[KERNEL][GPL][N4] franco.Kernel - r217

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franciscofranco

Recognized Developer
Dec 9, 2010
24,724
136,402
Carcavelos
Hi all.

Current builds (starting with r217) are for Lollipop 5.1 only.
Builds (starting with r214 up to r216) are Android 5.0 Lollipop only.
KitKat is dead and the last stable release was r213, which you're free to use if you're still on 4.4.4.

Download:
boot image:
http://kernels.franco-lnx.net/Nexus4/5.1/
zips:
http://kernels.franco-lnx.net/Nexus4/5.1/zips

Installation:
fastboot flash boot boot_name_img
or
flash the .zip in the recovery

Source:
https://github.com/franciscofranco/mako/tree/lollipop-mr1

Changelog:
http://kernels.franco-lnx.net/Nexus4/5.1/appfiles/changelog.xml

franco.Kernel updater Free apk: http://xdaforums.com/showthread.php?t=1867127

Got any questions that you couldn't find after searching?
FAQ: http://xdaforums.com/showthread.php?t=2532422
 
Last edited:

digweed4me

Senior Member
Oct 22, 2010
1,734
391
dallas, tx
Thanks for this Franco u are the one man.
I am running stock and Monitoring CPU state through CPU spy and lowest cpu is 1016 and highest being 1512 .it seems to change between 1016 and 1512 no deep sleep no 384 no 729. I think battery drain is cause CPU not going below 1012.

Sent from my Nexus 4 using Tapatalk 2 Beta-6
 
Last edited:

franciscofranco

Recognized Developer
Dec 9, 2010
24,724
136,402
Carcavelos
Thanks for this Franco u are the one man.
I am running stock and Monitoring CPU state through CPU spy and lowest cpu is 1016 and highest being 1512 .it seems to change between 1016 and 1512 no deep sleep no 384 no 729. I think battery drain is cause CPU not going below 1012.

Sent from my Nexus 4 using Tapatalk 2 Beta-6

No deep sleep means you have an app keeping your device awake.
 

resynx

Senior Member
Jun 14, 2010
3,231
1,288
Glad to see you here Franco! Looking forward to flashing your works :)
 

tobias_r33per

Member
Dec 6, 2007
40
29
Nice to see you here,

Now i am lucky enought to have one of these mythical devices :D , i have tested the kernel after unlocking the bootloader.

Product info:

PRODUCT: mako
VARIANT: mako 16GB
HW VERSION: - rev_10
BOOTLOADER VERSION: MAKOZ10L
SECUREBOOT - ENABLED
LOCKSTATE- unlocked

Both Flashing and boot do not work on my device:

Flashing Results:
sending 'zimage' (5649 KB)...
OKAY [ 0.358s]
writing 'zimage'...
FAILED (remote: partition table doesn't exist)
finished. total time: 0.363s

Result: Wont flash?

Fastboot remote boot:
creating boot image...
creating boot image - 5787648 bytes
downloading 'boot.img'...
OKAY [ 0.358s]
booting...
OKAY [ 0.154s]
finished. total time: 0.515s

Result: Uploads and creates sucessful temp boot.img, however the system hangs on Google Splash not further.
 

franciscofranco

Recognized Developer
Dec 9, 2010
24,724
136,402
Carcavelos
Nice to see you here,

Now i am lucky enought to have one of these mythical devices :D , i have tested the kernel after unlocking the bootloader.

Product info:



Both Flashing and boot do not work on my device:

Flashing Results:


Result: Wont flash?

Fastboot remote boot:


Result: Uploads and creates sucessful temp boot.img, however the system hangs on Google Splash not further.

Ok, thank you :)

I'll get back to you in 10m with a full boot.img.
 

yokken

Senior Member
Dec 29, 2010
635
126
Flashed the boot.img, then hit "Start" in fastboot. Now sitting at a blank (but on) screen.

