John-
For any custom modules, you can add them in lts.conf with the MODULE_XX
keyword. I'm pretty sure this keyword is still used by 4.2. For those
terminals that need 2.0 drivers, you can probably do something like this:
[ws005]
MODULE_01 = usbcore
MODULE_02 = ohci-hcd
MODULE_03 = ehci-hcd
-Todd
John Lucas wrote:
> On Friday 08 September 2006 14:47, you wrote:
>
>> John-
>>
>> I wonder if you loaded the ohci (USB 1.1) driver instead of the ehci
>> (USB 2.0) driver on the terminal if it would operate properly. You can
>> use rmmod to remove the ehci_hcd and uhci_ecd modules from the terminal
>> console (alt-F2), and insmod ohci_hcd to see if that helps.
>>
>> -Todd
>>
>>
>
> Ok, I removed the "modprobe" for ehci-hcd from /etc/rc.sysinit and
> /etc/rc.usb
> and now my terminal works on boot without fooling around, and no custom
> configuration needed in /etc/lts.conf for the terminal.
>
> For the environment contemplated this will work for me. A more adaptable,
> general-purpose configuration may be needed by others, but I figure I can
> manually load the ehci-hcd modules on any terminals that need it.
>
> If someone has a more elegant solution, please post it to the list. I am very
> happy with what I have. Thanks Todd.
>
>
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