Re: [gentoo-user] X11 without udev/eudev

2021-08-23 Thread karl
Dr. Canek Peláez Valdés:
> On Mon, Aug 23, 2021 at 11:07 AM  wrote:
...
> > Regarding udev, it has never
> > supported serial mice, so it doesn't help me.
> What are you talking about? Udev doesn't "support" any hardware; as the
> manual page states[1], it: "supplies the system software with device
> events, manages permissions of device nodes and may create additional
> symlinks in the /dev/ directory, or renames network interfaces".

Why would I need such a thing, I don't need any changes to /dev.
Even if I pop in a usb-disk, I just mount it.
Udev do not in the slightest solve any of my needs.
So why are you telling me that I must have it, yes, software 
dependancies are a problem. I'm interested in answers that tells me how 
to solve that without calling in extra software and deamons.

> If the kernel supports the hardware, udev will supply the corresponding
> event, so udev will generate the corresponding event for serial mice also
> (probably close to boot time).

You can try gpm to do that.
Udev do not do any way of serial mouce detection, never has.

> > Poeple write whatever software they want to or are paid to do. It is my
> > call if I want to use that software or not.
> Well, yeah; but if you want to use software X, and X depends on Y, then you
> either use software Y or don't use software X. The dependency chain can and
> will grow depending on several factors, and it's the situation here if I'm
> not mistaken: you want to keep using keyboard and mice, those depend on
> libinput, and libinput depends on udev.

I'm not a passive consumer in this as you seem to believe.
If I decide I will resurrect thoose x11 drivers, I will do so.
...

> > As I wrote before, udev does not handle serial mice, so udev does not
> > solve anything for me nor does it help me in any way to run my systems.
> You are saying it wrong, you mean to say:  "to handle serial mice, I don't
> need udev". And that is 100% completely true; you can keep a static /dev,
> don't use udev and create the device nodes by hand. But serial mice
> work great under udev also.

Yea, it does, simply because udev doesn't touch any serial mouse,
you have to fill in your own xorg.conf section for that or use gpm 
in a console. Udev just cares about the serial port, not what is
attached to that port

> It's not only USB; it's Bluetooth, Thunderbolt, eSATA and eSATAp, etc. The
> computing world is dominated by dynamic hardware; it has been so for at
> least the last two decades.

Bluetooth adapters mostly comes in as a usb device, thought there might 
be thoose with an i2c connection for the embedded market.
I don't know about thunderbolt.
esata as well as sata just works well without udev.

And I do not need a deamon to handle that.

> > Serial ports are darn easy to implement in hardware and softwere.
..
> Yes: but the software that *uses* mice doesn't care *ONLY* about serial
> port mice. They care about USB mice (which is the majority) and Bluetooth
> mice (which has the second place). Right now, serial mice have to be a
> distant third place, if at all.

Well, "if at all", so you agree with me that udev isn't for me.
What I'm looking for is alternatives.

> So the developers of software that deals with mice don't need to worry
> *ONLY* about your case; they need to worry about the general case. Which
> includes USB and Bluetooth (and whatever they invent in the future).

So, udev isn't for me, what do you complain about.
I don't say to others to not use udev, I don't care about that.

I ask, how can I make my case work without udev, because honsestly,
it doesn't bring me shit and I'm not interesed in using software that 
doesn't do anything for me. The problem of device nodes and permission 
is already solved, I don't need pop-ups, I don't want automounting.
Serial ports have been working for the last 70 years or more.
So stop this, I never asked about udev or how to make that work.
You are answering the wrong question.

Regards,
/Karl Hammar




Re: [gentoo-user] X11 without udev/eudev

2021-08-23 Thread Canek Peláez Valdés
On Mon, Aug 23, 2021 at 11:07 AM  wrote:
[...]

