How to install Lubuntu 16.04 on the ASUS X205TA (F205TA)












3















There are a lot of guides and discussions that get updated sometimes and therefore are hard to follow.



I did an install twice on my laptop and wanted to share an up-to-date way of installing Ubuntu 16.04 (or one of its flavors - in my case Lubuntu 16.04) on this laptop.










share|improve this question





























    3















    There are a lot of guides and discussions that get updated sometimes and therefore are hard to follow.



    I did an install twice on my laptop and wanted to share an up-to-date way of installing Ubuntu 16.04 (or one of its flavors - in my case Lubuntu 16.04) on this laptop.










    share|improve this question



























      3












      3








      3








      There are a lot of guides and discussions that get updated sometimes and therefore are hard to follow.



      I did an install twice on my laptop and wanted to share an up-to-date way of installing Ubuntu 16.04 (or one of its flavors - in my case Lubuntu 16.04) on this laptop.










      share|improve this question
















      There are a lot of guides and discussions that get updated sometimes and therefore are hard to follow.



      I did an install twice on my laptop and wanted to share an up-to-date way of installing Ubuntu 16.04 (or one of its flavors - in my case Lubuntu 16.04) on this laptop.







      system-installation asus






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      share|improve this question













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      share|improve this question








      edited Jan 26 at 5:24









      Pablo Bianchi

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      2,5251532










      asked Jan 8 '17 at 14:10









      BenBen

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      705821






















          3 Answers
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          3














          I have my answer from a post in a thread that is discussing this since 2014 for several linux flavours. I will share my way of installing without the optional parts from the guide.



          What still won't work




          • Chrome browser is flickering/tearing (turn off hardware acceleration in settings of chrome to avoid it)

          • Brightness control via FN buttons

          • Sound works, but not with a mainline kernel yet. It probably will be in mainline with version 4.11 or later. (There is the option of compiling a more advanced kernel, but this is not what I did.)

          • Sound through headphones does not work even with patch, but you can use this workaround to get it to work (I did not try it).


          Preparing in Windows



          If starting from Windows: Turn off BitLocker (this will allow Ubuntu to mount and/or resize the primary data drive). In Windows, click on PC Settings/PC and devices/PC info; scroll to the bottom of the screen and click to turn off BitLocker/decrypt drive



          Preparing USB Live



          UPDATE: Making a bootable USB-stick is also possible with harryharryharry's script



          Otherwise:



          Prepare Ubuntu Live bootable USB memory stick. Download .iso file for 64-bit Ubuntu 16.04. In Linux, sudo apt-get install unetbootin. Run unetbootin with the downloaded .iso.



          Copying special bootia32.efi onto USB



          After the memory stick is set up, copy bootia32.efi to the /EFI/BOOT directory on the memory stick. Fetch bootia32.efi from github. I am not sure if this is the right link, because I forgot which one I used during the installations. If anyone encounters problems, please comment and I will update. There are several such files, or guides how to create them, on the web, although firstly I fetched one that did not work (it was for Arch Linux).



          Boot Ubuntu Live from USB



          Insert memory stick in Asus X205TA USB port. In Windows, hold Shift key and click on Restart; choose Advanced Options/UEFI Firmware to enter BIOS. Turn off SecureBoot. Select USB stick as boot device. Save and exit



          If starting from an existing Linux install, you will need to press ESC when you first turn on the machine; this should pull up a small menu to choose the boot device. Choose the USB stick. When grub menu loads, select Try Ubuntu.



          Backup of SSHD



          Plug in a USB external hard disk or USB thumb drive with at least 32GB of free space. Right-click on any mounted drives in the Unity launcher (e.g., OS and Recovery if doing a dual-boot with Windows) and choose Unmount for each. Open a terminal and run the following:



          dd if=/dev/mmcblk0 of=/media/ubuntu/HD/FILENAME bs=1M`


          Replace HD with the name by which the external drive was mounted. Replace FILENAME with the filename you wish to use for the resulting image (or set another path as desired). It will take about 20 minutes for the command to complete; do NOT interrupt it, or you will have to start over! Note: to restore the X205TA to its original state, you can run this command “in reverse”: dd if=/media/ubuntu/HD/FILENAME of=/dev/mmcblk0 bs=1M



          Dual-boot



          Resize Recovery partition (note that the Recovery partition is required for booting Windows on this machine, so it cannot be removed if you want dual-boot, but it can be reduced in size to allow some additional room). Right-click on the OS and Recovery icons in the Unity launcher and make sure each is unmounted (choose Unmount for each if needed). Run gparted (note: this runs very slowly at this point; be patient!). Shrink the Recovery partition as small as it will go (a little less than 6 GB). Expand the OS partition to take up the extra room.



          Installation from Live-USB-Stick



          Reboot into the Live-USB.



          Set up a wireless connection



          This is necessary to download updates during installation. Insert a USB based wifi adapter (Ubuntu will not yet recognize the internal wifi). Choose a wireless connection and connect.



          Double-click on Install Ubuntu. Allow the installation to complete



          Reboot. It should come up perfectly, with grub-efi-ia32 already installed (and not grub-efi-amd64).



          Finalize installation



          If dual-booting, clean up Windows. Reboot to grub menu and choose Windows. Allow Windows to check and “repair” drive C: (basically Windows is responding to the fact that the drive has been re-sized). When finished, it will automatically reboot; choose Windows again to verify that the Windows installation is still functioning properly. Reboot again and choose Ubuntu.



          Update Ubuntu (assumes the USB wifi adapter is still installed; if not wait until the wifi is fixed) with sudo apt update and sudo apt upgrade.



          Set up internal Wifi



          Two files are needed in the /lib/firmware/brcm directory:





          • brcmfmac43340-sdio.bin – this was already in place in my 16.04 installation.


          • brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt – you may be able to copy the nvram* file from /sys/firmware/efi/efivars/ (e.g., nvram-74b00bd9-805a-4d61-b51f-43268123d113) as brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt: sudo cp /sys/firmware/efi/efivars/nvram* /lib/firmware/brcm/brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt


          If either of the above files does not exist, download brcmfmac43340-sdio.bin and brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt from internet and copy to /lib/firmware/brcm (requires sudo)



          sudo -H gedit /etc/modprobe.d/blacklist-custom.conf


          (possibly creating the file) and add the following lines:



          blacklist brcmfmac
          blacklist brcmutil


          And



          sudo -H gedit /etc/rc.local and add the following line:

          modprobe brcmfmac


          Make sure rc.local is executable (sudo chmod a+x /etc/rc.local)
          Instead of blacklisting, you can add the following lines to /etc/rc.local BEFORE the modprobe command:



          modprobe -r brcmfmac
          modprobe -r brcmutil


          Reboot; internal wifi should now be working



          Setup wifi so it finds 5Ghz band



          sudo mv /lib/firmware/brcm/brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt /lib/firmware/brcm/brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt.bak
          sudo wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/harryharryharry/x205ta-iso2usb-files/master/brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt -O /lib/firmware/brcm/brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt
          sudo modprobe -r brcmfmac
          sudo modprobe brcmfmac




          Note: no need to fix the SD card reader -- it works from the start.

          Note: no need to fix the touchpad -- it works correctly (including two-finger scrolling) from the start.



          Suspend



          Fix problems caused by attempts to suspend. Goto System Settings/Power and choose “Do not suspend” for “Suspend when inactive for” (do this for both battery and AC).



          At this point, everything is working great, except sound and internal bluetooth.You may address both of those with a USB bluetooth dongle until the currently made fixes are included in one of the mainline kernels.



          If you need more fixes for freezing, check out the original post from user awakephd here. Be aware that he has a typo in modEprobe.



          UPDATE: Applying patches to a mainline kernel



          It is possible to apply the most recent patches to a normally installed kernel. Here is an Ubuntu Forums post on how to do this.






          share|improve this answer


























          • +1 but I recommend using harryharryharry's script. So much easier

            – Zanna
            May 21 '17 at 17:48











          • please link the script as an answer.

            – Ben
            May 21 '17 at 17:49











          • you mean the patches? please be more specific! harry is doing great work there for a long time now. whats missing is a summary that is constantly updated. this is what i tried to do. any updates and comments are welcome!

            – Ben
            May 21 '17 at 17:57











          • no, not the patches, your link to his ftp server - includes precompiled kernel with sound support, script to make iso, and patches. When I install now, I use the script every time. Everything works except sound. Install the kernel (it comes with an installation script!), sound works. No faffing around blacklisting, modprobing, hunting for nvram etc

            – Zanna
            May 21 '17 at 18:02











          • awesome! as I said, make it an answer! it's obviously easier and more convenient.

            – Ben
            May 21 '17 at 18:05



















          1














          If you have access to an existing Linux system on the X205TA or any other device, I highly recommend using one of harryharryharry's scripts to prepare installation media. The most up-to-date version supports many distros and has the option to create a bootable USB for you. I use an old and much shorter version of the script and make the bootable myself.



          NB: USB tethering to an Android device is usually effective for gaining internet access before wifi has been set up on this device. USB wifi adapters sometimes worked for me.



          Here's the script (written by harryharryharry and made available on Ubuntu Forums)



          #!/bin/bash

          set -e
          set -u

          ISOFILENAME=$1
          ISOPATH=$(pwd)
          ISO=$ISOPATH/$ISOFILENAME
          TEMPDIR=$(mktemp -d -p $ISOPATH)

          function checkroot {
          if [ "$EUID" -ne 0 ]
          then
          echo "Please run as root"
          removetempdir
          exit 1
          else
          echo "You are root, continuing..."
          fi
          }

          function checkfreespace {
          if [ $(df -hk $ISOPATH|tail -n1|awk '{print $4}') -gt 6000000 ]
          then
          echo "Enough free space, continuing..."
          else
          echo "Not enough free space, move script and iso to a directory with more than 6GB free space and try again"
          removetempdir
          exit 2
          fi
          }

          function checkpartitiontype {
          if [ $(df -Thk $ISOPATH|tail -n1|awk '{print $2}') = "vfat" ] || [ $(df -Thk $ISOPATH|tail -n1|awk '{print $2}') = "ntfs" ]
          then
          echo "Wrong partition type: move the script and iso to a partition that supports group/ownership"
          removetempdir
          exit 3
          else
          echo "Partition type correct, continuing"
          fi
          }

          function unzipiso {
          7z x $ISO -o$TEMPDIR
          }

          function removetempdir {
          cd $ISOPATH
          rm -rf $TEMPDIR
          }

          function unsquash {
          pushd $TEMPDIR/casper
          unsquashfs filesystem.squashfs
          popd
          }

          function addstuff2squash {
          mkdir -p $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/etc/modprobe.d/
          echo "blacklist btsdio" >> $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/etc/modprobe.d/blacklist.conf
          mkdir -p $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/etc/systemd/system/suspend.target.wants
          cat > $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/etc/systemd/system/suspend.target.wants/root-resume.service << "EOF"
          [Unit]
          Description=Local system resume actions
          After=suspend.target

