Hi! > > Do you have an opinion on this? > > This is this problem with the Device Tree's scope of responsibility. > It is defined as a means for "describing the hardware", but often > this rule is abused by the properties that fall into "configuration" > category. E.g. default-state, retain-state-suspended from leds-gpio.txt > or linux-default-trigger from common LED bindings.
"retain-state-suspended" is actually hardware property. On PCs, (most?) LEDs will go off in suspend. On android phones, LEDs stay on while suspended. "linux-default-trigger" is actually kind-of hardware property, too. If LED has an icon near it (or on it), you want to use that LED in that meaning. (Thinkpad X60 has "wifi", "bluetooth", "numlock", "capslock", "hdd", "power", "battery", "ac" and "sleep" leds. Surely we should use them in that meaning?) Now, if someone has leds labeled "user 1..user 4" and uses "linux-default-trigger" there, that is kind of "more interesting". "default-state" is similar (subset of "linux-default-trigger"); you don't want power LED to go off during kernel boot... Pavel -- (english) http://www.livejournal.com/~pavelmachek (cesky, pictures) http://atrey.karlin.mff.cuni.cz/~pavel/picture/horses/blog.html
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