1*4882a593Smuzhiyun.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GFDL-1.1-no-invariants-or-later 2*4882a593Smuzhiyun 3*4882a593Smuzhiyun.. _lirc_dev_intro: 4*4882a593Smuzhiyun 5*4882a593Smuzhiyun************ 6*4882a593SmuzhiyunIntroduction 7*4882a593Smuzhiyun************ 8*4882a593Smuzhiyun 9*4882a593SmuzhiyunLIRC stands for Linux Infrared Remote Control. The LIRC device interface is 10*4882a593Smuzhiyuna bi-directional interface for transporting raw IR and decoded scancodes 11*4882a593Smuzhiyundata between userspace and kernelspace. Fundamentally, it is just a chardev 12*4882a593Smuzhiyun(/dev/lircX, for X = 0, 1, 2, ...), with a number of standard struct 13*4882a593Smuzhiyunfile_operations defined on it. With respect to transporting raw IR and 14*4882a593Smuzhiyundecoded scancodes to and fro, the essential fops are read, write and ioctl. 15*4882a593Smuzhiyun 16*4882a593SmuzhiyunIt is also possible to attach a BPF program to a LIRC device for decoding 17*4882a593Smuzhiyunraw IR into scancodes. 18*4882a593Smuzhiyun 19*4882a593SmuzhiyunExample dmesg output upon a driver registering w/LIRC: 20*4882a593Smuzhiyun 21*4882a593Smuzhiyun.. code-block:: none 22*4882a593Smuzhiyun 23*4882a593Smuzhiyun $ dmesg |grep lirc_dev 24*4882a593Smuzhiyun rc rc0: lirc_dev: driver mceusb registered at minor = 0, raw IR receiver, raw IR transmitter 25*4882a593Smuzhiyun 26*4882a593SmuzhiyunWhat you should see for a chardev: 27*4882a593Smuzhiyun 28*4882a593Smuzhiyun.. code-block:: none 29*4882a593Smuzhiyun 30*4882a593Smuzhiyun $ ls -l /dev/lirc* 31*4882a593Smuzhiyun crw-rw---- 1 root root 248, 0 Jul 2 22:20 /dev/lirc0 32*4882a593Smuzhiyun 33*4882a593SmuzhiyunNote that the package `v4l-utils <https://git.linuxtv.org/v4l-utils.git/>`_ 34*4882a593Smuzhiyuncontains tools for working with LIRC devices: 35*4882a593Smuzhiyun 36*4882a593Smuzhiyun - ir-ctl: can receive raw IR and transmit IR, as well as query LIRC 37*4882a593Smuzhiyun device features. 38*4882a593Smuzhiyun 39*4882a593Smuzhiyun - ir-keytable: can load keymaps; allows you to set IR kernel protocols; load 40*4882a593Smuzhiyun BPF IR decoders and test IR decoding. Some BPF IR decoders are also 41*4882a593Smuzhiyun provided. 42*4882a593Smuzhiyun 43*4882a593Smuzhiyun.. _lirc_modes: 44*4882a593Smuzhiyun 45*4882a593Smuzhiyun********** 46*4882a593SmuzhiyunLIRC modes 47*4882a593Smuzhiyun********** 48*4882a593Smuzhiyun 49*4882a593SmuzhiyunLIRC supports some modes of receiving and sending IR codes, as shown 50*4882a593Smuzhiyunon the following table. 51*4882a593Smuzhiyun 52*4882a593Smuzhiyun.. _lirc-mode-scancode: 53*4882a593Smuzhiyun.. _lirc-scancode-flag-toggle: 54*4882a593Smuzhiyun.. _lirc-scancode-flag-repeat: 55*4882a593Smuzhiyun 56*4882a593Smuzhiyun``LIRC_MODE_SCANCODE`` 57*4882a593Smuzhiyun 58*4882a593Smuzhiyun This mode is for both sending and receiving IR. 59*4882a593Smuzhiyun 60*4882a593Smuzhiyun For transmitting (aka sending), create a ``struct lirc_scancode`` with 61*4882a593Smuzhiyun the desired scancode set in the ``scancode`` member, :c:type:`rc_proto` 62*4882a593Smuzhiyun set to the :ref:`IR protocol <Remote_controllers_Protocols>`, and all other 63*4882a593Smuzhiyun members set to 0. Write this struct to the lirc device. 