On Sun, Apr 15, 2012 at 02:06:31PM +0200, Robert Millan wrote: > > I tried with kfreebsd-downloader on an up-to-date Debian GNU/kFreeBSD > system. kfreebsd-downloader downloads binaries for kFreeBSD 9.0 from > upstream. So as far as the kernel it's concerned, we get the same > result.
This is good. So it has to be some configuration option... The problem is that in Debian UTF-8 is used on the console and console-setup makes no attempts to support properly UTF-8 on FreeBSD because as far as I can tell this is impossible (or at least completely undocumented). I mean there is no info how to use internationalized fonts with UTF-8. Unfortunately right now I don't have kFreeBSD on my PC - I had it installed on a hard disk I am using for various software tests and accidentally it was deleted.. (On my primary disk I don't have space.) > Tried that on FreeBSD 10-CURRENT, but I notice setup instructions have > many references to a terminal type that is no longer in use (cons25). > Since FreeBSD 9.0 the default is xterm. Have you tested with recent > versions of FreeBSD? I haven't tested it on 10-CURRENT. I have it tested on 9.0. You are right - the section "TERMINAL TYPE" in the README is obsoleted (one could simply use TERM=xterm). But other than that everything seemed to work on 9.0 properly. As far as I could see only 8-bit encodings were supported on the console. The linedraw symbols were emulated with ASCII symbols (which was to be expected considering the use of unified terminal type). Anton Zinoviev -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-boot-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/20120415191434.ga2...@debian.lan