| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106 | <?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?><!DOCTYPE sect1 PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.3//EN" "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.3/docbookx.dtd" [  <!ENTITY % general-entities SYSTEM "../general.ent">  %general-entities;]><sect1 id="ch-scripts-console"><title>Configuring the Linux console</title><?dbhtml filename="console.html"?><indexterm zone="ch-scripts-console"><primary sortas="d-console">console</primary><secondary>configuring</secondary></indexterm><para>In this section we will configure the <command>console</command>initscript that sets up the keyboardmap and the console font. If youdon't need to use any non-ASCII characters(British pound and Euro character are not ASCII),and your keyboard is a US one, you can skip this section.Without the configuration file,the <command>console</command> initscript will do nothing.</para><para>The <command>console</command> script uses the<filename>/etc/sysconfig/console</filename>as a configuration file. You need to decide which keymap and screen font youwill use. The language-specific HOWTO can help you.A pre-made<filename>/etc/sysconfig/console</filename> file with knowngood settings for several countries was installed with the LFS-Bootscriptspackage, and you just have to uncommentthe relevant section if your country is supported (but read the restof this section anyway).If still in doubt,look into <filename class="directory">/usr/share/kbd</filename>for valid keymaps and screen fonts. Then read the <command>loadkeys</command>and <command>setfont</command> manual pages and figure out the correctarguments for these programs.Once you decided, create theconfiguration file with the following command:</para><screen><userinput>cat >/etc/sysconfig/console <<"EOF"</userinput>KEYMAP="<emphasis>arguments for loadkeys</emphasis>"FONT="<emphasis>arguments for setfont</emphasis>"<userinput>EOF</userinput></screen><para>E.g., for Spanish users who also want to use the Euro character(accessible by pressing Alt+E),the following settings are correct:</para><screen><userinput>cat >/etc/sysconfig/console <<"EOF"</userinput>KEYMAP="es euro"FONT="lat9-16 -u iso01"<userinput>EOF</userinput></screen><note><para>The FONT line above is correct only for the ISO-8859-15character set. If you prefer ISO-8859-1 and therefore use a pound signinstead of Euro, the correct FONT line is:</para><screen><userinput>FONT="lat1-16"</userinput></screen></note><para>If the KEYMAP or FONT variable is not set, the<command>console</command> initscript will not run the correspondingprogram.</para><para>In some keymaps, the Backspace and Delete keys send charactersdifferent form ones in the default keymap built into the kernel.This confuses some applications, e.g. <application>Emacs</application>displays its help (instead of erasing the character before the cursor)when you press Backspace. To check if your keymap is affected (this worksonly for i386 keymaps):</para><screen><userinput>zgrep '\W14\W' /path/to/your/keymap</userinput></screen><para>If you see that keycode 14 is Backspace and not Delete,create the following keymap snippet to fix this issue:</para><screen><userinput>mkdir -p /etc/kbd & & cat >/etc/kbd/bs-sends-del <<"EOF"</userinput>                keycode 14 =    Delete  Delete          Delete  Delete        alt     keycode 14 =    Meta_Deletealtgr   alt     keycode 14 =    Meta_Delete                keycode 111 =   Removealtgr   control keycode 111 =   Bootcontrol alt     keycode 111 =   Bootaltgr   control alt keycode 111 = Boot<userinput>EOF</userinput></screen><para>Then tell the <command>console</command> script to load this snippetafter the main keymap:</para><screen><userinput>cat >>/etc/sysconfig/console <<"EOF"</userinput>KEYMAP_CORRECTION="/etc/kbd/bs-sends-del"<userinput>EOF</userinput></screen><para>If you decided tocompile your keymap directly into the kernel later on in <xreflinkend="chapter-bootable"/> instead of setting it every time from the<command>console</command> bootscript, then you don't need to run the<command>loadkeys</command> program. Since the kernel will set up the keymap,you can omit the KEYMAP variable from the<filename>/etc/sysconfig/console</filename>configuration file. If you wish,you can still have it, this isn't going to hurt you. Keeping it could evenbe beneficial, in case you run a lot of different kernels and can't be surethat the keymap is compiled into every one of them.</para></sect1>
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