First of all, thank you so much for your time and work! I hope i don't cause any confusion and this question may be based on my lack of understanding the patch, i almost don't dare to ask, but does this quirk only gets into affect, when someone uses the same mainboard i use? Is this an rather rare case that probably won't effect other people? I can't judge that so please don't get me wrong, but i feel a bit uneasy about this. I assume that most fist time Linux users that have similar (but not the same) platform, where this quirk will not get applied and they end up with non-working wifi, just notice that wifi doesn't work and give up on Linux and remember it as "My Wifi even didn't work there". As a long time Gentoo user, i have the capability to build my own kernel and provide feedback that can help fix this issue, but i assume most users don't. I would assume an Ubuntu users will just remove the Ubuntu partition and calls it a day continuing using Windows. I am a bit worried and wonder, if there maybe a way to fix that, that is independent on my specific hardware/mainboard. Of course, feel free to correct me if i am getting something wrong here, im neither an Kernel nor C expert and thank you for your time again. "Ping-Ke Shih" pkshih@realtek.com – 2024年9月18日 18:00
Marcel Weißenbach mweissenbach@ignaz.org wrote:
Setting ret to -1 did the job, wifi works again as expected. Here is the output of dmidecode https://ignaz.org/nextcloud/index.php/s/tZdjYYdyeWpHPH4
I wrote a quirk according to your dmidecode [1]. Please try if this can still work to you. If yes, please help to reply a Tested-by tag there. Thanks. [1] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-wireless/20240918085551.54611-1-pkshih@realtek...