Prev | Current Page 257 | Next

Chris Tyler

"X Power Tools"

The output will be formatted for input to
xkbcomp, which is the keymap compiler (Section 12.9):
$ setxkbmap -print -rules xorg -model pc105 -layout us,ca -variant intl, \
-option grp:menu_toggle,grp_led:scroll
xkb_keymap {
xkb_keycodes { include "xfree86+aliases(qwerty)" };
xkb_types { include "complete" };
12.9
12.9 Setting the Keymap Using a Keyboard Configuration File 169
xkb_compat { include "complete+ledscroll(group_lock)" };
xkb_symbols { include "pc(pc105)+us(intl)+ca:2+group(menu_toggle)" };
xkb_geometry { include "pc(pc105)" };
};
You can also configure the keymap using components. Using the values from the
output above, the xkbsetmap command would look like this:
$ setxkbmap -keycodes "xfree86+aliases(qwerty)" \
-types "complete" \
-compat "complete" \
-symbols "pc(pc105)+us(intl)+ca:2+group(menu_toggle)" \
-geometry "pc(pc105)"
12.8 Setting the Keymap Using a Keyboard
Configuration File
One xorg.conf configuration file may be shared between several server instances: for
example, on a Linux system, you can start two (or more) X servers running on different
virtual terminals and switch between them. You may want to use a common
xorg.conf file for both servers, but specify different keyboard configurations.


Pages:
245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269
zakłady bukmacherskie Wczasy nad morzem oferty spa Spa Ciechocinek kolokacja rack