On 5/8/07, Paul Brook [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Monday 07 May 2007, Samuel Bronson wrote:
So, if the guest system has a triple-fault, and I had had my mouse grabbed,
it stays grabbed, so that X has to be restarted (as far as I know).
This happens because abort() doesn't run functions
So, if the guest system has a triple-fault, and I had had my mouse grabbed, it
stays grabbed, so that X has to be restarted (as far as I know).
This happens because abort() doesn't run functions registered with atexit().
Suggest use of exit() instead.
On Monday 07 May 2007, Samuel Bronson wrote:
So, if the guest system has a triple-fault, and I had had my mouse grabbed,
it stays grabbed, so that X has to be restarted (as far as I know).
This happens because abort() doesn't run functions registered with
atexit(). Suggest use of exit()
Samuel Bronson [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
So, if the guest system has a triple-fault, and I had had my mouse grabbed, it
stays grabbed, so that X has to be restarted (as far as I know).
Not if you have XF86_Ungrab bound to a key.
Andreas.
--
Andreas Schwab, SuSE Labs, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
SuSE
On Tue, 2007-05-08 at 18:38 +0200, Andreas Schwab wrote:
Samuel Bronson [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
So, if the guest system has a triple-fault, and I had had my mouse grabbed,
it
stays grabbed, so that X has to be restarted (as far as I know).
Not if you have XF86_Ungrab bound to a key.