On Fri, May 10, 2013 at 1:52 AM, John Marino <[email protected]> wrote: > This might be handled by xorg. > Look at /etc/X11/xorg.conf, section "InputDevice" > > Is there a mouse section there (Probably identified as "Mouse0"). > You might want to paste that. Mine has "Device" defined as "/dev/sysmouse". > > JustinS told you that before, and he also wrote the following on this very > mail list to you: > > "Scratch what I said about the mouse - put: > moused_enable="YES" > into /etc/rc.conf, and run > /etc/rc.d/moused start > and the mouse should work. This is what I just had to do now, > experimenting manually." > > So I suspect he basically answered you before you asked the question again.
Dear sir, I apologize or I am sorry, but I have mentioned that it does not work. I have tried that it does not work. I have uncommented the section where it says moused_port="/dev/ums1" and it does not work. I don't have mouse functionality. What good is a gui without a mouse? and I don't know any shortcuts to set menu entries in xfce :( I remember that there was an option for xorg.conf that had an option like Hidden="False" and that may do it? Thanks, Antonio > > John > > > > On 5/10/2013 00:55, Antonio Olivares wrote: >> >> Dear folks, >> >> after being down for a while not being able to get the system like I >> wanted, I reinstalled the system and have resolved to install packages >> via pkg, and have most of what I want. I have installed xfce like >> suggested in small howto: >> >> http://lists.dragonflybsd.org/pipermail/users/2013-April/053316.html >> >> But I have no mouse :( >> >> It is a usb mouse and in /dev/uhid0 and it justs sits there and does >> nothing. How can I get it working? >> >> Thanks for your advice/comments/&& suggestions. >> >> Best Regards, >> >> >> Antonio
