ard reset.
First reference which may be useful, AMD laptops.
https://www.reddit.com/r/Fedora/comments/1ad0crm/random_resume_after_suspend_issue_on_thinkpad/
Probably it's not the same problem but just in case watch, Intel laptops.
https://www.reddit.com/r/thinkpad/comments/1cvwepj/intermittent_suspendresume_issues_on_lenovo_l13/
Lenovo BIOS emulator for my specific laptop
<https://download.lenovo.com/bsco/index.html#/graphicalsimulator/ThinkPad%20T14s%20Gen%206%20%2821N1,21N2%29>.
@songbird, I think I do have a swap partition, and it's slightly larger
than the physical RAM (32 Gb).
Here's the output o
On 09/11/2024 05:57, AFB wrote:
The only way to get back control of the laptop is to hold down the power
button and do a hard reset.
Video drivers are not uncommon source of suspend and hibernate issues.
Are network services working in this state? Can you login using ssh (if
ssh daemon is ins
AFB wrote:
...
> I am a bit defeated out here, so do you have any ideas for me ?
my rusty brain seems to recall... isn't this done via
swap?
check to see if you have the swap partition defined,
mounted and available, it must be large enough to hold
the contents of memory.
there might al
On Sat, Nov 9, 2024 at 12:32 AM AFB wrote:
> Hi everyone,
>
> Briefly my issue is that I am unable to resume from suspend.
>
I just tested sleep on my laptop, also running Trixie and it works without
any problems. It does not appear to be an issue with Trixie.
> I own the new T14s G6 AMD ; wh
On Fri, 08 Nov 2024 23:57:16 +0100
AFB wrote:
> I am a bit defeated out here, so do you have any ideas for me ?
See if anyone on ThinkWiki has any ideas. And try the Bookworm (Debian
12) live CD. If that works, fall back to that.
--
Does anybody read signatures any more?
https://charlescurley
Hi everyone,
Briefly my issue is that I am unable to resume from suspend.
I own the new T14s G6 AMD ; which runs on the AMD CPU Ryzen AI 7 PRO
360 (released in august 2024).
I installed Debian Testing (Trixie) - which come with /Kernel
6.11.5-amd64/ at the time of the post.
Unfortunately whi
On Sat, Sep 21, 2024 at 09:56:17AM +, Andrew M.A. Cater wrote:
> On Sat, Sep 21, 2024 at 11:35:25AM +0200, Roberto Catanuto wrote:
> > Hi, the truth is I use Chrome OS Flex on TP Edge E530.
> > Honestly, this is the output
[...]
> Hi Roberto
>
> Strictly, this is off topic here. ChromeOS Fle
On 21/09/2024 16:35, Roberto Catanuto wrote:
Hi, the truth is I use Chrome OS Flex on TP Edge E530.
[...]
Even when the good old laptop is connected to the power supply, the
battery begins discharging after about one hour.
[...]
Do any of you have suggestions about solving this mystery ?
If
4), LLD 18.0.0) #1 SMP
> > PREEMPT_DYNAMIC Sat, 10 Aug 2024 02:57:26 +
> >
>
> Hi Roberto
>
> Strictly, this is off topic here. ChromeOS Flex is ChromeOS for
> non-Chromebooks. It's a Google product - maybe ask them.
>
> A quick search for the ThinkPad Edg
On Sat, 21 Sep 2024 11:35:25 +0200
Roberto Catanuto wrote:
> Even when the good old laptop is connected to the power supply, the
> battery begins discharging after about one hour.
>
> If I also use an external HDMI monitor, the discharge begins
> immediately.
>
> Do any of you have suggestions
It's a Google product - maybe ask them.
A quick search for the ThinkPad Edge from Lenovo: the review I found was
from about 2019. It's the cheapest end of the Lenovo range. I see a range
of them available second hand online from about £99 - at this point, it
is not an expensive laptop..
