On 11/7/2009 9:39 PM, Marcus Wanner wrote:
I have an old Suncom FX200 Joystick which I recently tried to get
working with my gentoo system. I tried using various methods, with
outcomes varying from epic fail to almost success, and finally got
results after following the guide at
http://en.gentoo-wiki.com/wiki/Joystick
I did what it said in the Kernel Configuration and Gameport Joysticks
sections (the one uses the parallel port on my sound card), and chose
the "Classic Analog" joystick driver, as there is not one for my
specific model (or manufacturer). I compiled, installed, and booted
into the new kernel, and continued with the testing and calibration.
After emerging the joystick package, I ran the dmesg | grep -i
Joystick command, and this was the output:
[ 4.329910] input: Analog 4-axis 4-button joystick as
/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1e.0/0000:02:07.0/gameport0/input/input5
Which was more or less correct, except that it is a 3-axis stick. I
ran cat /dev/input/js0, which produced the desired garbage data, but
new data appeared only on button presses, not stick movements, which
was where I first noticed problems. Anyway, I ran jstest
/dev/input/js0, which showed that axes 0 and 1 were always at 0
(regardless of actual stick position), and 2 and 3 were always -32767,
regardless of the position of the throttle wheel.
I ran jscal -c /dev/input/js0 to calibrate the joystick, and when I
run it now without the -c option, it outputs:
Joystick has 4 axes and 4 buttons.
Correction for axis 0 is broken line, precision is 0.
Coeficients are: 1789, 2299, 419758, 419758
Correction for axis 1 is broken line, precision is 0.
Coeficients are: 700, 900, 1073741, 1073741
Correction for axis 2 is broken line, precision is 0.
Coeficients are: 1422, 1422, 377546, 377546
Correction for axis 3 is broken line, precision is 0.
Coeficients are: 1422, 1422, 377546, 377546
Ok, so now you all know the facts. Can anyone tell me what I'm doing
wrong?
Thanks in advance, and for all your previous help with the ethernet
card drivers!
Marcus
Anyone?
If no one has any advice for that specific stick, how would I go about
debugging it myself? What about the joydump kernel module?
Marcus