| Linux ACPI Custom Control Method How To |
| ======================================= |
| |
| Written by Zhang Rui <rui.zhang@intel.com> |
| |
| |
| Linux supports customizing ACPI control methods at runtime. |
| |
| Users can use this to |
| 1. override an existing method which may not work correctly, |
| or just for debugging purposes. |
| 2. insert a completely new method in order to create a missing |
| method such as _OFF, _ON, _STA, _INI, etc. |
| For these cases, it is far simpler to dynamically install a single |
| control method rather than override the entire DSDT, because kernel |
| rebuild/reboot is not needed and test result can be got in minutes. |
| |
| Note: Only ACPI METHOD can be overridden, any other object types like |
| "Device", "OperationRegion", are not recognized. Methods |
| declared inside scope operators are also not supported. |
| Note: The same ACPI control method can be overridden for many times, |
| and it's always the latest one that used by Linux/kernel. |
| Note: To get the ACPI debug object output (Store (AAAA, Debug)), |
| please run "echo 1 > /sys/module/acpi/parameters/aml_debug_output". |
| |
| 1. override an existing method |
| a) get the ACPI table via ACPI sysfs I/F. e.g. to get the DSDT, |
| just run "cat /sys/firmware/acpi/tables/DSDT > /tmp/dsdt.dat" |
| b) disassemble the table by running "iasl -d dsdt.dat". |
| c) rewrite the ASL code of the method and save it in a new file, |
| d) package the new file (psr.asl) to an ACPI table format. |
| Here is an example of a customized \_SB._AC._PSR method, |
| |
| DefinitionBlock ("", "SSDT", 1, "", "", 0x20080715) |
| { |
| Method (\_SB_.AC._PSR, 0, NotSerialized) |
| { |
| Store ("In AC _PSR", Debug) |
| Return (ACON) |
| } |
| } |
| Note that the full pathname of the method in ACPI namespace |
| should be used. |
| e) assemble the file to generate the AML code of the method. |
| e.g. "iasl -vw 6084 psr.asl" (psr.aml is generated as a result) |
| If parameter "-vw 6084" is not supported by your iASL compiler, |
| please try a newer version. |
| f) mount debugfs by "mount -t debugfs none /sys/kernel/debug" |
| g) override the old method via the debugfs by running |
| "cat /tmp/psr.aml > /sys/kernel/debug/acpi/custom_method" |
| |
| 2. insert a new method |
| This is easier than overriding an existing method. |
| We just need to create the ASL code of the method we want to |
| insert and then follow the step c) ~ g) in section 1. |
| |
| 3. undo your changes |
| The "undo" operation is not supported for a new inserted method |
| right now, i.e. we can not remove a method currently. |
| For an overridden method, in order to undo your changes, please |
| save a copy of the method original ASL code in step c) section 1, |
| and redo step c) ~ g) to override the method with the original one. |
| |
| |
| Note: We can use a kernel with multiple custom ACPI method running, |
| But each individual write to debugfs can implement a SINGLE |
| method override. i.e. if we want to insert/override multiple |
| ACPI methods, we need to redo step c) ~ g) for multiple times. |
| |
| Note: Be aware that root can mis-use this driver to modify arbitrary |
| memory and gain additional rights, if root's privileges got |
| restricted (for example if root is not allowed to load additional |
| modules after boot). |