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1 | 09:10 < j`ey> Glanzmann: `git rev-list 6f59bc24287..smc/work` that might work, not sure how it deals with merges. git rebase is the better way. but if you do that youre on your own! |
2 | 09:19 < _jannau_> Glanzmann: git rebase --onto 5.17-rc3 6f59bc24287 | |
3 | 09:23 < j`ey> if you add -p it can also preserve the merges | |
37f23338 TG |
4 | |
5 | 19:13 < j`ey> but there's also CONFIG_OF_DMA_DEFAULT_COHERENT, which makes of_dma_is_coherent always return true | |
6 | ||
7 | 21:02 < jannau> mps: you need https://lore.kernel.org/u-boot/20220208210215.8612-1-j@jannau.net/ for extlinux | |
6189d624 TG |
8 | |
9 | ARCH: 23:29 < ah-[m]> yep, exactly. I had to grub-mkconfig -o /boot/grub/grub.cfg, and move my Image.gz to /boot, otherwise it was just what was on the wiki page | |
e70d320b TG |
10 | |
11 | https://lore.kernel.org/linux-arm-kernel/20211011165707.138157-1-marcan@marcan.st/ | |
12 | 19:02 < jannau> I think based on this branch https://github.com/AsahiLinux/linux/tree/cpufreq/v1 | |
0c4f408e TG |
13 | |
14 | 23:41 < kov> Glanzmann, hmm interesting, I'll try upgrading libinput firs then, see if that fixes it | |
15 | 23:42 < kov> it's weird because I remember the trackpad working a while ago | |
16 | 23:45 -!- mtjzh (~mtjzh@2a02:8388:1742:9b80:658f:93d3:ec68:d60e) has joined #asahi | |
17 | 23:46 < kov> yep, just upgrading to testing's libinput makes it work heh thanks Glanzmann! | |
f6f13b9e TG |
18 | |
19 | Chromium 16KB patch: https://tg.st/u/Set-kernal-page-size-to-16K-on-loongson-MIPS-archtec.patch | |
bc854271 | 20 | 10:10 < jannau> see the commit message for 64k on ppc64 https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromium/src.git/+/445c099c6486b8e5ff8dafaefcd812a7ea4bdfff%5E%21/ |
aa2187f5 TG |
21 | 15:26 < tpw_rules> Glanzmann: https://pastebin.com/NzJEQJDW - https://tg.st/u/NzJEQJDW |
22 | 15:26 < tpw_rules> last i checked the built chromium only worked with the flags --in-process-gpu --no-sandbox --no-zygote but that may have been a kernel config problem | |
f5e7256a | 23 | Upstream BUG: https://bugs.webkit.org/show_bug.cgi?id=236564 |
6de0ead9 TG |
24 | |
25 | 22:39 < jannau> `dtc -I fs -O dts -o - /proc/device-tree` will output the device-tree as seen by linux | |
54350e1e TG |
26 | |
27 | 19:11 < Glanzmann> axboe: Could you explain how to mark a device as write-through? Does that mean if I issue a sync in Linux that no flush will happen. Because this would be helpful for the m1 notebook owners to improve performance. | |
28 | 19:11 < axboe> I just do: `echo "write through" > /sys/block/nvme0n1/queue/write_cache"` for now... | |
29 | 19:11 < axboe> Glanzmann: ^^ | |
30 | 19:12 < axboe> Glanzmann: and yes, that's what it means | |
31 | 19:12 < Glanzmann> axboe: Thanks. | |
32 | 19:12 < axboe> Glanzmann: it'll bump your test case from 56 iops to 14k or something like that :) | |
33 | 19:12 < axboe> alternatively, some sort of time based hack might make sense | |
34 | 19:13 < axboe> "only issue flush if X seconds has passed since last issue" | |
35 | 19:13 < axboe> kinda nasty, but safer | |
7af338e8 TG |
36 | |
37 | 15:50 < mps> axboe: Glanzmann: `libinput Disable While Typing Enabled (268): 1` is set in my case and it works fine | |
38 | 15:51 < mps> though I built latest beta of libinput and rebuilt xf86-input-libinput with it | |
39 | 15:52 < mps> i.e. libinput-1.19.901 | |
40 | 15:52 < axboe> mps: promising | |
41 | 15:53 < mps> but still didn't got it to detect thumb | |
0bfb4169 TG |
42 | 16:07 < mps> Glanzmann: `libinput quirks list /dev/input/event1` will show you features of input device |
43 | 16:09 < mps> and `libinput quirks list /dev/input/event1` will show quirks from libinput database | |
376e9a36 TG |
44 | |
45 | From mps: | |
46 | #!/bin/sh | |
47 | echo 2 > /sys/module/hid_apple/parameters/fnmode | |
