On 11/10/2008 10:04 AM, Christof Kälin wrote: > Hi > > As a newbie, I just saw your email in the source-file when I was looking > into the sources of hid-apple.c to find my mighty mouse somewhere: > > /* Apple wireless Mighty Mouse */ > { HID_BLUETOOTH_DEVICE(USB_VENDOR_ID_APPLE, 0x030c), > .driver_data = APPLE_MIGHTYMOUSE | APPLE_INVERT_HWHEEL }, > > According to hid-ids.h, the ID 0x030c is a TDK mighty mouse. On my > Alu-iMac (last year edition), it's a Apple's owned mighty mouse (vendor > 0x05ac, ID 0x1000), which is not currently listed in hid-ids.h. My > mighty mouse anyway runs o.k. with the "wrong" ID, but since the start > withouth the mouse-wheel. > It did not help when I changed the ID's accordingly. So my question is: > Is there anything to be done in bluetooth driver area too to get this > mighty mouse fully supported (some quirks needed)? > > Sorry for my annoying questions. > > Thanks in advance for any suggestions and best regards I guess, they map Z axis to be a wheel instead a wheel be a wheel like in the 0x030c case. Could you add { HID_BLUETOOTH_DEVICE(USB_VENDOR_ID_APPLE, 0x030c), .driver_data = APPLE_MIGHTYMOUSE } there and HID_BLUETOOTH_DEVICE(USB_VENDOR_ID_APPLE, 0x030c) to hid_blacklist in drivers/hid/hid-core.c and try? If the wheel is inverted with your device, then you need also APPLE_INVERT_HWHEEL aswell. <me goes to implement new_id like in the PCI case to not bother users with recompiling the kernel for testing such things> -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-input" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html