Thanks for the response, Eric, it helped me troubleshoot the issue. Seems I never set my HOME environment variable (sigh), so it all ended up in my Windows home directory. Asserting ~/.inputrc did not have DOS line endings didn't have any effect, but removing the file allowed me to type all chars again (that's a relief).
The only thing I had in that custom ~/.inputrc were system beep suppression directives, namely: set bell-style no setterm -blength 0 After setting the HOME variable in my .bat file, I recreated .inputrc in vim and everything is fine again. I suspect permissions in the Windows user directory conflicted with Cygwin's installation. Cheers, Éric On Mon, Aug 30, 2010 at 6:58 PM, Eric Blake <ebl...@redhat.com> wrote: > On 08/30/2010 10:52 AM, Eric Vautier wrote: >> >> Hello all, >> >> I've used the US-International keyboard layout for ages without issues. >> Recently, I fired cygwin and noticed the "s" key was unresponsive. > > Did you check whether ~/.inputrc has DOS line endings? If so, run d2u on > it, and see if that fixes things. > > -- > Eric Blake ebl...@redhat.com +1-801-349-2682 > Libvirt virtualization library http://libvirt.org > -- Problem reports: http://cygwin.com/problems.html FAQ: http://cygwin.com/faq/ Documentation: http://cygwin.com/docs.html Unsubscribe info: http://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple