On 02/20/2015 03:31 PM, Benjamin Tissoires wrote:

What is most likely happening is that the synaptics driver switches
the touchpad into the i2c/hid protocol. And yes Synaptics told us that
only a reset re-enables the touchpad in the PS/2 mode.
Kernels 3.11 and later know how to deal with this mode (through
hid-rmi), so we should not see these problems in the future unless
hid-rmi is not compiled in the running kernel.

Fortunately, we can deal with the Dell/Synaptics touchpads, the Lenovo
ones are using SMBus, and we have never been able to talk to the
devices with SMBus :(

Cheers,
Benjamin
Ah, yeah that makes more sense to me.  And actually the newer touchpads like 
the one in the XPS 13 (2015) are microsoft precision touchpads.  They don't 
even bother with hid-rmi.  When in I2C mode the hid-multitouch and i2c-hid 
driver handle them sufficiently sans a patch that just hit linux-input to fix a 
problem introduced in 3.19 (and 3.18.3).

For clarities sake:
The touchpad in the XPS 13 (2015) will run in I2C or PS2 modes. When_OSI of Windows 2013 
is recognized it will be put into I2C mode.  I know that the current kernel does 
recognize Windows 2013 _OSI so by default the touchpad will be in I2C mode with a new 
kernel.  Unfortunately this also puts the sound card into I2S mode which is not yet 
supported by Linux.  This is being worked out separately, but currently we are 
recommending that customers use acpi_osi="!Windows 2013" to use the touchpad in 
PS2 and soundcard in HDA modes.

Obviously this patch isn't applicable when running the touchpad is running in 
I2C mode.
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