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Acer c720p + Ubuntu 14.04 guide

Before following this guide:

This guide now makes little sense to follow as Linux kernel above 3.17 supports all hardware features of C720P out of the box (verified). See first comments on RC1 release: https://plus.google.com/+JesseFleming1990/posts/D3uVNLUY7Ct to gain a bit of background.

This guide has been created for owners of Acer C720(P) Chromebook that would like to replace ChromeOS with native Ubuntu 14.04. It should help you with installation and enabling full hardware support for touch pad and touch panel.

DISCLAIMER: This guide has been built for internal use with a fresh 14.04 LTS 64bit Ubuntu and Acer C720P (with touchscreen). While we're good developers, we are no Linux kernel developers, Ubuntu maintainers or Acer support line. This guide has been built using the STFW method (risky) and following this guide will obliterate ChromeOS and void your warranty (you will be opening your laptop). You need to have some computing experience - if you don't, find someone who does.

  1. First step:

Removing Chrome and installing Ubuntu. Follow the guide on the awesome Arch Linux page dedicated to C720P: https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Acer_C720_Chromebook. You need to remove the write protect screw (see 1.1.), enable developer mode (see 1.2.) and set seabios on by default (see 1.3.).

Reboot the laptop, pop in an Ubuntu bootable and install it. You will not have touchpanel or touchpad after the boot so either be very savy with your keyboard-Fu or get a USB mouse ready.

  1. Hardware support:

  • Touch pad and touch panel

While Arch users have it good with the scripts fully prepped, we had to do some digging across the net to find a workable solution for the touch pad and touch panel under the 3.13 kernel, which is default in 14.04 LTS. Motley slate's google+ page provides the best starting point - there is a script which sadly breaks under 3.13 kernel. We've coupled that source with the patches we found on Arch page and finally implementing the patches from Fedora.

If you're using the C720P model with touch panel:

wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/visionect/c720p/master/files/ubuntu-1404_3.13-c720p-modules.sh 
sudo chmod +x ubuntu-1404_3.13-c720p-modules.sh 
sudo ./ubuntu-1404_3.13-c720p-modules.sh 

If you're using the C720 model without touch panel:

wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/visionect/c720p/master/files/ubuntu-1404_3.13-c720-modules.sh 
sudo chmod +x ubuntu-1404_3.13-c720-modules.sh 
sudo ./ubuntu-1404_3.13-c720-modules.sh 

Wait and reboot.

  • The rest of hardware

There is a bunch of things that won't work out of the box. Thanks to Simon Lister we have a couple of fixes ready. First - to fix the suspend feature:

wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/visionect/c720p/master/files/05_sound
sudo cp 05_sound /etc/pm/sleep.d/
sudo chmod +x /etc/pm/sleep.d/05_sound

The rest is a direct copy-paste from Simon Lister's page

Now edit the rc.local file by typing:

sudo gedit /etc/rc.local

Into the gedit window type/paste the following lines above the line that says "exit 0":

echo EHCI > /proc/acpi/wakeup
echo HDEF > /proc/acpi/wakeup
echo XHCI > /proc/acpi/wakeup
echo LID0 > /proc/acpi/wakeup
echo TPAD > /proc/acpi/wakeup
echo TSCR > /proc/acpi/wakeup
# 1000 corresponds to 100% backlight
echo 1000 > /sys/class/backlight/intel_backlight/brightness
rfkill block bluetooth
/etc/init.d/bluetooth stop

Save the file and exit gedit. Now edit the grub file by typing:

sudo gedit /etc/default/grub

Edit the line that says:

GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash"

So that it reads:

GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash tpm_tis.force=1"

Save the file and exit gedit. Then update grub by typing the following two lines:

sudo update-grub
sudo update-grub2
  • Preventing future updates to Kernel

A bunch of stuff we just did are plain ol' hacks. They are tied to the specific version of Kernel that we're currently using. We'd like to prevent auto-updates messing everything up, so we can use the guide on askubuntu and lock the version by typing:

echo $(dpkg -l "*$(uname -r)*" | grep image-3 | awk '{print $2}') hold | sudo dpkg --set-selections
  1. Further reading

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