linux_old1/drivers/hid/hid-ntrig.c

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/*
* HID driver for N-Trig touchscreens
*
* Copyright (c) 2008-2010 Rafi Rubin
* Copyright (c) 2009-2010 Stephane Chatty
*
*/
/*
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
* under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free
* Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option)
* any later version.
*/
#include <linux/device.h>
#include <linux/hid.h>
#include <linux/usb.h>
#include "usbhid/usbhid.h"
#include <linux/module.h>
include cleanup: Update gfp.h and slab.h includes to prepare for breaking implicit slab.h inclusion from percpu.h percpu.h is included by sched.h and module.h and thus ends up being included when building most .c files. percpu.h includes slab.h which in turn includes gfp.h making everything defined by the two files universally available and complicating inclusion dependencies. percpu.h -> slab.h dependency is about to be removed. Prepare for this change by updating users of gfp and slab facilities include those headers directly instead of assuming availability. As this conversion needs to touch large number of source files, the following script is used as the basis of conversion. http://userweb.kernel.org/~tj/misc/slabh-sweep.py The script does the followings. * Scan files for gfp and slab usages and update includes such that only the necessary includes are there. ie. if only gfp is used, gfp.h, if slab is used, slab.h. * When the script inserts a new include, it looks at the include blocks and try to put the new include such that its order conforms to its surrounding. It's put in the include block which contains core kernel includes, in the same order that the rest are ordered - alphabetical, Christmas tree, rev-Xmas-tree or at the end if there doesn't seem to be any matching order. * If the script can't find a place to put a new include (mostly because the file doesn't have fitting include block), it prints out an error message indicating which .h file needs to be added to the file. The conversion was done in the following steps. 1. The initial automatic conversion of all .c files updated slightly over 4000 files, deleting around 700 includes and adding ~480 gfp.h and ~3000 slab.h inclusions. The script emitted errors for ~400 files. 2. Each error was manually checked. Some didn't need the inclusion, some needed manual addition while adding it to implementation .h or embedding .c file was more appropriate for others. This step added inclusions to around 150 files. 3. The script was run again and the output was compared to the edits from #2 to make sure no file was left behind. 4. Several build tests were done and a couple of problems were fixed. e.g. lib/decompress_*.c used malloc/free() wrappers around slab APIs requiring slab.h to be added manually. 5. The script was run on all .h files but without automatically editing them as sprinkling gfp.h and slab.h inclusions around .h files could easily lead to inclusion dependency hell. Most gfp.h inclusion directives were ignored as stuff from gfp.h was usually wildly available and often used in preprocessor macros. Each slab.h inclusion directive was examined and added manually as necessary. 6. percpu.h was updated not to include slab.h. 7. Build test were done on the following configurations and failures were fixed. CONFIG_GCOV_KERNEL was turned off for all tests (as my distributed build env didn't work with gcov compiles) and a few more options had to be turned off depending on archs to make things build (like ipr on powerpc/64 which failed due to missing writeq). * x86 and x86_64 UP and SMP allmodconfig and a custom test config. * powerpc and powerpc64 SMP allmodconfig * sparc and sparc64 SMP allmodconfig * ia64 SMP allmodconfig * s390 SMP allmodconfig * alpha SMP allmodconfig * um on x86_64 SMP allmodconfig 8. percpu.h modifications were reverted so that it could be applied as a separate patch and serve as bisection point. Given the fact that I had only a couple of failures from tests on step 6, I'm fairly confident about the coverage of this conversion patch. If there is a breakage, it's likely to be something in one of the arch headers which should be easily discoverable easily on most builds of the specific arch. Signed-off-by: Tejun Heo <tj@kernel.org> Guess-its-ok-by: Christoph Lameter <cl@linux-foundation.org> Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com> Cc: Lee Schermerhorn <Lee.Schermerhorn@hp.com>
2010-03-24 16:04:11 +08:00
#include <linux/slab.h>
#include "hid-ids.h"
#define NTRIG_DUPLICATE_USAGES 0x001
HID: ntrig: add sensitivity and responsiveness support The old rejection size thresholds were too high for the 12" devices. Larger surfaces like the Dell Studio17 exacerbated the problem since contact size is reported on the same logical scale, making a contact look smaller to the larger screen. Since we have observed erroneous ghost events from these devices we still need to filter the incoming stream. The prior size threshold filter is still in place, though with defaults set to leave it off. This patch adds the two new classes of filters, those that reject live frames before activation, and those that reject empty frames until deactivation. These filters are expressed in terms of a simple state machine for clarity (I hope). The activation filter has two components, slack and size, events are discarded until either is satisfied. Slack is defined as the number of seemingly good contacts to read before accepting the stream as valid (if the threshold is reached in the middle of a frame the remainder of that frame is still discarded). The deactivation filter discards empty frames until hitting a deactivate slack. This time measured in frames. N-Trig devices emit 5-8 (observed so far) empty frames at the end of multitouch activity. Ignoring the first few enables us to safely and gracefully handle erroneous empty frames, thus preventing a change in the tool state which would otherwise result in things like broken lines or dragged objects being dropped in bad places. Also, now that devices with different logical densities have been observed, the aforementioned sizes are scaled from physical to logical scales once those scales are identified. Hopefully this should mean that a given threshold value means the same thing across differing devices. Signed-off-by: Rafi Rubin <rafi@seas.upenn.edu> Signed-off-by: Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz>
2010-05-05 02:20:15 +08:00
static unsigned int min_width;
module_param(min_width, uint, 0644);
MODULE_PARM_DESC(min_width, "Minimum touch contact width to accept.");
HID: ntrig: add sensitivity and responsiveness support The old rejection size thresholds were too high for the 12" devices. Larger surfaces like the Dell Studio17 exacerbated the problem since contact size is reported on the same logical scale, making a contact look smaller to the larger screen. Since we have observed erroneous ghost events from these devices we still need to filter the incoming stream. The prior size threshold filter is still in place, though with defaults set to leave it off. This patch adds the two new classes of filters, those that reject live frames before activation, and those that reject empty frames until deactivation. These filters are expressed in terms of a simple state machine for clarity (I hope). The activation filter has two components, slack and size, events are discarded until either is satisfied. Slack is defined as the number of seemingly good contacts to read before accepting the stream as valid (if the threshold is reached in the middle of a frame the remainder of that frame is still discarded). The deactivation filter discards empty frames until hitting a deactivate slack. This time measured in frames. N-Trig devices emit 5-8 (observed so far) empty frames at the end of multitouch activity. Ignoring the first few enables us to safely and gracefully handle erroneous empty frames, thus preventing a change in the tool state which would otherwise result in things like broken lines or dragged objects being dropped in bad places. Also, now that devices with different logical densities have been observed, the aforementioned sizes are scaled from physical to logical scales once those scales are identified. Hopefully this should mean that a given threshold value means the same thing across differing devices. Signed-off-by: Rafi Rubin <rafi@seas.upenn.edu> Signed-off-by: Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz>
2010-05-05 02:20:15 +08:00
static unsigned int min_height;
module_param(min_height, uint, 0644);
MODULE_PARM_DESC(min_height, "Minimum touch contact height to accept.");
HID: ntrig: add sensitivity and responsiveness support The old rejection size thresholds were too high for the 12" devices. Larger surfaces like the Dell Studio17 exacerbated the problem since contact size is reported on the same logical scale, making a contact look smaller to the larger screen. Since we have observed erroneous ghost events from these devices we still need to filter the incoming stream. The prior size threshold filter is still in place, though with defaults set to leave it off. This patch adds the two new classes of filters, those that reject live frames before activation, and those that reject empty frames until deactivation. These filters are expressed in terms of a simple state machine for clarity (I hope). The activation filter has two components, slack and size, events are discarded until either is satisfied. Slack is defined as the number of seemingly good contacts to read before accepting the stream as valid (if the threshold is reached in the middle of a frame the remainder of that frame is still discarded). The deactivation filter discards empty frames until hitting a deactivate slack. This time measured in frames. N-Trig devices emit 5-8 (observed so far) empty frames at the end of multitouch activity. Ignoring the first few enables us to safely and gracefully handle erroneous empty frames, thus preventing a change in the tool state which would otherwise result in things like broken lines or dragged objects being dropped in bad places. Also, now that devices with different logical densities have been observed, the aforementioned sizes are scaled from physical to logical scales once those scales are identified. Hopefully this should mean that a given threshold value means the same thing across differing devices. Signed-off-by: Rafi Rubin <rafi@seas.upenn.edu> Signed-off-by: Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz>
2010-05-05 02:20:15 +08:00
static unsigned int activate_slack = 1;
module_param(activate_slack, uint, 0644);
MODULE_PARM_DESC(activate_slack, "Number of touch frames to ignore at "
"the start of touch input.");
