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Add new key mappings for the HP Elite Dragonfly G2 laptop:
1. Map Fn+F12 (HP Programmable Key) to prog1.
2. Unmap Fn+F11 (Airplane mode) from atkbd and Intel HID events, as this
key is also reported by HP Wireless hotkeys.
* Add special keyboard combos for Thinkpad P1 Gen 3
These are based on the key codes I've found with evtest. See issue
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/24814 for more details.
I'm not entirely sure what some of these keys are supposed to do,
notably Fn+RShift; this doesn't seem to do anything in Windows on
my machine. Binding them to prog# makes them available to desktop
managers' key bindings at least, in case someone wishes to make
use of this extra keybind possibility.
As usual, it seems to be mostly additions and corrections. Sadly, it seems a
bit of mojibake has crept in in various places. But it's hard to correct, in
particular because it's hard to detect all cases automatically. I think we can
ignore this for now.
When I run this a few weeks ago, ma-large.txt was gutted and 20-OUI.hwdb was
siginificantly smaller. For whatever reasons, it's back to normal now.
The Acer Aspire One AOD270 and the same hardware rebranded as
Packard Bell Dot SC need a couple of keymap fixups:
1. The switch-video-mode key does not do anything. Standard acer-wmi
maps scancode 0x61 to KEY_IGNORE since typically these events are
duplicate with the ACPI video bus. But on these models the ACPI video
bus does not send events for this key, so map it.
2. The Brightness up / down hotkeys send atkbd scancode 0xce / 0xef
which by default are mapped to KEY_KPPLUSMINUS and KEY_MACRO.
These actually are duplicate events with the ACPI video bus,
so map these to KEY_IGNORE.
The key doesn't create a release event. This is a fix to make it work properly. I made sure the product is generic to work on all Victus laptops.
This fix#23006.
This adds support for Fn+PrtSc on my Lenovo Thinkpad Extreme gen 2. Judging by the picture on the key, it should probably instead of prog2 be "selective_screenshot" (that is a possible value from judging this list e18d950ce5/keynames.txt ) but that does not register with evtest at all. With this change, evtest reports:
```
Event: time 1661081631.027773, type 1 (EV_KEY), code 149 (KEY_PROG2), value 1
Event: time 1661081631.027773, -------------- SYN_REPORT ------------
Event: time 1661081631.027886, type 1 (EV_KEY), code 149 (KEY_PROG2), value 0
Event: time 1661081631.027886, -------------- SYN_REPORT ------------
```
I am not sure if systemd is the right place to add this, if not, please refer me somewhere else.
This fixes the discrepancies in the coordinate ranges for the touchpad, touchpad in this device(NS13A2) is generic and the same one is used in most models.
The base-mounted accelerometer on Chromebooks return values same as the
display when the lid angle is 180 degrees, instead of when the lid is
closed. To match userspace expectations we must further rotate the
existing accelerometer mounting matrix by 180 degrees around the X axis:
[[-1, 0, 0], [[ 1, 0, 0], [[-1, 0, 0],
[ 0, -1, 0], X [ 0, -1, 0], = [ 0, 1, 0],
[ 0, 0, -1]] [ 0, 0, -1]] [ 0, 0, 1]]
A previous commit lets us distinguish between the two cros-ec-accel
devices on these boards by their 'label' sysfs file. Add hwdb entries
that make base-mounted accelerometers use this correct matrix, and
display-mounted ones use the existing one.
Note that the cros-ec-accel drivers use 'label' only since Linux v6.0.
The old match strings are not removed to support older kernels, even
though they are only correct for the display-mounted sensor.
The IIO subsystem exposes a 'label' sysfs file to help userspace better
identify its devices [1]. Standardized labels include the sensor type
along with its location, including 'accel-base' and 'accel-display'.
Most Chrome OS boards have two accelerometers that are indistinguishable
except for this label (or a 'location' sysfs file before Linux v6.0),
and need different mounting matrix corrections based on their location.
Add a udev rule that matches hwdb entries using this label, so we can
correct both accelerometers on these devices with hwdb entries. The
existing rules and hwdb entries are not modified to keep potential
out-of-tree entries working, but new entries in this form will override
existing ones. Also add currently standardized labels to parse-hwdb.py.
[1] https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-bus-iio
The cros-ec-accel and cros-ec-accel-legacy kernel modules internally
correct for the board-specific accelerometer mounting orientations.
Their sensor outputs are in a standard reference frame consistent across
different boards, so the orientation matrix already added for a number
of devices should apply to every device using cros-ec accelerometers.
The different matrix for the 'Nocturne' board seems to be an error.
Replace the existing hwdb rules for select Chromebooks with generic
rules that apply to all Chromebooks.
They're floppy disk flux readers and writers used in digital
preservation and can be broadly considered to be "analyzers" of magnetic
fluxes.
This will have the intended side-effect of giving access to the device
to users at the console, obsoleting:
https://github.com/keirf/greaseweazle/blob/master/scripts/49-greaseweazle.rules
This device implements the phone mute HID usage as a toggle switch,
where 1 indicates muted, and 0 indicates unmuted. However, for a key
event 1 indicates that the key has been pressed and 0 indicates it has
been released. This mismatch causes issues, so prevent key events from
being generated for this HID usage.
