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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers OEM - what does this abbreviation stand for? Post 18157 by Ivo on Monday 25th of March 2002 08:22:17 AM
Old 03-25-2002
or Original Equipment Manufacturer. A company that manufactures a product and sells it to a reseller.
 

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ACPI_FUJITSU(4) 					   BSD Kernel Interfaces Manual 					   ACPI_FUJITSU(4)

NAME
acpi_fujitsu -- Fujitsu Laptop Extras SYNOPSIS
To compile this driver into the kernel, place the following line in your kernel configuration file: device acpi_fujitsu Alternatively, to load the driver as a module at boot time, place the following line in loader.conf(5): acpi_fujitsu_load="YES" DESCRIPTION
The acpi_fujitsu driver enables the ACPI-controlled buttons on Fujitsu notebooks. The button events are sent to userspace via devd(8), and a sysctl(8) interface is provided to simulate the hardware events. Using this driver, one can control the brightness of the display, the volume of the speakers, and the internal (eraserhead) mouse pointer. SYSCTL VARIABLES
These sysctls are currently implemented: hw.acpi.fujitsu.lcd_brightness Makes the LCD backlight brighter or dimmer. hw.acpi.fujitsu.pointer_enable Enables or disables the internal mouse pointer. hw.acpi.fujitsu.volume Controls the speaker volume. hw.acpi.fujitsu.mute Mutes the speakers. Defaults for these sysctls can be set in sysctl.conf(5). EXAMPLES
The following can be added to devd.conf(5) in order to pass button events to a /usr/local/sbin/acpi_oem_exec.sh script: notify 10 { match "system" "ACPI"; match "subsystem" "FUJITSU"; action "/usr/local/sbin/acpi_oem_exec.sh $notify fujitsu"; }; A possible /usr/local/sbin/acpi_oem_exec.sh script might look like: #!/bin/sh # if [ "$1" = "" -o "$2" = "" ] then echo "usage: $0 notify oem_name" exit 1 fi NOTIFY=`echo $1` LOGGER="logger" CALC="bc" BC_PRECOMMANDS="scale=2" ECHO="echo" CUT="cut" MAX_LCD_BRIGHTNESS=7 MAX_VOLUME=16 OEM=$2 DISPLAY_PIPE=/tmp/acpi_${OEM}_display case ${NOTIFY} in 0x00) LEVEL=`sysctl -n hw.acpi.${OEM}.mute` if [ "$LEVEL" = "1" ] then MESSAGE="volume muted" else MESSAGE="volume unmuted" fi ;; 0x01) LEVEL=`sysctl -n hw.acpi.${OEM}.pointer_enable` if [ "$LEVEL" = "1" ] then MESSAGE="pointer enabled" else MESSAGE="pointer disabled" fi ;; 0x02) LEVEL=`sysctl -n hw.acpi.${OEM}.lcd_brightness` PERCENT=`${ECHO} "${BC_PRECOMMANDS} ; ${LEVEL} / ${MAX_LCD_BRIGHTNESS} * 100" | ${CALC} | ${CUT} -d . -f 1` MESSAGE="brightness level ${PERCENT}%" ;; 0x03) LEVEL=`sysctl -n hw.acpi.${OEM}.volume` PERCENT=`${ECHO} "${BC_PRECOMMANDS} ; ${LEVEL} / ${MAX_VOLUME} * 100" | ${CALC} | ${CUT} -d . -f 1` MESSAGE="volume level ${PERCENT}%" ;; *) ;; esac ${LOGGER} ${MESSAGE} if [ -p ${DISPLAY_PIPE} ] then ${ECHO} ${MESSAGE} >> ${DISPLAY_PIPE} & fi exit 0 SEE ALSO
acpi(4), sysctl.conf(5), devd(8), sysctl(8) HISTORY
The acpi_fujitsu driver first appeared in FreeBSD 5.4. AUTHORS
The acpi_fujitsu driver was written by Sean Bullington <shegget@gmail.com>, Anish Mistry <mistry.7@osu.edu>, and Marc Santcroos <marks@ripe.net>. This manual page was written by Philip Paeps <philip@FreeBSD.org>. BSD
February 8, 2010 BSD
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