On Sat, Jun 12, 2004 at 02:03:08AM -0500, Javier Perez wrote: > I had the same situation but with a Linksys switchbox. > It was solved by upgrading to FC2 > > [mailto:fedora-list-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx]On Behalf Of Jerry Wilborn > > Sent: Viernes, 11 de Junio de 2004 10:52 p.m. > > To: For users of Fedora Core releases > > Subject: Re: FC1 mouse freezing > > > > > > I have a similar situation, but in conjunction with my Belkin > > switchbox. Are you using a switchbox between machines? > > > > If so, then this is a flaw in how X initializes (or fails to do so) > > when you switch between hosts. .... > > <jmcbride@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > > my mouse is freezing a lot in FC1/mozilla (my most frequently used app > > > at home) might do it in other apps too, will have to watch for it, the > > > only way to get cursor movement back is to ctrl-alt-fn to a virtual > > > terminal and then ctrl-alt-f7 back to x. On the general issues of switch boxes -- how are folks switching. Since the serial protocol of mice and keyboards does not support multiple contexts all a magic box can really do is multiplex the inputs. If you switch in the middle of a character or in the middle of a multi-character control sequence there is no way that a magic box (without complex logic) can keep all things in order. Sort of like mixing top and bottom posting does here ;-) I have an old Belkin switch box and have no trouble. I do however only use the buttons on the box to switch and not the function escape sequences. There are also issues where a keyboard can be programmed to send special sequences it could expect to retain these so machine A with special sequences borks when these sequences are sent to machine B or some combination of the above. So the question is how do people use their switch. It makes sense that some defensive programming could be included in the byte stream handler in X that could tidy things up when there is a protocol error. I also use remote X display via ssh a lot ;-) -- T o m M i t c h e l l /dev/null the ultimate in secure storage.