Edit: Powered off, turned on, yeah, doesn't boot.
 

yokken

Senior Member
Dec 29, 2010
635
126
I downloaded the new one and entered "fastboot flash boot boot.img" then hit Start and it sent me to the blank screen again. I just went back into fastboot and typed "fastboot boot boot.img" so we'll see if it works.
 

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  • 2376
    Hi all.

    Current builds (starting with r217) are for Lollipop 5.1 only.
    Builds (starting with r214 up to r216) are Android 5.0 Lollipop only.
    KitKat is dead and the last stable release was r213, which you're free to use if you're still on 4.4.4.

    Download:
    boot image:
    http://kernels.franco-lnx.net/Nexus4/5.1/
    zips:
    http://kernels.franco-lnx.net/Nexus4/5.1/zips

    Installation:
    fastboot flash boot boot_name_img
    or
    flash the .zip in the recovery

    Source:
    https://github.com/franciscofranco/mako/tree/lollipop-mr1

    Changelog:
    http://kernels.franco-lnx.net/Nexus4/5.1/appfiles/changelog.xml

    franco.Kernel updater Free apk: http://xdaforums.com/showthread.php?t=1867127

    Got any questions that you couldn't find after searching?
    FAQ: http://xdaforums.com/showthread.php?t=2532422
    197
    Color Calibration for the Nexus 4

    Thanks for all those of you who provided feedback on my color calibration settings using r72 and Franco's app.

    Someone messaged me to ask what the thinking was behind my settings, and I thought it might be worth posting the reasons here too so everyone can understand the why behind them.

    Because this thread moves so quickly, here are the settings I'm using again, so you don't have to go searching for them:

    R 175
    G 175
    B 175

    Whites 20
    Mids 100
    Blacks 255
    Contrast 0
    Brightness 0
    Saturation 200
    Grays 0

    Screen Brightness 50%

    These settings provide a VERY close approximation to my calibrated PC monitor when studying my photos in detail (I'm a cinematographer and photographer by profession - see here: http://www.visceralpsyche.com).

    A lot of you love the settings, but some of you also say they are too dark, or wonder why you can't put a lower screen brightness and compensate by increasing the RGB values to let more light through.

    To understand why I chose my settings, you have to remember that our displays are made up of two parts - the backlight (screen brightness control in Android) and the LCD panel itself (adjusted by Franco's app), which the backlight shines through.

    What I found with my testing was that with RGB set to 255, specular highlights (and white edges in general) tended to blow out, causing color fringing artifacts. This is easily seen as pink or yellow edges to what should be pure white images. As I pulled back the RGB values, this fringing began to get smaller, until by my settings of 175 there was no longer any color fringing to my whites. Think of it as a form of highlight recovery. By pulling the clipped channels down equally, I found the point at which the values didn't overflow the hardware limitation of the LCD panel itself.

    Once this was done, I went into the gamma interface and began looking for where the whites and blacks ran close to the limit, but not over. I adjusted the screen brightness to where I could distinguish the bottom and top values as individual shades. THis was close enough to 50% that I set it to 50% and tweaked it to be perfect.

    Then I played with the Mid and Gray values until middle grey was indeed in the middle, so that the tone curve wasn't biased to one direction.

    From there, I adjusted saturation to match my PC monitor's saturation level.

    After all that, I arrived at the values I posted above, and now have a screen which faithfully replicates the tonality of my photos without any artifacts or strange tone curves.

    If you want to test these values (or your own) I recommend the following images. The calibration chart is one I found online a long time ago, which is useful for seeing the top and bottom end of white and black, to make sure your screen is showing you all the proper values:

    calibration-chart.gif


    The photo is my own, and is useful because I know exactly how I processed it and therefore that it touches both the white end of the spectrum (the highlighted side of her face, with values at precisely full white) and the black end of the spectrum (the fine detail in her hair, which is very black but not crushed in the details):

    IMG_1362a_framed_sRGB_25.jpg


    You can also use her facial tonality to make sure you see a smooth transition through the grays, not steps.

