| What: /sys/bus/wmi/devices/.../driver_override |
| Date: February 2024 |
| Contact: Armin Wolf <W_Armin@gmx.de> |
| Description: |
| This file allows the driver for a device to be specified which |
| will override standard ID table matching. |
| When specified, only a driver with a name matching the value |
| written to driver_override will have an opportunity to bind |
| to the device. |
| The override is specified by writing a string to the |
| driver_override file (echo wmi-event-dummy > driver_override). |
| The override may be cleared with an empty string (echo > \ |
| driver_override) which returns the device to standard matching |
| rules binding. |
| Writing to driver_override does not automatically unbind the |
| device from its current driver or make any attempt to automatically |
| load the specified driver. If no driver with a matching name is |
| currently loaded in the kernel, the device will not bind to any |
| driver. |
| This also allows devices to opt-out of driver binding using a |
| driver_override name such as "none". Only a single driver may be |
| specified in the override, there is no support for parsing delimiters. |
| |
| What: /sys/bus/wmi/devices/.../modalias |
| Date: November 20:15 |
| Contact: Andy Lutomirski <luto@kernel.org> |
| Description: |
| This file contains the MODALIAS value emitted by uevent for a |
| given WMI device. |
| |
| Format: wmi:XXXXXXXX-XXXX-XXXX-XXXX-XXXXXXXXXXXX. |
| |
| What: /sys/bus/wmi/devices/.../guid |
| Date: November 2015 |
| Contact: Andy Lutomirski <luto@kernel.org> |
| Description: |
| This file contains the GUID used to match WMI devices to |
| compatible WMI drivers. This GUID is not necessarily unique |
| inside a given machine, it is solely used to identify the |
| interface exposed by a given WMI device. |
| |
| What: /sys/bus/wmi/devices/.../object_id |
| Date: November 2015 |
| Contact: Andy Lutomirski <luto@kernel.org> |
| Description: |
| This file contains the WMI object ID used internally to construct |
| the ACPI method names used by non-event WMI devices. It contains |
| two ASCII letters. |
| |
| What: /sys/bus/wmi/devices/.../notify_id |
| Date: November 2015 |
| Contact: Andy Lutomirski <luto@kernel.org> |
| Description: |
| This file contains the WMI notify ID used internally to map ACPI |
| events to WMI event devices. It contains two ASCII letters. |
| |
| What: /sys/bus/wmi/devices/.../instance_count |
| Date: November 2015 |
| Contact: Andy Lutomirski <luto@kernel.org> |
| Description: |
| This file contains the number of WMI object instances being |
| present on a given WMI device. It contains a non-negative |
| number. |
| |
| What: /sys/bus/wmi/devices/.../expensive |
| Date: November 2015 |
| Contact: Andy Lutomirski <luto@kernel.org> |
| Description: |
| This file contains a boolean flag signaling if interacting with |
| the given WMI device will consume significant CPU resources. |
| The WMI driver core will take care of enabling/disabling such |
| WMI devices. |
| |
| What: /sys/bus/wmi/devices/.../setable |
| Date: May 2017 |
| Contact: Darren Hart (VMware) <dvhart@infradead.org> |
| Description: |
| This file contains a boolean flags signaling the data block |
| aassociated with the given WMI device is writable. If the |
| given WMI device is not associated with a data block, then |
| this file will not exist. |