HP Spectre x360 15-ap012dx
Device | Status | Modules |
Video | Working | i915 |
Wireless | Working | iwlwifi |
Bluetooth | Working | bluetooth |
Audio | Working | snd_hda_intel |
Touchpad | Working | ? |
Touchscreen | Working | hid_multitouch |
Webcam | working | uvcvideo |
Card Reader | Working | rtsx_pci |
Wireless switch | Working | ? |
Function/Multimedia Keys | Working | ? |
Suspend/Resume | Working | ? |
This article is based on my personal experience with this laptop using Arch x86_64 (kernel 4.8.6-1-ARCH). While I found no noticeable issues remained after the initial installation, some issues have been found in a similar model (see HP Spectre x360 4231).
Hardware info
Specifications
This model was released in February 2016.
- Intel Core i7-6500U with Intel HD Graphics 520 (2.5 GHz, up to 3.1 GHz, 4 MB cache, 2 cores)
- 15.6" 4K (3840x2160) Ultra HD IPS WLED multitouch display
- 16 GB LPDDR3-1866 SDRAM
- 256 GB M.2 SDD
- 1 USB Type C port, 3 USB 3.0 ports, 1 HDMI port, 1 Mini DisplayPort, 1 headphone/microphone jack
- 1 SD media card reader
- 802.11ac (2x2) and Bluetooth 4.0
- Bang & Olufsen quad speakers
- 3-cell, 64.5 Wh Li-ion battery
- Webcam
- Backlit keyboard
Installation
Installing Arch was mostly without hiccup; you do need to disable secure boot (F10 for BIOS options; F9 for boot options). Dual boot was not tested. The laptop does not have a CD drive, so you have to use a USB stick.
The following packages got all the hardware working for me:
xorg-server xf86-video-intel xf86-input-synaptics libsynaptics mesa bluez bluez-utils bluez-hid2hci pulseaudio-bluetooth
Tweaks
KDE scaling
The screen natively runs at 3840x2160. KDE by default does not assume a scaling factor. You can go to System Settings > Display and Monitor > Displays > Scale Display to select a scaling factor. Often a factor of 2 is recommended (e.g. a factor of 2 is the default in Gnome). I use a factor of 1.5.
Screen Rotation
The laptop can be flipped completely (hence the 360 in the name) and it is sometimes useful to rotate the display. It is unclear whether this can be done automatically by detecting the physical laptop orientation, but it should be easy enough to map a shortcut to the following script to toggle the screen display (Source: Touchscreen Input Doesn't Rotate: Lenovo Yoga 13 / Yoga 2 Pro)
#!/bin/bash # This script rotates the screen and touchscreen input 180 degrees, # disables the touchpad, and enables the virtual keyboard And rotates # screen back if the touchpad was disabled isEnabled=$(xinput --list-props 'SynPS/2 Synaptics TouchPad' | awk '/Device Enabled/{print $NF}') if [ $isEnabled == 1 ] then echo "Screen is turned upside down" xrandr -o inverted xinput set-prop 'ELAN Touchscreen' 'Coordinate Transformation Matrix' -1 0 1 0 -1 1 0 0 1 xinput disable 'SynPS/2 Synaptics TouchPad' # Remove hashtag below if you want pop-up the virtual keyboard # onboard & else echo "Screen is turned back to normal" xrandr -o normal xinput set-prop 'ELAN Touchscreen' 'Coordinate Transformation Matrix' 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 xinput enable 'SynPS/2 Synaptics TouchPad' # killall onboard fi
TTY font
In case you find the tty font annoyingly small, I would recommend installing terminus-font
and
using one of the larger fonts available there (e.g. setfont ter-m24b
).
To make this permanent,
- Edit
/etc/vconsole.conf
to "FONT=ter-m24b" - Add
consolefont
to HOOKS="..." - Run
mkinitcpio -p linux
Mute Button LED
In order to get the LED Indicator on the mute button to function, you must add the following line to /etc/modprobe.d/alsa-base.conf
(create alsa-base.conf
if it does not exist) and then reboot. The LED should now be toggled on or off depending on the mute state.
options snd-hda-intel model=mute-led-gpio