> On March 31, 2013, 4:14 p.m., Àlex Fiestas wrote: > > To be honest I don't like adding yet another configuration option by > > default, a configuration option that apparently is needed only in some > > systems. > > > > There is no other alternative than this? > > Danny Baumann wrote: > Well, I don't see any. I tried to approach this at the kernel level > first, but the kernel people rejected the idea. But I don't see it as a big > problem either: E.g. Windows (which isn't an example of overconfigurability) > has a dimmed brightness setting as well. While it's required for my laptop, I > think it can be useful for other people as well. When I hit the problem, at > first I couldn't believe this isn't configurable either ;) > > BTW, one thing I'm not yet certain about is whether the option should be > 'dim to' or 'dim by'. Currently it's the former, but the latter might it make > more obvious that the value is relative to the non-dimmed brightness. > > Sebastian Kügler wrote: > Just set the minimum brightness to 1 instead of 0. We're generally not > adding config options for this kind of things. > > Danny Baumann wrote: > That doesn't help though, as with intel-backlight 1 is still way too low > to be visible. I think the value corresponding to acpi value 0 is about 5%. > At this point, I think, I would alter the acpi behaviour again. Also, if the > user had set the brightness to 0 before for some reason (e.g. because he's > working in the evening), 'dim display' would suddenly make the display more > bright. > In general, the problem is the different backlight interfaces just behave > differently, which is why I think this problem can't be solved with a > hardcoded value as long as it's not possible to detect the used sysfs file > (which isn't the case as long as the used X driver provides a backlight > interface via Xrandr). > > > Sebastian Kügler wrote: > The "dim can brighten up" is a different problem that needs a different > solution, it's unrelated here. > > I don't see how a config option solves this problem. Even with a config > option, we still don't know what the default should be. Also, users are not > going to look for such an option (which maybe says enough about the option > itself). Users are going to hit the brightness slider when the brightness is > too low, so 1 actually does make sense. > > Danny Baumann wrote: > A sane value for the default would be 'retain current behaviour' (that > is: dim by 100%). > Is there evidence for the 'users are not going to look for such an > option' assertion? I know for a fact that I _did_ search for that option > (until I looked up in the source that it's nowhere to be found). Surely this > one sample doesn't represent the KDE user base - but do you have any > representative data, especially given that the KDE user base in general > doesn't have a problem with a slightly-higher-than-usual amount of settings > (which is also evident in the very dialog we're talking about: are there that > many users who look for e.g. a highly configurable 'run script on power > status change' option?) > > I'm also not sure what you mean by 'Users are going to hit the brightness > slider when the brightness is too low', as we're talking about the > dimmed-down case after all, where the user was idle for the configured amount > of time. But as I wrote above, neither 0 nor 1 works for any user who is not > using the acpi_video backlight controls for whatever reason (e.g. because > it's buggy, or simply not present at all). I'm open for suggestions on how to > fix this problem without config option (even if I think the option makes > sense), but just raising the hardcoded value from 0 to 1 definitely does not > help. > > Sebastian Kügler wrote: > What would probably make sense it to use 10% or 1 (whichever is more) as > lowest value. We do know the max value, so we can make sure it's low, but not > zero. This should be tried. > > How does raising it from 0 to 1 not help, btw? > > Danny Baumann wrote: > Raising to 10% would help in my case, but how do you suggest handling > cases where either > - 10% is considered 'too bright' (given that it was darker before - > people might complain about 'more power usage than necessary') and > - 10% is brighter than the brightness before dimming? > > The answer to 'why does raising to 1 not help' is a few comments above ;) > "That doesn't help though, as with intel-backlight 1 is still way too low > to be visible. I think the value corresponding to acpi value 0 is about 5%" > > But can you please explain where exactly you see the problem of this > option compared to e.g. the way more sophisticated 'run script' options? > > Sebastian Kügler wrote: > The option does not solve the problem. We have to make sure the system is > usable without changing an option. qMax(5%, 1) is also fine with me. > > In general, we can't expect users to look into options to fix obvious > breakage. The fact that *you* would look into it doesn't say anything > valuable, since we're not developing a system for people familiar with power > management internals, but for people who want to get their job done. UI > options come at certain costs, so we're only adding those where they really > add value. For cases of breakage, we have to find solutions that are > transparant to the user. > > Danny Baumann wrote: > Well, the issue is that 5% solve the problem for me, but other people > might need other values (glossy panels, less bright backlight, etc.). The 5% > figure (BTW, all numbers dimdisplay.cpp deals with are in the 0..100 range) > is an _empiric_ value for _my_ system. I don't have any kind of data for > other systems, so I simply don't know at all whether there's any value that > would work for all users. > > To throw in some random data point I just found: Gnome dims to 30% of the > maximum value (as opposed to 30% of the currently set value, what my patch is > currently doing). That value is not mapped into their GUI, but it's not > hardcoded either: It's configurable via dconf-editor. Maybe an approach like > this (make it configurable, but don't map into the UI) would work? > > Àlex Fiestas wrote: > What would work. > > All we can do here (as we do with brightness) is having sensible defaults > that work best with for all hardware. Then we have to make it configurable > (we don't have it in brightness yet) so advanced users and in the future > retailers can make use of it. > > You should wait until Dario or Oliver review this (added them in review) > > Oliver Henshaw wrote: > I don't have particularly strong opinions about the existence of an extra > configuration option, so I'll leave that matter to those who do, although I > think you would need very good justification to put it in the configuration > UI[1]. > > I understand from the intel-gfx links, and others in that thread, that > you can't rely on any guarantees of the visibility of brightness 0 in > intel_backlight or even the acpi backend. But have you explored whether it's > possible to smooth over the difference between backends (or hash out some > agreed semantics) at xrandr level? > > [1] If this is added to the UI, perhaps it could be presented on another > (or the) brightness slider? We'd need someone who's actually an UI expert to > agree that's a good idea, of course. > > Danny Baumann wrote: > I tried to avoid making this a slider because of the relationship to the > current brightness: Expressing the setting as a slider IMHO implies that the > value to be set is an absolute value, which imposes corner cases (e.g. what > to do if current brightness is higher than dimmed brightness?). Using a > relative value avoids those and makes sure the display is always dimmed as > long as the hardware allows it. I couldn't think of a good way of expressing > the relative value with a slider, which is why I chose the spin box. I'm open > for suggestions, though :) > > As for the Xrandr question: No, I didn't (yet? - this already became > quite a work-intensive thing for me given that it's only a DSDT problem I'm > dealing with ;) ), because I'm not sure how it'll help: As KDE (as well as > Gnome, as well as probably the other DEs) ships a fallback for the non-Xrandr > case anyway, doesn't it make more sense to define the behaviour in the common > piece of code? Otherwise, one would get behavioral differences depending on > what backend happens to be in use; I'm not sure whether this is a desired > effect? > > Sebastian Kügler wrote: > There's no need for a slider, as there won't be any UI option for this. > That's my personal opinion, but you can ask anybody in the Plasma team, and > the answer will be the exact same. Making it configurable doesn't solve the > problem, it reduces clarity in the UI, and it's the kind of option we've been > successfully removing from our UI, with good reasons, for years. It just > would be a huge step back. > > With that out of the way, I still don't see what's wrong with setting it > to 5% or 1, whichever is lower. The user, after all, configured the system to > go to minimum brightness after a grace period, as long as the display is lit, > we're doing the expected thing. > > I do agree that dimming is not switching off, so we should make sure that > the value never reaches 0, but other than "the display switched off instead > of dimming", and of course the "dims after half the grace time", there is no > bug. > > From my experience, values for brightness are often either between 0 and > 10 or between 0 and 100. > > One thing that should not get lost in the discussion about implementation > details: I really appreciate your work on this. :)
Sebastian, honestly, why are you ignoring what I wrote multiple times? :( "That doesn't help though, as with intel-backlight 1 is still way too low to be visible. I think the value corresponding to acpi value 0 is about 5%" In other words: While with intel-backlight 1% may not be 'backlight off' technically speaking, the visual appearance of 'display off' and 'display at 1%' is almost exactly the same. - Danny ----------------------------------------------------------- This is an automatically generated e-mail. To reply, visit: http://git.reviewboard.kde.org/r/109792/#review30173 ----------------------------------------------------------- On April 2, 2013, 1:52 p.m., Danny Baumann wrote: > > ----------------------------------------------------------- > This is an automatically generated e-mail. To reply, visit: > http://git.reviewboard.kde.org/r/109792/ > ----------------------------------------------------------- > > (Updated April 2, 2013, 1:52 p.m.) > > > Review request for kde-workspace, Solid, Dario Freddi, and Oliver Henshaw. > > > Description > ------- > > This change does two things: > - No longer dim display before the dim time set by the user elapses. > This fixes bug #304696 > - No longer assume that 0% display brightness produces a visible result. > This doesn't work with the intel-backlight backlight interface (as it > turns off the backlight at 0% brightness). According to the kernel > developers (see [1] and [2]), this isn't a safe assumption to make for > other backlight interfaces either. Instead of always dimming to 0%, > make the amount of dimming configurable. > > [1] > http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/intel-gfx/2013-March/026152.html > [2] > http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/intel-gfx/2013-March/026140.html > > > This addresses bug 304696. > http://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=304696 > > > Diffs > ----- > > powerdevil/daemon/actions/bundled/dimdisplay.h > 426640ca7a2a2d23044052710fdfb4b1f65617d1 > powerdevil/daemon/actions/bundled/dimdisplay.cpp > 11554e3ba5d2f67d4d1de9d61c744c6c40a32d27 > powerdevil/daemon/actions/bundled/dimdisplayconfig.h > 14b787937249a512cf958a31fd3bd71d6051540d > powerdevil/daemon/actions/bundled/dimdisplayconfig.cpp > bc116d6216c4624cbf14489d739d9d226fb70ff3 > > Diff: http://git.reviewboard.kde.org/r/109792/diff/ > > > Testing > ------- > > > Thanks, > > Danny Baumann > >
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