SUMMARY: keyboard problem (booted off 40.F cdrom)

From: Wakeman, Lindsay (Lindsay.Wakeman@bl.uk)
Date: Tue May 27 2003 - 05:55:10 EDT


Much thanks for swift responses from:

Hamadoun Dicko
Bob Vickers
Shaun Racine
Martin Adolphson

Various creative solutions as follows:

* Run /usr/bin/X11/dxkeycaps

* Capture the root prompt h=`echo $PS1`; mount -t advfs domain${h}fileset
/mountpoint

* Use the octal value directly `echo "mount domain\043fileset /mountpoint"`

* and:

Shellscript: mount domain`echo -e "\043"`fileset /mountpoint
(you don't need the -e flag on "echo" unless you are using Bash)

Perl: mount domain`perl -e 'print "\043"'`fileset /mountpoint

And if you can't access the backtick key either you could always do it this
way:

Shellscript: echo -e '#!/bin/sh\nmount domain\043fileset /mountpoint' >
mountscript.sh
Or Perl: perl -e 'print "#!/bin/sh\nmount domain\043fileset /mountpoint\n"'
> mountscript.sh

which would create a script "mountscript.sh" that will mount your domain.

Thanks all,
Lindsay

----- Original Post -----
From: "Wakeman, Lindsay" <Lindsay.Wakeman@bl.uk>
>
> Hi Sysadmins
>
> I had to rebuild and restore a replacement system disk yesterday, and
ran
> into a bit of a problem with the keyboard mapping.
>
> My method was to boot off the 4.0F distribution CDROM, label the new disk,
> edit the new disk label, make the required root, usr and var AdvFS
> domains/filesets and then restore vdump images from tape.
>
> All was going well until I got to mounting the newly made filesets. The
> mount command requires the format:
>
> mount -t advfs domain#fileset /mountpoint
>
> ... and I had no # (hash) key available on the keyboard (really, I tried
> everything possible)
>
> The sterling pound key was just that, and the dollar key was a dollar. The
> hash key gave ^@
>
> In the end I got around it by editing a restored copy of the fstab file,
in
> order to obtain the hash symbol from the original
> mount requests. The root prompt in single-user mode was showing properly
as
> hash so I may also have been able to capture a
> hash in a file using the script command (if it is in the standalone
system).
>
> Anyway, my question is, what should/could I have done to change the
> keyboard mapping to get a hash symbol at the time?
>
> Thanks for any help you can offer, I could do without that hairy moment
> next time round!
>
> Lindsay
>
> Lindsay Wakeman
> Senior Analyst/Programmer, Systems Delivery London
> The British Library
> lindsay.wakeman@bl.uk

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