48 | echo 1 > /sys/module/hid_apple/parameters/swap_fn_leftctrl | |
49 | echo 1 > /sys/module/hid_apple/parameters/swap_opt_cmd | |
77d777c5 TG |
50 | |
51 | 19:19 < Glanzmann> sven: Do you know why axboe set the admin queue to 2 instead of 8? | |
52 | 19:19 < sven> yes | |
53 | 19:19 < sven> almost all commands go through the io queue, no need to waste that space for the admin queue | |
b04a3052 TG |
54 | |
55 | # j`ey on deleting efi and Linux partitions from the gui in macos | |
56 | 20:46 < j`ey> Glanzmann: I didnt figure it out at the diskutil cli, but I managed to do it from the GUI, I think you have to erase/reformat as APFS before you can delete the volumes | |
848792f5 | 57 | 10:53 < j`ey> Glanzmann: for your notes: < tpw_rules> you can delete a non-apfs partition with: diskutil eraseVolume free n disk0sX |
5e24301e | 58 | 21:07 < tpw_rules> you can delete a non-apfs partition with: diskutil eraseVolume free n disk0sX |
b04a3052 | 59 | |
6b9ae994 | 60 | 08:54 < mixi> Glanzmann: the command you're looking for should be "dtc -I dtb -O dts /sys/firmware/fdt" |
20c4132a | 61 | 08:57 < jannau> Glanzmann: dtc -I fs -O dts -o - /proc/device-tree |
2da24151 TG |
62 | |
63 | # j`ey on hack to hookup lid close/open | |
64 | 23:19 < j`ey> apple_smc_event_received in drivers/platform/apple/smc_core.c is a good place to start looking | |
65 | ||
66 | # kettenis on the same issue using existing infrastructure | |
67 | 23:20 < kettenis> so the lid is hooked up to gP01 | |
68 | 23:24 < kettenis> looks like you could try hooking that up using gpio-keys-polled | |
69 | 23:27 < Glanzmann> kettenis: So gpio-keys-polled would poll gP01 and send a key event and than I could use my window manager to do something when that key event is received? | |
70 | 23:29 < kettenis> look at arch/arm/boot/dts/imx6q-novena.dts | |
7c8aab25 TG |
71 | |
72 | # How to subscribe to smc events | |
73 | 23:45 < j`ey> Glanzmann: if youre still interested in looking: drivers/power/supply/macsmc_power.c apple_smc_register_notifier(power->smc, &power->nb); | |
74 | 23:46 < j`ey> so this driver gets called, when an SMC notification happens. looks like all registered handlers would be called and its up to the callback to figure out if it needs to do something | |
5ef66885 TG |
75 | |
76 | # More background | |
77 | 23:54 < kettenis> if the interrupts are hooked up correctly for thise SMC gpios, gpio-keys instead of gpio-keys-polled should work | |
78 | 23:54 < j`ey> no irq_chip in the current driver | |
79 | ||
9ef76d5d TG |
80 | 17:34 <marcan> the image as built will have a real grub config with static UUIDs |
81 | 17:35 <marcan> well, a systemd early unit but yes | |
757a2286 TG |
82 | |
83 | { | |
84 | "os_list": [ | |
85 | { | |
86 | "name": "Asahi Linux reference distro (Arch Linux ARM)", | |
87 | "default_os_name": "Asahi Linux", | |
88 | "boot_object": "m1n1_uboot.bin", | |
89 | "package": "asahi-alarm.zip", | |
90 | "partitions": [ | |
91 | { | |
92 | "name": "EFI", | |
93 | "type": "EFI", | |
94 | "size": "512MB", | |
95 | "format": "fat", | |
96 | "volume_id": "0x03f103f1", | |
97 | "copy_firmware": true, | |
98 | "copy_installer_data": true, | |
99 | "source": "esp" | |
100 | }, | |
101 | { | |
102 | "name": "Root", | |
103 | "type": "Linux", | |
104 | "size": "5GB", | |
105 | "expand": true, | |
106 | "image": "root.img" | |
107 | } | |
108 | ] | |
109 | }, | |
110 | { | |
111 | "name": "UEFI environment only (m1n1 + U-Boot + ESP)", | |
112 | "default_os_name": "UEFI boot", | |
113 | "boot_object": "m1n1_uboot.bin", | |
114 | "partitions": [ | |
115 | { | |
116 | "name": "EFI", | |
117 | "type": "EFI", | |
118 | "size": "512MB", | |
119 | "format": "fat", | |
120 | "copy_firmware": true, | |
121 | "copy_installer_data": true | |
122 | } | |
123 | ] | |
124 | }, | |
125 | { | |
126 | "name": "Tethered boot (m1n1, for development)", | |
