On Sunday 17 June 2007 16:24, Thomas Renninger wrote:
> Define standardized HIDs ...

> Index: linux-2.6.22-rc4/include/acpi/acpi_drivers.h
> ===================================================================
> --- linux-2.6.22-rc4.orig/include/acpi/acpi_drivers.h
> +++ linux-2.6.22-rc4/include/acpi/acpi_drivers.h
> @@ -34,16 +34,33 @@
>  #define ACPI_BUS_COMPONENT           0x00010000
>  #define ACPI_SYSTEM_COMPONENT                0x02000000
>  
> -/* _HID definitions */
> +/*
> +  _HID definitions
> +  HIDs starting with 'X' are self defined here and are used for devices where
> +  a HID does not exist in spec.
> +  HIDs must conform to (ACPI spec - 6.1.4):
>  
> -#define ACPI_POWER_HID                       "power_resource"
> +  Numeric 32-bit compressed EISA type ID are not supported (never seen one as
> +  an ACPI HID?)
> +
> +  A valid PNP ID must be of the form AAA#### where A is an uppercase letter
> +  and # is a hex digit.
> +  A valid ACPI ID must be of the form ACPI#### where # is a hex digit.
> +
> +  and our self-defined: XAAA#### where A is an uppercase letter and # is a 
> hex
> +  digit.

What was the criteria for inventing the XAAA#### format?
It doesn't comply with the PNP standard format above, since
it starts with four letters instead of three.

I don't think that "XVID0001" will be more meaningful than "video"
when seen in sysfs...

> +*/
> +
> +#define ACPI_POWER_HID                       "XPWR0001"
>  #define ACPI_PROCESSOR_HID           "ACPI0007"
> -#define ACPI_SYSTEM_HID                      "acpi_system"
> -#define ACPI_THERMAL_HID             "thermal"
> -#define ACPI_BUTTON_HID_POWERF               "button_power"
> -#define ACPI_BUTTON_HID_SLEEPF               "button_sleep"
> -#define ACPI_VIDEO_HID                       "video"
> -#define ACPI_BAY_HID                 "bay"
> +#define ACPI_SYSTEM_HID                      "XSYS0001"
> +#define ACPI_THERMAL_HID             "XTHM0001"
> +#define ACPI_BUTTON_HID_POWERF               "XPBT0001"
> +#define ACPI_BUTTON_HID_SLEEPF               "XSBT0001"
> +#define ACPI_VIDEO_HID                       "XVID0001"
> +#define ACPI_BAY_HID                 "XBAY0001"
> +

If the criteria is to stay within an 8 character id length,
I'd rather spell a word with capital letters, and stick
in 0's where we don't need more letters:

POWER000
SYSTEM00
THERMAL0
PWRBTN00
SLEEPBTN
VIDEO000
DRIVEBAY

Or when we discussed this before, we though about not conflicting
with a standard (or vendor standard) name by becoming the Linux vendor --
say using  the "LNX" prefix, and trying to spell something useful
in the remaining 5 characters. eg.

LNXPOWER
LNXSYSTM
LNXTHERM
LNXSLPBN
LNXPWRBN
LNXVIDEO
LNXIOBAY

-Len
-
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