Difference between revisions of "Installing Fedora 11 on a ThinkPad T60"
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− | {{NOTE|This is based on the x86-64 | + | {| width="100%" |
− | + | |style="vertical-align:top;padding-right:20px;width:10px;white-space:nowrap;" | __TOC__ | |
+ | |style="vertical-align:top" | | ||
+ | {{NOTE|Some functions mentioned below might rely on available Fedora updates being installed. So if you're having problems with something that is supposed to work, please ensure you have all available updates installed}} | ||
+ | {{NOTE|This is based on the x86-64 version of Fedora 11}} | ||
{{NOTE|ThinkPad T60p is reported here as well}} | {{NOTE|ThinkPad T60p is reported here as well}} | ||
+ | |} | ||
− | == Success Chart == | + | == Success Chart - Out of the box experience == |
The SMOLT profile for the T60 used for testing Fedora 11 is [http://www.smolts.org/client/show/pub_55c7e1c7-00a3-468c-a558-ae1382ef506c here]. | The SMOLT profile for the T60 used for testing Fedora 11 is [http://www.smolts.org/client/show/pub_55c7e1c7-00a3-468c-a558-ae1382ef506c here]. | ||
{| border="1" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="0" | {| border="1" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="0" | ||
Line 19: | Line 23: | ||
| Laptop Screen || {{Cyes}} || only 1 video mode available | | Laptop Screen || {{Cyes}} || only 1 video mode available | ||
|- | |- | ||
− | | VGA || {{ | + | | VGA || {{Cno}} || currently broken |
|- | |- | ||
− | | DVI || {{ | + | | DVI || {{Cno}} || currently broken |
|- | |- | ||
|rowspan=3|Display - ATI | |rowspan=3|Display - ATI | ||
Line 37: | Line 41: | ||
|colspan=2| Audio || {{Cyes}} || | |colspan=2| Audio || {{Cyes}} || | ||
|- | |- | ||
− | |rowspan=5| Wireless || WiFi - Atheros|| {{ | + | |rowspan=5| Wireless || WiFi - Atheros|| {{Cpart}} || occasional disconnect/reconnect |
|- | |- | ||
| WiFi - Intel|| {{Cyes}} || no problems at all | | WiFi - Intel|| {{Cyes}} || no problems at all | ||
Line 56: | Line 60: | ||
| Serial || {{Cyes}} || Requires port-replicator or dock | | Serial || {{Cyes}} || Requires port-replicator or dock | ||
|- | |- | ||
− | | IrDA || {{Cno}} || Device is detected, but | + | | IrDA || {{Cno}} || Device is detected, but does not work. |
|- | |- | ||
− | | PS/2 Keyboard/Mouse || {{ | + | | PS/2 Keyboard/Mouse || {{Cyes}}|| Mouse tested, Requires port-replicator or dock |
|- | |- | ||
| Parallel || {{Cunk}} (should work)|| Requires port-replicator or dock | | Parallel || {{Cunk}} (should work)|| Requires port-replicator or dock | ||
Line 71: | Line 75: | ||
caution out of the box | caution out of the box | ||
|- | |- | ||
− | | colspan=2| Fingerprint reader || {{ | + | | colspan=2| Fingerprint reader || {{Cyes}} || F11 has standard support for Fingerprint readers |
|- | |- | ||
| colspan=2| TPM (security subsystem) || {{Cunk}} || Not brave enough to mess around with it | | colspan=2| TPM (security subsystem) || {{Cunk}} || Not brave enough to mess around with it | ||
Line 79: | Line 83: | ||
= Tested and Verified on Fedora 11 = | = Tested and Verified on Fedora 11 = | ||
− | Information in this section has been tested and verified using Fedora 11 | + | Information in this section has been tested and verified using Fedora 11. |
== Installation == | == Installation == | ||
Line 91: | Line 95: | ||
Fedora 11 uses KMS (Kernel Mode Setting) by default, which for now has some up and down sides for external displays. | Fedora 11 uses KMS (Kernel Mode Setting) by default, which for now has some up and down sides for external displays. | ||
− | |||
− | + | For the moment external displays do not work. When you boot with an external display attached, you will get a non-optimal resolution on the external display, and the LVDS will be off. When you logon the system will hang, and you will have a black display, but with functioning mouse cursor. Attaching a display afterwards also freezes the system when you try to active extended desktop. | |
