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Top Forums Programming Read 1 of 2 keyboards connected Post 302980896 by bakunin on Sunday 4th of September 2016 05:22:42 PM
Old 09-04-2016
Quote:
Originally Posted by SerKan
2 usb keyboards connected to a normal x86
One keyboard working as usual in xorg, but I need that the other one doesn't send anything to xorg but instead I want to process its keystrokes with some kind of background process.
First a bit of theory: you communicate with a UNIX system by using a "tty": a "terminal" consisting of a keyboard and a screen, usually connected via a serial line.

If you connect to a UNIX system over a network you use a so-called "terminal emulator program" (many times "xterm", but that is not the only one) to emulate such a terminal and its serial connection is emulated via the network connection.

There is a special form of a tty, which is called console. This is not connected via the standard serial line but directly attached to the computer. Perhaps the local screen attached to your VGA-card and the (first) keyboard form this console.

Now, after that much theory, to your specific question: this might work, but not necessarily with a USB-attached keyboard and definitely not with a background process. Background processes are part of a process hierarchy, headed by some foreground process: this is usually the shell from which you initiated the background process, typically by issuing the command:

Code:
$ /path/to/command -someoptions &

Since the shell you typed that in was already connected to some tty (the one which keyboard you used to type it, probably the console) the background process inherited this connection. You can cut it off from this (by using the nohup command) but per default itis attached to the one you used to call it. Furthermore, a single USB-attached keyboard is not a terminal.

I hope this helps.

bakunin
This User Gave Thanks to bakunin For This Post:
 

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TTY(4)							     Linux Programmer's Manual							    TTY(4)

NAME
tty - controlling terminal DESCRIPTION
The file /dev/tty is a character file with major number 5 and minor number 0, usually of mode 0666 and owner.group root.tty. It is a syn- onym for the controlling terminal of a process, if any. In addition to the ioctl(2) requests supported by the device that tty refers to, the ioctl(2) request TIOCNOTTY is supported. TIOCNOTTY Detach the calling process from its controlling terminal. If the process is the session leader, then SIGHUP and SIGCONT signals are sent to the foreground process group and all processes in the current session lose their controlling tty. This ioctl(2) call works only on file descriptors connected to /dev/tty. It is used by daemon processes when they are invoked by a user at a terminal. The process attempts to open /dev/tty. If the open succeeds, it detaches itself from the terminal by using TIOCNOTTY, while if the open fails, it is obviously not attached to a terminal and does not need to detach itself. FILES
/dev/tty SEE ALSO
chown(1), mknod(1), ioctl(2), termios(3), console(4), tty_ioctl(4), ttyS(4), agetty(8), mingetty(8) COLOPHON
This page is part of release 3.53 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, and information about reporting bugs, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/. Linux 2003-04-07 TTY(4)
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