(Without disabling everything else)
My main laptop is a Lenovo X1 Yoga 2nd Gen running Manjaro KDE Plasma. Lovely machine and does what I want it to do. As a Yoga device, it has a touchscreen, which I don't use a lot and have often thought of disabling.
The other day, the laptop had the wrong kind of drop, which has cracked the touchscreen in the corner. This hasn't affected the display at all but has messed up the touchscreen input so that it keeps getting random signals that trigger events, which was sufficiently intrusive to need to turn off the touchscreen
The first thing I found was this from the Manjaro Forum. Tl;dr, disable the module that powers the touchscreen with sudo modprobe -r usbhid
and make it permanent by creating a blacklist at /etc/modprobe.d/blacklist/wacom
that contains the following:
blacklist wacom
blacklist usbhid
and restart.
This worked fine when just on the laptop, but I have a multi-monitor desktop setup that has a USB mouse and keyboard, and when I came to start work this morning, neither worked. Enabling usbhid
in the blacklist just brought the spurious touches back.
There was going to be something that creates rules to selectively allow USB devices, and that something is USBGuard.
The Arch Wiki documents it well, but basically install with pacman -Sy usbguard
(or your software manager of choice), and create your ruleset as root
with usbguard generate-policy > /etc/usbguard/rules.conf
.
This lists all your connected devices as allowed, including the touchscreen:
allow id 056a:50b6 serial "" name "Pen and multitouch sensor" hash "B1HYEaAtN9VpnKbIK5GQeZFfg3XN7EAAeQUvTx5zIhk=" parent-hash "jEP/6WzviqdJ5VSeTUY8PatCNBKeaREvo2OqdplND/o=" via-port "1-10" with-interface { 03:00:00 03:00:00 } with-connect-type "not used"
To disable it, change allow
to block
to stop it being processed, or reject
to stop the device being loaded at all. At the moment I have it set to block
.
Start USBGuard with systemctl start usbguard
and enable it on boot with systemctl enable usbguard
.
This stopped the touchscreen responding but kept the USB keyboard and mouse working. I haven't tested it across a reboot yet but I can't see why it won't continue to work.
@simon_greenwood it’s worth looking to see if you can disable it in the bios, that’s how I permanently got rid of mine after a bunch of xinput faff originally.
Very good point, but it doesn’t seem to be accessible in mine – it’s a Lenovo Yoga X1 and I think they assume the touchscreen is a given.
@simon_greenwood Thanks for sharing. That's a great solution. I had a Thinkpad touchscreen gone wild and ended up opening the laptop to unseat the flatcable responsible for the touch part.