On Thu, Jan 23, 2003 at 07:16:57PM -0500, Stephen Gran wrote: | This one time, at band camp, [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
| > I an having weird things happen to my mouse on bootup, and through X. | > Generic ps/2 mouse, windows type clone | > I am trying different combinations of : | > /dev/mouse | > /dev/psaux (used by gpm) | > and different protocols | > protocol PS/2 | > protocol mousesystems | > protocol IntelliMouse (used with a different mouse than above two) | > | > but the mouse if _still_ unstable. At the slightest touch it careers off | > screen in some random direction, never to appear again, though upon | > movement it squeals... | | This sounds like a wrong mouse protocol I agree here. Try different protocols until one works. You might want to also unplug the mouse sometimes to "reset" it's internal state. [...] | It's often difficult to make gpm and X get along nicely, What!? Step by step process : 1) Configure gpm a) use the real device (/dev/psaux) b) use the correct protocol c) repeat_type=raw 2) Configure X a) use the repeater (/dev/gpmdata) b) use the correct protocol!! (the /same/ protocol as gpm is set to use) What NOT to do : 1) tell gpm and X to fight over the same device file (eg /dev/psaux) 2) tell gpm and X to fight over which protocol to use (use the same one for both, it's the same mouse after all!) | so if you have no real reason to use gpm, I'd recommend dumping it. That applies to any software in general, but don't give gpm a hard time for people misconfiguring X and thinking it's gpm's fault :-). -D -- "Open Source Software - Sometimes you get more than you paid for..." http://dman.ddts.net/~dman/
msg25838/pgp00000.pgp
Description: PGP signature