Devicetree node to turn off LCD when backlight is 'disabled'
Alex Courbot
acourbot at nvidia.com
Tue Feb 12 18:35:56 EST 2013
On 02/11/2013 03:25 PM, Tony Prisk wrote:
> I was just wondering if the following would be an acceptable way to turn
> off an lcd backlight when the pwm-backlight driver is set to level 0.
> The LCD backlight is 'powered' by the gpio.
>
> leds {
> compatible = "gpio-leds";
> backlight {
> label = "lcd-power";
> gpios = <&gpio 0 0 0>; /* bank pin active_low */
> linux,default-trigger = "backlight";
> default-state = "on";
> };
> };
This would work... for the most common case of a FB blank event (as
gpio-leds will be notified of it and switch your GPIO on/off according
to the kind of event). There are a few drawbacks however:
1) You will have no control over the order of your power sequence.
pwm-backlight also uses FB notifications to switch the PWM on/off. Which
one will happen first will depend on the registration order.
2) This will only work on FB blank events. For instance, if someone
writes "0" into the "brightness" property of your backlight's sysfs
node, no FB blank event will be emitted and your GPIO will remain on.
Also this solution works for the simple case where you control the
backlight using only a GPIO. It would be good to support more complex
cases as well (I have to handle a GPIO and a regulator, for instance).
The "correct" way of doing this would be to let the pwm-backlight driver
(or even the backlight framework) control the power status of the
backlight itself. You can do this using the platform callbacks of
pwm-backlight, but this will require a custom panel. Another possibility
would be to use the power sequence framework within the backlight
drivers, but I need to rewrite it first.
So as an ad-hoc solution, what you propose would certainly work -
however I think this is a good opportunity to try and solve this problem
more globally. Maybe we can start discussing about Power Sequences 2.0. :)
Alex.
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