On 13 May 2003, Carlos Perelló Marín wrote: > With a flat imac (usb keyboard) the AltGr key is the right Alt key > It works with XFree and console and it's the default configuration. > My Xfree keyboard config is like the one for a PC, model pc105, rules > xfree86 and layout es
That doesn't work on the first iMac CRT with a narrow USB keyboard (see the key list below - there is NO Alt_R on this keyboard). > El mar, 13 de 05 de 2003 a las 14:35, Martin-Éric Racine escribió: > > On Tue, 13 May 2003, Veit Waltemath wrote: > > > > > On Tue, May 13, 2003 at 02:41:05AM +0300, Martin-Éric Racine wrote: > > > > Greetings, > > > > > > > > I'm just wondering how you solved that problem with the XFree86 keymap > > > > that is > > > > mentioned in Debian bug #121297? You mention something about > > > > ADB_Keycodes > > > > fixing this, but how and where do I enable this? What does the > > > > following > > > > section in your /etc/X11/XF86Config-4 look like: > > > > > > > > Section "InputDevice" > > > > Identifier "Generic Keyboard" > > > > Driver "keyboard" > > > > Option "CoreKeyboard" > > > > Option "XkbRules" "xfree86" > > > > Option "XkbModel" "macintosh" > > > > Option "XkbLayout" "fi" > > > > EndSection > > > > > > > > In my case, the computer is an early iMac (Rev.D 333MHz) but the same > > > > problem > > > > applies to XFree as your iBook and the expected key order is the same. > > > > > > > > However, I found perfect keymaps for the virtual console in > > > > console-data such as > > > > the /usr/share/keymaps/i386/qwerty/mac-usb-fi-latin1.kmap.gz (or in > > > > your case > > > > that would be /usr/share/keymaps/i386/qwertz/mac-usb-de-latin1.kmap.gz). > > > > > > > > -- > > > > > > Hi Martin-Éric, > > > > > > my thoughts at that time to solve the problem was to buy a new Keyboard, > > > so i bought a new Macintosh Keyboćrd with a additional right ALT Key. > > > But I end with the same Keycode issue. > > > Somebody posted a solution in the debian-ppc ML, here is what i've done, > > > but there are many other and shorter solutions but i can't remember > > > them. > > > > > > Add the following at the end of your /etc/X11/xkb/symbols/macintosh/fi: > > > - - - - - - - > > > partial alphanumeric_keys > > > xkb_symbols "mycustomkeys" { > > > include "macintosh/se(basic)" > > > include "ralt" > > > }; > > > - - - - - - - > > > > > > and put this in Section "InputDevice" in your XF86Config-4: > > > Option "XkbVariant" "mycustomkeys" > > > > > > I hope this helps, when not ask in the debian-ppc ML, i'am not > > > familiar with this keycode and xkb thing. > > > > > > BTW, i filed that bug on 26.11.2001 and this is still there in XFree > > > 4.3.0, neither a fix from Debian nor from XFree. > > > > Thanks for your reply. Unfortunately, that mycustomkeys made things worse. > > :( > > > > Whoever had found the solutions mentioned by Veit, can you please repost? > > > > Fixing the 4 meta keys found on old iBook/iMac keyboards whose bottom row is > > (Ctrl,Alt,LeftApple,<Spacebar>,RightApple,<Arrows>) is probably a problem > > affecting all early iBook/iMac from the first generation, on all locales. > > > > Surely somebody on Debian/PPC or XFree86 must have fixed that problem > > already? > > > > -- > > Martin-Éric Racine > > http://www.pp.fishpool.fi/~q-funk/ > > > -- Martin-Éric Racine http://www.pp.fishpool.fi/~q-funk/