Jon Smirl wrote: > 3) No special tools - use mkdir, echo, cat, shell scripts to build maps >From the POV of a distributor, there is always a special tool required. Whether it is implemented in bash, Python, or C doesn't make a difference to him. For an enduser whose distributor doesn't package that tool, it also doesn't matter whether it is bash or Python. (C is awkward because it needs to be run through gcc first.) A Pyton tool can operate the existing EVIOCSKEYCODE interface just as well as a C tool. Your mkdir/ echo/ cat programs would still just this: Programs. Sure, these programs would be interpreted by an interpreter which is installed everywhere, and the data they operate on is in a clear text format. The downside is that these programs do not exist yet. > 5) Direct multi-app support - no daemon Think of lircd (when it feeds into uinput) as of a userspace driver rather than a daemon. The huge benefit of a userspace driver is that it can load configuration files. Multi-app support is provided by evdev of course. > What are other goals for this subsystem? - Minimal development cost; reduced maintenance cost relative the to status quo. - No regressions would be best. -- Stefan Richter -=====-==--= =-== ==-== http://arcgraph.de/sr/ -- 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