Upstream changelog:
ca736e844a
Patches rebased, and includes some new fixes:
arm64-dts-imx8mq-librem5.dtsi-adjust-the-usdhc-bus-s.patch
- Being tested by Purism as well, has shown some promise improving GPS
reliability
arm64-dts-imx8mq-disable-SuperSpeed-instances-in-par.patch
- Fixes issue with modem disappearing
This is required for kernels earlier than 4.7 for bwrap to work for
normal users, and therefore for gnome web (epiphany) and flatpak.
[ci:skip-build] [ci:ignore-count]
Upstream changelog:
4e76143d2e
Note, previous wifi driver behavior is not changed. The redpine module
still expects the fw to be in /lib/firmware on boot, and won't use the
fw on the card.. Theoretically this kernel version now supports both
loading fw from rootfs into ram AND using fw burned on the chip, but
since I haven't tested that well yet I'm leaving this as-is.
[ci:skip-build]: already built successfully in CI
uboot-tools is provided by u-boot-tools but sometimes apk still gets
confused. This change prevents errors such as
pine64-pinephone:~$ sudo apk upgrade --verbose
WARNING: Failed to perform initial self-upgrade, continuing with full upgrade.
ERROR: unable to select packages:
uboot-tools (virtual):
provided by: u-boot-tools
required by: device-pine64-pinephone-0.25-r1[uboot-tools]
[ci:ignore-count]
[ci:skip-build]: already built in CI successfully
The AP6359SA is a BCM4359 SDIO-based Wi-Fi/Bluetooth module that PINE64
sells specifically for the ROCKPro64 device. This commit starts a
firmware package to support it specifically, while others can later add
firmware for other modules sold for the device. Also add this package as
a nonfree subpackage dependency in the ROCKPro64 device APKBUILD.
I was unable to find a suitable license for the firmware blobs, so until
we find a suitable repository containing all of the required files by
the module with a license included, or contact the vendor directly,
let's use LibreELEC's repository without a license for now.
[ci:skip-build]: already built successfully in CI
mce is used by both Glacier and Asteroid to do all kind of power
management related stuff, including blanking the display. However,
obviously we don't ever want to blank the display on Qemu
Upstream changelog:
6dcba4b588
The redpine interrupt handler patch has been dropped since it's now
merged in Purism's tree.
[ci:skip-build]: already built successfully in CI
As of MR 2039, the kernel modules are now stripped (INSTALL_MOD_STRIP=1).
It turns out that this massively reduces their size so that including
the panel + touchscreen modules in the initfs still fits into the
partition. This allows the splash screen and osk-sdl to work correctly.
As of MR 2039, the kernel modules are now stripped (INSTALL_MOD_STRIP=1).
It turns out that this massively reduces their size so that including
the panel + touchscreen modules in the initfs still fits into the
partition. This allows the splash screen and osk-sdl to work correctly.
As of MR 2039, the kernel modules are now stripped (INSTALL_MOD_STRIP=1).
It turns out that this massively reduces their size so that including
the panel + touchscreen modules in the initfs still fits into the
partition. This allows the splash screen and osk-sdl to work correctly.
As of MR 2039, the kernel modules are now stripped (INSTALL_MOD_STRIP=1).
It turns out that this massively reduces their size so that including
the panel + touchscreen modules in the initfs still fits into the boot
partition. This allows the splash screen and osk-sdl to work correctly.
Make needed deviceinfo changes to support osk-sdl, add "quiet" to the
cmdline and bump the package version to 1.
Signed-off-by: Caleb Connolly <caleb@connolly.tech>
[ci:skip-vercheck]
Make needed deviceinfo changes to support osk-sdl, add "quiet" to the
cmdline and bump the package version to 1.
Signed-off-by: Caleb Connolly <caleb@connolly.tech>
Add a subpackage to ensure that GPU firmware is included in initramfs so
that osk-sdl can work.
[ci:skip-vercheck]
Signed-off-by: Caleb Connolly <caleb@connolly.tech>
This device port is unmaintained: The mainline port (xiaomi-wt88047)
is preferred. This is only intended for testing, and was used to validate
the battery/charging driver as one example. Various patches are used
for the downstream kernel that expose helpful information for debugging.
[ci:skip-build]: already built successfully in CI
These are various debugging related patches that I have used over the time
when attempting to get new features working for the mainline kernel.
Given that the downstream kernel is just intended for debugging in this case,
it seems convenient to add them to pmaports so I don't need to go search for
them in case I need them again in the future.
