Difference between revisions of "Talk:Tp smapi"

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(tp_smapi 0.30 with kernel 2.6.20?)
(tp_smapi 0.30 with kernel 2.6.20?: Problem is limited to 64bit kernels)
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:Works here with 2.6.21-rc1 (didn't try 2.6.20) without problems --[[User:Zhenech|Zhenech]] 14:32, 22 February 2007 (CET)
 
:Works here with 2.6.21-rc1 (didn't try 2.6.20) without problems --[[User:Zhenech|Zhenech]] 14:32, 22 February 2007 (CET)
 +
 +
:I have this problem when compiling for x86_64 too. It seems to be limited to 64bit kernels though. I've notified the author of tp_smapi about it, so lets hope a solution is found soon. --[[User:Esmil|Esmil]] 20:08, 6 March 2007 (CET)

Revision as of 20:08, 6 March 2007

Feedback

Great, great work! Really! This completely rocks. I just stopped my battery from charging at 77% and restarted charging a bit later, no problems whatsoever. BTW, this is on kernel 2.6.14.3.

--spiney 21:25, 5 Dec 2005 (CET)


None of the fuctions is working on my T40, kernel 2.6.14-mm2.

--lammic, 2005.12.05

Works for me on a T41 running 2.6.12-10-686 (Ubuntu 5.10).

--berndtnm, 2005.12.06

Including stop_charge_thresh? That one seems to be missing on the T42p.

--Thinker 00:46, 7 Dec 2005 (CET)


tp_smapi works just fine on an R52 with Ubuntu Breezy stock kernel.

--Micampe 12:52, 7 Dec 2005 (CET)


To set the thresholds for starting and stopping battery charging (in percent of current capacity):

current really? That'd be weird, I'd expect it to be percent of total capacity.

--Micampe 14:39, 7 Dec 2005 (CET)

"Current full charge capacity", as opposed to "current remaining capacity" or "designed full charge capacity"...

--Thinker 15:05, 7 Dec 2005 (CET)


Battery features don't work with my T41p. I can't check this with windows. Can anybody try these features?

-- Nils, 7 Dec 2005


Nils, does cdrom_speed work for you on the T41p? Could you provide the details requested in the README (dmesg etc.)?

--Thinker 21:57, 7 Dec 2005 (CET)


CDRom Speed seems to work. (I see no warnings, but I have to do a speed test.) Now, I've send all outputs to the email-address in the readme.

-- Nils, 8 Dec 2005


All the features except the stop_charge_thresh seem to work here on a t42p. One note, the start_charge_thresh seems to really be stop_charge_thresh. Ie, If I set that to lower than my current battery %, it will never charge, and if I set it to 100 the battery charges all the way.

--Nirik 16 Dec 2005


Nirik, "all the features" as of which version? For example, do the force_discharge{1,2} in tp_smapi 0.12 also work for you? See the table in the article page. About start_charge, that's odd. Can you send me a log of what you did, what was the result a what was the dmesg output for each operation?

--Thinker 14:16, 16 Dec 2005 (CET)


System T40p:

fairlight:/sys/devices/platform/smapi/BAT0# echo 1 > /sys/devices/platform/smapi/BAT0/force_discharge1
fairlight:/sys/devices/platform/smapi/BAT0# echo 1 > /sys/devices/platform/smapi/BAT0/force_discharge2
fairlight:/sys/devices/platform/smapi/BAT0# dmesg   
tp_smapi: req_in: BX=2118 CX=100 DI=0 SI=0
tp_smapi: req_out: AX=8680 BX=2118 CX=100 DX=b2 DI=0 SI=0 ret=-38
tp_smapi: SMAPI error: Function is not supported by SMAPI BIOS (func=2118)
tp_smapi: cannot get force_discharge1 of battery 0: Function is not supported by SMAPI BIOS
tp_smapi: req_in: BX=2104 CX=100 DI=0 SI=0
tp_smapi: req_out: AX=80 BX=2103 CX=100 DX=78 DI=0 SI=0 ret=0
tp_smapi: cannot get force_discharge2 of battery 0: bx=2103

So it seems force_discharge1 is not supported at all. But force_discharge2? By the way, i think wiki is a _very_ good idea for collecting information, but not for discussion. I would prefer a maillinglist. We can use sourceforge.

--StefanSchmidt

force_discharge2 is indicating a real error condition (bx=2103 which has bit 0x02 on), but I have no idea what the error is or how to fix it. Sorry. If you can trigger this function under Windows and have SoftICE or equivalent, maybe it can be worked out.

