Author | Tokens | Token Proportion | Commits | Commit Proportion |
---|---|---|---|---|
David Brownell | 585 | 66.25% | 2 | 20.00% |
Dmitry Torokhov | 288 | 32.62% | 3 | 30.00% |
Paul Gortmaker | 3 | 0.34% | 1 | 10.00% |
Tejun Heo | 3 | 0.34% | 1 | 10.00% |
Lars-Peter Clausen | 2 | 0.23% | 1 | 10.00% |
Wolfram Sang | 1 | 0.11% | 1 | 10.00% |
JJ Ding | 1 | 0.11% | 1 | 10.00% |
Total | 883 | 10 |
/* * dm355evm_keys.c - support buttons and IR remote on DM355 EVM board * * Copyright (c) 2008 by David Brownell * * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or * modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License * as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version * 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. */ #include <linux/kernel.h> #include <linux/slab.h> #include <linux/input.h> #include <linux/input/sparse-keymap.h> #include <linux/platform_device.h> #include <linux/interrupt.h> #include <linux/mfd/dm355evm_msp.h> #include <linux/module.h> /* * The MSP430 firmware on the DM355 EVM monitors on-board pushbuttons * and an IR receptor used for the remote control. When any key is * pressed, or its autorepeat kicks in, an event is sent. This driver * read those events from the small (32 event) queue and reports them. * * Note that physically there can only be one of these devices. * * This driver was tested with firmware revision A4. */ struct dm355evm_keys { struct input_dev *input; struct device *dev; }; /* These initial keycodes can be remapped */ static const struct key_entry dm355evm_keys[] = { /* * Pushbuttons on the EVM board ... note that the labels for these * are SW10/SW11/etc on the PC board. The left/right orientation * comes only from the firmware's documentation, and presumes the * power connector is immediately in front of you and the IR sensor * is to the right. (That is, rotate the board counter-clockwise * by 90 degrees from the SW10/etc and "DM355 EVM" labels.) */ { KE_KEY, 0x00d8, { KEY_OK } }, /* SW12 */ { KE_KEY, 0x00b8, { KEY_UP } }, /* SW13 */ { KE_KEY, 0x00e8, { KEY_DOWN } }, /* SW11 */ { KE_KEY, 0x0078, { KEY_LEFT } }, /* SW14 */ { KE_KEY, 0x00f0, { KEY_RIGHT } }, /* SW10 */ /* * IR buttons ... codes assigned to match the universal remote * provided with the EVM (Philips PM4S) using DVD code 0020. * * These event codes match firmware documentation, but other * remote controls could easily send more RC5-encoded events. * The PM4S manual was used in several cases to help select * a keycode reflecting the intended usage. * * RC5 codes are 14 bits, with two start bits (0x3 prefix) * and a toggle bit (masked out below). */ { KE_KEY, 0x300c, { KEY_POWER } }, /* NOTE: docs omit this */ { KE_KEY, 0x3000, { KEY_NUMERIC_0 } }, { KE_KEY, 0x3001, { KEY_NUMERIC_1 } }, { KE_KEY, 0x3002, { KEY_NUMERIC_2 } }, { KE_KEY, 0x3003, { KEY_NUMERIC_3 } }, { KE_KEY, 0x3004, { KEY_NUMERIC_4 } }, { KE_KEY, 0x3005, { KEY_NUMERIC_5 } }, { KE_KEY, 0x3006, { KEY_NUMERIC_6 } }, { KE_KEY, 0x3007, { KEY_NUMERIC_7 } }, { KE_KEY, 0x3008, { KEY_NUMERIC_8 } }, { KE_KEY, 0x3009, { KEY_NUMERIC_9 } }, { KE_KEY, 0x3022, { KEY_ENTER } }, { KE_KEY, 0x30ec, { KEY_MODE } }, /* "tv/vcr/..." */ { KE_KEY, 0x300f, { KEY_SELECT } }, /* "info" */ { KE_KEY, 0x3020, { KEY_CHANNELUP } }, /* "up" */ { KE_KEY, 0x302e, { KEY_MENU } }, /* "in/out" */ { KE_KEY, 0x3011, { KEY_VOLUMEDOWN } }, /* "left" */ { KE_KEY, 0x300d, { KEY_MUTE } }, /* "ok" */ { KE_KEY, 0x3010, { KEY_VOLUMEUP } }, /* "right" */ { KE_KEY, 0x301e, { KEY_SUBTITLE } }, /* "cc" */ { KE_KEY, 0x3021, { KEY_CHANNELDOWN } },/* "down" */ { KE_KEY, 0x3022, { KEY_PREVIOUS } }, { KE_KEY, 0x3026, { KEY_SLEEP } }, { KE_KEY, 0x3172, { KEY_REWIND } }, /* NOTE: docs wrongly say 0x30ca */ { KE_KEY, 0x3175, { KEY_PLAY } }, { KE_KEY, 0x3174, { KEY_FASTFORWARD } }, { KE_KEY, 0x3177, { KEY_RECORD } }, { KE_KEY, 0x3176, { KEY_STOP } }, { KE_KEY, 0x3169, { KEY_PAUSE } }, }; /* * Because we communicate with the MSP430 using I2C, and all I2C calls * in Linux sleep, we use a threaded IRQ handler. The IRQ itself is * active low, but we go through the GPIO controller so we can trigger * on falling edges and not worry about enabling/disabling the IRQ in * the keypress handling path. */ static irqreturn_t dm355evm_keys_irq(int irq, void *_keys) { static u16 last_event; struct dm355evm_keys *keys = _keys; const struct key_entry *ke; unsigned int keycode; int status; u16 event; /* For simplicity we ignore INPUT_COUNT and just read * events until we get the "queue empty" indicator. * Reading INPUT_LOW decrements the count. */ for (;;) { status = dm355evm_msp_read(DM355EVM_MSP_INPUT_HIGH); if (status < 0) { dev_dbg(keys->dev, "input high err %d\n", status); break; } event = status << 8; status = dm355evm_msp_read(DM355EVM_MSP_INPUT_LOW); if (status < 0) { dev_dbg(keys->dev, "input low err %d\n", status); break; } event |= status; if (event == 0xdead) break; /* Press and release a button: two events, same code. * Press and hold (autorepeat), then release: N events * (N > 2), same code. For RC5 buttons the toggle bits * distinguish (for example) "1-autorepeat" from "1 1"; * but PCB buttons don't support that bit. * * So we must synthesize release events. We do that by * mapping events to a press/release event pair; then * to avoid adding extra events, skip the second event * of each pair. */ if (event == last_event) { last_event = 0; continue; } last_event = event; /* ignore the RC5 toggle bit */ event &= ~0x0800; /* find the key, or report it as unknown */ ke = sparse_keymap_entry_from_scancode(keys->input, event); keycode = ke ? ke->keycode : KEY_UNKNOWN; dev_dbg(keys->dev, "input event 0x%04x--> keycode %d\n", event, keycode); /* report press + release */ input_report_key(keys->input, keycode, 1); input_sync(keys->input); input_report_key(keys->input, keycode, 0); input_sync(keys->input); } return IRQ_HANDLED; } /*----------------------------------------------------------------------*/ static int dm355evm_keys_probe(struct platform_device *pdev) { struct dm355evm_keys *keys; struct input_dev *input; int irq; int error; keys = devm_kzalloc(&pdev->dev, sizeof (*keys), GFP_KERNEL); if (!keys) return -ENOMEM; input = devm_input_allocate_device(&pdev->dev); if (!input) return -ENOMEM; keys->dev = &pdev->dev; keys->input = input; input->name = "DM355 EVM Controls"; input->phys = "dm355evm/input0"; input->id.bustype = BUS_I2C; input->id.product = 0x0355; input->id.version = dm355evm_msp_read(DM355EVM_MSP_FIRMREV); error = sparse_keymap_setup(input, dm355evm_keys, NULL); if (error) return error; /* REVISIT: flush the event queue? */ /* set up "threaded IRQ handler" */ irq = platform_get_irq(pdev, 0); if (irq < 0) return irq; error = devm_request_threaded_irq(&pdev->dev, irq, NULL, dm355evm_keys_irq, IRQF_TRIGGER_FALLING | IRQF_ONESHOT, dev_name(&pdev->dev), keys); if (error) return error; /* register */ error = input_register_device(input); if (error) return error; return 0; } /* REVISIT: add suspend/resume when DaVinci supports it. The IRQ should * be able to wake up the system. When device_may_wakeup(&pdev->dev), call * enable_irq_wake() on suspend, and disable_irq_wake() on resume. */ /* * I2C is used to talk to the MSP430, but this platform device is * exposed by an MFD driver that manages I2C communications. */ static struct platform_driver dm355evm_keys_driver = { .probe = dm355evm_keys_probe, .driver = { .name = "dm355evm_keys", }, }; module_platform_driver(dm355evm_keys_driver); MODULE_LICENSE("GPL");
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