| ACPI video extensions | 
 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | 
 |  | 
 | This driver implement the ACPI Extensions For Display Adapters for | 
 | integrated graphics devices on motherboard, as specified in ACPI 2.0 | 
 | Specification, Appendix B, allowing to perform some basic control like | 
 | defining the video POST device, retrieving EDID information or to | 
 | setup a video output, etc.  Note that this is an ref. implementation | 
 | only.  It may or may not work for your integrated video device. | 
 |  | 
 | The ACPI video driver does 3 things regarding backlight control: | 
 |  | 
 | 1 Export a sysfs interface for user space to control backlight level | 
 |  | 
 | If the ACPI table has a video device, and acpi_backlight=vendor kernel | 
 | command line is not present, the driver will register a backlight device | 
 | and set the required backlight operation structure for it for the sysfs | 
 | interface control. For every registered class device, there will be a | 
 | directory named acpi_videoX under /sys/class/backlight. | 
 |  | 
 | The backlight sysfs interface has a standard definition here: | 
 | Documentation/ABI/stable/sysfs-class-backlight. | 
 |  | 
 | And what ACPI video driver does is: | 
 | actual_brightness: on read, control method _BQC will be evaluated to | 
 | get the brightness level the firmware thinks it is at; | 
 | bl_power: not implemented, will set the current brightness instead; | 
 | brightness: on write, control method _BCM will run to set the requested | 
 | brightness level; | 
 | max_brightness: Derived from the _BCL package(see below); | 
 | type: firmware | 
 |  | 
 | Note that ACPI video backlight driver will always use index for | 
 | brightness, actual_brightness and max_brightness. So if we have | 
 | the following _BCL package: | 
 |  | 
 | Method (_BCL, 0, NotSerialized) | 
 | { | 
 | 	Return (Package (0x0C) | 
 | 	{ | 
 | 		0x64, | 
 | 		0x32, | 
 | 		0x0A, | 
 | 		0x14, | 
 | 		0x1E, | 
 | 		0x28, | 
 | 		0x32, | 
 | 		0x3C, | 
 | 		0x46, | 
 | 		0x50, | 
 | 		0x5A, | 
 | 		0x64 | 
 | 	}) | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | The first two levels are for when laptop are on AC or on battery and are | 
 | not used by Linux currently. The remaining 10 levels are supported levels | 
 | that we can choose from. The applicable index values are from 0 (that | 
 | corresponds to the 0x0A brightness value) to 9 (that corresponds to the | 
 | 0x64 brightness value) inclusive. Each of those index values is regarded | 
 | as a "brightness level" indicator. Thus from the user space perspective | 
 | the range of available brightness levels is from 0 to 9 (max_brightness) | 
 | inclusive. | 
 |  | 
 | 2 Notify user space about hotkey event | 
 |  | 
 | There are generally two cases for hotkey event reporting: | 
 | i) For some laptops, when user presses the hotkey, a scancode will be | 
 |    generated and sent to user space through the input device created by | 
 |    the keyboard driver as a key type input event, with proper remap, the | 
 |    following key code will appear to user space: | 
 |  | 
 | 	EV_KEY, KEY_BRIGHTNESSUP | 
 | 	EV_KEY, KEY_BRIGHTNESSDOWN | 
 | 	etc. | 
 |  | 
 | For this case, ACPI video driver does not need to do anything(actually, | 
 | it doesn't even know this happened). | 
 |  | 
 | ii) For some laptops, the press of the hotkey will not generate the | 
 |     scancode, instead, firmware will notify the video device ACPI node | 
 |     about the event. The event value is defined in the ACPI spec. ACPI | 
 |     video driver will generate an key type input event according to the | 
 |     notify value it received and send the event to user space through the | 
 |     input device it created: | 
 |  | 
 | 	event		keycode | 
 | 	0x86		KEY_BRIGHTNESSUP | 
 | 	0x87		KEY_BRIGHTNESSDOWN | 
 | 	etc. | 
 |  | 
 | so this would lead to the same effect as case i) now. | 
 |  | 
 | Once user space tool receives this event, it can modify the backlight | 
 | level through the sysfs interface. | 
 |  | 
 | 3 Change backlight level in the kernel | 
 |  | 
 | This works for machines covered by case ii) in Section 2. Once the driver | 
 | received a notification, it will set the backlight level accordingly. This does | 
 | not affect the sending of event to user space, they are always sent to user | 
 | space regardless of whether or not the video module controls the backlight level | 
 | directly. This behaviour can be controlled through the brightness_switch_enabled | 
 | module parameter as documented in kernel-parameters.txt. It is recommended to | 
 | disable this behaviour once a GUI environment starts up and wants to have full | 
 | control of the backlight level. |