so that it no longer draws any power. So I believe that would be to have the CRTC turn off. We are using libX11 for this purpose [1], but I think the same can be achieved with "xset dpms force off". >> Our use case (in Maemo Leste, GNU/Linux+Debian smartphone OS) is >> reporting physical volume buttons to X clients when the device is >> locked. When the device is locked, the screen is blanked / turned off >> (via DPMS), but pressing a volume button causes the screen to unblank, >> leading to significant power drain. >> >> I am aware that one can tell X to close certain/all input devices, but >> then the volume buttons (and others: like 'next') would not be sent to X >> applications. >> >> I have not tested this, but I assume the same would apply for "headphone >> buttons": play, stop, pause, etc. Or if someone has a phone in their >> pocket: pressing a button by accident shouldn't cause the screen to >> unblank and cause significant battery drain. By design, the DPMS timeout >> is set to 0, and an external program will dim the screen brightness, and >> tell X when to blank and unblank. >> >> Turning off the screen with DPMS, and then disabling DPMS in an attempt >> to keep the screen blanked (and have input not affect it) also does not >> work - then the screen doesn't stay blanked - this is with the >> modesetting driver. > > What does "disabling DPMS" mean? I should have written "disabling the DPMS extension". It is possible to disable the DPMS extension at runtime, if I understand correctly. This is what the xset manpage says about it: > -dpms The -dpms option disables DPMS (Energy Star) features. > +dpms The +dpms option enables DPMS (Energy Star) features. The idea was to use the DPMS extension to turn the screen off (say with 'xset dpms force off'), and then disable the DPMS extension (while the screen is in the off mode) to workaround the DPMS always waking up the screen upon any input. But it seems like disabling the DPMS extension at runtime after the screen is off turns the screen back on (at least looking at the power consumption of the device). >> Due to the way DRM works, X is the master of the screen, so it is my >> understanding that there also cannot be another helper tool that blanks >> the display via DRM, because X is still the master, even when DPMS is >> disabled. > > There can be only one DRM master having access to KMS functionality at a > time, yes. This is deliberately designed to prevent any "rogue" > applications from touching the display state without going through the > display server in charge. > > DRM is the wrong layer to look at. DRM only does what a display server > tells it to, and has no connection to any input side at all. Your > problem has to be solved in co-operation with the display server. I understand - and I think the DRM design makes sense. I was wondering if this (not being able to forcibly keep the display blanked with a DRM backend while still processing input) is an oversight in X11 (since DRM was introduced way later, and support for it was added to X11). I am hoping to avoid having to ship/maintain a custom/patched X11 server, so if there's potential workaround, I'd be very interested. Perhaps it's also possible to extend the DPMS API in the X11 server to disable waking up on input. That might be a relatively small change to carry, and could be entirely backwards compatible. But I don't know what it takes to get (any) new features into X11. >> On older versions of Maemo, where DRM was not used (10+ years ago), >> external tools can just blank the fb and everything works as expected. >> Then DPMS is simply disabled, and external tools control the blanking >> behaviour, but it looks like with DRM, this is no longer possible. > > Have you tried using X11 RandR protocol to turn the output off? I'm > not sure it fits your use case, but maybe worth a try. I think this is a way to force the display off, but I also believe it usually confuses a lot of window managers and clients - if this is the only display, then what is the size of the desktop after the display is turned off - etc. > The ultimate solution in my opinion though is to ditch X11 and go for a > Wayland architecture. There you provide the display server yourself > (with the help from any Wayland compositor libraries you may want) > which means you are fully in control of the behaviour. Obviously that > would be a huge change. That would indeed be quite nice -- although I am afraid we are stuck with X11 for a while until we get all the other bits working well. Only then does it make sense to think about replacing X11. Cheers, Merlijn [1] https://github.com/maemo-leste/mce/commit/57786e7d26cb32fefc149d8d07ceee239e0bdd08
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