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Lenovo Ideapad 320-14IAP

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Revision as of 20:31, March 27, 2019 by Dan-erik (talk | contribs) (How to install Funtoo on the Lenovo Ideapad 320-14IAP laptop)
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== Introduction ==

Lenovo laptops are known to be difficult for Linux installations in general. Additionally even within the Ideapad 320 model there is a lot of variation, which is why I made a specific page for the Lenovo Ideapad 320-14IAP. It may not work the same with other Ideapad 320 models.

After trying a number of different distributions, the only one I got to work on the Lenovo Ideapad 320-14IAP without altering default BIOS settings was openSUSE Tumbleweed. All other distributions, including Funtoo, would appear to install fine up until trying to install GRUB when the system freezes. From what I have found it is therefore necessary to make some changes in the BIOS if you want to install a different distribution than openSUSE; e.g. Funtoo.

Getting Started

To access BIOS settings on the Lenovo Ideapad 320 there is not any standard key press available (e.g. F1, Alt-F2, etc). Instead, there is a tiny hole on the left side of the laptop where you insert a paper clip or similar to press a hidden button. In the manual, this is known as the "NOVO button", and the function is the same as the power button that it turns on your computer except that it brings up a menu where you can choose to enter a boot menu or change BIOS settings.

After you enter the BIOS the changes I have made was to turn off secure boot and set UEFI to "Legacy support".

Installation

You can follow the general Funtoo installation guide in most respects. I will only outline the differences I made below. I used the Manjaro Live on a USB stick to get started (Manjaro did not install successfully BTW).

My Ideapad 320-14IAP has a Pentium N4200 processor belonging to the Apollo lake family. As far as I can see there is no arch suitable for this so just use the general_64 arch.

Partitioning

I followed https://www.funtoo.org/Install/MBR_Partitioning to setup MBR partions on my 128 GB SSD. 256MB boot, 4GB swap, the rest ext4. I'm sure other options will work too if you have a preference.

Bootloader

After following the installation guide until you get to https://www.funtoo.org/Install/Bootloader, follow instructions for MBR install of GRUB. I added --debug to the options to observe anything that might go wrong, but following these small changes above everything should go without a hitch:

(chroot) # grub-install --target=i386-pc --no-floppy --debug /dev/sda


Finishing up

When you reach the finishing up stage and reboot, GRUB should load just fine and send you to a command line. I enabled the profiles for KDE Plasma 5 with audio,video,media mix-ins and had to do one more thing before continuing: removing a USE flag from one package:

(chroot) # mkdir /etc/portage/package.use
(chroot) # echo "gnome-base/librsvg -vala" > /etc/portage/package.use/librsvg

You could of course just add -vala to make.conf or something such, but I like to keep my settings sorted according to what requires them like I did above.

Dropbox tips

Like I said above, I chose to go with the KDE Plasma 5 this time for my desktop environment, but the Ideapad is not a powerful laptop so you might want to look at a leaner option like XFCE. Just in case, I have previously set up a dropbox environment under Funtoo that worked really well for me, so here are some tips on how that might look. There is no mix-in for dropbox, so you will need to do it yourself all the way, and many choices I made may look different if you make them. Any USE-flags I set was a couple years back or so, and there I didn't go through them to try if it is exactly the same today. Let me know if you have issues.

This takes up from the general installation guide after chroot into your funtoo environment (and setting up your locale if you are not US). One way to optimize your system is to find the CPU flags that you will put in make.conf later, make a note of the following output:

(chroot) # emerge -quDN app-portage/cpuid2cpuflags
(chroot) # cpuid2cpuflags

Now edit make.conf and add the use-flags below. Some of these are my own preference and not necessary - you can try your way forward by removing some you don't want to use yourself.

(chroot) # cp /etc/portage/make.conf.example /etc/portage/make.conf
(chroot) # nano -w /etc/portage/make.conf

Modify make.conf according to:

