To me it looks like the mouse device is recognized by (udev?) at boot - I
can see that in the log, but for some reason it is not activated.
When I then unplug it and plug back, it is both recognized and activated.
See the log excerpts I sent earlier on.

M.

2014-12-09 14:29 GMT+01:00 Ben Hutchings <[email protected]>:

> On Tue, 2014-12-09 at 12:29 +0100, Michael Biebl wrote:
> > Ben,
> >
> > any idea why this users mouse is not correctly detected during boot?
> > Might this be a kernel problem?
> >
> > Martin, do you have a custom initramfs without hid-generic?
> > If you don't have MODULES=most in /etc/initramfs-tools/initramfs.conf,
> > could you rebuilt your initramfs with that option set?
> [...]
>
> Why do you think it is necessary to have a mouse driver in the
> initramfs?  (I realise hid-generic isn't just for mice.)
>
> (As for the initramfs configuration, we really ought to add some
> comments to initramfs.conf about the other configuration files as I
> believe d-i *always* creates that overriding file.)
>
> Ben.
>
> --
> Ben Hutchings
> Q.  Which is the greater problem in the world today, ignorance or apathy?
> A.  I don't know and I couldn't care less.
>

Reply via email to