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-   -   Monitor is not detected (https://displaylink.org/forum/showthread.php?t=67823)

txan2 08-01-2021 10:47 AM

Monitor is not detected
 
Greetings,

I have an ASUS ZenScreen MB16AC portable monitor which is supposed to work with DisplayLink as in here:
Code:

https://www.displaylink.com/products/find?cat=2&br=-1&usbc=1
I have tried everything but it still not working:

1. Install evdi:
Code:

# dkms status
evdi, 1.9.1, 5.12.14-arch1-1, x86_64: installed

2. Install displaylink:
Code:

$ systemctl status displaylink
displaylink.service - DisplayLink Manager Service
    Loaded: loaded (/usr/lib/systemd/system/displaylink.service; enabled; vendor preset: disabled)
    Active: active (running) since Sun 2021-07-04 22:08:28 CEST; 14min ago
    Process: 489 ExecStartPre=/sbin/modprobe evdi (code=exited, status=0/SUCCESS)
  Main PID: 490 (DisplayLinkMana)
      Tasks: 14 (limit: 38078)
    Memory: 11.1M
        CPU: 398ms
    CGroup: /system.slice/displaylink.service
            └─490 /usr/lib/displaylink/DisplayLinkManager

3. Add Xorg configuration:
Code:

Section "OutputClass"
    Identifier  "DisplayLink"
    MatchDriver "evdi"
    Driver      "modesetting"
    Option      "AccelMethod" "none"
    Option      "PageFlip" "false"
EndSection

4. Attach the portable monitor and restart the computer;
dmesg doesn't show DisplayLink:
Code:

[    1.226512] usb 4-2: new SuperSpeed Gen 1 USB device number 2 using xhci_hcd
[    1.258506] usb 4-2: New USB device found, idVendor=0bda, idProduct=0412, bcdDevice= 0.00
[    1.258509] usb 4-2: New USB device strings: Mfr=1, Product=2, SerialNumber=0
[    1.258510] usb 4-2: Product: 4-Port USB 3.0 Hub
[    1.258511] usb 4-2: Manufacturer: Generic

and lsusb shows some USB hub thingy:
Code:

$ lsusb
Bus 004 Device 009: ID 0bda:0412 Realtek Semiconductor Corp. 4-Port USB 3.0 Hub

My system:
Code:

$ uname -r
5.12.14-arch1-1
$ pacman -Qi xorg-server | grep Version
Version        : 1.20.11-1

What can I do next?

karly 08-12-2021 05:17 PM

I think this might be because you have a kernel version higher than what the pre-built driver works with. I am using the 5.13.9 kernel right now and monitors aren't detected (everything else works though). From what I can tell from their github evdi repo, 5.12 kernel support was added in March, but not sure if it was part of the evdi version that is shipped with the 5.4 display link driver.

Ref: https://github.com/DisplayLink/evdi/commits/devel

karly 08-12-2021 06:05 PM

After having the same issue myself by using a mainline 5.13 kernel in Pop OS, I managed to get the monitors working by having a look at the guide for porting the driver to other distros here: https://support.displaylink.com/know...r-to-other-lin

A small summary though (only tested in PopOs, but should probably work in most Debian/Ubuntu based distros):

1. Make sure you uninstall the current EVDI driver. Do this by calling the currently installed DisplayLink installer file with a "uninstall" argument. For example:
Code:

sudo ./displaylink-driver-5.4.0-55.153.run uninstall
2. Extract the content of the installer file. For example:
Code:

./displaylink-driver-5.4.0-55.153.run --noexec --keep
3. A folder will now exist in the same path as your installer file. CD into it like so: (replace x.x.xx with the real numbers)
Code:

cd ./displaylink-driver-5.4.0-55.153
4. Replace the evdi.tar.gz file that exists there. I just downloaded a tarball from the latest dev branch from their Github like so:
Code:

curl -L https://github.com/DisplayLink/evdi/archive/refs/heads/devel.tar.gz -o evdi.tar.gz
5. Because the structure of the tar.gz file from Github has an extra folder in its root level, you also need to modify the install_evdi() function in the displaylink-installer.sh file. Look for this:

Code:

if ! tar xf "$TARGZ" -C "$EVDI"; then
and replace with:

Code:

if ! tar xf "$TARGZ" -C "$EVDI" --strip-components=1; then
6. Run the installer script as root: sudo ./displaylink-installer.sh and it should install and compile the very latest EVDI driver which is compatible with linux kernels up til and including 5.14.

