This allows using lm_sensors to read temperature data on the pinebook
pro (and probably other devices too)
❯ sensors
gpu_thermal-virtual-0
Adapter: Virtual device
temp1: +41.1°C (crit = +95.0°C)
tcpm_source_psy_4_0022-i2c-4-22
Adapter: rk3x-i2c
in0: 5.00 V (min = +5.00 V, max = +5.00 V)
curr1: 2.50 A (max = +2.50 A)
cw2015_battery-i2c-4-62
Adapter: rk3x-i2c
in0: 4.24 V
curr1: 0.00 A
cpu_thermal-virtual-0
Adapter: Virtual device
temp1: +47.5°C (crit = +95.0°C)
nvme-pci-0100
Adapter: PCI adapter
Composite: +31.9°C (low = -273.1°C, high = +80.8°C)
(crit = +80.8°C)
Sensor 1: +31.9°C (low = -273.1°C, high = +65261.8°C)
Sensor 2: +37.9°C (low = -273.1°C, high = +65261.8°C)
[ci:skip-build] Already built on CI
5.13.5 had some rockchip-related fixes in the changelog, so I figured
why not upgrade to it.
These patches from Manjaro seem to be the bare minimum required to get
usb-c charging and device peripherial support working again (external
display still doesn't work)
[ci:skip-build] already built successfully in CI
llvm was left over from Martijn's efforts to reduce the kernel size
The drivers for external DP are enabled here, but all patches from
manjaro that deal with DP/typec alt mode, etc are dropped since they do
not solve anything on their own and may cause display instability
issues...
[ci:skip-build]: already built successfully in CI
This switches the config over to one based on Alpine's linux-gru which
is for an rk3399 chromebook. It produces way smaller kernels and has
more general purpose hardware support.
Enable SATA host support, the AHCI driver, and SCSI disk support so that
some generic PCIe SATA cards will properly detect and mount SATA drives
connected to them.
Tested on a RockPro64 with 2 3.5" drives connected in RAID 0 to an
Ableconn PEXSA115A 2-port PCIe x2 card (ASM1062).
* 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]
At the moment we have Contributor: lines on some packages (but not all of them),
but often they don't represent the actual contributors to the package very well.
E.g. when we added them retroactively to the device packages we only added
the initial contributor (which isn't necessarily the person
who made most of the work for a device...)
The Git history is the most representative source for figuring out
who contributed to a package, so there is no reason to duplicate that
into the APKBUILD.
[skip ci]: way too many packages