diff mbox series

[v2,1/3] leds: core: Introduce generic pattern interface

Message ID 20170714224520.467-2-bjorn.andersson@linaro.org
State New
Headers show
Series [v2,1/3] leds: core: Introduce generic pattern interface | expand

Commit Message

Bjorn Andersson July 14, 2017, 10:45 p.m. UTC
Some LED controllers have support for autonomously controlling
brightness over time, according to some preprogrammed pattern or
function.

This adds a new optional operator that LED class drivers can implement
if they support such functionality as well as a new device attribute to
configure the pattern for a given LED.

Signed-off-by: Bjorn Andersson <bjorn.andersson@linaro.org>

---

Changes since v1:
- New patch, based on discussions following v1

 Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-class-led |  20 ++++
 drivers/leds/led-class.c                  | 150 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 include/linux/leds.h                      |  21 +++++
 3 files changed, 191 insertions(+)

-- 
2.12.0

Comments

Pavel Machek July 6, 2017, 3:18 a.m. UTC | #1
Hi!

> Some LED controllers have support for autonomously controlling

> brightness over time, according to some preprogrammed pattern or

> function.

> 

> This adds a new optional operator that LED class drivers can implement

> if they support such functionality as well as a new device attribute to

> configure the pattern for a given LED.


> @@ -61,3 +61,23 @@ Description:

>  		gpio and backlight triggers. In case of the backlight trigger,

>  		it is useful when driving a LED which is intended to indicate

>  		a device in a standby like state.

> +

> +What:		/sys/class/leds/<led>/pattern

> +Date:		July 2017

> +KernelVersion:	4.14

> +Description:

> +		Specify a pattern for the LED, for LED hardware that support

> +		altering the brightness as a function of time.

> +

> +		The pattern is given by a series of tuples, of brightness and

> +		duration (ms). The LED is expected to traverse the series and

> +		each brightness value for the specified duration.

> +

> +		Additionally a repeat marker ":|" can be appended to the

> +		series, which should cause the pattern to be repeated

> +		endlessly.

> +

> +		As LED hardware might have different capabilities and precision

> +		the requested pattern might be slighly adjusted by the driver

> +		and the resulting pattern of such operation should be returned

> +		when this file is read.


Well. I believe this is mostly useful for RGB LEDs. Unfortunately, having patterns
per-LED will present opportunity for different channels becoming de-synchronized
from each other, which will not look nice.

Best regards,
										Pavel
Jacek Anaszewski July 17, 2017, 9:08 p.m. UTC | #2
On 07/16/2017 11:14 PM, Bjorn Andersson wrote:
> On Sun 16 Jul 11:49 PDT 2017, Jacek Anaszewski wrote:

> 

>> Hi,

>>

>> On 07/06/2017 05:18 AM, Pavel Machek wrote:

>>> Hi!

>>>

>>>> Some LED controllers have support for autonomously controlling

>>>> brightness over time, according to some preprogrammed pattern or

>>>> function.

>>>>

>>>> This adds a new optional operator that LED class drivers can implement

>>>> if they support such functionality as well as a new device attribute to

>>>> configure the pattern for a given LED.

>>>

>>>> @@ -61,3 +61,23 @@ Description:

>>>>  		gpio and backlight triggers. In case of the backlight trigger,

>>>>  		it is useful when driving a LED which is intended to indicate

>>>>  		a device in a standby like state.

>>>> +

>>>> +What:		/sys/class/leds/<led>/pattern

>>>> +Date:		July 2017

>>>> +KernelVersion:	4.14

>>>> +Description:

>>>> +		Specify a pattern for the LED, for LED hardware that support

>>>> +		altering the brightness as a function of time.

>>>> +

>>>> +		The pattern is given by a series of tuples, of brightness and

>>>> +		duration (ms). The LED is expected to traverse the series and

>>>> +		each brightness value for the specified duration.

>>>> +

>>>> +		Additionally a repeat marker ":|" can be appended to the

>>>> +		series, which should cause the pattern to be repeated

>>>> +		endlessly.

>>>> +

>>>> +		As LED hardware might have different capabilities and precision

>>>> +		the requested pattern might be slighly adjusted by the driver

>>>> +		and the resulting pattern of such operation should be returned

>>>> +		when this file is read.

>>>

>>> Well. I believe this is mostly useful for RGB LEDs. Unfortunately, having patterns

>>> per-LED will present opportunity for different channels becoming de-synchronized

>>> from each other, which will not look nice.

>>

>> Hmm, they are only [brightness duration] tuples, and no definition of

>> R, G and B LED device is covered here, so how it can be useful for RGB

>> LEDs?