CFLAGS="-march=native -O2 -pipe" CXXFLAGS="${CFLAGS}" CPU_FLAGS_X86= "3dnow 3dnowext aes avx avx2 fma3 fma4 mmx mmxext popcnt sse sse2 sse3 sse4_1 sse4_2 ssse3 xop" XORGUSE="cairo compositor encode faac ffmpeg gif glamor gpl jpeg jpeg2k lm_sensors mp3 mp4 mpeg ogg openal opencl opengl openssl opentype opus pdf png postproc proprietary-codecs qt qt5 raw sdl speex svg theora truetype v4l vaapi vdpau vorbis vpx -wayland -wayland-compositor X x264 x265 xorg xvfb xvid zlib" USE="${CPU_FLAGS_X86} ${XORGUSE} aac alsa amd64 amr bluetooth cpudetection cups dbus dvd exif ipv6 llvm nls -systemd threads udev usb" ACCEPT_LICENSE="* -@EULA OPERA-2014" AUTOCLEAN="yes" EMERGE_DEFAULT_OPS="${EMERGE_DEFAULT_OPS} --quiet-build=y --with-bdeps=y" VIDEO_CARDS="intel i965 vesa" FFTOOLS="aviocat cws2fws ffescape ffeval ffhash fourcc2pixfmt graph2dot ismindex pktdumper qt-faststart sidxindex trasher" INPUT_DEVICES="evdev synaptics wacom" LINGUAS="de en fi fr it sv sv_SE th" L10N="${LINGUAS}" USE="ruby_targets_ruby24"

When make.conf is taken care of, I set up my root account like so:

(chroot) # nano /root/.bashrc

.bashrc for root user should contain something like:

export NUMCPUS=$(nproc) export NUMCPUSPLUSONE=$(( NUMCPUS + 1 )) export MAKEOPTS="-j${NUMCPUSPLUSONE} -l${NUMCPUS}" export EMERGE_DEFAULT_OPTS="--jobs=${NUMCPUSPLUSONE} --load-average=${NUMCPUS}"

This .bashrc should then be copied to your local user as well, along with the .bash_profile after copying it to the root user.

(chroot) # cp -v /etc/skel/.bash_profile /root/

Hardware clock in local time - necessary if Windows dual-boot

(chroot) # nano /etc/conf.d/hwclock

local # changed from UTC clock_hctosys="YES" clock_systohc="YES"

(chroot) # rc-service hwclock restart
(chroot) # rc-update add hwclock boot
(chroot) # passwd

--- Update the system ---

Some specific new USE flags are needed, due to our changes in make.conf we set these on a package basis before we sync and update the system.

(chroot) # mkdir /etc/portage/package.use
(chroot) # echo "x11-libs/libxcb xkb" > /etc/portage/package.use/libxcb
(chroot) # echo "dev-libs/libpcre pcre16" > /etc/portage/package.use/libpcre
(chroot) # echo "dev-libs/libpcre2 pcre16" > /etc/portage/package.use/libpcre2
(chroot) # echo "media-libs/mesa -vaapi -llvm -opencl" > /etc/portage/package.use/mesa
(chroot) # echo "sys-devel/llvm clang" > /etc/portage/package.use/llvm
(chroot) # echo "media-libs/harfbuzz -graphite" > /etc/portage/package.use/harfbuzz 
(chroot) # ego sync
(chroot) # emerge -quDN --with-bdeps=y @world

Install kernel and GRUB

(chroot) # emerge -q debian-sources boot-update
(chroot) # grub-install --target=i386-pc --no-floppy --debug /dev/sda
(chroot) # ego boot update

Configure Network

The name of your ethernet adapter may be different from enp0s25.

(chroot) # cd /etc/init.d
(chroot) # ln -s net.lo net.enp0s25
(chroot) # rc-update add net.enp0s25 default
(chroot) # emerge -q linux-firmware net-wireless/wpa_supplicant net-misc/dhcpcd sys-apps/ifplugd net-misc/netifrc
(chroot) # bzip2 -d /usr/share/doc/wpa_supplicant_2.6-r1/wpa_supplicant.conf.bz2
(chroot) # cp /usr/share/doc/wpa_supplicant_2.6-r1/wpa_supplicant.conf /etc/wpa_supplicant/
(chroot) # nano /etc/wpa_supplicant/wpa_supplicant.conf

update_config=1 #this may be a bad idea, but it's supposed to update config and save settings automatically country=SV autoscan=periodic:60

--- add this at the end if you know the SSID of an open WiFi network without password, such as school or café. network={ ssid="Wifi" key_mgmt=NONE }

(chroot) # nano /etc/conf.d/net

modules="dhcp wpa_supplicant" wpa_supplicant_eth0="-iwlwifi" ifplugd_enp0s25="..." config_enp0s25="dhcp"

(chroot) # rc-update add dhcpcd default
(chroot) # rc-update add wpa_supplicant default
(chroot) # nano -w /etc/conf.d/hostname

hostname="laptop"

(chroot) # nano -w /etc/hosts

127.0.0.1 localhost KVISlaptop KVISlaptop.local

Create my own user:

