ASUS G55VW
This page contains instructions, tips, pointers, and links for installing and configuring Arch Linux on the ASUS G55VW ROG Laptop
目次
Bootloader
Boot on usb
Press Escape
to get the boot menu. If usb bootable device is not listed, enter configuration menu and directly press F10
to save. Press Escape
again on reboot : this time USB bootable device should appears in the menu.
Set up UEFI boot
It is possible to use UEFISTUB[リンク切れ: セクションが存在しません] in-kernel bootloader, if you wish. We present here the GRUB2 way. We assume x86_64
version of Arch Linux.
In the original partition setup:
first partition: UEFI boot fat32 partition, should be mounted on /boot/efi
in Arch.
second partition: GUID Partition Table
Step 0 (optional): install x86_64 UEFI Shell 2.0 (Beta):
See UEFI#UEFI Shell. Can be useful during install, especially it allows to manually boot using UEFISTUB[リンク切れ: セクションが存在しません].
Step 1: granted you can boot into your install through install disk, grub1 or via a liveusb and a chroot:
# pacman -S grub-efi-x86_64
Follow GRUB2#UEFI systems.
Optional: add some power optimisation kernel parameters. In /etc/default/grub
file:
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet add_efi_memmap i915.i915_enable_rc6=1 drm.vblankoffdelay=1 i915.semaphores=1"
Reinstall grub2 :
grub-mkconfig -o /path/to/grub.cfg
Step 2: it is not yet possible to finish install by creating GRUB2 entry in the Firmware Boot Manager[リンク切れ: セクションが存在しません] since it is required to boot in UEFI mode to be able to use efibootmgr. The tricks is to do:
# cp /boot/efi/EFI/arch_grub/grubx64.efi /boot/efi/shellx64.efi
# reboot
Press F2
on reboot and choose "Launch EFI shell from filesystem device". It should trigger grub2 and boot into arch if grub2 is correctly set up. You should now be able to use efibootmgr to add grub entry to firmware.
Graphics Drivers
See NVIDIA.
Screen Backlight
Using the nvidia drivers provided in the extra repo screen the backlight-adjust keys(Fn+F5
, Fn+F6
) do not work. To get around this, you need to grab ({aur|nvidiabl-git}). Once you have installed that package, you can map your keys to the script.
Other Keys
It is also possible to use Dynamic Kernel Module Support (DKMS) (package in community), to avoid compiling the whole kernel:
1 get the archive at http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?p=12054636#post12054636 (ubuntu forums account + minimum of 50 posts required) or http://markmail.org/message/idvl6s27r26xzorb (no account required)
2 extract the archive, and then extract the .deb and get the sources inside (asus-wmi.c is already patched with above patch):
# cp -a usr/src/asus-wmi-0.2 /usr/src/ # cd /usr/src/ # dkms add -m asus-wmi -v 0.2 # dkms built -m asus-wmi -v 0.2 -k 3.4.6-1-ARCH # dkms status # dkms install -m asus-wmi -v 0.2 -k 3.4.6-1-ARCH # dkms status
replace 3.4.6-1-ARCH
by your output for uname -r
3 There is still a problem since dkms doesn't gzip the kernel module and archlinux does (see $ modinfo asus-wmi
):
# cd /lib/modules/3.4.6-1-ARCH/kernel/drivers/platform/x86/ # mv asus-wmi.ko.gz asus-wmi.ko.gz.save # gzip asus-wmi.ko
4 After reboot, xev
should display events for Fn
keys. And keyboard backlight can be trigger by:
# echo 0 >> /sys/class/leds/asus\:\:kbd_backlight/brightness # echo 3 >> /sys/class/leds/asus\:\:kbd_backlight/brightness
keyboard backlight script
In the same style that for screen backlight. As root, create the file /usr/local/share/kbd_backlight
:
#!/bin/bash path="/sys/class/leds/asus::kbd_backlight" #path="/sys/class/leds/asus\:\:kbd_backlight" # max should be 3 max=$(cat ${path}/max_brightness) # step: represent the difference between previous and next brightness step=1 previous=$(cat ${path}/brightness) function commit { if [[ $1 = [0-9]* ]] then if [[ $1 -gt $max ]] then next=$max elif [[ $1 -lt 0 ]] then next=0 else next=$1 fi echo $next >> ${path}/brightness exit 0 else exit 1 fi } case "$1" in up) commit $(($previous + $step)) ;; down) commit $(($previous - $step)) ;; max) commit $max ;; on) $0 max ;; off) commit 0 ;; show) echo $previous ;; night) commit 1 ;; allowusers) # Allow members of users group to change brightness sudo chgrp users ${path}/brightness sudo chmod g+w ${path}/brightness ;; disallowusers) # Allow members of users group to change brightness sudo chgrp root ${path}/brightness sudo chmod g-w ${path}/brightness ;; *) commit $1 esac exit 0
Allow file to be executed :
# chmod +x /usr/local/share/kbd_backlight
Allow users to change brightness at each boot :
# echo "/bin/bash /usr/local/share/kbd_backlight allowusers" >> /etc/rc.local
Adding to .zshrc
or .bashrc
:
alias -g "kbd_backlight"="/bin/bash /usr/local/share/kbd_backlight"
allows to easy toggle backlight in terminal :
$ kbd_backlight up $ kbd_backlight down $ kbd_backlight max $ kbd_backlight off $ kbd_backlight night $ kbd_backlight 2 $ kbd_backlight show
And finally, add some convenient keyboard shortcuts by the method of your choice.