NAME¶
acpi_panasonic
—
ACPI hotkey driver for Panasonic laptops
SYNOPSIS¶
To compile this driver into the kernel, place the following line in your kernel
configuration file:
device
acpi_panasonic
Alternatively, to load the driver as a module at boot time, place the following
line in
loader.conf(5):
acpi_panasonic_load="YES"
DESCRIPTION¶
The
acpi_panasonic
driver enables such hotkey
facilities of various Panasonic laptops as changing LCD brightness,
controlling mixer volumes, entering sleep or suspended state and so on. On the
following models it is reported to work: Let's note (or Toughbook, outside
Japan) CF-R1N, CF-R2A and CF-R3. It may also work on other models as well.
The driver consists of three functionalities. The first is to detect hotkey
events and take corresponding actions, which include changing LCD luminance
and speaker mute state. The second role is to notify occurrences of the event
by way of
devctl(4) and eventually to
devd(8). The third and last is to provide a way
to adjust LCD brightness and sound mute state via
sysctl(8).
Hotkeys¶
There are 9 hotkeys available on the supported hardware:
- Fn+F1
- Make LCD backlight darker.
- Fn+F2
- Make LCD backlight brighter.
- Fn+F3
- Switch video output between LCD and CRT. Not supported by the
acpi_panasonic
driver.
- Fn+F4
- Toggle muting the speaker.
- Fn+F5
- Turn the mixer volume down.
- Fn+F6
- Turn the mixer volume up.
- Fn+F7
- Enter suspend-to-RAM state.
- Fn+F9
- Show battery status.
- Fn+F10
- Enter suspend-to-disk state.
Actions are automatically taken within the driver for
Fn+F1,
Fn+F2 and
Fn+F4. For the other events such as mixer control
and showing battery status,
devd(8) should take
the role as described below.
devd(8) Ss Events¶
When notified to
devd(8), the hotkey event provides
the following information:
- system
- “
ACPI
”
- subsystem
- “
Panasonic
”
- type
- The source of the event in ACPI namespace. The value depends on the model
but typically “
\_SB_.HKEY
”.
- notify
- Event code (see below).
Event codes to be generated are assigned as follows:
- 0x81-0x86, 0x89
- Fn+F<n> pressed. 0x81 corresponds to
Fn+F1, 0x82 corresponds to
Fn+F2, and so on.
- 0x01-0x07, 0x09, 0x1a
- Fn+F<n> released. 0x01 corresponds to
Fn+F1, 0x02 corresponds to
Fn+F2, and so on.
SYSCTL VARIABLES¶
The following MIBs are available:
- hw.acpi.panasonic.lcd_brightness_max
- The maximum level of brightness. The value is read only and automatically
set according to hardware model.
- hw.acpi.panasonic.lcd_brightness_min
- The minimum level of brightness. The value is read only and automatically
set according to hardware model.
- hw.acpi.panasonic.lcd_brightness
- Current brightness level of the LCD (read-write). The value ranges from
hw.acpi.panasonic.lcd_brightness_min to
hw.acpi.panasonic.lcd_brightness_max.
- hw.acpi.panasonic.sound_mute
- A read-write boolean flag to control whether to mute the speaker. The
value 1 means to mute and 0 not.
SEE ALSO¶
acpi(4),
devd.conf(5),
devd(8),
sysctl(8)
HISTORY¶
The
acpi_panasonic
driver first appeared in
FreeBSD 5.3.
AUTHORS¶
The
acpi_panasonic
driver and this manual
page were written by
OGAWA Takaya
⟨t-ogawa@triaez.kaisei.org⟩ and
TAKAHASHI Yoshihiro
⟨nyan@FreeBSD.org⟩.