Source: linux Version: 6.1.11-1 Severity: normal
Hey. Over the year this has unfortunately happened numerous times, either by changes in the Xorg driver, or libinput... and now it seems the kernel caused the same: After upgrading from linux-image-6.1.0-3-amd64 to linux-image-6.1.0-4-amd64 and after a reboot, the speed and senstivity of the touchpad were quite messed up. Sounds like no issue, but is actually extremely annoying as one typically gets quite strongly used to those... and it seem I cannot even restore the previous behaviour by the usual switches. No other packages (that have remotely to do with X, libinput or so) were upgraded so I think it must be something in the kernel. OTOH, looking thorough the changelog from .9 to .11 there seems to be nothing where they write it would change the settings (though there were in fact some libinput/synaptics related commits). Any ideas how the previous behaviour can be gotten back? Thanks, Chris. -- System Information: Debian Release: bookworm/sid APT prefers unstable-debug APT policy: (500, 'unstable-debug'), (500, 'unstable') merged-usr: no Architecture: amd64 (x86_64) Kernel: Linux 6.1.0-3-amd64 (SMP w/16 CPU threads; PREEMPT) Locale: LANG=en_DE.UTF-8, LC_CTYPE=en_DE.UTF-8 (charmap=UTF-8), LANGUAGE not set Shell: /bin/sh linked to /bin/dash Init: systemd (via /run/systemd/system)