On Nov 21, 2011, at 9:14 AM, Magnus Olsen wrote:
PS/2 was never design be hot pluged. Alot of bios disable PS/2 I/O if no PS/2 device are plugin. that mean u need to reboot you computer.
PS/2 wasn't designed to be hot-plugged, but most boards today (all?) support hot-plugging as an unofficial standard. If the board disables PS/2 when it's not plugged in that's fine, it doesn't hurt anything, they just need to reboot like before hot-plugging.
We play with the thung how to make PS/2 hot plug
- We need write own chip driver for each chip.
- No we need write a hw scanner that activate PS/2 within some time intervall
and disable it if no device are found.
AFAIK, Windows doesn't need this. It uses the generic i8042prt.sys driver to do it just like we do.
Now to problem with this method is
- some hardware can be damnges the mainboard when u plugin the mouse or keyboard. it does not made if to high V or A are beign send in.
This is very true but it only really happens on old hardware, but still it's not technically standard so users are taking risks to do it.
if u only use one PS/2 port it is automatic made the second PS/2 hot plugin depns on the mainboard bios or chip driver for the mainboard in windows 3.x//NT 3.x/NT 4.x/95/98/ME/2000/XP/Vista/7
The question is does anyone want to write sepreate chipset driver for each mainboard only support hotplugin for PS/2 and add this feature.
In linux many of the opensource chipdriver does support this feature but not all.
This is not the case to my knowledge. Most chipsets don't even get a single driver installed for them (besides the generic drivers). Stuff like the Intel INF Update tool are simply that, just an INF update to set some registry entries and install (without a driver) some devices that Windows doesn't natively install a null driver for so Device Manager can look nice. None of these devices actually start in the PnP manager's eyes (since they have no function driver and can't be driven raw).
BestReagd Magnus Olsen aka GreatLord (I always read my mail if any one want ask me or known my skype name)
Regards, Cameron
2011/11/19 Ameen Ross a.ross@amdev.eu:
Linux does support hotplugging PS/2 devices. Are you saying Windows supports it too? If so that must be new, because it wasn't in XP.
On 11/19/2011 02:35 AM, Sylvain Petreolle wrote:
De : Timo Kreuzertimo.kreuzer@web.de À : ReactOS Development Listros-dev@reactos.org Envoyé le : Vendredi 18 Novembre 2011 22h55 Objet : Re: [ros-dev] [ros-diffs] [cgutman] 54415: [I8042PRT] - Implement support for hot plugging PS/2 mice if one was present at boot (same requirement as Windows) - Fixes bug 1395
Am 18.11.2011 09:48, schrieb Javier Agustìn Fernàndez Arroyo:
"if one was present at boot"
wouldn't it be a new ROS feature to allow hotplugging even if there is no mice at startup?
As always, im about not just copying Windows, but enhance it as possible.....
PS/2 standard doesn't support hot-plugging at all. In fact you might damage your mainboard with that.
Timo
There is the standard, but thats what people do, and Windows implemented it too. Kind regards, Sylvain Petreolle
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