On 3/30/20 1:51 PM, Hans de Goede wrote: > Hi, > > On 3/29/20 11:36 AM, Paul Menzel wrote: >> Dear Linux folks, >> >> >> On the MSI desktop board [1] >> >> [ 0.000000] DMI: Micro-Star International Co., Ltd. MS-7A37/B350M MORTAR (MS-7A37), BIOS 1.MR 12/02/2019 >> >> with an AMD Ryzen 3 2200G with Radeon Vega Graphics, the ACPI Video Driver `video` is loaded and creates a backlight device. >> >> $ readlink -f /sys/class/backlight/acpi_video0 >> /sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:08.1/0000:26:00.0/backlight/acpi_video0 >> >> I wonder what the driver is used for as the AMDGPU driver exists for the graphics device. > > Backlight on x86 hw is a bit of a mess, there is an ACPI standard for accessing it > and with older (Windows XP era) laptops that is the interface which usually works, > then there are a bunch of vendor specific SMBIOS or WMI backlight interfaces and > then there is the option of directly accessing the hardware as the amdgpu driver > is doing. > > We have a bunch of heuristics to avoid the acpi_video driver registering a > backlight interface when it should not, either because the direct hw access > should be used instead; or because there simply is no builtin LCD panel and thus > no backlight to control. > > These heuristics are failing on your board. > >> If it’s useful, is there a way to prevent the backlight interface from getting created? > > You can pass "acpi_backlight=ignore" on the kernel commandline to disable the Hi Hans, Should that be "acpi_backlight=none"? I don't see 'ignore' allowed here: static void acpi_video_parse_cmdline(void) { if (!strcmp("vendor", acpi_video_backlight_string)) acpi_backlight_cmdline = acpi_backlight_vendor; if (!strcmp("video", acpi_video_backlight_string)) acpi_backlight_cmdline = acpi_backlight_video; if (!strcmp("native", acpi_video_backlight_string)) acpi_backlight_cmdline = acpi_backlight_native; if (!strcmp("none", acpi_video_backlight_string)) acpi_backlight_cmdline = acpi_backlight_none; } and Documentation/admin-guide/kernel-parameters.txt could stand to be updated with a few of those options. > interface, this will stop e.g. gnome from showing a non working brightness > slider in its top right system menu. > > If this works you can make this permanent and avoid other users from having to > do the same thing by writing a patch adding a quirk for this like this one: > > https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=d21a91629f4b8e794fc4c0e0c17c85cedf1d806c -- ~Randy