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authorJoel Challis <git@zvecr.com>2019-11-02 21:20:03 +0000
committerGitHub <noreply@github.com>2019-11-02 21:20:03 +0000
commit4531cc874e1bb8602fede9dc038b692673521590 (patch)
tree8e0ca8571a0de21513e00829e638f998387af1b7 /docs/feature_backlight.md
parentff8d43694659b36ea5215a4183d43f58fc7f01e9 (diff)
downloadqmk_firmware-4531cc874e1bb8602fede9dc038b692673521590.tar.gz
qmk_firmware-4531cc874e1bb8602fede9dc038b692673521590.zip
Initial migration of software PWM backlight (#6709)
* Initial migration of software PWM backlight * First pass at backlight driver docs * Correct driver name in docs * Run backlight_task when using BACKLIGHT_PINS * Resolve backlight docs TODOs
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/feature_backlight.md')
-rw-r--r--docs/feature_backlight.md131
1 files changed, 87 insertions, 44 deletions
diff --git a/docs/feature_backlight.md b/docs/feature_backlight.md
index 6a2946fd6d..71f375594c 100644
--- a/docs/feature_backlight.md
+++ b/docs/feature_backlight.md
@@ -6,14 +6,16 @@ QMK is able to control the brightness of these LEDs by switching them on and off
The MCU can only supply so much current to its GPIO pins. Instead of powering the backlight directly from the MCU, the backlight pin is connected to a transistor or MOSFET that switches the power to the LEDs.
-## Usage
+## Driver configuration
Most keyboards have backlighting enabled by default if they support it, but if it is not working for you, check that your `rules.mk` includes the following:
-```make
-BACKLIGHT_ENABLE = yes
+```makefile
+BACKLIGHT_ENABLE = software # Valid driver values are 'yes,software,no'
```
+See below for help on individual drivers.
+
## Keycodes
Once enabled the following keycodes below can be used to change the backlight level.
@@ -27,8 +29,54 @@ Once enabled the following keycodes below can be used to change the backlight le
|`BL_DEC` |Decrease the backlight level |
|`BL_BRTG`|Toggle backlight breathing |
+## Backlight Functions
+
+|Function |Description |
+|----------|-----------------------------------------------------------|
+|`backlight_toggle()` |Turn the backlight on or off |
+|`backlight_enable()` |Turn the backlight on |
+|`backlight_disable()` |Turn the backlight off |
+|`backlight_step()` |Cycle through backlight levels |
+|`backlight_increase()` |Increase the backlight level |
+|`backlight_decrease()` |Decrease the backlight level |
+|`backlight_level(x)` |Sets the backlight level to specified level |
+|`get_backlight_level()` |Return the current backlight level |
+|`is_backlight_enabled()`|Return whether the backlight is currently on |
+
+### Backlight Breathing Functions
+
+|Function |Description |
+|----------|---------------------------------------------------|
+|`breathing_toggle()` |Turn the backlight breathing on or off |
+|`breathing_enable()` |Turns on backlight breathing |
+|`breathing_disable()` |Turns off backlight breathing |
+
+## Common Driver Configuration
+
+To change the behavior of the backlighting, `#define` these in your `config.h`:
+
+|Define |Default |Description |
+|---------------------|-------------|--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|
+|`BACKLIGHT_LEVELS` |`3` |The number of brightness levels (maximum 31 excluding off) |
+|`BACKLIGHT_CAPS_LOCK`|*Not defined*|Enable Caps Lock indicator using backlight (for keyboards without dedicated LED) |
+|`BACKLIGHT_BREATHING`|*Not defined*|Enable backlight breathing, if supported |
+|`BREATHING_PERIOD` |`6` |The length of one backlight "breath" in seconds |
+|`BACKLIGHT_ON_STATE` |`0` |The state of the backlight pin when the backlight is "on" - `1` for high, `0` for low |
+
+### Backlight On State
+
+Most backlight circuits are driven by an N-channel MOSFET or NPN transistor. This means that to turn the transistor *on* and light the LEDs, you must drive the backlight pin, connected to the gate or base, *high*.
+Sometimes, however, a P-channel MOSFET, or a PNP transistor is used. In this case, when the transistor is on, the pin is driven *low* instead.
+
+This functionality is configured at the keyboard level with the `BACKLIGHT_ON_STATE` define.
+
## AVR driver
+On AVR boards, the default driver currently sniffs the configuration to pick the best scenario. To enable it, add this to your rules.mk:
+```makefile
+BACKLIGHT_ENABLE = yes
+```
+
### Caveats
Hardware PWM is supported according to the following table:
@@ -63,22 +111,10 @@ When both timers are in use for Audio, the backlight PWM will not use a hardware
To change the behavior of the backlighting, `#define` these in your `config.h`:
-|Define |Default |Description |
-|---------------------|-------------|-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|
-|`BACKLIGHT_PIN` |`B7` |The pin that controls the LEDs. Unless you are designing your own keyboard, you shouldn't need to change this|
-|`BACKLIGHT_PINS` |*Not defined*|experimental: see below for more information |
-|`BACKLIGHT_LEVELS` |`3` |The number of brightness levels (maximum 31 excluding off) |
-|`BACKLIGHT_CAPS_LOCK`|*Not defined*|Enable Caps Lock indicator using backlight (for keyboards without dedicated LED) |
-|`BACKLIGHT_BREATHING`|*Not defined*|Enable backlight breathing, if supported |
-|`BREATHING_PERIOD` |`6` |The length of one backlight "breath" in seconds |
-|`BACKLIGHT_ON_STATE` |`0` |The state of the backlight pin when the backlight is "on" - `1` for high, `0` for low |
-
-### Backlight On State
-
-Most backlight circuits are driven by an N-channel MOSFET or NPN transistor. This means that to turn the transistor *on* and light the LEDs, you must drive the backlight pin, connected to the gate or base, *high*.
