> > The keyboard is missing keystrokes if I type > > too many at one time and don't pause every few seconds for it to > > catch up. This happens even before I log into gdm, if I go to a > > console with ctl-alt-F1 and log in as root after reboot, events is > > already eating cpu and keystrokes are lost. What's going on?
On Sun, 28 Aug 2011, Ben Hutchings wrote: > Did you upgrade the kernel in the last day or so? If not, > do you have any idea what might have changed? I tried rebooting earlier and that didn't help. But I shut down for a while and now it is fine. I did replace my CPU fan recently, and my replacement battery melted down (literally melted-- yikes). Maybe I damaged a sensor or something. The other thought was, does TiMidity feed some events? I don't know why it was running by default. > Do these warnings mean anything to you? > > [ 57.141392] thinkpad_acpi: setting the hotkey mask to > 0x00ffffff is likely not the best way to go about it [ > 57.141400] thinkpad_acpi: please consider using the driver > defaults, and refer to up-to-date thinkpad-acpi > documentation That's been happening for a while. I think the thinkpad acpi driver is out of date. I should probably recompile a custom kernel and use the tp-smapi driver instead. It gives the autopark shock feature with hdapsd too, which is not in the stock kernels. I don't know if it's a license issue or what. I don't think this is related. We can downgrade the importance of this... maybe it was a hardware glitch or a fluke. Mark -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-bugs-dist-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org