This branch was created from the version merged into the wireless-drivers-next repo, which is in the 5.16 kernel. IF YOU USE DRIVERS FROM THIS REPO FOR KERNELS 5.16+, TOU MUST BLACKLIST THE KERNEL VERSIONS!!!! FAILING TO DO THIS WILL RESULT IN ALL MANNER OF STRANGE ERRORS.
This code will build on any kernel 5.7 and newer as long as the distro has not modified any of the kernel APIs. IF YOU RUN UBUNTU, YOU CAN BE ASSURED THAT THE APIs HAVE CHANGED. NO, I WILL NOT MODIFY THE SOURCE FOR YOU. YOU ARE ON YOUR OWN!!!!!
I am working on fixing builds on older kernels.
This repository includes drivers for the following card:
Realtek 8852AE, 8852BE, and 8853CE
If you are looking for a driver for chips such as RTL8188EE, RTL8192CE, RTL8192CU, RTL8192DE, RTL8192EE, RTL8192SE, RTL8723AE, RTL8723BE, or RTL8821AE, these should be provided by your kernel. If not, then you should go to the Backports Project (https://backports.wiki.kernel.org/index.php/Main_Page) to obtain the necessary code.
You will need to install "make", "gcc", "kernel headers", "kernel build essentials", and "git".
For Ubuntu: You can install them with the following command
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install make gcc linux-headers-$(uname -r) build-essential git
For Fedora: You can install them with the following command
sudo dnf install kernel-headers kernel-devel
sudo dnf group install "C Development Tools and Libraries"
For openSUSE: Install necessary headers with
sudo zypper install make gcc kernel-devel kernel-default-devel git libopenssl-devel
For Arch: After installing the necessary kernel headers and base-devel,
git clone https://aur.archlinux.org/rtw89-dkms-git.git
cd rtw89-dkms-git
makepkg -sri
If any of the packages above are not found check if your distro installs them like that.
For all distros:
git clone git://github.com/lwfinger/rtw89.git
cd rtw89
make
sudo make install
For all distros:
git clone git://github.com/lwfinger/rtw89.git
cd rtw89
make
sudo make sign-install
You will be promted a password, please keep it in mind and use it in next steps. Reboot to activate the new installed module. In the MOK managerment screen:
- Select "Enroll key" and enroll the key created by above sign-install step
- When promted, enter the password you entered when create sign key.
- If you enter wrong password, your computer won't not bebootable. In this case, use the BOOT menu from your BIOS, to boot into your OS then do below steps:
sudo mokutil --reset
Restart your computer Use BOOT menu from BIOS to boot into your OS In the MOK managerment screen, select reset MOK list Reboot then retry from the step make sign-install
sudo modprobe -rv rtw_8852ae
sudo modprobe -rv rtw_core #These two statements unload the module
Doe to the behavior of the modprobe utility, it takes both to unload.
sudo modprobe -v rtw_8852ae #This loads the module
A single modprobe call will reload the module.
For all distros:
sudo make uninstall
Some BIOSs have trouble changing power state from D3hot to D0. If you have this problem, then
sudo cp suspend_rtw89 /usr/lib/systemd/system-sleep/.
That script will unload the driver before sleep or hibernation, and reload it following resumption.
If it turns out that your system needs one of the configuration options, then do the following:
sudo nano /etc/modprobe.d/<dev_name>.conf
There, enter the line below:
options <driver_name> <<driver_option_name>>=<value>
The available options for rtw89pci are disable_clkreq, disable_aspm_l1, and disable_aspm_l1ss. The available options for rtw89core are debug_mask, and disable_ps_mode
Normally, none of these will be needed; however, if you are getting firmware errors, one or both of the disable_aspm_* options may help. Thay are needed when a buggy BIOS fails to implement the PCI specs correctly.
When your kernel changes, then you need to do the following:
cd ~/rtw89
git pull
make clean
make
sudo make install
;or
sudo make sign-install
Remember, this MUST be done whenever you get a new kernel - no exceptions.
These drivers will not build for kernels older than 5.4. If you must use an older kernel, submit a GitHub issue with a listing of the build errors. Without the errors, the issue will be ignored. I am not a mind reader.
When you have problems where the driver builds and loads correctly, but fails to work, a GitHub issue is NOT the best place to report it. I have no idea of the internal workings of any of the chips, and the Realtek engineers who do will not read these issues. To reach them, send E-mail to linux-wireless@vger.kernel.org. Include a detailed description of any messages in the kernel logs and any steps that you have taken to analyze or fix the problem. If your description is not complete, you are unlikely to get any satisfaction. One other thing - your mail MUST be plain test. HTML mail is rejected.