plasma-nano (albeit saying it is 5.20.1) is pointing to the master branch
and kept as-is (there is no updates in master and I don't see a reason to
downgrade it to the actual 5.20.2 tag which is a few small commits behind
the master).
Upstream keeps making breaking changes in patch releases.
Let's fork alsa-ucm-conf entirely for now instead of just patching
in some files to ensure that these files don't break every few months.
This fixes audio on MSM8916 devices when not using the modem.
This patches from the megi solves the issue of the MIPI-DSI panels
framerate being at 2/3rd of actual or expected rate.
[ci:skip-build]: already built successfully in CI
This subpackage was removed when a proper fix for suspend was merged,
however apk doesn't know to purge this subpackage, so the old elogind
hook workaround stuck around. This workaround could probably be removed
once we're sure all folks on edge have installed this upgraded package
with the 'provides'...
Squeekboard >= 0.10.0 looks for an a11y setting to determine if it
should show up on the screen. This sets the config setting to 'true' so
that it shows up by default. It can apparently be toggled off in Gnome
Settings, but I haven't found the UI switch to do that yet..
Remove patches:
'0001-gtk-meson.build-add-new-hdy-files.patch' and
'10-Revert-gdkseatdefault-Grab-touch-events-where-applic.patch'
appear in the code downloaded from Purism at precisely the
location of the patches.
[ci:skip-build]: already built successfully in CI
- re-enable console suspend, which seems to be broken with elogind when
suspending (kernel gets hung up indefinitely in vt_waitactive)
- add a suspend hook to work around the musb driver not allowing the
device to suspend
Based on my testing, this option seems to prevent suspending via
elogind (using `loginctl suspend`). When console suspend is disabled,
the kernel gets hung up in the call to vt_waitactive, and elogind times
out trying to suspend.
On some downstream kernels it seems like we need to explicitly keep
/dev/subsys_modem open (without writing anything), otherwise the modem
will be stopped (or never started). Weird.
The -s switch to automatically start/stop the modem remoteproc only
works on mainline, on downstream it fails with "Failed to get rprocfd".
Let's abuse /usr/lib/preload/libqipcrtr4msmipc.so to check if we are
(probably) running on a downstream installation, and omit the -s
argument in this case. The modem remoteproc needs to be started
differently on downstream.
qrtr-ns is not needed (or working) on downstream, also it is no longer
needed for mainline starting with Linux 5.9. Convert the "need" dependency
to a "use" so qrtr-ns is only started if it is really needed.
In most cases, the qrtr-ns is not needed anymore now, but we still
need the libqrtr library. Separate that out into a separate package
so it can be installed independently.
qrtr-ns is now part of the Linux kernel (as of version 5.9), so
there is no need to start it in userspace anymore. It does not seem
to be needed (or working) on downstream either.
linux-postmarketos-qcom-msm8996 is the only mainline kernel which
is still on < 5.9. In preparation to make the qrtr dependency optional
for rmtfs, let's explicitly enable qrtr-ns for MSM8996 devices to avoid
causing regressions.
For some reason, the ModemManager build tends to freeze when built
with QEMU user emulation for arm*. Changing the build to use a single
thread only (-j1) avoids that, although the build is slower of course.
Also limit building to "armhf armv7 aarch64" since the forks are not
needed on any other architectures, to reduce build times a bit. The
other architectures can just use the upstream packages from Alpine.
This allows to connect the modem to the Internet with oFono.
I have verified that this does not break anything if the "rmnet0"
network interface is missing. Plus, all mainline devices currently
covered by the package should also be able to use the new "BAM DMUX"
network driver that is used as network interface to the modem.
(Note: This works differently on newer SoCs, but they also need
something different in oFono...)
Most older Qualcomm SoCs (e.g. MSM8916, MSM8974, ...) communicate
with the modem through shared memory. On mainline kernels these
shared memory channels are exposed through the RPMSG subsystem.
This is different from communication through USB or serial interfaces
that are currently supported by ModemManager.
This commit forks the "modemmanager" package from Alpine and adds
a patch that allows ModemManager to talk to modems through the RPMSG
subsystem.
Working functionality: Calls, SMS, Mobile Data
The same patch has also been submitted upstream:
https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/mobile-broadband/ModemManager/-/merge_requests/363
So far we have only created /dev/modem based on the DATA5_CNTL
channel available from the modem. The DATAX_CNTL channels allow
sending QMI messages to the modem. This is sufficient for oFono
to work.
Unfortunately, ModemManager currently does not support starting
calls through the QMI interface. Instead, it uses serial AT commands
that can be alternatively used on all USB-based Qualcomm modems.
It turns out that we can also send serial AT commands through
the RPMSG interface: the DATAX channels (without _CNTL) all respond
to serial AT commands. We set it up at /dev/modem-at, configure
ModemManager accordingly and then we are able to start calls. Yay!