The Dell rfkill key is handled by hardware and the dell-laptop driver catches
the i8042 event in order to update the rfkill state. Sending wlan to userspace
will just result in userspace trying to revert the change the hardware has
just made.
Signed-off-by: Matthew Garrett <mjg@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Martin Pitt <martin.pitt@ubuntu.com>
0x85 brightnessdown # Fn+Down arrow Brightness Down
0x86 brightnessup # Fn+Up arrow Brightness Up
0x87 battery # Fn+F3 battery icon
-0x88 wlan # Fn+F2 Turn On/Off Wireless
+0x88 unknown # Fn+F2 Turn On/Off Wireless - handled in hardware
0x89 ejectclosecd # Fn+F10 Eject CD
0x8A suspend # Fn+F1 hibernate
0x8B switchvideomode # Fn+F8 CRT/LCD (high keycode: "displaytoggle")