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
  
     | 
    
      
keyboard_present () {
    local kern kbdpattern class subclass protocol
    kern=`uname -r`
    case "$kern" in
	2.0*|2.1*|2.2*|2.3*|2.4*|2.5*)
	    # can't check keyboard presence
	    return 0; 
	    ;;
    esac
    [ -d /sys/bus/usb/devices ] || return 0
    for d in /sys/bus/usb/devices/*:*; do
	class=$(cat "$d/bInterfaceClass") # 03 = Human Interface Device
	subclass=$(cat "$d/bInterfaceSubClass") # 01 = Boot Interface Subclass
	protocol=$(cat "$d/bInterfaceProtocol") # 01 = Keyboard
	case "$class:$subclass:$protocol" in
	    03:01:01)
		return 0
		;;
	esac
    done
    # For Bluetooth keyboards one has to check the class of the device
    # -- it has to be 0x000540 or 0x002540.  I don't how to make the
    # required test, so instead we test (unreliably) for a string
    # bluetooth.*keyboard in /proc/bus/input/devices.
    [ -f /proc/bus/input/devices ] || return 0
    kbdpattern="AT Set \|AT Translated Set\|AT Raw Set"
    kbdpattern="$kbdpattern\|Atari Keyboard"
    kbdpattern="$kbdpattern\|Amiga Keyboard"
    kbdpattern="$kbdpattern\|HIL keyboard"
    kbdpattern="$kbdpattern\|ADB keyboard"
    kbdpattern="$kbdpattern\|Sun Type"
    kbdpattern="$kbdpattern\|bluetooth.*keyboard"
    if grep -i "$kbdpattern" /proc/bus/input/devices >/dev/null; then
	return 0
    fi
    return 1
}
 
     |