diff -up kbd-1.15/man/man1/showkey.1_old kbd-1.15/man/man1/showkey.1 --- kbd-1.15/man/man1/showkey.1_old 2008-03-13 17:46:23.000000000 +0100 +++ kbd-1.15/man/man1/showkey.1 2008-12-10 12:31:38.000000000 +0100 @@ -80,6 +80,19 @@ corresponds to what the keyboard hardwar to know the scan codes sent by various keys it is better to boot a 2.4 kernel. Since 2.6.9 there also is the boot option atkbd.softraw=0 that tells the 2.6 kernel to return the actual scan codes. + +.SH NOTES +The raw scan codes are available only on AT and PS/2 keyboards, +and even then they are disabled unless the +.B atkbd.softraw=0 +kernel parameter is used. +When the raw scan codes are not available, the kernel uses a fixed built-in +table to produce scan codes from keycodes. Thus, +.BR setkeycodes (8) +can affect the output of +.B showkey +in scan code dump mode. + .SH "SEE ALSO" .BR loadkeys (1), .BR dumpkeys (1), diff -up kbd-1.15/man/man8/setkeycodes.8_old kbd-1.15/man/man8/setkeycodes.8 --- kbd-1.15/man/man8/setkeycodes.8_old 2008-12-10 12:31:56.000000000 +0100 +++ kbd-1.15/man/man8/setkeycodes.8 2008-12-10 12:37:36.000000000 +0100 @@ -41,6 +41,10 @@ to showkey(1), the command will assign the keycode 112 to it, and then loadkeys(1) can be used to define the function of this key. +USB keyboards have standardized keycodes and +.B setkeycodes +doesn't affect them at all. + .SH "2.6 KERNELS" In 2.6 kernels key codes lie in the range 1-255, instead of 1-127. (It might be best to confine oneself to the range 1-239.) @@ -54,6 +58,14 @@ None. .SH BUGS The keycodes of X have nothing to do with those of Linux. Unusual keys can be made visible under Linux, but not under X. + +.B setkeycodes +affects only the "first" input device +that has modifiable scancode-to-keycode mapping. +If there is more than one such device, +.B setkeycodes +cannot change the mapping of other devices than the "first" one. + .SH "SEE ALSO" .I "dumpkeys (1), loadkeys (1), showkey (1), getkeycodes (8)"