Date: Wed, 15 Aug 2001 23:48:52 -0700 From: Terry Lambert <tlambert2@mindspring.com> To: Kazutaka YOKOTA <yokota@zodiac.mech.utsunomiya-u.ac.jp> Cc: Warner Losh <imp@harmony.village.org>, freebsd-current@FreeBSD.ORG Subject: Re: psmintr: out of sync (was: Re: FreeBSD's aggressive keyboard probe/attach) Message-ID: <3B7B6CD4.16697200@mindspring.com> References: <200108150924.SAA06230@zodiac.mech.utsunomiya-u.ac.jp> <200108151347.f7FDl6W23619@harmony.village.org> <200108160225.LAA08355@zodiac.mech.utsunomiya-u.ac.jp>
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Kazutaka YOKOTA wrote: > While we are carrying out the reset/initialization sequence, the mouse > pointer will be frozen on the screen. The keyboard input may not > respond in a timely fasion because the PS/2 mouse and the AT keyboard > share the same I/O port. Then, I suspect our user may feel uneasy and > think the entire FreeBSD is frozen... The keyboard freeze seems problematic; can you decouple the reset vs. the reset complete notification, by keeping a flag ("currently resetting") that the interrupt handler can look at? This kind of goes with your next observation: > What do you think the average user will do in such situation? It is > quite likely that s/he will wiggle the mouse (rather frantically?) to > see if the mouse is dead, won't he? I am not sure our initialization > sequence is robust enough to not be disturbed by this. Yes, wiggling the mouse to make it work is the natural thing for someone to do... > If disable/enable sequence, which is lot simpler and takes considrably > less time, can correct the sync problem, I think it will be better. It looks to me as if the mouse is automatically enabled by default after a reset? If this is true, then doing a disable then a reset will result in the next mouse packet coming in on a correct boundary. It makes the reset a tiny bit more complicated, but makes the results more deterministic. I don't know what to tell you, if the keyboard goes away during the reset process: it seems counter-intuitive, and it means you can't use keyboard shortcuts to get to a mouse "control panel" to fix the problem manually... 8-(. I think if that's unavoidable, a simple comment to that effect in the code would save you loads of grief later. -- Terry To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-current" in the body of the message
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