- Fixes FDE unlocking on devices with usb keyboards
- Also drops the i915 module from the initfs, this is specified by the
oem-intel package now
[ci:skip-build] already built successfully in CI
/dev/pmsg0 may be created by pstore driver. When it is available,
write logs into it so logs can be recovered through pstore after
a failed boot. This is useful for devices without console or hard
to get console.
On HTC devices with S-On still active, the 'userdata' partition
is not writable. Change the default rootfs partition to the
'system' partition, which is writable.
Now as boot-deploy allows us to generate both boot.img and extlinux.conf
at the same time, enable generating the config for all msm8916 since it
will be used in the future lk2nd release. boot.img is still kept to keep
compatibility with current lk2nd releases and to allow system recovery
with fastboot when required.
[ci:skip-build] already built successfully in CI
[ci:ignore-count]
Crappy workaround, it's better than having DNS broken...
See: https://gitlab.com/postmarketOS/pmaports/-/issues/2601
Also removed it from shellcheck, because SC doesn't like all of the
unused/unreachable things after the `exit 0`. This commit should be
reverted when the issue is actually fixed later...
[ci:skip-build] already built successfully in CI
* Depend on the common soc-qcom-sm7150 package
* Set console=null in cmdline
* Add touchscreen firmware to initramfs
* Add required modules for touchscreen to modules-initfs
* Panel output works, drop phoc.ini
* Switch maintainer and co-maintainer
* Bump pkgrel to 1.2
Signed-off-by: Jens Reidel <adrian@travitia.xyz>
tinydm uses startx for Xorg UIs, which is provided by the xinit package.
The xinit package used to be pulled in automatically by
the xorg-server package, but this stopped being the case with
1fd2d70696
this allows to opt-out of usb-tethering on pmOS devices with
`apk add !postmarketos-base-ui-networkmanager-usb-tethering`
this is useful for developers with laptops on pmOS / dailydriving
those laptops on pmOS.
[ci:skip-build]: Already built successfully in CI.
hwclock default configuration is to use the S3C RTC, which is mapped to
/dev/rtc0. However, reading from this clock fails with the following
kernel message:
"s3c-rtc 101e0000.rtc: hctosys: unable to read the hardware clock"
and the time as boot is then always set to 1/1/1970.
This commit change the default RTC to the MAX77686 one (mapped to
/dev/rtc1), that does not suffer from this issue.
Signed-off-by: Alexandre Marquet <tb@a-marquet.fr>
The adjustments made by this script are unnecessary now that the device
runs a mainline kernel, and more importantly the brcmfmac driver (as
opposed to the bcmdhd driver used in the vendor kernel).
Signed-off-by: Alexandre Marquet <tb@a-marquet.fr>