[Kernel-packages] [Bug 1846374] Re: Having a video playing/paused when switched to another user generates gigabytes of error logs
I am here to confirm the same issue. In my case, HOWEVER, minimizing and pausing VLC is all it needs to generate thousands of these so rapidly that I run into issues: Jan 21 08:27:40 pop-os vlc.desktop[2389]: [7f4cf4092ce0] vdpau_chroma filter error: video mixer features failure: An invalid handle value was provided. Jan 21 08:27:40 pop-os vlc.desktop[2389]: [7f4cf4092ce0] vdpau_chroma filter error: video mixer attributes failure: An invalid handle value was provided. I am using NVIDIA 440.44 running Ubuntu 19.10 (in fact Pop!_OS) on a GeForce GTX 1650/PCIe/SSE2. Thanks a lot for looking into this. -- You received this bug notification because you are a member of Kernel Packages, which is subscribed to nvidia-graphics-drivers-418 in Ubuntu. https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1846374 Title: Having a video playing/paused when switched to another user generates gigabytes of error logs Status in nvidia-graphics-drivers-418 package in Ubuntu: Confirmed Status in nvidia-graphics-drivers-435 package in Ubuntu: Confirmed Bug description: To replicate: 1. Start a video playing, for example in vlc. 'avcodec decoder: Using NVIDIA VDPAU Driver Shared Library 418.56 Fri Mar 15 12:31:51 CDT 2019 for hardware decoding' 2. Optionally pause it. 3. Switch to another user. The original user's ~/.xsession-errors will rapidly fill up with errors along the lines of "vdpau_chroma filter error". At the same time, errors are put in /var/log/syslog as well: [7f9d604810a0] vdpau_chroma filter error: video mixer features failure: An invalid handle value was provided. [7f9d604810a0] vdpau_chroma filter error: video mixer attributes failure: An invalid handle value was provided. [7f9d604810a0] vdpau_chroma filter error: video mixer rendering failure: An invalid handle value was provided. (repeat ad nauseum) At least one of the two will rapidly fill up its partition and problems will arise. With AMD video hardware and driver, the video continues playing - you can hear the sound despite being in the other user. To manage notifications about this bug go to: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/nvidia-graphics-drivers-418/+bug/1846374/+subscriptions -- 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
[Kernel-packages] [Bug 1778011] Re: SRU: PRIME Power Saving mode draws too much power
@Chris, Thanks for your reply. I know, my point is a bit different. If I set the bios to discrete only, I get an HDMI signal. If I set the bios option to hybrid, I can use prime-select to switch between intel and nvidia but in both cases I cannot use HDMI anymore and in both cases power consumption is at a rate of above 20W, essentially emptying my battery within 2-3 hours. -- You received this bug notification because you are a member of Kernel Packages, which is subscribed to nvidia-settings in Ubuntu. https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1778011 Title: SRU: PRIME Power Saving mode draws too much power Status in HWE Next: New Status in gdm3 package in Ubuntu: Fix Released Status in nvidia-graphics-drivers-390 package in Ubuntu: Fix Released Status in nvidia-prime package in Ubuntu: Fix Released Status in nvidia-settings package in Ubuntu: Fix Released Status in sddm package in Ubuntu: Confirmed Status in ubuntu-drivers-common package in Ubuntu: Fix Released Status in gdm3 source package in Bionic: Fix Released Status in nvidia-graphics-drivers-390 source package in Bionic: Fix Released Status in nvidia-prime source package in Bionic: Fix Released Status in nvidia-settings source package in Bionic: Fix Released Status in sddm source package in Bionic: Confirmed Status in ubuntu-drivers-common source package in Bionic: Fix Released Bug description: SRU Request: [Impact] Relying on the nouveau driver and on the vga switcheroo (to get around a change in systemd LP: #1777099) caused increased power consumption, and slowed down the switching process. Furthermore, if the main X/Xwayland session was started by Gdm when the nvidia driver was loaded, the session will keep the nvidia module loaded, and prevent the system from switching off the dGPU. Also, the nouveau driver will be loaded, if nvidia is not, and this can cause problems to unsupported NVIDIA GPUs. The solution involves the following changes: 1) Solving the problem in systemd (LP: #1777099) 2) Adding code in gpu-manager and in nvidia-prime to unload the nvidia modules, and to allow the PCI device to sleep. 