+ | |||
+ | Another down side is that currently mirror mode is very limited as the ThinkPad LCD (LVDS) is limited to one single display mode, so only if the external display supports this same mode can you activate mirror mode. On the other hand with KMS enabled the maximum virtual display size is now 4096x4096 (2048x2048 without KMS) meaning you can have an extended desktop. | ||
+ | |||
+ | A workaround to the single mode problem is to add the modes manually with xrandr. Below is a script I created that adds the most common modes for a 1400x1050 LCD ThinkPad | ||
+ | |||
+ | <pre> | ||
+ | #!/bin/bash | ||
+ | # | ||
+ | # modelines created with "gtf 640 480 60" | ||
+ | # | ||
+ | xrandr --newmode "1280x1024_60.00" 108.88 1280 1360 1496 1712 1024 1025 1028 1060 -HSync +Vsync | ||
+ | xrandr --newmode "1024x768_60.00" 64.11 1024 1080 1184 1344 768 769 772 795 -HSync +Vsync | ||
+ | xrandr --newmode "800x600_60.00" 38.22 800 832 912 1024 600 601 604 622 -HSync +Vsync | ||
+ | xrandr --newmode "640x480_60.00" 23.86 640 656 720 800 480 481 484 497 -HSync +Vsync | ||
+ | xrandr --addmode LVDS1 "1280x1024_60.00" | ||
+ | xrandr --addmode LVDS1 "1024x768_60.00" | ||
+ | xrandr --addmode LVDS1 "800x600_60.00" | ||
+ | xrandr --addmode LVDS1 "640x480_60.00" | ||
+ | </pre> | ||
+ | |||
=== X Server (ATI)=== | === X Server (ATI)=== | ||
On a T60p, displays work well, with multiple mirrored and non-mirrored displays and even with one of the displays being rotated! This may also work on a base T60, as there has been a lot of effort put into getting this to work right. | On a T60p, displays work well, with multiple mirrored and non-mirrored displays and even with one of the displays being rotated! This may also work on a base T60, as there has been a lot of effort put into getting this to work right. | ||
Line 104: | Line 127: | ||
Compiz (wobbly windows, desktops on a cube) seems to work. Direct display of video may be problematic with Compiz, however. | Compiz (wobbly windows, desktops on a cube) seems to work. Direct display of video may be problematic with Compiz, however. | ||
− | === | + | === DPI === |
− | On the 1400x1050 (and 1600x1200) LCD Fedora comes up with a DPI of 124 (or higher). While this is correct for the physical screen size, it waists a lot of screen real estate. | + | On the 1400x1050 (and 1600x1200) LCD Fedora comes up with a DPI (Dots per Inch) of 124 (or higher). While this is correct for the physical screen size, it waists a lot of screen real estate. |
To change to the more typical 96 DPI, go to System -> Preferences -> Appearance. Now in Appearance Preferences select the Fonts tab and press the "Details ..." button. Here you can change the dots per inch to 96. Of course, many things will shrink, but that is what you wanted, after all. | To change to the more typical 96 DPI, go to System -> Preferences -> Appearance. Now in Appearance Preferences select the Fonts tab and press the "Details ..." button. Here you can change the dots per inch to 96. Of course, many things will shrink, but that is what you wanted, after all. | ||
+ | === OSD === | ||
+ | By default OSD (On-Screen-Display) will only function for the brightness keys, not for other functions such as Volume. | ||
+ | |||
+ | For this you can install the 'tpb' package from the standard Fedora repository | ||
+ | yum install tpb | ||
+ | |||
+ | But afterwards, you need to edit {{path|/etc/tpbrc}} and change | ||
+ | |||
+ | #OSDBRIGHTNESS OFF | ||
+ | to (remove the #) | ||
+ | OSDBRIGHTNESS OFF | ||
+ | |||
+ | Otherwise you will get two OSDs when using the brightness keys, one from gnome-power-manager and the other from tpb. | ||
=== Wireless Network === | === Wireless Network === | ||
