Very sorry, that should have been "uhidev0" (not "9"). "uhidev0" identifies itself as: uhidev0 at uhub1 port 8 configuration 1 interface 0 uhidev0: eGalax Inc. (0xeef) eGalaxTouch EXC3000-0367-44.01.00 (0xc04d), rev 2.01/67.02, addr 3, iclass 3/1 uhidev0; 7 report ids I guess that is the touchpad.
However, the problem, I think, is elsewhere. After letting the computer sit for two days with the power off, I powered it on, and the system came up normally, and with a login prompt. I could login as "root" as expected. It seems that rebooting (/sbin/shutdown -r) caused the problem described in my original post. When I do that, the system tries to reboot, but hangs at the "uhid2 at uhidev0" line. Additionally, "/sbin/shutdown -p" is not working. The machine starts to shut down, but I get the following: acpibat0: workqueue busy: updates stopped acpitz0: workqueue busy: updates stopped core1temp0: workqueue busy: updates stopped core2temp: workqueue busy: updates stopped The system hangs on that last line, and the computer never shuts down. Do you think I should start a new thread on the port-amd64 list? Thanks much, Henry 2021年5月6日(木) 1:55 Rhialto <[email protected]>: > > On Wed 05 May 2021 at 15:18:03 +0900, Henry wrote: > > I recently installed 9.1 on a HP 15-au123cl. The install seemed to go > > fairly smoothly, and I was able to get the sets via ftp. > > > > The system kept booting into single user mode, but searching around I > > finally figured out that I needed to edit /etc/rc.conf. I thought I > > had successfully changed to rc_configured=YES. > > The installer is also supposed to do that for you, so there must have > been something weird there. > > > However, since then, whenever I try to boot the machine it hangs at: > > [ 4.7432765] uhid2 at uhidev9 report id 7: input=0, output=0 feature=256 > > (the numbers in brackets change; I have seen 7582388, 225.834047, > > 4.9366070). > > There seems to be nothing else to do other than to hold down the power > > button and shut the computer off. > > The "[ 4.7432765]" is a timestamp so it's not so strange that it > varies a bit. > > "uhid" is a "human interface device", usually a mouse or keyboard. There > should be a line earlier in the output, starting with "uhidev9:" which > tells you what sort of device it is. For example, for my mouse: > > uhidev0: Logitech (0x46d) USB Optical Mouse (0xc05a), rev 2.00/54.00, addr 1, > iclass 3/1 > > > What can I do to get the computer to boot? (Or, did the computer > > suddenly give out on me?) > > Hopefully that will tell you which device it is, and you can try to > unplug it and then boot. Sometimes devices like iPhones present > themselves as multiple devices to the computer. The high number (9) may > be explained by something like that. > > > Henry > -Olaf. > -- > ___ Q: "What's an anagram of Banach-Tarski?" -- Olaf "Rhialto" Seibert > \X/ A: "Banach-Tarski Banach-Tarski." -- rhialto at falu dot nl