If
Hi, the truth is I use Chrome OS Flex on TP Edge E530.
Honestly, this is the output
*~$ cat /proc/version *Linux version 6.6.41-03520-gd3d77f15f842 (
cros-ker...@chromium.org) (Chromium OS 18.0_pre516547 clang version 18.0.0
(/mnt/host/source/src/third_party/llvm-project
28a8f1b901389c1e478407440
> I just installed Debian Testing on my new Thinkpad T14 Gen 5 and I found out
> that the touchpad is not actually detected by the system.
Maybe it's the same issue as the one posted very recently under the
subject:
Touchpad not detected by kernel on ThinkPad X13 Gen5
- Stefan
On Sun, 9 Jun 2024 06:51:00 +0200
Timothée Jaussoin wrote:
> Is there something in particular I should look for ?
>
I would look for some of the identifiers in those dmsg lines you showed
earlier. See if the touchpad was detected but rejected. That migh give
you a clue as to why it was rejected
Is there something in particular I should look for ?
On Sat, 8 Jun 2024 22:17:49 +0200
Timothée Jaussoin wrote:
> If you need some more information I'd be pleased to share whatever is
> required :)
You might look at the installation logs. /var/log/installer/
--
Does anybody read signatures any more?
https://charlescurley.com
https://charlescur
Hi,
I just installed Debian Testing on my new Thinkpad T14 Gen 5 and I found
out that the touchpad is not actually detected by the system.
I have nothing in dmesg or xinput. However it is fully functional in
other Live USB distros (Fedora and Ubuntu LTS 24.04, they have the same
6.8 Linux
On 06/06/2024 16:57, Lists wrote:
As I don't do anything remotely graphically taxing I don't need a speedy
GPU.
More powerful GPU may mean better quality of local (offline) AI
assistant. Perhaps it is too early to say that it is must have, but it
seems changes are coming.
On 2024-06-03 23:50, Felix Miata wrote:
Lists composed on 2024-06-03 22:39 (UTC+0200):
I am thinking of replacing my old workstation with a Lenovo Thinkpad P16
Gen 2.
That's a model line, not a model. It's available with multiple CPU/GPU
combinations.
You are correct. That sli
Lists composed on 2024-06-03 22:39 (UTC+0200):
> I am thinking of replacing my old workstation with a Lenovo Thinkpad P16
> Gen 2.
That's a model line, not a model. It's available with multiple CPU/GPU
combinations.
To use it as described, I suggest to get one with only one GP
Hi all,
I am thinking of replacing my old workstation with a Lenovo Thinkpad P16
Gen 2. There's one thing that makes me hesitate though: on my current
laptop (Thinkpad P1 Gen 1) the external display is hardwired to a
specific port. Sadly, I have never been able to use any external di
Le lundi 27 mai 2024 à 19:32 +0200, Sébastien Villemot a écrit :
> I recently bought a ThinkPad X13 Gen5 (benefiting from the discount
> generously offered by Lenovo to Debian Developers).
> However, I still can’t get the touchpad to work. It is apparently not
> recognized by the k
On Mon, 27 May 2024 at 17:39, Sébastien Villemot wrote:
> I recently bought a ThinkPad X13 Gen5 (benefiting from the discount
> generously offered by Lenovo to Debian Developers).
>
> The laptop runs Debian Bookworm, and I got almost all the hardware to
> work by using more re
Hi,
I recently bought a ThinkPad X13 Gen5 (benefiting from the discount
generously offered by Lenovo to Debian Developers).