About the Wiki discussion, I'm not sure a mailing list is justified yet, but you can use the linux-thinkpad list or the e-mail address in the README.

--Thinker 21:42, 16 Dec 2005 (CET)

OK, then i use linux-thinkpad to get more people involved. I'am away the next weeks, but i hope to find some time to hacking on tp_smapi.

--User:StefanSchmidt


Someone reported cd_speed works on T42 but on mine, it doesn't: this is 2378DXU

--User:eBug 22:55, 17 Dec 2005 (CET)


eBug, how does it fail? If the file doesn't exist, it means you didn't enable PROVIDE_CD_SPEED (see the README). If it does exist, can you provide the dmesg output when you read an write to the file?

--Thinker 11:53, 18 Dec 2005 (CET)


To confirm: tp_smapi 0.13 works with hdaps module loaded on T41 (2373-8RG). However, force_discharge*, inhibit_charge_minutes, start_charge_thresh, stop_charge_thresh don't seem to be implemented on this model.

--LJSBrokken 21 Dec 2005


tp_smapi version 0.13 with T23 (2647-3QG) (I have dual batteries)...

None of the functions which make any changes work...

# cd /sys/devices/platform/smapi && cat BAT*/* > /dev/null
cat: BAT0/force_discharge1: Function not implemented
cat: BAT0/force_discharge2: Input/output error
cat: BAT0/inhibit_charge_minutes: Function not implemented
cat: BAT0/start_charge_thresh: Function not implemented
cat: BAT0/stop_charge_thresh: Function not implemented
cat: BAT1/force_discharge1: Function not implemented
cat: BAT1/force_discharge2: Input/output error
cat: BAT1/inhibit_charge_minutes: Function not implemented
cat: BAT1/start_charge_thresh: Function not implemented
cat: BAT1/stop_charge_thresh: Function not implemented

However, all the battery status information is available, and functions appear for both BAT0 and BAT1, regardless of when the UltraBay battery was inserted or ejected- this is very useful, it is the only way I can monitor my UltraBay battery unless it was present on boot.

--SystemParadox 21:51, 4 Jan 2006 (CET)


SystemParadox, what's the dmesg output produced by "cat BAT0/force_discharge2"?

--Thinker 22:02, 4 Jan 2006 (CET)


After the upgrade to 0.14 (with kernel 2.6.15, using the patch) I can't use inhibit_charge and start/stop_charge_thresh any longer (getting an input/output error), the dmesg debug output when cat-ing those three files:

tp_smapi: tp_smapi 0.14 loading...
tp_smapi: successfully loaded (smapi_port=0xb2).
tp_smapi: req_in: BX=2114 CX=100 DI=0 SI=0
tp_smapi: req_out: AX=ea210080 BX=ec192114 CX=c18d0700 DX=f7cc00b2 DI=f7f50000 SI=c18d0000 ret=-5
tp_smapi: SMAPI error: Unknown error code (func=2114)
tp_smapi: cannot get inhibit charge of battery 0: Unknown error code
tp_smapi: req_in: BX=2116 CX=100 DI=0 SI=0
tp_smapi: req_out: AX=c03b0080 BX=c18d2116 CX=c0160328 DX=ec7600b2 DI=ec760000 SI=a0810000 ret=-5
tp_smapi: SMAPI error: Unknown error code (func=2116)
tp_smapi: cannot get start thresh of battery 0: Unknown error code
tp_smapi: req_in: BX=211a CX=100 DI=0 SI=0
tp_smapi: req_out: AX=c03b0080 BX=c18d211a CX=c016032c DX=eb4500b2 DI=eb450000 SI=241e0000 ret=-5
tp_smapi: SMAPI error: Unknown error code (func=211a)
tp_smapi: cannot get stop thresh of battery 0: Unknown error code

--spiney 08:12, 10 Jan 2006 (CET)


Oops, the transition to 32-bit SMAPI calls was broken. Fixed in 0.15. Thanks for the quick report!

--Thinker 12:10, 10 Jan 2006 (CET)


Yep, 0.15 works again. Quick response, bravo! :)

--spiney 12:23, 10 Jan 2006 (CET)


On a T22, nothing seems to work with 0.16.

[output] when doing cat *

I am using an Ultrabay2000 battery, so it would be really usefull to be able to control that

--nusse


Nusse: Not even the extended battery status? That does work on T23. About the control features, I believe they're not available on the T23; did you have any kind of (dis)charge control under WindowS?

