on 20/03/2002 06:40, Michel Dänzer at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > On Mit, 2002-03-20 at 10:38, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: >> on 14/03/2002 04:20, Eric Lemoine at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: >> >>>>> With >>>>> >>>>> XkbRules xfree86 >>>>> XkbModel macintosh >>>>> XkbLayout fr_new >>>>> >>>>> my keyboard is still screwed up. By adding XkbKeycodes macintosh >>>>> everything works fine. >>>> >>>> So you seem to be still using ADB keycodes and need XkbModel >>>> macintosh_old. >>> >>> You're right. My ibook2 uses ADB keycodes. macintosh_old solved >>> all my keyboard problems. >> >> I'm having some ADB keyboard problems too. I have these settings in >> xf86config-4. But first, just so u folks know where I'm coming from now, >> here's my new set-up: upgraded to woody, and I've nearly completed compiling >> the 2.4.18 kernel that I d/led from the debian archives - note: in the >> README it says that a patch was applied. is that the patch that _needed to >> be applied cuz something was missing? I'm "stuck" in mac OS right now cuz my >> X isn't working. (I didn't know it was that easy to compile a kernel... :-) >> >> Ok, I have xkb set to macintosh_old, with xfree86 as a keyboard protocol, >> and 3-button emu (F11 and F12 as buttons 2 and 3). I have the >> "dev/mac_hid/keyboard_sends_linux_keycodes = 1". I had that funky _ssj thing >> happen - it was fun to fix though, since I knew what was up :). > > macintosh_old is for _ADB_ keycodes (as the X server debconf interface > explains...). You use Linux keycodes and thus need "XkbModel" > "macintosh". > Well, I should have mentioned this, but I'm using an ADB keyboard, not USB ;). Oh wait a minute, do you mean if I use the keyboard_sends_linux_keycodes = 1 setting in sysctl.conf for console, I have to set the XkbModel to macintosh, and not macintosh_old? If so, then I'm really confused, cuz all the docs I've read say use the _old model in XF86Config-4.
eric the confused