Your USB gizmo should be recognized no matter what. A PS2 to USB converter
needs extra circuitry (but this is a tiny chip which they can cast the
connector over). Going the other way is easy because many USB keyboards have
circuitry that will recognize they are not on a USB line and they will switch
into a PS2 mode.
So - first thing to do is check the /proc/bus/usb entries or the 'dmesg' to see if your a
keyboard was detected (even if the system doesn't know what it is). The converter should
advertise itself as a "HID" device. If you have it, then all you have to do is
load the USB HID drivers and, depending on your version of kernel you may also need to
load the 'input' driver:
modprobe input
modprobe usb-hid
If that is your only keyboard then you are in trouble - you will need another keyboard to configure the system so that it can detect your keyboard on boot. Also check the BIOS to see if it supports USB keyboards.
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]