Re: [PATCH v2 1/3] platform: x86: dell-rbtn: Dell Airplane Mode Switch driver

From: Pali RohÃr
Date: Sat May 02 2015 - 11:13:22 EST


On Saturday 02 May 2015 15:51:50 Gabriele Mazzotta wrote:
> On Thursday 30 April 2015 09:44:29 Pali RohÃr wrote:
> > On Thursday 30 April 2015 14:06:27 Alex Hung wrote:
> > > Method ABRT is to be used by driver to disable BIOS
> > > handling of radio button. So the changes in behaviours
> > > observed by Gabriele is expected. I have seen other
> > > systems behave the same way.
> >
> > Right, that after that ARBT call operating system get full
> > control over radio devices and ACPI/BIOS will not
> > automatically enable/disable them. I think this is OK.
> >
> > But for that we need also support for manually
> > enable/disable radio devices and code for this support is
> > missing. Or do DELLABCE/RBTN acpi devices somehow support
> > enabling/disabling it via system/kernel request?
> >
> > > I do also see firmware only sends Notify(RBTN, 0x80) and
> > > no hard block whether ABRT(1) is called or not. Thus
> > > keycode are the only option on those machines.
> >
> > Key is ok, but we *must* have ability to hard block it via
> > some ACPI/WMI/BIOS/FW/etc... call. Otherwise ARBT(1) is no
> > go as users should be able to enable/disable their radio
> > devices (bluetooth for powersave)
> >
> > > The idea to have an option (kernel parameter) for calling
> > > ABRT is great. I can help verify on more machines. Is
> > > Gabriele's patch above a final version that I should
> > > test?
> >
> > No, I do not think so. This looks like hack or pure design.
> > Kernel option could be there, but just for buggy BIOSes
> > (and future changed design).
> >
> > But now it looks like for correct work is specifying that
> > param required -- which is bad.
> >
> > Alex, can you ask Dell people how should system turn off e.g
> > bluetooth or wifi device if ARTB(1) is called and
> > system/kernel (instead ACPI) is expected to turn off/on
> > blueooth (and wifi) devices?
>
> I completely forgot that libsmbios comes with
> smbios-wireless-ctl. It allows me to control the hardware
> slider.
>
> > I think that without this information (and working driver
> > for it) we should not enable ARTB(1) or including this
> > driver into kernel tree as it will break some existing
> > machines...
>
> Alex, could you test smbios-wireless-ctl and see what it says
> about the laptops with no hardware slider? For instance on
> mine it says:
>
> Radio Status for WLAN:
> WLAN enabled at boot
> WLAN supported
> WLAN enabled
> WLAN installed
> WLAN boot-time wireless switch setting not present
> WLAN runtime switch control currently enabled
> Status Code: 0
>
> You can find the utility here:
> http://linux.dell.com/git/libsmbios.git
>
> The code to check for the presence of an hardware slider is
> even already implemented in dell-laptop and works on my
> laptop, it says the slider is present.
>
>
> Pali, you have a Latitude, right? Is "whitelisted" true when
> you load dell-laptop? I'm asking because when I load
> dell-laptop with force_rfkill, my function key stops working.
> Radio devices get disabled the moment dell-laptop is loaded
> and I must use smbios-wireless-ctl to re-enable them. Once I
> re-enabled them, the function keys starts working again.
> I don't know exactly what happens on your laptop, but I was
> wondering if dell-laptop is messing things up on your laptop
> too.

Hi, on my Latitude E6440 machine dell-laptop (with rfkill)
working fine. There is no problem with it.

--
Pali RohÃr
pali.rohar@xxxxxxxxx

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