That works! In fact, 'xinput enable /dev/wsmouse1' seems to suffice to fix the trackpad after resume.
In the text console the keyboard remains broken, though. Thanks On Mon, Nov 24, 2014 at 9:09 AM, Jaime Tarrant <[email protected]> wrote: > * On Mon Nov 24, 2014 at 08:56:59AM -0500 1558 , Maximilian Pichler > ([email protected]) wrote: >> On Mon, Nov 24, 2014 at 8:21 AM, Martin Pieuchot <[email protected]> >> wrote: >> > On 24/11/14(Mon) 08:11, Maximilian Pichler wrote: >> >> It's even slightly worse: after resuming, the keyboard still works in >> >> X, but switching to a text console (either via ctrl-alt-f1 or by >> >> quitting X) results in the keyboard being unusable, i.e. typing >> >> anything results in garbled characters. I therefore cannot even try >> >> your previous suggestions of restarting X. >> > >> > This is a bug. >> >> If I can do anything to help diagnose this better, please let me know. >> > > Hi all, I have a macbook pro 8.1 with the same mouse characteristics post > suspend/resume. Its only a work around, however you may be able to get > the mouse back by running the following from a console after resuming: > > xinput disable /dev/wsmouse1 && sleep 1 && xinput enable /dev/wsmouse1 > > Your dmesg looks similar to mine, so hopefully the above will work for > you too.