Both the Intel and Atheros wireless should work out of the box. | Both the Intel and Atheros wireless should work out of the box. | ||
+ | ====Atheros WiFi==== | ||
+ | Atheros was tested and works, but you may encounter occasional disconnects and reconnects. In addition you might have problems after a suspend cycle. It seems the Atheros chip can get stuck sometimes, require a shutdown (not just a reboot) before the driver can initialize the chip again. Also the WiFi LED remains off. | ||
− | + | As a test I tried the 2.6.31 fedora 12 kernel from rawhide, and it does improve matters, the chip no longer gets stuck, but I it can still take several tries before I get a network connection established. After a suspend/resume cycle, I occasionally have to unload/reload the ath5k module. Also the WiFi activity LED works. | |
+ | ====Intel WiFi==== | ||
Intel wireless was tested and works. | Intel wireless was tested and works. | ||
=== ThinkPad keys === | === ThinkPad keys === | ||
ThinkPad keys are handled by a mixture of the thinkpad_acpi, acpi button, acpi dock and acpi video drivers. | ThinkPad keys are handled by a mixture of the thinkpad_acpi, acpi button, acpi dock and acpi video drivers. | ||
− | + | ||
{| border="1" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="0" | {| border="1" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="0" | ||
|- | |- | ||
Line 146: | Line 185: | ||
| Fn-PgUp || thinklight || - || {{Cno}} || {{Cyes}} || changing thinkpad_acpi hotkey_mask, causes HAL events. No OSD in any case. | | Fn-PgUp || thinklight || - || {{Cno}} || {{Cyes}} || changing thinkpad_acpi hotkey_mask, causes HAL events. No OSD in any case. | ||
|- | |- | ||
− | | Fn-Space || zoom || thinkpad_acpi || {{Cyes|text=}} HAL || {{Cno}} || | + | | Fn-Space || zoom || thinkpad_acpi || {{Cyes|text=}} HAL || {{Cno}} || Known Xorg limitation, scheduled to be fixed in Xorg 1.8 with the new XKB2 extension in 2Q 2010 |
|- | |- | ||
| VolumeUp || Volume Up || - || {{Cno}} || {{Cyes}} || changing thinkpad_acpi hotkey_mask, causes HAL events. But OSD is wrong | | VolumeUp || Volume Up || - || {{Cno}} || {{Cyes}} || changing thinkpad_acpi hotkey_mask, causes HAL events. But OSD is wrong | ||
Line 195: | Line 234: | ||
To set this solution up, first | To set this solution up, first | ||
− | create the file {{path|/etc/udev/rules.d/50- | + | create the file {{path|/etc/udev/rules.d/50-thinkpad-ultrabay.rules}} with the following content |
ENV{BAY_EVENT}=="3", ACTION=="change", SUBSYSTEM=="scsi", RUN+="/usr/local/sbin/ultrabay_eject" | ENV{BAY_EVENT}=="3", ACTION=="change", SUBSYSTEM=="scsi", RUN+="/usr/local/sbin/ultrabay_eject" | ||
− | Make sure it is owned by root and has the | + | Make sure it is owned by root and has the right selinux security context |
+ | chown root:root /etc/udev/rules.d/50-thinkpad-ultrabay.rules | ||
+ | chmod 644 /etc/udev/rules.d/50-thinkpad-ultrabay.rules | ||
+ | chcon system_u:object_r:etc_runtime_t:s0 /etc/udev/rules.d/50-thinkpad-ultrabay.rules | ||
− | Then create the executable file {{path|/usr/local/sbin/ultrabay_eject}} | + | Then create the executable file {{path|/usr/local/sbin/ultrabay_eject}} with the following content |
<pre> | <pre> | ||
#!/bin/bash | #!/bin/bash | ||
Line 207: | Line 249: | ||
shopt -s nullglob | shopt -s nullglob | ||
logger ultrabay_eject storage device $DEVPATH | logger ultrabay_eject storage device $DEVPATH | ||
+ | export DISPLAY=:0.0 # required for notify-send | ||
# Umount the filesystem(s) backed by the given major:minor device(s) | # Umount the filesystem(s) backed by the given major:minor device(s) | ||
unmount_rdev() { perl - "$@" <<'EOPERL' # let's do it in Perl | unmount_rdev() { perl - "$@" <<'EOPERL' # let's do it in Perl | ||
− | + | for $major_minor (@ARGV) { | |
− | + | $major_minor =~ m/^(\d+):(\d+)$/ or die; | |
− | + | push(@tgt_rdevs, ($1<<8)|$2); | |
− | + | } | |
