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Henkb71e3182005-08-17 10:40:26 +02001Driver documentation for yealink usb-p1k phones
Henkaca951a2005-08-16 16:17:43 +02002
30. Status
4~~~~~~~~~
Henkaca951a2005-08-16 16:17:43 +02005The p1k is a relatively cheap usb 1.1 phone with:
Henkb71e3182005-08-17 10:40:26 +02006 - keyboard full support, yealink.ko / input event API
7 - LCD full support, yealink.ko / sysfs API
8 - LED full support, yealink.ko / sysfs API
9 - dialtone full support, yealink.ko / sysfs API
10 - ringtone full support, yealink.ko / sysfs API
11 - audio playback full support, snd_usb_audio.ko / alsa API
12 - audio record full support, snd_usb_audio.ko / alsa API
13
14For vendor documentation see http://www.yealink.com
Henkaca951a2005-08-16 16:17:43 +020015
16
171. Compilation (stand alone version)
18~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Henkaca951a2005-08-16 16:17:43 +020019Currently only kernel 2.6.x.y versions are supported.
Henkaf64a5e2005-10-12 15:02:56 +020020In order to build the yealink.ko module do
Henkaca951a2005-08-16 16:17:43 +020021
22 make
23
24If you encounter problems please check if in the MAKE_OPTS variable in
25the Makefile is pointing to the location where your kernel sources
26are located, default /usr/src/linux.
27
28
Henkaf64a5e2005-10-12 15:02:56 +0200291.1 Troubleshooting
30~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
31Q: Module yealink compiled and installed without any problem but phone
32 is not initialized and does not react to any actions.
33A: If you see something like:
34 hiddev0: USB HID v1.00 Device [Yealink Network Technology Ltd. VOIP USB Phone
35 in dmesg, it means that the hid driver has grabbed the device first. Try to
36 load module yealink before any other usb hid driver. Please see the
37 instructions provided by your distribution on module configuration.
38
39Q: Phone is working now (displays version and accepts keypad input) but I can't
40 find the sysfs files.
41A: The sysfs files are located on the particular usb endpoint. On most
42 distributions you can do: "find /sys/ -name get_icons" for a hint.
43
Henkaca951a2005-08-16 16:17:43 +020044
452. keyboard features
46~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
47The current mapping in the kernel is provided by the map_p1k_to_key
48function:
49
50 Physical USB-P1K button layout input events
51
52
53 up up
54 IN OUT left, right
55 down down
56
57 pickup C hangup enter, backspace, escape
58 1 2 3 1, 2, 3
59 4 5 6 4, 5, 6,
60 7 8 9 7, 8, 9,
61 * 0 # *, 0, #,
62
63 The "up" and "down" keys, are symbolised by arrows on the button.
64 The "pickup" and "hangup" keys are symbolised by a green and red phone
65 on the button.
66
67
683. LCD features
69~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
70The LCD is divided and organised as a 3 line display:
71
72 |[] [][] [][] [][] in |[][]
73 |[] M [][] D [][] : [][] out |[][]
74 store
75
76 NEW REP SU MO TU WE TH FR SA
77
78 [] [] [] [] [] [] [] [] [] [] [] []
79 [] [] [] [] [] [] [] [] [] [] [] []
80
81
82Line 1 Format (see below) : 18.e8.M8.88...188
83 Icon names : M D : IN OUT STORE
84Line 2 Format : .........
85 Icon name : NEW REP SU MO TU WE TH FR SA
86Line 3 Format : 888888888888
87
88
89Format description:
90 From a user space perspective the world is seperated in "digits" and "icons".
91 A digit can have a character set, an icon can only be ON or OFF.
92
93 Format specifier
94 '8' : Generic 7 segment digit with individual addressable segments
95
96 Reduced capabillity 7 segm digit, when segments are hard wired together.
97 '1' : 2 segments digit only able to produce a 1.
98 'e' : Most significant day of the month digit,
99 able to produce at least 1 2 3.
100 'M' : Most significant minute digit,
101 able to produce at least 0 1 2 3 4 5.
102
103 Icons or pictograms:
104 '.' : For example like AM, PM, SU, a 'dot' .. or other single segment
105 elements.
106
107
1084. Driver usage
109~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
110For userland the following interfaces are available using the sysfs interface:
111 /sys/.../
112 line1 Read/Write, lcd line1
113 line2 Read/Write, lcd line2
114 line3 Read/Write, lcd line3
115
116 get_icons Read, returns a set of available icons.
117 hide_icon Write, hide the element by writing the icon name.
118 show_icon Write, display the element by writing the icon name.
119
120 map_seg7 Read/Write, the 7 segments char set, common for all
121 yealink phones. (see map_to_7segment.h)
122
123 ringtone Write, upload binary representation of a ringtone,
124 see yealink.c. status EXPERIMENTAL due to potential
125 races between async. and sync usb calls.
126
127
1284.1 lineX
129~~~~~~~~~
130Reading /sys/../lineX will return the format string with its current value:
131
132 Example:
133 cat ./line3
134 888888888888
135 Linux Rocks!
136
137Writing to /sys/../lineX will set the coresponding LCD line.
138 - Excess characters are ignored.
139 - If less characters are written than allowed, the remaining digits are
140 unchanged.
141 - The tab '\t'and '\n' char does not overwrite the original content.
142 - Writing a space to an icon will always hide its content.
143
144 Example:
145 date +"%m.%e.%k:%M" | sed 's/^0/ /' > ./line1
146
147 Will update the LCD with the current date & time.
148
149
1504.2 get_icons
151~~~~~~~~~~~~~
152Reading will return all available icon names and its current settings:
153
154 cat ./get_icons
155 on M
156 on D
157 on :
158 IN
159 OUT
160 STORE
161 NEW
162 REP
163 SU
164 MO
165 TU
166 WE
167 TH
168 FR
169 SA
170 LED
171 DIALTONE
172 RINGTONE
173
174
1754.3 show/hide icons
176~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
177Writing to these files will update the state of the icon.
178Only one icon at a time can be updated.
179
180If an icon is also on a ./lineX the corresponding value is
181updated with the first letter of the icon.
182
183 Example - light up the store icon:
184 echo -n "STORE" > ./show_icon
185
186 cat ./line1
187 18.e8.M8.88...188
188 S
189
190 Example - sound the ringtone for 10 seconds:
191 echo -n RINGTONE > /sys/..../show_icon
192 sleep 10
193 echo -n RINGTONE > /sys/..../hide_icon
194
195
Henkb71e3182005-08-17 10:40:26 +02001965. Sound features
197~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
198Sound is supported by the ALSA driver: snd_usb_audio
199
200One 16-bit channel with sample and playback rates of 8000 Hz is the practical
201limit of the device.
202
203 Example - recording test:
204 arecord -v -d 10 -r 8000 -f S16_LE -t wav foobar.wav
205
206 Example - playback test:
207 aplay foobar.wav
208
209
2106. Credits & Acknowledgments
Henkaca951a2005-08-16 16:17:43 +0200211~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
212 - Olivier Vandorpe, for starting the usbb2k-api project doing much of
213 the reverse engineering.
214 - Martin Diehl, for pointing out how to handle USB memory allocation.
215 - Dmitry Torokhov, for the numerous code reviews and suggestions.
216