Date: Fri, 14 Oct 2005 21:56:29 -0700 From: Peter Clutton <peterclutton@gmail.com> To: T3chn0Phr34k <t3chn0phr34k@gmail.com> Cc: questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Hardware Support (USB) Message-ID: <57416b300510142156u3d20b553q627a65b798991e32@mail.gmail.com> In-Reply-To: <fd1d2bc70510140518t5a05a9f9w@mail.gmail.com> References: <fd1d2bc70510140518t5a05a9f9w@mail.gmail.com>
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On 10/14/05, T3chn0Phr34k <t3chn0phr34k@gmail.com> wrote: >My mouse is a USB mouse, optical from the Gateway > house, well none of the drivers supports it I was wandering if its > posible to configure the kernel before starting the installation, Well everything doesn't need to be stopped because of it, unless you have some special need, there is no necessity for the mouse to be configured before installation. The installation does not require a mouse. What makes you think the mouse is not supported? Because you haven't seen the name in the docs? Well this may not be a problem. I would start the installation and attempt to have the system auto detect it at the appropriate part of the installation, or run when you run xorg -configure after installation. When booting option 8 may help - "Start system with USB mouse" or some such. Also if this is the "main server" you would probably find it a better approach to not use a GUI, and thus a mouse at all. You can do everything necessary for a server from CLI, at the console or through SSH, or if you want a GUI system for controlling services, maybe Webmin, which you can access across the network. Hope that helps.
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