(chroot) # useradd -m -G users,wheel,audio,video,usb,portage,lp -s /bin/bash --comment “me” username
(chroot) # passwd username
(chroot) # exit
(chroot) # cd /
(chroot) # umount -lR funtoo
(chroot) # reboot

Network Time Protocol:

(chroot) # emerge net-misc/ntp
(chroot) # nano /etc/conf.d/ntp-client

NTPCLIENT-OPTS="-s -b -u \

  0.pool.ntp.org \
  1.pool.ntp.org \
  2.pool.ntp.org \
  3.pool.ntp.org"
(chroot) # rc-update add ntp-client default
(chroot) # rc

--- Desktop Environment ---

Install some basic apps:

(chroot) # emerge -q app-misc/screen sudo htop app-admin/sysklogd sys-process/cronie sys-fs/dosfstools app-admin/logrotate sys-apps/{usbutils,hwinfo} app-portage/{eix,gentoolkit,euses}
(chroot) # nano /etc/sudoers

%wheel ALL=(ALL) ALL %wheel ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: /usr/bin/wpa_gui

(chroot) # rc-update add sysklogd default
(chroot) # rc-update add cronie default
(chroot) # eix-update

Install X.org:

(chroot) # epro show
(chroot) # epro flavor desktop
(chroot) # epro mix-ins X audio media print
(chroot) # emerge -quDN --with-bdeps=y @world xorg-x11
(chroot) # nano /etc/X11/xorg.conf

---These xorg.conf settings were based on a different laptop than the Ideapad 320-14IAP and I have not tried them yet. Will update if I do get around to trying it, or you can let me know if something should be different.

Section "Module"

  Load "dri"
  Load "i2c"
  Load "bitmap"
  Load "ddc"
  Load "int10"
  Load "vbe"
  Load "glx"
  Load "extmod"

EndSection Section "Device"

  Identifier "intelVGA"

---remove: Driver "intel" # using the intel driver prevents X/SDDM from starting

  Option "NoAccel" "False"
  Option "DRI" "True"

---remove: Option "AccelMethod" "uxa" #using this option causes massive lag EndSection Section "Screen"

  Identifier "Monitor"
  Device "intelVGA"
  Monitor "StandardMonitor"
  DefaultDepth 24
  Subsection "Display"
     Viewport 0 0
     Depth 24
     Modes "1920x1080" "1280x720" "1024x768"
  EndSubsection

EndSection Section "DRI"

  Group "video"
  Mode 0666

EndSection Section "Extensions"

  Option "Composite" "On"

EndSection

Install Openbox and Compton:

SDDM and stuff

(chroot) # echo "app-text/xmlto text" > /etc/portage/package.use/xmlto
(chroot) # usermod -a -G video sddm
(chroot) # emerge -quDN media-libs/alsa-lib sys-auth/consolekit dbus sys-fs/eudev net-print/cups x11-misc/sddm alsa-tools
(chroot) # nano /etc/modprobe.d/alsa.conf

--- Make HDMI second card (not default output) options snd cards_limit=2 options snd-hda-intel id=PCH index=0 options snd-hda-intel id=HDMI index=1

(chroot) # rc-update add dbus default
(chroot) # rc-update add alsasound boot
(chroot) # rc-update add cupsd default
(chroot) # rc-update add consolekit default
(chroot) # nano /etc/udev/rules.d/10-usb-drives.rules

(replace --- with # to comment away that row, it messes with the wiki to put it first) --- Auto-mount USB drives when you plug them in and unmount when you remove !/bin/sh --- start at sdb to ignore the system hard drive KERNEL!="sd[b-z]*", GOTO="exit" ACTION=="add", PROGRAM!="/sbin/blkid %N", GOTO="exit" --- import some useful filesystem info as variables IMPORT{program}="/sbin/blkid -o udev -p %N" --- get the label if present, otherwise assign one based on device/partition ENV{ID_FS_LABEL}!="", ENV{dir_name}="%E{ID_FS_LABEL}" ENV{ID_FS_LABEL}=="", ENV{dir_name}="flash_drive_%k" --- create the dir in /media and symlink it to /mnt ACTION=="add", RUN+="/bin/mkdir -p '/media/%E{dir_name}'" --- filesystem-specific mount options (777/666 dir/file perms for vfat) ACTION=="add",ENV{mount_options_vfat}="gid=100,dmask=000,fmask=111,utf8,flush,rw,noatime,users" --- add device to /etc/fstab ACTION=="add", ENV{ID_FS_TYPE}=="vfat", RUN+="/bin/sed -i '$a\/dev/%k /media/%E{dir_name} vfat %E{mount_options_vfat} 0 0' /etc/fstab" --- mount device ACTION=="add", ENV{ID_FS_TYPE}=="vfat", RUN+="/bin/mount -t auto -o %E{mount_options_vfat} /dev/%k '/media/%E{dir_name}'"