>>

> 

> The typical Qualcomm PMIC sports 4-8 LPG channels. The output of these

> channels can be configured to some extent, but in theory any combination

> of the 8 could be hooked up to the three channels of a RGB LED.

> 

> So looking at the LPG hw block, there's no such thing as RGB.

> 

>> I've been working on addition of RGB LED support to the LED core for

>> some time now, in the way as we agreed upon at [0], but it turns out to

>> be less trivial if we want to do it in an elegant way.

>>

> 

> Generally 3 predefined LPG blocks are routed to the TRILED current sink.

> 

> Exposing the TRILED block as a RGB LED instance would make sense in its

> own, but it doesn't give us a coherent solution for the LPG.

> 

> The current board I'm working on (DragonBoard820c) has 4 LEDs, 3 of them

> are connected to the TRILED and the fourth is on a "GPIO" in current

> sink mode.

> 

> By having each LPG represented as a LED device gives us a unified view

> of the hardware even though there are two different types of current

> sinks.

> 

> 

> Further more, per the 96boards specification we're expected to have

> different triggers on the different "colors" of the TRILED.


What is the function of TRILED block then? My first impression was
that it allows for setting brightness on all three LED synchronously?

> 

> So I do not agree with imposing this kind of decisions on the board

> design just to support this higher level feature.

> 

>> Less elegant way would be duplicating led-core functions and changing

>> single enum led_brightness argument with the three ones (or a struct

>> containing three brightness components)

>>

>> I chose to go the elegant way and tried to introduce led_classdev_base

>> type that would be customizable with the set of ops, that would allow

>> for making the number of brightness components to be set at once

>> customizable. This of course entails significant amount of changes in

>> the LED core and some changes in LED Trigger core.

>>

> 

> I think that the RGB interface has to be a "frontend" of any

> configurable LED instances and not tied to a particular hardware

> controller.


That doesn't assure brightness setting synchronization which is
especially vital in case of triggers like timer.

> For patterns you need to have some sort of synchronization between the

> channels, but for non-pattern cases you can have any combination of LED

> drivers to drive the individual components and I believe this should be

> possible to expose through our RGB interface.

> 

>> Unfortunately I can't predict how much time it will take

>> to submit an RFC due to limited amount of time I can spend working

>> on it.

>>

>> [0] https://www.spinics.net/lists/linux-leds/msg07959.html

> 

> Regards,

> Bjorn

> 


-- 
Best regards,
Jacek Anaszewski
Jacek Anaszewski July 18, 2017, 9:36 p.m. UTC | #3
On 07/18/2017 01:39 AM, Bjorn Andersson wrote:
> On Mon 17 Jul 14:08 PDT 2017, Jacek Anaszewski wrote:

> 

>> On 07/16/2017 11:14 PM, Bjorn Andersson wrote:

>>> On Sun 16 Jul 11:49 PDT 2017, Jacek Anaszewski wrote:

>>>> On 07/06/2017 05:18 AM, Pavel Machek wrote:

> [..]

>>>> I've been working on addition of RGB LED support to the LED core for

>>>> some time now, in the way as we agreed upon at [0], but it turns out to

>>>> be less trivial if we want to do it in an elegant way.

>>>>

>>>

>>> Generally 3 predefined LPG blocks are routed to the TRILED current sink.

>>>

>>> Exposing the TRILED block as a RGB LED instance would make sense in its

>>> own, but it doesn't give us a coherent solution for the LPG.

>>>

>>> The current board I'm working on (DragonBoard820c) has 4 LEDs, 3 of them

>>> are connected to the TRILED and the fourth is on a "GPIO" in current

>>> sink mode.

>>>

>>> By having each LPG represented as a LED device gives us a unified view

>>> of the hardware even though there are two different types of current

>>> sinks.

>>>

>>>

>>> Further more, per the 96boards specification we're expected to have

>>> different triggers on the different "colors" of the TRILED.

>>

>> What is the function of TRILED block then? My first impression was

>> that it allows for setting brightness on all three LED synchronously?

>>

> 

> It's nothing more than one hardware block providing 3 current sinks.


What's the benefit of grouping three sinks? Is there some other gain
besides possibility of turning on/off the whole block at once?


>>>

>>> So I do not agree with imposing this kind of decisions on the board

>>> design just to support this higher level feature.

>>>

>>>> Less elegant way would be duplicating led-core functions and changing

>>>> single enum led_brightness argument with the three ones (or a struct

>>>> containing three brightness components)

>>>>

>>>> I chose to go the elegant way and tried to introduce led_classdev_base

>>>> type that would be customizable with the set of ops, that would allow

>>>> for making the number of brightness components to be set at once

>>>> customizable. This of course entails significant amount of changes in

>>>> the LED core and some changes in LED Trigger core.