--Thinker 20:59, 11 Jan 2006 (CET)


I don't really know what 'extended battery' status means, but here an example:

$ cat current_*                                                     /sys/devices/platform/smapi/BAT1
cat: current_avg: Input/output error
cat: current_now: Input/output error

This is what happens when i cat any file in this directory and also in ../BAT1 :(

--nusse Thu Jan 12 22:07:26 CET 2006


Nusse: Yes, that's what I meant. What's the # dmesg output generated by these commands?

--Thinker 00:27, 13 Jan 2006 (CET)



Thinker: I attached some link to my first comment but it seems to be down and the link was wrong anyway.

thinkpad controller read(%hx,%hx): failed writing to 0x1610
thinkpad controller read(%hx,%hx): failed writing to 0x1610
thinkpad controller read(%hx,%hx): failed writing to 0x1610
thinkpad controller read(%hx,%hx): failed writing to 0x1610
thinkpad controller read(%hx,%hx): failed writing to 0x1610
thinkpad controller read(%hx,%hx): failed writing to 0x1610
thinkpad controller read(%hx,%hx): failed writing to 0x1610
thinkpad controller read(%hx,%hx): failed writing to 0x1610
thinkpad controller read(%hx,%hx): failed writing to 0x1610
thinkpad controller read(%hx,%hx): failed writing to 0x1610
thinkpad controller read(%hx,%hx): failed writing to 0x1610
thinkpad controller read(%hx,%hx): failed writing to 0x1610
thinkpad controller read(%hx,%hx): failed writing to 0x1610
thinkpad controller read(%hx,%hx): failed writing to 0x1610
thinkpad controller read(%hx,%hx): failed writing to 0x1610
tp_smapi: SMAPI error: Function is not supported by SMAPI BIOS (func=2118)
tp_smapi: cannot get force_discharge of battery 0: Function is not supported by SMAPI BIOS
tp_smapi: SMAPI error: Function is not supported by SMAPI BIOS (func=2114)
tp_smapi: cannot get inhibit charge of battery 0: Function is not supported by SMAPI BIOS
thinkpad controller read(%hx,%hx): failed writing to 0x1610
thinkpad controller read(%hx,%hx): failed writing to 0x1610
thinkpad controller read(%hx,%hx): failed writing to 0x1610
thinkpad controller read(%hx,%hx): failed writing to 0x1610
thinkpad controller read(%hx,%hx): failed writing to 0x1610
thinkpad controller read(%hx,%hx): failed writing to 0x1610
thinkpad controller read(%hx,%hx): failed writing to 0x1610
thinkpad controller read(%hx,%hx): failed writing to 0x1610
thinkpad controller read(%hx,%hx): failed writing to 0x1610
thinkpad controller read(%hx,%hx): failed writing to 0x1610
thinkpad controller read(%hx,%hx): failed writing to 0x1610
thinkpad controller read(%hx,%hx): failed writing to 0x1610
thinkpad controller read(%hx,%hx): failed writing to 0x1610
thinkpad controller read(%hx,%hx): failed writing to 0x1610
thinkpad controller read(%hx,%hx): failed writing to 0x1610
tp_smapi: SMAPI error: Function is not supported by SMAPI BIOS (func=2116)
tp_smapi: cannot get start thresh of battery 0: Function is not supported by SMAPI BIOS
thinkpad controller read(%hx,%hx): failed writing to 0x1610
thinkpad controller read(%hx,%hx): failed writing to 0x1610
tp_smapi: SMAPI error: Function is not supported by SMAPI BIOS (func=211a)
tp_smapi: cannot get stop thresh of battery 0: Function is not supported by SMAPI BIOS
thinkpad controller read(%hx,%hx): failed writing to 0x1610
thinkpad controller read(%hx,%hx): failed writing to 0x1610

--nusse Fri Jan 13 14:35:57 CET 2006


Nusse: Thanks; but there's not much we can do. Maybe the T22 uses a different interface, or doesn't have that feature.

--Thinker 23:23, 15 January 2006 (CET)


Thinker: Is there anything I can do to check if the interface is different? Changing 0x1610 to some random number?

Is there a chance to get it by try and error?

--nusse Mon Jan 16 19:10:12 CET 2006


0x1610 is the number of an IO port it writes to, so changing it to a random number will pretty much guarantee a system crash...

