From owner-freebsd-hackers Thu Jan 6 6:17:39 2000 Delivered-To: freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org Received: from mushi.colo.neosoft.com (mushi.colo.neosoft.com [206.109.6.82]) by hub.freebsd.org (Postfix) with SMTP id D6AD015633 for ; Thu, 6 Jan 2000 06:17:36 -0800 (PST) (envelope-from peter@taronga.com) Received: (qmail 22200 invoked from network); 6 Jan 2000 14:17:35 -0000 Received: from citadel.in.taronga.com (10.0.0.43) by mushi.in.taronga.com with SMTP; 6 Jan 2000 14:17:35 -0000 Received: by citadel.in.taronga.com (Postfix, from userid 100) id 32AB432306; Thu, 6 Jan 2000 08:16:45 -0600 (CST) To: hackers@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Reading kbd scancodes from userland X-Newsgroups: taronga.freebsd.hackers In-Reply-To: References: <200001052345.PAA26271@biggusdiskus.flyingfox.com> Organization: Cc: Message-Id: <20000106141645.32AB432306@citadel.in.taronga.com> Date: Thu, 6 Jan 2000 08:16:45 -0600 (CST) From: peter@taronga.com (Peter da Silva) Sender: owner-freebsd-hackers@FreeBSD.ORG Precedence: bulk X-Loop: FreeBSD.ORG >Its really annoying having to find another machine when your app >coredumps so you can restore the keyboard to sanity :) If your keyboard is too borked for "^Jstty sane^J", let me know so I can avoid the app that does this. I remember running into a shell, once upon a time, that saved and restored all terminal modes before and after every program unless that program was a defined "this program changes terminal modes" utility like "tset" or "stty". (actually I think it just saved them at startup or after a utility, and restored them when you got to a prompt, but the result is the same) To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-hackers" in the body of the message