input: Add a function to add a keycode to the existing set
Most keyboards can be scanned to produce a list of the keycodes which are
depressed. With the i8042 keyboard this scanning is done internally and
only the processed results are returned.
In this case, when a key is pressed, a 'make' code is sent. When the key
is released a 'break' code is sent. This means that the driver needs to
keep track of which keys are pressed. It also means that any protocol error
can lead to stuck keys.
In order to support this type of keyboard, add a function when can be used
to provide a single keycode and either add it to the list of what is pressed
or remove it from the list. Then the normal input_send_keycodes() function
can be used to actually do the decoding work.
Add debugging to display the ASCII characters written to the input queue
also.
Signed-off-by: Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Bin Meng <bmeng.cn@gmail.com>
diff --git a/include/input.h b/include/input.h
index 71f3538..9942d6f 100644
--- a/include/input.h
+++ b/include/input.h
@@ -76,6 +76,26 @@
int input_send_keycodes(struct input_config *config, int keycode[], int count);
/**
+ * Add a new keycode to an existing list of keycodes
+ *
+ * This can be used to handle keyboards which do their own scanning. An
+ * internal list of depressed keys is maintained by the input library. Then
+ * this function is called to add a new key to the list (when a 'make code' is
+ * received), or remove a key (when a 'break code' is received).
+ *
+ * This function looks after maintenance of the list of active keys, and calls
+ * input_send_keycodes() with its updated list.
+ *
+ * @param config Input state
+ * @param new_keycode New keycode to add/remove
+ * @param release true if this key was released, false if depressed
+ * @return number of ascii characters sent, or 0 if none, or -1 for an
+ * internal error
+ */
+int input_add_keycode(struct input_config *config, int new_keycode,
+ bool release);
+
+/**
* Add a new key translation table to the input
*
* @param config Input state