On 31 August 2016 at 20:23, Alan Stern <stern@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Tue, 30 Aug 2016, Rafał Miłecki wrote: > >> >> As you quite often need more complex LED management, there are >> >> triggers that were introduced in 2006 by c3bc9956ec52f ("[PATCH] LED: >> >> add LED trigger tupport"). Some triggers are trivial and could be >> >> implemented in userspace as well (e.g. "timer"). Some had to be >> >> implemented in kernelspace (CPU activity, MTD activity, etc.). Having >> >> few triggers compiled, you can assign them to LEDs at it pleases you. >> >> Your hardware may have generic LED (not labeled) and you can >> >> dynamically assign various triggers to it, depending e.g. on user >> >> actions. E.g. if user (using GUI or whatever) wants to see flash >> >> activity, your userspace script should do: >> >> echo mtd > /sys/class/leds/foo/trigger >> > >> > So for example, you might want to do: >> > >> > echo usb1-4 >/sys/class/leds/foo/trigger >> > >> > and then have the "foo" LED toggle whenever an URB was submitted or >> > completed for a device attached to the 1-4 port. Right? >> >> Not really as it won't cover some pretty common use cases. Many home >> routers have few USB ports (2-5) and only 1 USB LED. It has to be >> possible to assign few USB ports to a single LED (trigger). That way >> LED should be turned on (and kept on) if there is at least 1 USB >> device connected. You obviously can't do: >> echo "usb1-1 usb1-2 usb2-1" > /sys/class/leds/foo/trigger >> >> This was already brought up by Rob (who mentioned CPU trigger) and I >> replied him pretty much the same way in: >> https://lkml.org/lkml/2016/7/29/38 >> (reply starts with "Anyway, the serious limitation I see"). > > The code for a bunch of triggers must already be written. What would > the user do if he wanted to flash a single LED in response to both > CPU activity and MTD activity? If not > > echo "cpu mtd" >/sys/class/leds/foo/trigger > > then what? Well, it sounds like a new feature then. Shall we add an extra API with a request function for turning LED on? It could internally count how many requests were raised and keep LED on as long as there is at least 1 left. I guess we should implement it in trigger "subsystem" (if I can call it so). Does it sound like a good plan? -- Rafał -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-doc" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html