This is a stable release to the aiptek driver, one of the legacy drivers.
For shutting down the driver, the previous release(s) relied on heap memory
values staying the same after a free(3) call. If such optimism is
inappropriate on your system, you're encouraged to update to this release.
Peter
the standard is pretty much defined by what the driver can take. If it
can't parse the protocol then the device is rather useless anyway.
but really, writing a serial kernel driver is rather trivial and has a
higher chance of actually working long-term than dragging the old input
drivers
On Tue, Jun 28, 2011 at 11:02:19AM +0100, Alan Cox wrote:
the standard is pretty much defined by what the driver can take. If it
can't parse the protocol then the device is rather useless anyway.
but really, writing a serial kernel driver is rather trivial and has a
higher chance of
This is a stable release to the aiptek driver, one of the legacy drivers.
For shutting down the driver, the previous release(s) relied on heap memory
values staying the same after a free(3) call. If such optimism is
inappropriate on your system, you're encouraged to update to this release.
Peter