Protect script when ram_freq is not set
Safely load PSCI DTO to enable CPUidle driver: psci_idle
The PSCI DTO shall only be applied if TF-A & Crust
support CPU idle states [0]. Otherwise the CPU usage
will be at 100%. This will not be visible in top,
lead to overheating and battery drain.
Worst case scenario would lead to a fried chip if
the CPU thermal_zone does not work or is not enabled
in DTS.
[0] https://gitlab.com/postmarketOS/pmaports/-/issues/1901#note_1238456920
I have enough other devices to care about, and honestly haven't touched
my PinePhone in a while. Remove myself as Co-Maintainer from all
relevant packages.
[ci:skip-vercheck]: No rebuild necessary
[ci:skip-build]: Doesn't change resulting packages
This wifi module doesn't ship with the L5, but I have one because it's
generally more stable than the redpine thing that does ship with the
L5... however there's a known problem with having PM enabled on it.
This adds a NM config option, that matches specifically on this
device/driver, to disable wifi. PM for the redpine should not be
affected by this config change.
[ci:skip-build] already built successfully in CI
Backport the Purism patch from https://source.puri.sm/Librem5/linux/-/merge_requests/640
"With this patch, older revisions (2.0) should be able to switch between
166MHz and 800MHz as opposed to being stuck to 800MHz all the time, since
that was the only supported frequency in the OPP table."
Signed-off-by: Alistair Francis <alistair@alistair23.me>
[ci:skip-build] already built successfully in CI
Schedutil is a CPU scheduler that is designed to be more efficient than other schedulers, such as the conservative scheduler, in terms of energy consumption.
This is because schedutil uses information about the utilization of individual CPU cores to make more intelligent decisions about when and how to scale the frequency of the CPU.
This can help to reduce the overall power consumption of the device, which can be particularly beneficial for battery-powered devices.
Additionally, schedutil can also help to improve the overall performance of the device by ensuring that the CPU is able to operate at its maximum frequency when needed.
In my personal testing I haven't seen any noticable impact on power consumption, while the performance does certainly noticeably increase
Note: This is only a change in the aarch64 configuration as the armv7 configuration already used the schedutil scheduler as default.
[ci:skip-build]: Already built successfully in CI
This fixes gnss out of the box on the librem 5, by configuring geoclue
to use gnss-share as a nmea source.
I went this route, of overriding a .service file that invokes geoclue
with a command line option, because forking this .service file is much
nicer than forking geoclue.conf. The conf file will likely change over
time to add new app permissions or whatever, and it's unlikely
(hopefull!) that this .service file will change much upstream...
[ci:skip-build] already built successfully in CI
Apparently upstream names udev rules with the .udev extension... which
doesn't work with udev (I guess debian has a helper for installing rules
and it renames them?). This adds the expected ".rules" extension to them
so that udev actually uses them.
This update also includes improved ucm config from Purism.
"Lockdown suppport" is also added here, which allows toggling off all of
the hks on the L5 to disable all radios, etc without breaking some
sensors. For more info, see 65ec7038 in librem5-base.
Based on some new (to me...) info from Purism's Sebastian K, there are
apparently Evergreen devices that return different values for board rev,
so we shouldn't assume only r4 are Evergreen, and default to the r2 DT.
But many earlier devices (Birch, Chestnut, Dogwood) may or may not have
the board rev set either. Who knows! Defaulting to the Evergreen DT on
these devices is bad too, but there weren't many of those shipped (I
guess?), at least not compared to the number of Evergreens that aren't
properly identifiable in u-boot... so this using this DT by default is
the best of the two bad options we have.
This comment thread has more info:
https://gitlab.com/postmarketOS/pmaports/-/issues/1643#note_1147248594fixes#1643
[ci:skip-build] already built successfully in CI
Kernel source updated to 6.1-rc7
Ext2 and Ext3 modules in aarch64 config disabled because Ext4 is backwards compatible.
2 fixes for PinePhone included in this source:
pinephone: fix power key behavior during suspend (avoid stuck key during resume)
pinephone keyboard: wait for 100ms after enabling power supply and before probing.
[ci:skip-build]: already built successfully in CI
Support launching postmarketOS in QEMU on riscv64 architecture. It is
mostly copied from device-qemu-aarch64 with some riscv64-specific
modifications.
Currently UIs using Xorg like Mate, XFCE4 and LXQT work fine, Wayland
UIs like weston, plasma-mobile etc didn't work in my testing.
Also using "pmbootstrap qemu --tablet" is needed to make mouse input
work, the defaults don't seem to work at the moment.
[ci:skip-build]: already built successfully in CI
Remove the -dev subpackages of kernels that replace the linux-headers
package. As I understand, the only case where this would make sense is
if you wanted to build a kernel module against headers that need to be
newer than the headers in Alpine's linux-headers package (currently
5.19.5).
While this might have been historically relevant when wireguard wasn't
in the kernel and you might have needed newer linux-headers to build
the module, it seems irrelevant today. If somebody should need this in
the future, then bring it back properly / consider getting the
linux-headers package in Alpine upgraded. Right now the -dev packages
are broken in several ways:
* Use of unversioned provides= (pma#1766)
* Don't contain binaries needed to build binary packages (pma#462).
This was worked around in 6aba5f ("Package kernel-scripts
separately"), but later this didn't build anymore and we removed it.
So in short: broken and unused, drop them.
This updates the APKBUILD with the new Megi 6.0.2 tag release.
The 2 incremental patches on top of 6.0 have hereby been removed.
[ci:skip-build]: already built successfully in CI
This kernel update addresses 5 important CVE's in the Wifi stack.
More info can be found over here: https://seclists.org/oss-sec/2022/q4/20
[ci:skip-build]: already built successfully in CI
- update to use librem5-base v52
- install usbguard config / new subpackage
- move xorg.conf to new x11 subpackage
- refactor udev rule install to just install everything available from
librem5-base upstream
- use purism's shipmode script, see:
https://source.puri.sm/Librem5/linux/-/merge_requests/333#note_195511
Replace usages of pmb:kconfigcheck-* options with
pmb:kconfigcheck-community which will be required for all devices in
community/main category. This ensures more consistent features &
behavior across devices.