On Tue, Nov 22, 2016 at 11:35:06AM -0200, Mauro Carvalho Chehab wrote:
> Em Wed,  9 Nov 2016 16:13:35 +0000
> Sean Young <s...@mess.org> escreveu:
> 
> > The bits are sent in lsb first. Hardware decoders also send nec32
> > in this order (e.g. dib0700). This should be consistent, however
> > I have no way of knowing which order the LME2510 and Tivo keymaps
> > are (the only two kernel keymaps with NEC32).
> 
> Hmm.. the lme2510 receives the scancode directly. So, this
> patch shouldn't affect it. So, we're stuck with the Tivo IR.
> 
> On Tivo, only a few keys (with duplicated scancodes) don't start with
> 0xa10c. So, it *seems* that this is an address.
> 
> The best here would be to try to get a Tivo remote controller[1], and
> do some tests with a driver that has a hardware decoder capable of
> output NEC32 data, and some driver that receives raw IR data in
> order to be sure.
> 
> In any case, we need to patch both the NEC32 decoder and the table
> at the same time, to be 100% sure.
> 
> [1] or some universal remote controller that could emulate
> the Tivo's scan codes. I suspect that the IR in question is
> this one, but maybe Jarod could shed some light here:
>       
> https://www.amazon.com/TiVo-Remote-Control-Universal-Replacement/dp/B00DYYKA04

Been away from the game for a few years now, so there are a good number of
cobwebs in this section of my brain... I'm pretty sure I do have both a
remote and receiver on hand that would fit the bill here though. Is the
question primarily about what actually gets emitted by the TiVo remote?

-- 
Jarod Wilson
ja...@redhat.com

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