So, I have this old Dell Dimension 8250 (2.4GHz P4, 768M RAM) that I wanted to install FreeBSD 10.2 on to see how well it might work as a desktop. I got the thing setup and put my old USB keyboard and mouse on it (Logitech G510).
I enabled USB emulation in the BIOS, figuring it would be needed for the USB keyboard to work prior to having the system fully booted. No issues there. It works fine in the BIOS, and it works fine at the boot loader. However, once the kernel boots, it stop working, making installation impossible.
So, I rebooted and disabled that option in the BIOS. This time, the keyboard works in the BIOS itself, but not at the boot loader (as expected). However, after the kernel boots, it *STILL* doesn't work, again making installation impossible.
While I could probably poke around my basement and find some antique PS2 keyboard, I'd really prefer to find a way to have USB work properly for this. I don't like using software which requires me to swap hardware when I want to reinstall or upgrade things, because at some point down the road, I may not have the "alternate, install only" hardware bits anymore.
Are there any boot parameters I can enter (with USB emulation enabled) at the boot loader screen to try and force it to recognize the USB keyboard? I could at least write that on the computer's case with a sharpie.
Thanks for reading guys.
I enabled USB emulation in the BIOS, figuring it would be needed for the USB keyboard to work prior to having the system fully booted. No issues there. It works fine in the BIOS, and it works fine at the boot loader. However, once the kernel boots, it stop working, making installation impossible.
So, I rebooted and disabled that option in the BIOS. This time, the keyboard works in the BIOS itself, but not at the boot loader (as expected). However, after the kernel boots, it *STILL* doesn't work, again making installation impossible.
While I could probably poke around my basement and find some antique PS2 keyboard, I'd really prefer to find a way to have USB work properly for this. I don't like using software which requires me to swap hardware when I want to reinstall or upgrade things, because at some point down the road, I may not have the "alternate, install only" hardware bits anymore.
Are there any boot parameters I can enter (with USB emulation enabled) at the boot loader screen to try and force it to recognize the USB keyboard? I could at least write that on the computer's case with a sharpie.
Thanks for reading guys.