B qnnayemhh nr Ormhv` 02 mnap 2007 Mark Thomas m`ohq`k(a): > On Nov 1, 2007 6:30 PM, Vadim Jukov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > The only one InputDevice section you need: > > > > Section "InputDevice" > > Identifier "Mouse1" > > Driver "mouse" > > Option "Protocol" "wsmouse" > > Option "Device" "/dev/wsmouse" > > Option "ZAxisMapping" "4 5 6 7" > > EndSection > > > > Then, in ServerLayout section you put only one string: > > > > InputDevice "Mouse1" "CorePointer" > > > > Greg is right: that's all what you need on OpenBSD.:) Put in more > > mice or get them out, your X doesn't have to bother about this. In > > very rare cases, at least on x86 architecture PCs, you will need to > > control mouse handling per device. > > I remember reading something just like a few weeks ago when I was > investigating what laptop hardware worked best with OpenBSD. It > basically said "OpenBSD just works!" > > Thanks for your time Vadim but it's still not working. > > Here again is the relevant part of my xorg.conf file > > Section "ServerLayout" > Identifier "X.org Configured" > Screen 0 "Screen0" 0 0 > InputDevice "Mouse0" "CorePointer" > InputDevice "Keyboard0" "CoreKeyboard" > EndSection > > Section "InputDevice" > Identifier "Mouse0" > Driver "mouse" > Option "Protocol" "wsmouse" > Option "Device" "/dev/wsmouse" > Option "ZAxisMapping" "4 5 6 7" > EndSection
Hmmm, looks sane. Run xev(1) application (inside X, of course) and see, does it generate anything when you try to move/click/scroll while pointer is positioned in it's window. Post what you see: no reaction on second mouse touching, or sample of messages it generates. Also, please, run "usbdevs -v" and post output lines here. And last but not least: try to rename/move xorg.conf and start X without it. Does this help? -- Best wishes, Vadim Jukov