> It is inconvenient that thoose two goes away. Regarding udev, it has never
> supported serial mice, so it doesn't help me.
>

What are you talking about? Udev doesn't "support" any hardware; as the
manual page states[1], it: "supplies the system software with device
events, manages permissions of device nodes and may create additional
symlinks in the /dev/ directory, or renames network interfaces".

If the kernel supports the hardware, udev will supply the corresponding
event, so udev will generate the corresponding event for serial mice also
(probably close to boot time).

[...]

> Poeple write whatever software they want to or are paid to do. It is my
> call if I want to use that software or not.
>

Well, yeah; but if you want to use software X, and X depends on Y, then you
either use software Y or don't use software X. The dependency chain can and
will grow depending on several factors, and it's the situation here if I'm
not mistaken: you want to keep using keyboard and mice, those depend on
libinput, and libinput depends on udev.

There are alternatives, of course; some members have posted several working
ones; but the fact is that either you accept the dependencies dictated by
the software you want to use, or you need an alternative that *someone* has
to write/debug/maintain, etc. You said: "[u]dev should be an optional
daemon, utilized when the local administrator decides to do so," and that
is simply not true: if a software you use decides to depend on udev, then
you either use udev, or need to change to a different software.


> As I wrote before, udev does not handle serial mice, so udev does not
> solve anything for me nor does it help me in any way to run my systems.
>

You are saying it wrong, you mean to say:  "to handle serial mice, I don't
need udev". And that is 100% completely true; you can keep a static /dev,
don't use udev and create the device nodes by hand. But serial mice
work great under udev also.

The thing is, the *GREAT* majority of users need support for dynamic
hardware, so the developers of most of the software in Linux solve the
general problem: dynamic hardware (which includes static hardware also). So
they do that, and you complain about daemons that are needed for other
people other than you.

But you didn't write the software that depends on udev; someone else
(worrying about the general problem) did. So either you write your own
version, or find someone else who does (again, check the alternatives).


> Udev is just something pushed on me for no gain except possible to satisfy
> some dependancy touted to be beneficial.


For no gain *TO YOU*. You want software that someone else wrote to cater to
*ONLY* your needs. That's not how it works; *MOST* developers will cater to
the needs of the *MAJORITY* of users, and that includes the dynamic
hardware scenario (which has been the case for all of the XXI century, by
the way).


> So in this very specific case it can be considered "bloat" if you wish to
> use that kind of words.
>
> My guess is that it is more useful on laptop than on a desktop box or an
> industrial computer.
>

Of course not; desktop and servers ("industrial computers") need dynamic
hardware (hot swappable storage, anyone?, disconnect the webcam after the
Zoom meeting?) Just because you in particular don't find it useful doesn't
mean it isn't: the truth is, dynamic hardware users surpass static hardware
users, and it has been the case for several decades now.


> As a side note, from what I understand, udev today is mostly
> about usb-devices because that is where the dynamic hardware comes
> from today (at least when we are not talking about hotplugging cpus, memory
> cards, io-cards and such (but that is more of a enterprise problem than a
> small system problem.
>

It's not only USB; it's Bluetooth, Thunderbolt, eSATA and eSATAp, etc. The
computing world is dominated by dynamic hardware; it has been so for at
least the last two decades.


> Serial ports are darn easy to implement in hardware and softwere.
>

Yes: but the software that *uses* mice doesn't care *ONLY* about serial
port mice. They care about USB mice (which is the majority) and Bluetooth
mice (which has the second place). Right now, serial mice have to be a
distant third place, if at all.

So the developers of software that deals with mice don't need to worry
*ONLY* about your case; they need to worry about the general case. Which
includes USB and Bluetooth (and whatever they invent in the future).

