ACPI / video: Do not register backlight if win8 and native interface exists

According to Matthew Garrett, "Windows 8 leaves backlight control up
to individual graphics drivers rather than making ACPI calls itself.
There's plenty of evidence to suggest that the Intel driver for
Windows [8] doesn't use the ACPI interface, including the fact that
it's broken on a bunch of machines when the OS claims to support
Windows 8.  The simplest thing to do appears to be to disable the
ACPI backlight interface on these systems".

So for Win8 systems, if there is native backlight control interface
registered by GPU driver, ACPI video does not need to register its own.
Since there are systems that don't work well with this approach, a
parameter for video module named use_native_backlight is introduced and
has the value of false by default. For users who have a broken ACPI
video backlight interface, video.use_native_backlight=1 is needed in
kernel cmdline.

Signed-off-by: Aaron Lu <aaron.lu@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Rafael J. Wysocki <rafael.j.wysocki@intel.com>
diff --git a/drivers/acpi/video_detect.c b/drivers/acpi/video_detect.c
index 940edbf..b639934 100644
--- a/drivers/acpi/video_detect.c
+++ b/drivers/acpi/video_detect.c
@@ -233,11 +233,11 @@
 		acpi_video_get_capabilities(NULL);
 }
 
-bool acpi_video_backlight_quirks(void)
+bool acpi_osi_is_win8(void)
 {
 	return acpi_gbl_osi_data >= ACPI_OSI_WIN_8;
 }
-EXPORT_SYMBOL(acpi_video_backlight_quirks);
+EXPORT_SYMBOL(acpi_osi_is_win8);
 
 /* Promote the vendor interface instead of the generic video module.
  * This function allow DMI blacklists to be implemented by externals