
The infrared camera can be used as an authentication method with howdy AUR. usr/lib/linux-enable-ir-emitter/IrConfig.yaml !!python/object:IrConfiguration.IrConfiguration
#Drivers for dell xps 13 manual
This is the IrConfig.yaml file as detected by the quick command so you do not need to go through all the manual configuration steps: You can follow the instructions from linux-enable-ir-emitter to enable the IR emitter. When the IR camera ( /dev/video2) is on, it will not automatically turn on the IR emitter.

#Drivers for dell xps 13 install
The rest of the process is identical to that described on fprint-just make sure not to install the version of libfprint in the official repositories as it conflicts with libfprint-tod-git. Downgrading fprintd to version 1.90.6-1 partially solves this problem. This can prevent GDM from listing users during login. Warning: Since fprintd was updated to version 1.92.0-1, libfprint-tod-git and libfprint-2-tod1-xps9300-bin no longer work as expected. The latest change of this branch is based on Linux v5.10 release, it has a work around that disables MHI M2 state and makes QCA6390 usable on 9310. You can compile the kernel with the ath11k-qca6390-bringup branch. Here are the earlier notes on compiling that Kernel: Note that if you add this in /etc/defaults/grub, you need to enter it as:ĭetails about this problem can be found in the Linux kernel mailing list: Kernel versions before 5.10.9

You can to reserve the memory starting from 20M to fix this error by adding the following parameter to your Linux kernel cmdline: Mm/page_alloc: place pages to tail in _free_pages_core() You might see the following error in your dmesg log if your WiFi is not working: Patches based on the ath11k-qca6390-bringup branch have been working (with an "experimental" caveat) for a while.
#Drivers for dell xps 13 driver
There is also work in progress in the form of qca6390 (the SoC of Killer AX500) driver development in the kvalo/ath repository. You need to enable the hooks with systemctl enable /etc/systemd/system/rvice and systemctl enable /etc/systemd/system/rvice. This can be automated via sleep hooks - if the module is unloaded before hibernating or suspending it unloads immediately with no delay, and the resume kernel bug doesn't happen: # wait a couple minutes (yes really) for the operation to complete However, recovery from suspend and hibernate appears to be broken, though it can usually be manually fixed by reloading the ath11k_pci module.

While it's reported to working fine with a 2.4 GHz WPA Personal WiFi network, there might be problems after disconnecting the WiFi or with different setups (WPA3, 5 GHz WiFi). Please note, the driver is still experimental. Since Kernel version 5.10.9, users have reported some success with the Arch stock Kernel (a recent Dell firmware is also required: at least version 1.2.5).

No additional systemd kernel module removal scripts are required anymore, the Kernel suspends and resumes correctly. Since Kernel version 5.14 (apart from broken wifi in 5.14.5 and 5.14.6, regression bug) wifi works fine, no issues with 5GHz and WPA3. AX201 support is already in the mainline kernel There are two possible devices the laptop may ship with, AX201 or AX500. See Advanced Linux Sound Architecture#ALSA firmware. This laptop requires firmware in order for the soundcard to work.