The laptop runs Debian Bookworm, and I got almost all the hardware to
work by using more recent kernel and firmware files (see Debian bug
reports #1070647, #1070648
On Mon 22 Jan 2024 at 07:40:00 (+0100), Geert Stappers wrote:
> On Sun, Jan 21, 2024 at 04:34:23PM -0600, David Wright wrote:
> > On Sun 21 Jan 2024 at 22:41:01 (+0100), Geert Stappers wrote:
> > > Pressing "Function key with symbol of computer sending signal" has no
> > > effect. Which could be ca
On Sun, Jan 21, 2024 at 04:34:23PM -0600, David Wright wrote:
> On Sun 21 Jan 2024 at 22:41:01 (+0100), Geert Stappers wrote:
> > Pressing "Function key with symbol of computer sending signal" has no
> > effect. Which could be caused by the horrible state of keyboard.
> > When keyboard is needed, i
On Sun, 21 Jan 2024 22:41:01 +0100
Geert Stappers wrote:
> Hoping that is it possible:
>
> How to inject key stroke or "button pressed" in
> /devices/platform/thinkpad_acpi/input/input16 ?
Thinkwiki might be useful. https://www.thinkwiki.org/wiki/ThinkWiki
--
Does anybody read signatures any
On Sun 21 Jan 2024 at 22:41:01 (+0100), Geert Stappers wrote:
> Pressing "Function key with symbol of computer sending signal" has no
> effect. Which could be caused by the horrible state of keyboard.
> When keyboard is needed, is an USB-attached keyboard needed. Usual use
> case of the laptop is "
ing if
echo 4242 > /devics/platform/laptop_chipset/input/input17
could change brightness (or another visible effect)
Regards Geert Stappers
Below some information from the original problem.
root@nero:~# dmesg | grep -e thinkpad -e iwlwifi -e rfkill
[7.867099] thinkpad_acpi: ThinkPad
Nicolas George writes:
> Rodolfo Medina (12024-01-11):
>> As my machine has a dual boot with MS Windows, F2 and F3 keyboard keys work
>> fine in Windows in lowering and increasing sound volume, and F1 for muting
>> it etcetera F4, F5, F6..., but in Debian they don't seem to work.
>
> Hi.
>
> Try
On Thu, Jan 11, 2024 at 10:29:37AM +, Rodolfo Medina wrote:
[...]
> Following your example, I aptitude-installed acpid and created
> /etc/apt/events/briteup and /etc/acpi/actions/brite and filled them with the
> stuff you reported; and then I did `chmod +x brite'... Then?
...you might be ab
an they don't seem to work.
>
> "In Debian" is a wide land :-)
It's Bookworm with Openbox.
> OT1H...
>
> A week ago I installed Debian's Bookworm with MATE on a friend's computer
> (Thinkpad x270) and the loudness keys worked out of the box.
&g
On Thu, Jan 11, 2024 at 10:08:53AM +0100, Nicolas George wrote:
> Rodolfo Medina (12024-01-11):
> > As my machine has a dual boot with MS Windows, F2 and F3 keyboard keys work
> > fine in Windows in lowering and increasing sound volume, and F1 for muting
> > it
> > etcetera F4, F5, F6..., but in D
k.
"In Debian" is a wide land :-)
OT1H...
A week ago I installed Debian's Bookworm with MATE on a friend's computer
(Thinkpad x270) and the loudness keys worked out of the box.
OTOH...
Myself -- I have no desktop environment (fvwm on X, *no* systemd, *no*
DBUS, so that wo
Rodolfo Medina (12024-01-11):
> As my machine has a dual boot with MS Windows, F2 and F3 keyboard keys work
> fine in Windows in lowering and increasing sound volume, and F1 for muting it
> etcetera F4, F5, F6..., but in Debian they don't seem to work.
Hi.
Try testing them with xev. Show what you
Rodolfo Medina writes:
> As my machine has a dual boot with MS Windows, F2 and F3 keyboard keys work
> fine in Windows in lowering and increasing sound volume, and F1 for muting it
> etcetera F4, F5, F6..., but in Debian they don't seem to work.
