Hi Stephen,
On Friday 24 August 2012 21:20:15 Stephen Warren wrote:
From: Stephen Warren swarren@nvidia.com
Both the schematics and practical testing show that the HP detect GPIO is high when the headphones are plugged in. Hence, the snd_soc_jack_gpio should not specify to invert the signal.
Signed-off-by: Stephen Warren swarren@nvidia.com Cc: Marc Dietrich marvin24@gmx.de Cc: Leon Romanovsky leon@leon.nu Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org # v3.4 v3.5
I tested it and evtest gives back the right stuff with your patch. Can't test more because I have no headphone/mic here (I just inserted a screwdriver, grr). On 3.1 kernels, we also have no pin inversion, so unless Leon or Andrey (cc'ed) have different opinions, this can go through. Just give them a week...
Thanks!
Marc
sound/soc/tegra/tegra_alc5632.c | 1 - 1 file changed, 1 deletion(-)
diff --git a/sound/soc/tegra/tegra_alc5632.c b/sound/soc/tegra/tegra_alc5632.c index e463529..76cb1b3 100644 --- a/sound/soc/tegra/tegra_alc5632.c +++ b/sound/soc/tegra/tegra_alc5632.c @@ -89,7 +89,6 @@ static struct snd_soc_jack_gpio tegra_alc5632_hp_jack_gpio = { .name = "Headset detection", .report = SND_JACK_HEADSET, .debounce_time = 150,
- .invert = 1,
};
static const struct snd_soc_dapm_widget tegra_alc5632_dapm_widgets[] = {