E.g. if I have a program connecting to a device using a serial
> and it is disconnected, I can just reconnect it and nothing
> special happens, noting to be done in software except logging.
>  The same device via usb, the dis-/reconnect will close the
> port and make it vanish forcing med to find out find out where the
> new /dev file is and reopen and reinitialize it.
>

That is what udev+libinput solves, *exactly*. You answered yourself why it
is 

Re: [gentoo-user] X11 without udev/eudev

2021-08-23 Thread karl
Karl Hammar:
> Dr. Canek Peláez Valdés:
...
> > My point is that it's not his call; it's the call of the developers of the
> > software that he decided to use.
> 
> Poeple write whatever software they want to or are paid to do.
> It is my call if I want to use that software or not.

 For what some people want to work on, here is an alternative api:
https://github.com/idunham/libsysdev

 And what Anna  gratiosly provided:
https://github.com/illiliti/libudev-zero

...
> > There is no bloat; the developers *need* to handle the dynamic hardware
> > case *and* the static hardware case. With udev, they handle both; otherwise
> > there would be two code routes: one for static and another for dynamic
> > hardware.

As an example of that is:
 https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/mesa/drm/-/blob/main/xf86drm.c

The changes nessesary for a non-udev solution is smallish,
and it doesn't have to resort to polling as in the udev case.

A gui's need for pop-up windows when new devices are connected
could just as well be handled separate to the system thing of
/dev nodes, permissions and such. You don't need a daemon for
that, it just that the udev people just merged the use cases.

...
> As a side note,
...

As an actual case, this is a prototype for a three way mouse
to be used on ship bridges
 http://aspodata.se/git/openhw/boards_arm_aspo/mouse/
Switching a knob, I can send mouse events to three different
computers, say for radar, maps, etc.
It uses microsoft serial mouse protocol.
This possible for low end mcu's since they contain multiple
serial interfaces.

If I had to use usb, well, not even a high end mcu's like
stm32f4 has more than two usb ports.

Regards,
/Karl Hammar




Re: [gentoo-user] X11 without udev/eudev

2021-08-23 Thread Vitor Hugo Nunes dos Santos
Based Karl

Keep the bloaties at bay
Rock on

August 23, 2021 1:08 PM, k...@aspodata.se wrote:

> Dr. Canek Peláez Valdés:
> ...
> 
>> Where do you get that impression from? The OP needs handling keyboard and
>> mouse (as per his first email), and to do that in Linux these days, you
>> basically need udev, because xf86-input-mouse and xf86-input-keyboard are
>> going the way of the dodo.
> 
> It is inconvenient that thoose two goes away.
> Regarding udev, it has never supported serial mice, so it doesn't help
> me.
> 
> ...
>> My point is that it's not his call; it's the call of the developers of the
>> software that he decided to use.
> 
> Poeple write whatever software they want to or are paid to do.
> It is my call if I want to use that software or not.
> 
>> Yes I take your point, but bloat is bloat, and bloat is a liability.
>> 
>> There is no bloat; the developers *need* to handle the dynamic hardware
>> case *and* the static hardware case. With udev, they handle both; otherwise
>> there would be two code routes: one for static and another for dynamic
>> hardware.
> 
> ...
> 
> As I wrote before, udev does not handle serial mice, so udev does not
> solve anything for me nor does it help me in any way to run my systems.
> Udev is just something pushed on me for no gain except possible to
> satisfy some dependancy touted to be beneficial. So in this very
> specific case it can be considered "bloat" if you wish to use that
> kind of words.
> 
> My guess is that it is more useful on laptop than on a desktop box
> or an industrial computer.
> 
> ///
> 
> As a side note, from what I understand, udev today is mostly about
> usb-devices because that is where the dynamic hardware comes from
> today (at least when we are not talking about hotplugging cpus,
> memory cards, io-cards and such (but that is more of a enterprise
> problem than a small system problem.
> 
> Serial ports are darn easy to implement in hardware and
> softwere.
> 
> E.g. if I have a program connecting to a device using a serial
> and it is disconnected, I can just reconnect it and nothing
> special happens, noting to be done in software except logging.
> The same device via usb, the dis-/reconnect will close the
> port and make it vanish forcing med to find out find out where the
> new /dev file is and reopen and reinitialize it.
> In hardware, mcu's without usb are cheap and their serial port
> are simpe to program and the serial port "stack" is vanishingly small.
> Just look at the tty_* files in
> http://aspodata.se/git/openhw/libarm
> http://aspodata.se/git/openhw/libarm/stm32
> For usb support, I need an usb stack (which is larger), e.g.
> https://github.com/libopencm3/libopencm3/tree/master/lib/usb
> I need to understand the usb protocol and all thoose structs to fill
> in, and in the end I get a system that is harder to program on the
> host side for no gain other than that +5V is provided by usb.
> 
> Regards,
> /Karl Hammar