Sorry, I forgot to say that Openbox is my graphica
As my machine has a dual boot with MS Windows, F2 and F3 keyboard keys work
fine in Windows in lowering and increasing sound volume, and F1 for muting it
etcetera F4, F5, F6..., but in Debian they don't seem to work.
Please help who can, thanks in advance.
Rodolfo
I found out that when I plugin a headset the microphone works. So it
seems that this is related only to the internal microphone.
*-multimedia:2
description: Audio device
product: Family 17h/19h HD Audio Controller
vendor: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.
I have installed Debian Bookworm on X13 with AMD Ryzen 7840U and
microphone is not working. It shows inactive.
I use KDE and installed pipewire. The mic did not work since base install.
Any advise?
$ inxi -A Audio: Device-1: AMD Rembrandt Radeon High Definition Audio
driver: snd_hda_intel Dev
On 20/10/2023 20:13, Anssi Saari wrote:
Max Nikulin writes:
A decade ago I used a HDMI to DVI adapter plugged into the monitor (a
case a bit larger than a DVI male connector having a HDMI slot). I
would check if DP to DVI or DP to HDMI converters exist and have no
compatibility issues (e.g. I h
Max Nikulin writes:
> A decade ago I used a HDMI to DVI adapter plugged into the monitor (a
> case a bit larger than a DVI male connector having a HDMI slot). I
> would check if DP to DVI or DP to HDMI converters exist and have no
> compatibility issues (e.g. I have heard of bugs related to supp
Max Nikulin wrote:
> On 20/10/2023 07:46, riveravaldez wrote:
> > Certainly, but it hasn't. It has only VGA and DVI-D (Dual Link) inputs,
> > and the laptop has only DP and VGA outputs, so, VGA is the first
> > option...
>
> A decade ago I used a HDMI to DVI adapter plugged into the monitor (a ca
riveravaldez composed on 2023-10-19 21:46 (UTC-0300):
> Felix Miata wrote:
>> riveravaldez composed on 2023-10-18 16:05 (UTC-0300):
>>> Hi everybody, I'm having a resolution issue trying to connect an
>>> external monitor to a laptop.
>> ...
> Hi, Felix, thanks a lot for your very detailed repl
On 20/10/2023 07:46, riveravaldez wrote:
Certainly, but it hasn't. It has only VGA and DVI-D (Dual Link) inputs,
and the laptop has only DP and VGA outputs, so, VGA is the first option...
A decade ago I used a HDMI to DVI adapter plugged into the monitor (a
case a bit larger than a DVI male co
On 10/19/23, Stefan Monnier wrote:
>> /var/log/Xorg.0.log https://paste.debian.net/plain/1295616
>
> IIUC this is an `Xorg.0.log` from when the external monitor was
> not connected.
>
> I suspect a more useful one would be when the external monitor was
> connected as well.
Certainly, Stefan, soun
> /var/log/Xorg.0.log https://paste.debian.net/plain/1295616
IIUC this is an `Xorg.0.log` from when the external monitor was
not connected.
I suspect a more useful one would be when the external monitor was
connected as well.
Stefan
On 10/18/23, Felix Miata wrote:
> riveravaldez composed on 2023-10-18 16:05 (UTC-0300):
>
>> Hi everybody, I'm having a resolution issue trying to connect an
>> external monitor to a laptop.
> ...
Hi, Felix, thanks a lot for your very detailed reply and help, it's most
appreciated.
> Using DP in
riveravaldez composed on 2023-10-18 16:05 (UTC-0300):
> Hi everybody, I'm having a resolution issue trying to connect an
> external monitor to a laptop.
...
>
https://support.lenovo.com/us/en/solutions/pd015807-detailed-specifications-thinkpad-x220-tablet
That URL covers multiple
Hi everybody, I'm having a resolution issue trying to connect an
external monitor to a laptop.
Laptop: ThinkPad X220T
External Monitor: Samsung SyncMaster S20A300B
Debian: 11.8 (bullseye), updated
Connecting through laptop's VGA port (to VGA input in external
monitor) everything works
ching in the logs using journalctl I got:
> acpi_call: loading out-of-tree module taints kernel.