clean up after device removal

ACTION=="remove", ENV{dir_name}!="", RUN+="/bin/umount -l '/media/%E{dir_name}'", RUN+="/bin/rmdir '/media/%E{dir_name}'" ACTION=="remove", ENV{ID_FS_TYPE}!="", RUN+="/bin/sed -i '/\/dev\/%k /d' /etc/fstab" --- exit LABEL="exit"

Restart udev to load rules:

(chroot) # /etc/init.d/udev --nodeps restart
(chroot) # sddm --example-config > /etc/sddm.conf
(chroot) # nano /etc/sddm.conf
(chroot) # gpasswd -a sddm video
(chroot) # nano /etc/conf.d/xdm

DISPLAYMANAGER="sddm"

(chroot) # rc-update add xdm default
(chroot) # rc

Openbox and config:

(chroot) # echo "x11-wm/openbox imlib nls svg" > /etc/portage/package.use/openbox
(chroot) # emerge --ask x11-wm/openbox obconf lxappearance-obconf obtheme
(chroot) # emerge -q playerctl xbacklight
(chroot) # mkdir -p ~/.config/openbox
(chroot) # cp /etc/xdg/openbox/* ~/.config/openbox/

For keyboard buttons that control sound and similar things, they have to be added manually to the openbox files. Here I also use nitrogen to display a desktop wallpaper, and compton:

(chroot) # nano /etc/xdg/openbox/autostart

nitrogen --restore & compton -b -c -r 13 -o 0.39 -l 0 -t 0 -m 0.91 -G --paint-on-overlay --backend xrender --vsync drm &

(chroot) # nano /etc/xdg/openbox/rc.xml

<keybind key="XF86AudioRaiseVolume">

   <action name="Execute">
       <command>amixer set Master 5%+ unmute</command>
   </action>

</keybind> <keybind key="XF86AudioLowerVolume">

   <action name="Execute">
       <command>amixer set Master 5%- unmute</command>
   </action>

</keybind> <keybind key="XF86AudioMute">

   <action name="Execute">
       <command>amixer set Master toggle</command>
   </action>

</keybind> <keybind key="XF86AudioPlay">

   <action name="Execute">
       <command>playerctl play</command>
   </action>

</keybind> <keybind key="XF86AudioPause">

   <action name="Execute">
       <command>playerctl pause</command>
   </action>

</keybind> <keybind key="XF86AudioNext">

   <action name="Execute">
       <command>playerctl next</command>
   </action>

</keybind> <keybind key="XF86AudioPrev">

   <action name="Execute">
       <command>playerctl previous</command>
   </action>

</keybind> <keybind key="XF86MonBrightnessUp">

    <action name="Execute">
      <command>xbacklight +10</command>
    </action>

</keybind> <keybind key="XF86MonBrightnessDown">

    <action name="Execute">
      <command>xbacklight -10</command>
    </action>

</keybind>

Compton:

(chroot) # emerge -q x11-misc/compton
(chroot) # emerge -q x11-misc/nitrogen
(chroot) # emerge -q x11-misc/pcmanfm-qt
(chroot) # emerge -q thunar xfce-base/thunar xfce-extra/thunar-archive-plugin
(chroot) # emerge -q tilda xterm
(chroot) # nano /home/username/.Xresources

---Set Xterm to have default font inconsolata and black background. xterm*faceName: Inconsolata xterm*faceSize: 13 xterm*loginshell: true ---! DOS-box colours... xterm*foreground: rgb:a8/a8/a8 xterm*background: rgb:00/00/00 xterm*color0: rgb:00/00/00 xterm*color1: rgb:a8/00/00 xterm*color2: rgb:00/a8/00 xterm*color3: rgb:a8/54/00 xterm*color4: rgb:00/00/a8 xterm*color5: rgb:a8/00/a8 xterm*color6: rgb:00/a8/a8 xterm*color7: rgb:a8/a8/a8 xterm*color8: rgb:54/54/54 xterm*color9: rgb:fc/54/54 xterm*color10: rgb:54/fc/54 xterm*color11: rgb:fc/fc/54 xterm*color12: rgb:54/54/fc xterm*color13: rgb:fc/54/fc xterm*color14: rgb:54/fc/fc xterm*color15: rgb:fc/fc/fc