HID: ntrig: add sensitivity and responsiveness support The old rejection size thresholds were too high for the 12" devices. Larger surfaces like the Dell Studio17 exacerbated the problem since contact size is reported on the same logical scale, making a contact look smaller to the larger screen. Since we have observed erroneous ghost events from these devices we still need to filter the incoming stream. The prior size threshold filter is still in place, though with defaults set to leave it off. This patch adds the two new classes of filters, those that reject live frames before activation, and those that reject empty frames until deactivation. These filters are expressed in terms of a simple state machine for clarity (I hope). The activation filter has two components, slack and size, events are discarded until either is satisfied. Slack is defined as the number of seemingly good contacts to read before accepting the stream as valid (if the threshold is reached in the middle of a frame the remainder of that frame is still discarded). The deactivation filter discards empty frames until hitting a deactivate slack. This time measured in frames. N-Trig devices emit 5-8 (observed so far) empty frames at the end of multitouch activity. Ignoring the first few enables us to safely and gracefully handle erroneous empty frames, thus preventing a change in the tool state which would otherwise result in things like broken lines or dragged objects being dropped in bad places. Also, now that devices with different logical densities have been observed, the aforementioned sizes are scaled from physical to logical scales once those scales are identified. Hopefully this should mean that a given threshold value means the same thing across differing devices. Signed-off-by: Rafi Rubin <rafi@seas.upenn.edu> Signed-off-by: Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz>
2010-05-05 02:20:15 +08:00
static unsigned int deactivate_slack = 4;
module_param(deactivate_slack, uint, 0644);
MODULE_PARM_DESC(deactivate_slack, "Number of empty frames to ignore before "
"deactivating touch.");
HID: ntrig: add sensitivity and responsiveness support The old rejection size thresholds were too high for the 12" devices. Larger surfaces like the Dell Studio17 exacerbated the problem since contact size is reported on the same logical scale, making a contact look smaller to the larger screen. Since we have observed erroneous ghost events from these devices we still need to filter the incoming stream. The prior size threshold filter is still in place, though with defaults set to leave it off. This patch adds the two new classes of filters, those that reject live frames before activation, and those that reject empty frames until deactivation. These filters are expressed in terms of a simple state machine for clarity (I hope). The activation filter has two components, slack and size, events are discarded until either is satisfied. Slack is defined as the number of seemingly good contacts to read before accepting the stream as valid (if the threshold is reached in the middle of a frame the remainder of that frame is still discarded). The deactivation filter discards empty frames until hitting a deactivate slack. This time measured in frames. N-Trig devices emit 5-8 (observed so far) empty frames at the end of multitouch activity. Ignoring the first few enables us to safely and gracefully handle erroneous empty frames, thus preventing a change in the tool state which would otherwise result in things like broken lines or dragged objects being dropped in bad places. Also, now that devices with different logical densities have been observed, the aforementioned sizes are scaled from physical to logical scales once those scales are identified. Hopefully this should mean that a given threshold value means the same thing across differing devices. Signed-off-by: Rafi Rubin <rafi@seas.upenn.edu> Signed-off-by: Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz>
2010-05-05 02:20:15 +08:00
static unsigned int activation_width = 64;
module_param(activation_width, uint, 0644);
MODULE_PARM_DESC(activation_width, "Width threshold to immediately start "
"processing touch events.");
HID: ntrig: add sensitivity and responsiveness support The old rejection size thresholds were too high for the 12" devices. Larger surfaces like the Dell Studio17 exacerbated the problem since contact size is reported on the same logical scale, making a contact look smaller to the larger screen. Since we have observed erroneous ghost events from these devices we still need to filter the incoming stream. The prior size threshold filter is still in place, though with defaults set to leave it off. This patch adds the two new classes of filters, those that reject live frames before activation, and those that reject empty frames until deactivation. These filters are expressed in terms of a simple state machine for clarity (I hope). The activation filter has two components, slack and size, events are discarded until either is satisfied. Slack is defined as the number of seemingly good contacts to read before accepting the stream as valid (if the threshold is reached in the middle of a frame the remainder of that frame is still discarded). The deactivation filter discards empty frames until hitting a deactivate slack. This time measured in frames. N-Trig devices emit 5-8 (observed so far) empty frames at the end of multitouch activity. Ignoring the first few enables us to safely and gracefully handle erroneous empty frames, thus preventing a change in the tool state which would otherwise result in things like broken lines or dragged objects being dropped in bad places. Also, now that devices with different logical densities have been observed, the aforementioned sizes are scaled from physical to logical scales once those scales are identified. Hopefully this should mean that a given threshold value means the same thing across differing devices. Signed-off-by: Rafi Rubin <rafi@seas.upenn.edu> Signed-off-by: Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz>
2010-05-05 02:20:15 +08:00
static unsigned int activation_height = 32;
module_param(activation_height, uint, 0644);
MODULE_PARM_DESC(activation_height, "Height threshold to immediately start "
"processing touch events.");
HID: ntrig: add sensitivity and responsiveness support The old rejection size thresholds were too high for the 12" devices. Larger surfaces like the Dell Studio17 exacerbated the problem since contact size is reported on the same logical scale, making a contact look smaller to the larger screen. Since we have observed erroneous ghost events from these devices we still need to filter the incoming stream. The prior size threshold filter is still in place, though with defaults set to leave it off. This patch adds the two new classes of filters, those that reject live frames before activation, and those that reject empty frames until deactivation. These filters are expressed in terms of a simple state machine for clarity (I hope). The activation filter has two components, slack and size, events are discarded until either is satisfied. Slack is defined as the number of seemingly good contacts to read before accepting the stream as valid (if the threshold is reached in the middle of a frame the remainder of that frame is still discarded). The deactivation filter discards empty frames until hitting a deactivate slack. This time measured in frames. N-Trig devices emit 5-8 (observed so far) empty frames at the end of multitouch activity. Ignoring the first few enables us to safely and gracefully handle erroneous empty frames, thus preventing a change in the tool state which would otherwise result in things like broken lines or dragged objects being dropped in bad places. Also, now that devices with different logical densities have been observed, the aforementioned sizes are scaled from physical to logical scales once those scales are identified. Hopefully this should mean that a given threshold value means the same thing across differing devices. Signed-off-by: Rafi Rubin <rafi@seas.upenn.edu> Signed-off-by: Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz>
2010-05-05 02:20:15 +08:00
struct ntrig_data {
/* Incoming raw values for a single contact */
__u16 x, y, w, h;
__u16 id;
bool tipswitch;
bool confidence;
bool first_contact_touch;
bool reading_mt;
__u8 mt_footer[4];
__u8 mt_foot_count;
HID: ntrig: add sensitivity and responsiveness support The old rejection size thresholds were too high for the 12" devices. Larger surfaces like the Dell Studio17 exacerbated the problem since contact size is reported on the same logical scale, making a contact look smaller to the larger screen. Since we have observed erroneous ghost events from these devices we still need to filter the incoming stream. The prior size threshold filter is still in place, though with defaults set to leave it off. This patch adds the two new classes of filters, those that reject live frames before activation, and those that reject empty frames until deactivation. These filters are expressed in terms of a simple state machine for clarity (I hope). The activation filter has two components, slack and size, events are discarded until either is satisfied. Slack is defined as the number of seemingly good contacts to read before accepting the stream as valid (if the threshold is reached in the middle of a frame the remainder of that frame is still discarded). The deactivation filter discards empty frames until hitting a deactivate slack. This time measured in frames. N-Trig devices emit 5-8 (observed so far) empty frames at the end of multitouch activity. Ignoring the first few enables us to safely and gracefully handle erroneous empty frames, thus preventing a change in the tool state which would otherwise result in things like broken lines or dragged objects being dropped in bad places. Also, now that devices with different logical densities have been observed, the aforementioned sizes are scaled from physical to logical scales once those scales are identified. Hopefully this should mean that a given threshold value means the same thing across differing devices. Signed-off-by: Rafi Rubin <rafi@seas.upenn.edu> Signed-off-by: Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz>
2010-05-05 02:20:15 +08:00
/* The current activation state. */
__s8 act_state;
/* Empty frames to ignore before recognizing the end of activity */
__s8 deactivate_slack;
/* Frames to ignore before acknowledging the start of activity */
__s8 activate_slack;
/* Minimum size contact to accept */
__u16 min_width;
__u16 min_height;
/* Threshold to override activation slack */
__u16 activation_width;
__u16 activation_height;
__u16 sensor_logical_width;
__u16 sensor_logical_height;
__u16 sensor_physical_width;
__u16 sensor_physical_height;
};
/*
* This function converts the 4 byte raw firmware code into
* a string containing 5 comma separated numbers.
*/
static int ntrig_version_string(unsigned char *raw, char *buf)
{
__u8 a = (raw[1] & 0x0e) >> 1;
__u8 b = (raw[0] & 0x3c) >> 2;
__u8 c = ((raw[0] & 0x03) << 3) | ((raw[3] & 0xe0) >> 5);
__u8 d = ((raw[3] & 0x07) << 3) | ((raw[2] & 0xe0) >> 5);
__u8 e = raw[2] & 0x07;
/*
* As yet unmapped bits:
* 0b11000000 0b11110001 0b00011000 0b00011000
*/
return sprintf(buf, "%u.%u.%u.%u.%u", a, b, c, d, e);
}
static inline int ntrig_get_mode(struct hid_device *hdev)
{
struct hid_report *report = hdev->report_enum[HID_FEATURE_REPORT].
report_id_hash[0x0d];
if (!report || report->maxfield < 1 ||
report->field[0]->report_count < 1)
return -EINVAL;
hid_hw_request(hdev, report, HID_REQ_GET_REPORT);
hid_hw_wait(hdev);
return (int)report->field[0]->value[0];
}
static inline void ntrig_set_mode(struct hid_device *hdev, const int mode)
{
struct hid_report *report;
__u8 mode_commands[4] = { 0xe, 0xf, 0x1b, 0x10 };
if (mode < 0 || mode > 3)
return;
report = hdev->report_enum[HID_FEATURE_REPORT].
