Lenovo ThinkPad T25

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Tango-edit-clear.pngThis article or section does not follow the Laptop page guidelines.Tango-edit-clear.png

Reason: Hardware table needs IDs and a function keys section should be added (Discuss in Talk:Lenovo ThinkPad T25)

Merge-arrows-2.pngThis article or section is a candidate for merging with Lenovo ThinkPad T470.Merge-arrows-2.png

Notes: The page for the Lenovo ThinkPad T470 has more content and was updated more regularly than this one. (Discuss in Talk:Lenovo ThinkPad T25)
Hardware PCI/USB ID Working?
GPU (Intel) Yes
GPU (Nvidia) Yes
Wireless Yes
Bluetooth Yes
Mobile broadband Yes
Webcam Yes
IR Camera No
TrackPoint Yes
Touchpad Yes
Touchscreen Yes
Fingerprint Reader No

This article covers the installation and configuration of Arch Linux on a Lenovo T25 Anniversary Edition laptop. It is based on the Lenovo T470 laptop so most of the hardware is identical and therefore should work like the T470.

For a general overview of laptop-related articles and recommendations, see Laptop.

Firmware (e.g. bios and peripherals)

As of writing, the current BIOS version is 1.54. By visiting the downloads section (T25) an ISO can be downloaded and burned to disk which will perform the update from Lenovo. Or extracted and copied on a USB Stick.

Kernel and hardware support

Hardware video acceleration with Kaby Lake seems to work fine via va-api.

As noted in Intel graphics, the xf86-video-intel driver seems to cause more issue than the builtin modesetting Xorg driver. Works fine without the intel driver (on a Skylake configuration).

138a:0097 will hopefully be supported as part of Validity90. Since the hardware is the same as in the T470 model, the fingerprint reader guide probably will work.

Screen backlight

With the intel driver (xf86-video-intel the xbacklight brightness control is not working. It is possible that, with the good acpi_* kernel parameters, the backlight related keys do their job.

Other workaround exists, such as described on this post or in the wiki acpid#Enabling backlight control. Using the acpilight package as a xbacklight replacement works well. You can also check this repository as a base to add the ACPI rules to call xbacklight when backlight keys are pressed.

Note: The acpilight package is known to allow controlling the ThinkPad keyboard backlight. Similar ACPI rules should allow to toggle it when the keyboard backlight key is pressed.

UEFI boot

After configuring the BIOS setup to allow UEFI boot (either UEFI only or both), it works flawlessly.

Special buttons

Some special buttons are not supported by X server due to keycode number limit.

Key combination Scancode Keycode
Fn+F11 0x49 374 KEY_KEYBOARD
Fn+F12 0x45 364 KEY_FAVORITES
Fn+Space 0x13 372 KEY_ZOOM

You can remap unsupported keys using udev hwdb:

/etc/udev/hwdb.d/90-thinkpad-keyboard.hwdb
evdev:name:ThinkPad Extra Buttons:dmi:bvn*:bvr*:bd*:svnLENOVO*:pn*
 KEYBOARD_KEY_13=search
 KEYBOARD_KEY_45=prog1
 KEYBOARD_KEY_49=prog2

Update hwdb after editing the rule.

# udevadm hwdb --update

Touchpad and trackpoint

Touchpad and trackpoint share bandwidth, so using them at the same time makes trackpoint slow, jumpy, and abrupt. Disabling the touchpad either in BIOS or via xinput does not fix the problem, so the trackpoint becomes unusable each time the touchpad is occasionally touched.

The touchpad is also accessible over secondary bus (SMBUS/RMI), allowing to leave the full bandwidth for the trackpoint. The kernel source code contains the whitelist of supported devices, which does not include LEN008e (T25 touchpad). You can enforce this feature setting synaptics_intertouch parameter of psmouse module to 1. For instance, using kernel cmdline: psmouse.synaptics_intertouch=1.

See also