| rfkill - RF switch subsystem support |
| ==================================== |
| |
| 1 Introduction |
| 2 Implementation details |
| 3 Kernel driver guidelines |
| 3.1 wireless device drivers |
| 3.2 platform/switch drivers |
| 3.3 input device drivers |
| 4 Kernel API |
| 5 Userspace support |
| |
| |
| 1. Introduction: |
| |
| The rfkill switch subsystem exists to add a generic interface to circuitry that |
| can enable or disable the signal output of a wireless *transmitter* of any |
| type. By far, the most common use is to disable radio-frequency transmitters. |
| |
| Note that disabling the signal output means that the the transmitter is to be |
| made to not emit any energy when "blocked". rfkill is not about blocking data |
| transmissions, it is about blocking energy emission. |
| |
| The rfkill subsystem offers support for keys and switches often found on |
| laptops to enable wireless devices like WiFi and Bluetooth, so that these keys |
| and switches actually perform an action in all wireless devices of a given type |
| attached to the system. |
| |
| The buttons to enable and disable the wireless transmitters are important in |
| situations where the user is for example using his laptop on a location where |
| radio-frequency transmitters _must_ be disabled (e.g. airplanes). |
| |
| Because of this requirement, userspace support for the keys should not be made |
| mandatory. Because userspace might want to perform some additional smarter |
| tasks when the key is pressed, rfkill provides userspace the possibility to |
| take over the task to handle the key events. |
| |
| =============================================================================== |
| 2: Implementation details |
| |
| The rfkill subsystem is composed of various components: the rfkill class, the |
| rfkill-input module (an input layer handler), and some specific input layer |
| events. |
| |
| The rfkill class provides kernel drivers with an interface that allows them to |
| know when they should enable or disable a wireless network device transmitter. |
| This is enabled by the CONFIG_RFKILL Kconfig option. |
| |
| The rfkill class support makes sure userspace will be notified of all state |
| changes on rfkill devices through uevents. It provides a notification chain |
| for interested parties in the kernel to also get notified of rfkill state |
| changes in other drivers. It creates several sysfs entries which can be used |
| by userspace. See section "Userspace support". |
| |
| The rfkill-input module provides the kernel with the ability to implement a |
| basic response when the user presses a key or button (or toggles a switch) |
| related to rfkill functionality. It is an in-kernel implementation of default |
| policy of reacting to rfkill-related input events and neither mandatory nor |
| required for wireless drivers to operate. It is enabled by the |
| CONFIG_RFKILL_INPUT Kconfig option. |
| |
| rfkill-input is a rfkill-related events input layer handler. This handler will |
| listen to all rfkill key events and will change the rfkill state of the |
| wireless devices accordingly. With this option enabled userspace could either |
| do nothing or simply perform monitoring tasks. |
| |
| The rfkill-input module also provides EPO (emergency power-off) functionality |
| for all wireless transmitters. This function cannot be overridden, and it is |
| always active. rfkill EPO is related to *_RFKILL_ALL input layer events. |
| |
| |
| Important terms for the rfkill subsystem: |
| |
| In order to avoid confusion, we avoid the term "switch" in rfkill when it is |
| referring to an electronic control circuit that enables or disables a |
| transmitter. We reserve it for the physical device a human manipulates |
| (which is an input device, by the way): |
| |
| rfkill switch: |
| |
| A physical device a human manipulates. Its state can be perceived by |
| the kernel either directly (through a GPIO pin, ACPI GPE) or by its |
| effect on a rfkill line of a wireless device. |
| |
| rfkill controller: |
| |
| A hardware circuit that controls the state of a rfkill line, which a |
| kernel driver can interact with *to modify* that state (i.e. it has |
| either write-only or read/write access). |
| |
| rfkill line: |
| |
| An input channel (hardware or software) of a wireless device, which |
| causes a wireless transmitter to stop emitting energy (BLOCK) when it |
| is active. Point of view is extremely important here: rfkill lines are |
| always seen from the PoV of a wireless device (and its driver). |
| |
| soft rfkill line/software rfkill line: |
| |
| A rfkill line the wireless device driver can directly change the state |
| of. Related to rfkill_state RFKILL_STATE_SOFT_BLOCKED. |
| |
| hard rfkill line/hardware rfkill line: |
| |
| A rfkill line that works fully in hardware or firmware, and that cannot |
| be overridden by the kernel driver. The hardware device or the |
| firmware just exports its status to the driver, but it is read-only. |
| Related to rfkill_state RFKILL_STATE_HARD_BLOCKED. |
| |
| The enum rfkill_state describes the rfkill state of a transmitter: |
| |
| When a rfkill line or rfkill controller is in the RFKILL_STATE_UNBLOCKED state, |
| the wireless transmitter (radio TX circuit for example) is *enabled*. When the |
| it is in the RFKILL_STATE_SOFT_BLOCKED or RFKILL_STATE_HARD_BLOCKED, the |
| wireless transmitter is to be *blocked* from operating. |
| |
| RFKILL_STATE_SOFT_BLOCKED indicates that a call to toggle_radio() can change |
| that state. RFKILL_STATE_HARD_BLOCKED indicates that a call to toggle_radio() |
| will not be able to change the state and will return with a suitable error if |
| attempts are made to set the state to RFKILL_STATE_UNBLOCKED. |
| |
| RFKILL_STATE_HARD_BLOCKED is used by drivers to signal that the device is |
| locked in the BLOCKED state by a hardwire rfkill line (typically an input pin |
| that, when active, forces the transmitter to be disabled) which the driver |
| CANNOT override. |
| |
| Full rfkill functionality requires two different subsystems to cooperate: the |
| input layer and the rfkill class. The input layer issues *commands* to the |
| entire system requesting that devices registered to the rfkill class change |
| state. The way this interaction happens is not complex, but it is not obvious |
| either: |
| |
| Kernel Input layer: |
| |
| * Generates KEY_WWAN, KEY_WLAN, KEY_BLUETOOTH, SW_RFKILL_ALL, and |
| other such events when the user presses certain keys, buttons, or |
| toggles certain physical switches. |
| |
| THE INPUT LAYER IS NEVER USED TO PROPAGATE STATUS, NOTIFICATIONS OR THE |
| KIND OF STUFF AN ON-SCREEN-DISPLAY APPLICATION WOULD REPORT. It is |
| used to issue *commands* for the system to change behaviour, and these |
| commands may or may not be carried out by some kernel driver or |
| userspace application. It follows that doing user feedback based only |
| on input events is broken, as there is no guarantee that an input event |
| will be acted upon. |
| |
| Most wireless communication device drivers implementing rfkill |
| functionality MUST NOT generate these events, and have no reason to |
| register themselves with the input layer. Doing otherwise is a common |
| misconception. There is an API to propagate rfkill status change |
| information, and it is NOT the input layer. |
| |
| rfkill class: |
| |
| * Calls a hook in a driver to effectively change the wireless |
| transmitter state; |
| * Keeps track of the wireless transmitter state (with help from |
| the driver); |
| * Generates userspace notifications (uevents) and a call to a |
| notification chain (kernel) when there is a wireless transmitter |
| state change; |
| * Connects a wireless communications driver with the common rfkill |
| control system, which, for example, allows actions such as |
| "switch all bluetooth devices offline" to be carried out by |
| userspace or by rfkill-input. |
| |
| THE RFKILL CLASS NEVER ISSUES INPUT EVENTS. THE RFKILL CLASS DOES |
| NOT LISTEN TO INPUT EVENTS. NO DRIVER USING THE RFKILL CLASS SHALL |
| EVER LISTEN TO, OR ACT ON RFKILL INPUT EVENTS. Doing otherwise is |
| a layering violation. |
| |
| Most wireless data communication drivers in the kernel have just to |
| implement the rfkill class API to work properly. Interfacing to the |
| input layer is not often required (and is very often a *bug*) on |
| wireless drivers. |
| |
| Platform drivers often have to attach to the input layer to *issue* |
| (but never to listen to) rfkill events for rfkill switches, and also to |
| the rfkill class to export a control interface for the platform rfkill |
| controllers to the rfkill subsystem. This does NOT mean the rfkill |
| switch is attached to a rfkill class (doing so is almost always wrong). |
| It just means the same kernel module is the driver for different |
| devices (rfkill switches and rfkill controllers). |
| |
| |
| Userspace input handlers (uevents) or kernel input handlers (rfkill-input): |
| |
| * Implements the policy of what should happen when one of the input |
| layer events related to rfkill operation is received. |
| * Uses the sysfs interface (userspace) or private rfkill API calls |
| to tell the devices registered with the rfkill class to change |
| their state (i.e. translates the input layer event into real |
| action). |
| |
| * rfkill-input implements EPO by handling EV_SW SW_RFKILL_ALL 0 |
| (power off all transmitters) in a special way: it ignores any |
