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koreader/frontend/device/kindle/powerd.lua
2019-08-01 18:45:30 +02:00

110 lines
3.8 KiB
Lua

local BasePowerD = require("device/generic/powerd")
-- liblipclua, see require below
local KindlePowerD = BasePowerD:new{
fl_min = 0, fl_max = 24,
lipc_handle = nil,
}
function KindlePowerD:init()
local haslipc, lipc = pcall(require, "liblipclua")
if haslipc and lipc then
self.lipc_handle = lipc.init("com.github.koreader.kindlepowerd")
end
end
function KindlePowerD:frontlightIntensityHW()
if not self.device:hasFrontlight() then return 0 end
-- Kindle stock software does not use intensity file directly, so we need to read from its
-- lipc property first.
if self.lipc_handle ~= nil then
return self.lipc_handle:get_int_property("com.lab126.powerd", "flIntensity")
else
-- NOTE: This fallback is of dubious use, as it will NOT match our expected [fl_min..fl_max] range,
-- each model has a specific curve.
return self:_readFLIntensity()
end
end
function KindlePowerD:setIntensityHW(intensity)
-- NOTE: This means we *require* a working lipc handle to set the FL:
-- it knows what the UI values should map to for the specific hardware much better than us.
if self.lipc_handle ~= nil then
-- NOTE: We want to bypass setIntensity's shenanigans and simply restore the light as-is
self.lipc_handle:set_int_property(
"com.lab126.powerd", "flIntensity", intensity)
end
if intensity == 0 then
-- NOTE: when intensity is 0, we want to *really* kill the light, so do it manually
-- (asking lipc to set it to 0 would in fact set it to 1 on most Kindles).
-- We do *both* to make the fl restore on resume less jarring on devices where lipc 0 != off.
os.execute("echo -n ".. intensity .." > " .. self.fl_intensity_file)
end
end
function KindlePowerD:getCapacityHW()
if self.lipc_handle ~= nil then
return self.lipc_handle:get_int_property("com.lab126.powerd", "battLevel")
elseif self.batt_capacity_file then
return self:read_int_file(self.batt_capacity_file)
else
local std_out = io.popen("gasgauge-info -c 2>/dev/null", "r")
if std_out then
local result = std_out:read("*all"):match("%d+")
std_out:close()
return result and tonumber(result) or 0
else
return 0
end
end
end
function KindlePowerD:isChargingHW()
local is_charging
if self.lipc_handle ~= nil then
is_charging = self.lipc_handle:get_int_property("com.lab126.powerd", "isCharging")
else
is_charging = self:read_int_file(self.is_charging_file)
end
return is_charging == 1
end
function KindlePowerD:__gc()
if self.lipc_handle then
self.lipc_handle:close()
self.lipc_handle = nil
end
end
function KindlePowerD:_readFLIntensity()
return self:read_int_file(self.fl_intensity_file)
end
function KindlePowerD:afterResume()
if not self.device:hasFrontlight() then
return
end
local UIManager = require("ui/uimanager")
if self:isFrontlightOn() then
-- The Kindle framework should turn the front light back on automatically.
-- The following statement ensures consistency of intensity, but should basically always be redundant,
-- since we set intensity via lipc and not sysfs ;).
-- NOTE: This is race-y, and we want to *lose* the race, hence the use of the scheduler (c.f., #4392)
UIManager:tickAfterNext(function() self:turnOnFrontlightHW() end)
else
-- But in the off case, we *do* use sysfs, so this one actually matters.
UIManager:tickAfterNext(function() self:turnOffFrontlightHW() end)
end
end
function KindlePowerD:toggleSuspend()
if self.lipc_handle then
self.lipc_handle:set_int_property("com.lab126.powerd", "powerButton", 1)
else
os.execute("powerd_test -p")
end
end
return KindlePowerD