The only way I can think of for figuring out the T22 interface is to see what the Windows software does.

--Thinker 19:47, 16 January 2006 (CET)


I have a R40 (2722-B3G), and several things don't work with 0.16 on linux 2.6.15.1:

tp_smapi: SMAPI error: Function is not supported by SMAPI BIOS (func=2118)
tp_smapi: cannot get force_discharge of battery 0: Function is not supported by SMAPI BIOS
tp_smapi: SMAPI error: Function is not supported by SMAPI BIOS (func=2114)
tp_smapi: cannot get inhibit charge of battery 0: Function is not supported by SMAPI BIOS
tp_smapi: SMAPI error: Function is not supported by SMAPI BIOS (func=2116)
tp_smapi: cannot get start thresh of battery 0: Function is not supported by SMAPI BIOS
tp_smapi: SMAPI error: Function is not supported by SMAPI BIOS (func=211a)
tp_smapi: cannot get stop thresh of battery 0: Function is not supported by SMAPI BIOS

Don't know about Windows, haven't booted it for weeks nor used it for years...

--Wonka 19:00, 19 January 2006 (CET)


Wonka: do the other features (i.e., extended battery status) work on your R40?

--Thinker 20:30, 20 January 2006 (CET)


--lisch 16:14, 11 April 2006 (CDT)

On my X32, with two batteries, I get just what I expect. Looks good:

$ cat BAT?/* > /dev/null
cat: BAT0/force_discharge: Function not implemented
cat: BAT0/inhibit_charge_minutes: Function not implemented
cat: BAT0/start_charge_thresh: Function not implemented
cat: BAT0/stop_charge_thresh: Function not implemented
cat: BAT1/force_discharge: Function not implemented
cat: BAT1/inhibit_charge_minutes: Function not implemented
cat: BAT1/start_charge_thresh: Function not implemented
cat: BAT1/stop_charge_thresh: Function not implemented
$

Changing the CD speed when the CD is being accessed will hang your computer

I don't have this problem on my T40p. CDROM is mounted and file on CD is opened. Change speed do not hang my system.

-- Stefan Schmidt


An open file looks fine if you're not reading/writing at that point. But my T43 does hangs on this:

# dd if=/dev/scd0 of=/dev/null &
# echo 1 > /sys/devices/platform/smapi/cdrom_speed

--Thinker 16:41, 7 Dec 2005 (CET)


OK, sorry. I was to fast. My system hangs on this commands, too. :(

-- Stefan Schmidt

Works well. Great.

T42 2373-8zh. Working :cdrom_speed and start_charge_thresh. Untest : inhibit_charge_minutes.

-- Haifeng Chen

cdrom_speed works on my T40.

-- lammic, 2005.12.09

Kernel Patch?

Hello Thinker,

would it be possible to provide the SMAPI support as kernel patch as well? Something along the lines of: (0.12 against 2.6.15-rc5)

(deleted, see below for how to create a patch file)

Deleted the tp_smapi.c file at the end, out of obvious reasons, and I'm not sure about the placement in the ACPI section, OTOH there it would be found easily next to ibm_acpi.

Providing a patch would help when recompiling the kernel often, I hate recompiling external modules every time (even got me a kernel-upgrade script to do most of it automatically). But of course it's up to you. :)

--spiney 09:52, 16 Dec 2005 (CET)


I'll be glad to add this, but I don't want to go through additional manual steps in the release process (there are already quite a few). Can you add a "make patch" functionality to the Makefile, or something of the sort, to automatically generate a full patch (including tp_smapi.c) against current kernel sources?

Also, this shouldn't be under drivers/acpi, since it doesn't use ACPI at all (that's why I didn't make it a patch to ibm_acpi). I think the right place is drivers/firmware, like the dell_rbu driver for Dell laptops.

BTW, the convention for kernel patches is to start them once level higher:

 diff -Nurp kernel-2.6.14-vanilla kernel-2.6.14-patched

--Thinker 17:12, 16 Dec 2005 (CET)


Of course it's from the wrong level, as usual I was just lazy/inattentive. And at one point I'll remember who likes what patch format, promise. ;)

A patch target as in "create a new file holding a correct diff to current kernel source" would be rather difficult, since line numbers might change etc., but applying the patch should be straighforward with a bit of sed. Of course I could just do that, create a patch with the diff command and then apply the new patch file in reverse. ;)

--spiney 18:36, 16 Dec 2005 (CET)


If it does that on a local copy (no changes the original kernel tree) and cleans up after itself, that's fine with me. :-)

--Thinker 18:50, 16 Dec 2005 (CET)


Ok, here's a shell script that creates the patch, feel free to use it under the terms of the GPL. For example call it from your Makefile with the patch target: (I didn't want to put all the script into the Makefile, since the rules about escaping in Makefiles, well, escape me ;)

#!/bin/bash

KDIR=/lib/modules/$(uname -r)/build
FDIR=drivers/firmware
OPWD=$(pwd)

TMPDIR=$(mktemp -d)
cd $TMPDIR

mkdir -p a/$FDIR
cp $KDIR/$FDIR/{Kconfig,Makefile} a/$FDIR
cp -r a b
sed -i -e '/endmenu/i\
config IBM_SMAPI\
        tristate "IBM ThinkPad SMAPI Support"\
        depends on X86\
        ---help---\
        This adds SMAPI support on IBM ThinkPads, mostly used for battery\
        charge control. For more information about this driver see\
        <http://www.thinkwiki.org/wiki/SMAPI_support_for_Linux> .\
\
        If you have an IBM ThinkPad laptop, say Y or M here.\
' b/$FDIR/Kconfig
sed -i -e '$a\
obj-$(CONFIG_IBM_SMAPI)            += tp_smapi.o' b/$FDIR/Makefile
cp $OPWD/tp_smapi.c b/$FDIR
diff -Nurp a b > $OPWD/tp_smapi-$(uname -r).patch
rm -r a b
cd $OPWD

BTW, GeSHi-based syntax-highlighting would be great...

--spiney 19:28, 16 Dec 2005 (CET)


Ah, neat sed foo. How about this escapade, then?

What's the sed spell needed to replace the Makefile's

VER  := 0.13

with auto-parsing of

#define TP_VERSION "0.13"

from tp_smapi.c?

--Thinker 20:37, 16 Dec 2005 (CET)


Hmm, something like

VERFROMC=$(sed -ne 's/^#define TP_VERSION "\(.*\)"/\1/gp' tp_smapi.c)
sed -i -e "s/^VER := .*$/VER := $VERFROMC/" Makefile

should do (untested, from the top of my head, maybe the temporary variable isn't even necessary?). And neat Makefile wizardry, at one point I'll learn the syntax.

--spiney 20:44, 16 Dec 2005 (CET)


Makefile escaping is horrible, keep avoiding it... Anyway, the updated make patch seems to do the right thing.

--Thinker 21:36, 16 Dec 2005 (CET)


Small documentation request: just needed to create a patch for the not-yet-installed 2.6.16-rc2, which is no problem with

make KSRC=/path/to/linux-2.6.16-rc2 KVER=2.6.16-rc2 patch

but I guess it would be a good addition to the README file. :)

--spiney 10:48, 8 February 2006 (CET)


Right, added (to next release).

--Thinker 13:40, 8 February 2006 (CET)


Installation questions

Amazing! I've loaded this module in my T43 which is running SuSE 10 with the kernel of 2.6.13-15. I have three points to share:

1. The battery control part seems to work but has a minor problem. I set the stop_charge_threshold to 70, but the battery stops charging at 55%. Don't know why and how to fix it. :P

2. I don't have the cd speed control function. Here is what I have under /sys/devices/platform/smapi/:

./ ../ ac_connected BAT0/ BAT1/ bus@ driver@ power/

3. SuSE 10 doesn't have the necessary C files under .../drivers/hwmon/, I copied them from a 2.6.14.5 kernel source. Maybe it causes the two problems above. :(

When I have time, I'll install the new kernel to see if the problems are gone and report the result.

--68.51.153.96 04:31, 2 Jan 2006 (CET)


1. It should stop charging at 70, but will only start charging when remaining capacity has dipped below start_charge_thresh.

2. See the note about PROVIDE_CD_SPEED.

3. That's should be needed only for patching the HDAPS driver in order to make it compatible with tp_smapi. If your kernel (which version is it?) doens't inlude the HDAPS driver anyway, you don't need to patch....

--Thinker 09:28, 2 Jan 2006 (CET)


Thanks Thinker.

1. I discharged and recharged the battery again. This time, it stops at 68% percent, which is pretty good.

2. I missed the NOTE in README, for I just followed this wiki. :P

3. My kernel version is 2.6.13-15.

By the way, I just got this T43 whose model number is 266896U. I feel that the noise of the fan is much louder than my previous T21. I think it is so since it has a CPU with bigger power but am wondering if other T43 has the same big noise?

--Tyne 00:14, 3 Jan 2006 (CET)


The note about PROVIDE_CD_SPEED is also in the Wiki...

About the T43 fan noise: yes, this is a very common (and annoying) problem. See Problem_with_fan_noise and our ACPI fan control script, and send Lenovo a complaint in hope they'll fix this at the firmware level.

--Thinker 08:48, 3 Jan 2006 (CET)


Formatting

Wyrfel, that was some heavy editing you did... I agree with most changes (including the saner color choice). I did like those HINT floats, though - they keep the hints from interrupting the flow of text too much, and this particular text needs any help it can get.

--Thinker 17:04, 3 Jan 2006 (CET)


Hei Thinker,

I'll look into it again. I felt that the floating HINTs were tearing the text apart too much. Maybe we could fix it by placing the clear marks somewhere else.

Wyrfel 18:46, 3 Jan 2006 (CET)


Dual battery operation with tp_smapi

It looks like it is working quite fine with tp_smapi-0.13 and 2.6.15 (it may also work with other versions, but those are the ones I have running right now).

The juicy details:

# cd /sys/devices/platform/smapi/ # cat ac_connected

0 # cat BAT{0,1}/state discharging idle

# echo 1 > BAT1/force_discharge1 # cat BAT{0,1}/state idle discharging

Checking capacity values shows that the corrent battery is being depleted.

And remember, before you yank the CD/DVD drive out, issue:

# cat eject > /proc/acpi/ibm/bay


Great! Which ThinkPad model is it? Could you also # cat /sys/devices/platform/smapi/BAT{0,1}/force_discharge2 and report the dmesg output (after # make load or # modprobe tp_smapi debug=1)?

About the eject command, I think it should be possible to do that automatically when the Ultrabay handle is ejected, via acpid.

--Thinker 15:45, 10 Jan 2006 (CET)


It's a T43 (2669). cat'ing force_discharge2 gives me an I/O error and I see

tp_smapi: cannot get force_discharge2 of battery 0: bx=2103

tp_smapi: cannot get force_discharge2 of battery 1: bx=2103

I find these errors irrelevant from the user's point of view, though.

Indeed, it should be possible to automatise the "eject" command. I should also be noted that once a force_discharge1 is set, it will NOT unset automatically, event when the AC is plugged back in. An obvious fix is to fiddle with the appropriate ACPI event to force_discharge1 back to 0 for all batteries once the AC is attached.


Thanks, this eliminates the last situation I imagined force_discharge2 might work. The next tp_smapi version will remove force_discharge2 and rename force_discharge1 to force_discharge.

If you write those ACPI scripts, it would be great if you put them on the Wiki.

--Thinker 16:31, 10 Jan 2006 (CET)


Well, I still do not preclude the fact that force_discharge2 may be useful for something else on other models.

The ACPI scripts (as well as an installation guide) is underway. It may take a while, though.


See the new article: Using an Ultrabay battery.

--Thinker 17:05, 10 Jan 2006 (CET)


Hei Thinker,

i just renamed the new page. Will adjust your links later on. Keeping the redirect page until that's done. Please set any new links you create to the new page (the pages of the individual UltraBay batteries should contain a pointer).

On a sidenote: I would like to split the SMAPI support under Linux page into a tp_smapi driver page, just listing the features, and a "How to use tp_smapi" page. I would also split the thinkpad/tpctl page off that again. Any objections?

Wyrfel 20:42, 10 Jan 2006 (CET)


ACK about the page rename (the old one did sound a bit out of line to my ear, but I couldn't spot why...).

About the splitting tp_smapi vs. thinkpad/tpctl, no objection.

About splitting tp_smapi: currently most of that section doubles as both a spec and a HOWTO, which I think is a convenient and concise way to describe things (hey, it must be right, the Perl docs do it!). I'm not sure there's much benefit in duplicating that. Perhaps we should wait for a critical mass of additional lore to accumulate?

--Thinker 21:04, 10 Jan 2006 (CET)


Ok, i agree on the latter.

Wyrfel 00:57, 11 Jan 2006 (CET)


Article name capitalization

Wikimedia autocapitalizes the article name upon submit. How do I concince Wikimedia that I really want a lowercase "t"? The underline is probably too much too ask...

--Thinker 11:03, 11 Jan 2006 (CET)


Impossible, according to Wikipedia:Canonicalization.