# Sort by reverse length of mount point, to unmount sub-directories first | # Sort by reverse length of mount point, to unmount sub-directories first | ||
open MOUNTS,"</proc/mounts" or die "$!"; | open MOUNTS,"</proc/mounts" or die "$!"; | ||
Line 220: | Line 263: | ||
foreach $m (@mounts) { | foreach $m (@mounts) { | ||
($dev,$dir)=@$m; | ($dev,$dir)=@$m; | ||
− | + | next unless -b $dev; $rdev=(stat($dev))[6]; | |
− | + | next unless grep($_==$rdev, @tgt_rdevs); | |
− | + | system("umount","-v","$dir")==0 or $bad=1; | |
− | + | if ($bad == 1) { | |
− | + | system("logger","ultrabay_eject","ERROR unmounting",$dev,$dir); | |
− | + | system("notify-send -u critical -t 300000 \"Error unmounting $dir\" \"Unmounting of $dir on $dev failed!\""); | |
+ | } else { | ||
+ | system("logger","ultrabay_eject","unmounted",$dev,$dir); | ||
+ | system("notify-send -u normal -t 300000 \"Unmounted $dir\""); | ||
+ | }; | ||
+ | } | ||
+ | exit 1 if $bad; | ||
EOPERL | EOPERL | ||
} | } | ||
Line 231: | Line 280: | ||
# Get the UltraBay's /dev/foo block device node | # Get the UltraBay's /dev/foo block device node | ||
ultrabay_dev_node() { | ultrabay_dev_node() { | ||
− | + | UDEV_PATH="`readlink -e "$ULTRABAY_SYSDIR/block/"*`" || return 1 | |
− | + | UDEV_NAME="`udevadm info --query=name --path=$UDEV_PATH`" || return 1 | |
− | + | echo /dev/$UDEV_NAME | |
} | } | ||
if [ -d $ULTRABAY_SYSDIR ]; then | if [ -d $ULTRABAY_SYSDIR ]; then | ||
− | + | sync | |
− | + | # Unmount filesystems backed by this device | |
− | + | ## This seems to be very inelegant and prone to failure | |
− | + | unmount_rdev `cat $ULTRABAY_SYSDIR/block/*/dev \ | |
− | + | $ULTRABAY_SYSDIR/block/*/*/dev` \ | |
− | + | || { | |
− | + | logger ultrabay_eject umounting failed | |
− | + | echo 2 > /proc/acpi/ibm/beep # triple error tone | |
− | + | notify-send -u critical -t 300000 "ThinkPad Ultrabay eject failed" "Please do not pull the device, doing so could cause file corruption and possibly hang the system. Unmounting of the filesystem on the ThinkPad Ultrabay device failed. Please put the eject leaver back in place, and try to unmount the filesystem manually. If this succeeds you can try the eject again" | |
− | + | exit 1; | |
+ | } | ||
sync | sync | ||
# Nicely power off the device | # Nicely power off the device | ||
− | + | DEVNODE=`ultrabay_dev_node` && hdparm -Y $DEVNODE | |
# Let HAL+KDE notice the unmount and let the disk spin down | # Let HAL+KDE notice the unmount and let the disk spin down | ||
− | + | sleep 0.5 | |
− | + | # Unregister this SCSI device: | |
− | + | sync | |
− | + | echo 1 > $ULTRABAY_SYSDIR/delete | |
else | else | ||
− | + | logger ultrabay_eject no ultrabay device directory | |
− | + | echo 2 > /proc/acpi/ibm/beep # triple error tone | |
− | + | exit 1 | |
fi | fi | ||
Line 268: | Line 318: | ||
dock=${dock%%/type:ata_bay} # needed for 2.6.27 and later | dock=${dock%%/type:ata_bay} # needed for 2.6.27 and later | ||
if [ -n "$dock" -a -d "$dock" ]; then | if [ -n "$dock" -a -d "$dock" ]; then | ||
− | + | logger ultrabay_eject undocking $dock | |
echo 1 > $dock/undock | echo 1 > $dock/undock | ||
fi | fi | ||
Line 274: | Line 324: | ||
logger ultrabay_eject done | logger ultrabay_eject done | ||
echo 12 > /proc/acpi/ibm/beep | echo 12 > /proc/acpi/ibm/beep | ||
+ | notify-send -u normal -t 300000 "Safe to remove" "The ThinkPad Ultrabay device can now safely be removed" | ||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
+ | Then make sure ownership and permissions are set correct | ||
+ | chown root:root /usr/local/sbin/ultrabay_eject | ||
+ | chmod 555 /usr/local/sbin/ultrabay_eject | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===IrDA=== | ||
+ | IrDA is detected, but does not work. Part of the problem is that the default Fedora configuration expects to find the IrDA port at /dev/ttyS2, while it should use /dev/ircomm0 instead. This can be fixed in {{path|/etc/sysconfig/irda}} after which the irda service can be started ({{cmdroot|service irda start}}). | ||
