Follow-up Comment #2, bug #46463 (project grub): Actually, it is Lenovo Yoga 2 tablet. http://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/tablets/lenovo/yoga-tablet-series/yoga-tablet-2-10/?sb=:000001C9:0001639D:#tab-tech_specs
The Android version has no other buttons. Volume up/down & power. Although it is Android tablet, the device has ordinary EFI partition and something like a BIOS: http://dl-1.va.us.xda-developers.com/3/2/9/4/0/6/1/322.jpg?key=I5jKGCei2TYaIbYrP736-w&ts=1447917071 The BIOS is fully usable with two buttons. Short press to select, long press to Enter/Escape. The main problem is lack of OTG support at the boot time. There are VBUS related options in the BIOS, but I didn't touch them. I'm afraid to get a "pseudo-brick" device that is not available via the fastboot utility, but which loads the Grub menu where I can't start the OS nor enter the BIOS. So I seek a way to use the Grub anyhow to go forward. The touchscreen is I2C based and useless for grub. I'm understand that my idea of using up/down keys as menu entry hotkeys is weird (they will work only before the menu will be shown) but it does not break anything. Another possibility, which I now research, is to implement the minimal fastboot daemon to connect the tablet to the PC and control the Grub via "fastboot oem keystroke cn fwsetupn" or something like that. The idea to monitor simultaneous press (or long press) is also good. But such a mode needs to be explicitly enabled, like "set awful_tablet_mode=twokeys" in the config file, so not to confuse users with normal keyboard. _______________________________________________________ Reply to this item at: <http://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?46463> _______________________________________________ Message sent via/by Savannah http://savannah.gnu.org/ _______________________________________________ Bug-grub mailing list [email protected] https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/bug-grub