--Thinker 12:04, 11 Jan 2006 (CET)


Status Table

For at least the T series i think that charge control was not supported prior to the T42, hardware/BIOS side. Perhaps "N/A" flags would be better here?

I also created {{Isup}} style templates for status, they just include images, like Template:Isup. Not emotional about it, just wanted to let you know in case you want to use them.

Third and last...would it possibly be better to make the table headers more human readable like i.e. "lower charge threshold" or something like that instead of "start_charge_thresh"?

Wyrfel 19:21, 11 Jan 2006 (CET)


About "N/A", sure, if we get reliable data about the hardware capabilities. Alas, most negative reports were just "it doesn't work", and in some cases gave contradictory information (SMAPI interface says a function is unsupported but user says it works under Windows).

About Working.png and friends, they're very cute, but I think think they're harder to parse visually and would add some clutter to an already dense table.

The table headers are just the names of the control files - that's important to keep, sine it's the most natural lookup key. Adding friendly description would be great, if we can fit them in (not everyone has an SXGA+ display...). I tried and failed.

--Thinker 20:38, 11 Jan 2006 (CET)


I have a T41p and the windows tools still don't offer me battery management, even though it's quite a while since the T42 came out.

I'm ok with the rest.

Wyrfel 22:35, 11 Jan 2006 (CET)


For the X40, I can report success using the stop_charge_thresh feature with BIOS v2.03 (1UETC8WW) and Embedded Controller Program v1.60 (1UHTB0WW).

Peterco 12:07, 28 February 2006 (CET)


Z60t

Tested on Z60t. No errors using cat. Setting thresholds works. Status and capacity queries work. --Alon 21:44, 4 May 2006 (CEST)

Problem setting thresholds with X40

My X40, kernel 2.6.16 and tp_smapi 0.20. I try to set the thresholds to 40% and 90% using:

# echo 90 > stop_charge_thresh
# echo 40 > start_charge_thresh

which should work, and the kernel reports from dmesg:

tp_smapi: successfully loaded (smapi_port=0xb2).
tp_smapi: battery 0: changed start threshold to 85(+1)
tp_smapi: battery 0: changed stop threshold to 90
tp_smapi: battery 0: changed start threshold to 39(+1)

but, on confirmation here is what happens:

# cat stop_charge_thresh
90
# cat start_charge_thresh
91

Any clues as to why start doesn't keep? Or why its always at 1 above stop_charge_thresh?

--Xmm0 15:01, 17 May 2006 (CEST)


Is it any different if you first set start_charge_thresh and then stop_charge_thresh?

Can you please load tp_smapi with module option "debug=1" and report the dmesg output genereated by each command?

--Thinker 16:31, 17 May 2006 (CEST)


Battery daemon feedback requested

I am writing a battery-management daemon to control charging and discharging BAT0 and BAT1 in accordance with usage patterns that extend Li-Ion and Li-Py battery life.

By default, the machine fully discharges BAT1 first, and it is said that deep-cycling all the time dramatically shortens their lifetime.

My Z61t is the test machine, and it is configured with two batteries, the stock 4-cell, and an "Advanced Ultrabay", which about doubles the runtime of the machine.

Currently there are two "modes" of the daemon:

Discharging mode.

 * look at the "remaining_percent" values for both batteries
 * if one is more than THRESHOLD percent less than the other one, 
      force discharge from the battery with more capacity left
 (the current value for THRESHOLD is 10%)

I believe the preceeding will prevent either battery from being deep-cycled disproportionately.

Charging mode. I am less sure what the "right" algorithm is here. The following is a proposal.

 * look at the "remaining_percent" values for both batteries
 * if one is more than THRESHOLD percent less than the other one, 
      force charging to the battery with less capacity left
 * honor pre-set values in stop_charge_thresh and start_charge_thresh

I would like to get feedback in the form of "better" algorithms or requests for this daemon.

--Zak 19:03, 12 September 2006 (CEST)

It sounds like your algorithm will indeed minimize wear on both batteries. A side benefit is that charging will toggle between the batteries, which may help keep them cooler while charging and thus prolong their life. OTOH, if you plan to occasionally swap the UltraBay battery for other devices, you may want to fully charge the system battery (up to stop_charge_thresh) first.

--Thinker 22:57, 12 September 2006 (CEST)


I have noticed that when force_discharge is set and the batteries switch, the gnome battery monitoring applet gets totally confused about remaining runtime. Besides being a nuisance, this could presumably cause premature emergency shutduwn.