[ci:skip-build] Already built on CI
Resize the partition when using a pre-built image. We didn't notice that
this was missing, because N900 images are new and we only tested from
pmbootstrap install --sdcard, which already uses the full SD card size.
modules-load.conf was completely unused by this package,
not installed anywhere. brcmfmac is loaded automatically anyway.
Sort values in sources= alphabetically
This is needed with the 5.11 kernel. Also adjust the vram & cma sizes
for all msm8974 devices.
The CMA size is 256MB as set in the kernel config.
VRAM is default 16MB although it is set to 192MB with a kernel patch;
but set it manually for all devices to make it possible to remove this
patch in the future - until we have IOMMU working.
still missing:
* audio
* lcd backlight control
* touchscreen driver
* front camera
* accelerometer mount fix (driver seem not to support mount-matrix)
* 3D acceleration
* HDMI support
This allows loading nonfree fw from rootfs (/lib/firmware), to work
around: https://source.puri.sm/Librem5/linux-next/-/issues/290
This change will break wifi unless the nonfree
firmware-siliconlabs-rs9116 package is installed.
New mainline port with most things working (usb/wifi/bt/3d-accel/sound/gps).
Modem/calls/sms/mobile-data should work but couldn't test it recently
due to broken devices.
* Add u-boot build with a lot of patches that makes the display work in
u-boot for boot selection
* Upgrade the rockchip kernel to 5.11 mainline with config for the
rk3399 devices built-in
* Make the rockpro64 and pinebook pro use the newer kernel
[ci:skip-build]
Actually the display in asus-me176c has a width of 800px, which means
that the splash screen isn't perfectly centered. Correct this in
deviceinfo to make it show up correctly.
Also, add configuration file for Phosh to reduce scaling a bit to 1.75.
It's kind of subjective but scaling = 2 definitely feels too large.
[ci:skip-build]: already built successfully in CI
There's a race condition between when the pwmled device is initialized,
which kicks off a feedbackd udev rule that configures the led trigger to
'pattern', and when ledtrig_pattern actually loads. It seems to mostly
load after the rule runs, so the trigger is never set to 'pattern' on
boot.
This removes the race by building the ledtrig_pattern driver into the
kernel.
[ci:skip-build] Already build successfully in CI
This patch fixes a fairly severe performance regression with wifi on the
L5 (something like 20x improvement in performance with this patch)
[ci:skip-build] Already build successfully in CI
The device has been renamed from fujitsu-m532 to pegatron-chagall since several rebrands of this board exist (Olivetti Olipad3, Siragon 4N, etc.), and Fujitsu M532 is just one of those.
Signed-off-by: Raffaele Tranquillini <raffaele.tranquillini@gmail.com>
Ship mode via the mechanism used by purism doesn't work; it's either not
possible or outside my understanding to run an openrc runscript with a
busybox init on *poweroff* and *not reboot*, which is what is required
for this to work properly..
This module param requires a corresponding kernel patch to enable ship
mode support in the bq25890-charger module
Upstream change logs:
5.11.2:
fdc91c4e20
5.11.4:
a178aa515c
This also adds a -dev subpackage, and cleans up makedepends
[ci:skip-build]: already built successfully in CI
This includes a new librem5-base config release, the most notable change
being some mic echo cancellation changes in pulseaudio config.
Upstream changelog:
351958ffc0
Note: I did not include the upstream change to disable wifi PM. I don't
find the performance to be so bad that it's worth giving up some battery
efficiency for.
Note: the librem5-base thing from purism has a new naming/versioning
format, which is in line with some of their other projects, so the
APKBUILD has been updated to support that too
Downstream kernel is outdated and no longer maintained by us. Thus,
removed. The linux-xiaomi-beryllium-mainline kernel is removed because
its superseded by the common sdm845 kernel and is no longer needed.
This adds a new subpackage that installs dependencies and configures the
smartcard reader on the librem 5. Some setup is required before this
will work (e.g. upgrading reader firmware), the L5 wiki page will have
this information.
The pcsc init script was forked into this package to allow for powering
on the reader *before* the service started. Doing this in a separate
init script would have caused the reader to power on regardless of
whether the pcsc service was set to start, which is not desirable since
it should *only* be powered on when pcsc is starting
So far the debug-shell in initfs works. The device uses dynamic
partitions, so that has to be figured out to get a proper rootfs.