3) Making a slight change to the current patch in Gdm, used to call the PRIME scripts before and after a Gdm session (so that gpu-manager gets actually called on log out) 4) Adding code in gpu-manager to kill the main X/Xwayland session on log out, if the session is preventing us from unloading the nvidia driver. A new X/Xwayland session will be created after unload the module. 5) Removing the systemd service that loads nouveau from the nvidia packages. [Test Case] 1) Enable the -proposed repository, and install the new "ubuntu-drivers-common", nvidia drivers, nvidia-prime, and gdm3 * 2) Make sure the nvidia packages are installed, and enable performance mode (if it is already enabled, call "sudo prime-select intel" first): sudo prime-select nvidia 3) Restart your computer and attach your /var/log/gpu-manager.log. see if the system boots correctly. If unsure, please attach your /var/log /gpu-manager.log and /var/log/Xorg.0.log 4) Select power saving mode: sudo prime-select intel 5) Log out and log back in 6) Check if the nvidia driver is still loaded: lsmod | grep nvidia [Regression Potential] Low, as hybrid graphics support does not work correctly, and the changes only affect this use case. _ * Steps to test the updates: 1) Enable the bionic-proposed repositories 2) Create /etc/apt/preferences.d/proposed-updates with the following content: Package: * Pin: release a=bionic-proposed Pin-Priority: 400 3) Update the list of packages: sudo apt-get update 4) Install the packages from -proposed using the following command: sudo apt install nvidia-driver-390/bionic-proposed gdm3/bionic- proposed ubuntu-drivers-common/bionic-proposed nvidia-prime/bionic- proposed nvidia-settings/bionic-proposed libnvidia-gl-390/bionic- proposed libnvidia-compute-390/bionic-proposed libnvidia-decode-390 /bionic-proposed libnvidia-encode-390/bionic-proposed libnvidia- ifr1-390/bionic-proposed libnvidia-fbc1-390/bionic-proposed To manage notifications about this bug go to: https://bugs.launchpad.net/hwe-next/+bug/1778011/+subscriptions -- 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
[Kernel-packages] [Bug 1778011] Re: SRU: PRIME Power Saving mode draws too much power
@Alberto: Thanks a lot for your help! There is no such setting in the BIOS of the Thinkpad X1 Extreme. I can either select discrete only or hybrid cards. I was finally able to get prime-select to switch to intel but the rate remains at like 20W which is essentially the same as using the nvidia card. I am also not able to connect to an external screen via the on-board HDMI port which is another issue I never had to deal with in a Thinkpad (usb-c to HDMI adapter does not work as well). -- You received this bug notification because you are a member of Kernel Packages, which is subscribed to nvidia-settings in Ubuntu. https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1778011 Title: SRU: PRIME Power Saving mode draws too much power Status in HWE Next: New Status in gdm3 package in Ubuntu: Fix Released Status in nvidia-graphics-drivers-390 package in Ubuntu: Fix Released Status in nvidia-prime package in Ubuntu: Fix Released Status in nvidia-settings package in Ubuntu: Fix Released Status in sddm package in Ubuntu: Confirmed Status in ubuntu-drivers-common package in Ubuntu: Fix Released Status in gdm3 source package in Bionic: Fix Released Status in nvidia-graphics-drivers-390 source package in Bionic: Fix Released Status in nvidia-prime source package in Bionic: Fix Released Status in nvidia-settings source package in Bionic: Fix Released Status in sddm source package in Bionic: Confirmed Status in ubuntu-drivers-common source package in Bionic: Fix Released Bug description: SRU Request: [Impact] Relying on the nouveau driver and on the vga switcheroo (to get around a change in systemd LP: #1777099) caused increased power consumption, and slowed down the switching process. Furthermore, if the main X/Xwayland session was started by Gdm when the nvidia driver was loaded, the session will keep the nvidia module loaded, and prevent the system from switching off the dGPU. Also, the nouveau driver will be loaded, if nvidia is not, and this can cause problems to unsupported NVIDIA GPUs. The solution involves the following changes: 1) Solving the problem in systemd (LP: #1777099) 2) Adding code in gpu-manager and in nvidia-prime to unload the nvidia modules, and to allow the PCI device to sleep. 