System Dma Controller Driver Acer Aspire One Cloudbook 11

Posted by3 years ago

Is there a driver required for this device? DMA Controller. Windows 7 Home Premium 64bit Acer Aspire 5820T Hard drive blew so had to.

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Acer Aspire Cloudbook: Cheap laptop that runs Linux reasonably well

I just got Ubuntu running pretty well on an Acer Aspire Cloudbook and thought I'd share some tips for other folks that might want to try the same thing. This is also partly for me to remember what I did in case I ever need to reinstall it again.

For some background the machine I'm using is an Acer Aspire Cloudbook, specifically model A01-131-C1G9. You can see specs and details here: http://www.acer.com/ac/en/US/content/series/aspireonecloudbook11 Don't get your hopes up though as this is squarely in the budget / barebones laptop territory. It has a slow dual core Celeron, 2GB of memory, fixed size 32GB eMMC memory module, and low end 11' 1366x768 screen. As far as I know there is no way to upgrade anything on the laptop. However the one redeeming quality of this device is its cost, I picked one up brand new at a Microsoft store for $120 (yes, $120). It's also pretty small and on-par with the size and weight of other 11' laptops like the Macbook Air.

As a Windows machine this laptop is pretty bad. It could just barely browse the web, and if you had anything open it would slow to a crawl. The eMMC is super, super slow and Windows seems to constantly be accessing it and slowing the machine down even more. It honestly feels like using a Windows machine circa ~2000 where you'd double click an app then go get a coffee and maybe 5 minutes later it would be running.

Anyways the point of this post is that I found this little laptop runs Linux pretty well. I used Ubuntu 15.10 and almost everything worked right out of the box with it. I imagine any distro that has a recent 4.x kernel and Intel device support (Intel video, wifi, etc.) would run it fine.

To get Ubuntu loaded I followed the steps laid out in this great blog post: http://bernaerts.dyndns.org/linux/74-ubuntu/340-ubuntu-install-acer-aspire-cloudbook-431 The gist is to go into the BIOS with F2 and move the USB drive up to the top boot priority. Then reboot and install Ubuntu 15.10 as normal from a USB stick. However on reboot the machine will fail to load Ubuntu because secure boot is enabled (ugh), but it's a simple matter of going back into the BIOS and flipping a few levers to confirm that the Ubuntu OS on the drive is what you want secure boot to use.

There are a few gotchas and issues I found and wanted to mention how to get around:

One
  • During installation the touchpad doesn't seem to work. As a workaround plug in a USB mouse. The keyboard works fine, but I think the touchpad has a more advanced driver that isn't included in the installer (but does seem to be included in the 15.10 install once it's running). I also noticed in the BIOS there is an option to adjust how the touchpad interfaces with the device, and perhaps changing it from the advanced I2C interface to something more legacy would work but I didn't try it.

  • The screen brightness up and down special keys don't work. I tried a few things but can't figure out how to make these work. The other special keys like sleep, sound mute, volume up/down work perfectly though. For brightness I installed this handy indicator brightness panel for Unity that gives a simple drop down to change brightness: http://codevanrohde.nl/wordpress/?p=128

  • I did notice a random lockup after using the machine for a bit, and I suspect it's related to power management and this bug in the kernel with baytrail devices: https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=109051 I applied the fix mentioned here to add the intel_idle.max_cstate=2 value to the kernel command line in GRUB: http://askubuntu.com/questions/689617/ubuntu-15-10-freezes-on-acer-aspire-e11?rq=1 I can't say for sure this is the fix, but I haven't seen a lockup since then. As an aside, wow that is a really nasty kernel bug and kind of sad that it's getting no traction at all given the number of folks hitting it.

  • Closing the lid turns off the screen but doesn't seem to put the device to sleep. I don't really know where to start figuring this one out, but luckily pressing the fn-F4 sleep hotkey does very quickly put the device to sleep. Then you can close the lid and be good to go. Annoying, but liveable.

Otherwise the machine seems to work great with Ubuntu. It is orders of magnitude faster than when it was running Windows and is easily usable as a basic development machine with a browser, good text editor, etc.

Wireless, bluetooth, graphics, etc. seem to work flawlessly. The touchpad feels good and has basics like tap to click, natural scrolling, and two finger tap for right click working fine. The boot up speed is impressively fast, easily under 10 seconds. After an install of 15.10 and a few small apps I still have about 19 gigabytes free on the eMMC--plenty of space for a basic development machine. The SD card reader works great to add on more space if necessary.

System Dma Controller Driver Acer Aspire One Cloudbook 11 Inch

I haven't used it a lot to really see how battery life goes, but Ubuntu tells me with a full charge and some moderate use I have a bit over 6 hours of life left. In Windows it was only getting about 7 hours of use, so that's not too bad of a hit and still good enough for a work day.

Driver

Overall if anyone is looking for an inexpensive and highly portable Linux laptop I would give the Acer Aspire Cloudbook a look, especially if you grab one for under $150. This machine is replacing an older Acer C720 chromebook I wiped and ran Linux fulltime on but ran into problems with flakiness on an upgraded SSD. The 32 gigs of onboard storage for the Cloudbook are just enough to be useful for basic development tasks.