          [Service]
          Type=simple
          ExecStart=/bin/bash /usr/bin/elan-fix

          [Install]
          WantedBy=suspend.target
          EOF
          cat > $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/usr/bin/elan-fix << "EOF"
          #!/bin/sh

          rmmod elan_i2c
          modprobe elan_i2c
          EOF
          chmod +x $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/usr/bin/elan-fix
          cat > $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/lib/firmware/brcm/brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt << "EOF"
          manfid=0x2d0
          prodid=0x0653
          vendid=0x14e4
          devid=0x4386
          boardtype=0x0653
          boardrev=0x1203
          boardnum=22
          macaddr=02:0A:F7:2A:3B:4C
          sromrev=3
          boardflags=0x0090201
          xtalfreq=37400
          nocrc=1
          ag0=255
          aa2g=1
          aa5g=1
          ccode=ALL
          pa0itssit=0x20
          pa0b0=6747
          pa0b1=-808
          pa0b2=-178
          tssifloor2g=69
          rssismf2g=0xf
          rssismc2g=0x8
          rssisav2g=0x1
          cckPwrOffset=3
          rssismf5g=0xf
          rssismc5g=0x7
          rssisav5g=0x3
          pa1lob0=5659
          pa1lob1=-693
          pa1lob2=-178
          tssifloor5gl=93
          pa1b0=5172
          pa1b1=-671
          pa1b2=-212
          tssifloor5gm=77
          pa1hib0=5320
          pa1hib1=-663
          pa1hib2=-179
          tssifloor5gh=74
          rxpo5g=0
          maxp2ga0=0x4E
          cck2gpo=0x0000
          ofdm2gpo=0x42000000
          mcs2gpo0=0x2222
          mcs2gpo1=0x7662
          maxp5ga0=0x46
          maxp5gla0=0x46
          maxp5gha0=0x46
          ofdm5gpo=0x52222222
          ofdm5glpo=0x52222222
          ofdm5ghpo=0x52222222
          mcs5gpo0=0x0000
          mcs5gpo1=0x8550
          mcs5glpo0=0x0000
          mcs5glpo1=0x8550
          mcs5ghpo0=0x0000
          mcs5ghpo1=0x8550
          swctrlmap_2g=0x00080008,0x00100010,0x00080008,0x011010,0x11f
          swctrlmap_5g=0x00020002,0x00040004,0x00020002,0x011010,0x2fe
          gain=32
          triso2g=8
          triso5g=8
          loflag=0
          iqlocalidx5g=40
          dlocalidx5g=70
          iqcalidx5g=50
          lpbckmode5g=1
          txiqlopapu5g=0
          txiqlopapu2g=0
          dlorange_lowlimit=5
          txalpfbyp=1
          txalpfpu=1
          dacrate2xen=1
          papden2g=1
          papden5g=1
          gain_settle_dly_2g=4
          gain_settle_dly_5g=4
          noise_cal_po_2g=-1
          noise_cal_po_40_2g=-1
          noise_cal_high_gain_2g=73
          noise_cal_nf_substract_val_2g=346
          noise_cal_po_5g=-1
          noise_cal_po_40_5g=-1
          noise_cal_high_gain_5g=73
          noise_cal_nf_substract_val_5g=346
          cckpapden=0
          paparambwver=1
          EOF
          curl http://sprunge.us/SZET | base64 -d > $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/lib/firmware/brcm/brcmfmac43340-sdio.bin
          curl http://sprunge.us/XIKF | base64 -d > $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/lib/firmware/brcm/BCM43341B0.hcd
          cat > $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/etc/systemd/system/multi-user.target.wants/btattach.service << "EOF"
          [Unit]
          Description=Btattach

          [Service]
          Type=simple
          ExecStart=/usr/bin/btattach --bredr /dev/ttyS1 -P bcm
          ExecStop=/usr/bin/killall btattach

          [Install]
          WantedBy=multi-user.target
          EOF
          echo "hci_uart" >> $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/etc/modules
          }

          function makesquash {
          mksquashfs $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/ $TEMPDIR/casper/filesystem.squashfs -noappend -always-use-fragments
          rm -rf $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/
          }

          function addstuff2iso {
          mkdir -p $TEMPDIR/EFI/BOOT
          curl http://sprunge.us/PYNY |base64 -d > $TEMPDIR/EFI/BOOT/bootia32.efi
          sed -i 's/--/intel_idle.max_cstate=1 --/g' $TEMPDIR/boot/grub/grub.cfg
          }

          function createzip {
          cd $TEMPDIR
          zip -ry $ISOPATH/$ISOFILENAME.zip .
          removetempdir
          successfulmessage
          }

          function successfulmessage {
          echo "+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------"
          echo "| Done creating the Live USB zip-file! "
          echo "| Now copy the contents of this zip-file to a fat32 formatted USB stick. "
          echo "+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------"
          }

          checkroot
          checkfreespace
          checkpartitiontype
          unzipiso
          unsquash
          addstuff2squash
          makesquash
          addstuff2iso
          createzip

          exit 0


          To use, copy the text into a file, save it as whatever you like, for example iso2zip, download any 64-bit Ubuntu iso (tested by me for 16.04, 16.10 and 17.04) and place the iso file and the script file in the same directory where you have at least 8GB free space. Run



          chmod u+x iso2zip               # or whatever you named the file
          sudo ./iso2zip name-of-iso.iso # replace with the correct name


          It will repack the iso as a zip file. Insert a spare USB flash drive and identify it with lsblk. Let's assume it is /dev/sdc (you must correct this and use the right name!) If the drive has mounted filesystems, unmount them (eg udisksctl unmount -b /dev/sdc1) Run these commands from the directory where the iso.zip file is, or use your own favourite method to make a bootable USB:



          Please note that this destroys all data on /dev/sdc



          sudo apt install p7zip-full                    
          sudo sgdisk --zap-all /dev/sdc
          sudo sgdisk --new=1:0:0 --typecode=1:ef00 /dev/sdc
          sudo mkfs.vfat -F32 /dev/sdc1
          sudo mount -t vfat /dev/sdc1 /mnt
          sudo 7z x name.of.file.iso.zip -o/mnt/ # use correct name!
          sudo umount /mnt


          On the X205TA, from powered off, switch on and hit F2 to bring up the UEFI menu and turn off secure boot if not done already. To boot from USB, either select it in the boot order from here, or start again and hit esc to get the boot menu and select the USB. Select Try Ubuntu and connect to WiFi (it will work). Run the installer selecting whatever options you like. Reboot when done.



          After installation, edit the config file for GRUB to pass a boot parameter to prevent freezing:



          sudo nano /etc/default/grub


          Change



          GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash"


          to



          GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash intel_idle.max_cstate=1"


          Save, exit, run



          sudo update-grub


          For sound run the code from harryharryharry's post here to install a kernel that supports it:



          wget ftp://x205ta.myftp.org:1337/kernel/kernel-sound-64bit.tar
          tar xf kernel-sound-64bit.tar
          sudo ./install-sound-kernel.sh -v


          or compile yourself



          TODO: make hibernation work with sound support kernel. (it works with the stock kernels with some tweaks- see my answer here)



          For brightness controls see workaround






          share|improve this answer


























          • @Ben no there isn't a don't missing - you need a Linux system to do this!

            – Zanna
            May 22 '17 at 7:33













          • @Ben You can use another Linux system if you have access to one. Anyway, I am mostly installing over the current Linux system on the device :)

            – Zanna
            May 22 '17 at 7:47











          • @Ben does this edit make it any clearer?

            – Zanna
            May 22 '17 at 7:59



















          0














          I'm a noob and thanks to you all I can now enjoy to use that wonderful laptop with ubuntu 18.04. (Special thanks to Harry )



          For all the rookies here comes the simplest way to make it :




          • create a bootable usb stick with Multisystem (http://liveusb.info/dotclear/) with the distrib you like
            -Plugin a usb wifi dongle + the bootable stick you just created
            -press F2 multiple times while X205Ta is waking up
            -disable secure boot in the boot menu + make sure usb config is on EHCI + set up first boot on the flash drive you created
            -During the install set up a connexion to your wifi network so the install program can download "some stuff" that will allow grub-ia386 to get installed in /target/ (without the internet connexion you will see an error like "unable to install grub-ia386 into /target/)


          After this you'll have a pretty ubuntu naked (without wifi, sound, bluetooth, and freezing).



          Now for wifi and freeze avoïdance follow the step above



          For the sound i recomand following this: No sound on my Asus X205TA (it's the simplest way to do it, and moreover harry's github is not accessible anymore) It will fix bluetooth too.



          And you are good to GO with the best ultra light laptop experience ever !!!



          Thanks Again to you all linux community !
          Freedom is awsome !






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            3 Answers
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            3 Answers
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            active

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            3














            I have my answer from a post in a thread that is discussing this since 2014 for several linux flavours. I will share my way of installing without the optional parts from the guide.



            What still won't work




            • Chrome browser is flickering/tearing (turn off hardware acceleration in settings of chrome to avoid it)

            • Brightness control via FN buttons

            • Sound works, but not with a mainline kernel yet. It probably will be in mainline with version 4.11 or later. (There is the option of compiling a more advanced kernel, but this is not what I did.)

            • Sound through headphones does not work even with patch, but you can use this workaround to get it to work (I did not try it).


            Preparing in Windows



            If starting from Windows: Turn off BitLocker (this will allow Ubuntu to mount and/or resize the primary data drive). In Windows, click on PC Settings/PC and devices/PC info; scroll to the bottom of the screen and click to turn off BitLocker/decrypt drive



            Preparing USB Live



            UPDATE: Making a bootable USB-stick is also possible with harryharryharry's script



            Otherwise:



            Prepare Ubuntu Live bootable USB memory stick. Download .iso file for 64-bit Ubuntu 16.04. In Linux, sudo apt-get install unetbootin. Run unetbootin with the downloaded .iso.



            Copying special bootia32.efi onto USB



            After the memory stick is set up, copy bootia32.efi to the /EFI/BOOT directory on the memory stick. Fetch bootia32.efi from github. I am not sure if this is the right link, because I forgot which one I used during the installations. If anyone encounters problems, please comment and I will update. There are several such files, or guides how to create them, on the web, although firstly I fetched one that did not work (it was for Arch Linux).



            Boot Ubuntu Live from USB



            Insert memory stick in Asus X205TA USB port. In Windows, hold Shift key and click on Restart; choose Advanced Options/UEFI Firmware to enter BIOS. Turn off SecureBoot. Select USB stick as boot device. Save and exit



            If starting from an existing Linux install, you will need to press ESC when you first turn on the machine; this should pull up a small menu to choose the boot device. Choose the USB stick. When grub menu loads, select Try Ubuntu.



            Backup of SSHD



            Plug in a USB external hard disk or USB thumb drive with at least 32GB of free space. Right-click on any mounted drives in the Unity launcher (e.g., OS and Recovery if doing a dual-boot with Windows) and choose Unmount for each. Open a terminal and run the following:



            dd if=/dev/mmcblk0 of=/media/ubuntu/HD/FILENAME bs=1M`


            Replace HD with the name by which the external drive was mounted. Replace FILENAME with the filename you wish to use for the resulting image (or set another path as desired). It will take about 20 minutes for the command to complete; do NOT interrupt it, or you will have to start over! Note: to restore the X205TA to its original state, you can run this command “in reverse”: dd if=/media/ubuntu/HD/FILENAME of=/dev/mmcblk0 bs=1M



            Dual-boot



            Resize Recovery partition (note that the Recovery partition is required for booting Windows on this machine, so it cannot be removed if you want dual-boot, but it can be reduced in size to allow some additional room). Right-click on the OS and Recovery icons in the Unity launcher and make sure each is unmounted (choose Unmount for each if needed). Run gparted (note: this runs very slowly at this point; be patient!). Shrink the Recovery partition as small as it will go (a little less than 6 GB). Expand the OS partition to take up the extra room.



            Installation from Live-USB-Stick



            Reboot into the Live-USB.



            Set up a wireless connection



            This is necessary to download updates during installation. Insert a USB based wifi adapter (Ubuntu will not yet recognize the internal wifi). Choose a wireless connection and connect.



            Double-click on Install Ubuntu. Allow the installation to complete



            Reboot. It should come up perfectly, with grub-efi-ia32 already installed (and not grub-efi-amd64).



            Finalize installation



            If dual-booting, clean up Windows. Reboot to grub menu and choose Windows. Allow Windows to check and “repair” drive C: (basically Windows is responding to the fact that the drive has been re-sized). When finished, it will automatically reboot; choose Windows again to verify that the Windows installation is still functioning properly. Reboot again and choose Ubuntu.



            Update Ubuntu (assumes the USB wifi adapter is still installed; if not wait until the wifi is fixed) with sudo apt update and sudo apt upgrade.



            Set up internal Wifi



            Two files are needed in the /lib/firmware/brcm directory:





            • brcmfmac43340-sdio.bin – this was already in place in my 16.04 installation.


            • brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt – you may be able to copy the nvram* file from /sys/firmware/efi/efivars/ (e.g., nvram-74b00bd9-805a-4d61-b51f-43268123d113) as brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt: sudo cp /sys/firmware/efi/efivars/nvram* /lib/firmware/brcm/brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt


            If either of the above files does not exist, download brcmfmac43340-sdio.bin and brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt from internet and copy to /lib/firmware/brcm (requires sudo)



            sudo -H gedit /etc/modprobe.d/blacklist-custom.conf


            (possibly creating the file) and add the following lines:



            blacklist brcmfmac
            blacklist brcmutil


            And



            sudo -H gedit /etc/rc.local and add the following line:

            modprobe brcmfmac


            Make sure rc.local is executable (sudo chmod a+x /etc/rc.local)
            Instead of blacklisting, you can add the following lines to /etc/rc.local BEFORE the modprobe command:



            modprobe -r brcmfmac
            modprobe -r brcmutil


            Reboot; internal wifi should now be working



            Setup wifi so it finds 5Ghz band



            sudo mv /lib/firmware/brcm/brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt /lib/firmware/brcm/brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt.bak
            sudo wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/harryharryharry/x205ta-iso2usb-files/master/brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt -O /lib/firmware/brcm/brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt
            sudo modprobe -r brcmfmac
            sudo modprobe brcmfmac




            Note: no need to fix the SD card reader -- it works from the start.

            Note: no need to fix the touchpad -- it works correctly (including two-finger scrolling) from the start.



            Suspend



            Fix problems caused by attempts to suspend. Goto System Settings/Power and choose “Do not suspend” for “Suspend when inactive for” (do this for both battery and AC).



            At this point, everything is working great, except sound and internal bluetooth.You may address both of those with a USB bluetooth dongle until the currently made fixes are included in one of the mainline kernels.



            If you need more fixes for freezing, check out the original post from user awakephd here. Be aware that he has a typo in modEprobe.



            UPDATE: Applying patches to a mainline kernel



            It is possible to apply the most recent patches to a normally installed kernel. Here is an Ubuntu Forums post on how to do this.






            share|improve this answer


























            • +1 but I recommend using harryharryharry's script. So much easier

              – Zanna
              May 21 '17 at 17:48











            • please link the script as an answer.

              – Ben
              May 21 '17 at 17:49











            • you mean the patches? please be more specific! harry is doing great work there for a long time now. whats missing is a summary that is constantly updated. this is what i tried to do. any updates and comments are welcome!

              – Ben
              May 21 '17 at 17:57











            • no, not the patches, your link to his ftp server - includes precompiled kernel with sound support, script to make iso, and patches. When I install now, I use the script every time. Everything works except sound. Install the kernel (it comes with an installation script!), sound works. No faffing around blacklisting, modprobing, hunting for nvram etc

              – Zanna
              May 21 '17 at 18:02











            • awesome! as I said, make it an answer! it's obviously easier and more convenient.

              – Ben
              May 21 '17 at 18:05
















            3














            I have my answer from a post in a thread that is discussing this since 2014 for several linux flavours. I will share my way of installing without the optional parts from the guide.



            What still won't work




            • Chrome browser is flickering/tearing (turn off hardware acceleration in settings of chrome to avoid it)

            • Brightness control via FN buttons

            • Sound works, but not with a mainline kernel yet. It probably will be in mainline with version 4.11 or later. (There is the option of compiling a more advanced kernel, but this is not what I did.)

            • Sound through headphones does not work even with patch, but you can use this workaround to get it to work (I did not try it).


            Preparing in Windows



            If starting from Windows: Turn off BitLocker (this will allow Ubuntu to mount and/or resize the primary data drive). In Windows, click on PC Settings/PC and devices/PC info; scroll to the bottom of the screen and click to turn off BitLocker/decrypt drive



            Preparing USB Live



            UPDATE: Making a bootable USB-stick is also possible with harryharryharry's script



            Otherwise:



            Prepare Ubuntu Live bootable USB memory stick. Download .iso file for 64-bit Ubuntu 16.04. In Linux, sudo apt-get install unetbootin. Run unetbootin with the downloaded .iso.



            Copying special bootia32.efi onto USB



            After the memory stick is set up, copy bootia32.efi to the /EFI/BOOT directory on the memory stick. Fetch bootia32.efi from github. I am not sure if this is the right link, because I forgot which one I used during the installations. If anyone encounters problems, please comment and I will update. There are several such files, or guides how to create them, on the web, although firstly I fetched one that did not work (it was for Arch Linux).



            Boot Ubuntu Live from USB



            Insert memory stick in Asus X205TA USB port. In Windows, hold Shift key and click on Restart; choose Advanced Options/UEFI Firmware to enter BIOS. Turn off SecureBoot. Select USB stick as boot device. Save and exit



            If starting from an existing Linux install, you will need to press ESC when you first turn on the machine; this should pull up a small menu to choose the boot device. Choose the USB stick. When grub menu loads, select Try Ubuntu.



            Backup of SSHD



            Plug in a USB external hard disk or USB thumb drive with at least 32GB of free space. Right-click on any mounted drives in the Unity launcher (e.g., OS and Recovery if doing a dual-boot with Windows) and choose Unmount for each. Open a terminal and run the following:



            dd if=/dev/mmcblk0 of=/media/ubuntu/HD/FILENAME bs=1M`


            Replace HD with the name by which the external drive was mounted. Replace FILENAME with the filename you wish to use for the resulting image (or set another path as desired). It will take about 20 minutes for the command to complete; do NOT interrupt it, or you will have to start over! Note: to restore the X205TA to its original state, you can run this command “in reverse”: dd if=/media/ubuntu/HD/FILENAME of=/dev/mmcblk0 bs=1M



            Dual-boot



            Resize Recovery partition (note that the Recovery partition is required for booting Windows on this machine, so it cannot be removed if you want dual-boot, but it can be reduced in size to allow some additional room). Right-click on the OS and Recovery icons in the Unity launcher and make sure each is unmounted (choose Unmount for each if needed). Run gparted (note: this runs very slowly at this point; be patient!). Shrink the Recovery partition as small as it will go (a little less than 6 GB). Expand the OS partition to take up the extra room.



            Installation from Live-USB-Stick



            Reboot into the Live-USB.



            Set up a wireless connection



            This is necessary to download updates during installation. Insert a USB based wifi adapter (Ubuntu will not yet recognize the internal wifi). Choose a wireless connection and connect.



            Double-click on Install Ubuntu. Allow the installation to complete



            Reboot. It should come up perfectly, with grub-efi-ia32 already installed (and not grub-efi-amd64).



            Finalize installation



            If dual-booting, clean up Windows. Reboot to grub menu and choose Windows. Allow Windows to check and “repair” drive C: (basically Windows is responding to the fact that the drive has been re-sized). When finished, it will automatically reboot; choose Windows again to verify that the Windows installation is still functioning properly. Reboot again and choose Ubuntu.



            Update Ubuntu (assumes the USB wifi adapter is still installed; if not wait until the wifi is fixed) with sudo apt update and sudo apt upgrade.



            Set up internal Wifi



            Two files are needed in the /lib/firmware/brcm directory:





            • brcmfmac43340-sdio.bin – this was already in place in my 16.04 installation.


            • brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt – you may be able to copy the nvram* file from /sys/firmware/efi/efivars/ (e.g., nvram-74b00bd9-805a-4d61-b51f-43268123d113) as brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt: sudo cp /sys/firmware/efi/efivars/nvram* /lib/firmware/brcm/brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt


            If either of the above files does not exist, download brcmfmac43340-sdio.bin and brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt from internet and copy to /lib/firmware/brcm (requires sudo)



            sudo -H gedit /etc/modprobe.d/blacklist-custom.conf


            (possibly creating the file) and add the following lines:



            blacklist brcmfmac
            blacklist brcmutil


            And



            sudo -H gedit /etc/rc.local and add the following line:

            modprobe brcmfmac


            Make sure rc.local is executable (sudo chmod a+x /etc/rc.local)
            Instead of blacklisting, you can add the following lines to /etc/rc.local BEFORE the modprobe command:



            modprobe -r brcmfmac
            modprobe -r brcmutil


            Reboot; internal wifi should now be working



            Setup wifi so it finds 5Ghz band



            sudo mv /lib/firmware/brcm/brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt /lib/firmware/brcm/brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt.bak
            sudo wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/harryharryharry/x205ta-iso2usb-files/master/brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt -O /lib/firmware/brcm/brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt
            sudo modprobe -r brcmfmac
            sudo modprobe brcmfmac




            Note: no need to fix the SD card reader -- it works from the start.

            Note: no need to fix the touchpad -- it works correctly (including two-finger scrolling) from the start.



            Suspend



            Fix problems caused by attempts to suspend. Goto System Settings/Power and choose “Do not suspend” for “Suspend when inactive for” (do this for both battery and AC).



            At this point, everything is working great, except sound and internal bluetooth.You may address both of those with a USB bluetooth dongle until the currently made fixes are included in one of the mainline kernels.



            If you need more fixes for freezing, check out the original post from user awakephd here. Be aware that he has a typo in modEprobe.



            UPDATE: Applying patches to a mainline kernel



            It is possible to apply the most recent patches to a normally installed kernel. Here is an Ubuntu Forums post on how to do this.






            share|improve this answer


























            • +1 but I recommend using harryharryharry's script. So much easier

              – Zanna
              May 21 '17 at 17:48











            • please link the script as an answer.

              – Ben
              May 21 '17 at 17:49











            • you mean the patches? please be more specific! harry is doing great work there for a long time now. whats missing is a summary that is constantly updated. this is what i tried to do. any updates and comments are welcome!

              – Ben
              May 21 '17 at 17:57











            • no, not the patches, your link to his ftp server - includes precompiled kernel with sound support, script to make iso, and patches. When I install now, I use the script every time. Everything works except sound. Install the kernel (it comes with an installation script!), sound works. No faffing around blacklisting, modprobing, hunting for nvram etc

              – Zanna
              May 21 '17 at 18:02











            • awesome! as I said, make it an answer! it's obviously easier and more convenient.

              – Ben
              May 21 '17 at 18:05














            3












            3








            3







            I have my answer from a post in a thread that is discussing this since 2014 for several linux flavours. I will share my way of installing without the optional parts from the guide.



            What still won't work




            • Chrome browser is flickering/tearing (turn off hardware acceleration in settings of chrome to avoid it)

            • Brightness control via FN buttons

            • Sound works, but not with a mainline kernel yet. It probably will be in mainline with version 4.11 or later. (There is the option of compiling a more advanced kernel, but this is not what I did.)

            • Sound through headphones does not work even with patch, but you can use this workaround to get it to work (I did not try it).


            Preparing in Windows



            If starting from Windows: Turn off BitLocker (this will allow Ubuntu to mount and/or resize the primary data drive). In Windows, click on PC Settings/PC and devices/PC info; scroll to the bottom of the screen and click to turn off BitLocker/decrypt drive



            Preparing USB Live



            UPDATE: Making a bootable USB-stick is also possible with harryharryharry's script



            Otherwise:



            Prepare Ubuntu Live bootable USB memory stick. Download .iso file for 64-bit Ubuntu 16.04. In Linux, sudo apt-get install unetbootin. Run unetbootin with the downloaded .iso.



            Copying special bootia32.efi onto USB



            After the memory stick is set up, copy bootia32.efi to the /EFI/BOOT directory on the memory stick. Fetch bootia32.efi from github. I am not sure if this is the right link, because I forgot which one I used during the installations. If anyone encounters problems, please comment and I will update. There are several such files, or guides how to create them, on the web, although firstly I fetched one that did not work (it was for Arch Linux).



            Boot Ubuntu Live from USB



            Insert memory stick in Asus X205TA USB port. In Windows, hold Shift key and click on Restart; choose Advanced Options/UEFI Firmware to enter BIOS. Turn off SecureBoot. Select USB stick as boot device. Save and exit



            If starting from an existing Linux install, you will need to press ESC when you first turn on the machine; this should pull up a small menu to choose the boot device. Choose the USB stick. When grub menu loads, select Try Ubuntu.



            Backup of SSHD



            Plug in a USB external hard disk or USB thumb drive with at least 32GB of free space. Right-click on any mounted drives in the Unity launcher (e.g., OS and Recovery if doing a dual-boot with Windows) and choose Unmount for each. Open a terminal and run the following:



            dd if=/dev/mmcblk0 of=/media/ubuntu/HD/FILENAME bs=1M`


            Replace HD with the name by which the external drive was mounted. Replace FILENAME with the filename you wish to use for the resulting image (or set another path as desired). It will take about 20 minutes for the command to complete; do NOT interrupt it, or you will have to start over! Note: to restore the X205TA to its original state, you can run this command “in reverse”: dd if=/media/ubuntu/HD/FILENAME of=/dev/mmcblk0 bs=1M



            Dual-boot



            Resize Recovery partition (note that the Recovery partition is required for booting Windows on this machine, so it cannot be removed if you want dual-boot, but it can be reduced in size to allow some additional room). Right-click on the OS and Recovery icons in the Unity launcher and make sure each is unmounted (choose Unmount for each if needed). Run gparted (note: this runs very slowly at this point; be patient!). Shrink the Recovery partition as small as it will go (a little less than 6 GB). Expand the OS partition to take up the extra room.



            Installation from Live-USB-Stick



            Reboot into the Live-USB.



            Set up a wireless connection



            This is necessary to download updates during installation. Insert a USB based wifi adapter (Ubuntu will not yet recognize the internal wifi). Choose a wireless connection and connect.



            Double-click on Install Ubuntu. Allow the installation to complete



            Reboot. It should come up perfectly, with grub-efi-ia32 already installed (and not grub-efi-amd64).



            Finalize installation



            If dual-booting, clean up Windows. Reboot to grub menu and choose Windows. Allow Windows to check and “repair” drive C: (basically Windows is responding to the fact that the drive has been re-sized). When finished, it will automatically reboot; choose Windows again to verify that the Windows installation is still functioning properly. Reboot again and choose Ubuntu.



            Update Ubuntu (assumes the USB wifi adapter is still installed; if not wait until the wifi is fixed) with sudo apt update and sudo apt upgrade.



            Set up internal Wifi



            Two files are needed in the /lib/firmware/brcm directory:





            • brcmfmac43340-sdio.bin – this was already in place in my 16.04 installation.


            • brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt – you may be able to copy the nvram* file from /sys/firmware/efi/efivars/ (e.g., nvram-74b00bd9-805a-4d61-b51f-43268123d113) as brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt: sudo cp /sys/firmware/efi/efivars/nvram* /lib/firmware/brcm/brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt


            If either of the above files does not exist, download brcmfmac43340-sdio.bin and brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt from internet and copy to /lib/firmware/brcm (requires sudo)



            sudo -H gedit /etc/modprobe.d/blacklist-custom.conf


            (possibly creating the file) and add the following lines:



            blacklist brcmfmac
            blacklist brcmutil


            And



            sudo -H gedit /etc/rc.local and add the following line:

            modprobe brcmfmac


            Make sure rc.local is executable (sudo chmod a+x /etc/rc.local)
            Instead of blacklisting, you can add the following lines to /etc/rc.local BEFORE the modprobe command:



            modprobe -r brcmfmac
            modprobe -r brcmutil


            Reboot; internal wifi should now be working



            Setup wifi so it finds 5Ghz band



            sudo mv /lib/firmware/brcm/brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt /lib/firmware/brcm/brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt.bak
            sudo wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/harryharryharry/x205ta-iso2usb-files/master/brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt -O /lib/firmware/brcm/brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt
            sudo modprobe -r brcmfmac
            sudo modprobe brcmfmac




            Note: no need to fix the SD card reader -- it works from the start.

            Note: no need to fix the touchpad -- it works correctly (including two-finger scrolling) from the start.



            Suspend



            Fix problems caused by attempts to suspend. Goto System Settings/Power and choose “Do not suspend” for “Suspend when inactive for” (do this for both battery and AC).



            At this point, everything is working great, except sound and internal bluetooth.You may address both of those with a USB bluetooth dongle until the currently made fixes are included in one of the mainline kernels.



            If you need more fixes for freezing, check out the original post from user awakephd here. Be aware that he has a typo in modEprobe.



            UPDATE: Applying patches to a mainline kernel



            It is possible to apply the most recent patches to a normally installed kernel. Here is an Ubuntu Forums post on how to do this.






            share|improve this answer















            I have my answer from a post in a thread that is discussing this since 2014 for several linux flavours. I will share my way of installing without the optional parts from the guide.



            What still won't work




            • Chrome browser is flickering/tearing (turn off hardware acceleration in settings of chrome to avoid it)

            • Brightness control via FN buttons

            • Sound works, but not with a mainline kernel yet. It probably will be in mainline with version 4.11 or later. (There is the option of compiling a more advanced kernel, but this is not what I did.)

            • Sound through headphones does not work even with patch, but you can use this workaround to get it to work (I did not try it).


            Preparing in Windows



            If starting from Windows: Turn off BitLocker (this will allow Ubuntu to mount and/or resize the primary data drive). In Windows, click on PC Settings/PC and devices/PC info; scroll to the bottom of the screen and click to turn off BitLocker/decrypt drive



            Preparing USB Live



            UPDATE: Making a bootable USB-stick is also possible with harryharryharry's script



            Otherwise:



            Prepare Ubuntu Live bootable USB memory stick. Download .iso file for 64-bit Ubuntu 16.04. In Linux, sudo apt-get install unetbootin. Run unetbootin with the downloaded .iso.



            Copying special bootia32.efi onto USB



            After the memory stick is set up, copy bootia32.efi to the /EFI/BOOT directory on the memory stick. Fetch bootia32.efi from github. I am not sure if this is the right link, because I forgot which one I used during the installations. If anyone encounters problems, please comment and I will update. There are several such files, or guides how to create them, on the web, although firstly I fetched one that did not work (it was for Arch Linux).



            Boot Ubuntu Live from USB



            Insert memory stick in Asus X205TA USB port. In Windows, hold Shift key and click on Restart; choose Advanced Options/UEFI Firmware to enter BIOS. Turn off SecureBoot. Select USB stick as boot device. Save and exit



            If starting from an existing Linux install, you will need to press ESC when you first turn on the machine; this should pull up a small menu to choose the boot device. Choose the USB stick. When grub menu loads, select Try Ubuntu.



            Backup of SSHD



            Plug in a USB external hard disk or USB thumb drive with at least 32GB of free space. Right-click on any mounted drives in the Unity launcher (e.g., OS and Recovery if doing a dual-boot with Windows) and choose Unmount for each. Open a terminal and run the following:



            dd if=/dev/mmcblk0 of=/media/ubuntu/HD/FILENAME bs=1M`


            Replace HD with the name by which the external drive was mounted. Replace FILENAME with the filename you wish to use for the resulting image (or set another path as desired). It will take about 20 minutes for the command to complete; do NOT interrupt it, or you will have to start over! Note: to restore the X205TA to its original state, you can run this command “in reverse”: dd if=/media/ubuntu/HD/FILENAME of=/dev/mmcblk0 bs=1M



            Dual-boot



            Resize Recovery partition (note that the Recovery partition is required for booting Windows on this machine, so it cannot be removed if you want dual-boot, but it can be reduced in size to allow some additional room). Right-click on the OS and Recovery icons in the Unity launcher and make sure each is unmounted (choose Unmount for each if needed). Run gparted (note: this runs very slowly at this point; be patient!). Shrink the Recovery partition as small as it will go (a little less than 6 GB). Expand the OS partition to take up the extra room.



            Installation from Live-USB-Stick



            Reboot into the Live-USB.



            Set up a wireless connection



            This is necessary to download updates during installation. Insert a USB based wifi adapter (Ubuntu will not yet recognize the internal wifi). Choose a wireless connection and connect.



            Double-click on Install Ubuntu. Allow the installation to complete



            Reboot. It should come up perfectly, with grub-efi-ia32 already installed (and not grub-efi-amd64).



            Finalize installation



            If dual-booting, clean up Windows. Reboot to grub menu and choose Windows. Allow Windows to check and “repair” drive C: (basically Windows is responding to the fact that the drive has been re-sized). When finished, it will automatically reboot; choose Windows again to verify that the Windows installation is still functioning properly. Reboot again and choose Ubuntu.



            Update Ubuntu (assumes the USB wifi adapter is still installed; if not wait until the wifi is fixed) with sudo apt update and sudo apt upgrade.



            Set up internal Wifi



            Two files are needed in the /lib/firmware/brcm directory:





            • brcmfmac43340-sdio.bin – this was already in place in my 16.04 installation.


            • brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt – you may be able to copy the nvram* file from /sys/firmware/efi/efivars/ (e.g., nvram-74b00bd9-805a-4d61-b51f-43268123d113) as brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt: sudo cp /sys/firmware/efi/efivars/nvram* /lib/firmware/brcm/brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt


            If either of the above files does not exist, download brcmfmac43340-sdio.bin and brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt from internet and copy to /lib/firmware/brcm (requires sudo)



            sudo -H gedit /etc/modprobe.d/blacklist-custom.conf


            (possibly creating the file) and add the following lines:



            blacklist brcmfmac
            blacklist brcmutil


            And



            sudo -H gedit /etc/rc.local and add the following line:

            modprobe brcmfmac


            Make sure rc.local is executable (sudo chmod a+x /etc/rc.local)
            Instead of blacklisting, you can add the following lines to /etc/rc.local BEFORE the modprobe command:



            modprobe -r brcmfmac
            modprobe -r brcmutil


            Reboot; internal wifi should now be working



            Setup wifi so it finds 5Ghz band



            sudo mv /lib/firmware/brcm/brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt /lib/firmware/brcm/brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt.bak
            sudo wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/harryharryharry/x205ta-iso2usb-files/master/brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt -O /lib/firmware/brcm/brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt
            sudo modprobe -r brcmfmac
            sudo modprobe brcmfmac




            Note: no need to fix the SD card reader -- it works from the start.

            Note: no need to fix the touchpad -- it works correctly (including two-finger scrolling) from the start.



            Suspend



            Fix problems caused by attempts to suspend. Goto System Settings/Power and choose “Do not suspend” for “Suspend when inactive for” (do this for both battery and AC).



            At this point, everything is working great, except sound and internal bluetooth.You may address both of those with a USB bluetooth dongle until the currently made fixes are included in one of the mainline kernels.



            If you need more fixes for freezing, check out the original post from user awakephd here. Be aware that he has a typo in modEprobe.



            UPDATE: Applying patches to a mainline kernel



            It is possible to apply the most recent patches to a normally installed kernel. Here is an Ubuntu Forums post on how to do this.







            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited May 23 '17 at 18:39

























            answered Jan 8 '17 at 14:10









            BenBen

            705821




            705821













            • +1 but I recommend using harryharryharry's script. So much easier

              – Zanna
              May 21 '17 at 17:48











            • please link the script as an answer.

              – Ben
              May 21 '17 at 17:49











            • you mean the patches? please be more specific! harry is doing great work there for a long time now. whats missing is a summary that is constantly updated. this is what i tried to do. any updates and comments are welcome!

              – Ben
              May 21 '17 at 17:57











            • no, not the patches, your link to his ftp server - includes precompiled kernel with sound support, script to make iso, and patches. When I install now, I use the script every time. Everything works except sound. Install the kernel (it comes with an installation script!), sound works. No faffing around blacklisting, modprobing, hunting for nvram etc

              – Zanna
              May 21 '17 at 18:02











            • awesome! as I said, make it an answer! it's obviously easier and more convenient.

