Sony Notebook Control Driver (SNC) Readme ----------------------------------------- Copyright (C) 2004- 2005 Stelian Pop <stelian@popies.net> Copyright (C) 2007 Mattia Dongili <malattia@linux.it> This mini-driver drives the SNC and SPIC device present in the ACPI BIOS of the Sony Vaio laptops. This driver mixes both devices functions under the same (hopefully consistent) interface. This also means that the sonypi driver is obsoleted by sony-laptop now. Fn keys (hotkeys): ------------------ Some models report hotkeys through the SNC or SPIC devices, such events are reported both through the ACPI subsystem as acpi events and through the INPUT subsystem. See the logs of acpid or /proc/acpi/event and /proc/bus/input/devices to find out what those events are and which input devices are created by the driver. Backlight control: ------------------ If your laptop model supports it, you will find sysfs files in the /sys/class/backlight/sony/ directory. You will be able to query and set the current screen brightness: brightness get/set screen brightness (an iteger between 0 and 7) actual_brightness reading from this file will query the HW to get real brightness value max_brightness the maximum brightness value Platform specific: ------------------ Loading the sony-laptop module will create a /sys/devices/platform/sony-laptop/ directory populated with some files. You then read/write integer values from/to those files by using standard UNIX tools. The files are: brightness_default screen brightness which will be set when the laptop will be rebooted cdpower power on/off the internal CD drive audiopower power on/off the internal sound card lanpower power on/off the internal ethernet card (only in debug mode) bluetoothpower power on/off the internal bluetooth device fanspeed get/set the fan speed Note that some files may be missing if they are not supported by your particular laptop model. Example usage: # echo "1" > /sys/devices/platform/sony-laptop/brightness_default sets the lowest screen brightness for the next and later reboots, # echo "8" > /sys/devices/platform/sony-laptop/brightness_default sets the highest screen brightness for the next and later reboots, # cat /sys/devices/platform/sony-laptop/brightness_default retrieves the value. # echo "0" > /sys/devices/platform/sony-laptop/audiopower powers off the sound card, # echo "1" > /sys/devices/platform/sony-laptop/audiopower powers on the sound card. Development: ------------ If you want to help with the development of this driver (and you are not afraid of any side effects doing strange things with your ACPI BIOS could have on your laptop), load the driver and pass the option 'debug=1'. REPEAT: DON'T DO THIS IF YOU DON'T LIKE RISKY BUSINESS. In your kernel logs you will find the list of all ACPI methods the SNC device has on your laptop. You can see the GCDP/GCDP methods used to pwer on/off the CD drive, but there are others. I HAVE NO IDEA WHAT THOSE METHODS DO. The sony-laptop driver creates, for some of those methods (the most current ones found on several Vaio models), an entry under /sys/devices/platform/sony-laptop, just like the 'cdpower' one. You can create other entries corresponding to your own laptop methods by further editing the source (see the 'sony_nc_values' table, and add a new entry to this table with your get/set method names using the SNC_HANDLE_NAMES macro). Your mission, should you accept it, is to try finding out what those entries are for, by reading/writing random values from/to those files and find out what is the impact on your laptop. Should you find anything interesting, please report it back to me, I will not disavow all knowledge of your actions :) See also http://www.linux.it/~malattia/wiki/index.php/Sony_drivers for other useful info. Bugs/Limitations: ----------------- * This driver is not based on official documentation from Sony (because there is none), so there is no guarantee this driver will work at all, or do the right thing. Although this hasn't happened to me, this driver could do very bad things to your laptop, including permanent damage. * The sony-laptop and sonypi drivers do not interact at all. In the future, sonypi could use sony-laptop to do (part of) its business. * spicctrl, which is the userspace tool used to communicate with the sonypi driver (through /dev/sonypi) does not try to use the sony-laptop driver. In the future, spicctrl could try sonypi first, and if it isn't present, try sony-laptop instead.