report_id_hash[mode_commands[mode]];
if (!report)
return;
hid_hw_request(hdev, report, HID_REQ_GET_REPORT);
}
static void ntrig_report_version(struct hid_device *hdev)
{
int ret;
char buf[20];
struct usb_device *usb_dev = hid_to_usb_dev(hdev);
unsigned char *data = kmalloc(8, GFP_KERNEL);
if (!data)
goto err_free;
ret = usb_control_msg(usb_dev, usb_rcvctrlpipe(usb_dev, 0),
USB_REQ_CLEAR_FEATURE,
USB_TYPE_CLASS | USB_RECIP_INTERFACE |
USB_DIR_IN,
0x30c, 1, data, 8,
USB_CTRL_SET_TIMEOUT);
if (ret == 8) {
ret = ntrig_version_string(&data[2], buf);
hid_info(hdev, "Firmware version: %s (%02x%02x %02x%02x)\n",
buf, data[2], data[3], data[4], data[5]);
}
err_free:
kfree(data);
}
static ssize_t show_phys_width(struct device *dev,
struct device_attribute *attr,
char *buf)
{
struct hid_device *hdev = to_hid_device(dev);
struct ntrig_data *nd = hid_get_drvdata(hdev);
return sprintf(buf, "%d\n", nd->sensor_physical_width);
}
static DEVICE_ATTR(sensor_physical_width, S_IRUGO, show_phys_width, NULL);
static ssize_t show_phys_height(struct device *dev,
struct device_attribute *attr,
char *buf)
{
struct hid_device *hdev = to_hid_device(dev);
struct ntrig_data *nd = hid_get_drvdata(hdev);
return sprintf(buf, "%d\n", nd->sensor_physical_height);
}
static DEVICE_ATTR(sensor_physical_height, S_IRUGO, show_phys_height, NULL);
static ssize_t show_log_width(struct device *dev,
struct device_attribute *attr,
char *buf)
{
struct hid_device *hdev = to_hid_device(dev);
struct ntrig_data *nd = hid_get_drvdata(hdev);
return sprintf(buf, "%d\n", nd->sensor_logical_width);
}
static DEVICE_ATTR(sensor_logical_width, S_IRUGO, show_log_width, NULL);
static ssize_t show_log_height(struct device *dev,
struct device_attribute *attr,
char *buf)
{
struct hid_device *hdev = to_hid_device(dev);
struct ntrig_data *nd = hid_get_drvdata(hdev);
return sprintf(buf, "%d\n", nd->sensor_logical_height);
}
static DEVICE_ATTR(sensor_logical_height, S_IRUGO, show_log_height, NULL);
static ssize_t show_min_width(struct device *dev,
struct device_attribute *attr,
char *buf)
{
struct hid_device *hdev = to_hid_device(dev);
struct ntrig_data *nd = hid_get_drvdata(hdev);
return sprintf(buf, "%d\n", nd->min_width *
nd->sensor_physical_width /
nd->sensor_logical_width);
}
static ssize_t set_min_width(struct device *dev,
struct device_attribute *attr,
const char *buf, size_t count)
{
struct hid_device *hdev = to_hid_device(dev);
struct ntrig_data *nd = hid_get_drvdata(hdev);
unsigned long val;
if (kstrtoul(buf, 0, &val))
return -EINVAL;
if (val > nd->sensor_physical_width)
return -EINVAL;
nd->min_width = val * nd->sensor_logical_width /
nd->sensor_physical_width;
return count;
}
static DEVICE_ATTR(min_width, S_IWUSR | S_IRUGO, show_min_width, set_min_width);
static ssize_t show_min_height(struct device *dev,
struct device_attribute *attr,
char *buf)
{
struct hid_device *hdev = to_hid_device(dev);
struct ntrig_data *nd = hid_get_drvdata(hdev);
return sprintf(buf, "%d\n", nd->min_height *
nd->sensor_physical_height /
nd->sensor_logical_height);
}
static ssize_t set_min_height(struct device *dev,
struct device_attribute *attr,
const char *buf, size_t count)
{
struct hid_device *hdev = to_hid_device(dev);
struct ntrig_data *nd = hid_get_drvdata(hdev);
unsigned long val;
if (kstrtoul(buf, 0, &val))
return -EINVAL;
if (val > nd->sensor_physical_height)
return -EINVAL;
nd->min_height = val * nd->sensor_logical_height /
nd->sensor_physical_height;
return count;
}
static DEVICE_ATTR(min_height, S_IWUSR | S_IRUGO, show_min_height,
set_min_height);
static ssize_t show_activate_slack(struct device *dev,
struct device_attribute *attr,
char *buf)
{
struct hid_device *hdev = to_hid_device(dev);
struct ntrig_data *nd = hid_get_drvdata(hdev);
return sprintf(buf, "%d\n", nd->activate_slack);
}
static ssize_t set_activate_slack(struct device *dev,
struct device_attribute *attr,
const char *buf, size_t count)
{
struct hid_device *hdev = to_hid_device(dev);
struct ntrig_data *nd = hid_get_drvdata(hdev);
unsigned long val;
if (kstrtoul(buf, 0, &val))
return -EINVAL;
if (val > 0x7f)
return -EINVAL;
nd->activate_slack = val;
return count;
}
static DEVICE_ATTR(activate_slack, S_IWUSR | S_IRUGO, show_activate_slack,
set_activate_slack);
static ssize_t show_activation_width(struct device *dev,
struct device_attribute *attr,
char *buf)
{
struct hid_device *hdev = to_hid_device(dev);
struct ntrig_data *nd = hid_get_drvdata(hdev);
return sprintf(buf, "%d\n", nd->activation_width *
nd->sensor_physical_width /
nd->sensor_logical_width);
}
static ssize_t set_activation_width(struct device *dev,
struct device_attribute *attr,
const char *buf, size_t count)
{
struct hid_device *hdev = to_hid_device(dev);
struct ntrig_data *nd = hid_get_drvdata(hdev);
unsigned long val;
if (kstrtoul(buf, 0, &val))
return -EINVAL;
if (val > nd->sensor_physical_width)
return -EINVAL;
nd->activation_width = val * nd->sensor_logical_width /
nd->sensor_physical_width;
return count;
}
static DEVICE_ATTR(activation_width, S_IWUSR | S_IRUGO, show_activation_width,
set_activation_width);
static ssize_t show_activation_height(struct device *dev,
struct device_attribute *attr,
char *buf)
{
struct hid_device *hdev = to_hid_device(dev);
struct ntrig_data *nd = hid_get_drvdata(hdev);
return sprintf(buf, "%d\n", nd->activation_height *
nd->sensor_physical_height /
nd->sensor_logical_height);
}
static ssize_t set_activation_height(struct device *dev,
struct device_attribute *attr,
const char *buf, size_t count)
{
struct hid_device *hdev = to_hid_device(dev);
struct ntrig_data *nd = hid_get_drvdata(hdev);
unsigned long val;
if (kstrtoul(buf, 0, &val))
return -EINVAL;
if (val > nd->sensor_physical_height)
return -EINVAL;
nd->activation_height = val * nd->sensor_logical_height /
nd->sensor_physical_height;
return count;
}
static DEVICE_ATTR(activation_height, S_IWUSR | S_IRUGO,
show_activation_height, set_activation_height);
static ssize_t show_deactivate_slack(struct device *dev,
struct device_attribute *attr,
char *buf)
{
struct hid_device *hdev = to_hid_device(dev);
struct ntrig_data *nd = hid_get_drvdata(hdev);
return sprintf(buf, "%d\n", -nd->deactivate_slack);
}
static ssize_t set_deactivate_slack(struct device *dev,
struct device_attribute *attr,
const char *buf, size_t count)
{
struct hid_device *hdev = to_hid_device(dev);
struct ntrig_data *nd = hid_get_drvdata(hdev);
unsigned long val;
if (kstrtoul(buf, 0, &val))
return -EINVAL;
/*
* No more than 8 terminal frames have been observed so far
* and higher slack is highly likely to leave the single
* touch emulation stuck down.