3) Making a slight change to the current patch in Gdm, used to call the PRIME scripts before and after a Gdm session (so that gpu-manager gets actually called on log out) 4) Adding code in gpu-manager to kill the main X/Xwayland session on log out, if the session is preventing us from unloading the nvidia driver. A new X/Xwayland session will be created after unload the module. 5) Removing the systemd service that loads nouveau from the nvidia packages. [Test Case] 1) Enable the -proposed repository, and install the new "ubuntu-drivers-common", nvidia drivers, nvidia-prime, and gdm3 * 2) Make sure the nvidia packages are installed, and enable performance mode (if it is already enabled, call "sudo prime-select intel" first): sudo prime-select nvidia 3) Restart your computer and attach your /var/log/gpu-manager.log. see if the system boots correctly. If unsure, please attach your /var/log /gpu-manager.log and /var/log/Xorg.0.log 4) Select power saving mode: sudo prime-select intel 5) Log out and log back in 6) Check if the nvidia driver is still loaded: lsmod | grep nvidia [Regression Potential] Low, as hybrid graphics support does not work correctly, and the changes only affect this use case. _ * Steps to test the updates: 1) Enable the bionic-proposed repositories 2) Create /etc/apt/preferences.d/proposed-updates with the following content: Package: * Pin: release a=bionic-proposed Pin-Priority: 400 3) Update the list of packages: sudo apt-get update 4) Install the packages from -proposed using the following command: sudo apt install nvidia-driver-390/bionic-proposed gdm3/bionic- proposed ubuntu-drivers-common/bionic-proposed nvidia-prime/bionic- proposed nvidia-settings/bionic-proposed libnvidia-gl-390/bionic- proposed libnvidia-compute-390/bionic-proposed libnvidia-decode-390 /bionic-proposed libnvidia-encode-390/bionic-proposed libnvidia- ifr1-390/bionic-proposed libnvidia-fbc1-390/bionic-proposed To manage notifications about this bug go to: https://bugs.launchpad.net/hwe-next/+bug/1778011/+subscriptions -- 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
[Kernel-packages] [Bug 1778011] Re: SRU: PRIME Power Saving mode draws too much power
@Alberto: here you go. The card is a GeForce GTX 1050 Ti with Max-Q Design/PCIe/SSE2 in a Thinkpad X1 Extreme. ** Attachment added: "gpu-manager.log" https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/nvidia-prime/+bug/1778011/+attachment/5211182/+files/gpu-manager.log -- You received this bug notification because you are a member of Kernel Packages, which is subscribed to nvidia-settings in Ubuntu. https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1778011 Title: SRU: PRIME Power Saving mode draws too much power Status in HWE Next: New Status in gdm3 package in Ubuntu: Fix Released Status in nvidia-graphics-drivers-390 package in Ubuntu: Fix Released Status in nvidia-prime package in Ubuntu: Fix Released Status in nvidia-settings package in Ubuntu: Fix Released Status in sddm package in Ubuntu: Confirmed Status in ubuntu-drivers-common package in Ubuntu: Fix Released Status in gdm3 source package in Bionic: Fix Released Status in nvidia-graphics-drivers-390 source package in Bionic: Fix Released Status in nvidia-prime source package in Bionic: Fix Released Status in nvidia-settings source package in Bionic: Fix Released Status in sddm source package in Bionic: Confirmed Status in ubuntu-drivers-common source package in Bionic: Fix Released Bug description: SRU Request: [Impact] Relying on the nouveau driver and on the vga switcheroo (to get around a change in systemd LP: #1777099) caused increased power consumption, and slowed down the switching process. Furthermore, if the main X/Xwayland session was started by Gdm when the nvidia driver was loaded, the session will keep the nvidia module loaded, and prevent the system from switching off the dGPU. Also, the nouveau driver will be loaded, if nvidia is not, and this can cause problems to unsupported NVIDIA GPUs. The solution involves the following changes: 1) Solving the problem in systemd (LP: #1777099) 2) Adding code in gpu-manager and in nvidia-prime to unload the nvidia modules, and to allow the PCI device to sleep. 