Thanks guys... as a first time mac user, I did not know that the keyboard is connected through ADB ports.
After enabling ADB support, it works great. Chu ----- Original Message ----- From: "Stefan Werner" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <debian-powerpc@lists.debian.org> Sent: Wednesday, December 05, 2001 11:02 AM Subject: Re: kernel: make config for ibook2 Hi, On Wednesday, December 5, 2001, at 03:47 AM, Michel Dänzer wrote: I have used make config and recompiled benh's kernel for my ibook 2. However, after booting up, the keyboard wasn't working. Does anyone knows the kernel options that are responsible for making the keyboard works? Assuming you are running woody and/or sid, you most likely need to disable CONFIG_MAC_ADBKEYCODES. As a workaround, you can pass keyboard_sends_linux_keycodes=1 to the kernel AFAIR the disabling CONFIG_MAC_ADBKEYCODES is considered the workaround and keyboard_sends_linux_keycodes=1 is the solution. However, Chu, you did not write that "wasn't working" means: Doesn't it work at all or do you get a very weird keymap? If you have a completely non-functional keyboard, you need to include support for ADB input devices in your kernel (the keyboard appears as ADB device, the Trackpad as a USB device). If you have the weird keymap, adding keyboard_sends_linux_keycodes=1 to the kernel parameters (a good place to do that is /etc/yaboot.conf). I ran into the same problem, and adding this line fixed it for me. Stefan PS: Sorry Michael for getting this mail twice - I didn't see that the list server does not set the reply-to: to the list address. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]