It is not necessarily sufficient to look only at the physical and logical
usages when determining if a field is for the pen or touch. Some fields
are not contained in a sub-collection and thus only have an application
usage. Not checking the application usage in such cases causes us to
ignore the field entirely, which may lead to incorrect behavior.
Signed-off-by: Jason Gerecke <killertofu@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Benjamin Tissoires <benjamin.tissoires@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz>
 }
 
 #define WACOM_PEN_FIELD(f)     (((f)->logical == HID_DG_STYLUS) || \
-                                ((f)->physical == HID_DG_STYLUS))
+                                ((f)->physical == HID_DG_STYLUS) || \
+                                ((f)->application == HID_DG_PEN))
 #define WACOM_FINGER_FIELD(f)  (((f)->logical == HID_DG_FINGER) || \
-                                ((f)->physical == HID_DG_FINGER))
+                                ((f)->physical == HID_DG_FINGER) || \
+                                ((f)->application == HID_DG_TOUCHSCREEN))
 
 void wacom_wac_usage_mapping(struct hid_device *hdev,
                struct hid_field *field, struct hid_usage *usage)