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r: 250513
b: refs/heads/master
c: 71c6d18
h: refs/heads/master
i:
  250511: 3f52c26
v: v3
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Éric Piel authored and Dmitry Torokhov committed May 17, 2011
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2 changes: 1 addition & 1 deletion [refs]
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---
refs/heads/master: 215ef98677c3e43cefd2159d76543f368a7f87b9
refs/heads/master: 71c6d18859ccb137343017ec995b76d9f62bd9b0
123 changes: 100 additions & 23 deletions trunk/Documentation/input/elantech.txt
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Expand Up @@ -34,7 +34,8 @@ Contents
Currently the Linux Elantech touchpad driver is aware of two different
hardware versions unimaginatively called version 1 and version 2. Version 1
is found in "older" laptops and uses 4 bytes per packet. Version 2 seems to
be introduced with the EeePC and uses 6 bytes per packet.
be introduced with the EeePC and uses 6 bytes per packet, and provides
additional features such as position of two fingers, and width of the touch.

The driver tries to support both hardware versions and should be compatible
with the Xorg Synaptics touchpad driver and its graphical configuration
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -94,18 +95,44 @@ Currently the Linux Elantech touchpad driver provides two extra knobs under
can check these bits and reject any packet that appears corrupted. Using
this knob you can bypass that check.

It is not known yet whether hardware version 2 provides the same parity
bits. Hence checking is disabled by default. Currently even turning it on
will do nothing.

Hardware version 2 does not provide the same parity bits. Only some basic
data consistency checking can be done. For now checking is disabled by
default. Currently even turning it on will do nothing.

/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////

3. Differentiating hardware versions
=================================

To detect the hardware version, read the version number as param[0].param[1].param[2]

4 bytes version: (after the arrow is the name given in the Dell-provided driver)
02.00.22 => EF013
02.06.00 => EF019
In the wild, there appear to be more versions, such as 00.01.64, 01.00.21,
02.00.00, 02.00.04, 02.00.06.

6 bytes:
02.00.30 => EF113
02.08.00 => EF023
02.08.XX => EF123
02.0B.00 => EF215
04.01.XX => Scroll_EF051
04.02.XX => EF051
In the wild, there appear to be more versions, such as 04.03.01, 04.04.11. There
appears to be almost no difference, except for EF113, which does not report
pressure/width and has different data consistency checks.

Probably all the versions with param[0] <= 01 can be considered as
4 bytes/firmware 1. The versions < 02.08.00, with the exception of 02.00.30, as
4 bytes/firmware 2. Everything >= 02.08.00 can be considered as 6 bytes.

/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////

3. Hardware version 1
4. Hardware version 1
==================

3.1 Registers
4.1 Registers
~~~~~~~~~

By echoing a hexadecimal value to a register it contents can be altered.
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -168,7 +195,7 @@ For example:
smart edge activation area width?


3.2 Native relative mode 4 byte packet format
4.2 Native relative mode 4 byte packet format
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

byte 0:
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -226,9 +253,13 @@ byte 3:
positive = down


3.3 Native absolute mode 4 byte packet format
4.3 Native absolute mode 4 byte packet format
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

EF013 and EF019 have a special behaviour (due to a bug in the firmware?), and
when 1 finger is touching, the first 2 position reports must be discarded.
This counting is reset whenever a different number of fingers is reported.

byte 0:
firmware version 1.x:

Expand Down Expand Up @@ -279,11 +310,11 @@ byte 3:
/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////


4. Hardware version 2
5. Hardware version 2
==================


4.1 Registers
5.1 Registers
~~~~~~~~~

By echoing a hexadecimal value to a register it contents can be altered.
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -316,41 +347,82 @@ For example:
0x7f = never i.e. tap again to release)


4.2 Native absolute mode 6 byte packet format
5.2 Native absolute mode 6 byte packet format
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

4.2.1 One finger touch
5.2.1 Parity checking and packet re-synchronization
There is no parity checking, however some consistency checks can be performed.

For instance for EF113:
SA1= packet[0];
A1 = packet[1];
B1 = packet[2];
SB1= packet[3];
C1 = packet[4];
D1 = packet[5];
if( (((SA1 & 0x3C) != 0x3C) && ((SA1 & 0xC0) != 0x80)) || // check Byte 1
(((SA1 & 0x0C) != 0x0C) && ((SA1 & 0xC0) == 0x80)) || // check Byte 1 (one finger pressed)
(((SA1 & 0xC0) != 0x80) && (( A1 & 0xF0) != 0x00)) || // check Byte 2
(((SB1 & 0x3E) != 0x38) && ((SA1 & 0xC0) != 0x80)) || // check Byte 4
(((SB1 & 0x0E) != 0x08) && ((SA1 & 0xC0) == 0x80)) || // check Byte 4 (one finger pressed)
(((SA1 & 0xC0) != 0x80) && (( C1 & 0xF0) != 0x00)) ) // check Byte 5
// error detected

For all the other ones, there are just a few constant bits:
if( ((packet[0] & 0x0C) != 0x04) ||
((packet[3] & 0x0f) != 0x02) )
// error detected


In case an error is detected, all the packets are shifted by one (and packet[0] is discarded).

5.2.1 One/Three finger touch
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

byte 0:

bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
n1 n0 . . . . R L
n1 n0 w3 w2 . . R L

L, R = 1 when Left, Right mouse button pressed
n1..n0 = numbers of fingers on touchpad

byte 1:

bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
. . . . . x10 x9 x8
p7 p6 p5 p4 . x10 x9 x8

byte 2:

bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
x7 x6 x5 x4 x4 x2 x1 x0
x7 x6 x5 x4 x3 x2 x1 x0

x10..x0 = absolute x value (horizontal)

byte 3:

bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
. . . . . . . .
n4 vf w1 w0 . . . b2

n4 = set if more than 3 fingers (only in 3 fingers mode)
vf = a kind of flag ? (only on EF123, 0 when finger is over one
of the buttons, 1 otherwise)
w3..w0 = width of the finger touch (not EF113)
b2 (on EF113 only, 0 otherwise), b2.R.L indicates one button pressed:
0 = none
1 = Left
2 = Right
3 = Middle (Left and Right)
4 = Forward
5 = Back
6 = Another one
7 = Another one

byte 4:

bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
. . . . . . y9 y8
p3 p1 p2 p0 . . y9 y8

p7..p0 = pressure (not EF113)

byte 5:

Expand All @@ -363,6 +435,11 @@ byte 5:
4.2.2 Two finger touch
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Note that the two pairs of coordinates are not exactly the coordinates of the
two fingers, but only the pair of the lower-left and upper-right coordinates.
So the actual fingers might be situated on the other diagonal of the square
defined by these two points.

byte 0:

bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
Expand All @@ -376,14 +453,14 @@ byte 1:
bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
ax7 ax6 ax5 ax4 ax3 ax2 ax1 ax0

ax8..ax0 = first finger absolute x value
ax8..ax0 = lower-left finger absolute x value

byte 2:

bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
ay7 ay6 ay5 ay4 ay3 ay2 ay1 ay0

ay8..ay0 = first finger absolute y value
ay8..ay0 = lower-left finger absolute y value

byte 3:

Expand All @@ -395,11 +472,11 @@ byte 4:
bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
bx7 bx6 bx5 bx4 bx3 bx2 bx1 bx0

bx8..bx0 = second finger absolute x value
bx8..bx0 = upper-right finger absolute x value

byte 5:

bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
by7 by8 by5 by4 by3 by2 by1 by0

by8..by0 = second finger absolute y value
by8..by0 = upper-right finger absolute y value

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