-Sometimes, however, a P-channel MOSFET, or a PNP transistor is used. In this case, when the transistor is on, the pin is driven *low* instead.
-
-This functionality is configured at the keyboard level with the `BACKLIGHT_ON_STATE` define.
+|Define |Default |Description |
+|---------------------|-------------|--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|
+|`BACKLIGHT_PIN` |`B7` |The pin that controls the LEDs. Unless you are designing your own keyboard, you shouldn't need to change this |
+|`BACKLIGHT_PINS` |*Not defined*|experimental: see below for more information |
### Multiple backlight pins
@@ -103,7 +139,7 @@ In this way `OCRxx` essentially controls the duty cycle of the LEDs, and thus th
The breathing effect is achieved by registering an interrupt handler for `TIMER1_OVF_vect` that is called whenever the counter resets, roughly 244 times per second.
In this handler, the value of an incrementing counter is mapped onto a precomputed brightness curve. To turn off breathing, the interrupt handler is simply disabled, and the brightness reset to the level stored in EEPROM.
-### Software PWM Implementation
+### Timer Assisted PWM Implementation
When `BACKLIGHT_PIN` is not set to a hardware backlight pin, QMK will use a hardware timer configured to trigger software interrupts. This time will count up to `ICRx` (by default `0xFFFF`) before resetting to 0.
When resetting to 0, the CPU will fire an OVF (overflow) interrupt that will turn the LEDs on, starting the duty cycle.
@@ -114,9 +150,14 @@ The breathing effect is the same as in the hardware PWM implementation.
## ARM Driver
+While still in its early stages, ARM backlight support aims to eventually have feature parity with AVR. To enable it, add this to your rules.mk:
+```makefile
+BACKLIGHT_ENABLE = yes
+```
+
### Caveats
-Currently only hardware PWM is supported, and does not provide automatic configuration.
+Currently only hardware PWM is supported, not timer assisted, and does not provide automatic configuration.
?> STMF072 support is being investigated.
@@ -130,30 +171,32 @@ To change the behavior of the backlighting, `#define` these in your `config.h`:
|`BACKLIGHT_PWM_DRIVER` |`PWMD4` |The PWM driver to use, see ST datasheets for pin to PWM timer mapping. Unless you are designing your own keyboard, you shouldn't need to change this|
|`BACKLIGHT_PWM_CHANNEL` |`3` |The PWM channel to use, see ST datasheets for pin to PWM channel mapping. Unless you are designing your own keyboard, you shouldn't need to change this|
|`BACKLIGHT_PAL_MODE` |`2` |The pin alternative function to use, see ST datasheets for pin AF mapping. Unless you are designing your own keyboard, you shouldn't need to change this|
-|`BACKLIGHT_LEVELS` |`3` |The number of brightness levels (maximum 31 excluding off) |
-|`BACKLIGHT_CAPS_LOCK` |*Not defined*|Enable Caps Lock indicator using backlight (for keyboards without dedicated LED) |
-|`BACKLIGHT_BREATHING` |*Not defined*|Enable backlight breathing, if supported |
-|`BREATHING_PERIOD` |`6` |The length of one backlight "breath" in seconds |
-## Backlight Functions
+## Software PWM Driver
-|Function |Description |
-|----------|-----------------------------------------------------------|
-|`backlight_toggle()` |Turn the backlight on or off |
-|`backlight_enable()` |Turn the backlight on |
-|`backlight_disable()` |Turn the backlight off |
-|`backlight_step()` |Cycle through backlight levels |
-|`backlight_increase()` |Increase the backlight level |
-|`backlight_decrease()` |Decrease the backlight level |
-|`backlight_level(x)` |Sets the backlight level, from 0 to |
-| |`BACKLIGHT_LEVELS` |
-|`get_backlight_level()` |Return the current backlight level |
-|`is_backlight_enabled()`|Return whether the backlight is currently on |
+Emulation of PWM while running other keyboard tasks, it offers maximum hardware compatibility without extra platform configuration. The tradeoff is the backlight might jitter when the keyboard is busy. To enable, add this to your rules.mk:
+```makefile
+BACKLIGHT_ENABLE = software
+```
-### Backlight Breathing Functions
+### Software PWM Configuration
+
+To change the behavior of the backlighting, `#define` these in your `config.h`:
+
+|Define |Default |Description |
+|-----------------|-------------|-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|
+|`BACKLIGHT_PIN` |`B7` |The pin that controls the LEDs. Unless you are designing your own keyboard, you shouldn't need to change this|
+|`BACKLIGHT_PINS` |*Not defined*|experimental: see below for more information |
-|Function |Description |
-|----------|----------------------------------------------------------|
-|`breathing_toggle()` |Turn the backlight breathing on or off |
-|`breathing_enable()` |Turns on backlight breathing |
-|`breathing_disable()` |Turns off backlight breathing |
+### Multiple backlight pins
+
+Most keyboards have only one backlight pin which control all backlight LEDs (especially if the backlight is connected to an hardware PWM pin).
+In software PWM, it is possible to define multiple backlight pins. All those pins will be turned on and off at the same time during the PWM duty cycle.
+This feature allows to set for instance the Caps Lock LED (or any other controllable LED) brightness at the same level as the other LEDs of the backlight. This is useful if you have mapped LCTRL in place of Caps Lock and you need the Caps Lock LED to be part of the backlight instead of being activated when Caps Lock is on.
+
+To activate multiple backlight pins, you need to add something like this to your user `config.h`:
+
+```c
+#undef BACKLIGHT_PIN
+#define BACKLIGHT_PINS { F5, B2 }
+```