>>>>

>>>

>>> I think that the RGB interface has to be a "frontend" of any

>>> configurable LED instances and not tied to a particular hardware

>>> controller.

>>

>> That doesn't assure brightness setting synchronization which is

>> especially vital in case of triggers like timer.

>>

> 

> If you look at any available Android based device you can see what

> happens when you set red, then green and then blue brightness

> independently - from user space even. The LED might be

> red/green/blue/purple whatever, but I would argue that it's not

> noticeable due to the short duration between the updates.


> The case where synchronization matters is if you have pattern

> transitions as you're extending the time of the transition and you can

> spot the color variation in the transitions.


It would require more thorough analysis across various devices
programmed via different buses. Probably in most cases applying
the userspace frontend mentioned by you would work just fine.

And when it comes to higher frequencies, we have had already
attempts of adding hr timer support for "fast LEDs" like the
ones driven through GPIOs, and those could benefit from the
kernel level synchronization.

-- 
Best regards,
Jacek Anaszewski
diff mbox series

Patch

diff --git a/Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-class-led b/Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-class-led
index 5f67f7ab277b..74a7f5b1f89b 100644
--- a/Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-class-led
+++ b/Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-class-led
@@ -61,3 +61,23 @@  Description:
 		gpio and backlight triggers. In case of the backlight trigger,
 		it is useful when driving a LED which is intended to indicate
 		a device in a standby like state.
+
+What:		/sys/class/leds/<led>/pattern
+Date:		July 2017
+KernelVersion:	4.14
+Description:
+		Specify a pattern for the LED, for LED hardware that support
+		altering the brightness as a function of time.
+
+		The pattern is given by a series of tuples, of brightness and
+		duration (ms). The LED is expected to traverse the series and
+		each brightness value for the specified duration.
+
+		Additionally a repeat marker ":|" can be appended to the
+		series, which should cause the pattern to be repeated
+		endlessly.
+
+		As LED hardware might have different capabilities and precision
+		the requested pattern might be slighly adjusted by the driver
+		and the resulting pattern of such operation should be returned
+		when this file is read.
diff --git a/drivers/leds/led-class.c b/drivers/leds/led-class.c
index b0e2d55acbd6..bd630e2ae967 100644
--- a/drivers/leds/led-class.c
+++ b/drivers/leds/led-class.c
@@ -74,6 +74,154 @@  static ssize_t max_brightness_show(struct device *dev,
 }
 static DEVICE_ATTR_RO(max_brightness);
 
