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a first pass of doxygen documentation of EXA. This removes the
corresponding pieces of exa-driver.txt, which were becoming stale.
Hopefully the documentation will stay much more up-to-date this way.
Many thanks to jbarnes for writing exa-driver.txt which was used a lot
in writing this documentation.
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| .. | ||
| changelogs | ||
| devel | ||
| man | ||
| sgml | ||
| Makefile.am | ||
| README.DRI | ||
| README.fonts | ||
| README.rapidaccess | ||
The IBM Rapid Access keyboard have some extra buttons
on it to launch programs, control a cd-player and so on.
These buttons is not functional when the computer is turned
on but have to be activated by sending the codes 0xea 0x71
to it.
I've written the following hack to send codes to the keyboard:
--------------------------------------------------------------
/* gcc -O2 -s -Wall -osend_to_keyboard send_to_keyboard.c */
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <sys/io.h>
int main( int argc, char *argv[] )
{
int i;
ioperm( 0x60, 3, 1 );
for( i = 1; i < argc; i++ ) {
int x = strtol( argv[i], 0, 16 );
usleep( 300 );
outb( x, 0x60 );
}
return 0;
}
--------------------------------------------------------------
As root you can then call this program (in your boot scripts)
as "send_to_keyboard ea 71" to turn on the extra buttons.
It's not a good idea to run several instances of this program
at the same time. It is a hack but it works. If you try to
send other codes to the keyboard it probably will lock up.
For other codes see:
http://www.win.tue.nl/~aeb/linux/kbd/scancodes-2.html#ss2.22
--
Dennis Björklund <db@zigo.dhs.org>
$XFree86$