3) Making a slight change to the current patch in Gdm, used to call the PRIME scripts before and after a Gdm session (so that gpu-manager gets actually called on log out) 4) Adding code in gpu-manager to kill the main X/Xwayland session on log out, if the session is preventing us from unloading the nvidia driver. A new X/Xwayland session will be created after unload the module. 5) Removing the systemd service that loads nouveau from the nvidia packages. [Test Case] 1) Enable the -proposed repository, and install the new "ubuntu-drivers-common", nvidia drivers, nvidia-prime, and gdm3 * 2) Make sure the nvidia packages are installed, and enable performance mode (if it is already enabled, call "sudo prime-select intel" first): sudo prime-select nvidia 3) Restart your computer and attach your /var/log/gpu-manager.log. see if the system boots correctly. If unsure, please attach your /var/log /gpu-manager.log and /var/log/Xorg.0.log 4) Select power saving mode: sudo prime-select intel 5) Log out and log back in 6) Check if the nvidia driver is still loaded: lsmod | grep nvidia [Regression Potential] Low, as hybrid graphics support does not work correctly, and the changes only affect this use case. _ * Steps to test the updates: 1) Enable the bionic-proposed repositories 2) Create /etc/apt/preferences.d/proposed-updates with the following content: Package: * Pin: release a=bionic-proposed Pin-Priority: 400 3) Update the list of packages: sudo apt-get update 4) Install the packages from -proposed using the following command: sudo apt install nvidia-driver-390/bionic-proposed gdm3/bionic- proposed ubuntu-drivers-common/bionic-proposed nvidia-prime/bionic- proposed nvidia-settings/bionic-proposed libnvidia-gl-390/bionic- proposed libnvidia-compute-390/bionic-proposed libnvidia-decode-390 /bionic-proposed libnvidia-encode-390/bionic-proposed libnvidia- ifr1-390/bionic-proposed libnvidia-fbc1-390/bionic-proposed To manage notifications about this bug go to: https://bugs.launchpad.net/hwe-next/+bug/1778011/+subscriptions -- 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
[Kernel-packages] [Bug 1778011] Re: SRU: PRIME Power Saving mode draws too much power
@Andrew, @Alberto: Looks like many Thinkpad X1 Extreme users are reporting the same issue where prime-select seems to work but does not power of the nvidia card nor shows up in nvidia-settings. I followed the instructions the same way Andrew did and got the same 'not found' message. I assumed the packages are in updates by now and we should all have them anyway. Apt tells me that 390.77-0ubuntu0.18.04.1 is the newest version. Am I missing something? I have the same issue as I had before (NVIDIA GTX 1050 TI). Thanks for your help. -- You received this bug notification because you are a member of Kernel Packages, which is subscribed to nvidia-settings in Ubuntu. https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1778011 Title: SRU: PRIME Power Saving mode draws too much power Status in HWE Next: New Status in gdm3 package in Ubuntu: Fix Released Status in nvidia-graphics-drivers-390 package in Ubuntu: Fix Released Status in nvidia-prime package in Ubuntu: Fix Released Status in nvidia-settings package in Ubuntu: Fix Released Status in ubuntu-drivers-common package in Ubuntu: Fix Released Status in gdm3 source package in Bionic: Fix Released Status in nvidia-graphics-drivers-390 source package in Bionic: Fix Released Status in nvidia-prime source package in Bionic: Fix Released Status in nvidia-settings source package in Bionic: Fix Released Status in ubuntu-drivers-common source package in Bionic: Fix Released Bug description: SRU Request: [Impact] Relying on the nouveau driver and on the vga switcheroo (to get around a change in systemd LP: #1777099) caused increased power consumption, and slowed down the switching process. Furthermore, if the main X/Xwayland session was started by Gdm when the nvidia driver was loaded, the session will keep the nvidia module loaded, and prevent the system from switching off the dGPU. Also, the nouveau driver will be loaded, if nvidia is not, and this can cause problems to unsupported NVIDIA GPUs. The solution involves the following changes: 1) Solving the problem in systemd (LP: #1777099) 2) Adding code in gpu-manager and in nvidia-prime to unload the nvidia modules, and to allow the PCI device to sleep. 