Re: [gentoo-user] X11 without udev/eudev

2021-08-23 Thread karl
Dr. Canek Peláez Valdés:
...
> Where do you get that impression from? The OP needs handling keyboard and
> mouse (as per his first email), and to do that in Linux these days, you
> basically need udev, because xf86-input-mouse and xf86-input-keyboard are
> going the way of the dodo.

It is inconvenient that thoose two goes away.
Regarding udev, it has never supported serial mice, so it doesn't help 
me.

...
> My point is that it's not his call; it's the call of the developers of the
> software that he decided to use.

Poeple write whatever software they want to or are paid to do.
It is my call if I want to use that software or not.

> > Yes I take your point, but bloat is bloat, and bloat is a liability.
> >
> 
> There is no bloat; the developers *need* to handle the dynamic hardware
> case *and* the static hardware case. With udev, they handle both; otherwise
> there would be two code routes: one for static and another for dynamic
> hardware.
...

As I wrote before, udev does not handle serial mice, so udev does not
solve anything for me nor does it help me in any way to run my systems.
Udev is just something pushed on me for no gain except possible to
satisfy some dependancy touted to be beneficial. So in this very
specific case it can be considered "bloat" if you wish to use that
kind of words.

My guess is that it is more useful on laptop than on a desktop box
or an industrial computer.

///

As a side note, from what I understand, udev today is mostly about
usb-devices because that is where the dynamic hardware comes from
today (at least when we are not talking about hotplugging cpus,
memory cards, io-cards and such (but that is more of a enterprise 
problem than a small system problem.

Serial ports are darn easy to implement in hardware and
softwere.

E.g. if I have a program connecting to a device using a serial
and it is disconnected, I can just reconnect it and nothing
special happens, noting to be done in software except logging.
 The same device via usb, the dis-/reconnect will close the
port and make it vanish forcing med to find out find out where the
new /dev file is and reopen and reinitialize it.
 In hardware, mcu's without usb are cheap and their serial port
are simpe to program and the serial port "stack" is vanishingly small.
Just look at the tty_* files in
 http://aspodata.se/git/openhw/libarm/
 http://aspodata.se/git/openhw/libarm/stm32/
For usb support, I need an usb stack (which is larger), e.g.
 https://github.com/libopencm3/libopencm3/tree/master/lib/usb
I need to understand the usb protocol and all thoose structs to fill
in, and in the end I get a system that is harder to program on the
host side for no gain other than that +5V is provided by usb.

Regards,
/Karl Hammar





Re: [gentoo-user] X11 without udev/eudev

2021-08-22 Thread Canek Peláez Valdés
On Sun, Aug 22, 2021 at 6:18 PM antlists  wrote:
[...]

> What you're missing, is that this code IS NOT USED.
>
> The OP wants to delete a load of code from his system precisely to
> ELIMINATE vulnerabilities. If the code ain't there, it don't need fixing.
>

Where do you get that impression from? The OP needs handling keyboard and
mouse (as per his first email), and to do that in Linux these days, you
basically need udev, because xf86-input-mouse and xf86-input-keyboard are
going the way of the dodo.

Where does the "ELIMINATE vulnerabilities" come from? The OP is just
complaining that to use keyboard and mouse, now he needs udev.

