In /etc/init.d/kbd, add this line in the very beginning of the file:
KBD_TTY="tty0 tty2 tty3 tty4 tty5 tty6 tty7" |
After modifications:
#! /bin/sh # Copyright (c) 1995-2001 SuSE GmbH Nuernberg, Germany. # # Author: Burchard Steinbild <[email protected]> # Werner Fink <[email protected]> # # /etc/init.d/kbd # # and symbolic its link # # /sbin/rckbd # ### BEGIN INIT INFO # Provides: kbd # Required-Start: $remote_fs # Required-Stop: # X-SuSE-Should-Start: fbset serial # X-SuSE-Should-Stop: # Default-Start: 1 2 3 5 S # Default-Stop: # Description: Keyboard settings (don't disable!) ### END INIT INFO . /etc/rc.status . /etc/sysconfig/console . /etc/sysconfig/keyboard MACHINE=`/bin/uname -m 2> /dev/null` if [ "$MACHINE" = "sparc" -o "$MACHINE" = "sparc64" ]; then # Test if we have a serial console. (test -c /dev/tty1 && > /dev/tty1 ) > /dev/null 2>&1 || exit 0 fi # The variable NON_SUSE_KERNEL determines whether we need to chvt # to a console before some console settings apply. # We have no magic to find out about this (at boot time), so we # leave it to the user to read this comment and put NON_SUSE_KERNEL="yes" # into /etc/sysconfig/console KBDBASE="/usr/share/kbd" KBD_TTY="tty0 tty2 tty3 tty4 tty5 tty6 tty7" KTABLE=${KEYTABLE%.map*} KTABLE=${KTABLE##*/} # # first search the wanted keytable. # if [ $MACHINE = ppc -o $MACHINE = ppc64 ]; then test -f /proc/cpuinfo || mount -n -t proc proc /proc 2>/dev/null while read line; do ...... ...... |
Hardware scans sometimes cause problems.
Recommended: disable. If you have to install new hardware and want to use this service, boot with standard kernel and start it manually.