Odd Martin Baanrud, on Wed 19 Oct 2016 22:24:03 +0200, wrote:
> it seems like the virtual Baum braille device is "missing".
[...]
> perhaps this should be reported upstream?
Yes, it should be reported, please feel free to :)
> > Perhaps it allows to pass -usbdevice braille to QEMU.
>
> The only
Hello,
On 10/17/2016 01:50 AM, MENGUAL Jean-Philippe wrote:
> With qemu, if you run a system with -curses and the guest is not GUI,
> you may access to it directly from the host (eg. Linux in CLI, Freddos).
But can this be done through virt-manager?
So far I don't see a way to pass additional op
Hello,
On 10/17/2016 01:49 AM, Samuel Thibault wrote:
> I guess you can ask virt-manager to provide a sound board to the guest,
> or pass-through a USB port to the guest to connect a braille device.
Yes, virt-manager can add a virtual sound board.
However, it seems like the virtual Baum braille
With qemu, if you run a system with -curses and the guest is not GUI,
you may access to it directly from the host (eg. Linux in CLI, Freddos).
Regards,
Le 17/10/2016 à 01:49, Samuel Thibault a écrit :
> Hello,
>
> Odd Martin Baanrud, on Mon 17 Oct 2016 01:43:14 +0200, wrote:
>> According to the
Hello,
Odd Martin Baanrud, on Mon 17 Oct 2016 01:43:14 +0200, wrote:
> According to the accessibility wiki, it’s possible to get some accessibility
> when starting a machine directly with QEMU, but I wonder if there’s a way to
> do something simular using virt-manager.
I guess you can ask virt-
Hello,
I’ve plaied with virt-manager (A tool to manage QEMU/KVM VM’s.).
The program itself is usable with Orca.
However, I wonder how one can make a VM accessible once started?
According to the accessibility wiki, it’s possible to get some accessibility
when starting a machine directly with QEMU,
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