My point is that it's not his call; it's the call of the developers of the
software that he decided to use.


> Yes I take your point, but bloat is bloat, and bloat is a liability.
>

There is no bloat; the developers *need* to handle the dynamic hardware
case *and* the static hardware case. With udev, they handle both; otherwise
there would be two code routes: one for static and another for dynamic
hardware.

THAT would be bloat; using udev solves all the cases and bloat is averted.
Is exactly the contrary of what you are saying.

Regards.
--
Dr. Canek Peláez Valdés
Profesor de Carrera Asociado C
Departamento de Matemáticas
Facultad de Ciencias
Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México


Re: [gentoo-user] X11 without udev/eudev

2021-08-22 Thread Rich Freeman
On Sun, Aug 22, 2021 at 7:18 PM antlists  wrote:
>
> On 22/08/2021 22:59, Canek Peláez Valdés wrote:
> > On Sun, Aug 22, 2021 at 3:32 PM  > > wrote:
> > [...]
> >
> > I'll be looking into that, but on some level, why should I be forced to
> > go around udev. Can't programs be compiled without udev today...
> >
> >
> > Yes, they can, if you (or someone else) write the necessary code, debug
> > it, maintain it and keep it up to date and fix vulnerabilities and other
> > errors that inevitably will appear, as it does with every piece of software.
>
> What you're missing, is that this code IS NOT USED.
>
> The OP wants to delete a load of code from his system precisely to
> ELIMINATE vulnerabilities. If the code ain't there, it don't need fixing.
>
> Yes I take your point, but bloat is bloat, and bloat is a liability.
>

Sure, and if it is that easy to remove then it won't be a huge time
commitment for you to maintain your own private fork of the software.
Still, somebody has to do the work, and since the number of people who
don't have udev installed is pretty small, chances are it won't be
somebody else.  Of course, you can release your fork as FOSS so that
others can benefit from it.

Keep in mind that even just removing code does incur the risk of
making mistakes, and at some point maintaining a fork that almost
nobody uses also has some risk to it.  Don't really want to get into a
completely hypothetical argument about which is worse - obviously the
devil is in the details.  This is likely why upstreams are mostly not
interested in supporting building without a requirement of udev.

-- 
Rich



Re: [gentoo-user] X11 without udev/eudev

2021-08-22 Thread antlists

On 22/08/2021 22:59, Canek Peláez Valdés wrote:
On Sun, Aug 22, 2021 at 3:32 PM > wrote:

[...]

I'll be looking into that, but on some level, why should I be forced to
go around udev. Can't programs be compiled without udev today...


Yes, they can, if you (or someone else) write the necessary code, debug 
it, maintain it and keep it up to date and fix vulnerabilities and other 
errors that inevitably will appear, as it does with every piece of software.


What you're missing, is that this code IS NOT USED.

The OP wants to delete a load of code from his system precisely to 
ELIMINATE vulnerabilities. If the code ain't there, it don't need fixing.


Yes I take your point, but bloat is bloat, and bloat is a liability.

Cheers,
Wol



Re: [gentoo-user] X11 without udev/eudev

2021-08-22 Thread Canek Peláez Valdés
On Sun, Aug 22, 2021 at 3:32 PM  wrote:
[...]

> I'll be looking into that, but on some level, why should I be forced to
> go around udev. Can't programs be compiled without udev today...
>

Yes, they can, if you (or someone else) write the necessary code, debug it,
maintain it and keep it up to date and fix vulnerabilities and other errors
that inevitably will appear, as it does with every piece of software.


> Udev should be an optional deamon, utilized when the local administrator
> decides to do so.


Wrong: the use of udev is to be decided by the developers of the code that
uses it. If you don't like it, then you write your own. The code is free
and open.

Udev solves a very real problem, because most modern PCs have dynamic
hardware; we connect and disconnect multiple devices from it all the time,
and the vast majority of users prefer it when it simply works
automagically. Moreover, it *also* works with static hardware, so it hits
two birds with one stone.

You want developers to write code that only benefits the simplest and most
boring case: a PC that never changes hardware. Any sane developer will
obviously prefer to depend on udev, which solves every case and it has the
most users (and therefore feedback for detecting and correcting bugs, and
also to ask for new features and capabilities).


> I don't want things to automatically pop up unless I say so.
>

Then write yourself the corresponding software, or pay someone to do it.
Otherwise, complaining (while cathartic and the preferred hobby of most of
the internet) is completely useless.

Regards.
--
Dr. Canek Peláez Valdés
Profesor de Carrera Asociado C
Departamento de Matemáticas
Facultad de Ciencias
Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México


Re: [gentoo-user] X11 without udev/eudev

2021-08-22 Thread karl
Anna:
> On 2021-08-21 22:17, k...@aspodata.se wrote:
> > Is there possible to resurrect the old drivers ?
> git clone https://anongit.gentoo.org/git/repo/gentoo.git && cd gentoo
> git log -p -- x11-drivers/xf86-input-keyboard
> git checkout commit_id
> 
> Copy to your local overlay

Thanks Anna, done so.

> > Or is there another way to solve this ?
> Try libudev-zero (install it and add udev/libudev virtuals to
> package.provided)
> https://github.com/illiliti/libudev-zero

I'll be looking into that, but on some level, why should I be forced to
go around udev. Can't programs be compiled without udev today...
Udev should be an optional deamon, utilized when the local 
administrator decides to do so. I don't want things to automatically
pop up unless I say so.

Regards,
/Karl Hammar




Re: [gentoo-user] X11 without udev/eudev

2021-08-22 Thread karl
Neil Bothwick:
...
> You need to grab xorg-2.eclass from the git history and put it in your
> overlay. Be prepared to repeat this process with other files.

Thanks, found them.

Regards,
/Karl Hammar




Re: [gentoo-user] X11 without udev/eudev

2021-08-22 Thread karl
Mart:
...
> Also be prepared for all the known security vulnerabilities you
> reintroduce by installing a heavily outdated xorg-server with multiple
> known vulnerabilities.
...

I don't reintroduce them, I just keep them.
Also, I had upgraded it if it wasn't for the udev dependancy.
If you have a solution without udev, please tell me.

Regards,
/Karl Hammar





Re: [gentoo-user] X11 without udev/eudev

2021-08-22 Thread Mart Raudsepp
Ühel kenal päeval, L, 21.08.2021 kell 23:45, kirjutas Neil Bothwick:
> On Sun, 22 Aug 2021 00:34:32 +0200 (CEST), k...@aspodata.se wrote:
> 
> > > This should have some of the info you need 
> > > https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Old_Fashioned_Gentoo_Install  
> > 
> > Well, I already have such a system, but developments since last
> > year somehow just claims I have to have a lot of (for me) useless
> > processes.
> > 
> > I have tried the overlay route, but since some time I get:
> > 
> >  * ERROR: x11-base/xorg-server-1.18.4::aspo failed (depend phase):
> >  *   xorg-2.eclass could not be found by inherit()
> >  * 
> 
> You need to grab xorg-2.eclass from the git history and put it in
> your
> overlay. Be prepared to repeat this process with other files.

Also be prepared for all the known security vulnerabilities you
reintroduce by installing a heavily outdated xorg-server with multiple
known vulnerabilities.


Mart




Re: [gentoo-user] X11 without udev/eudev

2021-08-21 Thread Anna “CyberTailor”
On 2021-08-21 22:17, k...@aspodata.se wrote:
> Is there possible to resurrect the old drivers ?
git clone https://anongit.gentoo.org/git/repo/gentoo.git && cd gentoo
git log -p -- x11-drivers/xf86-input-keyboard
git checkout commit_id

Copy to your local overlay

> Or is there another way to solve this ?
Try libudev-zero (install it and add udev/libudev virtuals to
package.provided)
https://github.com/illiliti/libudev-zero



Re: [gentoo-user] X11 without udev/eudev

2021-08-21 Thread Neil Bothwick
On Sun, 22 Aug 2021 00:34:32 +0200 (CEST), k...@aspodata.se wrote:

> > This should have some of the info you need 
> > https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Old_Fashioned_Gentoo_Install  
> 
> Well, I already have such a system, but developments since last
> year somehow just claims I have to have a lot of (for me) useless
> processes.
> 
> I have tried the overlay route, but since some time I get:
> 
>  * ERROR: x11-base/xorg-server-1.18.4::aspo failed (depend phase):
>  *   xorg-2.eclass could not be found by inherit()
>  * 

You need to grab xorg-2.eclass from the git history and put it in your
overlay. Be prepared to repeat this process with other files.


-- 
Neil Bothwick

"I laugh in the face of danger, then I hide until it goes away"


pgpCJYQwKqzj9.pgp
Description: OpenPGP digital signature


Re: [gentoo-user] X11 without udev/eudev

2021-08-21 Thread karl
Vitor Hugo:
...
> This should have some of the info you need 
> https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Old_Fashioned_Gentoo_Install

Well, I already have such a system, but developments since last
year somehow just claims I have to have a lot of (for me) useless
processes.

I have tried the overlay route, but since some time I get:

 * ERROR: x11-base/xorg-server-1.18.4::aspo failed (depend phase):
 *   xorg-2.eclass could not be found by inherit()
 * 
 * Call stack:
 *   ebuild.sh, line 609:  Called source 
'/home/local/portage/x11-base/xorg-server/xorg-server-1.18.4.ebuild'
 *   xorg-server-1.18.4.ebuild, line   8:  Called inherit 'xorg-2' 'multilib' 
'versionator' 'flag-o-matic'
 *   ebuild.sh, line 290:  Called die
 * The specific snippet of code:
 *  [[ -z ${location} ]] && die "${1}.eclass could not be found by 
inherit()"
 * 

Regards,
/Karl Hammar





Re: [gentoo-user] X11 without udev/eudev

2021-08-21 Thread karl
Wol:
> On 21/08/2021 21:17, k...@aspodata.se wrote:
> > Is there possible to resurrect the old drivers ?
> > Or is there another way to solve this ?
> 
> Put in a bug report?

I don't think libinput maintainers would care.
 https://wayland.freedesktop.org/libinput/doc/latest/what-is-libinput.html
plainly says:

 libinput is an input stack for processes that need to provide events
 from commonly used input devices. 

and serial mice isn't common any longer, and udev has never (from what I
know) cared about serial mice.

Regards,
/Karl Hammar





Re: [gentoo-user] X11 without udev/eudev

2021-08-21 Thread Vitor Hugo Nunes dos Santos

On 8/21/21 5:17 PM, k...@aspodata.se wrote:

With the demise of xf86-input-mouse and xf86-input-keyboard,
xf86-input-libinput is put forward as a replacement.
But it (or rather libinput) has udev as a hard dependency.

I have a ps2 keyboard and a 3-button serial mouse, so there is frankly
no use for udev here, nor would it help anything except possible to mess
up my preset dev directory. Also I have sys-fs/static, even if I install
udev, it woun't start, and I don't need yet another deamon running
doing nothing for me.

Is there possible to resurrect the old drivers ?
Or is there another way to solve this ?

Regards,
/Karl Hammar




Karl,

This should have some of the info you need 
https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Old_Fashioned_Gentoo_Install


Best regards,

Vitor Hugo




Re: [gentoo-user] X11 without udev/eudev

2021-08-21 Thread antlists

On 21/08/2021 21:17, k...@aspodata.se wrote:

Is there possible to resurrect the old drivers ?
Or is there another way to solve this ?


Put in a bug report?

Cheers,
Wol