              – Ben
              May 21 '17 at 18:05



















            • +1 but I recommend using harryharryharry's script. So much easier

              – Zanna
              May 21 '17 at 17:48











            • please link the script as an answer.

              – Ben
              May 21 '17 at 17:49











            • you mean the patches? please be more specific! harry is doing great work there for a long time now. whats missing is a summary that is constantly updated. this is what i tried to do. any updates and comments are welcome!

              – Ben
              May 21 '17 at 17:57











            • no, not the patches, your link to his ftp server - includes precompiled kernel with sound support, script to make iso, and patches. When I install now, I use the script every time. Everything works except sound. Install the kernel (it comes with an installation script!), sound works. No faffing around blacklisting, modprobing, hunting for nvram etc

              – Zanna
              May 21 '17 at 18:02











            • awesome! as I said, make it an answer! it's obviously easier and more convenient.

              – Ben
              May 21 '17 at 18:05

















            +1 but I recommend using harryharryharry's script. So much easier

            – Zanna
            May 21 '17 at 17:48





            +1 but I recommend using harryharryharry's script. So much easier

            – Zanna
            May 21 '17 at 17:48













            please link the script as an answer.

            – Ben
            May 21 '17 at 17:49





            please link the script as an answer.

            – Ben
            May 21 '17 at 17:49













            you mean the patches? please be more specific! harry is doing great work there for a long time now. whats missing is a summary that is constantly updated. this is what i tried to do. any updates and comments are welcome!

            – Ben
            May 21 '17 at 17:57





            you mean the patches? please be more specific! harry is doing great work there for a long time now. whats missing is a summary that is constantly updated. this is what i tried to do. any updates and comments are welcome!

            – Ben
            May 21 '17 at 17:57













            no, not the patches, your link to his ftp server - includes precompiled kernel with sound support, script to make iso, and patches. When I install now, I use the script every time. Everything works except sound. Install the kernel (it comes with an installation script!), sound works. No faffing around blacklisting, modprobing, hunting for nvram etc

            – Zanna
            May 21 '17 at 18:02





            no, not the patches, your link to his ftp server - includes precompiled kernel with sound support, script to make iso, and patches. When I install now, I use the script every time. Everything works except sound. Install the kernel (it comes with an installation script!), sound works. No faffing around blacklisting, modprobing, hunting for nvram etc

            – Zanna
            May 21 '17 at 18:02













            awesome! as I said, make it an answer! it's obviously easier and more convenient.

            – Ben
            May 21 '17 at 18:05





            awesome! as I said, make it an answer! it's obviously easier and more convenient.

            – Ben
            May 21 '17 at 18:05













            1














            If you have access to an existing Linux system on the X205TA or any other device, I highly recommend using one of harryharryharry's scripts to prepare installation media. The most up-to-date version supports many distros and has the option to create a bootable USB for you. I use an old and much shorter version of the script and make the bootable myself.



            NB: USB tethering to an Android device is usually effective for gaining internet access before wifi has been set up on this device. USB wifi adapters sometimes worked for me.



            Here's the script (written by harryharryharry and made available on Ubuntu Forums)



            #!/bin/bash

            set -e
            set -u

            ISOFILENAME=$1
            ISOPATH=$(pwd)
            ISO=$ISOPATH/$ISOFILENAME
            TEMPDIR=$(mktemp -d -p $ISOPATH)

            function checkroot {
            if [ "$EUID" -ne 0 ]
            then
            echo "Please run as root"
            removetempdir
            exit 1
            else
            echo "You are root, continuing..."
            fi
            }

            function checkfreespace {
            if [ $(df -hk $ISOPATH|tail -n1|awk '{print $4}') -gt 6000000 ]
            then
            echo "Enough free space, continuing..."
            else
            echo "Not enough free space, move script and iso to a directory with more than 6GB free space and try again"
            removetempdir
            exit 2
            fi
            }

            function checkpartitiontype {
            if [ $(df -Thk $ISOPATH|tail -n1|awk '{print $2}') = "vfat" ] || [ $(df -Thk $ISOPATH|tail -n1|awk '{print $2}') = "ntfs" ]
            then
            echo "Wrong partition type: move the script and iso to a partition that supports group/ownership"
            removetempdir
            exit 3
            else
            echo "Partition type correct, continuing"
            fi
            }

            function unzipiso {
            7z x $ISO -o$TEMPDIR
            }

            function removetempdir {
            cd $ISOPATH
            rm -rf $TEMPDIR
            }

            function unsquash {
            pushd $TEMPDIR/casper
            unsquashfs filesystem.squashfs
            popd
            }

            function addstuff2squash {
            mkdir -p $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/etc/modprobe.d/
            echo "blacklist btsdio" >> $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/etc/modprobe.d/blacklist.conf
            mkdir -p $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/etc/systemd/system/suspend.target.wants
            cat > $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/etc/systemd/system/suspend.target.wants/root-resume.service << "EOF"
            [Unit]
            Description=Local system resume actions
            After=suspend.target

            [Service]
            Type=simple
            ExecStart=/bin/bash /usr/bin/elan-fix

            [Install]
            WantedBy=suspend.target
            EOF
            cat > $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/usr/bin/elan-fix << "EOF"
            #!/bin/sh

            rmmod elan_i2c
            modprobe elan_i2c
            EOF
            chmod +x $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/usr/bin/elan-fix
            cat > $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/lib/firmware/brcm/brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt << "EOF"
            manfid=0x2d0
            prodid=0x0653
            vendid=0x14e4
            devid=0x4386
            boardtype=0x0653
            boardrev=0x1203
            boardnum=22
            macaddr=02:0A:F7:2A:3B:4C
            sromrev=3
            boardflags=0x0090201
            xtalfreq=37400
            nocrc=1
            ag0=255
            aa2g=1
            aa5g=1
            ccode=ALL
            pa0itssit=0x20
            pa0b0=6747
            pa0b1=-808
            pa0b2=-178
            tssifloor2g=69
            rssismf2g=0xf
            rssismc2g=0x8
            rssisav2g=0x1
            cckPwrOffset=3
            rssismf5g=0xf
            rssismc5g=0x7
            rssisav5g=0x3
            pa1lob0=5659
            pa1lob1=-693
            pa1lob2=-178
            tssifloor5gl=93
            pa1b0=5172
            pa1b1=-671
            pa1b2=-212
            tssifloor5gm=77
            pa1hib0=5320
            pa1hib1=-663
            pa1hib2=-179
            tssifloor5gh=74
            rxpo5g=0
            maxp2ga0=0x4E
            cck2gpo=0x0000
            ofdm2gpo=0x42000000
            mcs2gpo0=0x2222
            mcs2gpo1=0x7662
            maxp5ga0=0x46
            maxp5gla0=0x46
            maxp5gha0=0x46
            ofdm5gpo=0x52222222
            ofdm5glpo=0x52222222
            ofdm5ghpo=0x52222222
            mcs5gpo0=0x0000
            mcs5gpo1=0x8550
            mcs5glpo0=0x0000
            mcs5glpo1=0x8550
            mcs5ghpo0=0x0000
            mcs5ghpo1=0x8550
            swctrlmap_2g=0x00080008,0x00100010,0x00080008,0x011010,0x11f
            swctrlmap_5g=0x00020002,0x00040004,0x00020002,0x011010,0x2fe
            gain=32
            triso2g=8
            triso5g=8
            loflag=0
            iqlocalidx5g=40
            dlocalidx5g=70
            iqcalidx5g=50
            lpbckmode5g=1
            txiqlopapu5g=0
            txiqlopapu2g=0
            dlorange_lowlimit=5
            txalpfbyp=1
            txalpfpu=1
            dacrate2xen=1
            papden2g=1
            papden5g=1
            gain_settle_dly_2g=4
            gain_settle_dly_5g=4
            noise_cal_po_2g=-1
            noise_cal_po_40_2g=-1
            noise_cal_high_gain_2g=73
            noise_cal_nf_substract_val_2g=346
            noise_cal_po_5g=-1
            noise_cal_po_40_5g=-1
            noise_cal_high_gain_5g=73
            noise_cal_nf_substract_val_5g=346
            cckpapden=0
            paparambwver=1
            EOF
            curl http://sprunge.us/SZET | base64 -d > $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/lib/firmware/brcm/brcmfmac43340-sdio.bin
            curl http://sprunge.us/XIKF | base64 -d > $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/lib/firmware/brcm/BCM43341B0.hcd
            cat > $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/etc/systemd/system/multi-user.target.wants/btattach.service << "EOF"
            [Unit]
            Description=Btattach

            [Service]
            Type=simple
            ExecStart=/usr/bin/btattach --bredr /dev/ttyS1 -P bcm
            ExecStop=/usr/bin/killall btattach

            [Install]
            WantedBy=multi-user.target
            EOF
            echo "hci_uart" >> $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/etc/modules
            }

            function makesquash {
            mksquashfs $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/ $TEMPDIR/casper/filesystem.squashfs -noappend -always-use-fragments
            rm -rf $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/
            }

            function addstuff2iso {
            mkdir -p $TEMPDIR/EFI/BOOT
            curl http://sprunge.us/PYNY |base64 -d > $TEMPDIR/EFI/BOOT/bootia32.efi
            sed -i 's/--/intel_idle.max_cstate=1 --/g' $TEMPDIR/boot/grub/grub.cfg
            }

            function createzip {
            cd $TEMPDIR
            zip -ry $ISOPATH/$ISOFILENAME.zip .
            removetempdir
            successfulmessage
            }

            function successfulmessage {
            echo "+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------"
            echo "| Done creating the Live USB zip-file! "
            echo "| Now copy the contents of this zip-file to a fat32 formatted USB stick. "
            echo "+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------"
            }

            checkroot
            checkfreespace
            checkpartitiontype
            unzipiso
            unsquash
            addstuff2squash
            makesquash
            addstuff2iso
            createzip

            exit 0


            To use, copy the text into a file, save it as whatever you like, for example iso2zip, download any 64-bit Ubuntu iso (tested by me for 16.04, 16.10 and 17.04) and place the iso file and the script file in the same directory where you have at least 8GB free space. Run



            chmod u+x iso2zip               # or whatever you named the file
            sudo ./iso2zip name-of-iso.iso # replace with the correct name


            It will repack the iso as a zip file. Insert a spare USB flash drive and identify it with lsblk. Let's assume it is /dev/sdc (you must correct this and use the right name!) If the drive has mounted filesystems, unmount them (eg udisksctl unmount -b /dev/sdc1) Run these commands from the directory where the iso.zip file is, or use your own favourite method to make a bootable USB:



            Please note that this destroys all data on /dev/sdc



            sudo apt install p7zip-full                    
            sudo sgdisk --zap-all /dev/sdc
            sudo sgdisk --new=1:0:0 --typecode=1:ef00 /dev/sdc
            sudo mkfs.vfat -F32 /dev/sdc1
            sudo mount -t vfat /dev/sdc1 /mnt
            sudo 7z x name.of.file.iso.zip -o/mnt/ # use correct name!
            sudo umount /mnt


            On the X205TA, from powered off, switch on and hit F2 to bring up the UEFI menu and turn off secure boot if not done already. To boot from USB, either select it in the boot order from here, or start again and hit esc to get the boot menu and select the USB. Select Try Ubuntu and connect to WiFi (it will work). Run the installer selecting whatever options you like. Reboot when done.



            After installation, edit the config file for GRUB to pass a boot parameter to prevent freezing:



            sudo nano /etc/default/grub


            Change



            GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash"


            to



            GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash intel_idle.max_cstate=1"


            Save, exit, run



            sudo update-grub


            For sound run the code from harryharryharry's post here to install a kernel that supports it:



            wget ftp://x205ta.myftp.org:1337/kernel/kernel-sound-64bit.tar
            tar xf kernel-sound-64bit.tar
            sudo ./install-sound-kernel.sh -v


            or compile yourself



            TODO: make hibernation work with sound support kernel. (it works with the stock kernels with some tweaks- see my answer here)



            For brightness controls see workaround






            share|improve this answer


























            • @Ben no there isn't a don't missing - you need a Linux system to do this!

