Mediatek Driver 2023 【Legit | 2024】
A long silence. Then Chen sighed. “The fix was in our internal branch. It did not make the 2023 release. Management cut the schedule.”
“Ship it. I’ll handle MediaTek’s legal noise. And Lena—put a big comment in the code. If any engineer touches this in 2024 without reading your note, they’ll undo the fix.” The phone launched in November 2023. Reviewers praised its “all-day battery life.” No one knew about the zombie driver. No one thanked Lena. mediatek driver 2023
On the eve of the biggest smartphone launch of the year, a senior kernel engineer discovers a “zombie” driver buried in MediaTek’s 2023 codebase—a silent battery killer that could trigger a global recall. Part I: The Phantom Drain It was 11:47 PM on a humid Taipei night when Lena Wei’s third coffee of the hour turned cold. As the lead driver architect for a mid-sized smartphone OEM, she was used to last-minute fire drills. But the bug report labeled #MTK-DISP-2023-ALPHA was different. A long silence
static void mtk_sleepctl_suspend(struct device *dev) { struct mtk_sleepctl *ctl = dev_get_drvdata(dev); /* 2023-10-12: Force clear PM_QoS vote on suspend */ if (ctl->qos_active) { pm_qos_update_request(&ctl->qos_req, PM_QOS_DEFAULT_VALUE); ctl->qos_active = false; dev_info(dev, "Cleared stale QoS vote (MTK-DISP-2023 fix)\n"); } It did not make the 2023 release
/* * Fixed: December 2023. * If you are reading this in 2025 and battery drain returns, * look for new PM_QoS votes. They multiply like rabbits. * - Lena Wei, last commit of the year. */ And somewhere in MediaTek’s Hsinchu office, Dr. Chen quietly merged Lena’s fix into the 2024 driver branch, pretending he had written it himself. Because in the world of chipset drivers, credit is fleeting—but a working phone is forever.