*/
if (val > 7)
return -EINVAL;
nd->deactivate_slack = -val;
return count;
}
static DEVICE_ATTR(deactivate_slack, S_IWUSR | S_IRUGO, show_deactivate_slack,
set_deactivate_slack);
static struct attribute *sysfs_attrs[] = {
&dev_attr_sensor_physical_width.attr,
&dev_attr_sensor_physical_height.attr,
&dev_attr_sensor_logical_width.attr,
&dev_attr_sensor_logical_height.attr,
&dev_attr_min_height.attr,
&dev_attr_min_width.attr,
&dev_attr_activate_slack.attr,
&dev_attr_activation_width.attr,
&dev_attr_activation_height.attr,
&dev_attr_deactivate_slack.attr,
NULL
};
static struct attribute_group ntrig_attribute_group = {
.attrs = sysfs_attrs
};
/*
* this driver is aimed at two firmware versions in circulation:
* - dual pen/finger single touch
* - finger multitouch, pen not working
*/
static int ntrig_input_mapping(struct hid_device *hdev, struct hid_input *hi,
struct hid_field *field, struct hid_usage *usage,
unsigned long **bit, int *max)
{
HID: ntrig: add sensitivity and responsiveness support The old rejection size thresholds were too high for the 12" devices. Larger surfaces like the Dell Studio17 exacerbated the problem since contact size is reported on the same logical scale, making a contact look smaller to the larger screen. Since we have observed erroneous ghost events from these devices we still need to filter the incoming stream. The prior size threshold filter is still in place, though with defaults set to leave it off. This patch adds the two new classes of filters, those that reject live frames before activation, and those that reject empty frames until deactivation. These filters are expressed in terms of a simple state machine for clarity (I hope). The activation filter has two components, slack and size, events are discarded until either is satisfied. Slack is defined as the number of seemingly good contacts to read before accepting the stream as valid (if the threshold is reached in the middle of a frame the remainder of that frame is still discarded). The deactivation filter discards empty frames until hitting a deactivate slack. This time measured in frames. N-Trig devices emit 5-8 (observed so far) empty frames at the end of multitouch activity. Ignoring the first few enables us to safely and gracefully handle erroneous empty frames, thus preventing a change in the tool state which would otherwise result in things like broken lines or dragged objects being dropped in bad places. Also, now that devices with different logical densities have been observed, the aforementioned sizes are scaled from physical to logical scales once those scales are identified. Hopefully this should mean that a given threshold value means the same thing across differing devices. Signed-off-by: Rafi Rubin <rafi@seas.upenn.edu> Signed-off-by: Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz>
2010-05-05 02:20:15 +08:00
struct ntrig_data *nd = hid_get_drvdata(hdev);
/* No special mappings needed for the pen and single touch */
if (field->physical)
return 0;
switch (usage->hid & HID_USAGE_PAGE) {
case HID_UP_GENDESK:
switch (usage->hid) {
case HID_GD_X:
hid_map_usage(hi, usage, bit, max,
EV_ABS, ABS_MT_POSITION_X);
input_set_abs_params(hi->input, ABS_X,
field->logical_minimum,
field->logical_maximum, 0, 0);
HID: ntrig: add sensitivity and responsiveness support The old rejection size thresholds were too high for the 12" devices. Larger surfaces like the Dell Studio17 exacerbated the problem since contact size is reported on the same logical scale, making a contact look smaller to the larger screen. Since we have observed erroneous ghost events from these devices we still need to filter the incoming stream. The prior size threshold filter is still in place, though with defaults set to leave it off. This patch adds the two new classes of filters, those that reject live frames before activation, and those that reject empty frames until deactivation. These filters are expressed in terms of a simple state machine for clarity (I hope). The activation filter has two components, slack and size, events are discarded until either is satisfied. Slack is defined as the number of seemingly good contacts to read before accepting the stream as valid (if the threshold is reached in the middle of a frame the remainder of that frame is still discarded). The deactivation filter discards empty frames until hitting a deactivate slack. This time measured in frames. N-Trig devices emit 5-8 (observed so far) empty frames at the end of multitouch activity. Ignoring the first few enables us to safely and gracefully handle erroneous empty frames, thus preventing a change in the tool state which would otherwise result in things like broken lines or dragged objects being dropped in bad places. Also, now that devices with different logical densities have been observed, the aforementioned sizes are scaled from physical to logical scales once those scales are identified. Hopefully this should mean that a given threshold value means the same thing across differing devices. Signed-off-by: Rafi Rubin <rafi@seas.upenn.edu> Signed-off-by: Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz>
2010-05-05 02:20:15 +08:00
if (!nd->sensor_logical_width) {
nd->sensor_logical_width =
field->logical_maximum -
field->logical_minimum;
nd->sensor_physical_width =
field->physical_maximum -
field->physical_minimum;
nd->activation_width = activation_width *
nd->sensor_logical_width /
nd->sensor_physical_width;
nd->min_width = min_width *
nd->sensor_logical_width /
nd->sensor_physical_width;
}
return 1;
case HID_GD_Y:
hid_map_usage(hi, usage, bit, max,
EV_ABS, ABS_MT_POSITION_Y);
input_set_abs_params(hi->input, ABS_Y,
field->logical_minimum,
field->logical_maximum, 0, 0);
HID: ntrig: add sensitivity and responsiveness support The old rejection size thresholds were too high for the 12" devices. Larger surfaces like the Dell Studio17 exacerbated the problem since contact size is reported on the same logical scale, making a contact look smaller to the larger screen. Since we have observed erroneous ghost events from these devices we still need to filter the incoming stream. The prior size threshold filter is still in place, though with defaults set to leave it off. This patch adds the two new classes of filters, those that reject live frames before activation, and those that reject empty frames until deactivation. These filters are expressed in terms of a simple state machine for clarity (I hope). The activation filter has two components, slack and size, events are discarded until either is satisfied. Slack is defined as the number of seemingly good contacts to read before accepting the stream as valid (if the threshold is reached in the middle of a frame the remainder of that frame is still discarded). The deactivation filter discards empty frames until hitting a deactivate slack. This time measured in frames. N-Trig devices emit 5-8 (observed so far) empty frames at the end of multitouch activity. Ignoring the first few enables us to safely and gracefully handle erroneous empty frames, thus preventing a change in the tool state which would otherwise result in things like broken lines or dragged objects being dropped in bad places. Also, now that devices with different logical densities have been observed, the aforementioned sizes are scaled from physical to logical scales once those scales are identified. Hopefully this should mean that a given threshold value means the same thing across differing devices. Signed-off-by: Rafi Rubin <rafi@seas.upenn.edu> Signed-off-by: Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz>
2010-05-05 02:20:15 +08:00
if (!nd->sensor_logical_height) {
nd->sensor_logical_height =
field->logical_maximum -
field->logical_minimum;
nd->sensor_physical_height =
field->physical_maximum -
field->physical_minimum;
nd->activation_height = activation_height *
nd->sensor_logical_height /
nd->sensor_physical_height;
nd->min_height = min_height *
nd->sensor_logical_height /
nd->sensor_physical_height;
}
return 1;
}
return 0;
case HID_UP_DIGITIZER:
switch (usage->hid) {
/* we do not want to map these for now */
case HID_DG_CONTACTID: /* Not trustworthy, squelch for now */
case HID_DG_INPUTMODE:
case HID_DG_DEVICEINDEX:
case HID_DG_CONTACTMAX:
return -1;
/* width/height mapped on TouchMajor/TouchMinor/Orientation */
case HID_DG_WIDTH:
hid_map_usage(hi, usage, bit, max,
EV_ABS, ABS_MT_TOUCH_MAJOR);
return 1;
case HID_DG_HEIGHT:
hid_map_usage(hi, usage, bit, max,
EV_ABS, ABS_MT_TOUCH_MINOR);
input_set_abs_params(hi->input, ABS_MT_ORIENTATION,
0, 1, 0, 0);
return 1;
}
return 0;
case 0xff000000:
/* we do not want to map these: no input-oriented meaning */
return -1;
}
return 0;
}
static int ntrig_input_mapped(struct hid_device *hdev, struct hid_input *hi,
struct hid_field *field, struct hid_usage *usage,
unsigned long **bit, int *max)
{
/* No special mappings needed for the pen and single touch */
if (field->physical)
return 0;
if (usage->type == EV_KEY || usage->type == EV_REL
|| usage->type == EV_ABS)
clear_bit(usage->code, *bit);
return 0;
}
/*
* this function is called upon all reports
* so that we can filter contact point information,
* decide whether we are in multi or single touch mode
* and call input_mt_sync after each point if necessary
*/
static int ntrig_event (struct hid_device *hid, struct hid_field *field,
struct hid_usage *usage, __s32 value)
{
struct ntrig_data *nd = hid_get_drvdata(hid);
struct input_dev *input;
/* Skip processing if not a claimed input */
if (!(hid->claimed & HID_CLAIMED_INPUT))
goto not_claimed_input;
/* This function is being called before the structures are fully
* initialized */
if(!(field->hidinput && field->hidinput->input))
return -EINVAL;
input = field->hidinput->input;
/* No special handling needed for the pen */
if (field->application == HID_DG_PEN)
return 0;
switch (usage->hid) {
case 0xff000001:
/* Tag indicating the start of a multitouch group */
nd->reading_mt = 1;
nd->first_contact_touch = 0;
break;
case HID_DG_TIPSWITCH:
nd->tipswitch = value;
/* Prevent emission of touch until validated */
return 1;
case HID_DG_CONFIDENCE:
nd->confidence = value;
break;
case HID_GD_X:
nd->x = value;
/* Clear the contact footer */
nd->mt_foot_count = 0;
break;
case HID_GD_Y:
nd->y = value;
break;
case HID_DG_CONTACTID:
nd->id = value;
break;
case HID_DG_WIDTH:
nd->w = value;
break;
case HID_DG_HEIGHT:
nd->h = value;
/*
* when in single touch mode, this is the last
* report received in a finger event. We want
* to emit a normal (X, Y) position
*/
if (!nd->reading_mt) {
/*
* TipSwitch indicates the presence of a
* finger in single touch mode.
*/
input_report_key(input, BTN_TOUCH,
nd->tipswitch);
input_report_key(input, BTN_TOOL_DOUBLETAP,
nd->tipswitch);
input_event(input, EV_ABS, ABS_X, nd->x);
input_event(input, EV_ABS, ABS_Y, nd->y);
}
break;
case 0xff000002:
/*
* we receive this when the device is in multitouch
* mode. The first of the three values tagged with
* this usage tells if the contact point is real
* or a placeholder
*/
/* Shouldn't get more than 4 footer packets, so skip */
if (nd->mt_foot_count >= 4)
break;
nd->mt_footer[nd->mt_foot_count++] = value;
/* if the footer isn't complete break */
if (nd->mt_foot_count != 4)
break;
/* Pen activity signal. */
if (nd->mt_footer[2]) {
/*
* When the pen deactivates touch, we see a
* bogus frame with ContactCount > 0.