> 440 kernel: acpi_call: module verification failed: signature and/or
required key missing - tainting kernel
I'm using a Thinkpad T440, secureboot disabled. Kernel: /5.15.0-2-amd64./
Is this a bug?
//
Regards,
Apurv
riveravaldez (12021-03-26):
> debian kernel: i915 :00:02.0: [drm] GPU HANG: ecode 6:1:85fc,
> in eadedCompositor [10433]
> debian kernel: i915 :00:02.0: [drm] Resetting chip for stopped
> heartbeat on rcs0
> debian kernel: i915 :00:02.0: [drm] eadedCompositor[10433] context
> reset
riveravaldez composed on 2021-03-26 23:23 (UTC-0300):
> Any idea what to do/where to look?
Any chance the cooling system needs cleaning?
Are you using a display manager (login greeter) to launch?
There are two DDX d
Hi,
I'm having what I suppose are random (not frequent) video server hangs.
This is a ThinkPad X220 T with Debian Testing and:
00:02.0 VGA compatible controller [0300]: Intel Corporation 2nd
Generation Core Processor Family Integrated Graphics Controller
[8086:0126] (rev 09)
I'm u
Andrei POPESCU wrote:
> Try comparing kernel messages (dmesg).
Or install the old kernel image into the buster and try to eliminate or
confirm it depends on library or on kernel driver.
>From what I read it is kernel driver issue and it was fixed, then broken
then fixed, then broken etc.
On Lu, 18 ian 21, 14:09:17, Ottavio Caruso wrote:
>
> I have a usb flash drive with an old (2 years or so) Debian Testing image
> (Buster, which in the meantime is stable) running kernel 4.9.0-14 (same as
> the one I'm currently running now, but probably built on top of different
> libraries). I i
On Jo, 07 ian 21, 23:35:23, Ottavio Caruso wrote:
>
> Thanks. So, this is the list of all linux-image-amd64:
> https://snapshot.debian.org/binary/linux-image-amd64/
You might want to read the description for 'linux-image-amd64' first ;)
> Which one should I install? Which was the first kernel t
Ottavio Caruso wrote:
> Thanks. So, this is the list of all linux-image-amd64:
> https://snapshot.debian.org/binary/linux-image-amd64/
>
> Which one should I install? Which was the first kernel that came with
> Stretch?
Otavio, come on, does google not work on your PC?
https://wiki.debian.org/De
On Thu, Jan 07, 2021 at 09:44:49AM +0100, deloptes wrote:
> Andrei POPESCU wrote:
>
> > Some of us do need the webcam for video calls / conferences ;)
> > (family, friends or work)
> >
>
> Andrei, forgive me the the joke, but I doubt you are a model or movie star,
> I would insist looking at :D
On Jo, 07 ian 21, 14:22:30, deloptes wrote:
> Andrei POPESCU wrote:
>
> > Typically a Debian release should run with the kernel from the previous
> > release (makes dist-upgrade easier), specific exceptions are mentioned
> > in the Release Notes.
> >
> > If possible you should stick with kernels
Andrei POPESCU wrote:
> Typically a Debian release should run with the kernel from the previous
> release (makes dist-upgrade easier), specific exceptions are mentioned
> in the Release Notes.
>
> If possible you should stick with kernels from the LTS project (as far
> as I know stretch is still
On Thu, 7 Jan 2021 09:37:42 +0200
Andrei POPESCU wrote:
> On Jo, 07 ian 21, 02:06:33, deloptes wrote:
> >
> > I'm just wondering why one would want to have a spy cam on his notebook
> > working. In the company everybody glue something on the webcam or painted
> > it with permanent black.