+ | However, even after this communication with other devices fails. irdadump does not show any output when something like a mobile phone with IrDA is sending data. | ||
== Untested on Fedora 11 == | == Untested on Fedora 11 == | ||
− | The | + | The WWAN option has not been tested yet. If you try it with Fedora 11, please update the table. |
[[Category:T60]][[Category:Fedora]][[Category:T60p]] | [[Category:T60]][[Category:Fedora]][[Category:T60p]] |
Latest revision as of 23:04, 26 October 2009
NOTE!
Some functions mentioned below might rely on available Fedora updates being installed. So if you're having problems with something that is supposed to work, please ensure you have all available updates installed
NOTE!
This is based on the x86-64 version of Fedora 11
NOTE!
ThinkPad T60p is reported here as well
|
Success Chart - Out of the box experience
The SMOLT profile for the T60 used for testing Fedora 11 is here.
Item | Working | Notes | |
Installation | Local CD/DVD install | yes | |
Network Installation | yes | ||
USB Installation | yes | ||
Display - Intel | Laptop Screen | yes | only 1 video mode available |
VGA | no | currently broken | |
DVI | no | currently broken | |
Display - ATI | Laptop Screen | yes | everything works, including rotation |
VGA | yes | everything works, including rotation and mirroring | |
DVI | unknown (should work) | no reason this wouldn't work | |
Power Management | Software Suspend (hibernate) | yes | |
Suspend to Memory (ACPI sleep) | yes | ||
Audio | yes | ||
Wireless | WiFi - Atheros | partial | occasional disconnect/reconnect |
WiFi - Intel | yes | no problems at all | |
Bluetooth | yes | ||
WWAN - Verizon | unknown | ||
WWAN - Cingular | unknown | ||
Extra Buttons | Keyboard Section | partial | see ThinkPad keyboard section below |
Ports | Ethernet | yes | |
Modem | no | Requires closed-source driver | |
Serial | yes | Requires port-replicator or dock | |
IrDA | no | Device is detected, but does not work. | |
PS/2 Keyboard/Mouse | yes | Mouse tested, Requires port-replicator or dock | |
Parallel | unknown (should work) | Requires port-replicator or dock | |
USB | yes | ||
PCMCIA/Cardbus | yes | even ATA adaptors (for CF cards, etc) now work! | |
Harddisk Active Protection | no | ||
Ultrabay device hotswap | partial | see below, use with
caution out of the box | |
Fingerprint reader | yes | F11 has standard support for Fingerprint readers | |
TPM (security subsystem) | unknown | Not brave enough to mess around with it |
Tested and Verified on Fedora 11
Information in this section has been tested and verified using Fedora 11.
Installation
Installation is straight forward; you can follow the generic Fedora install instructions.
Configuration
X Server (Intel)
Basic X server functionality should work out of the box on the ThinkPad LCD (LVDS), as long as no external displays are attached at boot.
Fedora 11 uses KMS (Kernel Mode Setting) by default, which for now has some up and down sides for external displays.
For the moment external displays do not work. When you boot with an external display attached, you will get a non-optimal resolution on the external display, and the LVDS will be off. When you logon the system will hang, and you will have a black display, but with functioning mouse cursor. Attaching a display afterwards also freezes the system when you try to active extended desktop.
Another down side is that currently mirror mode is very limited as the ThinkPad LCD (LVDS) is limited to one single display mode, so only if the external display supports this same mode can you activate mirror mode. On the other hand with KMS enabled the maximum virtual display size is now 4096x4096 (2048x2048 without KMS) meaning you can have an extended desktop.