64*4882a593Smuzhiyun 65*4882a593Smuzhiyun For receiving, you read ``struct lirc_scancode`` from the LIRC device. 66*4882a593Smuzhiyun The ``scancode`` field is set to the received scancode and the 67*4882a593Smuzhiyun :ref:`IR protocol <Remote_controllers_Protocols>` is set in 68*4882a593Smuzhiyun :c:type:`rc_proto`. If the scancode maps to a valid key code, this is set 69*4882a593Smuzhiyun in the ``keycode`` field, else it is set to ``KEY_RESERVED``. 70*4882a593Smuzhiyun 71*4882a593Smuzhiyun The ``flags`` can have ``LIRC_SCANCODE_FLAG_TOGGLE`` set if the toggle 72*4882a593Smuzhiyun bit is set in protocols that support it (e.g. rc-5 and rc-6), or 73*4882a593Smuzhiyun ``LIRC_SCANCODE_FLAG_REPEAT`` for when a repeat is received for protocols 74*4882a593Smuzhiyun that support it (e.g. nec). 75*4882a593Smuzhiyun 76*4882a593Smuzhiyun In the Sanyo and NEC protocol, if you hold a button on remote, rather than 77*4882a593Smuzhiyun repeating the entire scancode, the remote sends a shorter message with 78*4882a593Smuzhiyun no scancode, which just means button is held, a "repeat". When this is 79*4882a593Smuzhiyun received, the ``LIRC_SCANCODE_FLAG_REPEAT`` is set and the scancode and 80*4882a593Smuzhiyun keycode is repeated. 81*4882a593Smuzhiyun 82*4882a593Smuzhiyun With nec, there is no way to distinguish "button hold" from "repeatedly 83*4882a593Smuzhiyun pressing the same button". The rc-5 and rc-6 protocols have a toggle bit. 84*4882a593Smuzhiyun When a button is released and pressed again, the toggle bit is inverted. 85*4882a593Smuzhiyun If the toggle bit is set, the ``LIRC_SCANCODE_FLAG_TOGGLE`` is set. 86*4882a593Smuzhiyun 87*4882a593Smuzhiyun The ``timestamp`` field is filled with the time nanoseconds 88*4882a593Smuzhiyun (in ``CLOCK_MONOTONIC``) when the scancode was decoded. 89*4882a593Smuzhiyun 90*4882a593Smuzhiyun.. _lirc-mode-mode2: 91*4882a593Smuzhiyun 92*4882a593Smuzhiyun``LIRC_MODE_MODE2`` 93*4882a593Smuzhiyun 94*4882a593Smuzhiyun The driver returns a sequence of pulse and space codes to userspace, 95*4882a593Smuzhiyun as a series of u32 values. 96*4882a593Smuzhiyun 97*4882a593Smuzhiyun This mode is used only for IR receive. 98*4882a593Smuzhiyun 99*4882a593Smuzhiyun The upper 8 bits determine the packet type, and the lower 24 bits 100*4882a593Smuzhiyun the payload. Use ``LIRC_VALUE()`` macro to get the payload, and 101*4882a593Smuzhiyun the macro ``LIRC_MODE2()`` will give you the type, which 102*4882a593Smuzhiyun is one of: 103*4882a593Smuzhiyun 104*4882a593Smuzhiyun ``LIRC_MODE2_PULSE`` 105*4882a593Smuzhiyun 106*4882a593Smuzhiyun Signifies the presence of IR in microseconds. 107*4882a593Smuzhiyun 108*4882a593Smuzhiyun ``LIRC_MODE2_SPACE`` 109*4882a593Smuzhiyun 110*4882a593Smuzhiyun Signifies absence of IR in microseconds. 111*4882a593Smuzhiyun 112*4882a593Smuzhiyun ``LIRC_MODE2_FREQUENCY`` 113*4882a593Smuzhiyun 114*4882a593Smuzhiyun If measurement of the carrier frequency was enabled with 115*4882a593Smuzhiyun :ref:`lirc_set_measure_carrier_mode` then this packet gives you 116*4882a593Smuzhiyun the carrier frequency in Hertz. 117*4882a593Smuzhiyun 118*4882a593Smuzhiyun ``LIRC_MODE2_TIMEOUT`` 119*4882a593Smuzhiyun 120*4882a593Smuzhiyun If timeout reports are enabled with 121*4882a593Smuzhiyun :ref:`lirc_set_rec_timeout_reports`, when the timeout set with 122*4882a593Smuzhiyun :ref:`lirc_set_rec_timeout` expires due to no IR being detected, 123*4882a593Smuzhiyun this packet will be sent, with the number of microseconds with 124*4882a593Smuzhiyun no IR. 125*4882a593Smuzhiyun 126*4882a593Smuzhiyun.. _lirc-mode-pulse: 127*4882a593Smuzhiyun 128*4882a593Smuzhiyun``LIRC_MODE_PULSE`` 129*4882a593Smuzhiyun 130*4882a593Smuzhiyun In pulse mode, a sequence of pulse/space integer values are written to the 131*4882a593Smuzhiyun lirc device using :ref:`lirc-write`. 132*4882a593Smuzhiyun 133*4882a593Smuzhiyun The values are alternating pulse and space lengths, in microseconds. The 134*4882a593Smuzhiyun first and last entry must be a pulse, so there must be an odd number 135*4882a593Smuzhiyun of entries. 136*4882a593Smuzhiyun 137*4882a593Smuzhiyun This mode is used only for IR send. 138*4882a593Smuzhiyun 139*4882a593Smuzhiyun******************** 140*4882a593SmuzhiyunBPF based IR decoder 141*4882a593Smuzhiyun******************** 142*4882a593Smuzhiyun 143*4882a593SmuzhiyunThe kernel has support for decoding the most common 144*4882a593Smuzhiyun:ref:`IR protocols <Remote_controllers_Protocols>`, but there 145*4882a593Smuzhiyunare many protocols which are not supported. To support these, it is possible 146*4882a593Smuzhiyunto load an BPF program which does the decoding. This can only be done on 147*4882a593SmuzhiyunLIRC devices which support reading raw IR. 148*4882a593Smuzhiyun 149*4882a593SmuzhiyunFirst, using the `bpf(2)`_ syscall with the ``BPF_LOAD_PROG`` argument, 150*4882a593Smuzhiyunprogram must be loaded of type ``BPF_PROG_TYPE_LIRC_MODE2``. Once attached 151*4882a593Smuzhiyunto the LIRC device, this program will be called for each pulse, space or 152*4882a593Smuzhiyuntimeout event on the LIRC device. The context for the BPF program is a 153*4882a593Smuzhiyunpointer to a unsigned int, which is a :ref:`LIRC_MODE_MODE2 <lirc-mode-mode2>` 154*4882a593Smuzhiyunvalue. When the program has decoded the scancode, it can be submitted using 155*4882a593Smuzhiyunthe BPF functions ``bpf_rc_keydown()`` or ``bpf_rc_repeat()``. Mouse or pointer 156*4882a593Smuzhiyunmovements can be reported using ``bpf_rc_pointer_rel()``. 157*4882a593Smuzhiyun 158*4882a593SmuzhiyunOnce you have the file descriptor for the ``BPF_PROG_TYPE_LIRC_MODE2`` BPF 159*4882a593Smuzhiyunprogram, it can be attached to the LIRC device using the `bpf(2)`_ syscall. 160*4882a593SmuzhiyunThe target must be the file descriptor for the LIRC device, and the 161*4882a593Smuzhiyunattach type must be ``BPF_LIRC_MODE2``. No more than 64 BPF programs can be 162*4882a593Smuzhiyunattached to a single LIRC device at a time. 163*4882a593Smuzhiyun 164*4882a593Smuzhiyun.. _bpf(2): http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/bpf.2.html 165