> > At
On Jo, 07 ian 21, 09:37:10, Ottavio Caruso wrote:
> On 07/01/2021 01:06, deloptes wrote:
> > Ottavio Caruso wrote:
> >
> > > In this case, what's the oldest kernel I can install on Stretch?
> > you mean the most recent?
>
> No, I mean the opposite. The oldest that can be installed on Stretch Beca
Ottavio Caruso wrote:
> No, I mean the opposite. The oldest that can be installed on Stretch
> Because I didn't have a problem with older kernels. I must have
> uninstalled some of the oldest kernel I had. At the moment I have:
>
from what I read you need a 3.x kernel to be sure it works.
Last
Andrei POPESCU wrote:
> Some of us do need the webcam for video calls / conferences ;)
> (family, friends or work)
>
Andrei, forgive me the the joke, but I doubt you are a model or movie star,
I would insist looking at :D - same for me :D.
I understand this but do not understand completely why w
On Jo, 07 ian 21, 02:06:33, deloptes wrote:
>
> I'm just wondering why one would want to have a spy cam on his notebook
> working. In the company everybody glue something on the webcam or painted
> it with permanent black.
> At home - audio is off and the webcam is fully covered as well.
> ... but
Ottavio Caruso wrote:
> In this case, what's the oldest kernel I can install on Stretch?
you mean the most recent?
I don't know - it looks like there is no solution though as even in later
5.6 similar issues are reported. The latest stable kernel is 5.10.5
https://www.kernel.org/
Better think
Ottavio Caruso wrote:
> [18820.144438] uvcvideo: Found UVC 1.00 device Integrated Camera
> [(5986:0299) 18820.147743] uvcvideo 2-4:1.0: Entity type for entity
> [Processing 2 was
> not initialized!
> [18820.147758] uvcvideo 2-4:1.0: Entity type for entity Camera 1 was not
> initialized!
> [18820.1
Ottavio Caruso wrote:
> Thanks. This is the dmesg log while giving the 2 commands as above:
>
> After `sudo rmmod uvcvideo`:
> [15630.304614] usbcore: deregistering interface driver uvcvideo
>
> After `sudo modprobe -v uvcvideo`:
>
> [15651.636552] uvcvideo: Found UVC 1.00 device Integrated Cam
Ottavio Caruso wrote:
> I have installed uvcdynctrl, but I don't know what to make of its output:
>
> $ sudo uvcdynctrl -l
> Listing available devices:
> video0 Integrated Camera: Integrated C
> Media controller device: /dev/media0
> Entity 1: Integrated Camera: Integrated C. Type: 65537, Revis
>
I just did a search in google for TP 130
https://wiki.debian.org/InstallingDebianOn/Thinkpad/Edge-E130/wheezy
http://linux-hardware.org/index.php?id=usb:5986-0299
It looks like it is supported since wheezy and reported to be recognized up
to kernel 5.10. If it does not work - either th
On Lu, 04 ian 21, 21:57:20, Patrick Elsen wrote:
> Hey all,
>
> I'm not sure if this is the right way or place to report this, but I've
> been running Debian bullseye (Testing) for some months now and it's
> been a really great experience, everything works out of the box
> (backlight, suspend, dis
i only have to
just software such as emacs, firefox, gitlab, etc, ...
So i am happy now with no-stress furthermore i have plan to buy new
thinkpad-chromebook [zork-morphius]. At there i will install the great
*Bullseye*.
(currently i am on Ubuntu 18.04 under chromebook [oak-birch])
Sincerely, Linux fan Byung-Hee
--
^고맙습니다 _救濟蒼生_ 감사합니다_^))//
Hey all,
I'm not sure if this is the right way or place to report this, but I've
been running Debian bullseye (Testing) for some months now and it's
been a really great experience, everything works out of the box
(backlight, suspend, display brightness control, switching between
speakers and headp
Dan Ritter wrote:
> If you absolutely need a working camera as soon as possible, buy
> a new USB camera.
but the subject says it is integrated. I suggest just install a new kernel
(may be from back ports if available and you want to stay on stretch)
you can compile new kernel or simply upgrade to
Ottavio Caruso wrote:
> https://paste.debian.net/plainh/1c22d1aa
Your kernel believes you have two video cameras, one named
Trust. They have different USB ids.
