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Date:      Sat, 04 Feb 1995 02:12:28 -0800
From:      rsoles@SIRIUS.COM (Roger L Soles)
To:        fod@netcom.com (Frank O'Donnell), questions@FreeBSD.org
Cc:        fod@netcom.com
Subject:   Re: Problem starting X (and mouse config)
Message-ID:  <9502041006.AA05266@SIRIUS.COM>

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This is what works for me -

   For MS-Mouse on COM1:

        /dev/tty00

   And to start X

        xinit

Remember /usr/X11/bin needs to be in your path (assuming you
made the /usr/X11 symbolic link to X11R6)

I certainly haven't worked out all the quirks of setting
up XFree86 yet... but this much should get you a little
further...

At 09:42 PM 2/3/95 -0800, Frank O'Donnell wrote:
>I have just installed FreeBSD 2.0 (Jan 95 Walnut Creek CD)
>on my 486DX66 on the second of two Maxtor 540MB IDE drives.
>After some false starts I found the magic alt-F2 key that
>allowed me to complete the XFree86-3.1 install off the CD-ROM;
>I did a full install.  Per /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/doc/README.FreeBSD,
>I left /usr/X11R6/bin/X as a symbolic link to XF86_VGA (my
>graphics card uses the Cirrus GD-5428 chip), then I put path
>statements for /usr/X11R6/bin in /etc/csh.login and /etc/profile,
>and added a line in /etc/ttys for
>  ttyv4  "/usr/X11R6/bin/xdm -nodaemon" xterm on secure
>I also copied /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/XF86Config.eg to XF86Config.
>
>I have about four unresolved issues:
>
>1)  When I reboot, around the time it gets to "Login:" the
>screen flashes four times as if it's trying to do a video mode
>change; however, the video mode appears to remain the same
>alphanumeric mode.  Isn't it supposed to go into a graphics
>mode at this point?
>
>2)  The only thing I can see for sure in XF86Config that I
>definitely need to change is the mouse configuration (and if
>I try to execute "startx" it results in a fatal error of being
>unable to work with the mouse).  My mouse is a Microsoft serial
>mouse, but it's on the second serial port.  The default entry
>in XF86Config is "/dev/com1", but I don't see a "/dev/com{1,2}"
>in my system.  In dmesg I see sio1 being recognized on startup,
>but there isn't a /dev/sio{0,1} either.  Could anyone tell me
>what device the system would normally map sio1 to?  (Or if I
>need to do this manually, what commands exactly do I need to
>execute?)
>
>3)  Just to see what would happen I also tried executing "xterm"
>and got a "Cannot open display" error.  Do I also need to do
>something like a "setenv DISPLAY xyz" somewhere?  Or does the
>fact that I'm just typing at the console make this unnecessary?
>
>4)  Finally, on the hardware setup outlined above can anyone see
>anything else I'd need to do to make X go?
>
>Thanks for any help -- despite the odd hurdle, FreeBSD is turning
>out to be very interesting.
>
>Frank
>fod@netcom.com
>
>
//----------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Roger L Soles
// PO Box 280785
// San Francisco, CA  94124-0785




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