93% Upvoted
Posted by3 years ago
System Dma Controller Driver Acer Aspire One Cloudbook 11
Archived

Acer Aspire Cloudbook: Cheap laptop that runs Linux reasonably well

I just got Ubuntu running pretty well on an Acer Aspire Cloudbook and thought I'd share some tips for other folks that might want to try the same thing. This is also partly for me to remember what I did in case I ever need to reinstall it again.

For some background the machine I'm using is an Acer Aspire Cloudbook, specifically model A01-131-C1G9. You can see specs and details here: http://www.acer.com/ac/en/US/content/series/aspireonecloudbook11 Don't get your hopes up though as this is squarely in the budget / barebones laptop territory. It has a slow dual core Celeron, 2GB of memory, fixed size 32GB eMMC memory module, and low end 11' 1366x768 screen. As far as I know there is no way to upgrade anything on the laptop. However the one redeeming quality of this device is its cost, I picked one up brand new at a Microsoft store for $120 (yes, $120). It's also pretty small and on-par with the size and weight of other 11' laptops like the Macbook Air.

As a Windows machine this laptop is pretty bad. It could just barely browse the web, and if you had anything open it would slow to a crawl. The eMMC is super, super slow and Windows seems to constantly be accessing it and slowing the machine down even more. It honestly feels like using a Windows machine circa ~2000 where you'd double click an app then go get a coffee and maybe 5 minutes later it would be running.

Anyways the point of this post is that I found this little laptop runs Linux pretty well. I used Ubuntu 15.10 and almost everything worked right out of the box with it. I imagine any distro that has a recent 4.x kernel and Intel device support (Intel video, wifi, etc.) would run it fine.

To get Ubuntu loaded I followed the steps laid out in this great blog post: http://bernaerts.dyndns.org/linux/74-ubuntu/340-ubuntu-install-acer-aspire-cloudbook-431 The gist is to go into the BIOS with F2 and move the USB drive up to the top boot priority. Then reboot and install Ubuntu 15.10 as normal from a USB stick. However on reboot the machine will fail to load Ubuntu because secure boot is enabled (ugh), but it's a simple matter of going back into the BIOS and flipping a few levers to confirm that the Ubuntu OS on the drive is what you want secure boot to use.

There are a few gotchas and issues I found and wanted to mention how to get around:

  • During installation the touchpad doesn't seem to work. As a workaround plug in a USB mouse. The keyboard works fine, but I think the touchpad has a more advanced driver that isn't included in the installer (but does seem to be included in the 15.10 install once it's running). I also noticed in the BIOS there is an option to adjust how the touchpad interfaces with the device, and perhaps changing it from the advanced I2C interface to something more legacy would work but I didn't try it.

  • The screen brightness up and down special keys don't work. I tried a few things but can't figure out how to make these work. The other special keys like sleep, sound mute, volume up/down work perfectly though. For brightness I installed this handy indicator brightness panel for Unity that gives a simple drop down to change brightness: http://codevanrohde.nl/wordpress/?p=128

  • I did notice a random lockup after using the machine for a bit, and I suspect it's related to power management and this bug in the kernel with baytrail devices: https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=109051 I applied the fix mentioned here to add the intel_idle.max_cstate=2 value to the kernel command line in GRUB: http://askubuntu.com/questions/689617/ubuntu-15-10-freezes-on-acer-aspire-e11?rq=1 I can't say for sure this is the fix, but I haven't seen a lockup since then. As an aside, wow that is a really nasty kernel bug and kind of sad that it's getting no traction at all given the number of folks hitting it.

  • Closing the lid turns off the screen but doesn't seem to put the device to sleep. I don't really know where to start figuring this one out, but luckily pressing the fn-F4 sleep hotkey does very quickly put the device to sleep. Then you can close the lid and be good to go. Annoying, but liveable.

System Dma Controller Driver Acer Aspire One Cloudbook 11 Reviews

Otherwise the machine seems to work great with Ubuntu. It is orders of magnitude faster than when it was running Windows and is easily usable as a basic development machine with a browser, good text editor, etc.

Wireless, bluetooth, graphics, etc. seem to work flawlessly. The touchpad feels good and has basics like tap to click, natural scrolling, and two finger tap for right click working fine. The boot up speed is impressively fast, easily under 10 seconds. After an install of 15.10 and a few small apps I still have about 19 gigabytes free on the eMMC--plenty of space for a basic development machine. The SD card reader works great to add on more space if necessary.

I haven't used it a lot to really see how battery life goes, but Ubuntu tells me with a full charge and some moderate use I have a bit over 6 hours of life left. In Windows it was only getting about 7 hours of use, so that's not too bad of a hit and still good enough for a work day.

Overall if anyone is looking for an inexpensive and highly portable Linux laptop I would give the Acer Aspire Cloudbook a look, especially if you grab one for under $150. This machine is replacing an older Acer C720 chromebook I wiped and ran Linux fulltime on but ran into problems with flakiness on an upgraded SSD. The 32 gigs of onboard storage for the Cloudbook are just enough to be useful for basic development tasks.

System Dma Controller Driver Acer Aspire One Cloudbook 11 Specs

93% Upvoted