* We can
* save a bit of work by ensuring act_state < 0
* even if deactivation slack is turned off.
*/
nd->act_state = deactivate_slack - 1;
nd->confidence = 0;
break;
}
/*
* The first footer value indicates the presence of a
* finger.
*/
if (nd->mt_footer[0]) {
/*
* We do not want to process contacts under
* the size threshold, but do not want to
* ignore them for activation state
*/
if (nd->w < nd->min_width ||
nd->h < nd->min_height)
nd->confidence = 0;
} else
break;
if (nd->act_state > 0) {
HID: ntrig: add sensitivity and responsiveness support The old rejection size thresholds were too high for the 12" devices. Larger surfaces like the Dell Studio17 exacerbated the problem since contact size is reported on the same logical scale, making a contact look smaller to the larger screen. Since we have observed erroneous ghost events from these devices we still need to filter the incoming stream. The prior size threshold filter is still in place, though with defaults set to leave it off. This patch adds the two new classes of filters, those that reject live frames before activation, and those that reject empty frames until deactivation. These filters are expressed in terms of a simple state machine for clarity (I hope). The activation filter has two components, slack and size, events are discarded until either is satisfied. Slack is defined as the number of seemingly good contacts to read before accepting the stream as valid (if the threshold is reached in the middle of a frame the remainder of that frame is still discarded). The deactivation filter discards empty frames until hitting a deactivate slack. This time measured in frames. N-Trig devices emit 5-8 (observed so far) empty frames at the end of multitouch activity. Ignoring the first few enables us to safely and gracefully handle erroneous empty frames, thus preventing a change in the tool state which would otherwise result in things like broken lines or dragged objects being dropped in bad places. Also, now that devices with different logical densities have been observed, the aforementioned sizes are scaled from physical to logical scales once those scales are identified. Hopefully this should mean that a given threshold value means the same thing across differing devices. Signed-off-by: Rafi Rubin <rafi@seas.upenn.edu> Signed-off-by: Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz>
2010-05-05 02:20:15 +08:00
/*
* Contact meets the activation size threshold
HID: ntrig: add sensitivity and responsiveness support The old rejection size thresholds were too high for the 12" devices. Larger surfaces like the Dell Studio17 exacerbated the problem since contact size is reported on the same logical scale, making a contact look smaller to the larger screen. Since we have observed erroneous ghost events from these devices we still need to filter the incoming stream. The prior size threshold filter is still in place, though with defaults set to leave it off. This patch adds the two new classes of filters, those that reject live frames before activation, and those that reject empty frames until deactivation. These filters are expressed in terms of a simple state machine for clarity (I hope). The activation filter has two components, slack and size, events are discarded until either is satisfied. Slack is defined as the number of seemingly good contacts to read before accepting the stream as valid (if the threshold is reached in the middle of a frame the remainder of that frame is still discarded). The deactivation filter discards empty frames until hitting a deactivate slack. This time measured in frames. N-Trig devices emit 5-8 (observed so far) empty frames at the end of multitouch activity. Ignoring the first few enables us to safely and gracefully handle erroneous empty frames, thus preventing a change in the tool state which would otherwise result in things like broken lines or dragged objects being dropped in bad places. Also, now that devices with different logical densities have been observed, the aforementioned sizes are scaled from physical to logical scales once those scales are identified. Hopefully this should mean that a given threshold value means the same thing across differing devices. Signed-off-by: Rafi Rubin <rafi@seas.upenn.edu> Signed-off-by: Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz>
2010-05-05 02:20:15 +08:00
*/
if (nd->w >= nd->activation_width &&
nd->h >= nd->activation_height) {
if (nd->id)
HID: ntrig: add sensitivity and responsiveness support The old rejection size thresholds were too high for the 12" devices. Larger surfaces like the Dell Studio17 exacerbated the problem since contact size is reported on the same logical scale, making a contact look smaller to the larger screen. Since we have observed erroneous ghost events from these devices we still need to filter the incoming stream. The prior size threshold filter is still in place, though with defaults set to leave it off. This patch adds the two new classes of filters, those that reject live frames before activation, and those that reject empty frames until deactivation. These filters are expressed in terms of a simple state machine for clarity (I hope). The activation filter has two components, slack and size, events are discarded until either is satisfied. Slack is defined as the number of seemingly good contacts to read before accepting the stream as valid (if the threshold is reached in the middle of a frame the remainder of that frame is still discarded). The deactivation filter discards empty frames until hitting a deactivate slack. This time measured in frames. N-Trig devices emit 5-8 (observed so far) empty frames at the end of multitouch activity. Ignoring the first few enables us to safely and gracefully handle erroneous empty frames, thus preventing a change in the tool state which would otherwise result in things like broken lines or dragged objects being dropped in bad places. Also, now that devices with different logical densities have been observed, the aforementioned sizes are scaled from physical to logical scales once those scales are identified. Hopefully this should mean that a given threshold value means the same thing across differing devices. Signed-off-by: Rafi Rubin <rafi@seas.upenn.edu> Signed-off-by: Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz>
2010-05-05 02:20:15 +08:00
/*
* first contact, activate now
HID: ntrig: add sensitivity and responsiveness support The old rejection size thresholds were too high for the 12" devices. Larger surfaces like the Dell Studio17 exacerbated the problem since contact size is reported on the same logical scale, making a contact look smaller to the larger screen. Since we have observed erroneous ghost events from these devices we still need to filter the incoming stream. The prior size threshold filter is still in place, though with defaults set to leave it off. This patch adds the two new classes of filters, those that reject live frames before activation, and those that reject empty frames until deactivation. These filters are expressed in terms of a simple state machine for clarity (I hope). The activation filter has two components, slack and size, events are discarded until either is satisfied. Slack is defined as the number of seemingly good contacts to read before accepting the stream as valid (if the threshold is reached in the middle of a frame the remainder of that frame is still discarded). The deactivation filter discards empty frames until hitting a deactivate slack. This time measured in frames. N-Trig devices emit 5-8 (observed so far) empty frames at the end of multitouch activity. Ignoring the first few enables us to safely and gracefully handle erroneous empty frames, thus preventing a change in the tool state which would otherwise result in things like broken lines or dragged objects being dropped in bad places. Also, now that devices with different logical densities have been observed, the aforementioned sizes are scaled from physical to logical scales once those scales are identified. Hopefully this should mean that a given threshold value means the same thing across differing devices. Signed-off-by: Rafi Rubin <rafi@seas.upenn.edu> Signed-off-by: Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz>
2010-05-05 02:20:15 +08:00
*/
nd->act_state = 0;
else {
/*
* avoid corrupting this frame
* but ensure next frame will
* be active
*/
nd->act_state = 1;
HID: ntrig: add sensitivity and responsiveness support The old rejection size thresholds were too high for the 12" devices. Larger surfaces like the Dell Studio17 exacerbated the problem since contact size is reported on the same logical scale, making a contact look smaller to the larger screen. Since we have observed erroneous ghost events from these devices we still need to filter the incoming stream. The prior size threshold filter is still in place, though with defaults set to leave it off. This patch adds the two new classes of filters, those that reject live frames before activation, and those that reject empty frames until deactivation. These filters are expressed in terms of a simple state machine for clarity (I hope). The activation filter has two components, slack and size, events are discarded until either is satisfied. Slack is defined as the number of seemingly good contacts to read before accepting the stream as valid (if the threshold is reached in the middle of a frame the remainder of that frame is still discarded). The deactivation filter discards empty frames until hitting a deactivate slack. This time measured in frames. N-Trig devices emit 5-8 (observed so far) empty frames at the end of multitouch activity. Ignoring the first few enables us to safely and gracefully handle erroneous empty frames, thus preventing a change in the tool state which would otherwise result in things like broken lines or dragged objects being dropped in bad places. Also, now that devices with different logical densities have been observed, the aforementioned sizes are scaled from physical to logical scales once those scales are identified. Hopefully this should mean that a given threshold value means the same thing across differing devices. Signed-off-by: Rafi Rubin <rafi@seas.upenn.edu> Signed-off-by: Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz>
2010-05-05 02:20:15 +08:00
break;
}
} else
/*
* Defer adjusting the activation state
* until the end of the frame.
