(accidentally unicasted) Re: In which a touchscreen is rehabilitated, or: How I learned to stop being scared and just hack at /usr/src/sys/dev
Arto Pekkanen
isoa at kapsi.fi
Thu Feb 23 00:48:47 UTC 2017
I was just being direct in regards to having a new feature contributed,
instead of it drowning into the noise of a mailing list, which tends to
happen too often. Especially support for new devices are needed.
As for getting the patch approved and MFC'd, read this first:
https://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/articles/contributing/contrib-how.html
A direct quote from above:
"Once you have a set of diffs (which you may test with the patch(1)
command), you should submit them for inclusion with FreeBSD as a bug
report."
To learn how to report a bug report:
https://www.freebsd.org/support/bugreports.html
A web based platform is used to submit and track the problem report.
This is better for the maintainers than using mailing lists.
Thanks.
On 23.2.2017 2:08, Large Hadron Collider wrote:
> Hey, sorry to piss you off but I do not know how to do this.
>
>
> On 22/02/2017 13:11, Arto Pekkanen wrote:
>> Please contribute your patch and get it approved and MFC'd by
>> maintainers so that other people who are not knowledgeable enough can
>> have the thing working without having to figure out how to hack and
>> patch the kernel. Thanks.
>>
>> On 21.2.2017 2:49, Large Hadron Collider wrote:
>>> (Apologies if this doesn't line break at 79 chars - full formatting in
>>> HTML but this may be lost - shouldn't lose any info though)
>>>
>>> Good day subscribers to this list.
>>>
>>> I'm here with what could be described as a success story and a patch in
>>> the same e-mail.
>>>
>>> Please do stop me if WACF00E has already been slated for the next major
>>> release - but I would like to share how I got my HP Elitebook 2760p's
>>> touchscreen working.
>>>
>>> So I, a former and now again user of FreeBSD (I got hacked the first
>>> time... silly Ellie shouldn't give shells to strangers, should she now?)
>>> have a laptop whose screen is touch-capable, and whose touchscreen
>>> subsystem is based on a serial Wacom tablet.
>>>
>>> It worked under Linux and too I presume Windows (with which the laptop
>>> shipped), but not FreeBSD. I thought, what was going on? What was I
>>> doing wrong? So after some poking around I discovered that the screen is
>>> a WACF00E - not supported in 11.0-RELEASE-p1 by the driver that handles
>>> the UART.
>>>
>>> It showed
>>>
>>> unknown pnpinfo _HID=WACF00E _UID=0 at
>>> handle=\_SB_.PCI0.LPCB.SIO_.DIGI
>>>
>>> as the devinfo line.
>>>
>>> Intriguingly, there was this line in uart_bus_acpi.c:static struct
>>> isa_pnp_id acpi_ns8250_ids[]:
>>>
>>> {0x04f0235c, "Wacom Tablet PC Screen"}, /* WACF004 */
>>>
>>> So I thought what the hell, I'd copy that line under itself and change
>>> 04f0 (which is byte-swapped, counterintuitively) to 0ef0, representing
>>> WACF00E.
>>>
>>> Adding this:
>>>
>>> {0x0ef0235c, "Wacom Tablet PC Screen 00e"}, /* WACF00e */
>>>
>>> to uart_bus_acpi.c and this:
>>>
>>> {0x0ef0235c, NULL}, /* WACF004 - Wacom Tablet PC Screen*/
>>>
>>> (Yes it should read WACF00E in the comment) under the WACF004 entry in
>>> uart_bus_isa.c, then recompiling and installing in whatever way your
>>> configuration might demand seems to make the kernel detect the tablet as
>>> a UART.
>>>
>>> So it detected it, and the dev file was /dev/cuau4, for uart4, the
>>> WACF00E (it was ttyS4 under Linux).
>>>
>>> Great. X didn't detect it on its own, but that let me debug it using
>>> Minicom, which I promptly installed.
>>>
>>> After telling Minicom to use /dev/cuau4 as the modem, and telling it to
>>> use 38400 8N1, touches to the screen resulted in what can only be
>>> described as euphoric garbage, indicating that this ugly hack on top of
>>> hack alert worked.
>>>
>>> So I set up /usr/local/etc/X11/xorg.conf.d/wacom.conf to include
>>> (slightly amended from my actual setup, which only has ISDV4 in the
>>> stylus but still works for touch, haven't tested for stylus):
>>>
>>> Section "InputDevice"
>>> Identifier "wacom stylus"
>>> Driver "wacom"
>>> Option "Type" "stylus"
>>> Option "Device" "/dev/cuau4"
>>> Option "ForceDevice" "ISDV4"
>>> Option "AutoServerLayout" "true"
>>> EndSection
>>>
>>> Section "InputDevice"
>>> Identifier "wacom eraser"
>>> Driver "wacom"
>>> Option "Type" "eraser"
>>> Option "Device" "/dev/cuau4"
>>> Option "ForceDevice" "ISDV4"
>>> Option "AutoServerLayout" "true"
>>> EndSection
>>>
>>> Section "InputDevice"
>>> Identifier "wacom touch"
>>> Driver "wacom"
>>> Option "Type" "touch"
>>> Option "Touch" "on"
>>> Option "Device" "/dev/cuau4"
>>> Option "ForceDevice" "ISDV4"
>>> Option "AutoServerLayout" "true"
>>> EndSection
>>>
>>> Restarted X, and after
>>>
>>> % xsetwacom set "wacom touch" Touch on
>>>
>>> (I didn't initially have Touch on in the options list for "wacom touch")
>>> it was almost like striking platinum in a gold mine or something when
>>> the mouse just followed my finger the way I was used to it doing so
>>> under Linux.
>>>
>>> To those of you who say that FreeBSD will never be ready for the
>>> desktop, you're only right when you're talking to newbs. And this is
>>> living proof that if you know some C and you're intrepid enough,
>>> miracles really can happen.
>>>
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>>> "freebsd-hardware-unsubscribe at freebsd.org"
>
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--
Arto Pekkanen
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