On Sun, Mar 14, 2010 at 3:01 AM, Hans Petter Selasky <[email protected]> wrote: > On Sunday 14 March 2010 11:30:04 Steven Noonan wrote: >> The following reply was made to PR usb/144414; it has been noted by GNATS. >> >> From: Steven Noonan <[email protected]> >> To: [email protected] >> Cc: [email protected], [email protected] >> Subject: Re: usb/144414: Apple "Fn" key doesn't work properly >> Date: Sun, 14 Mar 2010 03:26:19 -0700 >> >> On Thu, Mar 4, 2010 at 12:01 AM, Steven Noonan <[email protected]> >> wrot= >> >> e: >> > On Wed, Mar 3, 2010 at 11:00 PM, Steven Noonan <[email protected]> >> > wr= >> >> ote: >> >> On Wed, Mar 3, 2010 at 10:36 PM, =C2=A0<[email protected]> wrote: >> >>> Steven Noonan <[email protected]> wrote: >> >>>> Interestingly, my tilde key doesn't work either (though the key >> >>>> press is detected, no character shows when the key is pressed). >> >>> >> >>> Any chance it is configured as a "dead" key? =C2=A0If you press >> >>> tilde followed by n do you get an n with a tilde over it? >> >> >> >> Nope. It simply does nothing in the console. >> >> >> >> But in X11, it does something very odd. Shift+Tilde Key gives me '>', >> >> and Tilde Key gives me '<'. And Alt+Tilde gives me... What? I don't >> >> even know what action. It's grabbing some arbitrary command in my >> >> .bash_history. It gave me the first item in my .bash_history the first >> >> time I tried it. Then I tried an arbitrary command ("echo"), and then >> >> Alt+Tilde gave me the second command in my .bash_history. Whaa? >> >> Any more ideas/news on this from anyone? >> >> The tilde key thing is especially irritating. >> > > static uint8_t > ukbd_apple_swap(uint8_t keycode) { > switch (keycode) { > case 0x35: return 0x64; > case 0x64: return 0x35; > default: return keycode; > } > } > > Can you try to change the function above in ukbd.c to only return keycode? Any > difference? >
Yep, commenting the two case lines brought my tilde key back. Any idea what the ukbd_apple_swap() function was _supposed_ to be doing? Also, there's only one thing left (input-wise) that I can't get to work, and that's the 'delete' key (Fn+Backspace). I'm pretty certain that it's not a problem with Fn+Backspace failing to map to Delete, because my non-Mac i386 box has the same problem. Everything I read online keeps saying to muck with an .inputrc file (for bash, anyway), but I haven't been able to get it to work. Places I've looked have said to add this to .inputrc: "\e[3~": delete-char But this seems to have no effect (and I tried bind -f .inputrc in case my INPUTRC environment variable wasn't working). Is there something FreeBSD-specific I'm not seeing, or what? - Steven _______________________________________________ [email protected] mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-usb To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[email protected]"
