| 1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132333435 | <sect2><title>Configuring your keyboard</title><para>Nothing is more annoying than using Linux with a wrong keymap loadedfor your keyboard. If you have a default US keyboard, you can skip thissection. The US keymap file is the default if you don't change it.</para><para>To set the default keymap file, create the <filename class="symlink">/usr/share/kbd/keymaps/defkeymap.map.gz</filename>symlink by running the following commands:</para><para><screen><userinput>ln -s <path/to/keymap> /usr/share/kbd/keymaps/defkeymap.map.gz</userinput></screen></para><para>Replace <path/to/keymap> with the your keyboard's map file. Forexample, if you have a Dutch keyboard, you would run:</para><para><screen><userinput>ln -s i386/qwerty/nl.map.gz /usr/share/kbd/keymaps/defkeymap.map.gz</userinput></screen></para><para>An second option to configure your keyboard's layout is to compilethe keymap directly into the kernel. This will make sure that yourkeyboard always works as expected, even when you have booted intomaintenance mode (by passing `init=/bin/sh' to the kernel) in which casethe bootscript that normally sets up your keymap isn't run.</para><para>If you didn't create the defkeymap.map.gz file and going with thedefault US keymap, then again you don't have to do anything. The kernelcompiles a suitable keymap by default that'll work just fine foryou, so skip the next command.</para><para>Run the following commands to accomplish that:</para><para><screen><userinput>loadkeys -m /usr/share/kbd/keymaps/defkeymap.map.gz > \    /usr/src/linux/drivers/char/defkeymap.c</userinput></screen></para></sect2>
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