Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Like the Inspiron 1520, the Dell Latitude 2110 emits brightness-control
key events both through atkbd and acpi-video. This suppresses them on
the atkbd side.
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This parser will also be used in libinput, which uses the MIT license, so
relicense this file to the more permissive license to make bidirectional code
flow easier. parse_hwdb.py is only useful during building of the project, and
is not part of the installation, so effectively both licenses are very similar.
In particular, the licensing of binary packages produced by systemd is not
influenced in any way, because the MIT licensed part is not installed.
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Like many other recent thinkpads the factory default pointingstick
sensitivity on these devices is quite low, making the pointingstick
very slow in moving the cursor.
This extends the existing hwdb rules for tweaking the sensitivity to
also apply to the X1 Tablet models.
Signed-off-by: Dennis Wassenberg <dennis.wassenberg@secunet.com>
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hwdb: add axis corrections for the Lenovo Yoga 500-14ISK touchpad
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https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=96220
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https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1357990
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https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=97433
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I think I am developing OCD... Let's fix this before this actually gets used in
the wild.
A follow-up for #3986 (5fc9e4abb41e7f58f6c308f54881c596713fba75).
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https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=97347
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The Logitech MX Master has a horizontal scroll wheel with a different click
angle than the vertical one. Add a new property for this case, we can't add
values to the normal one without risking upsetting existing parsers.
Fixes #3947
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Add hwdb parser to check for inconsistencies
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It's hard to say which one of the two mappings should stay. But the later
one would win (when both very present), and nobody complained, so let's
assume that that's the one.
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It seems awkward to have both cases mixes. Note that the real parser
accepts both cases, and this only standarizes the usage in the systemd
database.
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Quoting https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/3906#discussion_r73828368:
> According to
> http://support.logitech.com/en_us/product/v220-cordless-optical-mouse-for-notebooks
> it seems the mouse is using a pre-version of the small unifying receiver we
> know now. If there are 2 mice with the same receiver, that means that the
> values should both be dropped IMO.
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This works for hwdb/[67]0-*.hwdb. I also added code to parse hwdb/20-*, but those
files are huge, and parsing them using this parser is annoyingly slow (about one
minute for the biggest files). So I removed the support for hwdb/20-*, a much simpler
hand-generated parser should suffice for those.
Current output:
hwdb/60-evdev.hwdb: 24 match groups, 35 matches, 88 properties, 0.19323015213012695s to parse
Match 'evdev:input:b0003v05ACp0259*' is duplicated
Match 'evdev:input:b0003v05ACp025A*' is duplicated
Match 'evdev:input:b0003v05ACp025B*' is duplicated
hwdb/60-keyboard.hwdb: 122 match groups, 188 matches, 638 properties, 1.0906572341918945s to parse
Failed to parse: 'KEYBOARD_KEY_8F=switchvideomode'
Failed to parse: 'KEYBOARD_KEY_C0183=media'
Failed to parse: 'KEYBOARD_KEY_C0201=new'
Failed to parse: 'KEYBOARD_KEY_C0289=reply'
Failed to parse: 'KEYBOARD_KEY_C028B=forwardmail'
Failed to parse: 'KEYBOARD_KEY_C028C=send'
Failed to parse: 'KEYBOARD_KEY_C021A=undo'
Failed to parse: 'KEYBOARD_KEY_C0279=redo'
Failed to parse: 'KEYBOARD_KEY_C0208=print'
Failed to parse: 'KEYBOARD_KEY_C0207=save'
Failed to parse: 'KEYBOARD_KEY_C0194=file'
Failed to parse: 'KEYBOARD_KEY_C01A7=documents'
Failed to parse: 'KEYBOARD_KEY_C01B6=images'
Failed to parse: 'KEYBOARD_KEY_C01B7=sound'
Property KEYBOARD_KEY_c7 is duplicated
Failed to parse: 'KEYBOARD_KEY_cF=end'
hwdb/70-mouse.hwdb: 62 match groups, 93 matches, 68 properties, 0.34186625480651855s to parse
Match 'mouse:usb:v046dpc51b:name:Logitech USB Receiver:' is duplicated
hwdb/70-pointingstick.hwdb: 5 match groups, 14 matches, 7 properties, 0.06518816947937012s to parse
hwdb/70-touchpad.hwdb: 3 match groups, 5 matches, 3 properties, 0.039690494537353516s to parse
Subsequest commits will clean those issues up.
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This way it's clear that the property block does not end at the comment.
The python checker will complain if this is not the case.
We had a few bugs before where two match blocks were merged by mistake,
and this change should help avoid that.
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Copy-paste error, correct IDs from the kernel's drivers/input/mouse/bcm5974.c
Fixes: https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/3906/
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Commit e5bc3f4fdc matches on e.g. a T440s, but not a T440 (i.e. the one
without a suffix).
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Each series has identical hardware, let's use a glob instead of listing them
one by one.
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Whether a device is a trackball or not is a physical property so we should
store this globally, in one place. The new property must be set in addition to
ID_INPUT_MOUSE, otherwise existing clients won't detect the device.
No actual code changes required, the default match rule is simply checking for
"Trackball" in the name (in a few versions), other entries need to be added
manually.
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Like many other recent thinkpads the factory default pointingstick
sensitivity on these devices is quite low, making the pointingstick
very slow in moving the cursor.
This extends the existing hwdb rules for tweaking the sensitivity to
also apply to the X260 models.
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Like many other recent thinkpads the factory default pointingstick
sensitivity on these devices is quite low, making the pointingstick
very slow in moving the cursor.
This extends the existing hwdb rules for tweaking the sensitivity to
also apply to the T560 models.
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Like many other recent thinkpads the factory default pointingstick
sensitivity on these devices is quite low, making the pointingstick
very slow in moving the cursor.
This extends the existing hwdb rules for tweaking the sensitivity to
also apply to the T460s models.
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Like many other recent thinkpads the factory default pointingstick
sensitivity on these devices is quite low, making the pointingstick
very slow in moving the cursor.
This extends the existing hwdb rules for tweaking the sensitivity to
also apply to the L460 models.
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Like many other recent thinkpads the factory default pointingstick
sensitivity on these devices is quite low, making the pointingstick
very slow in moving the cursor.
This extends the existing hwdb rules for tweaking the sensitivity to
also apply to the X250 models.
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Like many other recent thinkpads the factory default pointingstick
sensitivity on these devices is quite low, making the pointingstick
very slow in moving the cursor.
This extends the existing hwdb rules for tweaking the sensitivity to
also apply to the T450s models.
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Like many other recent thinkpads the factory default pointingstick
sensitivity on these devices is quite low, making the pointingstick
very slow in moving the cursor.
This extends the existing hwdb rules for tweaking the sensitivity to
also apply to the L450 models.
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Like many other recent thinkpads the factory default pointingstick
sensitivity on these devices is quite low, making the pointingstick
very slow in moving the cursor.
This extends the existing hwdb rules for tweaking the sensitivity to
also apply to the T440p models.
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"make update-hwdb" in preparation for v231.
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https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=97011
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https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=96875
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Add a new key ID_INPUT_TOUCHPAD_INTEGRATION=internal|external so we have a
single source for figuring out which touchpads are built-in.
Fairly simple approach: bluetooth is external, usb is external unless it's an
Apple touchpad. Everything else is internal.
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Likely bad measurement and all other websites refer to it being 1000dpi.
See https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=96225#c13
This reverts commit e7b90ddc345d1817ca48bfcc4e3e73836c8051af.
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