Bug #1456
openMicrosoft wireless desktop problems
Added by elekktretterr over 15 years ago. Updated almost 10 years ago.
0%
Description
Hi Matt and others,
Since DragonFly will be releasing soon, I thought it would be a good idea to
mention some minor issues that I have with my MS Wireless Desktop
keyboard/mouse. I used to use Logitech which worked great (untill i broke the
mouse).
Issue 1:
Keyboard doesnt work in the DragonFly boot menu.
Issue 2:
Mouse isnt recognized at all.
Here is dmesg output:
ukbd0: <Microsoft Microsoft\M-. 2.4GHz Transceiver V1.0, class 0/0, rev
2.00/2.70, addr 3> on uhub0
kbd1 at ukbd0
uhid0: <Microsoft Microsoft\M-. 2.4GHz Transceiver V1.0, class 0/0, rev
2.00/2.70, addr 3> on uhub0
As you can see the mouse is uhid instead of ums.
Would it be difficult to get this working before the release? In FreeBSD 7 the
mouse doesnt work either.
Petr
Updated by dillon over 15 years ago
:Hi Matt and others,
:
:Since DragonFly will be releasing soon, I thought it would be a good idea to
:mention some minor issues that I have with my MS Wireless Desktop
:keyboard/mouse. I used to use Logitech which worked great (untill i broke the
:mouse).
:
:Issue 1:
:Keyboard doesnt work in the DragonFly boot menu.
The boot menu uses BIOS calls for keyboard access. Does it work
with anyone else's boot menu? FreeBSD? Linux?
If it does then a patch set that smtms put together that gets rid of
most of the BTX junk might help for the keyboard. It was a few months
ago and I think it is still in one of his git branches. You should
be able to find a reference in the list archives. If FreeBSD's boot
menu works w/ this keyboard then that patch set might make ours
work w/ the keyboard too.
It's a bit too late for this release cycle for us to patch it into
master. It's been around a while but it kinda got lost and now
there isn't enough testing time left before the release.
:Issue 2:
:Mouse isnt recognized at all.
:...
:Would it be difficult to get this working before the release? In FreeBSD 7 the
:mouse doesnt work either.
:
:Petr
I don't think there is much that can be done about a mouse
that doesn't probe as a mouse. It might be possible to create
a quirk entry of some sort but I've never tried making a USB
device look like something else.
-Matt
Matthew Dillon
<dillon@backplane.com>
Updated by steve over 15 years ago
On Wed, 19 Aug 2009 19:38:21 -0700 (PDT)
Matthew Dillon <dillon@apollo.backplane.com> wrote:
I don't think there is much that can be done about a mouse
that doesn't probe as a mouse. It might be possible to create
a quirk entry of some sort but I've never tried making a USB
device look like something else.
FWIW I had similar problems with my FK-760 wireless
keyboard/trackball unit. I spent quite some time trying to bring in the
NetBSD uhid framework which apparently should support mice via uhid. I
think this is the way to go for improved uhid support - but I couldn't get
it to work before I ran out of time and it lapsed into bit rot.
Updated by hasso over 15 years ago
Steve O'Hara-Smith wrote:
FWIW I had similar problems with my FK-760 wireless
keyboard/trackball unit. I spent quite some time trying to bring in the
NetBSD uhid framework which apparently should support mice via uhid. I
think this is the way to go for improved uhid support - but I couldn't get
it to work before I ran out of time and it lapsed into bit rot.
I think that it's actually FreeBSD new USB stack which should be
investigated. It removes too many shortcomings present in current stack we
share with the rest of BSD systems. I looked at it briefly at some point,
but it requires more time and knowledge than I (will) have.
Updated by steve over 15 years ago
On Thu, 20 Aug 2009 14:41:31 +0300
Hasso Tepper <hasso@estpak.ee> wrote:
Steve O'Hara-Smith wrote:
FWIW I had similar problems with my FK-760 wireless
keyboard/trackball unit. I spent quite some time trying to bring in the
NetBSD uhid framework which apparently should support mice via uhid. I
think this is the way to go for improved uhid support - but I couldn't
get it to work before I ran out of time and it lapsed into bit rot.I think that it's actually FreeBSD new USB stack which should be
investigated. It removes too many shortcomings present in current stack we
Maybe - but last I checked it didn't handle HID devices as well as
the current NetBSD one with it's uhidev layer.
Updated by elekktretterr over 15 years ago
The boot menu uses BIOS calls for keyboard access. Does it work
with anyone else's boot menu? FreeBSD? Linux?If it does then a patch set that smtms put together that gets rid of
most of the BTX junk might help for the keyboard. It was a few months
ago and I think it is still in one of his git branches. You should
be able to find a reference in the list archives. If FreeBSD's boot
menu works w/ this keyboard then that patch set might make ours
work w/ the keyboard too.It's a bit too late for this release cycle for us to patch it into
master. It's been around a while but it kinda got lost and now
there isn't enough testing time left before the release.
Hi Matt,
So Ive tried booting Linux cd that uses GRUB and keyboard works fine. I also
tried FBSD 7.1 but it doesnt work in FreeBSD boot menu.
So heres an idea. Whats involved in changing our boot loader to GRUB?. Solaris
has been using it by default. Maybe its time to dump the 20 year old
technology and get a fleshy colorful boot loader that works with current
technology. It would also definately differentiate DragonFly from FreeBSD.
Cheers,
Petr
Updated by dillon about 15 years ago
:Hi Matt,
:
:So Ive tried booting Linux cd that uses GRUB and keyboard works fine. I also
:tried FBSD 7.1 but it doesnt work in FreeBSD boot menu.
:
:So heres an idea. Whats involved in changing our boot loader to GRUB?. Solaris
:has been using it by default. Maybe its time to dump the 20 year old
:technology and get a fleshy colorful boot loader that works with current
:technology. It would also definately differentiate DragonFly from FreeBSD.
:
:Cheers,
:Petr
I have no idea what it would take. We are heavily dependant on
our loader infrastructure for module preloading, kernel environment
variables, and transfering the PXE dataset from the loader to the
kernel.
-Matt
Matthew Dillon
<dillon@backplane.com>
Updated by TGEN about 15 years ago
Petr Janda wrote:
So heres an idea. Whats involved in changing our boot loader to GRUB?. Solaris
has been using it by default. Maybe its time to dump the 20 year old
technology and get a fleshy colorful boot loader that works with current
technology. It would also definately differentiate DragonFly from FreeBSD.
BTX isn't that old. Also, grub is the stuff on your plate when you're
eating. Adding multiboot support to the kernel is good, but good luck
with that. Having Grub as default bootloader is not imo. We'd become
even more locked into GNU technology. I'm not sure we need a colourful
and fleshy (?) bootloader just to differentiate DragonFly BSD from FreeBSD.
Cheers,
--
Thomas E. Spanjaard
tgen@netphreax.net
tgen@deepbone.net
Updated by tuxillo almost 10 years ago
- Description updated (diff)
- Category set to Driver
- Status changed from New to Feedback
- Assignee deleted (
0) - Target version set to Unverifiable
Hi,
Moving it to unverifiable.
Feel free to update this ticket if you manage to test it with latest master.
Cheers,
Antonio Huete