@@ -256,16 +256,23 @@ int __ps2_command(struct ps2dev *ps2dev, u8 *param, unsigned int command)
for (i = 0; i < receive; i++)
ps2dev->cmdbuf[(receive - 1) - i] = param[i];
+ /* Signal that we are sending the command byte */
+ ps2dev->flags |= PS2_FLAG_ACK_CMD;
+
/*
* Some devices (Synaptics) peform the reset before
* ACKing the reset command, and so it can take a long
* time before the ACK arrives.
*/
- rc = ps2_do_sendbyte(ps2dev, command & 0xff,
- command == PS2_CMD_RESET_BAT ? 1000 : 200, 2);
+ timeout = command == PS2_CMD_RESET_BAT ? 1000 : 200;
+
+ rc = ps2_do_sendbyte(ps2dev, command & 0xff, timeout, 2);
if (rc)
goto out_reset_flags;
+ /* Now we are sending command parameters, if any */
+ ps2dev->flags &= ~PS2_FLAG_ACK_CMD;
+
for (i = 0; i < send; i++) {
rc = ps2_do_sendbyte(ps2dev, param[i], 200, 2);
if (rc)
@@ -416,7 +423,19 @@ bool ps2_handle_ack(struct ps2dev *ps2dev, u8 data)
}
/* Fall through */
default:
- return false;
+ /*
+ * Do not signal errors if we get unexpected reply while
+ * waiting for an ACK to the initial (first) command byte:
+ * the device might not be quiesced yet and continue
+ * delivering data.
+ * Note that we reset PS2_FLAG_WAITID flag, so the workaround
+ * for mice not acknowledging the Get ID command only triggers
+ * on the 1st byte; if device spews data we really want to see
+ * a real ACK from it.
+ */
+ dev_dbg(&ps2dev->serio->dev, "unexpected %#02x\n", data);
+ ps2dev->flags &= ~PS2_FLAG_WAITID;
+ return ps2dev->flags & PS2_FLAG_ACK_CMD;
}
if (!ps2dev->nak) {
@@ -27,6 +27,7 @@
#define PS2_FLAG_CMD1 BIT(2) /* Waiting for the first byte of command response */
#define PS2_FLAG_WAITID BIT(3) /* Command executing is GET ID */
#define PS2_FLAG_NAK BIT(4) /* Last transmission was NAKed */
+#define PS2_FLAG_ACK_CMD BIT(5) /* Waiting to ACK the command (first) byte */
struct ps2dev {
struct serio *serio;
When we probe PS/2 devices we first issue "Get ID" command and only if we receive what we consider a valid keyboard or mouse ID we disable the device and continue with protocol detection. That means that the device may be transmitting motion or keystroke data, while we expect ACK response. Instead of signaling failure if we see anything but ACK/NAK let's ignore "garbage" response until we see ACK for the command byte (first byte). The checks for subsequent ACKs of command parameters will continue be strict. Signed-off-by: Dmitry Torokhov <dmitry.torokhov@gmail.com> --- drivers/input/serio/libps2.c | 25 ++++++++++++++++++++++--- include/linux/libps2.h | 1 + 2 files changed, 23 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)