o Implement a shiny new algorithm to keep track of finger movement at
slow speeds. This dramatically reduces the level of questionable
language from users trying to resize windows.
o Properly catch the many extra buttons and dials which manufacturers
are known to screw onto Synaptics touchpad controllers. Currently,
up to seven buttons are known to work, more should work too.
o Add a number of sysctls allowing one to tune the driver to taste in
a simple way:
# Should the extra buttons act as axes or as middle button
hw.psm.synaptics.directional_scrolls
# These control the 'stickiness' at low speeds
hw.psm.synaptics.low_speed_threshold
hw.psm.synaptics.min_movement
hw.psm.synaptics.squelch_level
PR: kern/75725
Submitted by: Jason Kuri <jay@oneway.com>
MFC after: 1 month
o Move the sysctls under debug.psm.* and hw.psm.* making them a bit
clearer and more consistent with other drivers.
o Remove the debug.psm_soft_timeout sysctl. It was introduced many
moons ago in r1.64 but never referenced anywhere.
o Introduce hw.psm.tap_threshold and hw.psm.tap_timeout to control
the behaviour of taps on touchpads. People might like to fiddle
with these if tapping seems to slow or too fast for them.
o Add debug.psm.loglevel as a tunable so that verbosity can be set
easily at boot-time (to watch probes and such) without having to
compile a kernel with options PSM_DEBUG=N.
people have reported problems (stickyness, aiming difficulty) which is proving
difficult to fix, so this will default to disable until sometime after 5.3R.
To enable Synaptics support, set the 'hw.psm.synaptics_support=1' tunable.
MT5 candidate.
Approved by: njl
o Remove PSM_SYNCERR_THRESHOLD1. This value specified how many sync
errors were required before the mouse is re-initialised.
Re-initialisation is now done after (packetsize * 2) sync errors as
things aren't likely to improve after that.
o Reset lastinputerror when re-initialisation occurs. We don't want
to continue to drop data after re-initialisation.
o Count the number of failed packets independently of the syncerrors
statistic. syncerrors is useful for recovering sync within a single
packet. pkterrors allows us to detect when the mouse changes its
packet mode due to some external event (e.g. KVM switch).
o Reinitialize the mouse if we see more than psmpkterrthresh errors
during the validation period. The validation period begins as soon
as a sync error is detected and continues until psmerrsecs/msecs
time has elapsed. The defaults for these two values force a reset
if we see two packet errors in a 2 second period. This allows rapid
detection of packet framing errors caused by the mouse changing packet
modes.
o Export psmpkterrthresh as a sysctl
o Export psmloglevel as a sysctl.
o Enable more debugging code to be enabled at runtime via psmloglevel.
o Simplify verbose conditioned loging by using a VLOG macro.
o Add several comments describing the sync recovery algorithm of
this driver.
Large Portions by: Brian Somers <brian@Awfulhak.org>
Inspired and Frustrated by: Belkin KVMs
Reviewed by: njl, philip
data packet is received from the mouse. In the case of many KVM's,
this avoids a bug in their mouse emulation that sends back incorrect
sync when you explicitly request a data packet from the mouse. Without
this change, you must force the driver into stock PS/2 mode or be flooded
with a never ending stream of "out of sync" messages on these KVMs.
Approved by: re
o Change the motion calculation to result in
a more reasonable speed of motion
This should fix the 'aiming' problems people have reported. It also
mitigates (but doesn't completely solve) the 'stalling' problems at
very low speeds.
Tested by: many subscribers to -current
Approved by: njl
o Catch 'taps' as button presses
o One finger sends button1, two fingers send button3,
three fingers send button2 (double-click)
Tested by: many subscribers to -current
Approved by: njl
o Handle the 'up/down' buttons some touchpads have as
a z-axis (scrollwheel) as recommended by the specs
o Report the buttons as button4 and button5 instead
of button2 and button4, button2 can be emulated by
pressing button1 and button3 simultaneously. This
allows one to use the two extra buttons for other
purposes if one so desires.
Tested by: many subscribers to -current
Approved by: njl
o Clean up whitespace and comments in the
enable_synaptics() probing function
o Only use (and rely on) the extended capability
bits when we are told they actually exist
o Partly ignore the (possibly dated?) part of the
specification about the mode byte so that we
can support 'guest devices' too.
Tested by: many subscribers to -current
Approved by: njl
submitted version with style cleanups and changes to comments. I also
modified the ioctl interface. This version only has one ioctl (to get
the Synaptics-specific config parameters) since this is the only
information a user might want.
Submitted by: Arne Schwabe <arne -at- rfc2549.org>
scenario into #ifdef DEBUG. This makes my cluster with Belkin
KVM switch completely usable, even if the KVM switch and mouse
get a bit confused sometimes.
Without this, when the mouse gets confused, all sorts of crud
gets spammed all over the screen. With this, the mouse may appear
dead for a second or three, but it recovers silently.
Introduce d_version field in struct cdevsw, this must always be
initialized to D_VERSION.
Flip sense of D_NOGIANT flag to D_NEEDGIANT, this involves removing
four D_NOGIANT flags and adding 145 D_NEEDGIANT flags.
Free approx 86 major numbers with a mostly automatically generated patch.
A number of strategic drivers have been left behind by caution, and a few
because they still (ab)use their major number.
when using a KVM.
There is no actual solution possible, but this gets us pretty close.
