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/freebsd-11.0-release/etc/rc.d/
H A Dmouseddiff 137112 Mon Nov 01 18:05:41 MST 2004 mtm Do a better job of supporting more than one mouse device
on the system.

To start/stop/check on a specific device give the device name as
the second argument to the script:
# /etc/rc.d/moused start ums0

To use different rc.conf(5) knobs with different mice use the device
name as part of the knob. For example, if the mouse device is ums0, then:
moused_ums0_enable=yes
moused_ums0_flags="-z 4"
moused_ums0_port="/dev/ums0"

Starting rc.d/moused without the device argument will use the standard
moused_* flags. So, this commit should not disrupt or change current usage.

To preserve current behaviour with respect to usb mice, which appear
automatically when inserted, there is a new knob, moused_nondefault_enable,
which will treat any devices without rc.conf knobs as enabled.

To minimize knobs in /etc/rc.conf, the device file and pid file are
auto-computed, so that in the typical case for a usb mouse you don't
need to add anything extra in /etc/rc.conf to get it working.

Additionally, this updates /etc/usbd.conf to use the rc.d/moused script so
people don't have to modify it to configure their usb mouse anymore.

MFC after: 1 month
/freebsd-11.0-release/share/man/man5/
H A Drc.conf.5diff 137112 Mon Nov 01 18:05:41 MST 2004 mtm Do a better job of supporting more than one mouse device
on the system.

To start/stop/check on a specific device give the device name as
the second argument to the script:
# /etc/rc.d/moused start ums0

To use different rc.conf(5) knobs with different mice use the device
name as part of the knob. For example, if the mouse device is ums0, then:
moused_ums0_enable=yes
moused_ums0_flags="-z 4"
moused_ums0_port="/dev/ums0"

Starting rc.d/moused without the device argument will use the standard
moused_* flags. So, this commit should not disrupt or change current usage.

To preserve current behaviour with respect to usb mice, which appear
automatically when inserted, there is a new knob, moused_nondefault_enable,
which will treat any devices without rc.conf knobs as enabled.

To minimize knobs in /etc/rc.conf, the device file and pid file are
auto-computed, so that in the typical case for a usb mouse you don't
need to add anything extra in /etc/rc.conf to get it working.

Additionally, this updates /etc/usbd.conf to use the rc.d/moused script so
people don't have to modify it to configure their usb mouse anymore.

MFC after: 1 month
/freebsd-11.0-release/etc/defaults/
H A Drc.confdiff 137112 Mon Nov 01 18:05:41 MST 2004 mtm Do a better job of supporting more than one mouse device
on the system.

To start/stop/check on a specific device give the device name as
the second argument to the script:
# /etc/rc.d/moused start ums0

To use different rc.conf(5) knobs with different mice use the device
name as part of the knob. For example, if the mouse device is ums0, then:
moused_ums0_enable=yes
moused_ums0_flags="-z 4"
moused_ums0_port="/dev/ums0"

Starting rc.d/moused without the device argument will use the standard
moused_* flags. So, this commit should not disrupt or change current usage.

To preserve current behaviour with respect to usb mice, which appear
automatically when inserted, there is a new knob, moused_nondefault_enable,
which will treat any devices without rc.conf knobs as enabled.

To minimize knobs in /etc/rc.conf, the device file and pid file are
auto-computed, so that in the typical case for a usb mouse you don't
need to add anything extra in /etc/rc.conf to get it working.

Additionally, this updates /etc/usbd.conf to use the rc.d/moused script so
people don't have to modify it to configure their usb mouse anymore.

MFC after: 1 month

Completed in 274 milliseconds