Let me put my unsolicited €0.02 in. My mindset is pretty hackerish as well, but 
I'm also an engineer thinking in efficiency terms. The raspi is what it is, and 
it is a nice building block for many jobs. If I wanted to build a vdr, I'd 
either let the raspi run permanently (given its low energy demand) or get a 
Pico PSU powered mini itx board with an embedded CPU, like one of the low-power 
(4.3-10W) celerons, and let it wake up and shut down when needed. 

But that's just me.  




Am 12. April 2023 08:00:27 MESZ schrieb "Marko Mäkelä" <marko.mak...@iki.fi>:
>Tue, Apr 11, 2023 at 05:41:24PM +0200, Joerg Riechardt wrote:
>> https://github.com/j1rie/IRMP_STM32
>
>Thank you. This is a user space solution, with the benefit that it is not 
>limited to Linux. I think that it would be good to mention this at 
>https://www.linuxtv.org/vdrwiki/index.php/Raspberry_Pi and perhaps also add 
>some pictures.
>
>That page currently mentions a minimal IR receiver for the Raspberry Pi: a 
>3-pin IR receiver module connected to the GPIO header. Because the Linux 
>kernel already includes a number of IR protocol drivers, there is no need to 
>install any user-space lircd driver (or input plugin) if you are using a 
>recent enough version of VDR.
>
>       Marko
>
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>vdr@linuxtv.org
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