Typically when switching back to a FreeBSD box and moving the mouse
wild data is produced, because the protocol's validation/checksum
system is extremely weak it is impossible to determine that we're
out of sync before dropping several bogus packets to user land.
The actual solution that appears to offer the best clamping of
jitter is to buffer the mouse packets if we've not seen mouse
activity for more than .5 seconds. Then waiting to flush that data
for 1/20th of a second. If within that 20th of a second we get any
packets that do fail the weak test we drop the entire queue and
back off accepting data from the mouse for 2 seconds and then repeat
the whole deal.
You can still get _some_ jitter, notably if you switch to the FreeBSD
box, then move the mouse just enough to generate one or two packets.
Those packets may be bogus, but may still pass the validity check.
One way to finally kill the problem once and for all is to check
the initial packets for "wild" values. Typically one sees packets
in the +/-60 range during normal operation, however when bogus data
is generated it's typically near the outer range of +/-120 or more,
those packets would be a good candidate for dropping or clamping.
I've been running with this for several weeks now and it has
significantly helped me stay sane even with a piece of junk Belkin
KVM causing wild jitter each and every time I switch.
Lastly I'd like to note that my experience with Windows shows me that
somehow the Microsoft PS/2 driver typically avoids this problem, but
that may only be possible when running the mouse in a dumb-ed down PS/2
mode that Belkin recommends on their site.
thread being waken up. The thread waken up can run at a priority as
high as after tsleep().
- Replace selwakeup()s with selwakeuppri()s and pass appropriate
priorities.
- Add cv_broadcastpri() which raises the priority of the broadcast
threads. Used by selwakeuppri() if collision occurs.
Not objected in: -arch, -current
branches:
Initialize struct cdevsw using C99 sparse initializtion and remove
all initializations to default values.
This patch is automatically generated and has been tested by compiling
LINT with all the fields in struct cdevsw in reverse order on alpha,
sparc64 and i386.
Approved by: re(scottl)
Problem:
selwakeup required calling pfind which would cause lock order
reversals with the allproc_lock and the per-process filedesc lock.
Solution:
Instead of recording the pid of the select()'ing process into the
selinfo structure, actually record a pointer to the thread. To
avoid dereferencing a bad address all the selinfo structures that
are in use by a thread are kept in a list hung off the thread
(protected by sellock). When a selwakeup occurs the selinfo is
removed from that threads list, it is also removed on the way out
of select or poll where the thread will traverse its list removing
all the selinfos from its own list.
Problem:
Previously the PROC_LOCK was used to provide the mutual exclusion
needed to ensure proper locking, this couldn't work because there
was a single condvar used for select and poll and condvars can
only be used with a single mutex.
Solution:
Introduce a global mutex 'sellock' which is used to provide mutual
exclusion when recording events to wait on as well as performing
notification when an event occurs.
Interesting note:
schedlock is required to manipulate the per-thread TDF_SELECT
flag, however if given its own field it would not need schedlock,
also because TDF_SELECT is only manipulated under sellock one
doesn't actually use schedlock for syncronization, only to protect
against corruption.
Proc locks are no longer used in select/poll.
Portions contributed by: davidc
- Count the number of this error.
- When the error is detected for the first time, the psm driver will
throw few data bytes (up to entire packet size) and see if it can
get back to sync.
- If the error still persists, the psm driver disable/enable the mouse
and see if it works.
- If the error still persists and the count goes up to 20,
the psm driver reset and reinitialize the mouse. The counter
is reset to zero.
- It also discards an incomplete data packet when the interval
between two consequtive bytes are longer than pre-defined timeout
(2 seconds). The last byte which arrived late will be regarded as
the first byte of a new packet. This is louie's idea.
You may see the following error logs during the above operations:
"psmintr: delay too long; resetting byte count"
"psmintr: out of sync (%04x != %04x)"
"psmintr: discard a byte (%d)"
"psmintr: re-enable the mouse"
"psmintr: reset the mouse"
MFC after: 1 month
problems currently experienced in -CURRENT.
This should fix the problem that the PS/2 mouse is detected
twice if the acpi module is not loaded on some systems.
- Add workaround for the problematic PnP BIOS which does not assign
irq resource for the PS/2 mouse device node; if there is no irq
assigned for the PS/2 mouse node, refer to device.hints for an
irq number. If we still don't find an irq number in the hints
database, use a hard-coded value.
- Delete unused ivars.
- Bit of clean up in probe/attach.
- Add PnP ID for the PS/2 mouse port on some IBM ThinkPad models.
Note ALL MODULES MUST BE RECOMPILED
make the kernel aware that there are smaller units of scheduling than the
process. (but only allow one thread per process at this time).
This is functionally equivalent to teh previousl -current except
that there is a thread associated with each process.
Sorry john! (your next MFC will be a doosie!)
Reviewed by: peter@freebsd.org, dillon@freebsd.org
X-MFC after: ha ha ha ha
more cleanly and consistently in all APCI, PnP BIOS, and "hint"
cases.
NOTE: this doesn't necessarily solve the problem that the PS/2
mouse is not detected after the recent ACPI update.
but a hack! Add `flags 0x8000' to the psm driver to enable it.
The psm driver will try to get out of out-of-sync situation
by disabling the mouse and immediately enable it again.
If you are seeing this out-of-sync problem because of an
incompetent(?!) KVM switch, this hack will NOT be good
for you. However, if you are occasionally seeing the
problem because of lost mouse interrupt, this might help.