It has been shown that the autosuspend delay for this device enacted
by modem manager will race with suspend and cause system suspend
failures.
This occurred in ChromiumOS on a chromebook, but there is no reason
it won't happen in regular notebooks with the same WWAN. To avoid
the failure delay autosuspend to a frequency longer than the polling
rate used by modem manager.
Link: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/chromiumos/overlays/board-overlays/+/3635003
Link: 43e76bf1bb/src/mm-iface-modem.c (L1633)
For micmute userspace handles both micmute and f20, as Xorg cannot
handle the high keycode that the micmute key has. As such, adding the
remapping means that the key will work on Xorg clients and not just when
using wayland.
Add keymappings for the Acer Aspire One AO532h netbook.
Unmap the brightnesskeys because they send duplicate key events with
the ACPI video bus key events and add a mapping for the bluetooth
on/off hotkey.
We've had this text since the beginning, but in fact the patterns must be
stable in order for people to create local hwdb entries. And we support that
and can't change the match patterns without being very careful. So let's just
drop the text.
The handling of whitespace in pyparsing is a bother. There's some
global state, and per-element state, and it's hard to get a handle on
things. With python3-pyparsing-2.4.7-10.fc36.noarch the grammar would
not match. After handling of tabs was fixed to not accept duplicate tabs,
the grammar passes.
It seems that the entry for usb:v8087p8087*
was generated incorrectly because we treated the interface line
(with two TABs) as a device line (with one TAB).
On the new Elite x360 2 in 1 HP laptops, the microphone mute hotkey is "Fn+F8" and
the scancode for this hotkey is 0x81, but this scancode was mapped to
fn_esc in the HP generic keymap section. To fix this problem, we add
a machine specific keymap section to add the correct keymap rule.
The Stream Deck products from Elgato are simple key pads
intended to be used as macro pads. They're popular within
the streaming community.
This commit adds all 5 Stream Deck variants available to
the AV production file.
See https://www.elgato.com/en/stream-deck
This adds support for AV production controller devices, such
as DJ tables, music-oriented key pads, and others.
The USB vendor and product IDs come from Mixxx, Ctlra, and
Ardour.
Fixes#20533
Co-developed-by: Georges Basile Stavracas Neto <georges.stavracas@gmail.com>
The brightness control key (Fn+F7 Fn+F8) and touchpad toggle key (Fn + Space) do not work on the NEC VersaPro VG-S laptop. Add the keycode to fix the problem.
The approach to use '''…'''.split() instead of a list of strings was initially
used when converting from automake because it allowed identical blocks of lines
to be used for both, making the conversion easier.
But over the years we have been using normal lists more and more, especially
when there were just a few filenames listed. This converts the rest.
No functional change.
The machine has tree buttons connected to an EC that acts as a regular
AT-compatible keyboard controller. It can be either in "Windows 7" or
"Android" mode. It boots up with the earlier, but the Android build on
the tablet switches it on bootup (Windows presumably leaves it as-is).
The "Windows 7" mode, the behavior is very inconvenient: the Home button
emits multiple key presses that presumably do something in Windws 7 while
the second button toggles the RF Kill Switch in addition to producing a
scancode (it's labeled "Back" on Android version of the tablet).
The "Android" mode just sends the good ol' scan codes and this patch
handles them. On mainline Linux, the "x86-android-tablets" driver makes
sure we're in the correct mode.
Add a new database for handhelds (PDAs, calculators, etc.) that should be
accessible the seat owner.
The database is initially populated with Texas Instruments calculators
and linking cables, which removes the need to installing dedicated udev
rules for them.
The check was added in 77547d5313, but
it doesn't work as expected. Because the second part is wrapped in Optional(),
it would silently "succeed" when the lowercase digits were in the second part:
>>> from parse_hwdb import *
>>> g = 'v' + upperhex_word(4) + Optional('p' + upperhex_word(4))
>>> g.parseString('v04D8pE11C*')
(['v', '04D8', 'p', 'E11C'], {})
>>> g.parseString('v04D8pe11c*')
(['v', '04D8'], {})
The following matches are OK:
usb:v0627p0001:*QEMU USB Keyboard*
usb:v0627p0001:*
usb:v0627p0001*
usb:v0627*
The Asus TF103C misses the home button in its PNP0C40 GPIO resources
causing the button mappings for the volume buttons to be off by one,
leading to the volume-up button sending home button presses and the
volume-down button sending volume-up button presses.
Add a 60-keyboard hwdb entry to correct the mappings. Note this is
split over 2 input devices because the soc_button_array driver
creates separate input devices for power + home and vol up/down.
This is done because power/home act as wakeup buttons where as
the volume buttons do not.
This means that after this fixup the home -> volume-up button
still acts as a wakeup button, there is nothing which can be done
about this without adding a kludge to the kernel which is not
worth the trouble (IMHO).