Gaboto 08-18-2021 05:20 PM

I did exactly the steps Karly said, but it doesn't work. When I connect the displaylink docking station to my USB and i check de status of the doplaylink-driver service, I get:
displaylink-driver.service - DisplayLink Driver Service
Loaded: loaded (/lib/systemd/system/displaylink-driver.service; static; vendor preset: enabled)
Active: activating (auto-restart) (Result: exit-code) since Wed 2021-08-18 13:12:56 -03; 4s ago
Process: 4262 ExecStartPre=/bin/sh -c modprobe evdi || (dkms install $(ls -t /usr/src | grep evdi | head -n1 | sed -e "s:-:/:") && modprobe evdi) (code=exited, status=1/FAILURE)

karly 08-23-2021 06:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Gaboto (Post 92491)
I did exactly the steps Karly said, but it doesn't work. When I connect the displaylink docking station to my USB and i check de status of the doplaylink-driver service, I get:
displaylink-driver.service - DisplayLink Driver Service
Loaded: loaded (/lib/systemd/system/displaylink-driver.service; static; vendor preset: enabled)
Active: activating (auto-restart) (Result: exit-code) since Wed 2021-08-18 13:12:56 -03; 4s ago
Process: 4262 ExecStartPre=/bin/sh -c modprobe evdi || (dkms install $(ls -t /usr/src | grep evdi | head -n1 | sed -e "s:-:/:") && modprobe evdi) (code=exited, status=1/FAILURE)

Hm, that is too bad, but do you use a Debian or Ubuntu based OS? I know for Fedora an extra step is needed according to this: https://github.com/DisplayLink/evdi/issues/297

Gaboto 08-25-2021 04:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by karly (Post 92521)
Hm, that is too bad, but do you use a Debian or Ubuntu based OS? I know for Fedora an extra step is needed according to this: https://github.com/DisplayLink/evdi/issues/297

I use Ubuntu 20.04

karly 08-26-2021 08:54 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Gaboto (Post 92532)
I use Ubuntu 20.04

I also fixed a missing -L argument in the curl command above though, as pointed out in the mentioned Github thread. If that failed previously it might be worth giving it another try now

cement_head 09-16-2021 01:18 PM

Great! Just found this post via GitHub - and I **think** it worked on Ubuntu 20.04 (no errors). I'm running vanilla Ubuntu with the System76 PPA for a System76 GalagoPro laptop.

Just an FYI for Ubuntu; the two commands should replace the <./> with <bash>.

johnsongw 09-25-2021 09:48 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Gaboto (Post 92532)
I use Ubuntu 20.04

I had encountered similar, or maybe I should say identical issue, on a freshly install Ubuntu 20.04 on Lenovo X13. I am not sure if it's hardware related.

One thing I noticed in common is our laptop detected the new monitor as:

Code:

: new high-speed USB device number 10 using xhci_hcd
: New USB device found, idVendor=0bda, idProduct=5412, bcdDevice= 1.27
: New USB device strings: Mfr=1, Product=2, SerialNumber=0
: Product: 2-Port USB 2.1 Hub
: Manufacturer: Generic
: USB hub found
: 2 ports detected
: new full-speed USB device number 11 using xhci_hcd
: not running at top speed; connect to a high speed hub
: New USB device found, idVendor=0bda, idProduct=5450, bcdDevice= 0.06
: New USB device strings: Mfr=17, Product=18, SerialNumber=19
: Product: BillBoard Device
: Manufacturer: Realtek

This is puzzling. Based on the documentation it seems that the monitor's USB vendor ID should be 17e9

Code:

https://support.displaylink.com/knowledgebase/articles/683672-my-displaylink-device-does-not-work-on-ubuntu
I have tried the github manner, as well as installing the vanilla displaylink-driver-5.4.1-55.174.run. same observation.

Would greatly appreciate any advice / idea / pointer. Thank you.

PS: forgot to mention, the vanilla displaylink driver and the same Asus monitor works on a Dell laptop, fresh Ubuntu 20.04 installation. lsusb shows correct vendor ID on that Dell laptop

sdjf 10-21-2021 10:33 AM

I am dealing with monitor issues as well, with a quite different scenario, on a totally different system, but it seems to me that the kernel is not seeing the monitor's DisplayLink chip, or it would show in lsusb.

My experience is with a DoubleSight monitor on ArchLInuxArm, which is quite different than your systems, but still, I would expect the monitor to show up, even if it is not attached to the correct driver.

Instead, it is shown as a hub? Possibly it is not getting enough power? Is it plugged in to a hub? Have you seen lsusb output, and especially lsusb -t output, for someone who has gotten this monitor to work on Ubuntu? I bet that in the device tree, DisplayLink will show up.

Also, try lsusb -t on your system without the DisplayLink plugged in - If lsusb -t looks the same, then it is not getting seen by the kernel.

Another possibility is that the device and product ID are not interpreted properly, it should be seen as an I/O device even if it is not claimed by any driver, I believe.

EDIT: Did a bit of googling, did not come up with an answer but it seems important to look at information about "Billboard Devices". There may be power issues, because of how various USB standards work. Also look at Power Delivery issues (abbreviated PD). It may require some sort of docking station to resolve them.


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