They both get recognized repeatedly in your snippet, but because
there is not enough context, I can't tell whether that means
- you put
On 1/4/21 1:00 PM, Ottavio Caruso wrote:
> Hi,
>
> $ uname -a
> Linux e130 4.9.0-14-amd64 #1 SMP Debian 4.9.246-2 (2020-12-17) x86_64
> GNU/Linux
>
> $ cat /etc/debian_version
> 9.13
>
> $ inxi -M
> Machine:
> Type: Laptop System: LENOVO product: 33588QG v
Thanks for the tip! I will have to check those out as well. I believe I
did have the non free when I setup to ensure Wi-Fi support. I don't know
if the miscellaneous non free was included with that build.
I used an unofficial build from here using the netinst.iso writtento a
USB.
https://cdimag
Also - check carefully what firmware it might require. You have, for
example, installed firmware-linux-nonfree, firmware-misc-nonfree to enable
non-free firmware possibly?
On Sat, Sep 5, 2020 at 10:12 PM riveravaldez
wrote:
> On 9/5/20, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> > On Saturday, September 05, 2
On 9/5/20, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> On Saturday, September 05, 2020 12:34:37 PM Aaron Elmquist wrote:
>> Well, I don't think it's a hardware issue. The computer is less than a
>> year old and it's been used sporadically over the last year. Any
>> thoughts
>> on how to rule hardware out as an
On Saturday, September 05, 2020 12:34:37 PM Aaron Elmquist wrote:
> Well, I don't think it's a hardware issue. The computer is less than a
> year old and it's been used sporadically over the last year. Any thoughts
> on how to rule hardware out as an issue?
Sorry, no, not off the top of my head,
Well, I don't think it's a hardware issue. The computer is less than a
year old and it's been used sporadically over the last year. Any thoughts
on how to rule hardware out as an issue?
On Sat, Sep 5, 2020 at 6:18 AM wrote:
> On Friday, September 04, 2020 07:55:43 PM Aaron Elmquist wrote:
> >
On Friday, September 04, 2020 07:55:43 PM Aaron Elmquist wrote:
> I'm on debian buster using KDE as my GUI. My trackpoint was working quite
> well until a month or two ago (maybe more). Now it has some odd behavior
> where it will snap to the bottom of the screen every so often when I'm
> using it
Hi,
I'm on debian buster using KDE as my GUI. My trackpoint was working quite
well until a month or two ago (maybe more). Now it has some odd behavior
where it will snap to the bottom of the screen every so often when I'm
using it.
Seems like the input is very sensitive to the bottom direction.
Hi,
For the record, I had the exact same problem on a computer running
buster that I don't use very often. For sure, it was working fine even
with timidity installed a few months ago. Many thanks to Andrei for the
'lsof | grep /dev/snd' command that pointed us in the right direction!
Debugging the
imidity 644timidity3r CHR
>>116,33 0t0 12547 /dev/snd/timer
>> timidity 644timidity4u CHR
>> 116,2 0t0 13463 /dev/snd/pcmC0D0p
>> timidity 644 timidity
7 /dev/snd/timer
> timidity 644timidity4u CHR
> 116,2 0t0 13463 /dev/snd/pcmC0D0p
> timidity 644timidity5u CHR
> 116,9 0t0 13479 /dev/snd/controlC0
> timidity 644timidity
On Du, 12 apr 20, 11:39:52, riveravaldez wrote:
>
> $ groups
> thinkpad cdrom floppy sudo audio dip video plugdev netdev
Ok.
> $ speaker-test -c2 [Still not sound.]
