Thanks Mark,
I worked my way through these build instruction and got successfully to Step 15:
There, I don't know to do. What is my target platform? Is it "custom"?
If so, what are the correct values to set?
I also wonder whether that part is optional. In 8./9. I make and install
the software
Package: src:linux
Version: 5.19.6-1
Severity: normal
I have a ThinkPad X1 Yoga (4th gen). It has an NFC device built in.
The NFC device appears in the BIOS, and it is enabled there.
However, I cannot see it from Debian at all. Neither lsusb nor
lspci show anything ressembling an NFC device. I
I saw this, too. The latest kernel from unstable fixed it.
smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature
Package: src:linux
Version: 3.8.11-1
Severity: minor
Dear Maintainer,
I have a Lenovo ThinkPad X230, running Wheezy and the 3.8.11 kernel from
today's unstable.
The touchpad works okay, in particular the two buttons do what they are
supposed to do.
Unless, that is, I have a finger resting on th
I have gotten rid of this hardware. Feel free to close the bug.
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... on a Dell Latitude E6510, that is.
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I have been using Seth Forshee's patches together with the testing kernels
for several month now. They appear to work flawlessly.
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Hi!
I just tried the 2.6.38 kernel in squeeze-backports, to no avail.
From http://wireless.kernel.org/en/users/Drivers/orinoco I learned that
this is a known issue, and that I should set the wpa_supplicant
parameter ap_scan to 2.
However I can only do that if I stop using networkmanager, because
I had the same symptoms with an ALPS touchpad in a Dell Latitude E6510.
I found a patch in the following list:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=590880,
which I attach for your convenience. The patch applies cleanly to the
current stable
kernel. It enabled vertical scrolling for me.
I just tried linux-image-2.6.37-rc7 from experimental. The problem is still
there.
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Hi! This really does seem to be the same as 593432. I have also
seen the backlight behavior you describe, and even the problem
with 'nomodeset'.
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Arc
Forget what I said about the default behavior having changed.
This machine is a can full of Heisenbugs! After the fifth reboot,
kms came back with a vengeance. Currently not even the
conf file won't stop it. The only way I have to use
the machine is the kernel from Ubuntu 10.4 that I hand-copie
Strange. Last night's update must have changed the default
behavior. All of a sudden the content of /etc/modprobe.d/i915-kms.conf
doesn't seem to matter anymore: kms is always off. The only way
to trigger the problem is to add modeset=1 to the boot options.
I guess this makes the problem less g
Package: linux-2.6
Version: 2.6.32-18
Severity: normal
I cannot connect to a WEP network. The kde network manager
keeps asking me for the password. This is after a complete
reinstall of Debian Squeeze. Connecting to the very same
network worked when the machine was still running Lenny.
One ot
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