[Bug 1627905] Re: Ubuntu can't be installed to certain Lenovo Yoga laptops because the fakeraid storage mode is not supported.

2019-07-24 Thread Brad Figg
** Tags added: cscc

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Title:
  Ubuntu can't be installed to certain Lenovo Yoga laptops because the
  fakeraid storage mode is not supported.

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[Bug 1627905] Re: Ubuntu can't be installed to certain Lenovo Yoga laptops because the fakeraid storage mode is not supported.

2018-11-25 Thread amarajohsan
You have to switch to Linux, to install this one in Lenovo laptop and
desktop is so easy, If someone has a query related to Lenovo laptop and
desktop then you can take help from this site
https://www.lenovosupportphonenumber.com/blog/fix-lenovo-error-code-
0xc185/ it always provides a good solution of Lenovo related
problem you can take help from this at any time.

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Title:
  Ubuntu can't be installed to certain Lenovo Yoga laptops because the
  fakeraid storage mode is not supported.

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[Bug 1627905] Re: Ubuntu can't be installed to certain Lenovo Yoga laptops because the fakeraid storage mode is not supported.

2018-11-25 Thread amarajohsan
You have to switch Linux,  if you want to do this if someone has a
problem regarding Lenovo laptop and desktop and have any query related
to this then take help from this site
www.lenovosupportphonenumber.com/blog/fix-lenovo-error-code-0xc185/
its always provide a good solution you can take help from this site at
any time.

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Title:
  Ubuntu can't be installed to certain Lenovo Yoga laptops because the
  fakeraid storage mode is not supported.

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[Bug 1627905] Re: Ubuntu can't be installed to certain Lenovo Yoga laptops because the fakeraid storage mode is not supported.

2018-04-02 Thread Ryan
This bug is old and Lenovo fixed the issue upstream with a corrected
BIOS that users can optionally install, which enables AHCI mode.

Also, from my understanding, Linux installs even in the default
configuration now, including on the more recent Yoga 910 and 920 models
thanks to some patches from Intel that went into the upstream Linux
kernel.

Unless anyone objects, I think this should be closed as fixed upstream.

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Title:
  Ubuntu can't be installed to certain Lenovo Yoga laptops because the
  fakeraid storage mode is not supported.

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[Bug 1627905] Re: Ubuntu can't be installed to certain Lenovo Yoga laptops because the fakeraid storage mode is not supported.

2017-05-31 Thread Ryan
apport information

** Tags added: apport-collected zesty

** Description changed:

  Several Lenovo Yoga laptops do not allow the user to install any current
  Linux distributions due to being BIOS-locked to a RAID mode and Linux
  does not support this. You can boot a Linux live environment, but when
  you go to install, it will not see the Solid State Drive and it does not
  appear as a PCI device.
  
  The affected models are the Yoga 900 ISK2, 900S, 710S, and 900 ISK for
  Business, and probably the new Yoga Book and Yoga 910 as well.
  
  Lenovo has stated that removing the AHCI option from the BIOS is a
  feature and that they don't plan to fix this.
  
  There have been some blog postings and news articles about this issue
  lately.
  
  Here is the Lenovo Forums topic:
  
  https://forums.lenovo.com/t5/Linux-Discussion/Yoga-900-13ISK2-BIOS-
  update-for-setting-RAID-mode-for-missing/td-p/3339206/highlight/false
  
  (Note that this says it is solved, but it is not. Lenovo replied that
  they won't fix it and that Linux is not supported on these laptops.)
  
  Matthew Garrett's blog post is here:
  https://mjg59.dreamwidth.org/44694.html
  
  I approached him with the idea that perhaps the Linux kernel could be
  modified to reset the hardware and put it into AHCI mode after GRUB
  loads the kernel (according to him, GRUB doesn't need to be modified
  because it uses the uEFI firmware's disk access), and then Linux could
  proceed to boot.
  
  Here's what he said:
  
  "If you wanted to try that, the best place to do it would be the UEFI
  setup code in the kernel under arch/x86/boot/compressed/eboot.c - that
  way you can do it independent of bootloader. Grub's able to read files
  anyway since it's using the firmware calls to do that.
  
  The power management thing isn't about the SSD itself, it's about
  ensuring that the controller is programmed correctly so that the entire
  CPU package can enter deep sleep states. Modern systems should idle at
  around 4W at most, so small amounts make abig difference here."
  
  [...]
  
