diff options
author | Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org> | 2013-07-27 02:37:54 +0400 |
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committer | Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org> | 2013-07-27 02:37:54 +0400 |
commit | ca01583539b62729609e0ec8c21c813b75617a21 (patch) | |
tree | a4935d9fa753645f9eb1f90accd35c8c1a2e4a1c /drivers/staging/asus_oled/README | |
parent | 0c4349c91625188930f12382b061399827bf4da6 (diff) | |
download | linux-ca01583539b62729609e0ec8c21c813b75617a21.tar.xz |
staging: asus_oled: delete driver
No one has the hardware for it anymore, and there has not been any
development on it in a long time.
If someone shows up with the hardware, and wants to clean it up, this
can be easily reverted.
Reported-by: Lidza Louina <lidza.louina@gmail.com>
Cc: Jakub Schmidtke <sjakub@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'drivers/staging/asus_oled/README')
-rw-r--r-- | drivers/staging/asus_oled/README | 156 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 156 deletions
diff --git a/drivers/staging/asus_oled/README b/drivers/staging/asus_oled/README deleted file mode 100644 index 2d721232467a..000000000000 --- a/drivers/staging/asus_oled/README +++ /dev/null @@ -1,156 +0,0 @@ - - Driver for Asus OLED display present in some Asus laptops. - - The code of this driver is based on 'asusoled' program taken from - <http://lapsus.berlios.de/asus_oled.html>. I just wanted to have a simple - kernel driver for controlling this device, but I didn't know how - to do that. Now I know ;) Also, that program can not be used - with usbhid loaded, which means no USB mouse/keyboard while - controlling OLED display :( - - It has been tested on Asus G1 and didn't cause any problems, - but I don't guarantee that it won't do anything wrong :) - - It can (and probably does) have errors. It is usable - in my case, and I hope others will find it useful too! - -******* - -Building the module - - To build the module you need kernel 2.6 include files and some C compiler. - - Just run: - make - make install (as a root) - - It will build (hopefully) the module and install it in - /lib/modules/'uname -r'/extra/asus_oled.ko. - - To load it just use: - modprobe asus_oled - - You can check if it has detected your OLED display by looking into dmesg output. - There should be something like this: - asus-oled 2-7:1.0: Attached Asus OLED device - - If it doesn't find your display, you can try removing usbhid module. - If you add asus_oled into the list of modules loaded during system boot - before usbhid, it will work even when usbhid is present. - - If it still doesn't detect your hardware, check lsusb output. - There should be similar line: - Bus 002 Device 005: ID 0b05:1726 ASUSTek Computer, Inc. - - If you don't see any lines with '0b05:1726' it means that you have different - type of hardware that is not detected (it may or may not work, but the driver - knows only '0b05:1726' device). - -******* - -Configuration - - There is only one option: start_off. - You can use it by: 'modprobe asus_oled start_off=1', or by adding this - line to /etc/modprobe.d/asus_oled.conf: - options asus_oled start_off=1 - - With this option provided, asus_oled driver will switch off the display - when it is detected and attached. It is nice feature to just switch off the 'ASUS' - logo. If you don't use the display, it is probably the good idea to switch it off, - to protect OLEDs from "wearing off". - -******* - -Usage - - This module can be controlled with two special files: - /sys/class/asus_oled/oled_N/enabled - /sys/class/asus_oled/oled_N/picture - - (N is the device number, the first, and probably the only, has number 1, - so it is /sys/class/asus_oled/oled_1/enabled - and /sys/class/asus_oled/oled_1/picture) - - 'enabled' files is for reading and writing, 'picture' is writeable only. - - You can write 0 or 1 to 'enabled' file, which will switch - on and off the display. Reading from this file will tell you the last - status set, either 0 or 1. By default it is 1, so if the device was set to 'off', - and the computer was rebooted without power-off, this file will contain wrong - value - because the device is off, but hasn't been disabled this time and is - assumed to be on... - - To 'picture' file you write pictures to be displayed by the OLED device. - The format of the file: - <M:WxH> - 00001110010111000 - 00010101010101010 - .... - - First line is a configuration parameter. Meaning of fields in <M:WxH>: - M - picture mode. It can be either 's' for static pictures, - 'r' for rolling pictures, and 'f' for flashing pictures. - W - width of the picture. May be between 1 and 1792 - H - height of the picture. May be between 1 and 32 - - For example <s:128x32> means static picture, 128 pixels long and 32 pixels high. - - The physical size of the display is 128x32 pixels. Static and flashing pictures - can't be larger than that (actually they can, but only part of them will be displayed ;) ) - - If the picture is smaller than 128x32 it will be centered. Rolling pictures wider than - 128 pixels will be centered too, unless their width = n*128. Vertically they will be - centered just like static pictures, if their height is smaller than 32. - - Flashing pictures will be centered horizontally if their width < 128, but they were - centered vertically in a different way. If their height < 16, they will be centered - in the upper half of the display (rows 0-15). This is because only the first half - of flashing pictures is used for flashing. When the picture with heigh = 32 is - displayed in flashing mode, its upper 16 rows will be flashing in the upper half - of the display, and the lower half will be empty. After few seconds upper part will - stop flashing (but that part of the picture will remain there), and the lower - half of the display will start displayin the lower half of the picture - in rolling mode, unless it is empty, or the picture was small enough to fit in - upper part. It is not mine idea, this is just the way Asus' display work ;) - So if you need just flashing, use at most 128x16 picture. If you need flashing and - rolling, use whole size of the display. - - Lines following the first, configuration, line are picture data. Each '1' means - that the pixel is lit, and '0' means that it is not. You can also use '#' as ON, - and ' ' (space) as OFF. Empty lines and all other characters are ignored. - - It is possible to write everything in one line <M:WxH>01010101010101010..., - and W*H characters will be used. If there is not enough characters, nothing will be - displayed. However, the 'line mode' is easier to read (and write), and it also - lets to omit parts of data. Whenever End-Of-Line character is found, but - the line is not W characters long, it is assumed that all missing characters - are equal to the last character in the line. - - Following line represents '0', '1' and a lots of '0's, dependng on the width of the picture - provided in configuration data: - 010 - - So if you need empty line, it is sufficient to write line with only one '0' in it. - The same works with '1' (or ' ' and '#'). - - If there are too many data in the file, they will be ignored. If you are not sure - how many characters you are missing, you can add few lines with one zero in each of them. - - There are some example pictures in .txt format, that can be used as follows: - cat foo.txt > /sys/class/asus_oled/oled_1/picture - - If the display is switched off you also need to run: - echo 1 > /sys/class/asus_oled/oled_1/enabled - To switch it off, just use: - echo 0 > /sys/class/asus_oled/oled_1/enabled - - -******* - - For any additional info please have a look at http://lapsus.berlios.de/asus_oled.html - - - - Jakub Schmidtke (sjakub@gmail.com) - |