Pressing a button on a remote control unit will typically lead to
messages being sent several times per second until the button is released.
Some remote control units indicate long key presses by sending
special "repeat" messages, for which the protocol driver calls
rc_repeat(). Other units repeat the same message over and over,
which will be handled by calling rc_keydown().
The function rc_keydown() never set the LIRC "repeat" flag to distinguish
repeated messages that were sent due to a long keypress, and messages
sent due to repeated short keypresses. While a user-space program may
implement special logic to distinguish long keypresses, it is much simpler
to be able to rely on the flag.
Commit
de142c32410649e64d44928505ffad2176a96a9e ("media: lirc: implement
reading scancode") would never set the LIRC_SCANCODE_FLAG_REPEAT flag.
Commit
b66218fddfd29f315a103db811152ab0c95fb054
("media: lirc: ensure lirc device receives nec repeats") fixed it up for
rc_repeat() but not rc_keydown().
Signed-off-by: Marko Mäkelä <marko.makela@iki.fi>
Co-developed-by: Sean Young <sean@mess.org>
Signed-off-by: Sean Young <sean@mess.org>
Signed-off-by: Mauro Carvalho Chehab <mchehab@kernel.org>
dev->last_toggle != toggle);
struct lirc_scancode sc = {
.scancode = scancode, .rc_proto = protocol,
- .flags = toggle ? LIRC_SCANCODE_FLAG_TOGGLE : 0,
+ .flags = (toggle ? LIRC_SCANCODE_FLAG_TOGGLE : 0) |
+ (!new_event ? LIRC_SCANCODE_FLAG_REPEAT : 0),
.keycode = keycode
};