Very simple, work in progress input driver for the SPI keyboard / trackpad found on 12" MacBooks (2015 and later) and newer MacBook Pros (late 2016 and later).
If you're on any MacBook or MacBook Pro other than MacBook8,1 (2015), and you're running a kernel before 4.11, then you'll need to boot the kernel with intremap=nosid
. In all cases make sure you don't have noapic
in your kernel options.
On the 2015 MacBook you need to (re)compile your kernel with CONFIG_X86_INTEL_LPSS=n
if running a kernel before 4.14. And on all kernels you need ensure the spi_pxa2xx_platform
and spi_pxa2xx_pci
modules are loaded too (if you don't have those module, rebuild your kernel with CONFIG_SPI_PXA2XX=m
and CONFIG_SPI_PXA2XX_PCI=m
).
On all other MacBook's and MacBook Pros you need to instead make sure both the spi_pxa2xx_platform
and intel_lpss_pci
modules are loaded (if these don't exist, you need to (re)compile your kernel with CONFIG_SPI_PXA2XX=m
and CONFIG_MFD_INTEL_LPSS_PCI=m
).
For best results everywhere, make sure all three modules (this applespi
driver plus the two core ones mentioned above) are present in your initramfs/initrd so that the keyboard is functional by the time the prompt for the disk password appears. Also, having them loaded early also appears to remove the need for the irqpoll
kernel parameter on MacBook8,1's.
As root, do the following (all MacBook's and MacBook Pro's except MacBook8,1 (2015)):
echo -e "\n# applespi\napplespi\nspi_pxa2xx_platform\nintel_lpss_pci" >> /etc/initramfs-tools/modules
apt install dkms
git clone https://github.com/cb22/macbook12-spi-driver.git /usr/src/applespi-0.1
dkms install -m applespi -v 0.1
If you're on a MacBook8,1 (2015):
echo -e "\n# applespi\napplespi\nspi_pxa2xx_platform\nspi_pxa2xx_pci" >> /etc/initramfs-tools/modules
apt install dkms
git clone https://github.com/cb22/macbook12-spi-driver.git /usr/src/applespi-0.1
dkms install -m applespi -v 0.1
Interrupts are now working! This means that the driver is no longer polled, and should no longer be a massive battery drain. For more information on how the driver receives interrupts, see the discussion here
The touchpad protocol is the same as the bcm5974 driver. Perhaps there is a nice way of utilizing it? For now, bits of code have just been copy and pasted.
The debug
module parameter can be used to turn debugging output on (and off) dynamically, and can be set in all the usual ways (e.g. via kernel command-line (applespi.debug=0x1
), via sysfs (echo 0x10000 | sudo tee /sys/module/applespi/parameters/debug
), etc.).
Some useful values are (since the value is a bitmask, these can be combined):