+static ssize_t pattern_show(struct device *dev,
+			    struct device_attribute *attr, char *buf)
+{
+	struct led_classdev *led_cdev = dev_get_drvdata(dev);
+	struct led_pattern *pattern;
+	size_t offset = 0;
+	size_t count;
+	bool repeat;
+	size_t i;
+	int n;
+
+	if (!led_cdev->pattern_get)
+		return -EOPNOTSUPP;
+
+	pattern = led_cdev->pattern_get(led_cdev, &count, &repeat);
+	if (IS_ERR_OR_NULL(pattern))
+		return PTR_ERR(pattern);
+
+	for (i = 0; i < count; i++) {
+		n = snprintf(buf + offset, PAGE_SIZE - offset, "%d %d",
+			     pattern[i].brightness, pattern[i].delta_t);
+
+		if (offset + n >= PAGE_SIZE)
+			goto err_nospc;
+
+		offset += n;
+
+		if (i < count - 1)
+			buf[offset++] = ' ';
+	}
+
+	if (repeat) {
+		if (offset + 4 >= PAGE_SIZE)
+			goto err_nospc;
+
+		memcpy(buf + offset, " :|", 3);
+		offset += 3;
+	}
+
+	if (offset + 1 >= PAGE_SIZE)
+		goto err_nospc;
+
+	buf[offset++] = '\n';
+
+	kfree(pattern);
+	return offset;
+
+err_nospc:
+	kfree(pattern);
+	return -ENOSPC;
+}
+
+static ssize_t pattern_store(struct device *dev,
+			     struct device_attribute *attr,
+			     const char *buf, size_t size)
+{
+	struct led_classdev *led_cdev = dev_get_drvdata(dev);
+	struct led_pattern *pattern = NULL;
+	unsigned long val;
+	char *sbegin;
+	char *elem;
+	char *s;
+	int len = 0;
+	int ret = 0;
+	bool odd = true;
+	bool repeat = false;
+
+	s = sbegin = kstrndup(buf, size, GFP_KERNEL);
+	if (!s)
+		return -ENOMEM;
+
+	/* Trim trailing newline */
+	s[strcspn(s, "\n")] = '\0';
+
+	/* If the remaining string is empty, clear the pattern */
+	if (!s[0]) {
+		ret = led_cdev->pattern_clear(led_cdev);
+		goto out;
+	}
+
+	pattern = kcalloc(size, sizeof(*pattern), GFP_KERNEL);
+	if (!pattern) {
+		ret = -ENOMEM;
+		goto out;
+	}
+
+	/* Parse out the brightness & delta_t touples and check for repeat */
+	while ((elem = strsep(&s, " ")) != NULL) {
+		if (!strcmp(elem, ":|")) {
+			repeat = true;
+			break;
+		}
+
+		ret = kstrtoul(elem, 10, &val);
+		if (ret)
+			goto out;
+
+		if (odd) {
+			pattern[len].brightness = val;
+		} else {
+			/* Ensure we don't have any delta_t == 0 */
+			if (!val) {
+				ret = -EINVAL;
+				goto out;
+			}
+
+			pattern[len].delta_t = val;
+			len++;
+		}
+
+		odd = !odd;
+	}
+
+	/*
+	 * Fail if we didn't find any data points or last data point was partial
+	 */
+	if (!len || !odd) {
+		ret = -EINVAL;
+		goto out;
+	}
+
+	ret = led_cdev->pattern_set(led_cdev, pattern, len, repeat);
+
+out:
+	kfree(pattern);
+	kfree(sbegin);
+	return ret < 0 ? ret : size;
+}
+
+static DEVICE_ATTR_RW(pattern);
+
+static umode_t led_class_attrs_mode(struct kobject *kobj,
+				    struct attribute *attr,
+				    int index)
+{
+	struct device *dev = container_of(kobj, struct device, kobj);
+	struct led_classdev *led_cdev = dev_get_drvdata(dev);
+
+	if (attr == &dev_attr_brightness.attr)
+		return attr->mode;
+	if (attr == &dev_attr_max_brightness.attr)
+		return attr->mode;
+	if (attr == &dev_attr_pattern.attr && led_cdev->pattern_set)
+		return attr->mode;
+
+	return 0;
+}
+
 #ifdef CONFIG_LEDS_TRIGGERS
 static DEVICE_ATTR(trigger, 0644, led_trigger_show, led_trigger_store);
 static struct attribute *led_trigger_attrs[] = {
@@ -88,11 +236,13 @@  static const struct attribute_group led_trigger_group = {
 static struct attribute *led_class_attrs[] = {
 	&dev_attr_brightness.attr,
 	&dev_attr_max_brightness.attr,
+	&dev_attr_pattern.attr,
 	NULL,
 };
 
 static const struct attribute_group led_group = {
 	.attrs = led_class_attrs,
+	.is_visible = led_class_attrs_mode,
 };
 
 static const struct attribute_group *led_groups[] = {
diff --git a/include/linux/leds.h b/include/linux/leds.h
index 64c56d454f7d..0ffbc86c36d5 100644
--- a/include/linux/leds.h
+++ b/include/linux/leds.h
@@ -33,6 +33,8 @@  enum led_brightness {
 	LED_FULL	= 255,
 };
 
+struct led_pattern;
+
 struct led_classdev {
 	const char		*name;
 	enum led_brightness	 brightness;
@@ -87,6 +89,15 @@  struct led_classdev {
 				     unsigned long *delay_on,
 				     unsigned long *delay_off);
 
+	int		(*pattern_set)(struct led_classdev *led_cdev,
+				       struct led_pattern *pattern, int len,
+				       bool repeat);
+
+	int		(*pattern_clear)(struct led_classdev *led_cdev);
+
+	struct led_pattern *(*pattern_get)(struct led_classdev *led_cdev,
+					   size_t *len, bool *repeat);
+
 	struct device		*dev;
 	const struct attribute_group	**groups;
 
@@ -444,4 +455,14 @@  static inline void led_classdev_notify_brightness_hw_changed(
 	struct led_classdev *led_cdev, enum led_brightness brightness) { }
 #endif
 
+/**
+ * struct led_pattern - brigheness value in a pattern
+ * @delta_t:	delay until next entry, in milliseconds
+ * @brightness:	brightness at time = 0
+ */
+struct led_pattern {
+	int delta_t;
+	int brightness;
+};
+
 #endif		/* __LINUX_LEDS_H_INCLUDED */