users of xorg, in particular on FreeBSD 11.3
Niclas Zeising
zeising at freebsd.org
Mon Mar 23 21:01:04 UTC 2020
In ports r528813 I switched FreeBSD 11 (including FreeBSD 11.3 and the
upcoming 11.4) back to use the legacy rule set. This means that once
you have installed libxkbcommon 0.10.0_2 on FreeBSD 11, things should
work as normal, and the environment variable XKB_DEFAULT_RULES does not
need to be changed.
If you are on FreeBSD 12 or later, and are using xf96-input-keyboard,
you might still need to set this env variable. Please see the
instructions below.
Regards
On 2020-03-21 00:41, Niclas Zeising wrote:
> [ This is cross-posted across several mailing lists for maximum
> visibility. Please respect reply-to and keep replies to x11 at FreeBSD.org
> . Thank you! ]
>
> In order to improve support when using evdev to manage input devices, in
> particular keyboards, we have switched the default in x11/libxkbcommon
> to the evdev instead of the legacy ruleset. This was done in ports
> r528813 .
>
> On FreeBSD 11.3, the default configuration still requires the legacy
> ruleset.
>
> If you are using FreeBSD 11.3, or if you are using xf86-input-keyboard
> on FreeBSD 12 or later, you need to change the ruleset used by
> x11/libxkbcommon.
>
> If you have issues with your keyboard, most notably arrow keys, and if
> /var/log/Xorg.*.log shows that the "kbd" or "keyboard" driver is being
> used, you need to switch to legacy rules by setting the environment
> variable XKB_DEFAULT_RULES to xorg.
>
> The easiest way to accomplish this is by adding it to your shell startup
> file.
>
> As an example, for users of [t]csh, put
> setenv XKB_DEFAULT_RULES xorg
> in ~/.login
>
> For users of bourne type shells (sh, bash, ksh, zsh, ...) instead put
> export XKB_DEFAULT_RULES=xorg
> in ~/.profile
>
> Regards
--
Niclas Zeising
FreeBSD Graphics Team
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