> Acceptance criteria would be "consistent with documentation and with > other similar users". If the LED is really white, it should be > f1072004.mdio-mii\:white\:WAN, but you probably want > f1072004.mdio-mii\:white\:LAN (or :activity), as discussed elsewhere in the thread. Hi Pavel What i ended up with is: f1072004.mdio-mii:00:white:wan The label on the box is WAN, since it is meant to be a WiFi routers, and this port should connected to your WAN. And this is what the LED code came up with, given my DT description for this device. > Documentation is in Documentation/leds/well-known-leds.txt , so you > should probably add a new section about networking, and explain naming > scheme for network activity LEDs. When next users appear, I'll point > them to the documentation. I added a patch with the following text: * Ethernet LEDs Currently two types of Network LEDs are support, those controlled by the PHY and those by the MAC. In theory both can be present at the same time for one Linux netdev, hence the names need to differ between MAC and PHY. Do not use the netdev name, such as eth0, enp1s0. These are not stable and are not unique. They also don't differentiate between MAC and PHY. ** MAC LEDs Good: f1070000.ethernet:white:WAN Good: mdio_mux-0.1:00:green:left Good: 0000:02:00.0:yellow:top The first part must uniquely name the MAC controller. Then follows the colour. WAN/LAN should be used for a single LED. If there are multiple LEDs, use left/right, or top/bottom to indicate their position on the RJ45 socket. ** PHY LEDs Good: f1072004.mdio-mii:00: white:WAN Good: !mdio-mux!mdio@2!switch@0!mdio:01:green:right Good: r8169-0-200:00:yellow:bottom The first part must uniquely name the PHY. This often means uniquely identifying the MDIO bus controller, and the address on the bus. Andrew