127 | "default_os_name": "m1n1 proxy", | |
128 | "expert": true, | |
129 | "boot_object": "m1n1.bin", | |
130 | "partitions": [] | |
131 | } | |
132 | ] | |
133 | } | |
1e964352 TG |
134 | |
135 | cloud-initramfs-growroot | |
f890e3ed TG |
136 | 16:00 < Glanzmann> So applying a new uuid to the rootfs needs to be done in the initrd. |
137 | tune2fs -U random /dev/whatever | |
5064faae TG |
138 | |
139 | 07:54 < VinDuv> So I’ve been looking at how macOS installation from USB works on M1 Macs and I think it might be interesting for the Asashi installer. The way it works is that there’s a hidden plist file on the USB drive that references a macOS | |
140 | application on the drive; if this file is present, the USB drive will show up in the power-button-held boot menu, and when selected, it will run the application. It doesn’t seem to care about file signature | |
141 | 07:54 < VinDuv> (it works even if the app is just a shell script) and it looks like it’s in 1TR mode. | |
142 | 07:56 < VinDuv> So the installation workflow from 1TR could be “plug in a USB stick, hold the power button, select Install Asahi” instead of having to manually open the terminal and run curl | sh. The installer doesn’t even need to be graphical since | |
143 | it’s possible for the launched shell script to start the recovery environment’s Terminal and giving it an arbitrary command to run. | |
144 | 07:59 < VinDuv> This is also not limited to external USB drives; it also works if the files are in an APFS volume in internal storage, which I guess might be useful to have a Asahi Recovery boot option in the boot menu or something. | |
b16f82dc TG |
145 | |
146 | ---- .IAPhysicalMedia --------------------------------------------------------- | |
147 | <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> | |
148 | <!DOCTYPE plist PUBLIC "-//Apple//DTD PLIST 1.0//EN" "http://www.apple.com/DTDs/PropertyList-1.0.dtd"> | |
149 | <plist version="1.0"> | |
150 | <dict> | |
151 | <key>AppName</key> | |
152 | <string>Some App.app</string> | |
153 | <key>ProductBuildVersion</key> | |
154 | <string>00A191</string> | |
155 | <key>ProductVersion</key> | |
156 | <string>12.2.1</string> | |
157 | </dict> | |
158 | </plist> | |
159 | ||
160 | ---- Some App.app/Contents/Info.plist ----------------------------------------- | |
161 | <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> | |
162 | <!DOCTYPE plist PUBLIC "-//Apple//DTD PLIST 1.0//EN" "http://www.apple.com/DTDs/PropertyList-1.0.dtd"> | |
163 | <plist version="1.0"> | |
164 | <dict> | |
165 | <key>CFBundleDisplayName</key> | |
166 | <string>Some App</string> | |
167 | <key>CFBundleExecutable</key> | |
168 | <string>SomeApp</string> | |
169 | </dict> | |
170 | </plist> | |
171 | ||
172 | ---- Some App.app/Contents/Resources/<lang code>.lproj/InfoPlist.strings ------ | |
173 | "CFBundleDisplayName" = "Some App"; | |
174 | ||
175 | ---- Some App.app/Contents/MacOS/SomeApp (executable) ------------------------- | |
176 | #!/bin/bash | |
177 | exec /System/Applications/Utilities/Terminal.app/Contents/MacOS/Terminal "${0%/*}/../Resources/myscript.command" | |
178 | ||
179 | ---- Some App.app/Contents/Resources/myscript.command ------------------------- | |
180 | #!/bin/sh | |
181 | ||
182 | echo "Hello, world!" | |
183 | exec /bin/bash | |
7fada752 TG |
184 | |
185 | ||
186 | 19:14 <VinDuv> marcan: I have done a bit more testing with the .IAPhysicalMedia file and it looks like ProductBuildVersion can be any value including blank. ProductVersion seems to be checked against the minimal macOS version supported by the Mac; on my mini the icon shows up in the boot menu only if it’s >= 11.3. | |
187 | 19:15 <VinDuv> Maybe it should be set to a higher value for forward compatibility with future Macs that will require 13.0? I’ve tested setting it to 99 and it works. |