Hi there --- for some reason I am getting really weird keyboard behavior on the CLI (no xfs or anything running). Centos 4.4 yummed up. For example if i type "root" to login, I get "rot" or sometimes "roooooot". Then other times I will have to press a key like 3 times to get a double character. Now at first I thought maybe it was the keyboard, but it seems to work fine when within gnome. In all honesty I think i just have to get a different keyboard, but wanted to see if anyone had any experience with something like this (before I returned it) and a way to fix for the CLI. I have tried the kbdrate command. The keyboard is a wireless belkin with a usb connection. Thanks in advance. d
On 04/10/06, dnk <mailinglists at backbonetechnology.com> wrote:> Hi there --- for some reason I am getting really weird keyboard behavior > on the CLI (no xfs or anything running). Centos 4.4 yummed up. > > For example if i type "root" to login, I get "rot" or sometimes > "roooooot". Then other times I will have to press a key like 3 times to > get a double character. > > Now at first I thought maybe it was the keyboard, but it seems to work > fine when within gnome. > > In all honesty I think i just have to get a different keyboard, but > wanted to see if anyone had any experience with something like this > (before I returned it) and a way to fix for the CLI. I have tried the > kbdrate command. > > The keyboard is a wireless belkin with a usb connection.There was a similar problem reported in a past thread "Cool 'n Quiet". http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/2006-August/thread.html#68493 Have a read through that thread, see if it helps. Will.
On Wed, 2006-10-04 at 08:27 -0700, dnk wrote:> Hi there --- for some reason I am getting really weird keyboard behavior > on the CLI (no xfs or anything running). Centos 4.4 yummed up. > > For example if i type "root" to login, I get "rot" or sometimes > "roooooot". Then other times I will have to press a key like 3 times to > get a double character.Acts the same with a different keyboard? If so, is there a possibility that multiple processes are reading the keyboard at the same time? This can cause apparent losses when a bg process with, e.g. &>somelogfile has an interaction with user. You never see prompt, but it sucks a few characters up.> > Now at first I thought maybe it was the keyboard, but it seems to work > fine when within gnome. > > In all honesty I think i just have to get a different keyboard, but > wanted to see if anyone had any experience with something like this > (before I returned it) and a way to fix for the CLI. I have tried the > kbdrate command. > > The keyboard is a wireless belkin with a usb connection.Is it a "windows" keyboard? I have a wireless multi-media that needed some adjustment with setkeys to get rid of aggravating messages. Check the /var/log/message and see if there is anything helpful there. For usb "I know nutting!" (Schultzy, "Hogan's Heroes")> > > Thanks in advance. > > d > <snip sig stuff>HTH -- Bill
Are there any yum-installable ftpd packages that support LDAP authentication? Compiling from source is really kicking my rump. CentOS 4.4 latest here-- any other information I can provide I gladly will. Regards, Jay Chandler Network Administrator, Chapman University 714.628.7249