*/
break;
}
HID: ntrig: add sensitivity and responsiveness support The old rejection size thresholds were too high for the 12" devices. Larger surfaces like the Dell Studio17 exacerbated the problem since contact size is reported on the same logical scale, making a contact look smaller to the larger screen. Since we have observed erroneous ghost events from these devices we still need to filter the incoming stream. The prior size threshold filter is still in place, though with defaults set to leave it off. This patch adds the two new classes of filters, those that reject live frames before activation, and those that reject empty frames until deactivation. These filters are expressed in terms of a simple state machine for clarity (I hope). The activation filter has two components, slack and size, events are discarded until either is satisfied. Slack is defined as the number of seemingly good contacts to read before accepting the stream as valid (if the threshold is reached in the middle of a frame the remainder of that frame is still discarded). The deactivation filter discards empty frames until hitting a deactivate slack. This time measured in frames. N-Trig devices emit 5-8 (observed so far) empty frames at the end of multitouch activity. Ignoring the first few enables us to safely and gracefully handle erroneous empty frames, thus preventing a change in the tool state which would otherwise result in things like broken lines or dragged objects being dropped in bad places. Also, now that devices with different logical densities have been observed, the aforementioned sizes are scaled from physical to logical scales once those scales are identified. Hopefully this should mean that a given threshold value means the same thing across differing devices. Signed-off-by: Rafi Rubin <rafi@seas.upenn.edu> Signed-off-by: Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz>
2010-05-05 02:20:15 +08:00
/* Discarding this contact */
if (!nd->confidence)
break;
HID: ntrig: add sensitivity and responsiveness support The old rejection size thresholds were too high for the 12" devices. Larger surfaces like the Dell Studio17 exacerbated the problem since contact size is reported on the same logical scale, making a contact look smaller to the larger screen. Since we have observed erroneous ghost events from these devices we still need to filter the incoming stream. The prior size threshold filter is still in place, though with defaults set to leave it off. This patch adds the two new classes of filters, those that reject live frames before activation, and those that reject empty frames until deactivation. These filters are expressed in terms of a simple state machine for clarity (I hope). The activation filter has two components, slack and size, events are discarded until either is satisfied. Slack is defined as the number of seemingly good contacts to read before accepting the stream as valid (if the threshold is reached in the middle of a frame the remainder of that frame is still discarded). The deactivation filter discards empty frames until hitting a deactivate slack. This time measured in frames. N-Trig devices emit 5-8 (observed so far) empty frames at the end of multitouch activity. Ignoring the first few enables us to safely and gracefully handle erroneous empty frames, thus preventing a change in the tool state which would otherwise result in things like broken lines or dragged objects being dropped in bad places. Also, now that devices with different logical densities have been observed, the aforementioned sizes are scaled from physical to logical scales once those scales are identified. Hopefully this should mean that a given threshold value means the same thing across differing devices. Signed-off-by: Rafi Rubin <rafi@seas.upenn.edu> Signed-off-by: Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz>
2010-05-05 02:20:15 +08:00
/* emit a normal (X, Y) for the first point only */
if (nd->id == 0) {
HID: ntrig: add sensitivity and responsiveness support The old rejection size thresholds were too high for the 12" devices. Larger surfaces like the Dell Studio17 exacerbated the problem since contact size is reported on the same logical scale, making a contact look smaller to the larger screen. Since we have observed erroneous ghost events from these devices we still need to filter the incoming stream. The prior size threshold filter is still in place, though with defaults set to leave it off. This patch adds the two new classes of filters, those that reject live frames before activation, and those that reject empty frames until deactivation. These filters are expressed in terms of a simple state machine for clarity (I hope). The activation filter has two components, slack and size, events are discarded until either is satisfied. Slack is defined as the number of seemingly good contacts to read before accepting the stream as valid (if the threshold is reached in the middle of a frame the remainder of that frame is still discarded). The deactivation filter discards empty frames until hitting a deactivate slack. This time measured in frames. N-Trig devices emit 5-8 (observed so far) empty frames at the end of multitouch activity. Ignoring the first few enables us to safely and gracefully handle erroneous empty frames, thus preventing a change in the tool state which would otherwise result in things like broken lines or dragged objects being dropped in bad places. Also, now that devices with different logical densities have been observed, the aforementioned sizes are scaled from physical to logical scales once those scales are identified. Hopefully this should mean that a given threshold value means the same thing across differing devices. Signed-off-by: Rafi Rubin <rafi@seas.upenn.edu> Signed-off-by: Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz>
2010-05-05 02:20:15 +08:00
/*
* TipSwitch is superfluous in multitouch
* mode. The footer events tell us
* if there is a finger on the screen or
* not.
HID: ntrig: add sensitivity and responsiveness support The old rejection size thresholds were too high for the 12" devices. Larger surfaces like the Dell Studio17 exacerbated the problem since contact size is reported on the same logical scale, making a contact look smaller to the larger screen. Since we have observed erroneous ghost events from these devices we still need to filter the incoming stream. The prior size threshold filter is still in place, though with defaults set to leave it off. This patch adds the two new classes of filters, those that reject live frames before activation, and those that reject empty frames until deactivation. These filters are expressed in terms of a simple state machine for clarity (I hope). The activation filter has two components, slack and size, events are discarded until either is satisfied. Slack is defined as the number of seemingly good contacts to read before accepting the stream as valid (if the threshold is reached in the middle of a frame the remainder of that frame is still discarded). The deactivation filter discards empty frames until hitting a deactivate slack. This time measured in frames. N-Trig devices emit 5-8 (observed so far) empty frames at the end of multitouch activity. Ignoring the first few enables us to safely and gracefully handle erroneous empty frames, thus preventing a change in the tool state which would otherwise result in things like broken lines or dragged objects being dropped in bad places. Also, now that devices with different logical densities have been observed, the aforementioned sizes are scaled from physical to logical scales once those scales are identified. Hopefully this should mean that a given threshold value means the same thing across differing devices. Signed-off-by: Rafi Rubin <rafi@seas.upenn.edu> Signed-off-by: Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz>
2010-05-05 02:20:15 +08:00
*/
nd->first_contact_touch = nd->confidence;
input_event(input, EV_ABS, ABS_X, nd->x);
input_event(input, EV_ABS, ABS_Y, nd->y);
}
/* Emit MT events */
input_event(input, EV_ABS, ABS_MT_POSITION_X, nd->x);
input_event(input, EV_ABS, ABS_MT_POSITION_Y, nd->y);
/*
* Translate from height and width to size
* and orientation.
*/
if (nd->w > nd->h) {
input_event(input, EV_ABS,
ABS_MT_ORIENTATION, 1);
input_event(input, EV_ABS,
ABS_MT_TOUCH_MAJOR, nd->w);
input_event(input, EV_ABS,
ABS_MT_TOUCH_MINOR, nd->h);
} else {
input_event(input, EV_ABS,
ABS_MT_ORIENTATION, 0);
input_event(input, EV_ABS,
ABS_MT_TOUCH_MAJOR, nd->h);
input_event(input, EV_ABS,
ABS_MT_TOUCH_MINOR, nd->w);
}
input_mt_sync(field->hidinput->input);
break;
case HID_DG_CONTACTCOUNT: /* End of a multitouch group */
if (!nd->reading_mt) /* Just to be sure */
break;
nd->reading_mt = 0;
/*
* Activation state machine logic:
*
* Fundamental states:
* state > 0: Inactive
* state <= 0: Active
* state < -deactivate_slack:
* Pen termination of touch
*
* Specific values of interest
* state == activate_slack
* no valid input since the last reset
*
* state == 0
* general operational state
*
* state == -deactivate_slack
* read sufficient empty frames to accept
* the end of input and reset
*/
if (nd->act_state > 0) { /* Currently inactive */
if (value)
/*
* Consider each live contact as
* evidence of intentional activity.
*/
nd->act_state = (nd->act_state > value)
? nd->act_state - value
: 0;
else
/*
* Empty frame before we hit the
* activity threshold, reset.
*/
nd->act_state = nd->activate_slack;
HID: ntrig: add sensitivity and responsiveness support The old rejection size thresholds were too high for the 12" devices. Larger surfaces like the Dell Studio17 exacerbated the problem since contact size is reported on the same logical scale, making a contact look smaller to the larger screen. Since we have observed erroneous ghost events from these devices we still need to filter the incoming stream. The prior size threshold filter is still in place, though with defaults set to leave it off. This patch adds the two new classes of filters, those that reject live frames before activation, and those that reject empty frames until deactivation. These filters are expressed in terms of a simple state machine for clarity (I hope). The activation filter has two components, slack and size, events are discarded until either is satisfied. Slack is defined as the number of seemingly good contacts to read before accepting the stream as valid (if the threshold is reached in the middle of a frame the remainder of that frame is still discarded). The deactivation filter discards empty frames until hitting a deactivate slack. This time measured in frames. N-Trig devices emit 5-8 (observed so far) empty frames at the end of multitouch activity. Ignoring the first few enables us to safely and gracefully handle erroneous empty frames, thus preventing a change in the tool state which would otherwise result in things like broken lines or dragged objects being dropped in bad places. Also, now that devices with different logical densities have been observed, the aforementioned sizes are scaled from physical to logical scales once those scales are identified. Hopefully this should mean that a given threshold value means the same thing across differing devices. Signed-off-by: Rafi Rubin <rafi@seas.upenn.edu> Signed-off-by: Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz>
2010-05-05 02:20:15 +08:00
/*
* Entered this block inactive and no
* coordinates sent this frame, so hold off
* on button state.
