File: templates.in

package info (click to toggle)
console-common 0.7.49
  • links: PTS
  • area: main
  • in suites: sarge
  • size: 724 kB
  • ctags: 67
  • sloc: perl: 519; sh: 341; makefile: 135; awk: 134
file content (100 lines) | stat: -rw-r--r-- 4,235 bytes parent folder | download
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
Template: console-data/keymap/policy
Type: select
_Choices: Select keymap from arch list, Don't touch keymap, Keep kernel keymap, Select keymap from full list
Default: Don't touch keymap
_Description: What policy do you want to apply regarding keymaps ?
 The keymap describes how keys are laid out on your keyboard, and what
 symbols (letters, digits, etc.) are drawn on them.
 .
 "Select keymap from arch list" will allow you to select one of the
 predefined keymaps specific for your architecture - you will most likely
 want this unless you have a USB keyboard.
 .
 "Don't touch keymap" will prevent the configuration system from
 overwriting the keymap you have in /etc/console.  Select this if you want
 to keep a keymap you obtained through other means.  Please remember to
 install new keymaps with install-keymap(8) if you select this choice.
 .
 "Keep kernel keymap" will prevent any keymap from being loaded next time
 your system boots.  It will remove from /etc/console any keymap you may
 have already selected (it will be lost), but if you have already loaded a
 keymap, it cannot be changed back until you reboot.
 .
 "Select keymap from full list" offers a full listing of all predefined
 keymaps.  You want this, if you use an USB keyboard from a different
 computer architecture or if you use an adapter to use such a keyboard.

Template: console-data/keymap/ignored
Type: note
_Description: A boot-time keymap in an old location is about to be ignored.
 You have asked the keymap configuration tool not to touch an existing
 keymap you installed, or you asked for higher-priority questions only to
 be asked and the tool decided not to mess with your existing setup.
 .
 However, you have file(s) that were recognized as boot-time keymaps by
 older versions of the console utilities, either in /etc/kbd/ or in
 /etc/console-tools/, named default.kmap(.gz) and these are now ignored.
 .
 If you wish that one of them takes effect on next reboot, you will have to
 move it to /etc/console/boottime.kmap.gz manually.

Template: console-data/keymap/family
Type: select
Choices: ${choices}
Default: qwerty
_Description: What is the layout family of your keyboard ?
 You need to first specify the generic family name for your keyboard
 layout. Usually the layout family name is taken from the first keys on the
 left of the top letters row of the keymap (this is at least true for
 qwerty and azerty layouts).

Template: console-data/keymap/template/layout
Type: select
Choices: ${choices}
_Description: What is the keys layout of your keyboard ?
 To refine your choice for a keymap, I need to know the physical layout of
 your keyboard.

Template: console-data/keymap/template/variant
Type: select
Choices: ${choices}
_Description: Which variant do you have ?
 The layout you selected has several variants.  Please select the one
 matching your keyboard.

Template: console-data/keymap/template/keymap
Type: select
Choices: ${choices}
_Description: Which specific keymap do you want ?
 The keyboard you selected allows you to choose among several keymaps.
 Usually these were designed either for specific tastes (eg. dead keys or
 not), or for specific needs (eg. programmer's keymaps).

Template: console-data/keymap/full
Type: select
Choices: ${choices}
_Description: Which keymap do you want ?
 If you use a keyboard from a different computer architecture, you can
 choose a specific keymap in the full map.

Template: console-data/keymap/powerpcadb
Type: select
_Choices: yes, no
_Description: Are you ready for the ADB keycodes transition?
 Your kernel is configured to have the keyboard send ADB keycodes. This
 behaviour is now deprecated and no longer supported by Debian.
 .
 For best results you should reconfigure your kernel with
 CONFIG_MAC_ADBKEYCODES=n. If you can't or don't want to do this for some
 reason, pass keyboard_sends_linux_keycodes=1 as an argument to the kernel.
 .
 Beware that the transition will most probably break your X configuration
 so it is strongly recommended that you exit all X sessions now and adapt
 your configuration afterwards (start "dpkg-reconfigure console-data" as
 root).

Template: console-data/bootmap-md5sum
Type: string
Default: none
Description: for internal use