From 55bbf9ebe5fe633a2de974389ac6dbb9305ba89f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Miguel Ojeda Date: Tue, 13 Mar 2018 01:07:37 +0100 Subject: Doc: misc-devices: move lcd-panel-cgram.txt to auxdisplay/ Commit 7005b58458e4beecaf5efacb872c456bc7d3541a ("Staging: add lcd-panel driver") introduced the panel driver, which is now in drivers/auxdisplay. Cc: Willy Tarreau Cc: Jonathan Corbet Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda --- Documentation/auxdisplay/lcd-panel-cgram.txt | 24 ++++++++++++++++++++++++ Documentation/misc-devices/lcd-panel-cgram.txt | 24 ------------------------ 2 files changed, 24 insertions(+), 24 deletions(-) create mode 100644 Documentation/auxdisplay/lcd-panel-cgram.txt delete mode 100644 Documentation/misc-devices/lcd-panel-cgram.txt (limited to 'Documentation') diff --git a/Documentation/auxdisplay/lcd-panel-cgram.txt b/Documentation/auxdisplay/lcd-panel-cgram.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..7f82c905763d --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/auxdisplay/lcd-panel-cgram.txt @@ -0,0 +1,24 @@ +Some LCDs allow you to define up to 8 characters, mapped to ASCII +characters 0 to 7. The escape code to define a new character is +'\e[LG' followed by one digit from 0 to 7, representing the character +number, and up to 8 couples of hex digits terminated by a semi-colon +(';'). Each couple of digits represents a line, with 1-bits for each +illuminated pixel with LSB on the right. Lines are numbered from the +top of the character to the bottom. On a 5x7 matrix, only the 5 lower +bits of the 7 first bytes are used for each character. If the string +is incomplete, only complete lines will be redefined. Here are some +examples : + + printf "\e[LG0010101050D1F0C04;" => 0 = [enter] + printf "\e[LG1040E1F0000000000;" => 1 = [up] + printf "\e[LG2000000001F0E0400;" => 2 = [down] + printf "\e[LG3040E1F001F0E0400;" => 3 = [up-down] + printf "\e[LG40002060E1E0E0602;" => 4 = [left] + printf "\e[LG500080C0E0F0E0C08;" => 5 = [right] + printf "\e[LG60016051516141400;" => 6 = "IP" + + printf "\e[LG00103071F1F070301;" => big speaker + printf "\e[LG00002061E1E060200;" => small speaker + +Willy + diff --git a/Documentation/misc-devices/lcd-panel-cgram.txt b/Documentation/misc-devices/lcd-panel-cgram.txt deleted file mode 100644 index 7f82c905763d..000000000000 --- a/Documentation/misc-devices/lcd-panel-cgram.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,24 +0,0 @@ -Some LCDs allow you to define up to 8 characters, mapped to ASCII -characters 0 to 7. The escape code to define a new character is -'\e[LG' followed by one digit from 0 to 7, representing the character -number, and up to 8 couples of hex digits terminated by a semi-colon -(';'). Each couple of digits represents a line, with 1-bits for each -illuminated pixel with LSB on the right. Lines are numbered from the -top of the character to the bottom. On a 5x7 matrix, only the 5 lower -bits of the 7 first bytes are used for each character. If the string -is incomplete, only complete lines will be redefined. Here are some -examples : - - printf "\e[LG0010101050D1F0C04;" => 0 = [enter] - printf "\e[LG1040E1F0000000000;" => 1 = [up] - printf "\e[LG2000000001F0E0400;" => 2 = [down] - printf "\e[LG3040E1F001F0E0400;" => 3 = [up-down] - printf "\e[LG40002060E1E0E0602;" => 4 = [left] - printf "\e[LG500080C0E0F0E0C08;" => 5 = [right] - printf "\e[LG60016051516141400;" => 6 = "IP" - - printf "\e[LG00103071F1F070301;" => big speaker - printf "\e[LG00002061E1E060200;" => small speaker - -Willy - -- cgit v1.2.3-58-ga151