I have also noticed that the reported remaining runtimes vary greatly between acpi, the applet, and /proc/acpi/battery/*/state

--Zak 21:46, 14 September 2006 (CEST)

What do you mean by "acpi" vs. "/proc/acpi/battery/*/state"?

The most accurate readout is probably /sys/devices/platform/smapi/BAT0/remaining_running_time, but I don't think any applet uses that yet.

--Thinker 12:07, 15 September 2006 (CEST)

By acpi, I meant the output of the acpi (1) command. I'll get some comparative numbers later and post them here.

--Zak 20:37, 15 September 2006 (CEST)

Odd, my version of /usr/bin/acpi doesn't report remaining time, just percent (which is the same as /sys/devices/platform/smapi/BAT0/remaining_percent).

--Thinker 21:32, 15 September 2006 (CEST)

I have been running batteryd for a while with good results. I will upload it here shortly.

I disabled the preferential charging mode, and only control discharging.

--Zak 23:15, 14 November 2006 (CET)

http://demigod.org/~zak/src/batteryd.cc

--Zak 20:18, 5 December 2006 (CET)

Instructions for X60 with Bios 1.11 under Debian Etch

Could someone please provide step-by-step instructions of how to make this work with Debian? What have I to do after apt-get install kernel-patch-tpsmapi? Thank you!

--PeterBursch 21:39, 15 September 2006 (CEST)

tp_smapi 0.30 with kernel 2.6.20?

T60:~/tp_smapi-0.30# uname -rm
2.6.20 x86_64

T60:~/tp_smapi-0.30# make load
if lsmod | grep -q '^hdaps '; then rmmod hdaps; fi
if lsmod | grep -q '^tp_smapi '; then rmmod tp_smapi; fi
if lsmod | grep -q '^thinkpad_ec '; then rmmod thinkpad_ec; fi
if lsmod | grep -q '^tp_base '; then rmmod tp_base; fi  # old thinkpad_ec
make -C /lib/modules/2.6.20/source M=/root/tp_smapi-0.30 O=/lib/modules/2.6.20/build modules
make[1]: Entering directory `/usr/src/linux-2.6.20'
  CC [M]  /root/tp_smapi-0.30/thinkpad_ec.o
/root/tp_smapi-0.30/thinkpad_ec.c:83: warning: type defaults to 'int' in declaration of 'DECLARE_MUTEX'
/root/tp_smapi-0.30/thinkpad_ec.c:83: warning: parameter names (without types) in function declaration
/root/tp_smapi-0.30/thinkpad_ec.c: In function 'thinkpad_ec_lock':
/root/tp_smapi-0.30/thinkpad_ec.c:94: warning: implicit declaration of function 'down_interruptible'
/root/tp_smapi-0.30/thinkpad_ec.c:94: error: 'thinkpad_ec_mutex' undeclared (first use in this function)
/root/tp_smapi-0.30/thinkpad_ec.c:94: error: (Each undeclared identifier is reported only once
/root/tp_smapi-0.30/thinkpad_ec.c:94: error: for each function it appears in.)
/root/tp_smapi-0.30/thinkpad_ec.c: In function 'thinkpad_ec_try_lock':
/root/tp_smapi-0.30/thinkpad_ec.c:109: warning: implicit declaration of function 'down_trylock'
/root/tp_smapi-0.30/thinkpad_ec.c:109: error: 'thinkpad_ec_mutex' undeclared (first use in this function)
/root/tp_smapi-0.30/thinkpad_ec.c: In function 'thinkpad_ec_unlock':
/root/tp_smapi-0.30/thinkpad_ec.c:122: warning: implicit declaration of function 'up'
/root/tp_smapi-0.30/thinkpad_ec.c:122: error: 'thinkpad_ec_mutex' undeclared (first use in this function)
make[3]: *** [/root/tp_smapi-0.30/thinkpad_ec.o] Error 1
make[2]: *** [_module_/root/tp_smapi-0.30] Error 2
make[1]: *** [modules] Error 2
make[1]: Leaving directory `/usr/src/linux-2.6.20'
make: *** [modules] Error 2
Works here with 2.6.21-rc1 (didn't try 2.6.20) without problems --Zhenech 14:32, 22 February 2007 (CET)
I have this problem when compiling for x86_64 too. It seems to be limited to 64bit kernels though. I've notified the author of tp_smapi about it, so lets hope a solution is found soon. --Esmil 20:08, 6 March 2007 (CET)