One thing to look out for is that mount_subpartitions task in initfs
hangs, so pmos_boot=sth was added to kernel cmdline to skip it. This is
also related to dynamic partitions, anyway.
[ci:skip-build] Already built on CI
Purism has changed the kernel name they used, so that's reflected in the
apkbuild.
This kernel includes patches for renaming the audio device, and requires
a corresponding upgrade to the device package to bring in the new ucm2
config changes for that.
Cypress bought the brcm WiFi stuff from broadcom so they want their firmware to
be called cyfmac instead of brcmfmac
a lot of brcmfmac firmware is now symlinked to cyfmac
This package is no longer used, as the OnePlus 6 will now use the
linux-postmarketos-qcom-sdm845 package.
Signed-off-by: Caleb Connolly <caleb@connolly.tech>
There is already samsung-a3ulte in community, and the devices actually
share the same kernel, device tree, and basically everything except
firmware. We just need separate firmware packages because Samsung uses
different secure boot certificates on a3lte and a3ulte.
They also share the same wiki page which suggests installation using
the pre-built images now, so having pre-built images only for
samsung-a3ulte is quite confusing for users.
The situation is similar as for samsung-a5ulte and samsung-a5lte
which also are both in community already.
This updates the current commit and refactor APKBUILD to
more modern way of writing downstream kernels. Also move to main/ to fit
other linux-postmarketos-* kernels.
Not sure why "qemu" is listed in the depends of bq-paella-downstream,
that does not really make sense. Also fixup the pkgdesc of the
nonfree-firmware subpackage, the modem works somewhat now.
[ci:skip-build]: already built successfully in CI
The "bq-picmt" device port is actually for the same device as the
"bq-paella" device package in community, just with the downstream
kernel. This is useful occasionally for testing.
However, the name applies that this device package should be used
on the BQ variant of the BQ Aquaris X5 (picmt) and the mainline
package should be used on the Cyanogen variant (paella). Actually
both packages work on both variants since the hardware is the same.
To make that clear, rename "bq-picmt" to "bq-paella-downstream".
Right now the "bq-picmt" device port is quite confusing.
It's actually for the same device as "bq-paella", which is in community
and uses the mainline kernel, except that it uses the downstream kernel.
Having the downstream kernel packaged is useful for testing sometimes,
but otherwise the device package is completely unsupported.
The mainline port works much better. The downstream port should only
be used if you know what you are doing (e.g. because you want to test
if something is working on downstream but not mainline) and therefore
it should not show up in "pmbootstrap init" by default.
Move the device package to unmaintained to implement that.
Also, add an "# Unmaintained: ..." comment that will be displayed
in "pmbootstrap init" if the device is selected anyway.
This is required by some software, e.g. bluez/gnome to set some ACLs on
/dev/rfkill (see #904). While probably nobody will notice on the
downstream kernels (as we don't have any proper software there anyways)
it's definitely needed on mainline-ish kernels. Surprisingly only one
kernel has broken by enabling this option (linux-sony-tulip) which I've
patched up.
linux-postmarketos-qcom-sdm660 did not break by enabling this option,
but required linux4.17-gcc10-extern_YYLOC_global_declaration.patch to
build again, so this was fixed too.
[ci:skip-build] [ci:ignore-count]
According to Purism, the imx8mq-librem5.dtb alias is going away soon,
and we should be using the -r2 dtb. The -r2 dtb (which represents
Birch/Chestnut L5 variants) is most compatible, it'll boot on later
variants. dtbs for later L5 devices won't work on older devices.
This is a generic package for devices which use x86_64 CPU and 32-bit
EFI. Most distributions don't provide installation for 32-bit EFI, so
installation is not user-friendly.
Actually, these tablets deserve device-specific packages (I am going to
make ones for ASUS VivoTab Note 8 and ASUS Transformer Book T100TA), but
this one includes basic functions and can be booted on any 32-bit EFI
tablet with disabled secure boot and missing device-specific package.
I guess 32-bit EFI with 64-bit CPU is Intel's "feature" and AMD doesn't
have such stuff, so this package will be installed only on devices with
Intel CPU, unlike device-tablet-x64uefi which can be installed on any
x86_64 PC. So i decided to enable some Intel specific things (userspace
GPU stuff and alsa-ucm-conf).
I used for reference device-tablet-x64uefi and
device-trekstor-surftabduow1 packages. This package also can be used as
a reference for device-specific ones.