Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | USB Legacy support |
| 2 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| 3 | |
| 4 | Vojtech Pavlik <vojtech@suse.cz>, January 2004 |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 | Also known as "USB Keyboard" or "USB Mouse support" in the BIOS Setup is a |
| 8 | feature that allows one to use the USB mouse and keyboard as if they were |
| 9 | their classic PS/2 counterparts. This means one can use an USB keyboard to |
| 10 | type in LILO for example. |
| 11 | |
| 12 | It has several drawbacks, though: |
| 13 | |
| 14 | 1) On some machines, the emulated PS/2 mouse takes over even when no USB |
| 15 | mouse is present and a real PS/2 mouse is present. In that case the extra |
| 16 | features (wheel, extra buttons, touchpad mode) of the real PS/2 mouse may |
| 17 | not be available. |
| 18 | |
| 19 | 2) If CONFIG_HIGHMEM64G is enabled, the PS/2 mouse emulation can cause |
| 20 | system crashes, because the SMM BIOS is not expecting to be in PAE mode. |
| 21 | The Intel E7505 is a typical machine where this happens. |
| 22 | |
| 23 | 3) If AMD64 64-bit mode is enabled, again system crashes often happen, |
| 24 | because the SMM BIOS isn't expecting the CPU to be in 64-bit mode. The |
| 25 | BIOS manufacturers only test with Windows, and Windows doesn't do 64-bit |
| 26 | yet. |
| 27 | |
| 28 | Solutions: |
| 29 | |
| 30 | Problem 1) can be solved by loading the USB drivers prior to loading the |
| 31 | PS/2 mouse driver. Since the PS/2 mouse driver is in 2.6 compiled into |
| 32 | the kernel unconditionally, this means the USB drivers need to be |
| 33 | compiled-in, too. |
| 34 | |
| 35 | Problem 2) can currently only be solved by either disabling HIGHMEM64G |
| 36 | in the kernel config or USB Legacy support in the BIOS. A BIOS update |
| 37 | could help, but so far no such update exists. |
| 38 | |
| 39 | Problem 3) is usually fixed by a BIOS update. Check the board |
| 40 | manufacturers web site. If an update is not available, disable USB |
| 41 | Legacy support in the BIOS. If this alone doesn't help, try also adding |
| 42 | idle=poll on the kernel command line. The BIOS may be entering the SMM |
| 43 | on the HLT instruction as well. |
| 44 | |