| Acer Laptop WMI Extras Driver |
| http://code.google.com/p/aceracpi |
| Version 0.1 |
| 9th February 2008 |
| |
| Copyright 2007-2008 Carlos Corbacho <carlos@strangeworlds.co.uk> |
| |
| acer-wmi is a driver to allow you to control various parts of your Acer laptop |
| hardware under Linux which are exposed via ACPI-WMI. |
| |
| This driver completely replaces the old out-of-tree acer_acpi, which I am |
| currently maintaining for bug fixes only on pre-2.6.25 kernels. All development |
| work is now focused solely on acer-wmi. |
| |
| Disclaimer |
| ********** |
| |
| Acer and Wistron have provided nothing towards the development acer_acpi or |
| acer-wmi. All information we have has been through the efforts of the developers |
| and the users to discover as much as possible about the hardware. |
| |
| As such, I do warn that this could break your hardware - this is extremely |
| unlikely of course, but please bear this in mind. |
| |
| Background |
| ********** |
| |
| acer-wmi is derived from acer_acpi, originally developed by Mark |
| Smith in 2005, then taken over by Carlos Corbacho in 2007, in order to activate |
| the wireless LAN card under a 64-bit version of Linux, as acerhk[1] (the |
| previous solution to the problem) relied on making 32 bit BIOS calls which are |
| not possible in kernel space from a 64 bit OS. |
| |
| [1] acerhk: http://www.cakey.de/acerhk/ |
| |
| Supported Hardware |
| ****************** |
| |
| Please see the website for the current list of known working hardare: |
| |
| http://code.google.com/p/aceracpi/wiki/SupportedHardware |
| |
| If your laptop is not listed, or listed as unknown, and works with acer-wmi, |
| please contact me with a copy of the DSDT. |
| |
| If your Acer laptop doesn't work with acer-wmi, I would also like to see the |
| DSDT. |
| |
| To send me the DSDT, as root/sudo: |
| |
| cat /sys/firmware/acpi/DSDT > dsdt |
| |
| And send me the resulting 'dsdt' file. |
| |
| Usage |
| ***** |
| |
| On Acer laptops, acer-wmi should already be autoloaded based on DMI matching. |
| For non-Acer laptops, until WMI based autoloading support is added, you will |
| need to manually load acer-wmi. |
| |
| acer-wmi creates /sys/devices/platform/acer-wmi, and fills it with various |
| files whose usage is detailed below, which enables you to control some of the |
| following (varies between models): |
| |
| * the wireless LAN card radio |
| * inbuilt Bluetooth adapter |
| * inbuilt 3G card |
| * mail LED of your laptop |
| * brightness of the LCD panel |
| |
| Wireless |
| ******** |
| |
| With regards to wireless, all acer-wmi does is enable the radio on the card. It |
| is not responsible for the wireless LED - once the radio is enabled, this is |
| down to the wireless driver for your card. So the behaviour of the wireless LED, |
| once you enable the radio, will depend on your hardware and driver combination. |
| |
| e.g. With the BCM4318 on the Acer Aspire 5020 series: |
| |
| ndiswrapper: Light blinks on when transmitting |
| bcm43xx/b43: Solid light, blinks off when transmitting |
| |
| Wireless radio control is unconditionally enabled - all Acer laptops that support |
| acer-wmi come with built-in wireless. However, should you feel so inclined to |
| ever wish to remove the card, or swap it out at some point, please get in touch |
| with me, as we may well be able to gain some data on wireless card detection. |
| |
| To read the status of the wireless radio (0=off, 1=on): |
| cat /sys/devices/platform/acer-wmi/wireless |
| |
| To enable the wireless radio: |
| echo 1 > /sys/devices/platform/acer-wmi/wireless |
| |
| To disable the wireless radio: |
| echo 0 > /sys/devices/platform/acer-wmi/wireless |
| |
| To set the state of the wireless radio when loading acer-wmi, pass: |
| wireless=X (where X is 0 or 1) |
| |
| Bluetooth |
| ********* |
| |
| For bluetooth, this is an internal USB dongle, so once enabled, you will get |
| a USB device connection event, and a new USB device appears. When you disable |
| bluetooth, you get the reverse - a USB device disconnect event, followed by the |
| device disappearing again. |
| |
| Bluetooth is autodetected by acer-wmi, so if you do not have a bluetooth module |
| installed in your laptop, this file won't exist (please be aware that it is |
| quite common for Acer not to fit bluetooth to their laptops - so just because |
| you have a bluetooth button on the laptop, doesn't mean that bluetooth is |
| installed). |
| |
| For the adventurously minded - if you want to buy an internal bluetooth |
| module off the internet that is compatible with your laptop and fit it, then |
| it will work just fine with acer-wmi. |
| |
| To read the status of the bluetooth module (0=off, 1=on): |
| cat /sys/devices/platform/acer-wmi/wireless |
| |
| To enable the bluetooth module: |
| echo 1 > /sys/devices/platform/acer-wmi/bluetooth |
| |
| To disable the bluetooth module: |
| echo 0 > /sys/devices/platform/acer-wmi/bluetooth |
| |
| To set the state of the bluetooth module when loading acer-wmi, pass: |
| bluetooth=X (where X is 0 or 1) |
| |
| 3G |
| ** |
| |
| 3G is currently not autodetected, so the 'threeg' file is always created under |
| sysfs. So far, no-one in possession of an Acer laptop with 3G built-in appears to |
| have tried Linux, or reported back, so we don't have any information on this. |
| |
| If you have an Acer laptop that does have a 3G card in, please contact me so we |
| can properly detect these, and find out a bit more about them. |
| |
| To read the status of the 3G card (0=off, 1=on): |
| cat /sys/devices/platform/acer-wmi/threeg |
| |
| To enable the 3G card: |
| echo 1 > /sys/devices/platform/acer-wmi/threeg |
| |
| To disable the 3G card: |
| echo 0 > /sys/devices/platform/acer-wmi/threeg |
| |
| To set the state of the 3G card when loading acer-wmi, pass: |
| threeg=X (where X is 0 or 1) |
| |
| Mail LED |
| ******** |
| |
| This can be found in most older Acer laptops supported by acer-wmi, and many |
| newer ones - it is built into the 'mail' button, and blinks when active. |
| |
| On newer (WMID) laptops though, we have no way of detecting the mail LED. If |
| your laptop identifies itself in dmesg as a WMID model, then please try loading |
| acer_acpi with: |
| |
| force_series=2490 |
| |
| This will use a known alternative method of reading/ writing the mail LED. If |
| it works, please report back to me with the DMI data from your laptop so this |
| can be added to acer-wmi. |
| |
| The LED is exposed through the LED subsystem, and can be found in: |
| |
| /sys/devices/platform/acer-wmi/leds/acer-wmi::mail/ |
| |
| The mail LED is autodetected, so if you don't have one, the LED device won't |
| be registered. |
| |
| If you have a mail LED that is not green, please report this to me. |
| |
| Backlight |
| ********* |
| |
| The backlight brightness control is available on all acer-wmi supported |
| hardware. The maximum brightness level is usually 15, but on some newer laptops |
| it's 10 (this is again autodetected). |
| |
| The backlight is exposed through the backlight subsystem, and can be found in: |
| |
| /sys/devices/platform/acer-wmi/backlight/acer-wmi/ |
| |
| Credits |
| ******* |
| |
| Olaf Tauber, who did the real hard work when he developed acerhk |
| http://www.informatik.hu-berlin.de/~tauber/acerhk |
| All the authors of laptop ACPI modules in the kernel, whose work |
| was an inspiration in the early days of acer_acpi |
| Mathieu Segaud, who solved the problem with having to modprobe the driver |
| twice in acer_acpi 0.2. |
| Jim Ramsay, who added support for the WMID interface |
| Mark Smith, who started the original acer_acpi |
| |
| And the many people who have used both acer_acpi and acer-wmi. |