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Date:      Sat, 26 Aug 2000 20:21:52 -0700 (PDT)
From:      Gary Kline <kline@thought.org>
To:        yokota@zodiac.mech.utsunomiya-u.ac.jp (Kazutaka YOKOTA)
Cc:        kline@thought.org (Gary Kline), freebsd-stable@FreeBSD.ORG, yokota@zodiac.mech.utsunomiya-u.ac.jp
Subject:   Re: mouse question....
Message-ID:  <200008270321.UAA28285@tao.thought.org>
In-Reply-To: <200008260746.QAA26455@zodiac.mech.utsunomiya-u.ac.jp> from "Kazutaka YOKOTA" at Aug 26, 2000 04:46:58 PM

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According to Kazutaka YOKOTA:
> 
> 
> Please do the following to diagnose the problem.
> 
> 1. Hook up the mouse (it's a serial mouse, right?) to COM1
> 
> 2. Become root.
> 
> 3. Don't run X yet. Kill `moused' if it is already running.
>    (Run "ps aux | grep mouse" to see if it is running. Kill it if any.)
> 
> 4. Run moused in the information mode as follows:
> 	moused -p /dev/cuaa0 -i all
>    You should get some information if the mouse is a PnP mouse or a 
>    Microsoft-compatible mouse.  Something like:
> 	/dev/cuaa0 serial microsoft generic
> 
> 5. Run moused again, this time in the debug mode:
> 	moused -p /dev/cuaa0 -d -f 
>    If you move mouse and click buttons, you should see mouse status
>    information should be printed.  Type ^C to stop moused.
>    If this seems Ok, then you should edit /etc/rc.conf and
>    put the following lines there:
> 	moused_enable="YES"
> 	moused_type="auto"
> 	moused_port="/dev/cuaa0"
>    Then, edit /etc/XF86Config and set the mouse protocol to "Auto" and
>    the mouse device to "/dev/sysmouse".
>    Start moused in the daemon mode by hand for now (this will automatically
>    done the next time the system is rebooted.)
> 	moused -p /dev/cuaa0 -t auto
> 
> 6. If moused says 'cannot determine mouse type...' in 4, the mouse
>    may be a MouseSystems-compatible mouse, or it may be broken.
>    If the mouse is considered MouseSystems-compatible, you can
>    test the mouse as follows:
> 	moused -p /dev/cuaa0 -d -f -t mousesystems
>    If this is successful Ok, then you should edit /etc/rc.conf and
>    put the following lines there:
> 	moused_enable="YES"
> 	moused_type="mousesystems"
> 	moused_port="/dev/cuaa0"
>    Edit /etc/XF86Config and set the mouse protocol to "Auto" and
>    the mouse device to "/dev/sysmouse".
>    Start moused in the daemon mode by hand for now (this will automatically
>    done the next time the system is rebooted.)
> 	moused -p /dev/cuaa0 -t mousesystems
> 
> 

	This is getting stranger and stranger.  I just bought a new
	Logitech mouse and have it plugged directly into the COM1 
	port.

	The results are the same as before for trying your (4) above,
	and 

moused -p /dev/cuaa0 -d -f -t mouseman
moused: port: /dev/cuaa0  interface: unknown  type: mouseman  model: generic
moused: received char 0x0

	for the above.  The ``received char 0x0'' only happened one time.

	Does this suggest anything to you? Or anyone else on the list?

	gary




-- 
   Gary D. Kline         kline@tao.thought.org          Public service Unix



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