Leaving the backlight on the Official Raspberry Pi touchscreen can quickly wear it out and waste power. If you have a use that requires the pi to be on all the time, but does not require the display on all the time, then turning off the backlight or dimming it while not in use can dramatically increase the life of the backlight and save power.
This work is based on the original by Timothy Hollabaugh https://github.com/timothyhollabaugh/pi-touchscreen-timeout.git and the a lot of changes kindly done by Dougie Lawson https://github.com/DougieLawson/backlight_dimmer.git This readme is an edited version of Dougie's readme (originally by Timothy) with applicable changes
pi-touchscreen-dimmer will transparently dim or turn off the display backlight after there has been no input for a specifed timeout, independent of anything using the display at the moment. It will then turn the touchscreen back on when input is received. The timeout period and the level it dims to is set by a command-line argument. Dimming to a level 0 will mean the backlight is off.
Note: This does not stop the event from getting to whatever is running on the display. Whatever is running will still receive an event, even if the display is off.
The program will use a linux event device like /dev/input/event0
to receive events
from the touchscreen, keyboard, mouse, etc., and /sys/class/backlight/rpi_backlight/brightness
to adjust the backlight brightness. The event device is a command-line parameter without the
/dev/input/ path specification.
Clone the repository and change directories:
git clone https://github.com/eskdale/pi-touchscreen-dimmer.git
cd pi-touchscreen-dimmer
Assuming you don't have other input devices Run it - This will give a 10 second timeout with a minumum brightness of 15 reset by event0.
sudo ./timeout 10 15 event0
or Build and run it!
make
sudo ./timeout 10 15 event0
If you have multiple devices you can use the lsinput command to find which they are. If you haven't installed it already
sudo apt install input-utils
lsinput
Multiple devices may be specified.
Note: It must be run as root or with sudo
to be able to access the backlight, unless you run the following
sudo su -c 'echo SUBSYSTEM==\"backlight\", RUN+=\"/bin/chmod 0666 /sys/class/backlight/%k/brightness /sys/class/backlight/%k/bl_power\" > /etc/udev/rules.d/99-backlight.rules'
sudo reboot
Use the following to change the brightness manually
echo 120 > /sys/class/backlight/rpi_backlight/brightness
It can be run at startup, for example by putting a line in
/etc/rc.local
copy the files timout
and run-dimmer.sh
to the /etc folder
Add the line below to the /etc/rc.local
This needs you to have lsinput installed as above. The run-dimmer.sh will determine the event number for the Touchscreen so even if you have other devices it will use the touchscreen event. You may wish to edit this file to modify the delay and the minimum brightness and also if you wish add events for keyboard or mice to also reset the timeout.
/etc/run-dimmer.sh
When running this program without X Windows running, such as when running a Kivy program in the console at startup, you may run into a conflict with a console blanker. In such an instance, the backlight will be turned on, but with the console blanked, it seems like the backlight has not come on.
In this case, follow one of these methods for disabling the console blanker:
- Raspbian Jessie : Add the following line to /etc/rc.local (on the line before the final exit 0) and reboot:
sh -c "TERM=linux setterm -blank 0 >/dev/tty0"
Even though /dev/tty0 is used, this should propagate across all terminals.
- Raspbian Wheezy : Edit /etc/kbd/config and change the values for the variable shown below, then reboot:
BLANK_TIME=0