(In reply to Mark Syms from comment #251)
> Not exactly surprising when the change that fixed then gets reverted out of
> the kernel. Seems like Intel trying to force obsolescence of these systems.
what has to be done to bring the fix back into the kernel code?
I mean at the first glance it was only for `Samsung hardware`, so I guess it does not affect any other vendors/hardwares.
The mentioned commit looks like just a `code cleanup` changes. but I'm not familiar with the kernel code.
Shall I file a new issue or could this be opened again?
(In reply to Mark Syms from comment #251)
> Not exactly surprising when the change that fixed then gets reverted out of
> the kernel. Seems like Intel trying to force obsolescence of these systems.
what has to be done to bring the fix back into the kernel code?
I mean at the first glance it was only for `Samsung hardware`, so I guess it does not affect any other vendors/hardwares.
The mentioned commit looks like just a `code cleanup` changes. but I'm not familiar with the kernel code.
Shall I file a new issue or could this be opened again?