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Whether a device is a trackball or not is a physical property so we should
store this globally, in one place. The new property must be set in addition to
ID_INPUT_MOUSE, otherwise existing clients won't detect the device.
No actual code changes required, the default match rule is simply checking for
"Trackball" in the name (in a few versions), other entries need to be added
manually.
Like many other recent thinkpads the factory default pointingstick
sensitivity on these devices is quite low, making the pointingstick
very slow in moving the cursor.
This extends the existing hwdb rules for tweaking the sensitivity to
also apply to the X260 models.
Like many other recent thinkpads the factory default pointingstick
sensitivity on these devices is quite low, making the pointingstick
very slow in moving the cursor.
This extends the existing hwdb rules for tweaking the sensitivity to
also apply to the T560 models.
Like many other recent thinkpads the factory default pointingstick
sensitivity on these devices is quite low, making the pointingstick
very slow in moving the cursor.
This extends the existing hwdb rules for tweaking the sensitivity to
also apply to the T460s models.
Like many other recent thinkpads the factory default pointingstick
sensitivity on these devices is quite low, making the pointingstick
very slow in moving the cursor.
This extends the existing hwdb rules for tweaking the sensitivity to
also apply to the L460 models.
Like many other recent thinkpads the factory default pointingstick
sensitivity on these devices is quite low, making the pointingstick
very slow in moving the cursor.
This extends the existing hwdb rules for tweaking the sensitivity to
also apply to the X250 models.
Like many other recent thinkpads the factory default pointingstick
sensitivity on these devices is quite low, making the pointingstick
very slow in moving the cursor.
This extends the existing hwdb rules for tweaking the sensitivity to
also apply to the T450s models.
Like many other recent thinkpads the factory default pointingstick
sensitivity on these devices is quite low, making the pointingstick
very slow in moving the cursor.
This extends the existing hwdb rules for tweaking the sensitivity to
also apply to the L450 models.
Like many other recent thinkpads the factory default pointingstick
sensitivity on these devices is quite low, making the pointingstick
very slow in moving the cursor.
This extends the existing hwdb rules for tweaking the sensitivity to
also apply to the T440p models.
Add a new key ID_INPUT_TOUCHPAD_INTEGRATION=internal|external so we have a
single source for figuring out which touchpads are built-in.
Fairly simple approach: bluetooth is external, usb is external unless it's an
Apple touchpad. Everything else is internal.
Let's hook up the ACPI database we maintain from the upstream UEFI sources.
This adds a tool to convert the database provided upstream to our native
format, similar to how this is handled for the PCI and USB databases.
Note that the upstream web site claims to offer an XLS download, but the actual
data made available is an HTML file in reality, just one with the ".xls"
suffix...
The data provided from the UEFI folks is not very high quality nor complete,
hence apply a patch after the conversion step that fixes up a few things and
adds in more entries from various sources. For example, the EDID ids maintained
by GNOME and other sources have been added too, as they all appear to use the
same ID namespace.
This also adds explicit support for 4 character ACPI ids, in addition to the
normal 3 character PNP ids.
Also fixes:
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=90524
Like many other recent thinkpads the factory default pointingstick
sensitivity on these devices is quite low, making the pointingstick
very slow in moving the cursor.
This extends the existing hwdb rules for tweaking the sensitivity to
also apply to the X1 carbon 4thgen model.
Apparently the vendor string for newer models now uses "svnHP" instead of
"svnHewlett-Packard", so add this alternative match to the global HP map.
Generalize matches for micmute key on ProBook 4xx.
Silence two hardwired keys on the ProBook 440 G3 that should not produce evdev
events. Thanks to Hermann Kraus for those! (See PR #2679)
This Lenovo machine use codec Line2 to implement a microphone mute
button, it depends on the unsolicited interrupt to generate key event,
the scan code for this button is assigned to 0x00 in the linux kernel
driver, and the keycode is KEY_MICMUTE(248), we need to remap this
keycode to KEY_F20 to make this hotkey work in X11.
BugLink: https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1531362
Signed-off-by: Hui Wang <hui.wang@canonical.com>