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Message-ID: <92ba6f97-a579-47d6-9eb7-a97b566c7c6c@redhat.com>
Date: Fri, 26 Jan 2024 16:58:37 +0100
From: Hans de Goede <hdegoede@...hat.com>
To: Paul Menzel <pmenzel@...gen.mpg.de>
Cc: linux-input@...r.kernel.org, linux-pm@...r.kernel.org,
Dell.Client.Kernel@...l.com, regressions@...ts.linux.dev,
linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org
Subject: Re: PS/2 keyboard of laptop Dell XPS 13 9360 goes missing after S3
Hi Paul,
On 1/26/24 14:32, Hans de Goede wrote:
> Hi Paul,
>
> On 1/26/24 08:03, Paul Menzel wrote:
>> Dear Hans,
>>
>>
>> Thank you for your reply, and sorry for the delay on my side. I needed to set up an environment to easily build the Linux kernel.
>
> No problem thank you for testing this.
>
>> Am 22.01.24 um 14:43 schrieb Hans de Goede:
>>
>>> On 1/21/24 15:26, Paul Menzel wrote:
>>
>> […]
>>
>>>> Am 20.01.24 um 21:26 schrieb Hans de Goede:
>>>>
>>>>> On 1/18/24 13:57, Paul Menzel wrote:
>>>>>> #regzbot introduced v6.6.11..v6.7
>>>>
>>>>>> There seems to be a regression in Linux 6.7 on the Dell XPS 13 9360 (Intel i7-7500U).
>>>>>>
>>>>>> [ 0.000000] DMI: Dell Inc. XPS 13 9360/0596KF, BIOS 2.21.0 06/02/2022
>>>>>>
>>>>>> The PS/2 keyboard goes missing after S3 resume¹. The problem does not happen with Linux 6.6.11.
>>>>>
>>>>> Thank you for reporting this.
>>>>>
>>>>> Can you try adding "i8042.dumbkbd=1" to your kernel commandline?
>>>>>
>>>>> This should at least lead to the device not disappearing from
>>>>>
>>>>> "sudo libinput list-devices"
>>>>>
>>>>> The next question is if the keyboard will still actually
>>>>> work after suspend/resume with "i8042.dumbkbd=1". If it
>>>>> stays in the list, but no longer works then there is
>>>>> a problem with the i8042 controller; or interrupt
>>>>> delivery to the i8042 controller.
>>>>>
>>>>> If "i8042.dumbkbd=1" somehow fully fixes things, then I guess
>>>>> my atkbd driver fix for other laptop keyboards is somehow
>>>>> causing issues for yours.
>>>>
>>>> Just a quick feedback, that booting with `i8042.dumbkbd=1` seems to fix the issue.
>>>>
>>>>> If "i8042.dumbkbd=1" fully fixes things, can you try building
>>>>> your own 6.7.0 kernel with commit 936e4d49ecbc:
>>>>>
>>>>> https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=936e4d49ecbc8c404790504386e1422b599dec39
>>>>>
>>>>> reverted?
>>>>
>>>> I am going to try that as soon as possible.
>>>
>>> Assuming this was not some one time glitch with 6.7.0,
>>> I have prepared a patch hopefully fixing this (1) as well
>>> as a follow up fix to address another potential issue which
>>> I have noticed.
>>
>> Unfortunately, it wasn’t just a glitch.
>>
>>> Can you please give a 6.7.0 (2) kernel with the 2 attached
>>> patches added a try ?
>>>
>>> I know building kernels can be a bit of work / takes time,
>>> sorry. If you are short on time I would prefer testing these 2
>>> patches and see if they fix things over trying a plain revert.
>>
>> Applying both patches on v6.7.1
>>
>> $ git log --oneline -3
>> 053fa44c0de1 (HEAD -> v6.7.1) Input: atkbd - Do not skip atkbd_deactivate() when skipping ATKBD_CMD_GETID
>> 0e0fa0113c7a Input: atkbd - Skip ATKBD_CMD_SETLEDS when skipping ATKBD_CMD_GETID
>> a91fdae50a6d (tag: v6.7.1, stable/linux-6.7.y, origin/linux-6.7.y) Linux 6.7.1
>>
>> I am unable to reproduce the problem in eight ACPI S3 suspend/resume cycles. The DMAR errors [3] are also gone:
>
> Thanks.
>
> So thinking more about this I think the DMAR errors are actually the real cause of the issue here, specifically if we replace: f0 with 00 (I guess DMAR uses the high bits for its own purposes) in
>
> `[INTR-REMAP] Request device [f0:1f.0] fault index 0x0`
>
> then the device ID is 00:1f.0 which is the ISA bridge and [INTR-REMAP] errors are known to disable interrupts. The PS/2 controller (which sits behind the ISA bridge) interrupt getting disabled would explain the suspend/resume keyboard issue better then the atkbd.c changes I have been focusing on.
>
> So then the question becomes why does the 6.7.1 kernel not show the DMAR errors. I don't see anything between 6.7.0 and 6.7.1 which explains this. But maybe your local build is using a different configuration which explains this.
>
> Can you try your local 6.7.1 build without my 2 patches? The quickest way to do that would be to run: "git reset --hard HEAD~2" and then re-run the make commandos, this will re-use your previous build so it should be pretty quick.
>
> If things still work after that then the problem is not with the atkbd code.
Never mind I just became aware of a bunch of other reports which don't have
the DMAR errors on resume, so I'm submitting the 2 fixes for this upstream
now.
Regards,
Hans
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