A workaround to the single mode problem is to add the modes manually with xrandr. Below is a script I created that adds the most common modes for a 1400x1050 LCD ThinkPad
#!/bin/bash # # modelines created with "gtf 640 480 60" # xrandr --newmode "1280x1024_60.00" 108.88 1280 1360 1496 1712 1024 1025 1028 1060 -HSync +Vsync xrandr --newmode "1024x768_60.00" 64.11 1024 1080 1184 1344 768 769 772 795 -HSync +Vsync xrandr --newmode "800x600_60.00" 38.22 800 832 912 1024 600 601 604 622 -HSync +Vsync xrandr --newmode "640x480_60.00" 23.86 640 656 720 800 480 481 484 497 -HSync +Vsync xrandr --addmode LVDS1 "1280x1024_60.00" xrandr --addmode LVDS1 "1024x768_60.00" xrandr --addmode LVDS1 "800x600_60.00" xrandr --addmode LVDS1 "640x480_60.00"
X Server (ATI)
On a T60p, displays work well, with multiple mirrored and non-mirrored displays and even with one of the displays being rotated! This may also work on a base T60, as there has been a lot of effort put into getting this to work right.
One thing that still doesn't work quite right is screensavers and screen blanking. There is something wrong with the timers, which may result in your screen blanking while you are typing. Recovery is a simple as waiting until the screen is completely blank and then type or click to wake up the screen.
Another thing that doesn't work quite right is screen resolution when booting with multiple screens. If one screen doesn't not have a preferred resolution, a poor resolution may be used for both screens during the booting process. Everything works fine after login, however.
Desktop Effects
Compiz (wobbly windows, desktops on a cube) seems to work. Direct display of video may be problematic with Compiz, however.
DPI
On the 1400x1050 (and 1600x1200) LCD Fedora comes up with a DPI (Dots per Inch) of 124 (or higher). While this is correct for the physical screen size, it waists a lot of screen real estate.
To change to the more typical 96 DPI, go to System -> Preferences -> Appearance. Now in Appearance Preferences select the Fonts tab and press the "Details ..." button. Here you can change the dots per inch to 96. Of course, many things will shrink, but that is what you wanted, after all.
OSD
By default OSD (On-Screen-Display) will only function for the brightness keys, not for other functions such as Volume.
For this you can install the 'tpb' package from the standard Fedora repository
yum install tpb
But afterwards, you need to edit /etc/tpbrc and change
#OSDBRIGHTNESS OFF
to (remove the #)
OSDBRIGHTNESS OFF
Otherwise you will get two OSDs when using the brightness keys, one from gnome-power-manager and the other from tpb.
Wireless Network
Both the Intel and Atheros wireless should work out of the box.
Atheros WiFi
Atheros was tested and works, but you may encounter occasional disconnects and reconnects. In addition you might have problems after a suspend cycle. It seems the Atheros chip can get stuck sometimes, require a shutdown (not just a reboot) before the driver can initialize the chip again. Also the WiFi LED remains off.
As a test I tried the 2.6.31 fedora 12 kernel from rawhide, and it does improve matters, the chip no longer gets stuck, but I it can still take several tries before I get a network connection established. After a suspend/resume cycle, I occasionally have to unload/reload the ath5k module. Also the WiFi activity LED works.
Intel WiFi
Intel wireless was tested and works.
ThinkPad keys
ThinkPad keys are handled by a mixture of the thinkpad_acpi, acpi button, acpi dock and acpi video drivers.
