You have been subscribed to a public bug:

A fresh install of 20.04 from the live USB doesn't see internal keyboard
or touchpad input on my Acer Aspire E15 E5-511-POBM. After much private
investigation to no avail
(https://askubuntu.com/questions/1275809/ubuntu-20-04-lts-laptop-
internal-keyboard-and-touchpad-no-longer-work), I am prepared to assert
this as a bug. I'll restate the relevant info here, but see the link for
a more chronological account. And I guess, for what it's worth, I would
also assert that this is reproducible by installing 20.04 on my specific
laptop model.

So, I boot up the laptop. I'm presented with GRUB boot menu. At this
point the keyboard works, and if I choose advanced options and boot into
a root shell I can type commands and do things that way as a last
resort. However, all the problems seem to begin right from the start of
the graphical session, even the login screen. This, in accordance with
the instruction of
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Bugs/FindRightPackage#At_the_login_screen, is
why I've filed this as a bug in gdm3. As I couldn't run the graphical
bug program in Ubuntu, I ran the CLI in the root shell and attached the
apport file here. I've tried to follow the relevant steps, but this is
my first bug report so apologies if something is wrong.

I first noticed this problem a few weeks after upgrading 18.04 to 20.04.
Yes, for the first few weeks of using 20.04, there were no problems. And
then, one day, I booted up and the keyboard and touchpad spontaneously
stopped working. This was mysterious because to my memory I hadn't done
any major upgrade or change to any part of the system the previous day.

When the system is asleep / suspended, pressing a key or the touchpad
easily wakes it up -- after which, they refuse to work again.

The brightness key combos (Fn+←/→) and one that turns off the screen
(Fn+F6) do work, but others such as volume (Fn+↑/↓) do not work.

I see all expected key output when I run `sudo libinput debug-events
--device /dev/input/event4 --show-keycodes` and type keys.

When I plug in an external USB keyboard and mouse, they work correctly
while the internal keyboard and touchpad remain the same.

Outside of those specific situations, absolutely no internal keyboard
input -- not even Ctrl+Alt+Del or Ctrl+Alt+F2 VT switching, let alone
ordinary typing -- has any effect, and same with the touchpad.

When I haven't had an external keyboard available I've used the on-
screen keyboard to painstakingly run terminal commands by clicking each
letter. However, sometimes the on-screen keyboard also stops sending
keystrokes. The only concrete situation I can report is what I saw after
resuming the system from sleep by opening the lid: at the login prompt
on the lock screen, the onscreen keyboard came up, but didn't do
anything when keys were clicked, forcing me to reboot.

I had the following message in my `journalctl -b` logs:
```
The XKEYBOARD keymap compiler (xkbcomp) reports:
Sep 17 11:36:20 joel-Aspire-E5-511 gnome-shell[1575]: > Warning:          
Unsupported maximum keycode 569, clipping.
Sep 17 11:36:20 joel-Aspire-E5-511 gnome-shell[1575]: >                   X11 
cannot support keycodes above 255.
Sep 17 11:36:20 joel-Aspire-E5-511 gnome-shell[1575]: > Internal error:   Could 
not resolve keysym Invalid
Sep 17 11:36:20 joel-Aspire-E5-511 gnome-shell[1575]: Errors from xkbcomp are 
not fatal to the X server
```
This looks like it should have something to do with the keyboard issue. If it 
doesn't, then what is its significance?

When I first investigated, I was on kernel 5.0.47. When I selected
4.15.0-112 in the boot menu, everything was fine again; keyboard and
touchpad working. I also found everything working fine on the install
USB demo. Yet when I did a fresh reinstall of Ubuntu from the USB, the
keyboard and touchpad did not work. This was now kernel 5.4.0-54.

Fortunately, switching down to 5.4.0-42 fixes my keyboard and touchpad
problems, but I've no idea how long this will last (whether the problem
is intermittent or can be relied upon to stay this way). Also, this was
after my reinstall -- I did try this kernel on my previous install, and
back then it only fixed the keyboard without the touchpad!

After installing lightdm alongside gdm, I see that lightdm actually sees
my touchpad on 5.4.0-54, but still not my keyboard.

How can it be OK in the Live USB Demo but not the OS it installs? And
why did switching down to those old kernel versions fix my problems if
the problems only happened in the GUI and not the root console? What on
earth is the connection between the kernel and GNOME's input handling
... downstream of an apparently working libinput??

Further, what is common between gdm and lightdm that, in some way
related to the kernel, causes neither to recognise keyboard input? And
what do they do differently such that lightdm sees touchpad input?

Ideally I'd want to know the different stages in the lifecycle of an
event, say a keystroke -- post-libinput -- and to find out at which
stage it is getting discarded. I literally went digging through the
source code of various GNOME packages and programs, xkb tools, etc. I
got as far as vaguely learning about Mutter or Clutter or something
before deciding I had better things to do with my evenings. I am lost
and I need someone who knows more about this.

One person on Ask Ubuntu gave some pessimistic sympathy, describing the
issue as "just a thing we have to live with" on this particular laptop
model. This is unacceptable, and I am able and willing to spend more
time looking into this myself, if I can get just some pointers.

Thank you for your consideration.

** Affects: linux (Ubuntu)
     Importance: Undecided
         Status: Confirmed


** Tags: gnome keyboard laptop touchpad
-- 
Acer Aspire E15 E5-511-POBM laptop internal keyboard & touchpad not working in 
kernel 5.4.0-54, but 5.4.0-42 works
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1908801
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Kernel Packages, 
which is subscribed to linux in Ubuntu.

-- 
Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~kernel-packages
Post to     : kernel-packages@lists.launchpad.net
Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~kernel-packages
More help   : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp

Reply via email to