Date: Wed, 4 Aug 2004 08:16:09 +0200 From: Philip Paeps <philip@FreeBSD.org> To: Robert Watson <rwatson@FreeBSD.org> Cc: cvs-all@FreeBSD.org Subject: Re: cvs commit: src/sys/sys mouse.h src/sys/isa psm.c Message-ID: <20040804061609.GA16596@fasolt.home.paeps.cx> In-Reply-To: <Pine.NEB.3.96L.1040803190259.93198B-100000@fledge.watson.org> References: <200407300059.i6U0xfbJ063368@repoman.freebsd.org> <Pine.NEB.3.96L.1040803190259.93198B-100000@fledge.watson.org>
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On 2004-08-03 19:05:09 (-0400), Robert Watson <rwatson@FreeBSD.org> wrote: > On Fri, 30 Jul 2004, Nate Lawson wrote: > > Add support for the Synaptics Touchpad mouse driver. > > I haven't yet attempted to track down whether it was this specific commit, > but sometime in the last few days, my notebook mousepad began behaving very > strangely. That's probably this specific commit. > I'm seeing a few different symptoms: > > - The touchpad is much more sensitive than it was before, making it > difficult to point it accurately at window borders, etc. Could you try playing with the acceleration option (-a) of moused? I also think the sensitivity is a bit over the top at the moment. I'm getting good results with -a 0.75 and am considering making that the default (changing the distance calculation in psm, actually). But maybe that's still too much? Suggestions welcome :-) > - When I hold down the mouse buttons to drag, that appears not to register > properly, so I can't resize windows easily. I'm not seeing that here. Does the behaviour change depending how much of your finger stays on the pad while dragging? > - Sometimes, the mouse cursor appears to stall and not move. It then > rights itself, but I'm not sure why. This I have seen, but not very often, and always when I've just put moused in the background after getting sick of its verbosity in the foreground :-o > psm now reports as "model Synaptics Touchpad, device ID 0" which I don't > recall it doing previously. By default, the touchpad behaves like a simple two-button mouse and does the scaling and accelerating itself. When you activate the special features, you also have to do all the 'standard' magic yourself. The documentation, while very good, unfortunately doesn't specify exactly which magic values the internal logic uses, so it's a bit of guesswork still. :-) - Philip -- Philip Paeps Please don't CC me, I am subscribed to the list. BOFH Excuse #114: electro-magnetic pulses from French above ground nuke testing.
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