fujitsu-laptop: Support touchpad toggle hotkey on Skylake-based models

Haswell-based Fujitsu laptops (Lifebook E734/E744/E754) have a touchpad
toggle hotkey (Fn+F4) which is handled transparently to the operating
system: while an ACPI notification is sent to FUJ02B1 when Fn+F4 is
pressed, touchpad state is properly toggled without any explicit support
for this operation in fujitsu-laptop.

Skylake-based models (Lifebook E736/E746/E756) also have that hotkey,
but the touchpad is not toggled transparently to the operating system.
When Fn+F4 is pressed, an ACPI notification is sent to FUJ02E3.  A
subsequent call to S000 (FUNC_RFKILL) can be used to determine whether
the touchpad toggle hotkey was pressed so that an input event can be
sent to userspace.

Relevant ACPI code:

    Method (_L21, 0, NotSerialized)
    {
        ...
        If (AHKF)
        {
            Notify (\_SB.FEXT, 0x80)
        }
        ...
    }

    Method (S000, 3, Serialized)
    {
        Name (_T_0, Zero)
        Local0 = Zero
        While (One)
        {
            _T_0 = Arg0
            If (_T_0 == Zero)
            {
                Local0 |= 0x04000000
                Local0 |= 0x02000000
                Local0 |= 0x00020000
                Local0 |= 0x0200
                Local0 |= 0x0100
                Local0 |= 0x20
            }
            ElseIf (_T_0 == One)
            {
                ...
                If (AHKF & 0x08)
                {
                Local0 |= 0x04000000
                AHKF ^= 0x08
                }
                ...
            } ...
            Break
        }
        Return (Local0)
    }

Pressing Fn+F4 raises GPE 0x21 and sets bit 3 in AHKF.  This in turn
results in bit 26 being set in the value returned by FUNC_RFKILL called
with 1 as its first argument.  On Skylake-based models, bit 26 is also
set in the value returned by FUNC_RFKILL called with 0 as its first
argument (this value is saved in fujitsu_hotkey->rfkill_supported upon
module initialization), which suggests that this bit is set on models
which do not handle touchpad toggling transparently to the operating
system.

Note that bit 3 is cleared in AHKF once FUNC_RFKILL is called with 1 as
its first argument, which requires fujitsu-laptop to handle this hotkey
in a different manner than the other, GIRB-based hotkeys: two input
events (press and release) are immediately sent once Fn+F4 is pressed.

Reported-and-tested-by: Jan-Marek Glogowski <glogow@fbihome.de>
Signed-off-by: Michał Kępień <kernel@kempniu.pl>
Acked-by: Jonathan Woithe <jwoithe@just42.net>
Signed-off-by: Darren Hart <dvhart@linux.intel.com>
This commit is contained in:
Michał Kępień 2016-06-28 09:25:50 +02:00 committed by Darren Hart
parent 00816e1b38
commit 1879e69f4c

View File

@ -846,6 +846,7 @@ static int acpi_fujitsu_hotkey_add(struct acpi_device *device)
set_bit(fujitsu->keycode3, input->keybit);
set_bit(fujitsu->keycode4, input->keybit);
set_bit(fujitsu->keycode5, input->keybit);
set_bit(KEY_TOUCHPAD_TOGGLE, input->keybit);
set_bit(KEY_UNKNOWN, input->keybit);
error = input_register_device(input);
@ -1050,6 +1051,19 @@ static void acpi_fujitsu_hotkey_notify(struct acpi_device *device, u32 event)
}
}
/* On some models (first seen on the Skylake-based Lifebook
* E736/E746/E756), the touchpad toggle hotkey (Fn+F4) is
* handled in software; its state is queried using FUNC_RFKILL
*/
if ((fujitsu_hotkey->rfkill_supported & BIT(26)) &&
(call_fext_func(FUNC_RFKILL, 0x1, 0x0, 0x0) & BIT(26))) {
keycode = KEY_TOUCHPAD_TOGGLE;
input_report_key(input, keycode, 1);
input_sync(input);
input_report_key(input, keycode, 0);
input_sync(input);
}
break;
default:
keycode = KEY_UNKNOWN;