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Full Discussion: SunOS 5.8 and mouse setup
Operating Systems Solaris SunOS 5.8 and mouse setup Post 302717361 by jlliagre on Thursday 18th of October 2012 04:51:42 AM
Old 10-18-2012
It should work with CDE. The /etc/openwin/server/etc/OWconfig is the Xsun server configuration file, not the OpenWindows one.

kdmconfig is an x86 only command unavailable on SPARC. USB keyboard layout is expected to be auto-detected by the driver and a dip-switch allows to change the setting. That is at least the case with the Sun keyboards. Unfortunately, most generic/cheap keyboards always advertise an US layout so you need to configure them on the server.

You might use xmodmap to map the keycodes to the correct keys.
Code:
# save the current layout
xmodmap -pke > qwerty.map
# make a copy
cp qwerty.map > azerty.map
# fix the layout
vi azerty.map
...
# load the new map (should be done each time the X server is launched)
xmodmap azerty.map

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SETXKBMAP(1)						      General Commands Manual						      SETXKBMAP(1)

NAME
setxkbmap - set the keyboard using the X Keyboard Extension SYNOPSIS
setxkbmap [ args ] [ layout [ variant [ option ... ] ] ] DESCRIPTION
The setxkbmap command maps the keyboard to use the layout determined by the options specified on the command line. An XKB keymap is constructed from a number of components which are compiled only as needed. The source for all of the components can be found in /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/xkb. OPTIONS
-help Prints a message describing the valid input to setxkbmap. -compat name Specifies the name of the compatibility map component used to construct a keyboard layout. -config file Specifies the name of an XKB configuration file which describes the keyboard to be used. -display display Specifies the display to be updated with the new keyboard layout. -geometry name Specifies the name of the geometry component used to construct a keyboard layout. -keymap name Specifies the name of the keymap description used to construct a keyboard layout. -layout name Specifies the name of the layout used to determine the components which make up the keyboard description. Only one layout may be specified on the command line. -model name Specifies the name of the keyboard model used to determine the components which make up the keyboard description. Only one model may be specified on the command line. -option name Specifies the name of an option to determine the components which make up the keyboard description; multiple options may be speci- fied, one per -option flag. Note that setxkbmap summarize options specified in the command line with options was set before (saved in root window properties). If you want only specified options will be set use the -option flag with an empty argument first. -print With this option the setxkbmap just prints component names in a format acceptable by an xkbcomp (an XKB keymap compiler) and exits. The option can be used for tests instead of a verbose option and in case when one need to run both the setxkbmap and the xkbcomp in chain (see below). -rules file Specifies the name of the rules file used to resolve the request layout and model to a set of component names. -symbols name Specifies the name of the symbols component used to construct a keyboard layout. -synch Force synchronization for X requests. -types name Specifies the name of the types component used to construct a keyboard layout. -variant name Specifies which variant of the keyboard layout should be used to determine the components which make up the keyboard description. Only one variant may be specified on the command line. USING WITH xkbcomp If you have an Xserver and a client shell running on different computers and XKB configuration files sets on those machines are different you can get problems specifying a keyboard map by model, layout, options names. The thing is the setxkbcomp converts these names to names of XKB configuration files according to files that are on the client side computer. Then it sends the file names to the server where the xkbcomp has to compose a complete keyboard map using files which the server has. Thus if the sets of files differ significantly the names that the setxkbmap generates can be unacceptable on the server side. You can solve this problem running the xkbcomp on the client side too. With the -print option setxkbmap just prints the files names in an appropriate format to its stdout and this output can be piped directly to the xkbcomp input. For example, a command setxkbmap us -print | xkbcomp - $DISPLAY makes both step on the same (client) machine and loads a keyboard map into the server. FILES
/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/xkb XFree86 Version 4.7.0 SETXKBMAP(1)
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