On Thu, 2007-05-31 at 13:36 +0100, Richard Hughes wrote: > Attached patch adds a kernel thread to do polling on Toshiba hardware. > > Toshiba hardware is a little oddball, and does not provide ACPI events > on some key presses, typically Fn hotkey buttons. The key interface is > now polled, and events now matched to a list of toshiba specific > scancodes, and are squirted to userspace using the INPUT subsystem. > > This means that toshiba laptops buttons "just work" without any > userspace daemon (using uinput) such as fnfx or bodges such as using a > userspace hal addon. Doing the polling in kernel is more efficient, and > makes stuff just work out of the box. You can assign the keys using > standard X keymaps, or using tools such as gnome-keybinding-properties. > > This is similar to other patches sent for the thinkpad_acpi driver, and > is part of the "Unf*ck my keyboard" initiative to make multimedia keys > just work. > > Changes from the first patch involve switching to a workqueue for the > polling, not breaking the spaces in "hotkeys_via_input" and also masking > out the fn key button up. A couple of things: - use a switch statement in toshiba_deliver_button_event(), would look a bit cleaner. - make the magic number #defines - not sure if it's possible, but you should disable the workqueue altogether if nothing has the input device opened. Hopefully we'll find a way to receive an interrupt, or some kind of event when the keys are pressed in the future, and completely avoid the polling. In the meantime, it should be minimised. Cheers -- Bastien Nocera <hadess@xxxxxxxxxx> - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-acpi" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html