On Thu, Nov 08, 2018 at 04:15:40PM -0500, Theodore Y. Ts'o wrote: > On Thu, Nov 08, 2018 at 06:00:59PM +0000, mario.limoncie...@dell.com wrote: > > > Sortly after 12:30am US/Eastern, I got a low power warning on my > > > system, and the battery power had dropped below 10%. Apparently the > > > laptop was not accepting any charge any more. I tried doing a suspend > > > to ram, and then unsuspended it, and it still wasn't accepting any > > > charge, even though the adapter indicated it was plugged in and > > > supplying power. I then did a power cycle, and still the laptop > > > didn't indicate it was charging with a USB C 45W power supply plugged > > > in. > > > > Just to be clear was this a Dell adapter or another manufacturer? > > > > If it's non-Dell, there could easily be an untested combination of > > controllers > > and one getting into a bad state.
It happened again, just now. Unfortunately I didn't have a Dell charger handy when it did, but it was the same symptoms. One interesting thing that I did discover is that by observing the voltage being negotiated via USB-C PD, using a Satechi USB-C power monitor, I discovered that when the laptop gets into this state, while the laptop is suspended or powered off, it will negotiate to 5 volts at 3 amps (assuming the power supply supports it). So apparently the problem is that the PD controller on the XPS 13 was refusing to negotiate any other voltage *besides* 5 volts. The fact that it could negotiate 3 amps means that it was doing USB-C PD negotiation; it was just doing so... badly. As before, the problem persisted across multiple USB-C power sources, and I could switch between them so long as the laptop was booted into Linux, suspended, or powered off but with a power supply attached. The way the problem got fixed is by unplugging the power supply with the laptop in a powered of state. Apparently that (and only that) will reset the problem in the EC or USB-C PD controller. If there is something that I should try next time (other than trying to use a Dell USB-C power supply; I'll start carrying it around in the future), please let me know. I couldn't find any obvious EC Logs that I could download, unfortunately. Firmware versions: <tytso.root@cwcc> {/usr/projects/linux/ext4-fsverity}, level 2 (master) 1008# fwupdmgr get-devices XPS 13 9370 System Firmware DeviceId: 8a21cacfb0a8d2b30c5ee9290eb71db021619f8b Guid: 7ceaf7a8-0611-4480-9e30-64d8de420c7c Guid: 43ea5588-d9a4-5031-8ad3-308045302d6b Guid: 230c8b18-8d9b-53ec-838b-6cfc0383493a Plugin: uefi Flags: internal|updatable|require-ac|supported|registered|needs-reboot Version: 0.1.5.1 VersionLowest: 0.1.5.1 Icon: computer Created: 2018-11-10 KXG50ZNV1T02 NVMe TOSHIBA 1024GB DeviceId: f954c7acdf5fab61aeaca1cd71d29ea5ade6992f Guid: 4d0aed03-a30c-52c6-99e7-a8977797c3d9 Guid: ad9fe8f7-cdc4-52c9-9fea-31b6f4988ffa Serial: Y77S10C8TYAT Summary: NVM Express Solid State Drive Plugin: nvme Flags: internal|updatable|require-ac|registered|needs-reboot Vendor: Toshiba America Info Systems VendorId: NVME:0x1179 Version: AADA4102 Icon: drive-harddisk Created: 2018-11-10 XPS 13 9370 Thunderbolt Controller DeviceId: 8885ea984074c84d636e5458d6b6d12649df2e5d Guid: 4eeb9d07-a96c-56d6-92d3-4a23ee7a6e4a Summary: Unmatched performance for high-speed I/O Plugin: thunderbolt Flags: internal|updatable|supported|registered Vendor: Dell VendorId: TBT:0x00D4 Version: 33.00 Icon: computer Created: 2018-11-10