  "If the firmware hasn't locked the control bit and if the hardware is ok
  with suddenly being reconfigured, sure, that ought to work. Doing it in
  eboot.c means you're doing it before any PCI enumeration has occurred,
  which makes it more likely that things will work out well."
  
  [...]
  
  "I'll take a quick look at the 10-series chipset docs to see if it's
  documented, and if so I'll throw a quick patch together - but I'm
  probably not going to try pushing it upstream, I'm afraid. If it does
  work, I'm fine with anybody else doing so."
  
  
  I heaven't heard anything back lately, so I am putting this in a bug report 
so that the Ubuntu maintainers are aware of the issue.
  
- It seems like a few lines of kernel code are all that is really required
- to fix this and restore the ability of Linux distributions to be
- installed on half a dozen laptops (probably more to come, since Lenovo
- says that the industry is moving to this!).
+ It seems like a few lines of kernel code are all that is really required to 
fix this and restore the ability of Linux distributions to be installed on half 
a dozen laptops (probably more to come, since Lenovo says that the industry is 
moving to this!).
+ --- 
+ ApportVersion: 2.20.4-0ubuntu4.1
+ Architecture: amd64
+ AudioDevicesInUse:
+  USERPID ACCESS COMMAND
+  /dev/snd/controlC0:  ryan   1604 F pulseaudio
+ CurrentDesktop: GNOME
+ DistroRelease: Ubuntu 17.04
+ EcryptfsInUse: Yes
+ InstallationDate: Installed on 2017-05-30 (2 days ago)
+ InstallationMedia: Ubuntu-GNOME 17.04 "Zesty Zapus" - Release amd64 (20170412)
+ Lsusb:
+  Bus 002 Device 001: ID 1d6b:0003 Linux Foundation 3.0 root hub
+  Bus 001 Device 003: ID 8087:0a2b Intel Corp. 
+  Bus 001 Device 002: ID 5986:068c Acer, Inc 
+  Bus 001 Device 001: ID 1d6b:0002 Linux Foundation 2.0 root hub
+ MachineType: LENOVO 80UE
+ Package: linux (not installed)
+ ProcEnviron:
+  TERM=xterm-256color
+  PATH=(custom, no user)
+  XDG_RUNTIME_DIR=
+  LANG=en_US.UTF-8
+  SHELL=/bin/bash
+ ProcFB: 0 inteldrmfb
+ ProcKernelCmdLine: BOOT_IMAGE=/boot/vmlinuz-4.10.0-22-generic.efi.signed 
root=UUID=3ee79c46-724b-41b5-8c42-44458297de6a ro quiet splash vt.handoff=7
+ ProcVersionSignature: Ubuntu 4.10.0-22.24-generic 4.10.15
+ RelatedPackageVersions:
+  linux-restricted-modules-4.10.0-22-generic N/A
+  linux-backports-modules-4.10.0-22-generic  N/A
+  linux-firmware 1.164.1
+ Tags:  zesty
+ Uname: Linux 4.10.0-22-generic x86_64
+ UpgradeStatus: No upgrade log present (probably fresh install)
+ UserGroups: adm cdrom dip lpadmin plugdev sambashare sudo
+ _MarkForUpload: True
+ dmi.bios.date: 10/14/2016
+ dmi.bios.vendor: LENOVO
+ dmi.bios.version: 2UCN10T
+ dmi.board.asset.tag: NO Asset Tag
+ dmi.board.name: VIUU4
+ dmi.board.vendor: LENOVO
+ dmi.board.version: SDK0J40709 WIN
+ dmi.chassis.asset.tag: NO Asset Tag
+ dmi.chassis.type: 10
+ dmi.chassis.v

[Bug 1627905] Re: Ubuntu can't be installed to certain Lenovo Yoga laptops because the fakeraid storage mode is not supported.

2017-05-31 Thread Ryan
NOTE: The apport information posted above is with the nvme ssd in this
laptop visible and operating in AHCI mode (not RAID) under the fixed
BIOS that Lenovo provided.

As noted by Intel, there's no way (without their patch) for computers
without the new BIOS to install Linux. Linux can't see the device or
interact with it at all in the "RAID" mode.

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Title:
  Ubuntu can't be installed to certain Lenovo Yoga laptops because the
  fakeraid storage mode is not supported.

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[Bug 1627905] Re: Ubuntu can't be installed to certain Lenovo Yoga laptops because the fakeraid storage mode is not supported.

