So you're running an X server? Well, my lad or lass, sit down and let me tell you about the neverending story of X server input configuration changes that has hopefully ended now. I'm just pushing the latest X server goodness into rawhide and enabling udev, completing (from the X server's POV) the excision of the hardware abstraction layer that shall not be named. >From F9 to including F12 (and rawhide until today) we've used hal to discover the input devices. For lack of better options, this means that many configurations have moved into fdi files. As you may know, hal is deprecated and as much as fdi files may be pleasing to the eyes, there's just no future in them. You'll just have to let it go, even if it hurts. Instead, we have the newest latest and greatest bits, namely xorg.conf.d support and InputClasses. You can drop configuration files into the new directory and the server will pick it up on startup. e.g. /etc/xorg.conf.d/foobar.conf "A configuration directory? Is this even possible?" you say? I know, it sounds mightily advanced but we have to keep surfing the wave of new technological achievements. The existing section types in xorg.conf(5) weren't really suitable, so we now have something that resembles the functionality provided by hal's fdi files. A section of type InputClass will match against multiple devices and even hotplugged ones - depending on the match rules. An example section looks like this: Section "InputClass" Identifier "superhero mouse config" MatchIsPointer "on" MatchProduct "Mighty Mouse" Driver "evdev" Option "X-Ray vision" "on" EndSection Any pointer device that contains "Mighty Mouse" in its product name will match against this section and be added with the evdev driver and the options as specified. That's just one example, I've tried to detail the new configurations on our wiki. https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Input_device_configuration If you think there's anything missing, please let me know or add it yourself. Because the match rules are different to hal's matching rules, we don't have an automatic conversion from your custom fdi files into xorg.conf format. If you have custom rules, I recommend porting them to the new format before updating to ensure a smooth upgrade. Cheers, Peter -- devel mailing list devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel