perf record: Document --group option
[linux/fpc-iii.git] / Documentation / ABI / stable / sysfs-class-backlight
blob70302f370e7ec1c1d46e4d278f41319e1ce536c1
1 What:           /sys/class/backlight/<backlight>/bl_power
2 Date:           April 2005
3 KernelVersion:  2.6.12
4 Contact:        Richard Purdie <rpurdie@rpsys.net>
5 Description:
6                 Control BACKLIGHT power, values are FB_BLANK_* from fb.h
7                  - FB_BLANK_UNBLANK (0)   : power on.
8                  - FB_BLANK_POWERDOWN (4) : power off
9 Users:          HAL
11 What:           /sys/class/backlight/<backlight>/brightness
12 Date:           April 2005
13 KernelVersion:  2.6.12
14 Contact:        Richard Purdie <rpurdie@rpsys.net>
15 Description:
16                 Control the brightness for this <backlight>. Values
17                 are between 0 and max_brightness. This file will also
18                 show the brightness level stored in the driver, which
19                 may not be the actual brightness (see actual_brightness).
20 Users:          HAL
22 What:           /sys/class/backlight/<backlight>/actual_brightness
23 Date:           March 2006
24 KernelVersion:  2.6.17
25 Contact:        Richard Purdie <rpurdie@rpsys.net>
26 Description:
27                 Show the actual brightness by querying the hardware.
28 Users:          HAL
30 What:           /sys/class/backlight/<backlight>/max_brightness
31 Date:           April 2005
32 KernelVersion:  2.6.12
33 Contact:        Richard Purdie <rpurdie@rpsys.net>
34 Description:
35                 Maximum brightness for <backlight>.
36 Users:          HAL
38 What:           /sys/class/backlight/<backlight>/type
39 Date:           September 2010
40 KernelVersion:  2.6.37
41 Contact:        Matthew Garrett <mjg@redhat.com>
42 Description:
43                 The type of interface controlled by <backlight>.
44                 "firmware": The driver uses a standard firmware interface
45                 "platform": The driver uses a platform-specific interface
46                 "raw": The driver controls hardware registers directly
48                 In the general case, when multiple backlight
49                 interfaces are available for a single device, firmware
50                 control should be preferred to platform control should
51                 be preferred to raw control. Using a firmware
52                 interface reduces the probability of confusion with
53                 the hardware and the OS independently updating the
54                 backlight state. Platform interfaces are mostly a
55                 holdover from pre-standardisation of firmware
56                 interfaces.