6

I cannot get changing the display brightness to work. I have a Lenovo IdeaPad 5 with AMD Ryzen 4800u CPU and integrated Vega graphics.

I tried the following solutions: Grub property acpi_backlight, xbacklight, changing backlight directly in /sys/class/backlight/..., xgamma, xrandr, gdbus and setpci.

I followed instructions on these answers, but none of them worked:

I can see, that values for e.g. xrandr or xgamma or backlight are set, but they have no effect on the notebooks display.

I guess that it has something to do with AMD drivers but I don't know...

Now I don't know in wich direction to search further. Maybe it's a driver or kernel thingy.

So, can anyone help? :)

6 Answers 6

9

The issue is related to the Renoir graphics in AMD 4000 series processors. Here is a Phoronix article that gives a short description of it. Starting from Linux kernel 5.5, Renoir support was marked as no longer experimental. Kernel 5.7 is the newest kernel, so updating to that provides support for your processor.

I have a laptop with a 4500U. Upgrading to 5.7 helped fix every issue besides the brightness control.

The following steps to install the kernel comes from this answer which is a general version of an ubuntuforums.org post from user lykwydchykyn. The following steps contain some additions that I found useful when installing the kernel:

  1. Go here (sorted by most recent build): https://kernel.ubuntu.com/~kernel-ppa/mainline/?C=N;O=D

  2. Select the build you want, then navigate to the amd64/ directory.

  3. Download 3 (maybe 4) debs to a folder somewhere:

     linux-headers-VERSION-NUMBER_all.deb
     linux-headers-VERSION-NUMBER_amd64.deb
     linux-image-VERSION-NUMBER_amd64.deb
     linux-image-extra-VERSION-NUMBER_amd64.deb    # if available
    
  4. Install the debs with whatever package manager front-end you use, or use these commands:

     cd /path/to/folder/where/you/put/the/debs
     sudo dpkg -i *.deb
    

An additional resource is the Ubuntu wiki which explains how to install an upstream kernel with generic instructions. This is good for learning that you choose either the generic kernel or the lowlatency kernel and don't download all of them (like I did at first): https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Kernel/MainlineBuilds

3
  • My config is an acer swift 3 with amd ryzen 7 4700u. It worked after upgrading the kernel of ubuntu 20.4 from 5.4 to 5.8.7 with "mainline" tool. I can now use the keyboard brightness adjust key or brightness software. Thanks ! Sep 6, 2020 at 21:24
  • Dell Inspiron 5505, ryzen 4500U, same backlight issue with Ubuntu 20.04. The backlight slider shows but the brightness was not adjustable. Instead of manually upgrading the kernel, I simply upgraded to Ubuntu 20.10 which comes with linux kernel 5.8, and now the brightness settings are working.
    – dmi_
    Dec 30, 2020 at 23:36
  • Actually be careful of the build you choose. I have chosen a build that didn't even detect the monitor after booting. solved only by choosing another build.
    – Maaddy
    Aug 3, 2021 at 14:03
1

upgrade the kernel to 5.7 thats ging to work.

2
  • 2
    Welcome to Ask Ubuntu! Although this answer is already potentially valuable, I recommend that you edit it to give details about how to upgrade the kernel to 5.7, and also to say why this is expected to work (even if only to say you did it and found it to work). Jun 11, 2020 at 20:22
  • @robot21: Thanks for your reply. I also would like to know, why upgrading to kernel 5.7 would work. If you could explain that in your answer, I will mark that as the correct one. Also I tested it and it worked.
    – Der Alex
    Jun 14, 2020 at 17:02
1

I use kernel 5.7.1 on this notebook and display brightness is adjustable. Look at https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Kernel/MainlineBuilds for instructions.

1

As mentioned in answers above, you have to update your kernel version to some newer one. I found very handy and free tool - https://github.com/bkw777/mainline

1

I also have this problem on a Lenovo ThinkPad T14, AMD Ryzen 5 PRO 4650U and Integrated AMD Radeon Graphics.

The only thing working for me was the Brightness Controller, after trying everything from modifying the GRUB with "acpi_backlight" through updating the BIOS (from 1.05 to 1.09) to some newer kernels (5.8.11 and 5.7.19). Still looking for a proper solution though, since Brightness Controller sort of greys out the screen when dimming (i.e. the contrast is decreasing slightly).

Update 2020_12_04:

Actually, the "5.4.0-54" kernel seems to have this fixed and I don't need Brightness Controller anymore (although it is an awesome little tool for many other purposes). The only problem now was that after a reboot, the brightness level wasn't remembered. To solve that I have two scripts, running as services:

  1. Run just before shutdown - stores the current brightness level into a file: echo $(brightnessctl -c backlight g) > lastBrigh.txt

  2. Run just after the login screen appears:

lastBrigh=$(<"lastBrigh.txt")

for i in {1..200}; do
    if [ $(brightnessctl -c backlight g) = $lastBrigh ]; then
        break
    else
        sudo brightnessctl -c backlight s $lastBrigh
        sleep 0.1
    fi
done

Which keeps trying to set the brightness to the last recorded level for ~20 seconds and then gives up. By the way, the "5.4.0-56" kernel is a doom again (desktop environment won't start), so I'll skip that one.

0

I have the same problem. Technically update to any kernel beyond 5.5 should fix it as the support for Renior gpu is in stable. But for me I have tried 5.7.0/1/2 and none of those kernels were able to fix the brightness changing thing. And the blank screen dimming works but not manual changes. Hope someone could help with the issue.

Update: After updating the BIOS to ver17 everything works perfectly now. Using kernel 5.7.1

3

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .