Or easier you could do: xdpyinfo | grep XKEYBOARD if it displays notthing, you dont have it, if it displayss XKEYBOARD you have it!
Jamie On Thursday 16 January 2003 10:10 pm, Neil Parker wrote: : On 16 Jan 2003, Ben Barrett wrote: : >Humm... or it could be me!! Is anyone getting this to work through a : >KVM? I wouldn't think it matters, but it might... I use one at home, : >but it doesn't explain my office workstation. Maybe I'll try on some : >other linux boxen here at the office, since they're numerous. = ) : > : >Is my odd situation possibly related to disabling "Dead Keys"? : : Probably not. Given that it seems to be an XKB thing, its availability : probably depends on whether XKB is turned on or not. : : In XFree86 3.3.6, XKB is controlled by an option in the XF86Config file : called "XkbDisable". On my machine, "XkbDisable" is commented out, : so I get XKB behavior, including mousekeys. Uncommenting XkbDisable does : pretty much what you'd expect. There's probably a similar option for : XFree86 4.x. : : You can find out whether your display supports XKB by typing "xdpyinfo" in : a terminal window. This prints out, among other things, a list of the X : extensions supported by the server...if you see "XKEYBOARD" on the list, : then XKB is available. : : - Neil Parker : : _______________________________________________ : Eug-LUG mailing list : [EMAIL PROTECTED] : http://mailman.efn.org/cgi-bin/listinfo/eug-lug -- No microsoft products were used to produce this message. EUG-LUG Mailing List: http://mailman.efn.org/cgi-bin/listinfo/eug-lug _______________________________________________ Eug-LUG mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mailman.efn.org/cgi-bin/listinfo/eug-lug