Key | Function | Handled by | Event | Works | Notes |
Fn-F2 | lock screen | thinkpad_acpi | HAL | yes | |
Fn-F3 | battery | thinkpad_acpi | HAL | yes | |
Fn-F4 | suspend | acpi button | HAL | yes | |
Fn-F5 | wireless | thinkpad_acpi | HAL | partial | No default action, but can be associated with gnome-keybinding-properties |
Fn-F7 | videomode | thinkpad_acpi | HAL | yes | Cycles through only LCD, only external, both (mirrored), and both (non-mirrored) |
Fn-F8 | mouse input select | thinkpad_acpi | HAL | partial | No default action, but can be associated with gnome-keybinding-properties |
Fn-F9 | undock | thinkpad_acpi | HAL | partial | No default action, but can be associated with gnome-keybinding-properties |
Fn-F12 | hibernate | acpi button | HAL | partial | does the same as Fn-F4 (suspend), not hibernate |
Fn-Home | brightness up | acpi video | HAL | yes | includes on-screen display of brightness level |
Fn-End | brightness down | acpi video | HAL | yes | includes on-screen display of brightness level |
Fn-PgUp | thinklight | - | no | yes | changing thinkpad_acpi hotkey_mask, causes HAL events. No OSD in any case. |
Fn-Space | zoom | thinkpad_acpi | HAL | no | Known Xorg limitation, scheduled to be fixed in Xorg 1.8 with the new XKB2 extension in 2Q 2010 |
VolumeUp | Volume Up | - | no | yes | changing thinkpad_acpi hotkey_mask, causes HAL events. But OSD is wrong |
VolumeDown | Volume Down | - | no | yes | changing thinkpad_acpi hotkey_mask, causes HAL events. But OSD is wrong |
Mute | Mute | - | no | yes | changing thinkpad_acpi hotkey_mask, causes HAL events and OSD. works as a on/off toggle |
ThinkVantage | Vendor key | thinkpad_acpi | HAL | partial | No default action, but can be associated with gnome-keybinding-properties |
NextTab | Browser Next tab | standard keyboard driver | HAL | yes | |
PreviousTab | Browser Previous tab | standard keyboard driver | HAL | yes | |
Fn-Up | Stop | standard keyboard driver | HAL | yes | |
Fn-Left | reverse | standard keyboard driver | HAL | yes | |
Fn-Right | forward | standard keyboard driver | HAL | yes | |
Fn-Down | play/pause | standard keyboard driver | HAL | yes | |
Power | Power button | acpi button | HAL | yes | Need to press button for ~1 second to trigger event |
Lid | Lid button | acpi button | HAL | yes | |
Dock | Dock eject button | acpi dock | udev | partial | causes udev event. Disconnects Ethernet, switches to battery and unload of USB devices (including internal Bluetooth!!).Does not restore video to ThinkPad only. |
Ultrabay | Ultrabay eject switch | acpi dock | udev | partial | causes a udev event, which can be handled as in [How to hotswap Ultrabay devices], with minor changes, but should be handled better |
Radio switch | Radio kill switch | thinkpad_acpi | udev | partial | Bluetooth only |
Ultrabay
The Ultrabay has some glitches out of the box with respect to hotswapping. It is possible to lock the machine when pulling out devices, even the CD/DVD device.
The culprit is that the Ultrabay pre-eject switch is not hooked into anything useful. It does cause udev events, but nothing is listening for them. When a device that has a mounted partition or CD is actually pulled out it is too late to do the right thing. Fedora 11 will usually just complain, sometimes bitterly, but may also lock up for some unknown reason, even if just pulling out a CD/DVD device with a mounted CD.
Manually unmounting before removal will help. Manual powering down may also be required for correct performance.
A better solution is to set up a udev rule and script to handle the pre-eject switch event for Ultrabay devices that have mountable things in them as in [How to hotswap Ultrabay devices].
The revised solution here works well. Pushing the pre-eject switch either does the unmounting and powering off and then emits a low beep, or fails and then emits a triple beep. After success the device can be safely removed or the eject lever can be pushed back and everything will be remounted. After failure pushing the eject lever back in does nothing, permitting continuing as if nothing happened or allowing changes to be made before the next attempt to remove.
Unfortunately the code below is complex and may be fragile. A better solution would be very useful.
