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Re: Wifi not working in Lenovo laptop/Ideapad/Atheros QCA9377



Hi, most people on this list prefer bottom-posting rather than top-posting, so I'll stick with the convention and post my answer at the bottom of the message, suggesting you do the same in the future to avoid potential nasty comments. ;-) vvv

On 31/05/2019 22:38, senthil kosapeta wrote:
Hi,

Earlier my system got stuck after firmware-atheros installation.
Now i have freshly installed debian 9.9.

So it does not have following
/lib/firmware/ath10k/QCA9377/hw1.0/

Shall i retry installing "firmware-atheros" and proceed as per your
suggestion?






On Fri, May 31, 2019 at 9:10 PM idiotein30@gmail.com <idiotein30@gmail.com>
wrote:

Putting thread back on list, this was sent to me directly. Answer is at
bottom.vvvvvvvv

On 31/05/2019 19:07, senthil kosapeta wrote:

Hi,

These are the logs that i got, it says "firmware loading failed"



*May 31 12:58:48 debian kernel: [    0.048770] Spectre V2 : Enabling
Restricted Speculation for firmware calls*
*May 31 12:58:48 debian kernel: [    7.671866] i915 0000:00:02.0: Direct
firmware load for i915/kbl_dmc_ver1_01.bin failed with error -2May 31
12:58:48 debian kernel: [    7.671873] i915 0000:00:02.0: Failed to load
DMC firmware [
https://01.org/linuxgraphics/intel-linux-graphics-firmwares
<https://01.org/linuxgraphics/intel-linux-graphics-firmwares>],
disabling
runtime power management.May 31 12:58:48 debian kernel: [    7.677946]
[drm] GuC firmware load skippedMay 31 12:58:48 debian kernel: [
  8.226104] ath10k_pci 0000:03:00.0: Direct firmware load for
ath10k/pre-cal-pci-0000:03:00.0.bin failed with error -2May 31 12:58:48
debian kernel: [    8.226118] ath10k_pci 0000:03:00.0: Direct firmware
load
for ath10k/cal-pci-0000:03:00.0.bin failed with error -2May 31 12:58:48
debian kernel: [    8.226129] ath10k_pci 0000:03:00.0: Direct firmware
load
for ath10k/QCA9377/hw1.0/firmware-5.bin failed with error -2May 31
12:58:48
debian kernel: [    8.226143] ath10k_pci 0000:03:00.0: Direct firmware
load
for ath10k/QCA9377/hw1.0/firmware-4.bin failed with error -2May 31
12:58:48
debian kernel: [    8.226156] ath10k_pci 0000:03:00.0: Direct firmware
load
for ath10k/QCA9377/hw1.0/firmware-3.bin failed with error -2May 31
12:58:48
debian kernel: [    8.226168] ath10k_pci 0000:03:00.0: Direct firmware
load
for ath10k/QCA9377/hw1.0/firmware-2.bin failed with error -2May 31
12:58:50
debian NetworkManager[559]: <info>  [1559287730.5479]
manager[0x5578b9b35040]: monitoring kernel firmware directory
'/lib/firmware'.May 31 12:58:50 debian kernel: [   16.179299] r8169
0000:02:00.0: Direct firmware load for rtl_nic/rtl8168g-3.fw failed with
error -2May 31 12:58:50 debian kernel: [   16.179307] r8169 0000:02:00.0
enp2s0: unable to load firmware patch rtl_nic/rtl8168g-3.fw (-2)May 31
14:37:49 debian kernel: [ 5323.527328] [drm] GuC firmware load skippedMay
31 18:44:53 debian kernel: [11230.812795] [drm] GuC firmware load
skipped*

On Fri, May 31, 2019 at 4:46 PM tv.debian@googlemail.com <
tv.debian@googlemail.com> wrote:

On 31/05/2019 15:46, senthil kosapeta wrote:
Dear Debians,

I have purchased Lenovo laptop around 6 months back. (Lenovo ideapad)
I had installed ubuntu earlier and Wifi used to work fine.
Somehow it got crashed a month back.

I have decided to switch over to debian 9.9 and installed it.
Internet via Ethernet port is working. But wifi is not working and not
showing available wireless networks.
I searched/googled certain topic related to Debian wifi and tried
installing firmware-atheros earlier.
It did not work. When i tried restart, shutdown is stuck.
If i force shutdown and restart, It will be stuck again.
When i tried to do recover mode, msg displays that
"ath10k_pci ** failed recieve control reponse completion, polling ...."

Please let me know how to proceed.

   Thanks
Senthil


Hi, can you check for firmware loading information in your logs ?

"grep firmware /var/log/messages" or "journalctl -b" and look for info
related to the wifi chip.

Given the "shutdown stuck" issue I would try disabling interrupts and
see if it solves the problem, "modinfo" says ath10k_pci accepts three
irq options:

"parm:           irq_mode:0: auto, 1: legacy, 2: msi"

Maybe try "legacy" mode first, that may be what Ubuntu is doing as a
default. You will need elevated privileges to run the next commands
("sudo command" or "su -" and then type commands).

First two commands unload the driver module:


modprobe -r ath10k_pci
modprobe -r ath10k_core

Then reload it with proper option:

modprobe -v ath10k_core
modprobe -v ath10k_pci irq_mode=1

If it solves the problem you can make the change permanent.

Hope it helps.



The error message is very generic (ignore the message regarding the
graphic chip, it's unrelated and mostly harmless).

First look into the firmware directory to make sure you do have the
needed firmware binary:

ls -l /lib/firmware/ath10k/QCA9377/hw1.0/

You should see a "firmware-6.bin" file in the output.

Then try the commands I suggested before in a terminal window, you need
to do this as root, either by using "sudo" in front of the commands or
by doing "su -" and ater providing the root password type the actual
commands one line at a time:

modprobe -r ath10k_pci
modprobe -r ath10k_core

modprobe -v ath10k_core
modprobe -v ath10k_pci irq_mode=1

and report back to the list the outcome.




I looked into the firmware-atheros package in Debian Stable (9), backports, testing and unstable. Only the version in unstable currently has the firmware file you need to make your wifi chip work (/lib/firmware/ath10k/QCA9377/hw1.0/firmware-6.bin) .

You can download it yourself on one of the Debian mirrors:

https://packages.debian.org/sid/all/firmware-atheros/download

Then install the package with the command:

dpkg -i firmware-atheros_20190502-1_all.deb

This command must be issued in the directory where you downloaded the package, and with root privileges.

When this is done, simply reboot your system, or unload/reload the driver module with:

modprobe -r ath10k_pci
modprobe -r ath10k_core

modprobe -v ath10k_core
modprobe -v ath10k


Ignore the "irq=" option for now, I am on Debian unstable and wrongly assumed you had the needed firmware file already on your system.


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