              – Zanna
              May 22 '17 at 7:33













            • @Ben You can use another Linux system if you have access to one. Anyway, I am mostly installing over the current Linux system on the device :)

              – Zanna
              May 22 '17 at 7:47











            • @Ben does this edit make it any clearer?

              – Zanna
              May 22 '17 at 7:59
















            1














            If you have access to an existing Linux system on the X205TA or any other device, I highly recommend using one of harryharryharry's scripts to prepare installation media. The most up-to-date version supports many distros and has the option to create a bootable USB for you. I use an old and much shorter version of the script and make the bootable myself.



            NB: USB tethering to an Android device is usually effective for gaining internet access before wifi has been set up on this device. USB wifi adapters sometimes worked for me.



            Here's the script (written by harryharryharry and made available on Ubuntu Forums)



            #!/bin/bash

            set -e
            set -u

            ISOFILENAME=$1
            ISOPATH=$(pwd)
            ISO=$ISOPATH/$ISOFILENAME
            TEMPDIR=$(mktemp -d -p $ISOPATH)

            function checkroot {
            if [ "$EUID" -ne 0 ]
            then
            echo "Please run as root"
            removetempdir
            exit 1
            else
            echo "You are root, continuing..."
            fi
            }

            function checkfreespace {
            if [ $(df -hk $ISOPATH|tail -n1|awk '{print $4}') -gt 6000000 ]
            then
            echo "Enough free space, continuing..."
            else
            echo "Not enough free space, move script and iso to a directory with more than 6GB free space and try again"
            removetempdir
            exit 2
            fi
            }

            function checkpartitiontype {
            if [ $(df -Thk $ISOPATH|tail -n1|awk '{print $2}') = "vfat" ] || [ $(df -Thk $ISOPATH|tail -n1|awk '{print $2}') = "ntfs" ]
            then
            echo "Wrong partition type: move the script and iso to a partition that supports group/ownership"
            removetempdir
            exit 3
            else
            echo "Partition type correct, continuing"
            fi
            }

            function unzipiso {
            7z x $ISO -o$TEMPDIR
            }

            function removetempdir {
            cd $ISOPATH
            rm -rf $TEMPDIR
            }

            function unsquash {
            pushd $TEMPDIR/casper
            unsquashfs filesystem.squashfs
            popd
            }

            function addstuff2squash {
            mkdir -p $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/etc/modprobe.d/
            echo "blacklist btsdio" >> $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/etc/modprobe.d/blacklist.conf
            mkdir -p $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/etc/systemd/system/suspend.target.wants
            cat > $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/etc/systemd/system/suspend.target.wants/root-resume.service << "EOF"
            [Unit]
            Description=Local system resume actions
            After=suspend.target

            [Service]
            Type=simple
            ExecStart=/bin/bash /usr/bin/elan-fix

            [Install]
            WantedBy=suspend.target
            EOF
            cat > $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/usr/bin/elan-fix << "EOF"
            #!/bin/sh

            rmmod elan_i2c
            modprobe elan_i2c
            EOF
            chmod +x $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/usr/bin/elan-fix
            cat > $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/lib/firmware/brcm/brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt << "EOF"
            manfid=0x2d0
            prodid=0x0653
            vendid=0x14e4
            devid=0x4386
            boardtype=0x0653
            boardrev=0x1203
            boardnum=22
            macaddr=02:0A:F7:2A:3B:4C
            sromrev=3
            boardflags=0x0090201
            xtalfreq=37400
            nocrc=1
            ag0=255
            aa2g=1
            aa5g=1
            ccode=ALL
            pa0itssit=0x20
            pa0b0=6747
            pa0b1=-808
            pa0b2=-178
            tssifloor2g=69
            rssismf2g=0xf
            rssismc2g=0x8
            rssisav2g=0x1
            cckPwrOffset=3
            rssismf5g=0xf
            rssismc5g=0x7
            rssisav5g=0x3
            pa1lob0=5659
            pa1lob1=-693
            pa1lob2=-178
            tssifloor5gl=93
            pa1b0=5172
            pa1b1=-671
            pa1b2=-212
            tssifloor5gm=77
            pa1hib0=5320
            pa1hib1=-663
            pa1hib2=-179
            tssifloor5gh=74
            rxpo5g=0
            maxp2ga0=0x4E
            cck2gpo=0x0000
            ofdm2gpo=0x42000000
            mcs2gpo0=0x2222
            mcs2gpo1=0x7662
            maxp5ga0=0x46
            maxp5gla0=0x46
            maxp5gha0=0x46
            ofdm5gpo=0x52222222
            ofdm5glpo=0x52222222
            ofdm5ghpo=0x52222222
            mcs5gpo0=0x0000
            mcs5gpo1=0x8550
            mcs5glpo0=0x0000
            mcs5glpo1=0x8550
            mcs5ghpo0=0x0000
            mcs5ghpo1=0x8550
            swctrlmap_2g=0x00080008,0x00100010,0x00080008,0x011010,0x11f
            swctrlmap_5g=0x00020002,0x00040004,0x00020002,0x011010,0x2fe
            gain=32
            triso2g=8
            triso5g=8
            loflag=0
            iqlocalidx5g=40
            dlocalidx5g=70
            iqcalidx5g=50
            lpbckmode5g=1
            txiqlopapu5g=0
            txiqlopapu2g=0
            dlorange_lowlimit=5
            txalpfbyp=1
            txalpfpu=1
            dacrate2xen=1
            papden2g=1
            papden5g=1
            gain_settle_dly_2g=4
            gain_settle_dly_5g=4
            noise_cal_po_2g=-1
            noise_cal_po_40_2g=-1
            noise_cal_high_gain_2g=73
            noise_cal_nf_substract_val_2g=346
            noise_cal_po_5g=-1
            noise_cal_po_40_5g=-1
            noise_cal_high_gain_5g=73
            noise_cal_nf_substract_val_5g=346
            cckpapden=0
            paparambwver=1
            EOF
            curl http://sprunge.us/SZET | base64 -d > $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/lib/firmware/brcm/brcmfmac43340-sdio.bin
            curl http://sprunge.us/XIKF | base64 -d > $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/lib/firmware/brcm/BCM43341B0.hcd
            cat > $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/etc/systemd/system/multi-user.target.wants/btattach.service << "EOF"
            [Unit]
            Description=Btattach

            [Service]
            Type=simple
            ExecStart=/usr/bin/btattach --bredr /dev/ttyS1 -P bcm
            ExecStop=/usr/bin/killall btattach

            [Install]
            WantedBy=multi-user.target
            EOF
            echo "hci_uart" >> $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/etc/modules
            }

            function makesquash {
            mksquashfs $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/ $TEMPDIR/casper/filesystem.squashfs -noappend -always-use-fragments
            rm -rf $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/
            }

            function addstuff2iso {
            mkdir -p $TEMPDIR/EFI/BOOT
            curl http://sprunge.us/PYNY |base64 -d > $TEMPDIR/EFI/BOOT/bootia32.efi
            sed -i 's/--/intel_idle.max_cstate=1 --/g' $TEMPDIR/boot/grub/grub.cfg
            }

            function createzip {
            cd $TEMPDIR
            zip -ry $ISOPATH/$ISOFILENAME.zip .
            removetempdir
            successfulmessage
            }

            function successfulmessage {
            echo "+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------"
            echo "| Done creating the Live USB zip-file! "
            echo "| Now copy the contents of this zip-file to a fat32 formatted USB stick. "
            echo "+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------"
            }

            checkroot
            checkfreespace
            checkpartitiontype
            unzipiso
            unsquash
            addstuff2squash
            makesquash
            addstuff2iso
            createzip

            exit 0


            To use, copy the text into a file, save it as whatever you like, for example iso2zip, download any 64-bit Ubuntu iso (tested by me for 16.04, 16.10 and 17.04) and place the iso file and the script file in the same directory where you have at least 8GB free space. Run



            chmod u+x iso2zip               # or whatever you named the file
            sudo ./iso2zip name-of-iso.iso # replace with the correct name


            It will repack the iso as a zip file. Insert a spare USB flash drive and identify it with lsblk. Let's assume it is /dev/sdc (you must correct this and use the right name!) If the drive has mounted filesystems, unmount them (eg udisksctl unmount -b /dev/sdc1) Run these commands from the directory where the iso.zip file is, or use your own favourite method to make a bootable USB:



            Please note that this destroys all data on /dev/sdc



            sudo apt install p7zip-full                    
            sudo sgdisk --zap-all /dev/sdc
            sudo sgdisk --new=1:0:0 --typecode=1:ef00 /dev/sdc
            sudo mkfs.vfat -F32 /dev/sdc1
            sudo mount -t vfat /dev/sdc1 /mnt
            sudo 7z x name.of.file.iso.zip -o/mnt/ # use correct name!
            sudo umount /mnt


            On the X205TA, from powered off, switch on and hit F2 to bring up the UEFI menu and turn off secure boot if not done already. To boot from USB, either select it in the boot order from here, or start again and hit esc to get the boot menu and select the USB. Select Try Ubuntu and connect to WiFi (it will work). Run the installer selecting whatever options you like. Reboot when done.



            After installation, edit the config file for GRUB to pass a boot parameter to prevent freezing:



            sudo nano /etc/default/grub


            Change



            GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash"


            to



            GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash intel_idle.max_cstate=1"


            Save, exit, run



            sudo update-grub


            For sound run the code from harryharryharry's post here to install a kernel that supports it:



            wget ftp://x205ta.myftp.org:1337/kernel/kernel-sound-64bit.tar
            tar xf kernel-sound-64bit.tar
            sudo ./install-sound-kernel.sh -v


            or compile yourself



            TODO: make hibernation work with sound support kernel. (it works with the stock kernels with some tweaks- see my answer here)



            For brightness controls see workaround






            share|improve this answer


























            • @Ben no there isn't a don't missing - you need a Linux system to do this!

              – Zanna
              May 22 '17 at 7:33













            • @Ben You can use another Linux system if you have access to one. Anyway, I am mostly installing over the current Linux system on the device :)

              – Zanna
              May 22 '17 at 7:47











            • @Ben does this edit make it any clearer?

              – Zanna
              May 22 '17 at 7:59














            1












            1








            1







            If you have access to an existing Linux system on the X205TA or any other device, I highly recommend using one of harryharryharry's scripts to prepare installation media. The most up-to-date version supports many distros and has the option to create a bootable USB for you. I use an old and much shorter version of the script and make the bootable myself.



            NB: USB tethering to an Android device is usually effective for gaining internet access before wifi has been set up on this device. USB wifi adapters sometimes worked for me.