| overrides and local state cache and forces all transmitters to the |
| RFKILL_STATE_SOFT_BLOCKED state (including those which are already |
| supposed to be BLOCKED). |
| * rfkill EPO will remain active until rfkill-input receives an |
| EV_SW SW_RFKILL_ALL 1 event. While the EPO is active, transmitters |
| are locked in the blocked state (rfkill will refuse to unblock them). |
| * rfkill-input implements different policies that the user can |
| select for handling EV_SW SW_RFKILL_ALL 1. It will unlock rfkill, |
| and either do nothing (leave transmitters blocked, but now unlocked), |
| restore the transmitters to their state before the EPO, or unblock |
| them all. |
| |
| Userspace uevent handler or kernel platform-specific drivers hooked to the |
| rfkill notifier chain: |
| |
| * Taps into the rfkill notifier chain or to KOBJ_CHANGE uevents, |
| in order to know when a device that is registered with the rfkill |
| class changes state; |
| * Issues feedback notifications to the user; |
| * In the rare platforms where this is required, synthesizes an input |
| event to command all *OTHER* rfkill devices to also change their |
| statues when a specific rfkill device changes state. |
| |
| |
| =============================================================================== |
| 3: Kernel driver guidelines |
| |
| Remember: point-of-view is everything for a driver that connects to the rfkill |
| subsystem. All the details below must be measured/perceived from the point of |
| view of the specific driver being modified. |
| |
| The first thing one needs to know is whether his driver should be talking to |
| the rfkill class or to the input layer. In rare cases (platform drivers), it |
| could happen that you need to do both, as platform drivers often handle a |
| variety of devices in the same driver. |
| |
| Do not mistake input devices for rfkill controllers. The only type of "rfkill |
| switch" device that is to be registered with the rfkill class are those |
| directly controlling the circuits that cause a wireless transmitter to stop |
| working (or the software equivalent of them), i.e. what we call a rfkill |
| controller. Every other kind of "rfkill switch" is just an input device and |
| MUST NOT be registered with the rfkill class. |
| |
| A driver should register a device with the rfkill class when ALL of the |
| following conditions are met (they define a rfkill controller): |
| |
| 1. The device is/controls a data communications wireless transmitter; |
| |
| 2. The kernel can interact with the hardware/firmware to CHANGE the wireless |
| transmitter state (block/unblock TX operation); |
| |
| 3. The transmitter can be made to not emit any energy when "blocked": |
| rfkill is not about blocking data transmissions, it is about blocking |
| energy emission; |
| |
| A driver should register a device with the input subsystem to issue |
| rfkill-related events (KEY_WLAN, KEY_BLUETOOTH, KEY_WWAN, KEY_WIMAX, |
| SW_RFKILL_ALL, etc) when ALL of the folowing conditions are met: |
| |
| 1. It is directly related to some physical device the user interacts with, to |
| command the O.S./firmware/hardware to enable/disable a data communications |
| wireless transmitter. |
| |
| Examples of the physical device are: buttons, keys and switches the user |
| will press/touch/slide/switch to enable or disable the wireless |
| communication device. |
| |
| 2. It is NOT slaved to another device, i.e. there is no other device that |
| issues rfkill-related input events in preference to this one. |
| |
| Please refer to the corner cases and examples section for more details. |
| |
| When in doubt, do not issue input events. For drivers that should generate |
| input events in some platforms, but not in others (e.g. b43), the best solution |
| is to NEVER generate input events in the first place. That work should be |
| deferred to a platform-specific kernel module (which will know when to generate |
| events through the rfkill notifier chain) or to userspace. This avoids the |
| usual maintenance problems with DMI whitelisting. |
| |
| |
| Corner cases and examples: |
| ==================================== |
| |
| 1. If the device is an input device that, because of hardware or firmware, |
| causes wireless transmitters to be blocked regardless of the kernel's will, it |
| is still just an input device, and NOT to be registered with the rfkill class. |
| |
| 2. If the wireless transmitter switch control is read-only, it is an input |
| device and not to be registered with the rfkill class (and maybe not to be made |
| an input layer event source either, see below). |
| |
| 3. If there is some other device driver *closer* to the actual hardware the |
