On Tue, Aug 09, 2005 at 10:14:09PM +0200, Denis Barbier wrote:
> On Tue, Aug 09, 2005 at 09:21:20AM +0200, Marcel Sebek wrote:
> > On Mon, Aug 08, 2005 at 10:47:13PM +0200, Denis Barbier wrote:
> > > > When I configured my keyboard with dpkg-reconfigure console-common, I 
> > > > could
> > > > write all special characters (ěščřý). Then I rebooted and couldn't write
> > > > some of them (eg. ščřž). So I tried to run init script again and special
> > > > keys started to work.
> > > > 
> > > > When the init script ran first time, it printed couple of messages
> > > > similar to "assuming iso-8859-2 zcaron", I didn't remember the exact
> > > > messages.
> > > 
> > > Ok, then try the following commands:
> > >   # unicode_stop
> > >   # loadkeys cz-lat2-prog
> > >   # install-keymap cz-lat2-prog
> > > This will create a new /etc/console/boottime.kmap.gz file, which
> > > should work at init time.  Can you please test it?
> > > 
> > The messages disappeared but the special keys are still unusable. Even
> > re-running init script doesn't help. It seems that it consider
> > iso-8859-2 characters to be iso-8859-1. Instead of ř it prints ø and so
> > on. But characters common to iso-8859-1 and 2 can be written well.
> 
> Yes, I was confused, these commands cannot help here.
> It seems that your /usr is not mounted when keymap.sh is first run,
> is it the case?
Yes, I have separate /usr, /boot, /var, /home and /tmp and they are
mounted later than that init script is executed.

-- 
Marcel Sebek

Attachment: signature.asc
Description: Digital signature

Reply via email to