Re: broken mouse after undocking

2000-10-12 Thread Heather
> There are those who would have you believe that Richard Black wrote:
> > Hi all
> > 
> > Most of the day I use my laptop is a docking station with an external
> > mouse.  I've noticed that when I remove my laptop from its docking
> > station and open it up, I have X okay, but no mouse.
> > 
> > Is there are way to get X to recognise my mouse (i.e. the one on the
> > laptop, not an external one) when I undock my laptop?
> > 
> 
> Many laptops will disable the internal mouse if they see that an
> external one is present, and enable it if they don't.  Some only
> perform this check when the computer boots.  You may have one of
> these.  Check your BIOS to see if you have a setting to affect this
> behavior.  You might have to live with both mice always being enabled.

You might try removing the external mouse while it is still docked, using
the builtin mouse so you know it works, then undocking.

(if it doesn't work then, you'll have to use the gpm trick described by
someone else on the list - it will be the only way to keep the mouse sane.)

btw, I know a handful of dock-based systems that behave much better if you
suspend them before you undock them - perhaps they do bus rescans when they
resume.  So, if you don't normally do that, you could try that too.  Heck,
you could even try a suspend/resume cycle after it's undocked...

* Heather Stern * star@ many places...



Re: broken mouse after undocking

2000-10-12 Thread Manfred Wassmann
On Thu, 12 Oct 2000, Richard Black wrote:

> Hi all
> 
> Most of the day I use my laptop is a docking station with an external
> mouse.  I've noticed that when I remove my laptop from its docking
> station and open it up, I have X okay, but no mouse.
> 
> Is there are way to get X to recognise my mouse (i.e. the one on the
> laptop, not an external one) when I undock my laptop?
> 
> thanks

Use gpm in repeater mode and you can restart using /etc/init.d/gpm. Works
well on my Libretto.  

-- Manfred Waßmann --



Re: broken mouse after undocking

2000-10-12 Thread Andy Bastien
There are those who would have you believe that Richard Black wrote:
> Hi all
> 
> Most of the day I use my laptop is a docking station with an external
> mouse.  I've noticed that when I remove my laptop from its docking
> station and open it up, I have X okay, but no mouse.
> 
> Is there are way to get X to recognise my mouse (i.e. the one on the
> laptop, not an external one) when I undock my laptop?
> 

Many laptops will disable the internal mouse if they see that an
external one is present, and enable it if they don't.  Some only
perform this check when the computer boots.  You may have one of
these.  Check your BIOS to see if you have a setting to affect this
behavior.  You might have to live with both mice always being enabled.



Re: broken mouse after undocking

2000-10-12 Thread Heather

> There are those who would have you believe that Richard Black wrote:
> > Hi all
> > 
> > Most of the day I use my laptop is a docking station with an external
> > mouse.  I've noticed that when I remove my laptop from its docking
> > station and open it up, I have X okay, but no mouse.
> > 
> > Is there are way to get X to recognise my mouse (i.e. the one on the
> > laptop, not an external one) when I undock my laptop?
> > 
> 
> Many laptops will disable the internal mouse if they see that an
> external one is present, and enable it if they don't.  Some only
> perform this check when the computer boots.  You may have one of
> these.  Check your BIOS to see if you have a setting to affect this
> behavior.  You might have to live with both mice always being enabled.

You might try removing the external mouse while it is still docked, using
the builtin mouse so you know it works, then undocking.

(if it doesn't work then, you'll have to use the gpm trick described by
someone else on the list - it will be the only way to keep the mouse sane.)

btw, I know a handful of dock-based systems that behave much better if you
suspend them before you undock them - perhaps they do bus rescans when they
resume.  So, if you don't normally do that, you could try that too.  Heck,
you could even try a suspend/resume cycle after it's undocked...

* Heather Stern * star@ many places...


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Re: broken mouse after undocking

2000-10-12 Thread Manfred Wassmann

On Thu, 12 Oct 2000, Richard Black wrote:

> Hi all
> 
> Most of the day I use my laptop is a docking station with an external
> mouse.  I've noticed that when I remove my laptop from its docking
> station and open it up, I have X okay, but no mouse.
> 
> Is there are way to get X to recognise my mouse (i.e. the one on the
> laptop, not an external one) when I undock my laptop?
> 
> thanks

Use gpm in repeater mode and you can restart using /etc/init.d/gpm. Works
well on my Libretto.  

-- Manfred Waßmann --


--  
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]




Re: broken mouse after undocking

2000-10-12 Thread Andy Bastien

There are those who would have you believe that Richard Black wrote:
> Hi all
> 
> Most of the day I use my laptop is a docking station with an external
> mouse.  I've noticed that when I remove my laptop from its docking
> station and open it up, I have X okay, but no mouse.
> 
> Is there are way to get X to recognise my mouse (i.e. the one on the
> laptop, not an external one) when I undock my laptop?
> 

Many laptops will disable the internal mouse if they see that an
external one is present, and enable it if they don't.  Some only
perform this check when the computer boots.  You may have one of
these.  Check your BIOS to see if you have a setting to affect this
behavior.  You might have to live with both mice always being enabled.


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To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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