Fixing the kernels backlight API
David Herrmann
dh.herrmann at gmail.com
Wed Feb 12 14:26:34 PST 2014
Hi
On Wed, Feb 12, 2014 at 9:43 PM, Ville Syrjälä
<ville.syrjala at linux.intel.com> wrote:
> On Thu, Feb 13, 2014 at 06:14:04AM +1000, Dave Airlie wrote:
>> >
>> > The biggest remaining stumbling block is the backlight API, because opening the
>> > sysfs files requires root rights. I'll very likely write a little helper for this
>> > for now, but in the long run it would be good to have a better solution.
>> >
>> > While discussion this in the graphics devroom at Fosdem, the general consensus
>> > seemed to be that the current backlight API is in need of an overhaul anyways.
>> >
>> > There are several issues with the current API:
>> > -there is no reliable way to determine the relation between a backlight
>> > control in sysfs and the display it controls the backlight off
>> > -on many laptops we end up with multiple providers of backlight control
>> > all battling over control of the same backlight controller through various
>> > firmware interfaces
>> > -and there is no way to do acl management on it because of sysfs usage
>> >
>> > At Fosdem it was suggested to "simply" make the backlight a property of
>> > the connector in drm/kms and let users control it that way. From an acl pov
>> > this makes a ton of sense, if a user controls the other display-panel settings,
>> > then he should be able to control the backlight too.
>> >
>> > This also nicely solves the issue of userspace having to figure out which backlight
>> > control to use for a certain output.
>> >
>> > Last this makes it the kernels responsibility to figure out which firmware interface
>> > (if any) to use and tie that to the connector, rather then just exporting all of
>> > them, including conflicting ones, and just hoping that userspace will figure things out.
>> >
>> > Note that wrt the last point, the kernel is the one which should have all the hardware
>> > knowledge to do this properly, after all hardware abstraction is one of the tasks of
>> > the kernel.
>> >
>> > I realize moving this more into the kernel, and tying things into drm is in no means
>> > easy, but it is about time we clean up this mess.
>> >
>> > Note that although I'm kicking of this discussion, my focus within the graphics team is
>> > mostly on input devices, so I'm hoping that someone else will pick things up once we've
>> > a better idea of how we would like to solve this.
>> >
>>
>> I hate to respond with yeah no, but yeah no,
>>
>> http://people.freedesktop.org/~cbrill/dri-log/?channel=dri-devel&show_html=true&highlight_names=&date=2014-02-04
>> http://people.freedesktop.org/~cbrill/dri-log/?channel=dri-devel&show_html=true&highlight_names=&date=2014-02-05
>>
>> read down that until you see me and tagr talking, read it a few times,
>> and the follow on chat with dvdhrm.
>>
>> The biggest problem with leaving the kernel to pick the correct one,
>> is the kernel simply never knows which is the
>> correct one,
>
> That could be solved by still allowing userspace to change the
> connection between the property and the actual backlight device.
>
> With the prop approach + atomic modeset you could also do some
> slightly fancier things like changing the backlight at the same
> time as doing a modeset or just adjusting some other display
> related properties.
The "attach" stuff actually sounds doable, but who decides which one
to attach? You still need some user-space script during device-plug
for that.
But to be honest, the simplest way would be a "backlightd"
bus-activatable daemon. SetBacklight() then takes a DRM-connector and
brightness-value, which the daemon looks up in /sys and sets.. This
has the advantage that we can do any fancy matching in user-space. We
can provide quirks (maybe even via udev-hwdb) and other helpers for
weird setups.
Cheers
David
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