3) Making a slight change to the current patch in Gdm, used to call the PRIME scripts before and after a Gdm session (so that gpu-manager gets actually called on log out) 4) Adding code in gpu-manager to kill the main X/Xwayland session on log out, if the session is preventing us from unloading the nvidia driver. A new X/Xwayland session will be created after unload the module. 5) Removing the systemd service that loads nouveau from the nvidia packages. [Test Case] 1) Enable the -proposed repository, and install the new "ubuntu-drivers-common", nvidia drivers, nvidia-prime, and gdm3 * 2) Make sure the nvidia packages are installed, and enable performance mode (if it is already enabled, call "sudo prime-select intel" first): sudo prime-select nvidia 3) Restart your computer and attach your /var/log/gpu-manager.log. see if the system boots correctly. If unsure, please attach your /var/log /gpu-manager.log and /var/log/Xorg.0.log 4) Select power saving mode: sudo prime-select intel 5) Log out and log back in 6) Check if the nvidia driver is still loaded: lsmod | grep nvidia [Regression Potential] Low, as hybrid graphics support does not work correctly, and the changes only affect this use case. _ * Steps to test the updates: 1) Enable the bionic-proposed repositories 2) Create /etc/apt/preferences.d/proposed-updates with the following content: Package: * Pin: release a=bionic-proposed Pin-Priority: 400 3) Update the list of packages: sudo apt-get update 4) Install the packages from -proposed using the following command: sudo apt install nvidia-driver-390/bionic-proposed gdm3/bionic- proposed ubuntu-drivers-common/bionic-proposed nvidia-prime/bionic- proposed nvidia-settings/bionic-proposed libnvidia-gl-390/bionic- proposed libnvidia-compute-390/bionic-proposed libnvidia-decode-390 /bionic-proposed libnvidia-encode-390/bionic-proposed libnvidia- ifr1-390/bionic-proposed libnvidia-fbc1-390/bionic-proposed To manage notifications about this bug go to: https://bugs.launchpad.net/hwe-next/+bug/1778011/+subscriptions -- 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
[Kernel-packages] [Bug 1507073] Re: 8086:1616 Display goes black at random times
Same issue being discussed here: http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2301071&page=6&p=13393733#post13393733 (with links to potential solutions ) Kernel 4.3 still has the issue for me on a new (late 2015) XPS 15 running Nvidia's 355 driver. -- You received this bug notification because you are a member of Kernel Packages, which is subscribed to linux in Ubuntu. https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1507073 Title: 8086:1616 Display goes black at random times Status in Dell Sputnik: New Status in linux package in Ubuntu: Triaged Bug description: Frequently using Ubuntu 15.04 my display blacks out. It occurs at seemingly random times, many times back to back. I'm getting the following messages in syslog each time it happens. pci_bus :01: Allocating resources pci_bus :02: Allocating resources i915_bpo :00:02.0: BAR 6: [??? 0x flags 0x2] has bogus alignment pci_bus :01: Allocating resources pci_bus :02: Allocating resources i915_bpo :00:02.0: BAR 6: [??? 0x flags 0x2] has bogus alignment i915_bpo :00:02.0: BAR 6: [??? 0x flags 0x2] has bogus alignment i915_bpo :00:02.0: BAR 6: [??? 0x flags 0x2] has bogus alignment i915_bpo :00:02.0: BAR 6: [??? 0x flags 0x2] has bogus alignment pci_bus :01: Allocating resources pci_bus :02: Allocating resources i915_bpo :00:02.0: BAR 6: [??? 0x flags 0x2] has bogus alignment i915_bpo :00:02.0: BAR 6: [??? 0x flags 0x2] has bogus alignment i915_bpo :00:02.0: BAR 6: [??? 0x flags 0x2] has bogus alignment i915_bpo :00:02.0: BAR 6: [??? 0x flags 0x2] has bogus alignment i915_bpo :00:02.0: BAR 6: [??? 0x flags 0x2] has bogus alignment i915_bpo :00:02.0: BAR 6: [??? 