---! stop output to terminal from jumping down to bottom of scroll again xterm*scrollTtyOutput: false

Look and feel like icons and screensavers:

(chroot) # emerge -q x11-themes/flatsvg x11-themes/human-icon-theme x11-themes/elementary-xfce-icon-theme kde-frameworks/breeze-icons kde-frameworks/oxygen-icons x11-themes/gnome-icon-theme x11-themes/gnome-icon-theme-extras x11-themes/gnome-icon-theme-symbolic
(chroot) # lxappearance
(chroot) # emerge -q lxqt-base/lxqt-config
(chroot) # mkdir /home/username/.icons/mytheme
(chroot) # cd .icons/mytheme
(chroot) # cp /usr/share/icons/breeze-dark/* .
(chroot) # nano index.theme

[Icon Theme] Name=MyThemeName Comment=This is my theme Inherits=Breeze Dark

(chroot) # ln -s #link some icons that you like
(chroot) # emerge -q tint2
(chroot) # emerge -q volumeicon
(chroot) # emerge -q connman wpa_supplicant bluez
(chroot) # emerge -q x11-misc/qxkb
(chroot) # emerge -q x11-misc/xscreensaver
(chroot) # emerge -q x11-misc/screengrab
(chroot) # emerge -q lximage-qt

Here are some applications that I have been using in this setup:

Dropbox
(chroot) # nano /etc/portage/make.conf
RUBY_TARGETS="ruby24"
(chroot) # emerge -q dropbox thunar-dropbox
(chroot) # nano /etc/conf.d/dropbox

DROPBOX_USERS="username"

(chroot) # rc-update add dropbox default
(chroot) # dropbox start
(chroot) # emerge -q qlipper
(chroot) # echo "app-text/texlive epspdf extra games graphics humanities luatex music png pstricks publishers science truetype xetex xindy X" > /etc/portage/package.use/texlive
(chroot) # echo "app-text/texlive-core xetex" > /etc/portage/package.use/texlive-core
(chroot) # echo "media-libs/harfbuzz fontconfig graphite truetype" > /etc/portage/package.use/harfbuzz
(chroot) # echo "media-libs/gd fontconfig" > /etc/portage/package.use/gd
(chroot) # emerge -q texstudio
(chroot) # emerge -q www-client/firefox
(chroot) # emerge -q kvirc
(chroot) # echo "media-libs/libmypaint gegl introspection nls" > /etc/portage/package.use/libmypaint
(chroot) # echo "media-libs/gexiv2 introspection python" > /etc/portage/package.use/gexiv2
(chroot) # emerge -q gimp
(chroot) # echo "media-gfx/inkscape dbus exif jpeg latex nls openmp visio" > /etc/portage/package.use/inkscape
(chroot) # emerge -q inkscape
(chroot) # emerge -q obs-studio
(chroot) # echo "media-gfx/blender cycles doc -elbeem game-engine jack libav llvm man nls player tiff" > /etc/portage/package.use/blender
(chroot) # emerge -q blender
(chroot) # echo "media-video/vlc alsa bluray dbus dvd ffmpeg jpeg kate mp3 mpeg ogg opengl png qt5 skins svg truetype udev upnp v4l vorbis" > /etc/portage/package.use/vlc
(chroot) # emerge -q vlc
(chroot) # emerge -q smplayer smplayer-themes smplayer-skins
(chroot) # emerge -q clementine
(chroot) # emerge -q audacity
(chroot) # emerge -q layman
(chroot) # layman -L # same as emerge --sync
(chroot) # layman -a gamerlay
(chroot) # layman -S
(chroot) # emerge steam-launcher
(chroot) # usermod -a -G games danerik #<-- Username
(chroot) # echo 'media-libs/libtxc_dxtn abi_x86_32' >> /etc/portage/package.use   #This is said to fix some Dota2 screen problem
(chroot) # emerge media-libs/libtxc_dxtn
(chroot) # #Create menu.xml menu entry for /usr/games/bin/steam
(chroot) # emerge -q gromit-mpx

At this point your dropbox-based desktop environment should be fully setup. Perhaps you need to tweak menu items and such things a bit more. Fonts are worth looking over too. Like I said, the dropbox part of this wiki page is something I used on different hardware, but I think it is worth looking at for a more snappy experience on the Ideapad.