On Sat, May 9, 2020 at 4:07 PM Hans de Goede <hdegoede@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Many Bay Trail and Cherry Trail devices come with a camera attached to > Intel's Image Signal Processor. Linux currently does not have a driver for > these, so they do not work as a camera. > > Some of these camera's have a status LED which is controlled through a GPIO > in some cases, e.g. on the Asus T100TA and Asus T200TA, there is a firmware > issue where the LED gets turned on at boot. > > This commit adds a Linux LED driver for the camera LED on these devices. > This driver will turn the LED off at boot and also allows controlling the > LED (so the user can repurpose it) through the sysfs LED interface. > > Which GPIO is attached to the LED is usually not described in the ACPI > tables, so this driver contains per-system info about the GPIO inside the > driver. This means that this driver only works on systems the driver knows > about. > +static int __init atomisp2_led_init(void) > +{ > + const struct dmi_system_id *system; > + > + system = dmi_first_match(atomisp2_led_systems); > + if (!system) > + return -ENODEV; > + > + gpio_lookup = system->driver_data; > + gpiod_add_lookup_table(gpio_lookup); > + > + pdev = platform_device_register_resndata(NULL, > + DEV_NAME, PLATFORM_DEVID_NONE, > + NULL, 0, &atomisp2_leds_pdata, > + sizeof(atomisp2_leds_pdata)); > + if (IS_ERR(pdev)) { > + gpiod_remove_lookup_table(gpio_lookup); > + return PTR_ERR(pdev); > + } > + > + return 0; return PTR_ERR_OR_ZERO(...); > +} -- With Best Regards, Andy Shevchenko