Up until now, we polled the rfkill status for every incoming FUJ02E3 ACPI event. It turns out that the firmware has a bitmask which indicates what rfkill-related state it can report. The rfkill_supported bitmask is now used to avoid polling for rfkill at all in the notification handler if there is no support. Also, it is used in the platform device callbacks. As before we register all callbacks and report "unknown" if the firmware does not give us status updates for that particular bit. This was fed through checkpatch.pl and tested on the S6420, S7020 and P8010 platforms. Signed-off-by: Tony Vroon <tony@xxxxxxxx> Tested-by: Stephen Gildea <stepheng+linux@xxxxxxxxxx> Acked-by: Jonathan Woithe <jwoithe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> -- Len, could we have this in 2.6.29 please. It turns out (based on DSDT analysis) that there are platforms that do not implement all 3 status bits and could thus report invalid information in one of the 3 platform files. An example of such a machine would be the Lifebook N6460 which apparently can't be docked. --- linux-2.6/drivers/platform/x86/fujitsu-laptop.c.orig 2009-01-18 01:05:55.000000000 +0000 +++ linux-2.6/drivers/platform/x86/fujitsu-laptop.c 2009-01-18 01:21:27.000000000 +0000 @@ -166,6 +166,7 @@ struct platform_device *pf_device; struct kfifo *fifo; spinlock_t fifo_lock; + int rfkill_supported; int rfkill_state; int logolamp_registered; int kblamps_registered; @@ -526,7 +527,7 @@ show_lid_state(struct device *dev, struct device_attribute *attr, char *buf) { - if (fujitsu_hotkey->rfkill_state == UNSUPPORTED_CMD) + if (!(fujitsu_hotkey->rfkill_supported & 0x100)) return sprintf(buf, "unknown\n"); if (fujitsu_hotkey->rfkill_state & 0x100) return sprintf(buf, "open\n"); @@ -538,7 +539,7 @@ show_dock_state(struct device *dev, struct device_attribute *attr, char *buf) { - if (fujitsu_hotkey->rfkill_state == UNSUPPORTED_CMD) + if (!(fujitsu_hotkey->rfkill_supported & 0x200)) return sprintf(buf, "unknown\n"); if (fujitsu_hotkey->rfkill_state & 0x200) return sprintf(buf, "docked\n"); @@ -550,7 +551,7 @@ show_radios_state(struct device *dev, struct device_attribute *attr, char *buf) { - if (fujitsu_hotkey->rfkill_state == UNSUPPORTED_CMD) + if (!(fujitsu_hotkey->rfkill_supported & 0x20)) return sprintf(buf, "unknown\n"); if (fujitsu_hotkey->rfkill_state & 0x20) return sprintf(buf, "on\n"); @@ -928,8 +929,17 @@ ; /* No action, result is discarded */ vdbg_printk(FUJLAPTOP_DBG_INFO, "Discarded %i ringbuffer entries\n", i); - fujitsu_hotkey->rfkill_state = - call_fext_func(FUNC_RFKILL, 0x4, 0x0, 0x0); + fujitsu_hotkey->rfkill_supported = + call_fext_func(FUNC_RFKILL, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0); + + /* Make sure our bitmask of supported functions is cleared if the + RFKILL function block is not implemented, like on the S7020. */ + if (fujitsu_hotkey->rfkill_supported == UNSUPPORTED_CMD) + fujitsu_hotkey->rfkill_supported = 0; + + if (fujitsu_hotkey->rfkill_supported) + fujitsu_hotkey->rfkill_state = + call_fext_func(FUNC_RFKILL, 0x4, 0x0, 0x0); /* Suspect this is a keymap of the application panel, print it */ printk(KERN_INFO "fujitsu-laptop: BTNI: [0x%x]\n", @@ -1005,8 +1015,9 @@ input = fujitsu_hotkey->input; - fujitsu_hotkey->rfkill_state = - call_fext_func(FUNC_RFKILL, 0x4, 0x0, 0x0); + if (fujitsu_hotkey->rfkill_supported) + fujitsu_hotkey->rfkill_state = + call_fext_func(FUNC_RFKILL, 0x4, 0x0, 0x0); switch (event) { case ACPI_FUJITSU_NOTIFY_CODE1: -- 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