On 04/03/2017 09:00 PM, Bjorn Andersson wrote: > On Fri 31 Mar 02:28 PDT 2017, Jacek Anaszewski wrote: > >> Hi Bjorn and Pavel, >> >> On 03/30/2017 09:43 AM, Pavel Machek wrote: >>> Hi! >>> >>>>>> There is a binding for ti,lp55xx, but there's nothing I can reuse from >>>>>> that binding...because it's completely different hardware. >>>>> >>>>> Agreed, if you drop the pattern stuff from the binding, at least for now. >>>> >>>> I do not have a strong preference to expose these knobs in devicetree >>>> and I do fear that finding some common "pattern" bindings that suits >>>> everyone will be very difficult. >>>> >>>> So I'll drop them from the binding for now. >>> >>> Ok. >>> >>>>> If you want driver merged quickly, I believe the best way would be to >>>>> leave out pattern support for now. We can merge the basic driver >>>>> easily to 4.12. >>>>> >>>> >>>> I'm not that much in a hurry and would rather see that we resolve any >>>> outstanding issues with the implementation of the pattern handling. >>> >>> Ok, good. >>> >>>> But regardless of this we still have the problem that the typical >>>> Qualcomm PMIC has 8 LPG-blocks and any triple could be driving a >>>> RGB-LED. So we would have to create some sort of in-driver-wrapper >>>> around any three instances exposing them as a single LED to the user. >>> >>> Yes, I believe we should do the wrapping. In N900 case, >>> >>>> I rather expose the individual channels and make sure that when we >>>> trigger a blink operation or enable a pattern (i.e. the two operations >>>> that do require synchronization) we will perform that synchronization >>>> under the hood. >>> >>> First, we need a way to tell userspace which LEDs are synchronized, >>> because otherwise it will be confusing. >> >> There is one year old discussion [0] about the possible approaches >> to RGB sub-LEDs synchronization problem and patterns in general. >> My last message with API design proposal has been left unanswered. >> >> Probably we continue that discussion here. >> >> Generally Bjorn's drivers touch two yet to be addressed issues: >> - RGB LED support >> - Generic support for patterns >> >> It is likely that both issues can be solved by utilizing trigger >> mechanism. The possible solution to the problem Bjorn tried to >> address with /sys/class/leds/<led>/pattern comma separated list >> could be a trigger with adjustable number of pattern intervals. >> >> The trigger once activated would create a directory with the >> number of files corresponding to the number of requested intervals, >> and then user could write an interval value by writing it to the >> corresponding file. Somehow related approach has been implemented >> for USB port LED trigger: >> >> 0f247626cbbf ('usb: core: Introduce a USB port LED trigger") >> >> In both RGB and pattern approaches we should assess >> if it is acceptable to provide a pattern for trigger name, >> e.g. blink-pattern-{num_intervals}. >> >> If so, then "echo transition-pattern-15" would create a directory >> e.g. transition_intervals with files interval_0 to interval_14, >> that could be adjusted by userspace. >> > > Having a RGB-trigger that proxy a accepts a userspace request of a > brightness-tripple and sets the brightness on the individual associated > LEDs sounds reasonable - but should probably be generalized to any > number of LEDs. > > A slightly related matter is the question on how to use a single LED for > multiple trigger sources, e.g. how do I get a single LED to show > activity of two MMCs?. You would have to add a dedicated trigger, similar to usb port trigger, I mentioned in the previous message. > > For the patterns I don't know how a trigger for this would look like, > how would setting the pattern of a trigger be propagated down to the > hardware? We'd need a new op and API similar to blink_set()/led_blink_set(). >>> Second, there are more issues than just patterns with the RGB >>> LED. Most important is ability to set particular colors. You want to >>> set the RGB LED to "white", but that does not mean you can set >>> red=green=blue=1.0. You want color to look the same on LCD and on the >>> LED, which means coefficients for white and some kind of function for >>> brightness-to-PWM conversion. >> >> Shouldn't we leave that entirely to the userspace? Can we come up >> with coefficients that will guarantee the same result on all existing >> LCD devices? >> > > How about we just force user space perform the 3 writes and save us the > cost of another trigger in that case? Configuring the brightness of 3 > LEDs is not board specific - and even with a RGB-interface we still need > to specify which RGB-LED should be controlled. This is what we have now, so we can live with it. Addition of a new RGB trigger would be an improvement of the existing state. -- Best regards, Jacek Anaszewski