On Mon, 2017-01-02 at 18:09 +0100, Pali Rohár wrote: > On Monday 02 January 2017 16:27:05 Bastien Nocera wrote: > > On Sun, 2016-12-25 at 11:04 +0100, Pali Rohár wrote: > > > This patch allows user to disable events from any input device so > > > events > > > would not be delivered to userspace. > > > > > > Currently there is no way to disable particular input device by > > > kernel. > > > User for different reasons would need it for integrated PS/2 > > > keyboard or > > > touchpad in notebook or touchscreen on mobile device to prevent > > > sending > > > events. E.g. mobile phone in pocket or broken integrated PS/2 > > > keyboard. > > > > > > This is just a RFC patch, not tested yet. Original post about > > > motivation > > > about this patch is there: https://lkml.org/lkml/2014/11/29/92 > > > > Having implemented something of that ilk in user-space (we > > automatically disable touch devices when the associated screen is > > turned off/suspended), I think this might need more thought. > > How to implement such thing in userspace? I think you cannot do that > without rewriting every one userspace application which uses input. > > > What happens when a device is opened and the device disabled > through > > sysfs, are the users revoked? > > Applications will not receive events. Same as if input device does > not > generates events. > > > Does this put the device in suspend in the same way that closing > the > > device's last user does? > > Current code not (this is just RFC prototype), but it should be > possible > to implement. > > > Is this not better implemented in user-space at the session level, > > where it knows about which output corresponds to which input > device? > > How to do that without rewriting existing applications? > > > Is this useful enough to disable misbehaving devices on hardware, > so > > that the device is not effective on boot? > > In case integrated device is absolutely unusable and generates > always > random events, it does not solve problem at boot time. > > But more real case is laptop with closed LID press buttons and here > it > is useful. There's usually a display manager in between the application and the input device. Whether it's X.org, or a Wayland compositor. Even David's https://github.com/dvdhrm/kmscon could help for console applications. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-input" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html