> Bummer, nothing :-/ It's all pretty much very configurable... but it can take quite a bit of effort.
Read up on: man setkeycodes man showkey man dumpkeys man loadkeys man xev man xkbset man xmodmap Then you need to: a) make sure the kernel sees the keypresses, and knows what to do with them (if it doesn't know it'll output a message probably in /var/log/messages about needing to run setkeycodes) [you can also use showkey -s here from outside of X] b) verify you get these codes through to userspace within a non-X environment (showkey -k) c) bind something to these keycodes within non-X (via loadkeys) d) verify you see the keypress in X via xev e) bind something to the keypress in X via xmodmap I haven't done this in ages, so my memory of the precise process is very fuzzy. Furthermore USB keyboards (the built-in keyboard in a macbook pro for example) are kind of special in that the kernel emulates them producing scancodes like old-style keyboards. Anyway, it can all be worked out, and I'm willing to help. -- Maciej _______________________________________________ screen-users mailing list screen-users@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/screen-users