+Andy On Wed, Mar 27, 2019 at 04:22:04PM +0800, Daniel Drake wrote: > Hi Mika, > > Digging up this old thread again... > > On Tue, Nov 21, 2017 at 8:13 PM Mika Westerberg > <mika.westerberg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > On Tue, Nov 21, 2017 at 07:54:26PM +0800, Chris Chiu wrote: > > > Yup, I checked the value of the corresponded pin. It shows following before > > > suspend > > > pin 18 (GPIO_18) GPIO 0x40800102 0x00024075 > > > > > > Then after resume > > > pin 18 (GPIO_18) GPIO 0x40800102 0x00024075 [ACPI] > > > > OK, so ownership is changed to ACPI. > > > > > What else register do you suggest me to compare? The PADCFG2 is invalid > > > > It's fine APL does not have PADCFG2. > > > > Hmm, I don't understand how this can work in Windows either. The Windows > > people told me that they don't save and restore anything else than > > padcfg registers + ie. If the ownership is changed to ACPI it means you > > don't get interrupts anymore (only GPEs) and that applies to Windows as > > well. > > In the mails after the one quoted above, we reported back to you that > the new BIOS from Asus solved the issue. > > However, during the time that has followed, we have had numerous user > reports from Asus E403NA, X540NA, and X541NA laptops (basically the > same models that we originally discussed) where the touchpad stops > working after suspend/resume, even with the latest BIOS. We managed to > get an affected E403NA unit in-hands again, and confirmed that > HOSTSW_OWN was being lost like we had observed before. > > Unfortunately as this was a customer laptop we had to return it > immediately, before we could investigate further. We don't have access > to any more units since they are old models now. > > However I'm wondering if you have any other ideas or if you think > something like our workaround patch might be acceptable under these > circumstances: > https://github.com/endlessm/linux/commit/f391452299f62a3d0cbe5333be90f69e9895d8ff I wonder if it would be simpler to save it always and then upon resume compare them and if changed, log this in dmesg and restore the saved one.