And no error...
> $ sudo speaker-test -c2 [Sounds OK.]
That would indicate that sound is handled differently
On 4/12/20, deloptes wrote:
> riveravaldez wrote:
>
>> But this not, even as sudo (and the error is similar to JACK one):
>> $ aplay -vv -D front:CARD=PCH,DEV=0 /usr/share/sounds/alsa/Noise.wav
>> aplay: main:830: audio open error: Device or resource bussy
>
> aplay -vv -D plughw:CARD=PCH,DEV=0 /u
; Any error message? Is your user a member of group 'audio'?
>
> Some program might be blocking the sound card, check also the output of
> 'lsof | grep /dev/snd' (as root).
>
> Kind regards,
> Andrei
Thanks a lot for your answer and help, Andrei.
I've got
riveravaldez wrote:
> But this not, even as sudo (and the error is similar to JACK one):
> $ aplay -vv -D front:CARD=PCH,DEV=0 /usr/share/sounds/alsa/Noise.wav
> aplay: main:830: audio open error: Device or resource bussy
aplay -vv -D plughw:CARD=PCH,DEV=0 /usr/share/sounds/alsa/Noise.wav
read t
On Sb, 11 apr 20, 21:02:39, riveravaldez wrote:
>
> Strangely, 'speaker-test -c2' doesn't produce a sound. But 'sudo
> speaker-test -c2' works flawlessly. (The idea to check that came from
> [1].)
Any error message? Is your user a member of group 'audio'?
Some program might be blocking the sound
On 4/11/20, riveravaldez wrote:
> On 4/11/20, riveravaldez wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> I would like to know what's the proper way to solve this. I'm on an
>> updated debian-testing installation (with pulseaudio installed and
>> working, but the problem seems to be previous, i.e., in ALSA, because
>> pavu
On 4/11/20, riveravaldez wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I would like to know what's the proper way to solve this. I'm on an
> updated debian-testing installation (with pulseaudio installed and
> working, but the problem seems to be previous, i.e., in ALSA, because
> pavucontrol doesn't show the soundcard in its
Hi,
I would like to know what's the proper way to solve this. I'm on an
updated debian-testing installation (with pulseaudio installed and
working, but the problem seems to be previous, i.e., in ALSA, because
pavucontrol doesn't show the soundcard in its correspondent tab).
I can get audio from a
On Sun, 1 Dec 2019 23:33:10 -0300
Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
Thanks for the help (and for your work on the thinkpad-acpi driver).
> On Sun, 01 Dec 2019, Celejar wrote:
> > 1) Most of the function keys don't seem to have scancodes / keycodes
> > (evtest doesn't
rnel? Some of the ones that have no keycodes do work,
> however (F5-7). Is this happening through the BIOS or something at a
> lower level than the kernel?
The thinkpad-acpi exports a fully reconfigurable input device. *If* it
gets the keycode from the thinkpad firmware, it can map it t
Hello,
I've always had trouble understanding how all the layers of keyboard
handling code fit together. Here's another attempt at understanding why
some things work on my keyboard and some don't, and - even more
importantly - why.
This is a Lenovo W550s ThinkPad running Debian Sid
On 8/24/19, Pétùr wrote:
> ffmpeg -f x11grab -s 1280x720 -r 25 -i :0.0 screencast.mp4
but where did the audio go?
it worked but not always. base on its logs ffmpeg seems to be making
a video, but vlc doesn't show to me the actual video even though the
file is there.
Why is it that the video
On 8/24/19 3:53 PM, Pétùr wrote:
> On 24/08/19 13:29, Albretch Mueller wrote:
>> How can I make a video from what is displayed on the screen using
>> ffmpeg, aconv or whatever?
>
> ffmpeg -f x11grab -s 1280x720 -r 25 -i :0.0 screencast.mp4
>
>
Or you can use Simple Screen Recorder
https://trac
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