On Wed, 6 Sep 2023, Hans de Goede wrote: > Hi Julius, > > On 9/4/23 21:02, Julius Zint wrote: > > > > > > On Mon, 4 Sep 2023, Thomas Weißschuh wrote: > > > >> +Cc Hans who ins involved with the backlight subsystem > >> > >> Hi Julius, > >> > >> today I stumbled upon a mail from Hans [0], which explains that the > >> backlight subsystem is not actually a good fit (yet?) for external > >> displays. > >> > >> It seems a new API is in the works that would better fit, but I'm not > >> sure about the state of this API. Maybe Hans can clarify. > >> > >> This also ties back to my review question how userspace can figure out > >> to which display a backlight devices applies. So far it can not. > >> > >> [0] https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/7f2d88de-60c5-e2ff-9b22-acba35cfdfb6@xxxxxxxxxx/ > >> > > > > Hi Thomas, > > > > thanks for the hint. I will make sure to give this a proper read and > > see, if it fits my use case better then the current backlight subsystem. > > Note the actual proposal for the new usespace API for display brightness > control is here: > > https://lore.kernel.org/dri-devel/b61d3eeb-6213-afac-2e70-7b9791c86d2e@xxxxxxxxxx/ > > I have finished / stabilized the backlight code refactor which I landed > in 6.1, which is a prerequisite for the above proposal. But I have not > been able to make time to actually implement the above proposal; and > I don't know when I will be able to make time for this. > > > Especially since I wasnt able to properly address your other review > > comments for now. You are right that the name should align better with > > the kernel module and also, that it is possible for multiple displays to > > be attached. > > > > In its current state, this would mean that you could only control the > > backlight for the first HID device (enough for me :-). > > > > The systemd-backlight@.service uses not only the file name, but also the > > full bus path for storing/restoring backlights. I did not yet get around > > to see how the desktops handle brightness control, but since the > > systemd-backlight@.service already uses the name, its important to stay > > the same over multiple boots. > > > > I would be able to get a handle on the underlying USB device and use the > > serial to uniquely (and persistently) name the backlight. But it does > > feel hacky doing it this way. > > So mutter (gnome-shell compositor library) has a similar issue when saving > monitor layouts and I can tell you beforehand that monitor serial numbers > by themselves are not unique enough. Some models just report 123456789 > as serial and if you have a dual-monitor setup with 2 such monitors > and name the backlight class device <serial>-vcp-hid or something like that > you will still end up with 2 identical names. > > To avoid this when saving monitor layouts mutter saves both the port > to which the monitor is attached (e.g. DP-1 DP-2) and the serialnumber > and on startup / monitor hotplug when it checks to see if it has saved > layout info for the monitor it checks the port+serialnr combination. > > So what I think you should do is figure out a way to map which > VCP HID device maps to which drm-connector and then use > the connector-name + serial-nr to generate the backlight device name. > > We will need the mapping the a drm-connector object anyway for > the new brightness API proposal from above. > > Note this does NOT solve the fact that registering a new backlight > class device for an external monitor on a laptop will hopelessly > confuse userspace, see: > > https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/7f2d88de-60c5-e2ff-9b22-acba35cfdfb6@xxxxxxxxxx/ > > Regards, > > Hans > Thank you for all this additional information. I have watched the talks and read up upon the mail threads you`ve linked. I will see if I can make the mapping to the DRM connector and plan to update this patchset. Thanks, Julius