| user interacted with (the button/switch/key) to issue an input event, THAT is |
| the device driver that should be issuing input events. |
| |
| E.g: |
| [RFKILL slider switch] -- [GPIO hardware] -- [WLAN card rf-kill input] |
| (platform driver) (wireless card driver) |
| |
| The user is closer to the RFKILL slide switch plaform driver, so the driver |
| which must issue input events is the platform driver looking at the GPIO |
| hardware, and NEVER the wireless card driver (which is just a slave). It is |
| very likely that there are other leaves than just the WLAN card rf-kill input |
| (e.g. a bluetooth card, etc)... |
| |
| On the other hand, some embedded devices do this: |
| |
| [RFKILL slider switch] -- [WLAN card rf-kill input] |
| (wireless card driver) |
| |
| In this situation, the wireless card driver *could* register itself as an input |
| device and issue rf-kill related input events... but in order to AVOID the need |
| for DMI whitelisting, the wireless card driver does NOT do it. Userspace (HAL) |
| or a platform driver (that exists only on these embedded devices) will do the |
| dirty job of issuing the input events. |
| |
| |
| COMMON MISTAKES in kernel drivers, related to rfkill: |
| ==================================== |
| |
| 1. NEVER confuse input device keys and buttons with input device switches. |
| |
| 1a. Switches are always set or reset. They report the current state |
| (on position or off position). |
| |
| 1b. Keys and buttons are either in the pressed or not-pressed state, and |
| that's it. A "button" that latches down when you press it, and |
| unlatches when you press it again is in fact a switch as far as input |
| devices go. |
| |
| Add the SW_* events you need for switches, do NOT try to emulate a button using |
| KEY_* events just because there is no such SW_* event yet. Do NOT try to use, |
| for example, KEY_BLUETOOTH when you should be using SW_BLUETOOTH instead. |
| |
| 2. Input device switches (sources of EV_SW events) DO store their current state |
| (so you *must* initialize it by issuing a gratuitous input layer event on |
| driver start-up and also when resuming from sleep), and that state CAN be |
| queried from userspace through IOCTLs. There is no sysfs interface for this, |
| but that doesn't mean you should break things trying to hook it to the rfkill |
| class to get a sysfs interface :-) |
| |
| 3. Do not issue *_RFKILL_ALL events by default, unless you are sure it is the |
| correct event for your switch/button. These events are emergency power-off |
| events when they are trying to turn the transmitters off. An example of an |
| input device which SHOULD generate *_RFKILL_ALL events is the wireless-kill |
| switch in a laptop which is NOT a hotkey, but a real sliding/rocker switch. |
| An example of an input device which SHOULD NOT generate *_RFKILL_ALL events by |
| default, is any sort of hot key that is type-specific (e.g. the one for WLAN). |
| |
| |
| 3.1 Guidelines for wireless device drivers |
| ------------------------------------------ |
| |
| (in this text, rfkill->foo means the foo field of struct rfkill). |
| |
| 1. Each independent transmitter in a wireless device (usually there is only one |
| transmitter per device) should have a SINGLE rfkill class attached to it. |
| |
| 2. If the device does not have any sort of hardware assistance to allow the |
| driver to rfkill the device, the driver should emulate it by taking all actions |
| required to silence the transmitter. |
| |
| 3. If it is impossible to silence the transmitter (i.e. it still emits energy, |
| even if it is just in brief pulses, when there is no data to transmit and there |
| is no hardware support to turn it off) do NOT lie to the users. Do not attach |
| it to a rfkill class. The rfkill subsystem does not deal with data |
| transmission, it deals with energy emission. If the transmitter is emitting |
| energy, it is not blocked in rfkill terms. |
| |
| 4. It doesn't matter if the device has multiple rfkill input lines affecting |
| the same transmitter, their combined state is to be exported as a single state |
| per transmitter (see rule 1). |
| |
| This rule exists because users of the rfkill subsystem expect to get (and set, |
| when possible) the overall transmitter rfkill state, not of a particular rfkill |
| line. |
| |
| 5. The wireless device driver MUST NOT leave the transmitter enabled during |
| suspend and hibernation unless: |
| |
| 5.1. The transmitter has to be enabled for some sort of functionality |
| like wake-on-wireless-packet or autonomous packed forwarding in a mesh |
| network, and that functionality is enabled for this suspend/hibernation |
| cycle. |
| |
| AND |
| |
| 5.2. The device was not on a user-requested BLOCKED state before |
