On Sat, Jan 8, 2011 at 2:35 PM, RT Hatfield <[email protected]> wrote:

> I'm no expert, but it sounds to me like X is thinking it has to drop the
> driver after a power state transition.  I think the easiest way to get the
> mouse driver working again is to straight-up restart X.  That's probably
> gonna be no fun for you, so make sure your files are all up to date and
> google to see if this is a known issue (no idea how many people run Fedora
> on mb airs, so it might not be).  That's all I've got.  Best bet is asking
> someone who's an expert on configuring X.
>

Hmm...  Now that I think about it, the problem seems to be in X, you're
right.  But when I restart X (just killing the Xorg process from a terminal,
because ctrl-alt-backspace for some reason doesn't work), the mouse still
doesn't work.  I had thought of what you suggested, and I tried it, to no
avail.  So that doesn't give me much hope...  Any other ideas?
--------------------
BYU Unix Users Group 
http://uug.byu.edu/ 

The opinions expressed in this message are the responsibility of their
author.  They are not endorsed by BYU, the BYU CS Department or BYU-UUG. 
___________________________________________________________________
List Info (unsubscribe here): http://uug.byu.edu/mailman/listinfo/uug-list

Reply via email to