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Re: -current on PowerBook G4 667 (TiBook)
On Sat, 14 Jul 2012, Michael wrote:
On Jul 14, 2012, at 5:05 AM, John D. Baker wrote:
I'm guesing powerd intercepts this and begins a normal shutdown and
poweroff, but it never completes. At this point, pressing Fn-LCmd
again elicits a kernel message:
adbkbd0: power switch pressed, shutting down.
Hmm, so it produces the same ADB sequence as the power button. I wonder if
there's a way to tell the two apart :/
(or something like that--it happens too quick) and the machine immediately
powers off.
Then powerd didn't get it, otherwise it would do a more orderly ( and
therefore slower ) shutdown.
The _first_ time I press Fn-LCmd, it (powerd?) reports power button
pressed and starts an orderly shutdown. It gets around to unmounting
filesystems, but since I'm currently operating it netboot/NFS-root, it
never finishes shutting down and just hangs (if I had DEBUG defined, it
would print an endless procession of "nfs_timer: error 49 ignored"
messages and never actually finish powering off).
At this point, there is no powerd running anymore, so the _second_ time
I press Fn-LCmd, it produces the kernel message and shuts down immediately.
DRM won't work on non-x86.
I suspected this would be the answer. Oh well. [ rambling deleted ]
I mapped the enter key on the right of the right Command key to the right
mouse button - close enough to the pad and it's not like that key would be
used for anything else anyway.
I noticed that its default mapping is as the right-Alt key.
Also, Shift-Fn-{Up,Down}Arrow does scroll terminal windows, but its very
sensitive to order. You MUST press Shift well before pressing Fn. I'd
gotten used to (in MacOS X) just mashing LShift-Fn simultaneously and
pressing the desired arrow key.
Mouse operation deteriorates over time. After a few hours, the mouse
will lose a coordinate, or be limited to a small region of the upper
left portion of the screen, and eventually, be stuck in the upper left
corner of the screen. I was using the trackpad exclusively at the time,
but plugging in a USB mouse after the fact didn't change the behavior.
Any mouse event (motion or button) will send the mouse to the upper
right corner of the screen. In a multi-pane graphical environment (fvwm
in my case) this will warp the screen to the upper-right workspace from
any other place. In fvwm, you can use Alt-Tab to bring up a window list
and warp to any window on any workspace of the current desktop, so you
can navigate a bit while the mouse is stuck.
--
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