| the suspend (i.e. the driver must NOT unblock a device, not even |
| to support wake-on-wireless-packet or remain in the mesh). |
| |
| In other words, there is absolutely no allowed scenario where a driver can |
| automatically take action to unblock a rfkill controller (obviously, this deals |
| with scenarios where soft-blocking or both soft and hard blocking is happening. |
| Scenarios where hardware rfkill lines are the only ones blocking the |
| transmitter are outside of this rule, since the wireless device driver does not |
| control its input hardware rfkill lines in the first place). |
| |
| 6. During resume, rfkill will try to restore its previous state. |
| |
| 7. After a rfkill class is suspended, it will *not* call rfkill->toggle_radio |
| until it is resumed. |
| |
| |
| Example of a WLAN wireless driver connected to the rfkill subsystem: |
| -------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| A certain WLAN card has one input pin that causes it to block the transmitter |
| and makes the status of that input pin available (only for reading!) to the |
| kernel driver. This is a hard rfkill input line (it cannot be overridden by |
| the kernel driver). |
| |
| The card also has one PCI register that, if manipulated by the driver, causes |
| it to block the transmitter. This is a soft rfkill input line. |
| |
| It has also a thermal protection circuitry that shuts down its transmitter if |
| the card overheats, and makes the status of that protection available (only for |
| reading!) to the kernel driver. This is also a hard rfkill input line. |
| |
| If either one of these rfkill lines are active, the transmitter is blocked by |
| the hardware and forced offline. |
| |
| The driver should allocate and attach to its struct device *ONE* instance of |
| the rfkill class (there is only one transmitter). |
| |
| It can implement the get_state() hook, and return RFKILL_STATE_HARD_BLOCKED if |
| either one of its two hard rfkill input lines are active. If the two hard |
| rfkill lines are inactive, it must return RFKILL_STATE_SOFT_BLOCKED if its soft |
| rfkill input line is active. Only if none of the rfkill input lines are |
| active, will it return RFKILL_STATE_UNBLOCKED. |
| |
| Since the device has a hardware rfkill line, it IS subject to state changes |
| external to rfkill. Therefore, the driver must make sure that it calls |
| rfkill_force_state() to keep the status always up-to-date, and it must do a |
| rfkill_force_state() on resume from sleep. |
| |
| Every time the driver gets a notification from the card that one of its rfkill |
| lines changed state (polling might be needed on badly designed cards that don't |
| generate interrupts for such events), it recomputes the rfkill state as per |
| above, and calls rfkill_force_state() to update it. |
| |
| The driver should implement the toggle_radio() hook, that: |
| |
| 1. Returns an error if one of the hardware rfkill lines are active, and the |
| caller asked for RFKILL_STATE_UNBLOCKED. |
| |
| 2. Activates the soft rfkill line if the caller asked for state |
| RFKILL_STATE_SOFT_BLOCKED. It should do this even if one of the hard rfkill |
| lines are active, effectively double-blocking the transmitter. |
| |
| 3. Deactivates the soft rfkill line if none of the hardware rfkill lines are |
| active and the caller asked for RFKILL_STATE_UNBLOCKED. |
| |
| =============================================================================== |
| 4: Kernel API |
| |
| To build a driver with rfkill subsystem support, the driver should depend on |
| (or select) the Kconfig symbol RFKILL; it should _not_ depend on RKFILL_INPUT. |
| |
| The hardware the driver talks to may be write-only (where the current state |
| of the hardware is unknown), or read-write (where the hardware can be queried |
| about its current state). |
| |
| The rfkill class will call the get_state hook of a device every time it needs |
| to know the *real* current state of the hardware. This can happen often, but |
| it does not do any polling, so it is not enough on hardware that is subject |
| to state changes outside of the rfkill subsystem. |
| |
| Therefore, calling rfkill_force_state() when a state change happens is |
| mandatory when the device has a hardware rfkill line, or when something else |
| like the firmware could cause its state to be changed without going through the |
| rfkill class. |
| |
| Some hardware provides events when its status changes. In these cases, it is |
| best for the driver to not provide a get_state hook, and instead register the |
| rfkill class *already* with the correct status, and keep it updated using |
| rfkill_force_state() when it gets an event from the hardware. |
| |