HID: ntrig: add sensitivity and responsiveness support The old rejection size thresholds were too high for the 12" devices. Larger surfaces like the Dell Studio17 exacerbated the problem since contact size is reported on the same logical scale, making a contact look smaller to the larger screen. Since we have observed erroneous ghost events from these devices we still need to filter the incoming stream. The prior size threshold filter is still in place, though with defaults set to leave it off. This patch adds the two new classes of filters, those that reject live frames before activation, and those that reject empty frames until deactivation. These filters are expressed in terms of a simple state machine for clarity (I hope). The activation filter has two components, slack and size, events are discarded until either is satisfied. Slack is defined as the number of seemingly good contacts to read before accepting the stream as valid (if the threshold is reached in the middle of a frame the remainder of that frame is still discarded). The deactivation filter discards empty frames until hitting a deactivate slack. This time measured in frames. N-Trig devices emit 5-8 (observed so far) empty frames at the end of multitouch activity. Ignoring the first few enables us to safely and gracefully handle erroneous empty frames, thus preventing a change in the tool state which would otherwise result in things like broken lines or dragged objects being dropped in bad places. Also, now that devices with different logical densities have been observed, the aforementioned sizes are scaled from physical to logical scales once those scales are identified. Hopefully this should mean that a given threshold value means the same thing across differing devices. Signed-off-by: Rafi Rubin <rafi@seas.upenn.edu> Signed-off-by: Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz>
2010-05-05 02:20:15 +08:00
*/
break;
} else { /* Currently active */
if (value && nd->act_state >=
nd->deactivate_slack)
HID: ntrig: add sensitivity and responsiveness support The old rejection size thresholds were too high for the 12" devices. Larger surfaces like the Dell Studio17 exacerbated the problem since contact size is reported on the same logical scale, making a contact look smaller to the larger screen. Since we have observed erroneous ghost events from these devices we still need to filter the incoming stream. The prior size threshold filter is still in place, though with defaults set to leave it off. This patch adds the two new classes of filters, those that reject live frames before activation, and those that reject empty frames until deactivation. These filters are expressed in terms of a simple state machine for clarity (I hope). The activation filter has two components, slack and size, events are discarded until either is satisfied. Slack is defined as the number of seemingly good contacts to read before accepting the stream as valid (if the threshold is reached in the middle of a frame the remainder of that frame is still discarded). The deactivation filter discards empty frames until hitting a deactivate slack. This time measured in frames. N-Trig devices emit 5-8 (observed so far) empty frames at the end of multitouch activity. Ignoring the first few enables us to safely and gracefully handle erroneous empty frames, thus preventing a change in the tool state which would otherwise result in things like broken lines or dragged objects being dropped in bad places. Also, now that devices with different logical densities have been observed, the aforementioned sizes are scaled from physical to logical scales once those scales are identified. Hopefully this should mean that a given threshold value means the same thing across differing devices. Signed-off-by: Rafi Rubin <rafi@seas.upenn.edu> Signed-off-by: Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz>
2010-05-05 02:20:15 +08:00
/*
* Live point: clear accumulated
* deactivation count.
HID: ntrig: add sensitivity and responsiveness support The old rejection size thresholds were too high for the 12" devices. Larger surfaces like the Dell Studio17 exacerbated the problem since contact size is reported on the same logical scale, making a contact look smaller to the larger screen. Since we have observed erroneous ghost events from these devices we still need to filter the incoming stream. The prior size threshold filter is still in place, though with defaults set to leave it off. This patch adds the two new classes of filters, those that reject live frames before activation, and those that reject empty frames until deactivation. These filters are expressed in terms of a simple state machine for clarity (I hope). The activation filter has two components, slack and size, events are discarded until either is satisfied. Slack is defined as the number of seemingly good contacts to read before accepting the stream as valid (if the threshold is reached in the middle of a frame the remainder of that frame is still discarded). The deactivation filter discards empty frames until hitting a deactivate slack. This time measured in frames. N-Trig devices emit 5-8 (observed so far) empty frames at the end of multitouch activity. Ignoring the first few enables us to safely and gracefully handle erroneous empty frames, thus preventing a change in the tool state which would otherwise result in things like broken lines or dragged objects being dropped in bad places. Also, now that devices with different logical densities have been observed, the aforementioned sizes are scaled from physical to logical scales once those scales are identified. Hopefully this should mean that a given threshold value means the same thing across differing devices. Signed-off-by: Rafi Rubin <rafi@seas.upenn.edu> Signed-off-by: Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz>
2010-05-05 02:20:15 +08:00
*/
nd->act_state = 0;
else if (nd->act_state <= nd->deactivate_slack)
HID: ntrig: add sensitivity and responsiveness support The old rejection size thresholds were too high for the 12" devices. Larger surfaces like the Dell Studio17 exacerbated the problem since contact size is reported on the same logical scale, making a contact look smaller to the larger screen. Since we have observed erroneous ghost events from these devices we still need to filter the incoming stream. The prior size threshold filter is still in place, though with defaults set to leave it off. This patch adds the two new classes of filters, those that reject live frames before activation, and those that reject empty frames until deactivation. These filters are expressed in terms of a simple state machine for clarity (I hope). The activation filter has two components, slack and size, events are discarded until either is satisfied. Slack is defined as the number of seemingly good contacts to read before accepting the stream as valid (if the threshold is reached in the middle of a frame the remainder of that frame is still discarded). The deactivation filter discards empty frames until hitting a deactivate slack. This time measured in frames. N-Trig devices emit 5-8 (observed so far) empty frames at the end of multitouch activity. Ignoring the first few enables us to safely and gracefully handle erroneous empty frames, thus preventing a change in the tool state which would otherwise result in things like broken lines or dragged objects being dropped in bad places. Also, now that devices with different logical densities have been observed, the aforementioned sizes are scaled from physical to logical scales once those scales are identified. Hopefully this should mean that a given threshold value means the same thing across differing devices. Signed-off-by: Rafi Rubin <rafi@seas.upenn.edu> Signed-off-by: Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz>
2010-05-05 02:20:15 +08:00
/*
* We've consumed the deactivation
* slack, time to deactivate and reset.
HID: ntrig: add sensitivity and responsiveness support The old rejection size thresholds were too high for the 12" devices. Larger surfaces like the Dell Studio17 exacerbated the problem since contact size is reported on the same logical scale, making a contact look smaller to the larger screen. Since we have observed erroneous ghost events from these devices we still need to filter the incoming stream. The prior size threshold filter is still in place, though with defaults set to leave it off. This patch adds the two new classes of filters, those that reject live frames before activation, and those that reject empty frames until deactivation. These filters are expressed in terms of a simple state machine for clarity (I hope). The activation filter has two components, slack and size, events are discarded until either is satisfied. Slack is defined as the number of seemingly good contacts to read before accepting the stream as valid (if the threshold is reached in the middle of a frame the remainder of that frame is still discarded). The deactivation filter discards empty frames until hitting a deactivate slack. This time measured in frames. N-Trig devices emit 5-8 (observed so far) empty frames at the end of multitouch activity. Ignoring the first few enables us to safely and gracefully handle erroneous empty frames, thus preventing a change in the tool state which would otherwise result in things like broken lines or dragged objects being dropped in bad places. Also, now that devices with different logical densities have been observed, the aforementioned sizes are scaled from physical to logical scales once those scales are identified. Hopefully this should mean that a given threshold value means the same thing across differing devices. Signed-off-by: Rafi Rubin <rafi@seas.upenn.edu> Signed-off-by: Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz>
2010-05-05 02:20:15 +08:00
*/
nd->act_state =
nd->activate_slack;
else { /* Move towards deactivation */
nd->act_state--;
break;
}
}
if (nd->first_contact_touch && nd->act_state <= 0) {
/*
* Check to see if we're ready to start
* emitting touch events.
*
* Note: activation slack will decrease over
* the course of the frame, and it will be
* inconsistent from the start to the end of
* the frame. However if the frame starts
* with slack, first_contact_touch will still
* be 0 and we will not get to this point.
*/
input_report_key(input, BTN_TOOL_DOUBLETAP, 1);
input_report_key(input, BTN_TOUCH, 1);
} else {
input_report_key(input, BTN_TOOL_DOUBLETAP, 0);
input_report_key(input, BTN_TOUCH, 0);
}
break;
default:
/* fall-back to the generic hidinput handling */
return 0;
}
not_claimed_input:
/* we have handled the hidinput part, now remains hiddev */
if ((hid->claimed & HID_CLAIMED_HIDDEV) && hid->hiddev_hid_event)
hid->hiddev_hid_event(hid, field, usage, value);
return 1;
}
static int ntrig_input_configured(struct hid_device *hid,
struct hid_input *hidinput)
{
struct input_dev *input = hidinput->input;
if (hidinput->report->maxfield < 1)
return 0;
switch (hidinput->report->field[0]->application) {
case HID_DG_PEN:
input->name = "N-Trig Pen";
break;
case HID_DG_TOUCHSCREEN:
/* These keys are redundant for fingers, clear them
* to prevent incorrect identification */
__clear_bit(BTN_TOOL_PEN, input->keybit);
__clear_bit(BTN_TOOL_FINGER, input->keybit);
__clear_bit(BTN_0, input->keybit);
__set_bit(BTN_TOOL_DOUBLETAP, input->keybit);
/*
* The physical touchscreen (single touch)
* input has a value for physical, whereas
* the multitouch only has logical input
* fields.
*/
input->name = (hidinput->report->field[0]->physical) ?
