Handle USSD QMI indication messages.
Add support for UCS2 USS Data coding scheme.
Check for User Action TLV type.
Downstream the accepted ofono patch as temporary solution.
Based on the Alpine mesa APKBUILD, but only the DRI driver
is packaged. It conflicts with the DRI gallium driver as
they both provide ARM dri drivers. It depends on the main
Mesa packages.
From TI, they must not be redistributed in a modified form. They
are built against GLIBC 2.29
To be functional, they need to be paired with a special build
of Mesa. There are subpackages for each different soc and only
one soc can be installed at a time. The Exynos S5PV210 subpackage
uses the same SGX540-120 as the ti443x blobs, but needs a binary
edit to be loaded. Due to the license restrictions, it must be
done in a post-install script.
We may wish to distribute some files that are explicitly
non-free, and it makes sense to place them in a separate
non-free directory rather than in main.
The work on an adaptive gpodder UI by tpikonen has continued
and is now available in the official gpodder repo as a dedicated
branch. This commit updates the package to the latest current
version of the branch.
CRDA in the kernel requires a regulatory database to be available
to configure the WiFi card correctly following the regulations in
each possible environment.
This has upstreamed fixes for call audio on the L5, but upstream hasn't
made a release yet. In the meantime, this is needed for calls to work on
5.11.0 and later kernels
[ci:skip-build]: won't finish in time
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>
Add post-upgrade file with a warning, so we don't symlink it to the
post-install script.
[ci:skip-vercheck]: no need to rebuild the package
Related: build.postmarketos.org#85
The TLVs are documented in GobiAPI. I pass 0xff for the call ID, as the
stock RIL appears to always do. I would guess it means "current foreground
call."
The call ID is returned in TLV 0x10, but I didn't implement parsing of
that.
Co-authored-by: Joey Hewitt <joey@joeyhewitt.com>
Acked-by: Alexey Andreyev <aa13q@ya.ru>
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.
Unmaintained devices are device packages that:
- Are known to be broken in some way without an active maintainer
who can investigate how to fix it, or
- Have not received any updates for a very long time, or
- Are discouraged from using because they are just intended for testing.
An example for this are ports using the downstream kernel for devices
which have a mainline port that is working quite well.
Unmaintained devices are still built by bpo (otherwise it would not make
sense to keep them), but they do not show up in "pmbootstrap init".
However, it is possible to manually select them by entering the name.
pmbootstrap will warn in that case.
Unmaintained packages should have a # Unmaintained: <reason> comment
in the APKBUILD, this comment is displayed in "pmbootstrap init"
so that the user knows why the device should not be used unless they
know what they are doing.
In this git repository, everything is about aports, this distinction was only
useful back in the day when pmbootstrap and pmaports were in the same git
repository.