1 -*- org -*- 2 3 It is somehow important to provide consistent interface to the 4 userland. LED devices have one problem there, and that is naming of 5 directories in /sys/class/leds. It would be nice if userland would 6 just know right "name" for given LED function, but situation got more 7 complex. 8 9 Anyway, if backwards compatibility is not an issue, new code should 10 use one of the "good" names from this list, and you should extend the 11 list where applicable. 12 13 Legacy names are listed, too; in case you are writing application that 14 wants to use particular feature, you should probe for good name, first, 15 but then try the legacy ones, too. 16 17 Notice there's a list of functions in include/dt-bindings/leds/common.h . 18 19 * Gamepads and joysticks 20 21 Game controllers may feature LEDs to indicate a player number. This is commonly 22 used on game consoles in which multiple controllers can be connected to a system. 23 The "player LEDs" are then programmed with a pattern to indicate a particular 24 player. For example, a game controller with 4 LEDs, may be programmed with "x---" 25 to indicate player 1, "-x--" to indicate player 2 etcetera where "x" means on. 26 Input drivers can utilize the LED class to expose the individual player LEDs 27 of a game controller using the function "player". 28 Note: tracking and management of Player IDs is the responsibility of user space, 29 though drivers may pick a default value. 30 31 Good: "input*:*:player-{1,2,3,4,5} 32 33 * Keyboards 34 35 Good: "input*:*:capslock" 36 Good: "input*:*:scrolllock" 37 Good: "input*:*:numlock" 38 Legacy: "shift-key-light" (Motorola Droid 4, capslock) 39 40 Set of common keyboard LEDs, going back to PC AT or so. 41 42 Legacy: "tpacpi::thinklight" (IBM/Lenovo Thinkpads) 43 Legacy: "lp5523:kb{1,2,3,4,5,6}" (Nokia N900) 44 45 Frontlight/backlight of main keyboard. 46 47 Legacy: "button-backlight" (Motorola Droid 4) 48 49 Some phones have touch buttons below screen; it is different from main 50 keyboard. And this is their backlight. 51 52 * Sound subsystem 53 54 Good: "platform:*:mute" 55 Good: "platform:*:micmute" 56 57 LEDs on notebook body, indicating that sound input / output is muted. 58 59 * System notification 60 61 Good: "rgb:status" 62 Legacy: "status-led:{red,green,blue}" (Motorola Droid 4) 63 Legacy: "lp5523:{r,g,b}" (Nokia N900) 64 65 Phones usually have multi-color status LED. 66 67 * Power management 68 69 Good: "platform:*:charging" (allwinner sun50i, leds-cht-wcove) 70 71 * Screen 72 73 Good: ":backlight" (Motorola Droid 4) 74 75 * Indicators 76 77 Good: ":indicator" (Blinkm) 78 79 * RGB 80 81 Good: ":rgb" (Blinkm) 82 83 * Ethernet LEDs 84 85 Currently two types of Network LEDs are support, those controlled by 86 the PHY and those by the MAC. In theory both can be present at the 87 same time for one Linux netdev, hence the names need to differ between 88 MAC and PHY. 89 90 Do not use the netdev name, such as eth0, enp1s0. These are not stable 91 and are not unique. They also don't differentiate between MAC and PHY. 92 93 ** MAC LEDs 94 95 Good: f1070000.ethernet:white:WAN 96 Good: mdio_mux-0.1:00:green:left 97 Good: 0000:02:00.0:yellow:top 98 99 The first part must uniquely name the MAC controller. Then follows the 100 colour. WAN/LAN should be used for a single LED. If there are 101 multiple LEDs, use left/right, or top/bottom to indicate their 102 position on the RJ45 socket. 103 104 ** PHY LEDs 105 106 Good: f1072004.mdio-mii:00: white:WAN 107 Good: !mdio-mux!mdio@2!switch@0!mdio:01:green:right 108 Good: r8169-0-200:00:yellow:bottom 109 110 The first part must uniquely name the PHY. This often means uniquely 111 identifying the MDIO bus controller, and the address on the bus.
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