On 5/6/23 01:47, Thorsten Leemhuis wrote:
On 03.05.23 21:00, Dmitry Torokhov wrote:
On Wed, May 03, 2023 at 11:11:33AM -0500, Limonciello, Mario wrote:
On 5/3/2023 7:58 AM, Linux regression tracking (Thorsten Leemhuis) wrote:
I noticed a regression report in bugzilla.kernel.org. As many (most?)
kernel developers don't keep an eye on it, I decided to forward it by mail.
Chuanhong Guo, apparently it's cause by a change of yours.
BTW, there is another report caused by the change:
https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=217406
```
I have an HP Pavilion Aero 13 laptop that comes with an AMD Ryzen 7735U
CPU and an up-to-date BIOS. Using any kernel version that is strictly
greater than 5.19.9 on it is causing the typing with the integrated
keyboard to be extremely slow. "Slow" is subjective but let's say [...]"
```
/me wonders how many machines out there show problems we never hear about
Anyway:
Note, you have to use bugzilla to reach the reporter, as I sadly[1] can
not CCed them in mails like this.
Quoting from https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=217394 :
Matthew 2023-05-03 02:28:33 UTC
Reverting the changes found in this patch fixes the issue:
https://lore.kernel.org/all/20220712020058.90374-1-gch981213@xxxxxxxxx/
With that patch the AT Translated Set 2 Keyboard doesn't show up with the evtest and is not usable.
Hardware:
Aya Neo Air Plus
AMD Ryzen 7 6800U
See the ticket for more details.
BTW: there apparently is another IRQ override needed for a different
machine. See https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=216804#c8 for
details (ignore the comments before that, the quirk entry for that
machine was merged; comment 8 and all related to it really should have a
separate bug; that's also why this partly fall through the cracks here
:-/ ). The user is currently trying to create a patch.
Something I'm wondering about is if it's possible for i8042 to detect the
polarity is incorrect when it probes and
to try to correct it.
If we could do that we can probably drop 9946e39fe8d0 ("ACPI: resource: skip
IRQ override on AMD Zen platforms")
to fix this issue along with all the other quirks that have collected over
time on i8042 polarity issues.
8042 is shared between multiple platforms and is quite fragile as it is.
If there are issues in AMD firmware and you know the polarity that is
needed for 8042 on these platforms you should add a proper fixup for
override. Maybe you should only skip override for IRQ 1?
Stupid question from the peanut gallery: does anyone know what Windows
is doing on those machines? I wonder if this is one of those situation
where we just must follow suite to make things work reliably long term
for users, even if that might mean 8042 needs to be modified.
Or is the problem likely to go away with new hardware?
Ciao, Thorsten
P.S.: BTW:
#regzbot link: https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=217406
I've got the same question. This issue doesn't happen in AMD's
reference platform; it's not in AMD's firmware.
It seems to be happening in some OEM platforms only.
Dmitry,
Can you think about what a polarity detection scheme would look
like for i8042? If it's put in the error path (device not responding to
probe)
I would think it should be relatively low risk to otherwise working
hardware.