[gnome-bluetooth/wip/hadess/default-adapter-work: 3/10] README: Explain how to disable a Bluetooth adapter
- From: Bastien Nocera <hadess src gnome org>
- To: commits-list gnome org
- Cc:
- Subject: [gnome-bluetooth/wip/hadess/default-adapter-work: 3/10] README: Explain how to disable a Bluetooth adapter
- Date: Thu, 6 Jan 2022 10:11:29 +0000 (UTC)
commit c43f459e5a30b18e61124b004f1cff7db18cffe2
Author: Bastien Nocera <hadess hadess net>
Date: Tue Dec 14 15:21:47 2021 +0100
README: Explain how to disable a Bluetooth adapter
Explain how to disable a builtin Bluetooth adapter as gnome-bluetooth
only supports one in its UI.
README.md | 42 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1 file changed, 42 insertions(+)
---
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
index 39114212..715c5ad1 100644
--- a/README.md
+++ b/README.md
@@ -10,6 +10,48 @@ Requirements
- bluez 5.51 or newer
- rfkill sub-system enabled in the kernel, and [accessible](https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/21605)
+Multiple Bluetooth adapters
+---------------------------
+
+The gnome-bluetooth user interface and API have no support for handling
+multiple Bluetooth adapters. Earlier versions of the bluez backend software
+had support for setting a "default adapter" but that is not the case
+any more.
+
+As the goal is usually to disable an internal Bluetooth adapter in favour of
+a more featureful removable one, there are a couple of possibilities
+to do this, depending on the hardware:
+
+- Disable the internal Bluetooth adapter in the system's BIOS or firmware
+
+- Disable the internal adapter through a mechanical "RF kill" switch
+ available on some laptops
+
+- Unplug the USB cable from the wireless card in the case of combo Bluetooth/Wi-Fi
+ desktop cards
+
+- Enable the hardware-specific software kill switch on laptops. First find out
+ whether your hardware has one:
+
+```sh
+rfkill | grep bluetooth | grep -v hci
+5 bluetooth hp-bluetooth unblocked unblocked
+```
+
+ Then block it with `rfkill block <ID>` where `<ID>` is the identifier in the
+ command above. systemd will remember this across reboots.
+
+- Disable a specific USB adapter through udev by creating a
+ `/etc/udev/rules.d/81-bluetooth-hci.rules` device containing:
+
+```
+SUBSYSTEM=="usb", ATTRS{idVendor}=="0a5c", ATTRS{idProduct}=="21b4", ATTR{authorized}="0"
+```
+
+- If the adapter still needs to be plugged in so it can be used as a passthrough,
+for virtualisation or gaming, we ship [a small script that makes unbinding the Bluetooth
+driver easier](contrib/unbind-bluetooth-driver.sh)
+
Copyright
---------
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