            Here's the script (written by harryharryharry and made available on Ubuntu Forums)



            #!/bin/bash

            set -e
            set -u

            ISOFILENAME=$1
            ISOPATH=$(pwd)
            ISO=$ISOPATH/$ISOFILENAME
            TEMPDIR=$(mktemp -d -p $ISOPATH)

            function checkroot {
            if [ "$EUID" -ne 0 ]
            then
            echo "Please run as root"
            removetempdir
            exit 1
            else
            echo "You are root, continuing..."
            fi
            }

            function checkfreespace {
            if [ $(df -hk $ISOPATH|tail -n1|awk '{print $4}') -gt 6000000 ]
            then
            echo "Enough free space, continuing..."
            else
            echo "Not enough free space, move script and iso to a directory with more than 6GB free space and try again"
            removetempdir
            exit 2
            fi
            }

            function checkpartitiontype {
            if [ $(df -Thk $ISOPATH|tail -n1|awk '{print $2}') = "vfat" ] || [ $(df -Thk $ISOPATH|tail -n1|awk '{print $2}') = "ntfs" ]
            then
            echo "Wrong partition type: move the script and iso to a partition that supports group/ownership"
            removetempdir
            exit 3
            else
            echo "Partition type correct, continuing"
            fi
            }

            function unzipiso {
            7z x $ISO -o$TEMPDIR
            }

            function removetempdir {
            cd $ISOPATH
            rm -rf $TEMPDIR
            }

            function unsquash {
            pushd $TEMPDIR/casper
            unsquashfs filesystem.squashfs
            popd
            }

            function addstuff2squash {
            mkdir -p $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/etc/modprobe.d/
            echo "blacklist btsdio" >> $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/etc/modprobe.d/blacklist.conf
            mkdir -p $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/etc/systemd/system/suspend.target.wants
            cat > $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/etc/systemd/system/suspend.target.wants/root-resume.service << "EOF"
            [Unit]
            Description=Local system resume actions
            After=suspend.target

            [Service]
            Type=simple
            ExecStart=/bin/bash /usr/bin/elan-fix

            [Install]
            WantedBy=suspend.target
            EOF
            cat > $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/usr/bin/elan-fix << "EOF"
            #!/bin/sh

            rmmod elan_i2c
            modprobe elan_i2c
            EOF
            chmod +x $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/usr/bin/elan-fix
            cat > $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/lib/firmware/brcm/brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt << "EOF"
            manfid=0x2d0
            prodid=0x0653
            vendid=0x14e4
            devid=0x4386
            boardtype=0x0653
            boardrev=0x1203
            boardnum=22
            macaddr=02:0A:F7:2A:3B:4C
            sromrev=3
            boardflags=0x0090201
            xtalfreq=37400
            nocrc=1
            ag0=255
            aa2g=1
            aa5g=1
            ccode=ALL
            pa0itssit=0x20
            pa0b0=6747
            pa0b1=-808
            pa0b2=-178
            tssifloor2g=69
            rssismf2g=0xf
            rssismc2g=0x8
            rssisav2g=0x1
            cckPwrOffset=3
            rssismf5g=0xf
            rssismc5g=0x7
            rssisav5g=0x3
            pa1lob0=5659
            pa1lob1=-693
            pa1lob2=-178
            tssifloor5gl=93
            pa1b0=5172
            pa1b1=-671
            pa1b2=-212
            tssifloor5gm=77
            pa1hib0=5320
            pa1hib1=-663
            pa1hib2=-179
            tssifloor5gh=74
            rxpo5g=0
            maxp2ga0=0x4E
            cck2gpo=0x0000
            ofdm2gpo=0x42000000
            mcs2gpo0=0x2222
            mcs2gpo1=0x7662
            maxp5ga0=0x46
            maxp5gla0=0x46
            maxp5gha0=0x46
            ofdm5gpo=0x52222222
            ofdm5glpo=0x52222222
            ofdm5ghpo=0x52222222
            mcs5gpo0=0x0000
            mcs5gpo1=0x8550
            mcs5glpo0=0x0000
            mcs5glpo1=0x8550
            mcs5ghpo0=0x0000
            mcs5ghpo1=0x8550
            swctrlmap_2g=0x00080008,0x00100010,0x00080008,0x011010,0x11f
            swctrlmap_5g=0x00020002,0x00040004,0x00020002,0x011010,0x2fe
            gain=32
            triso2g=8
            triso5g=8
            loflag=0
            iqlocalidx5g=40
            dlocalidx5g=70
            iqcalidx5g=50
            lpbckmode5g=1
            txiqlopapu5g=0
            txiqlopapu2g=0
            dlorange_lowlimit=5
            txalpfbyp=1
            txalpfpu=1
            dacrate2xen=1
            papden2g=1
            papden5g=1
            gain_settle_dly_2g=4
            gain_settle_dly_5g=4
            noise_cal_po_2g=-1
            noise_cal_po_40_2g=-1
            noise_cal_high_gain_2g=73
            noise_cal_nf_substract_val_2g=346
            noise_cal_po_5g=-1
            noise_cal_po_40_5g=-1
            noise_cal_high_gain_5g=73
            noise_cal_nf_substract_val_5g=346
            cckpapden=0
            paparambwver=1
            EOF
            curl http://sprunge.us/SZET | base64 -d > $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/lib/firmware/brcm/brcmfmac43340-sdio.bin
            curl http://sprunge.us/XIKF | base64 -d > $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/lib/firmware/brcm/BCM43341B0.hcd
            cat > $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/etc/systemd/system/multi-user.target.wants/btattach.service << "EOF"
            [Unit]
            Description=Btattach

            [Service]
            Type=simple
            ExecStart=/usr/bin/btattach --bredr /dev/ttyS1 -P bcm
            ExecStop=/usr/bin/killall btattach

            [Install]
            WantedBy=multi-user.target
            EOF
            echo "hci_uart" >> $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/etc/modules
            }

            function makesquash {
            mksquashfs $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/ $TEMPDIR/casper/filesystem.squashfs -noappend -always-use-fragments
            rm -rf $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/
            }

            function addstuff2iso {
            mkdir -p $TEMPDIR/EFI/BOOT
            curl http://sprunge.us/PYNY |base64 -d > $TEMPDIR/EFI/BOOT/bootia32.efi
            sed -i 's/--/intel_idle.max_cstate=1 --/g' $TEMPDIR/boot/grub/grub.cfg
            }

            function createzip {
            cd $TEMPDIR
            zip -ry $ISOPATH/$ISOFILENAME.zip .
            removetempdir
            successfulmessage
            }

            function successfulmessage {
            echo "+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------"
            echo "| Done creating the Live USB zip-file! "
            echo "| Now copy the contents of this zip-file to a fat32 formatted USB stick. "
            echo "+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------"
            }

            checkroot
            checkfreespace
            checkpartitiontype
            unzipiso
            unsquash
            addstuff2squash
            makesquash
            addstuff2iso
            createzip

            exit 0


            To use, copy the text into a file, save it as whatever you like, for example iso2zip, download any 64-bit Ubuntu iso (tested by me for 16.04, 16.10 and 17.04) and place the iso file and the script file in the same directory where you have at least 8GB free space. Run



            chmod u+x iso2zip               # or whatever you named the file
            sudo ./iso2zip name-of-iso.iso # replace with the correct name


            It will repack the iso as a zip file. Insert a spare USB flash drive and identify it with lsblk. Let's assume it is /dev/sdc (you must correct this and use the right name!) If the drive has mounted filesystems, unmount them (eg udisksctl unmount -b /dev/sdc1) Run these commands from the directory where the iso.zip file is, or use your own favourite method to make a bootable USB:



            Please note that this destroys all data on /dev/sdc



            sudo apt install p7zip-full                    
            sudo sgdisk --zap-all /dev/sdc
            sudo sgdisk --new=1:0:0 --typecode=1:ef00 /dev/sdc
            sudo mkfs.vfat -F32 /dev/sdc1
            sudo mount -t vfat /dev/sdc1 /mnt
            sudo 7z x name.of.file.iso.zip -o/mnt/ # use correct name!
            sudo umount /mnt


            On the X205TA, from powered off, switch on and hit F2 to bring up the UEFI menu and turn off secure boot if not done already. To boot from USB, either select it in the boot order from here, or start again and hit esc to get the boot menu and select the USB. Select Try Ubuntu and connect to WiFi (it will work). Run the installer selecting whatever options you like. Reboot when done.



            After installation, edit the config file for GRUB to pass a boot parameter to prevent freezing:



            sudo nano /etc/default/grub


            Change



            GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash"


            to



            GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash intel_idle.max_cstate=1"


            Save, exit, run



            sudo update-grub


            For sound run the code from harryharryharry's post here to install a kernel that supports it:



            wget ftp://x205ta.myftp.org:1337/kernel/kernel-sound-64bit.tar
            tar xf kernel-sound-64bit.tar
            sudo ./install-sound-kernel.sh -v


            or compile yourself



            TODO: make hibernation work with sound support kernel. (it works with the stock kernels with some tweaks- see my answer here)



            For brightness controls see workaround






            share|improve this answer















            If you have access to an existing Linux system on the X205TA or any other device, I highly recommend using one of harryharryharry's scripts to prepare installation media. The most up-to-date version supports many distros and has the option to create a bootable USB for you. I use an old and much shorter version of the script and make the bootable myself.



            NB: USB tethering to an Android device is usually effective for gaining internet access before wifi has been set up on this device. USB wifi adapters sometimes worked for me.



            Here's the script (written by harryharryharry and made available on Ubuntu Forums)



            #!/bin/bash

            set -e
            set -u

            ISOFILENAME=$1
            ISOPATH=$(pwd)
            ISO=$ISOPATH/$ISOFILENAME
            TEMPDIR=$(mktemp -d -p $ISOPATH)

            function checkroot {
            if [ "$EUID" -ne 0 ]
            then
            echo "Please run as root"
            removetempdir
            exit 1
            else
            echo "You are root, continuing..."
            fi
            }

            function checkfreespace {
            if [ $(df -hk $ISOPATH|tail -n1|awk '{print $4}') -gt 6000000 ]
            then
            echo "Enough free space, continuing..."
            else
            echo "Not enough free space, move script and iso to a directory with more than 6GB free space and try again"
            removetempdir
            exit 2
            fi
            }

            function checkpartitiontype {
            if [ $(df -Thk $ISOPATH|tail -n1|awk '{print $2}') = "vfat" ] || [ $(df -Thk $ISOPATH|tail -n1|awk '{print $2}') = "ntfs" ]
            then
            echo "Wrong partition type: move the script and iso to a partition that supports group/ownership"
            removetempdir
            exit 3
            else
            echo "Partition type correct, continuing"
            fi
            }

            function unzipiso {
            7z x $ISO -o$TEMPDIR
            }

            function removetempdir {
            cd $ISOPATH
            rm -rf $TEMPDIR
            }

            function unsquash {
            pushd $TEMPDIR/casper
            unsquashfs filesystem.squashfs
            popd
            }

            function addstuff2squash {
            mkdir -p $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/etc/modprobe.d/
            echo "blacklist btsdio" >> $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/etc/modprobe.d/blacklist.conf
            mkdir -p $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/etc/systemd/system/suspend.target.wants
            cat > $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/etc/systemd/system/suspend.target.wants/root-resume.service << "EOF"
            [Unit]
            Description=Local system resume actions
            After=suspend.target

            [Service]
            Type=simple
            ExecStart=/bin/bash /usr/bin/elan-fix

            [Install]
            WantedBy=suspend.target
            EOF
            cat > $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/usr/bin/elan-fix << "EOF"
            #!/bin/sh

            rmmod elan_i2c
            modprobe elan_i2c
            EOF
            chmod +x $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/usr/bin/elan-fix
            cat > $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/lib/firmware/brcm/brcmfmac43340-sdio.txt << "EOF"
            manfid=0x2d0
            prodid=0x0653
            vendid=0x14e4
            devid=0x4386
            boardtype=0x0653
            boardrev=0x1203
            boardnum=22
            macaddr=02:0A:F7:2A:3B:4C
            sromrev=3
            boardflags=0x0090201
            xtalfreq=37400
            nocrc=1
            ag0=255
            aa2g=1
            aa5g=1
            ccode=ALL
            pa0itssit=0x20
            pa0b0=6747
            pa0b1=-808
            pa0b2=-178
            tssifloor2g=69
            rssismf2g=0xf
            rssismc2g=0x8
            rssisav2g=0x1
            cckPwrOffset=3
            rssismf5g=0xf
            rssismc5g=0x7
            rssisav5g=0x3
            pa1lob0=5659
            pa1lob1=-693
            pa1lob2=-178
            tssifloor5gl=93
            pa1b0=5172
            pa1b1=-671
            pa1b2=-212
            tssifloor5gm=77
            pa1hib0=5320
            pa1hib1=-663
            pa1hib2=-179
            tssifloor5gh=74
            rxpo5g=0
            maxp2ga0=0x4E
            cck2gpo=0x0000
            ofdm2gpo=0x42000000
            mcs2gpo0=0x2222
            mcs2gpo1=0x7662
            maxp5ga0=0x46
            maxp5gla0=0x46
            maxp5gha0=0x46
            ofdm5gpo=0x52222222
            ofdm5glpo=0x52222222
            ofdm5ghpo=0x52222222
            mcs5gpo0=0x0000
            mcs5gpo1=0x8550
            mcs5glpo0=0x0000
            mcs5glpo1=0x8550
            mcs5ghpo0=0x0000
            mcs5ghpo1=0x8550
            swctrlmap_2g=0x00080008,0x00100010,0x00080008,0x011010,0x11f
            swctrlmap_5g=0x00020002,0x00040004,0x00020002,0x011010,0x2fe
            gain=32
            triso2g=8
            triso5g=8
            loflag=0
            iqlocalidx5g=40
            dlocalidx5g=70
            iqcalidx5g=50
            lpbckmode5g=1
            txiqlopapu5g=0
            txiqlopapu2g=0
            dlorange_lowlimit=5
            txalpfbyp=1
            txalpfpu=1
            dacrate2xen=1
            papden2g=1
            papden5g=1
            gain_settle_dly_2g=4
            gain_settle_dly_5g=4
            noise_cal_po_2g=-1
            noise_cal_po_40_2g=-1
            noise_cal_high_gain_2g=73
            noise_cal_nf_substract_val_2g=346
            noise_cal_po_5g=-1
            noise_cal_po_40_5g=-1
            noise_cal_high_gain_5g=73
            noise_cal_nf_substract_val_5g=346
            cckpapden=0
            paparambwver=1
            EOF
            curl http://sprunge.us/SZET | base64 -d > $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/lib/firmware/brcm/brcmfmac43340-sdio.bin
            curl http://sprunge.us/XIKF | base64 -d > $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/lib/firmware/brcm/BCM43341B0.hcd
            cat > $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/etc/systemd/system/multi-user.target.wants/btattach.service << "EOF"
            [Unit]
            Description=Btattach

            [Service]
            Type=simple
            ExecStart=/usr/bin/btattach --bredr /dev/ttyS1 -P bcm
            ExecStop=/usr/bin/killall btattach

            [Install]
            WantedBy=multi-user.target
            EOF
            echo "hci_uart" >> $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/etc/modules
            }

            function makesquash {
            mksquashfs $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/ $TEMPDIR/casper/filesystem.squashfs -noappend -always-use-fragments
            rm -rf $TEMPDIR/casper/squashfs-root/
            }

            function addstuff2iso {
            mkdir -p $TEMPDIR/EFI/BOOT
            curl http://sprunge.us/PYNY |base64 -d > $TEMPDIR/EFI/BOOT/bootia32.efi
            sed -i 's/--/intel_idle.max_cstate=1 --/g' $TEMPDIR/boot/grub/grub.cfg
            }

            function createzip {
            cd $TEMPDIR
            zip -ry $ISOPATH/$ISOFILENAME.zip .
            removetempdir
            successfulmessage
            }

            function successfulmessage {
            echo "+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------"
            echo "| Done creating the Live USB zip-file! "
            echo "| Now copy the contents of this zip-file to a fat32 formatted USB stick. "
            echo "+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------"
            }

            checkroot
            checkfreespace
            checkpartitiontype
            unzipiso
            unsquash
            addstuff2squash
            makesquash
            addstuff2iso
            createzip

            exit 0


            To use, copy the text into a file, save it as whatever you like, for example iso2zip, download any 64-bit Ubuntu iso (tested by me for 16.04, 16.10 and 17.04) and place the iso file and the script file in the same directory where you have at least 8GB free space. Run



            chmod u+x iso2zip               # or whatever you named the file
            sudo ./iso2zip name-of-iso.iso # replace with the correct name


            It will repack the iso as a zip file. Insert a spare USB flash drive and identify it with lsblk. Let's assume it is /dev/sdc (you must correct this and use the right name!) If the drive has mounted filesystems, unmount them (eg udisksctl unmount -b /dev/sdc1) Run these commands from the directory where the iso.zip file is, or use your own favourite method to make a bootable USB:



            Please note that this destroys all data on /dev/sdc



            sudo apt install p7zip-full                    
            sudo sgdisk --zap-all /dev/sdc
            sudo sgdisk --new=1:0:0 --typecode=1:ef00 /dev/sdc
            sudo mkfs.vfat -F32 /dev/sdc1
            sudo mount -t vfat /dev/sdc1 /mnt
            sudo 7z x name.of.file.iso.zip -o/mnt/ # use correct name!
            sudo umount /mnt


            On the X205TA, from powered off, switch on and hit F2 to bring up the UEFI menu and turn off secure boot if not done already. To boot from USB, either select it in the boot order from here, or start again and hit esc to get the boot menu and select the USB. Select Try Ubuntu and connect to WiFi (it will work). Run the installer selecting whatever options you like. Reboot when done.



            After installation, edit the config file for GRUB to pass a boot parameter to prevent freezing:



            sudo nano /etc/default/grub


            Change



            GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash"


            to



            GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash intel_idle.max_cstate=1"


            Save, exit, run



            sudo update-grub


            For sound run the code from harryharryharry's post here to install a kernel that supports it:



            wget ftp://x205ta.myftp.org:1337/kernel/kernel-sound-64bit.tar
            tar xf kernel-sound-64bit.tar
            sudo ./install-sound-kernel.sh -v


            or compile yourself



            TODO: make hibernation work with sound support kernel. (it works with the stock kernels with some tweaks- see my answer here)



            For brightness controls see workaround







            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited Nov 20 '17 at 12:19









            derHugo

            2,29021430




            2,29021430










            answered May 21 '17 at 19:52









            ZannaZanna

            50.6k13135241




            50.6k13135241













            • @Ben no there isn't a don't missing - you need a Linux system to do this!

              – Zanna
              May 22 '17 at 7:33













            • @Ben You can use another Linux system if you have access to one. Anyway, I am mostly installing over the current Linux system on the device :)

              – Zanna
              May 22 '17 at 7:47











            • @Ben does this edit make it any clearer?

              – Zanna
              May 22 '17 at 7:59



















            • @Ben no there isn't a don't missing - you need a Linux system to do this!

              – Zanna
              May 22 '17 at 7:33













            • @Ben You can use another Linux system if you have access to one. Anyway, I am mostly installing over the current Linux system on the device :)

              – Zanna
              May 22 '17 at 7:47











            • @Ben does this edit make it any clearer?

              – Zanna
              May 22 '17 at 7:59

















            @Ben no there isn't a don't missing - you need a Linux system to do this!

            – Zanna
            May 22 '17 at 7:33







            @Ben no there isn't a don't missing - you need a Linux system to do this!

            – Zanna
            May 22 '17 at 7:33















            @Ben You can use another Linux system if you have access to one. Anyway, I am mostly installing over the current Linux system on the device :)

            – Zanna
            May 22 '17 at 7:47





            @Ben You can use another Linux system if you have access to one. Anyway, I am mostly installing over the current Linux system on the device :)

            – Zanna
            May 22 '17 at 7:47













            @Ben does this edit make it any clearer?

            – Zanna
            May 22 '17 at 7:59





            @Ben does this edit make it any clearer?

            – Zanna
            May 22 '17 at 7:59











            0














            I'm a noob and thanks to you all I can now enjoy to use that wonderful laptop with ubuntu 18.04. (Special thanks to Harry )



            For all the rookies here comes the simplest way to make it :




            • create a bootable usb stick with Multisystem (http://liveusb.info/dotclear/) with the distrib you like
              -Plugin a usb wifi dongle + the bootable stick you just created
              -press F2 multiple times while X205Ta is waking up
              -disable secure boot in the boot menu + make sure usb config is on EHCI + set up first boot on the flash drive you created
              -During the install set up a connexion to your wifi network so the install program can download "some stuff" that will allow grub-ia386 to get installed in /target/ (without the internet connexion you will see an error like "unable to install grub-ia386 into /target/)


            After this you'll have a pretty ubuntu naked (without wifi, sound, bluetooth, and freezing).



            Now for wifi and freeze avoïdance follow the step above



            For the sound i recomand following this: No sound on my Asus X205TA (it's the simplest way to do it, and moreover harry's github is not accessible anymore) It will fix bluetooth too.



            And you are good to GO with the best ultra light laptop experience ever !!!



            Thanks Again to you all linux community !
            Freedom is awsome !






            share|improve this answer




























              0














              I'm a noob and thanks to you all I can now enjoy to use that wonderful laptop with ubuntu 18.04. (Special thanks to Harry )



              For all the rookies here comes the simplest way to make it :




              • create a bootable usb stick with Multisystem (http://liveusb.info/dotclear/) with the distrib you like
                -Plugin a usb wifi dongle + the bootable stick you just created
                -press F2 multiple times while X205Ta is waking up
                -disable secure boot in the boot menu + make sure usb config is on EHCI + set up first boot on the flash drive you created
                -During the install set up a connexion to your wifi network so the install program can download "some stuff" that will allow grub-ia386 to get installed in /target/ (without the internet connexion you will see an error like "unable to install grub-ia386 into /target/)


              After this you'll have a pretty ubuntu naked (without wifi, sound, bluetooth, and freezing).



              Now for wifi and freeze avoïdance follow the step above



              For the sound i recomand following this: No sound on my Asus X205TA (it's the simplest way to do it, and moreover harry's github is not accessible anymore) It will fix bluetooth too.



              And you are good to GO with the best ultra light laptop experience ever !!!



              Thanks Again to you all linux community !
              Freedom is awsome !






              share|improve this answer


























                0












                0








                0







                I'm a noob and thanks to you all I can now enjoy to use that wonderful laptop with ubuntu 18.04. (Special thanks to Harry )



                For all the rookies here comes the simplest way to make it :




                • create a bootable usb stick with Multisystem (http://liveusb.info/dotclear/) with the distrib you like
                  -Plugin a usb wifi dongle + the bootable stick you just created
                  -press F2 multiple times while X205Ta is waking up
                  -disable secure boot in the boot menu + make sure usb config is on EHCI + set up first boot on the flash drive you created
                  -During the install set up a connexion to your wifi network so the install program can download "some stuff" that will allow grub-ia386 to get installed in /target/ (without the internet connexion you will see an error like "unable to install grub-ia386 into /target/)


                After this you'll have a pretty ubuntu naked (without wifi, sound, bluetooth, and freezing).



                Now for wifi and freeze avoïdance follow the step above



                For the sound i recomand following this: No sound on my Asus X205TA (it's the simplest way to do it, and moreover harry's github is not accessible anymore) It will fix bluetooth too.



                And you are good to GO with the best ultra light laptop experience ever !!!



                Thanks Again to you all linux community !
                Freedom is awsome !






                share|improve this answer













                I'm a noob and thanks to you all I can now enjoy to use that wonderful laptop with ubuntu 18.04. (Special thanks to Harry )



                For all the rookies here comes the simplest way to make it :




                • create a bootable usb stick with Multisystem (http://liveusb.info/dotclear/) with the distrib you like
                  -Plugin a usb wifi dongle + the bootable stick you just created
                  -press F2 multiple times while X205Ta is waking up
                  -disable secure boot in the boot menu + make sure usb config is on EHCI + set up first boot on the flash drive you created
                  -During the install set up a connexion to your wifi network so the install program can download "some stuff" that will allow grub-ia386 to get installed in /target/ (without the internet connexion you will see an error like "unable to install grub-ia386 into /target/)


                After this you'll have a pretty ubuntu naked (without wifi, sound, bluetooth, and freezing).



                Now for wifi and freeze avoïdance follow the step above



                For the sound i recomand following this: No sound on my Asus X205TA (it's the simplest way to do it, and moreover harry's github is not accessible anymore) It will fix bluetooth too.



                And you are good to GO with the best ultra light laptop experience ever !!!



                Thanks Again to you all linux community !
                Freedom is awsome !







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                answered May 22 '18 at 19:21









                AlbatAlbat

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