| rfkill_force_state() must be used on the device resume handlers to update the |
| rfkill status, should there be any chance of the device status changing during |
| the sleep. |
| |
| There is no provision for a statically-allocated rfkill struct. You must |
| use rfkill_allocate() to allocate one. |
| |
| You should: |
| - rfkill_allocate() |
| - modify rfkill fields (flags, name) |
| - modify state to the current hardware state (THIS IS THE ONLY TIME |
| YOU CAN ACCESS state DIRECTLY) |
| - rfkill_register() |
| |
| The only way to set a device to the RFKILL_STATE_HARD_BLOCKED state is through |
| a suitable return of get_state() or through rfkill_force_state(). |
| |
| When a device is in the RFKILL_STATE_HARD_BLOCKED state, the only way to switch |
| it to a different state is through a suitable return of get_state() or through |
| rfkill_force_state(). |
| |
| If toggle_radio() is called to set a device to state RFKILL_STATE_SOFT_BLOCKED |
| when that device is already at the RFKILL_STATE_HARD_BLOCKED state, it should |
| not return an error. Instead, it should try to double-block the transmitter, |
| so that its state will change from RFKILL_STATE_HARD_BLOCKED to |
| RFKILL_STATE_SOFT_BLOCKED should the hardware blocking cease. |
| |
| Please refer to the source for more documentation. |
| |
| =============================================================================== |
| 5: Userspace support |
| |
| rfkill devices issue uevents (with an action of "change"), with the following |
| environment variables set: |
| |
| RFKILL_NAME |
| RFKILL_STATE |
| RFKILL_TYPE |
| |
| The ABI for these variables is defined by the sysfs attributes. It is best |
| to take a quick look at the source to make sure of the possible values. |
| |
| It is expected that HAL will trap those, and bridge them to DBUS, etc. These |
| events CAN and SHOULD be used to give feedback to the user about the rfkill |
| status of the system. |
| |
| Input devices may issue events that are related to rfkill. These are the |
| various KEY_* events and SW_* events supported by rfkill-input.c. |
| |
| ******IMPORTANT****** |
| When rfkill-input is ACTIVE, userspace is NOT TO CHANGE THE STATE OF AN RFKILL |
| SWITCH IN RESPONSE TO AN INPUT EVENT also handled by rfkill-input, unless it |
| has set to true the user_claim attribute for that particular switch. This rule |
| is *absolute*; do NOT violate it. |
| ******IMPORTANT****** |
| |
| Userspace must not assume it is the only source of control for rfkill switches. |
| Their state CAN and WILL change due to firmware actions, direct user actions, |
| and the rfkill-input EPO override for *_RFKILL_ALL. |
| |
| When rfkill-input is not active, userspace must initiate a rfkill status |
| change by writing to the "state" attribute in order for anything to happen. |
| |
| Take particular care to implement EV_SW SW_RFKILL_ALL properly. When that |
| switch is set to OFF, *every* rfkill device *MUST* be immediately put into the |
| RFKILL_STATE_SOFT_BLOCKED state, no questions asked. |
| |
| The following sysfs entries will be created: |
| |
| name: Name assigned by driver to this key (interface or driver name). |
| type: Name of the key type ("wlan", "bluetooth", etc). |
| state: Current state of the transmitter |
| 0: RFKILL_STATE_SOFT_BLOCKED |
| transmitter is forced off, but one can override it |
| by a write to the state attribute; |
| 1: RFKILL_STATE_UNBLOCKED |
| transmiter is NOT forced off, and may operate if |
| all other conditions for such operation are met |
| (such as interface is up and configured, etc); |
| 2: RFKILL_STATE_HARD_BLOCKED |
| transmitter is forced off by something outside of |
| the driver's control. One cannot set a device to |
| this state through writes to the state attribute; |
| claim: 1: Userspace handles events, 0: Kernel handles events |
| |
| Both the "state" and "claim" entries are also writable. For the "state" entry |
| this means that when 1 or 0 is written, the device rfkill state (if not yet in |
| the requested state), will be will be toggled accordingly. |
| |
| For the "claim" entry writing 1 to it means that the kernel no longer handles |
| key events even though RFKILL_INPUT input was enabled. When "claim" has been |
| set to 0, userspace should make sure that it listens for the input events or |
| check the sysfs "state" entry regularly to correctly perform the required tasks |
| when the rkfill key is pressed. |
| |
| A note about input devices and EV_SW events: |
| |
| In order to know the current state of an input device switch (like |
| SW_RFKILL_ALL), you will need to use an IOCTL. That information is not |
| available through sysfs in a generic way at this time, and it is not available |
| through the rfkill class AT ALL. |