To set this solution up, first create the file /etc/udev/rules.d/50-thinkpad-ultrabay.rules with the following content
ENV{BAY_EVENT}=="3", ACTION=="change", SUBSYSTEM=="scsi", RUN+="/usr/local/sbin/ultrabay_eject"
Make sure it is owned by root and has the right selinux security context
chown root:root /etc/udev/rules.d/50-thinkpad-ultrabay.rules chmod 644 /etc/udev/rules.d/50-thinkpad-ultrabay.rules chcon system_u:object_r:etc_runtime_t:s0 /etc/udev/rules.d/50-thinkpad-ultrabay.rules
Then create the executable file /usr/local/sbin/ultrabay_eject with the following content
#!/bin/bash ULTRABAY_SYSDIR=/sys$DEVPATH shopt -s nullglob logger ultrabay_eject storage device $DEVPATH export DISPLAY=:0.0 # required for notify-send # Umount the filesystem(s) backed by the given major:minor device(s) unmount_rdev() { perl - "$@" <<'EOPERL' # let's do it in Perl for $major_minor (@ARGV) { $major_minor =~ m/^(\d+):(\d+)$/ or die; push(@tgt_rdevs, ($1<<8)|$2); } # Sort by reverse length of mount point, to unmount sub-directories first open MOUNTS,"</proc/mounts" or die "$!"; @mounts=sort { length($b->[1]) <=> length($a->[1]) } map { [ split ] } <MOUNTS>; close MOUNTS; foreach $m (@mounts) { ($dev,$dir)=@$m; next unless -b $dev; $rdev=(stat($dev))[6]; next unless grep($_==$rdev, @tgt_rdevs); system("umount","-v","$dir")==0 or $bad=1; if ($bad == 1) { system("logger","ultrabay_eject","ERROR unmounting",$dev,$dir); system("notify-send -u critical -t 300000 \"Error unmounting $dir\" \"Unmounting of $dir on $dev failed!\""); } else { system("logger","ultrabay_eject","unmounted",$dev,$dir); system("notify-send -u normal -t 300000 \"Unmounted $dir\""); }; } exit 1 if $bad; EOPERL } # Get the UltraBay's /dev/foo block device node ultrabay_dev_node() { UDEV_PATH="`readlink -e "$ULTRABAY_SYSDIR/block/"*`" || return 1 UDEV_NAME="`udevadm info --query=name --path=$UDEV_PATH`" || return 1 echo /dev/$UDEV_NAME } if [ -d $ULTRABAY_SYSDIR ]; then sync # Unmount filesystems backed by this device ## This seems to be very inelegant and prone to failure unmount_rdev `cat $ULTRABAY_SYSDIR/block/*/dev \ $ULTRABAY_SYSDIR/block/*/*/dev` \ || { logger ultrabay_eject umounting failed echo 2 > /proc/acpi/ibm/beep # triple error tone notify-send -u critical -t 300000 "ThinkPad Ultrabay eject failed" "Please do not pull the device, doing so could cause file corruption and possibly hang the system. Unmounting of the filesystem on the ThinkPad Ultrabay device failed. Please put the eject leaver back in place, and try to unmount the filesystem manually. If this succeeds you can try the eject again" exit 1; } sync # Nicely power off the device DEVNODE=`ultrabay_dev_node` && hdparm -Y $DEVNODE # Let HAL+KDE notice the unmount and let the disk spin down sleep 0.5 # Unregister this SCSI device: sync echo 1 > $ULTRABAY_SYSDIR/delete else logger ultrabay_eject no ultrabay device directory echo 2 > /proc/acpi/ibm/beep # triple error tone exit 1 fi # We need sleep here so someone can disconnect the bay and the drive sleep 1 # Turn off power to the UltraBay dock=$( /bin/grep ata_bay /sys/devices/platform/dock.?/type ) dock=${dock%%/type:ata_bay} # needed for 2.6.27 and later if [ -n "$dock" -a -d "$dock" ]; then logger ultrabay_eject undocking $dock echo 1 > $dock/undock fi # Tell the user we're OK logger ultrabay_eject done echo 12 > /proc/acpi/ibm/beep notify-send -u normal -t 300000 "Safe to remove" "The ThinkPad Ultrabay device can now safely be removed"
Then make sure ownership and permissions are set correct
chown root:root /usr/local/sbin/ultrabay_eject chmod 555 /usr/local/sbin/ultrabay_eject
IrDA
IrDA is detected, but does not work. Part of the problem is that the default Fedora configuration expects to find the IrDA port at /dev/ttyS2, while it should use /dev/ircomm0 instead. This can be fixed in /etc/sysconfig/irda after which the irda service can be started (# service irda start
).
However, even after this communication with other devices fails. irdadump does not show any output when something like a mobile phone with IrDA is sending data.
Untested on Fedora 11
The WWAN option has not been tested yet. If you try it with Fedora 11, please update the table.