The device is very similar to MACH-WX9 in many ways, including this
particular one. Adding these rules gets rid of evdev warnings as buttons
are being pressed on this device.
As documented at the top of the file we require the normal property if we have
the horizontal property, and we require the CLICK_ANGLE property if the
CLICK_COUNT property is present. Codify this into the hwdb parser so we can
pick up on it.
The script is renamed to match.
Now all targets are named uniformly in a tab-completion-friendly fashion, with
the exception of systemd-update-po which is generated by the i18n module
automatically:
$ ninja -C build -t targets | grep update
systemd-update-po: phony
update-syscall-tables: phony
update-syscall-header: phony
update-hwdb: phony
update-hwdb-autosuspend: phony
update-dbus-docs: CUSTOM_COMMAND
update-man-rules: CUSTOM_COMMAND
It is only the Samsung 900X3A which has the alternative function keys.
The 900X3B, 900X4B have the standard Series 9 layout - as defined above.
Note: the 900X4A is not a valid laptop model.
libfprint includes a list of known fingerprint readers that can be
autosuspended. Upstream libfprint generates this file from the USB IDs
registered to drivers and a list of well-known readers that are
currently unsupported.
Closes: #17663
Added Cube Mix Plus (i18B) Rotation information.
Also Combined the sensor lines with the different Cube i7 stylus models because they use the same ACCEL_MOUNT_MATRIX
This fixes the following warning:
```
parse_hwdb.py:120: UserWarning: warn_ungrouped_named_tokens_in_collection: setting results name 'SETTINGS*' on And expression collides with 'HZ' on contained expression
dpi_setting = (Optional('*')('DEFAULT') + INTEGER('DPI') + Suppress('@') + INTEGER('HZ'))('SETTINGS*')
```
Not sure about for the mount_matrix, but LGTM.com warns in that line,
and, adding Group() does not change the parse result.
Only some small changes, because we updated recently. As usual, it seems that there are mostly
additions with a smaller amount of corrections, no big removals.
The Lenovo ThinkPad Yoga 11e 360 degree hinges style 2-in-1s use 2
accelerometers, 1 in the display and 1 in the base.
Kernel work is under way to also export the second accelerometer in
the base as an iio-device; and userspace work is underway to use
both accelerometers on 360 degree hinges style 2-in-1s (with 2 accels)
to figure out the angle between the 2 halves.
So far most orientation-matrix quirks have not cared much about the
Z-axis being correct, but in these 2 accelerometer setups getting
the Z-axis correct is important too.
The KIOX010A and KIOX02A ACPI hw-ids (HIDs) are used in 360 degree hinges
style 2-in-1s which have 2 accelerometers, 1 in the display (as usual) and
a second accelerometer in the base.
So far 60-sensor.hwdb has only defined a mount-matrix for the
sensor with the KIOX010A HID, which is the sensor in the display
half of the device. The reason for this is that sofar userspace has
only cared actually used the sensor in the display (for automatic
display rotation. Work is underway to make userspace use both sensors:
https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/hadess/iio-sensor-proxy/-/issues/216
Recently an entry was added for the Medion Akoya's E2221T base-sensor,
but that was added to mark it with ACCEL_LOCATION=base and the entry
simply used the identity-matrix for ACCEL_MOUNT_MATRIX since nothing
is using the mount-matrix info for the second accelerometer.
I believe that this entry was added because on some devices the second
accelerometer gets enumerated first and then iio-sensor-proxy will
wrongly use the second sensor for display-rotation, unless it is marked
with ACCEL_LOCATION=base.
Instead of adding info for the second accelerometer on a per device
basis use the same generic dmi matches as used for the first (KIOX010A)
sensor, replacing the special case added for the E2221T and also
update the ACCEL_MOUNT_MATRIX with the actual mount-matrix for the
KIOX020A sensor in the base of these devices.
This was tested on a Medion Akoya E2228T.
Document how the mount-matrix for the base-accelerometer must be set on
360 degree hinges style 2-in-1s with 2 sensors (one in the display and
1 in the base).
Note the choice to define the lid being fully closed as an angle of
0 degrees is based on the ACPI tables of devices with a BOSC0200
ACPI device-node describing both sensors. In this case the ACPI
tables contain mount-matrix info (and the kernel will soon support
reading this and exporting it to userspace) and the mount-matrices
defined in these ACPI tables are such that the angle of the G-force
vector measured by the sensors is identical for both sensors when
the laptop's lid is fully closed.
This also feels more natural then defining the laptop being fully
open (180 degrees open) as the home / 0 degree angle position.
2 updates to the Logitech MX5000 key mappings:
1. Fix Logitech MX5000 Media key mapping:
The MX5000 has a key clearly marked "media" (in text) and when they gets
pressed the keyboards LCD briefly shows "MEDIA" in a big font.
Yet the keyboard sends a HID usage code which according to the HUTT
is config/control-panel. Map this to media so that the key behaves as
labeled.
2. Add mapping for the scan-code send by the Fn on/off toggle key
The Logitech Dinovo Edge has 5 special hotkeys, one with a phone symbol
and the 4 usual Logitech A-D smartkeys. These send custom Logitech
0xc10xx keycodes, add mappings for these.
Some Logitech wireless keyboards report when there Fn key is pressed,
add a mapping for this.
While it also fix identiation of 2 adjescent key-maps to use tabs like the
other Logitech entries
Dell new Privacy feature provide new hardware level privacy
protect for users,it needs to map the scan code to F20 micmute
Signed-off-by: Perry Yuan <perry_yuan@dell.com>
This is useful for development where overwriting files out side
the configured prefix will affect the host as well as stateless
systems such as NixOS that don't let packages install to /etc but handle
configuration on their own.
Alternative to https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/17501
tested with:
$ mkdir inst build && cd build
$ meson \
-Dcreate-log-dirs=false \
-Dsysvrcnd-path=$(realpath ../inst)/etc/rc.d \
-Dsysvinit-path=$(realpath ../inst)/etc/init.d \
-Drootprefix=$(realpath ../inst) \
-Dinstall-sysconfdir=false \
--prefix=$(realpath ../inst) ..
$ ninja install