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authorHenrique de Moraes Holschuh <hmh@hmh.eng.br>2007-07-18 23:45:33 -0300
committerLen Brown <len.brown@intel.com>2007-07-21 23:38:23 -0400
commitd54b7d7f8026300c612dd733d501fcbc22fd0370 (patch)
treeb0c31839196d25938bdb02b8b090c6f5673ec03c /Documentation
parent94b08713186cc47a5c367a866cc0a0a762721455 (diff)
ACPI: thinkpad-acpi: update CMOS commands documentation
The CMOS set of commands is often just used to keep the CMOS NVRAM in sync with whatever the ACPI BIOS has been doing in modern ThinkPads. In older ThinkPads, it actually carried out real actions. Document this. Signed-off-by: Henrique de Moraes Holschuh <hmh@hmh.eng.br> Signed-off-by: Len Brown <len.brown@intel.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation')
-rw-r--r--Documentation/thinkpad-acpi.txt35
1 files changed, 21 insertions, 14 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/thinkpad-acpi.txt b/Documentation/thinkpad-acpi.txt
index 7a06a27ee37..bd00d14538c 100644
--- a/Documentation/thinkpad-acpi.txt
+++ b/Documentation/thinkpad-acpi.txt
@@ -464,27 +464,34 @@ CMOS control
procfs: /proc/acpi/ibm/cmos
sysfs device attribute: cmos_command
-This feature is used internally by the ACPI firmware to control the
-ThinkLight on most newer ThinkPad models. It may also control LCD
-brightness, sounds volume and more, but only on some models.
+This feature is mostly used internally by the ACPI firmware to keep the legacy
+CMOS NVRAM bits in sync with the current machine state, and to record this
+state so that the ThinkPad will retain such settings across reboots.
+
+Some of these commands actually perform actions in some ThinkPad models, but
+this is expected to disappear more and more in newer models. As an example, in
+a T43 and in a X40, commands 12 and 13 still control the ThinkLight state for
+real, but commands 0 to 2 don't control the mixer anymore (they have been
+phased out) and just update the NVRAM.
The range of valid cmos command numbers is 0 to 21, but not all have an
effect and the behavior varies from model to model. Here is the behavior
on the X40 (tpb is the ThinkPad Buttons utility):
- 0 - no effect but tpb reports "Volume down"
- 1 - no effect but tpb reports "Volume up"
- 2 - no effect but tpb reports "Mute on"
- 3 - simulate pressing the "Access IBM" button
- 4 - LCD brightness up
- 5 - LCD brightness down
- 11 - toggle screen expansion
- 12 - ThinkLight on
- 13 - ThinkLight off
- 14 - no effect but tpb reports ThinkLight status change
+ 0 - Related to "Volume down" key press
+ 1 - Related to "Volume up" key press
+ 2 - Related to "Mute on" key press
+ 3 - Related to "Access IBM" key press
+ 4 - Related to "LCD brightness up" key pess
+ 5 - Related to "LCD brightness down" key press
+ 11 - Related to "toggle screen expansion" key press/function
+ 12 - Related to "ThinkLight on"
+ 13 - Related to "ThinkLight off"
+ 14 - Related to "ThinkLight" key press (toggle thinklight)
The cmos command interface is prone to firmware split-brain problems, as
-in newer ThinkPads it is just a compatibility layer.
+in newer ThinkPads it is just a compatibility layer. Do not use it, it is
+exported just as a debug tool.
LED control -- /proc/acpi/ibm/led
---------------------------------