    It's also black and white, which means that any color fringing you see is entirely due to artifacts introduced by errors in the color or gamma settings and not the backlight of the screen).

    Both images are hosted on my own server, so there are no compression artifacts introduced by the forum.

    Again - my aim with these settings is to give you a proper, reference screen that displays accurate colors without any artifacts or errors. Brightness is set to match a proper reference display (120cd/m2) and may be brighter or darker than you prefer.

    If you value absolute battery savings over accurate color, then these settings may not be for you. That's perfectly ok of course. But for me, in my line of work, I value accuracy over the little bit of battery savings I might get by lowering my screen brightness, so if that's your goal too, then you'll find these colors are a good basis for having the best possible photo viewing screen on any phone.

    Because I can tell you, I have never had a more accurate screen than the Nexus 4 when it comes to looking at my photos, when combined with Franco's fantastic color interface and kernel.

    Hope this helps!

    Cheers,

    Paul Leeming
    Writer/Director/Cinematographer
    Visceral Psyche Films
    http://www.visceralpsyche.com
    162
    Really sad to read some posts after all the work I put on this device for longer than an year. Anyway here's r204 that I've been working on for a while...

    * Introduce a new bunch of tunables for my Hotplug driver and squash all code improvements from Hammerhead's version
    * Uses a power efficient system workqueue to allow the cores to stay longer times on idle
    * Several key subsystems are now using a newer and more advanced kernel thread infrastructure to allow cores to allow for better power savings
    * Improved thermal throttle code
    * Merged all upstream 3.4.y patches
    * Merged misc patches

    Have fun.
    157
    I couldn't resist. My girlfriend is a bit mad at me, but I told her I would buy her some nice drinks after dinner so while she's happy I managed to get the new Kernel sources, build fresh with the new ramdisk and I only had time to merge my custom changes:

    - Cleaned config from crap
    - Added my Hotplug driver (bye mpdecision)
    - Added my custom changes to the Thermal driver (bye thermald)
    - Added my custom changes to Interactive Governor (and made it default)

    And thats pretty much it. I don't have more time now, (we'll see tomorrow, I rented a hut in the beach for tomorrow for me to work a bit on the Kernel/App while getting some nice sun and my GF won't get mad eheh - Android, GF, drinks, sun and beach, who doesn't love this. I'll take a picture tomorrow and share with you all). Attached is r170 for 4.3 with the changes I mentioned above.

    Have fun guys.
    140
    Ok I have a small gift for all of you that run FK for almost a year on this device. I always said that I would never implement any of those functionalities to wake the device without pressing the power button - point is that LG G2 has brought this feature, Oppo N1 has something very similar and... I've been getting emails that users are having the Power Buttons wore off. Initially I implemented this on the new Nexus 7 as a challenge and to have some fun. Couple code lines later I had the functionality working fine and dandy. The device deep sleeps and the only thing that is being kept active is the digitizer for this to work. I sent it to a couple of people and they enjoyed it specially because it worked better than other Kernels that had implemented similar options. Good, so lets try and implement it on Mako. It's 100% my code, pretty simple, and easy to understand. Please refer to git (I just pushed the code) for how it works in the touch driver and input subsystem.

    By default this option is disabled, but you can enable it by doing:

    echo 1 > /sys/module/lge_touch_core/parameters/touch_to_wake

    After this is enabled you can power up the display by double tapping just like the LG G2, and you can swipe from whenever you want on the display and it will power up. There is a 100ms (0.1s) minimum interval where the algorithm will detect touch events so filter ghost touches and some unintended shít. It seems very low value, but when we're touching the screen the digitizer is capturing hundreds of touch events every minute, and dozens every second. So this works as a filter.

    If you're using touch_control and you want to test this, please disable the module and reboot your device or you'll most likely get into some **** problems. And the same thing other way around.

    Oh and interactive is back to default, it just gives me more consistence results all around.

    Attached goes two test zips, flash, enable the touch thingy, test, and report back.