SHA256
1
0
forked from pool/grub2
grub2/README.ibm3215
Michael Chang 957b4bf706 Accepting request 1191065 from home:gary_lin:branches:Base:System
- Switch to '--no-hostonly' when creating the ZIPL initrd in the
  KIWI build environment to avoid some potential issues due to the
  missing modules
  * grub2-s390x-set-hostonly.patch

OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/request/show/1191065
OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Base:System/grub2?expand=0&rev=510
2024-08-02 08:19:09 +00:00

60 lines
2.7 KiB
Plaintext

[Disclaimer: I do not know enough (by far) about the inner workings
and secrets of these printer-consoles, so please correct me/send advice,
if there are better solutions!]
On 3215/327x things are dramatically different from everywhere else.
You'll have to live with some severe limitations:
0. Interactivity is quite limited. You'll need to "blindly" type,
most of the time, to see the effect only on "submission" ([Enter]).
In edit and shell mode it's sometimes useful to insert underlines
just to see, where the curser (AKA "point") is. (BTW, 3270 is _much_
better at displaying/refreshing grub2 screens than 3215.)
1. No cursor-movement-, alt-, meta-, and control-keys (like [ESC]).
2. To work around the lack of control-keys, the "[^][C]-sends-interrupt"-
trick is extended to translate sequences of caret followed by character
to the respective control-character. In the following this sequence
of two keystrokes is referred to as '^c' instead of that somewhat balky
[^][C]. Thus an [ESC] keypress can be generated with '^[' ("caret"
followed by "opening square bracket").
3. If a caret itself is needed, send one on it's own (i.e. a solitary [^]
followed by [Enter] -- or use '^^'.
4. No '[Enter]', because it can't be avoided on *any* input.
5. If you still need one to arrive at the application, you may either
press '[Enter]' *twice* (one empty line, sort of) or add '^j' to your
input. In menu mode '^f' works as well (see below). But using "empty
lines" does now work very reliably, so explicit control sequences
are to be preferred. This has the additional advantage, that combined
sequences can be sent, e.g. to exit from 'grub2-emu' without doing
anything, you can simply type 'cexit^j' and submit that with [Enter].
Common Substitutes:
'^j'` => [Enter] "engage"
'^[' => [ESC] "abort" / return to previous "state"
'^i' => [TAB] try completion (in edit & shell mode)
Available Keys in Menu Mode:
'^a' first entry '^e' last entry
'^p' previous entry '^n' next entry
'^g' previous page '^c' next page
'^f' boot selected entry/enter sub-menu (same as '^j')
'e' edit selected entry 'c' enter grub-shell
Available Keys in Edit Mode:
'^p' previous line '^n' next line
'^b' backward char '^f' forward char
'^a' beginning of line '^e' end of line
'^h' backspace '^d' delete
'^k' kill (to end of) line '^y' yank
'^o' open line '^l' refresh screen
'^x' boot entry '^c' enter grub-shell
Availble Keys on Command Line Mode:
'^p' previous command '^n' next command (from history)
'^a' beginning of line '^e' end of line
'^b' backward char '^f' forward char
'^h' backspace '^d' delete
'^k' kill (to end of) line '^u' discard line
'^y' yank