"N-Trig Touchscreen" :
"N-Trig MultiTouch";
break;
}
return 0;
}
static int ntrig_probe(struct hid_device *hdev, const struct hid_device_id *id)
{
int ret;
struct ntrig_data *nd;
struct hid_report *report;
if (id->driver_data)
hdev->quirks |= HID_QUIRK_MULTI_INPUT
| HID_QUIRK_NO_INIT_REPORTS;
nd = kmalloc(sizeof(struct ntrig_data), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!nd) {
hid_err(hdev, "cannot allocate N-Trig data\n");
return -ENOMEM;
}
nd->reading_mt = 0;
HID: ntrig: add sensitivity and responsiveness support The old rejection size thresholds were too high for the 12" devices. Larger surfaces like the Dell Studio17 exacerbated the problem since contact size is reported on the same logical scale, making a contact look smaller to the larger screen. Since we have observed erroneous ghost events from these devices we still need to filter the incoming stream. The prior size threshold filter is still in place, though with defaults set to leave it off. This patch adds the two new classes of filters, those that reject live frames before activation, and those that reject empty frames until deactivation. These filters are expressed in terms of a simple state machine for clarity (I hope). The activation filter has two components, slack and size, events are discarded until either is satisfied. Slack is defined as the number of seemingly good contacts to read before accepting the stream as valid (if the threshold is reached in the middle of a frame the remainder of that frame is still discarded). The deactivation filter discards empty frames until hitting a deactivate slack. This time measured in frames. N-Trig devices emit 5-8 (observed so far) empty frames at the end of multitouch activity. Ignoring the first few enables us to safely and gracefully handle erroneous empty frames, thus preventing a change in the tool state which would otherwise result in things like broken lines or dragged objects being dropped in bad places. Also, now that devices with different logical densities have been observed, the aforementioned sizes are scaled from physical to logical scales once those scales are identified. Hopefully this should mean that a given threshold value means the same thing across differing devices. Signed-off-by: Rafi Rubin <rafi@seas.upenn.edu> Signed-off-by: Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz>
2010-05-05 02:20:15 +08:00
nd->min_width = 0;
nd->min_height = 0;
nd->activate_slack = activate_slack;
nd->act_state = activate_slack;
nd->deactivate_slack = -deactivate_slack;
nd->sensor_logical_width = 1;
nd->sensor_logical_height = 1;
nd->sensor_physical_width = 1;
nd->sensor_physical_height = 1;
HID: ntrig: add sensitivity and responsiveness support The old rejection size thresholds were too high for the 12" devices. Larger surfaces like the Dell Studio17 exacerbated the problem since contact size is reported on the same logical scale, making a contact look smaller to the larger screen. Since we have observed erroneous ghost events from these devices we still need to filter the incoming stream. The prior size threshold filter is still in place, though with defaults set to leave it off. This patch adds the two new classes of filters, those that reject live frames before activation, and those that reject empty frames until deactivation. These filters are expressed in terms of a simple state machine for clarity (I hope). The activation filter has two components, slack and size, events are discarded until either is satisfied. Slack is defined as the number of seemingly good contacts to read before accepting the stream as valid (if the threshold is reached in the middle of a frame the remainder of that frame is still discarded). The deactivation filter discards empty frames until hitting a deactivate slack. This time measured in frames. N-Trig devices emit 5-8 (observed so far) empty frames at the end of multitouch activity. Ignoring the first few enables us to safely and gracefully handle erroneous empty frames, thus preventing a change in the tool state which would otherwise result in things like broken lines or dragged objects being dropped in bad places. Also, now that devices with different logical densities have been observed, the aforementioned sizes are scaled from physical to logical scales once those scales are identified. Hopefully this should mean that a given threshold value means the same thing across differing devices. Signed-off-by: Rafi Rubin <rafi@seas.upenn.edu> Signed-off-by: Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz>
2010-05-05 02:20:15 +08:00
hid_set_drvdata(hdev, nd);
ret = hid_parse(hdev);
if (ret) {
hid_err(hdev, "parse failed\n");
goto err_free;
}
ret = hid_hw_start(hdev, HID_CONNECT_DEFAULT & ~HID_CONNECT_FF);
if (ret) {
hid_err(hdev, "hw start failed\n");
goto err_free;
}
/* This is needed for devices with more recent firmware versions */
report = hdev->report_enum[HID_FEATURE_REPORT].report_id_hash[0x0a];
if (report) {
/* Let the device settle to ensure the wakeup message gets
* through */
hid_hw_wait(hdev);
hid_hw_request(hdev, report, HID_REQ_GET_REPORT);
/*
* Sanity check: if the current mode is invalid reset it to
* something reasonable.
*/
if (ntrig_get_mode(hdev) >= 4)
ntrig_set_mode(hdev, 3);
}
ntrig_report_version(hdev);
ret = sysfs_create_group(&hdev->dev.kobj,
&ntrig_attribute_group);
return 0;
err_free:
kfree(nd);
return ret;
}
static void ntrig_remove(struct hid_device *hdev)
{
sysfs_remove_group(&hdev->dev.kobj,
&ntrig_attribute_group);
hid_hw_stop(hdev);
kfree(hid_get_drvdata(hdev));
}
static const struct hid_device_id ntrig_devices[] = {
{ HID_USB_DEVICE(USB_VENDOR_ID_NTRIG, USB_DEVICE_ID_NTRIG_TOUCH_SCREEN),
.driver_data = NTRIG_DUPLICATE_USAGES },
{ HID_USB_DEVICE(USB_VENDOR_ID_NTRIG, USB_DEVICE_ID_NTRIG_TOUCH_SCREEN_1),
.driver_data = NTRIG_DUPLICATE_USAGES },
{ HID_USB_DEVICE(USB_VENDOR_ID_NTRIG, USB_DEVICE_ID_NTRIG_TOUCH_SCREEN_2),
.driver_data = NTRIG_DUPLICATE_USAGES },
{ HID_USB_DEVICE(USB_VENDOR_ID_NTRIG, USB_DEVICE_ID_NTRIG_TOUCH_SCREEN_3),
.driver_data = NTRIG_DUPLICATE_USAGES },
{ HID_USB_DEVICE(USB_VENDOR_ID_NTRIG, USB_DEVICE_ID_NTRIG_TOUCH_SCREEN_4),
.driver_data = NTRIG_DUPLICATE_USAGES },
{ HID_USB_DEVICE(USB_VENDOR_ID_NTRIG, USB_DEVICE_ID_NTRIG_TOUCH_SCREEN_5),
.driver_data = NTRIG_DUPLICATE_USAGES },
{ HID_USB_DEVICE(USB_VENDOR_ID_NTRIG, USB_DEVICE_ID_NTRIG_TOUCH_SCREEN_6),
.driver_data = NTRIG_DUPLICATE_USAGES },
{ HID_USB_DEVICE(USB_VENDOR_ID_NTRIG, USB_DEVICE_ID_NTRIG_TOUCH_SCREEN_7),
.driver_data = NTRIG_DUPLICATE_USAGES },
{ HID_USB_DEVICE(USB_VENDOR_ID_NTRIG, USB_DEVICE_ID_NTRIG_TOUCH_SCREEN_8),
.driver_data = NTRIG_DUPLICATE_USAGES },
{ HID_USB_DEVICE(USB_VENDOR_ID_NTRIG, USB_DEVICE_ID_NTRIG_TOUCH_SCREEN_9),
.driver_data = NTRIG_DUPLICATE_USAGES },
{ HID_USB_DEVICE(USB_VENDOR_ID_NTRIG, USB_DEVICE_ID_NTRIG_TOUCH_SCREEN_10),
.driver_data = NTRIG_DUPLICATE_USAGES },
{ HID_USB_DEVICE(USB_VENDOR_ID_NTRIG, USB_DEVICE_ID_NTRIG_TOUCH_SCREEN_11),
.driver_data = NTRIG_DUPLICATE_USAGES },
{ HID_USB_DEVICE(USB_VENDOR_ID_NTRIG, USB_DEVICE_ID_NTRIG_TOUCH_SCREEN_12),
.driver_data = NTRIG_DUPLICATE_USAGES },
{ HID_USB_DEVICE(USB_VENDOR_ID_NTRIG, USB_DEVICE_ID_NTRIG_TOUCH_SCREEN_13),
.driver_data = NTRIG_DUPLICATE_USAGES },
{ HID_USB_DEVICE(USB_VENDOR_ID_NTRIG, USB_DEVICE_ID_NTRIG_TOUCH_SCREEN_14),
.driver_data = NTRIG_DUPLICATE_USAGES },
{ HID_USB_DEVICE(USB_VENDOR_ID_NTRIG, USB_DEVICE_ID_NTRIG_TOUCH_SCREEN_15),
.driver_data = NTRIG_DUPLICATE_USAGES },
{ HID_USB_DEVICE(USB_VENDOR_ID_NTRIG, USB_DEVICE_ID_NTRIG_TOUCH_SCREEN_16),
.driver_data = NTRIG_DUPLICATE_USAGES },
{ HID_USB_DEVICE(USB_VENDOR_ID_NTRIG, USB_DEVICE_ID_NTRIG_TOUCH_SCREEN_17),
.driver_data = NTRIG_DUPLICATE_USAGES },
{ HID_USB_DEVICE(USB_VENDOR_ID_NTRIG, USB_DEVICE_ID_NTRIG_TOUCH_SCREEN_18),
.driver_data = NTRIG_DUPLICATE_USAGES },
{ }
};
MODULE_DEVICE_TABLE(hid, ntrig_devices);
static const struct hid_usage_id ntrig_grabbed_usages[] = {
{ HID_ANY_ID, HID_ANY_ID, HID_ANY_ID },
{ HID_ANY_ID - 1, HID_ANY_ID - 1, HID_ANY_ID - 1 }
};
static struct hid_driver ntrig_driver = {
.name = "ntrig",
.id_table = ntrig_devices,
.probe = ntrig_probe,
.remove = ntrig_remove,
.input_mapping = ntrig_input_mapping,
.input_mapped = ntrig_input_mapped,
.input_configured = ntrig_input_configured,
.usage_table = ntrig_grabbed_usages,
.event = ntrig_event,
};
module_hid_driver(ntrig_driver);
MODULE_LICENSE("GPL");