This reverts commit c0443b97b7.
I got various cases wrong:
"usb:v04F3p2B7Cd5912dc00dsc00dp00ic03isc00ip00in00"
"usb:v0627p0001:QEMU USB Tablet"
"input:b0003v0627p0001e0001-e0,1,2,4,k110,111,112,r0,1,8,B,am4,lsfw"
OTOH:
-evdev:name:ETPS/2 Elantech Touchpad:dmi:*svnASUSTeKComputerInc.:pnN53SV:*
+evdev:name:ETPS/2 Elantech Touchpad:dmi:*svnASUSTeKComputerInc.:pnN53SV*
is OK. Other parts follow after 'pn'.
-mouse:*:name:*Trackball*:*
-mouse:*:name:*trackball*:*
-mouse:*:name:*TrackBall*:*
+mouse:*:name:*Trackball*:
+mouse:*:name:*trackball*:
+mouse:*:name:*TrackBall*:
... and anything else with :name should be OK too, because our imports always
include ":" at the end:
IMPORT{builtin}="hwdb 'joystick:$env{ID_BUS}:v$attr{id/vendor}p$attr{id/product}:name:$attr{name}:'"
Including '*' at the end makes the pattern work even if we decide to add
something to the match string later.
Fixes#17499.
No functional change is intended.
The general pattern of changes:
-usb:v04F3p2B7C*
+usb:v04F3p2B7C:*
This is mostly a clarification, to make the part that makes the usb vXXXXpYYYY
part visually separated. It would only make a difference if we added further
keys with a different number of digits, which is unlikely.
-usb:v0627p0001:*QEMU USB Keyboard*
-usb:v0627p0001:*QEMU USB Mouse*
-usb:v0627p0001:*QEMU USB Tablet*
+usb:v0627p0001:*QEMU USB Keyboard*:*
+usb:v0627p0001:*QEMU USB Mouse*:*
+usb:v0627p0001:*QEMU USB Tablet*:*
Again, only a clarification. We know that ":" will appear somewhere later in
the match key, so anything that matches "…Keyboard*" will also match "…Keyboard*:*".
-evdev:name:ETPS/2 Elantech Touchpad:dmi:*svnASUSTeKComputerInc.:pnN53SV*
+evdev:name:ETPS/2 Elantech Touchpad:dmi:*svnASUSTeKComputerInc.:pnN53SV:*
This makes the match narrower. Previously we would match product "N53SV"
and "N53SV2", "N53SV3", and others. Here we are saying that the ':pn' part must
match exactly. Most of the changes in this patch match this pattern. I made a few
judgement calls and used "pn…*:*" when I wasn't sure if the full pn is included:
-evdev:name:Dell WMI hotkeys:dmi:bvn*:bvr*:bd*:svnDell*:pnPrecision*
+evdev:name:Dell WMI hotkeys:dmi:bvn*:bvr*:bd*:svnDell*:pnPrecision*:*
-evdev:name:Cypress APA Trackpad ?cyapa?:dmi:*:svnHewlett-Packard*:pnFalco*:
+evdev:name:Cypress APA Trackpad ?cyapa?:dmi:*:svnHewlett-Packard*:pnFalco*:*
This more like the "QEMU" example above, since all dmi strings end in ":", so
anything which matches the old version will also match the new version.
-evdev:atkbd:dmi:bvn*:bvr*:bd*:svnGateway*:pnA0A1*:pvr*
+evdev:atkbd:dmi:bvn*:bvr*:bd*:svnGateway*:pnA0A1*:*
I replaced trailing ":pvr*" by ":*". This makes no functional difference because
we expect "pvr" to always appear in the dmi string. This makes patterns shorter.
-evdev:atkbd:dmi:bvn*:bvr*:bd*:svnAcer*:pn*
+evdev:atkbd:dmi:bvn*:bvr*:bd*:svnAcer*:pn*:*
OTOH, ":pn*" is kept. This is because almost patterns include ":pn*", and if we
skip it, we should make it clear that this is on purpose, that we really want to
match any product name.
The python script to generate autosuspend rules is updated to use ":*" too.
Inspired by https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/17281#discussion_r501489750.
The f'...' format was introduced in Python 3.6 ( https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0498/ )
and returns an error when systemd is built on a system with an older Python3 version:
<...>
File /home/bluca/git/systemd/tools/make-autosuspend-rules.py, line 15
print(f'pci:v{vendor:08X}d{device:08X}*')
^
SyntaxError: invalid syntax
[2/388] Generating version.h with a custom command.
ninja: build stopped: subcommand failed.
$ python3 --version
Python 3.5.6
Use an older format to keep backward compatibility.
Concatenating strings is not a very efficient approach. And in this case fully
unnecessary. We also need some rules to make use of those hwdb entries.
PCI needs to be 8 characters, not 4. And we need to use uppercase hexadecimal
for both. With udev rules this made no difference, but hwdb match is case
sensitive.
Fixes#16119.
The ChromeOS ecosystem has a large amount of testing, both automated
and manual across devices including measurement of power regressions.
It's safe to assume that any of these devices will handle USB
auto-suspend appropriately. Use the script from ChromeOS
https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromiumos/platform2/+/master/power_manager/udev/gen_autosuspend_rules.py
to generate udev rules at build time.
This script in systemd `tools/chromeos/gen_autosuspend_rules.py` should be kept
in sync with the ChromeOS version of the script.
Manually added autosuspend devices should be placed in the new
template `rules/61-autosuspend-manual.rules`
Suggested-by: Hans de Goede <hdegoede@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Mario Limonciello <mario.limonciello@dell.com>