0x flags 0x2] has bogus alignment i915_bpo :00:02.0: BAR 6: [??? 0x flags 0x2] has bogus alignment I can restore my display by either closing my laptops lid and reopen, or by running xset dpms force off xset dpms force on ProblemType: Bug DistroRelease: Ubuntu 15.04 Package: xorg 1:7.7+7ubuntu4 ProcVersionSignature: Ubuntu 3.19.0-30.34-generic 3.19.8-ckt6 Uname: Linux 3.19.0-30-generic x86_64 .tmp.unity.support.test.0: ApportVersion: 2.17.2-0ubuntu1.5 Architecture: amd64 CompizPlugins: No value set for `/apps/compiz-1/general/screen0/options/active_plugins' CompositorRunning: compiz CompositorUnredirectDriverBlacklist: '(nouveau|Intel).*Mesa 8.0' CompositorUnredirectFSW: true CurrentDesktop: Unity Date: Fri Oct 16 18:27:00 2015 DistUpgraded: Fresh install DistroCodename: vivid DistroVariant: ubuntu EcryptfsInUse: Yes ExtraDebuggingInterest: Yes GraphicsCard: Intel Corporation Broadwell-U Integrated Graphics [8086:1616] (rev 09) (prog-if 00 [VGA controller]) Subsystem: Dell Device [1028:0665] InstallationDate: Installed on 2015-10-14 (2 days ago) InstallationMedia: Ubuntu 15.04 "Vivid Vervet" - Release amd64 (20150422) MachineType: Dell Inc. XPS 13 9343 ProcKernelCmdLine: BOOT_IMAGE=/boot/vmlinuz-3.19.0-30-generic.efi.signed root=UUID=edec3894-6c89-4414-9a20-8d4804f4a27e ro quiet splash vt.handoff=7 SourcePackage: xorg UdevLog: Error: [Errno 2] No such file or directory: '/var/log/udev' UpgradeStatus: No upgrade log present (probably fresh install) dmi.bios.date: 07/14/2015 dmi.bios.vendor: Dell Inc. dmi.bios.version: A05 dmi.board.name: 0TM99H dmi.board.vendor: Dell Inc. dmi.board.version: A00 dmi.chassis.type: 9 dmi.chassis.vendor: Dell Inc. dmi.modalias: dmi:bvnDellInc.:bvrA05:bd07/14/2015:svnDellInc.:pnXPS139343:pvr:rvnDellInc.:rn0TM99H:rvrA00:cvnDellInc.:ct9:cvr: dmi.product.name: XPS 13 9343 dmi.sys.vendor: Dell Inc. version.compiz: compiz 1:0.9.12.1+15.04.20150410.1-0ubuntu1 version.ia32-libs: ia32-libs N/A version.libdrm2: libdrm2 2.4.60-2 version.libgl1-mesa-dri: libgl1-mesa-dri 10.5.9-2ubuntu1~vivid2 version.libgl1-mesa-dri-experimental: libgl1-mesa-dri-experimental N/A version.libgl1-mesa-glx: libgl1-mesa-glx 10.5.9-2ubuntu1~vivid2 version.xserver-xorg-core: xserver-xorg-core 2:1.17.1-0ubuntu3.1 version.xserver-xorg-input-evdev: xserver-xorg-input-evdev 1:2.9.0-1ubuntu2 version.xserver-xorg-video-ati: xserver-xorg-video-ati 1:7.5.0-1ubuntu2 version.xserver-xorg-video-intel: xserver-xorg-video-intel 2:2.99.917-1~exp1ubuntu2.2 version.xserver-xorg-video-nouveau: xserver-xorg-video-nouveau 1:1.0.11-1ubuntu2build1 xserver.bootTime: Fri Oct 16 09:32:33 2015 xserver.configfile: default xserver.errors: SynPS/2 Synaptics TouchPad: Read error 19 xserver.logfile: /var/log/Xorg.0.log xserver.outputs: product id5153 vendor SHP xserver.version: 2:1.17.1-0ubuntu3.1 To manage notifications about this bug go to: https://bugs.launchpad.net/dell-sputnik/+bug/1507073/+subscriptions -- Mailing list: htt
[Kernel-packages] [Bug 1239578] Re: No wireless support for Realtek RTL8192EE [10ec:818b]
Still the same, despite a new kernel (3.19) running on 14.10. Essentially, Lenovo T440(s) and T540 don't have wifi on Linux. -- You received this bug notification because you are a member of Kernel Packages, which is subscribed to linux in Ubuntu. https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1239578 Title: No wireless support for Realtek RTL8192EE [10ec:818b] Status in HWE Next Project: Fix Released Status in linux package in Ubuntu: Fix Released Status in linux source package in Trusty: Won't Fix Status in linux source package in Utopic: Fix Released Bug description: Open this bug to trace device driver RTL8192EE. We have seen this wireless card on some laptops, id is [10ec:818b], driver is RTL8192EE. This bug is only for the initial support of this WiFi adapter, it's not working 100% well yet, please report new "not working bug" or contact upstream but not keep posting comments, thanks. Status: pull-request for trusty was NAKed because next minor Trusty release will use Utopic LTS kernel, which had already fixed this issue. please wait it or upgrade your whole distro to Utopic. To manage notifications about this bug go to: https://bugs.launchpad.net/hwe-next/+bug/1239578/+subscriptions -- 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