2017-05-31 Thread Ryan
http://marc.info/?l=linux-ide&m=147709610621480&w=2

There's a link to the patches that Intel submitted.

If you go to next in list, you can see the patches and if you go to next
in thread, you can follow the ensuing conversation where upstream kernel
developers declare it "too ugly to live" and Intel admits that putting
the storage in AHCI mode is better. Of course with Lenovo's default BIOS
you can't, so no Linux for you! Regardless, does Ubuntu want to merge
and maintain this in case there are other laptops out there with
ridiculous BIOS settings? It's a distinct possibility that other
companies have hardware out there that does this. I doubt that Lenovo
will try it again, but you never know.:P

I'm probably done buying hardware from OEMs that pull stuff like this
and then fighting them later as others apologize for them. If it's not
crooked, then it's at least braindead stupid.

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Title:
  Ubuntu can't be installed to certain Lenovo Yoga laptops because the
  fakeraid storage mode is not supported.

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[Bug 1627905] Re: Ubuntu can't be installed to certain Lenovo Yoga laptops because the fakeraid storage mode is not supported.

2017-05-31 Thread Ryan
This bug has been solved by Lenovo releasing a new BIOS update for
affected Lenovo Yoga laptops that allows the user to put the storage
controller into AHCI mode, thus making it visible to Linux and any other
OS that the user wants to install.

There was also a patch from Intel that adds support for the RAID
controller, but there was a long discussion on the Linux Kernel Mailing
List where the maintainers of the storage subsystem did not want to
merge it because the way Intel implemented this was deemed to be pretty
horrible and Intel themselves admitted that it would be better to just
install in AHCI mode.

Is Ubuntu interested in that patch? It's smallish, but it's likely to
never be upstreamed.

Users of the affected systems should go to Lenovo's support website,
enter their serial number or model number, and download the "Linux Only"
BIOS firmware. Then they can go into their BIOS and enable BIOS
backflashing to make the BIOS accept the update, otherwise it thinks
you're trying to install an older firmware and won't allow it. Once
that's done, go back into Windows and double click the firmware exe and
let it do its thing (making sure that the laptop is plugged into the
wall and on AC power the entire time!!!). Once it's flashed in, you can
then enter BIOS setup and switch the SATA controller mode to AHCI
instead of RAID. Then you can boot from the Linux Live environment and
install to the SSD.

At all times, remember that it's easiest to get into boot options and
BIOS set-up on a Lenovo laptop by finding the small button next to the
power button and pressing it with something like the tip of a pen. This
will turn on the computer and immediately take you to startup options.

You may also want to disable "quick boot" while you're in the BIOS
setup. I did and it doesn't seem to add any appreciable time to the boot
procedure, but it gives you more startup options than quick boot does if
you require them in the future.

Now, with all of this said, I'm going to try/recommend closing this bug
since Lenovo begrudgingly fixed it in response to a complaint that I
filed with the Illinois Attorney General consumer affairs department,
after telling the news all of the preceding weeks that it was all the
fault of Linux for "not having drivers". The only real reason to have it
in RAID mode was to force Windows to load the Intel RST driver for power
policy, and that's irrelevant on Linux (although I do recommend creating
a system service that calls powertop and has it auto tune the settings
as you can get power usage down roughly 30% over the Linux defaults that
way, and having it apply the optimization at every boot is convenient.

I found out how to make powertop do this in Ubuntu. I believe they
copied the service file from Fedora.

https://blog.sleeplessbeastie.eu/2015/08/10/how-to-set-all-tunable-
powertop-options-at-system-boot/

Anyway, I threw that in because the obscene power usage that Matthew
Garrett talks about goes away if you do this. With the power policy
optimization, the run time on my laptop in Ubuntu is comparable to
Windows 10.

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Title:
  Ubuntu can't be installed to certain Lenovo Yoga laptops because the
  fakeraid storage mode is not supported.

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[Bug 1627905] Re: Ubuntu can't be installed to certain Lenovo Yoga laptops because the fakeraid storage mode is not supported.

2016-10-03 Thread Joseph Salisbury
** Changed in: linux (Ubuntu)
   Importance: Undecided => Medium

** Changed in: linux (Ubuntu)
   Status: Incomplete => Triaged

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Title:
  Ubuntu can't be installed to certain Lenovo Yoga laptops because the
  fakeraid storage mode is not supported.

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