Re: Discovering the keycode of key.

2014-12-27 Thread Eduardo Lopes
Joel Rees joel.rees at gmail.com writes:

there was a thread somewhere back there this last week about keymaps that
might be of interest. Henrique got offended about having to look at source
code and complained about having to compile the kernel, which was either a
misunderstanding or deliberately taking things out of proportion. But it
might help you, too.

(No, I don't know the answer to your question. You could find out,
'though.)

Thanks anyway, but I've read that thread before asking this. It really
helped, but not with this particular matter.

thanks

Eduardo Lopes



Re: Discovering the keycode of key.

2014-12-26 Thread Eduardo Lopes
Joel Rees joel.rees at gmail.com writes:

 
 showkey doesn't seem to be on my machine, but xev is.
 
 Is xev part of the standard X11 install?
 

Yes, xev is part of Xenocara, but I donĀ“t think the keycodes on X correlates 
to that on wsconsctl, do they?



Discovering the keycode of key.

2014-12-25 Thread Eduardo Lopes
Hello folks! 

May someone point to me how do I can obtain, in the console, the keycode of 
any particular key, in OpenBSD?

thanks

Eduardo Lopes.



5.4 instead of 5.5 in faq1.html

2014-11-01 Thread Eduardo Lopes
In http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq1.html#WhatsNew:

The complete list of changes made to OpenBSD 5.4 to create OpenBSD 5.6 
can[...]

I think that 5.4 was left behind, wasn't it? 



Re: Weird tmux pane separator chars in wsconsole

2014-05-18 Thread Eduardo Lopes
A more general solution should be use the pccon terminal type (or pccon0 if you 
have a screen with more than 25 lines) (see /etc/termcap for descriptions). 
They 
provide acs (or ascii line drawing for pccon0) and color.

Here in my T410 I have put this in .profile:

[ -z $TMUX]  [ -z $DISPLAY ]  TERM=pccon0
export TERM