/* * ChromeOS EC keyboard driver * * Copyright (C) 2012 Google, Inc * * This software is licensed under the terms of the GNU General Public * License version 2, as published by the Free Software Foundation, and * may be copied, distributed, and modified under those terms. * * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the * GNU General Public License for more details. * * This driver uses the Chrome OS EC byte-level message-based protocol for * communicating the keyboard state (which keys are pressed) from a keyboard EC * to the AP over some bus (such as i2c, lpc, spi). The EC does debouncing, * but everything else (including deghosting) is done here. The main * motivation for this is to keep the EC firmware as simple as possible, since * it cannot be easily upgraded and EC flash/IRAM space is relatively * expensive. */ #include <linux/module.h> #include <linux/i2c.h> #include <linux/input.h> #include <linux/kernel.h> #include <linux/notifier.h> #include <linux/platform_device.h> #include <linux/slab.h> #include <linux/input/matrix_keypad.h> #include <linux/mfd/cros_ec.h> #include <linux/mfd/cros_ec_commands.h> /* * @rows: Number of rows in the keypad * @cols: Number of columns in the keypad * @row_shift: log2 or number of rows, rounded up * @keymap_data: Matrix keymap data used to convert to keyscan values * @ghost_filter: true to enable the matrix key-ghosting filter * @old_kb_state: bitmap of keys pressed last scan * @dev: Device pointer * @idev: Input device * @ec: Top level ChromeOS device to use to talk to EC * @event_notifier: interrupt event notifier for transport devices */ struct cros_ec_keyb { unsigned int rows; unsigned int cols; int row_shift; const struct matrix_keymap_data *keymap_data; bool ghost_filter; uint8_t *old_kb_state; struct device *dev; struct input_dev *idev; struct cros_ec_device *ec; struct notifier_block notifier; }; static bool cros_ec_keyb_row_has_ghosting(struct cros_ec_keyb *ckdev, uint8_t *buf, int row) { int pressed_in_row = 0; int row_has_teeth = 0; int col, mask; mask = 1 << row; for (col = 0; col < ckdev->cols; col++) { if (buf[col] & mask) { pressed_in_row++; row_has_teeth |= buf[col] & ~mask; if (pressed_in_row > 1 && row_has_teeth) { /* ghosting */ dev_dbg(ckdev->dev, "ghost found at: r%d c%d, pressed %d, teeth 0x%x\n", row, col, pressed_in_row, row_has_teeth); return true; } } } return false; } /* * Returns true when there is at least one combination of pressed keys that * results in ghosting. */ static bool cros_ec_keyb_has_ghosting(struct cros_ec_keyb *ckdev, uint8_t *buf) { int row; /* * Ghosting happens if for any pressed key X there are other keys * pressed both in the same row and column of X as, for instance, * in the following diagram: * * . . Y . g . * . . . . . . * . . . . . . * . . X . Z . * * In this case only X, Y, and Z are pressed, but g appears to be * pressed too (see Wikipedia). * * We can detect ghosting in a single pass (*) over the keyboard state * by maintaining two arrays. pressed_in_row counts how many pressed * keys we have found in a row. row_has_teeth is true if any of the * pressed keys for this row has other pressed keys in its column. If * at any point of the scan we find that a row has multiple pressed * keys, and at least one of them is at the intersection with a column * with multiple pressed keys, we're sure there is ghosting. * Conversely, if there is ghosting, we will detect such situation for * at least one key during the pass. * * (*) This looks linear in the number of keys, but it's not. We can * cheat because the number of rows is small. */ for (row = 0; row < ckdev->rows; row++) if (cros_ec_keyb_row_has_ghosting(ckdev, buf, row)) return true; return false; } /* * Compares the new keyboard state to the old one and produces key * press/release events accordingly. The keyboard state is 13 bytes (one byte * per column) */ static void cros_ec_keyb_process(struct cros_ec_keyb *ckdev, uint8_t *kb_state, int len) { struct input_dev *idev = ckdev->idev; int col, row; int new_state; int old_state; int num_cols; num_cols = len; if (ckdev->ghost_filter && cros_ec_keyb_has_ghosting(ckdev, kb_state)) { /* * Simple-minded solution: ignore this state. The obvious * improvement is to only ignore changes to keys involved in * the ghosting, but process the other changes. */ dev_dbg(ckdev->dev, "ghosting found\n"); return; } for (col = 0; col < ckdev->cols; col++) { for (row = 0; row < ckdev->rows; row++) { int pos = MATRIX_SCAN_CODE(row, col, ckdev->row_shift); const unsigned short *keycodes = idev->keycode; new_state = kb_state[col] & (1 << row); old_state = ckdev->old_kb_state[col] & (1 << row); if (new_state != old_state) { dev_dbg(ckdev->dev, "changed: [r%d c%d]: byte %02x\n", row, col, new_state); input_report_key(idev, keycodes[pos], new_state); } } ckdev->old_kb_state[col] = kb_state[col]; } input_sync(ckdev->idev); } static int cros_ec_keyb_open(struct input_dev *dev) { struct cros_ec_keyb *ckdev = input_get_drvdata(dev); return blocking_notifier_chain_register(&ckdev->ec->event_notifier, &ckdev->notifier); } static void cros_ec_keyb_close(struct input_dev *dev) { struct cros_ec_keyb *ckdev = input_get_drvdata(dev); blocking_notifier_chain_unregister(&ckdev->ec->event_notifier, &ckdev->notifier); } static int cros_ec_keyb_get_state(struct cros_ec_keyb *ckdev, uint8_t *kb_state) { return ckdev->ec->command_recv(ckdev->ec, EC_CMD_MKBP_STATE, kb_state, ckdev->cols); } static int cros_ec_keyb_work(struct notifier_block *nb, unsigned long state, void *_notify) { int ret; struct cros_ec_keyb *ckdev = container_of(nb, struct cros_ec_keyb, notifier); uint8_t kb_state[ckdev->cols]; ret = cros_ec_keyb_get_state(ckdev, kb_state); if (ret >= 0) cros_ec_keyb_process(ckdev, kb_state, ret); return NOTIFY_DONE; } static int cros_ec_keyb_probe(struct platform_device *pdev) { struct cros_ec_device *ec = dev_get_drvdata(pdev->dev.parent); struct device *dev = ec->dev; struct cros_ec_keyb *ckdev; struct input_dev *idev; struct device_node *np; int err; np = pdev->dev.of_node; if (!np) return -ENODEV; ckdev = devm_kzalloc(&pdev->dev, sizeof(*ckdev), GFP_KERNEL); if (!ckdev) return -ENOMEM; err = matrix_keypad_parse_of_params(&pdev->dev, &ckdev->rows, &ckdev->cols); if (err) return err; ckdev->old_kb_state = devm_kzalloc(&pdev->dev, ckdev->cols, GFP_KERNEL); if (!ckdev->old_kb_state) return -ENOMEM; idev = devm_input_allocate_device(&pdev->dev); if (!idev) return -ENOMEM; ckdev->ec = ec; ckdev->notifier.notifier_call = cros_ec_keyb_work; ckdev->dev = dev; dev_set_drvdata(&pdev->dev, ckdev); idev->name = ec->ec_name; idev->phys = ec->phys_name; __set_bit(EV_REP, idev->evbit); idev->id.bustype = BUS_VIRTUAL; idev->id.version = 1; idev->id.product = 0; idev->dev.parent = &pdev->dev; idev->open = cros_ec_keyb_open; idev->close = cros_ec_keyb_close; ckdev->ghost_filter = of_property_read_bool(np, "google,needs-ghost-filter"); err = matrix_keypad_build_keymap(NULL, NULL, ckdev->rows, ckdev->cols, NULL, idev); if (err) { dev_err(dev, "cannot build key matrix\n"); return err; } ckdev->row_shift = get_count_order(ckdev->cols); input_set_capability(idev, EV_MSC, MSC_SCAN); input_set_drvdata(idev, ckdev); ckdev->idev = idev; err = input_register_device(ckdev->idev); if (err) { dev_err(dev, "cannot register input device\n"); return err; } return 0; } #ifdef CONFIG_PM_SLEEP /* Clear any keys in the buffer */ static void cros_ec_keyb_clear_keyboard(struct cros_ec_keyb *ckdev) { uint8_t old_state[ckdev->cols]; uint8_t new_state[ckdev->cols]; unsigned long duration; int i, ret; /* * Keep reading until we see that the scan state does not change. * That indicates that we are done. * * Assume that the EC keyscan buffer is at most 32 deep. */ duration = jiffies; ret = cros_ec_keyb_get_state(ckdev, new_state); for (i = 1; !ret && i < 32; i++) { memcpy(old_state, new_state, sizeof(old_state)); ret = cros_ec_keyb_get_state(ckdev, new_state); if (0 == memcmp(old_state, new_state, sizeof(old_state))) break; } duration = jiffies - duration; dev_info(ckdev->dev, "Discarded %d keyscan(s) in %dus\n", i, jiffies_to_usecs(duration)); } static int cros_ec_keyb_resume(struct device *dev) { struct cros_ec_keyb *ckdev = dev_get_drvdata(dev); /* * When the EC is not a wake source, then it could not have caused the * resume, so we clear the EC's key scan buffer. If the EC was a * wake source (e.g. the lid is open and the user might press a key to * wake) then the key scan buffer should be preserved. */ if (ckdev->ec->was_wake_device) cros_ec_keyb_clear_keyboard(ckdev); return 0; } #endif static SIMPLE_DEV_PM_OPS(cros_ec_keyb_pm_ops, NULL, cros_ec_keyb_resume); static struct platform_driver cros_ec_keyb_driver = { .probe = cros_ec_keyb_probe, .driver = { .name = "cros-ec-keyb", .pm = &cros_ec_keyb_pm_ops, }, }; module_platform_driver(cros_ec_keyb_driver); MODULE_LICENSE("GPL"); MODULE_DESCRIPTION("ChromeOS EC keyboard driver"); MODULE_ALIAS("platform:cros-ec-keyb");