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332 lines
14 KiB
Text
332 lines
14 KiB
Text
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The Speakup Tutorial
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By Saqib Shaikh <ss@saqibshaikh.com>
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Introduction
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In recent months there has been a vast growth in the popularity of the
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Linux operating system. Speakup is a Linux screen reader, that is it is a
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software program that enables blind computer users to use Linux by
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receiving speech output.
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This tutorial takes the new Speakup/Linux user through the basic things
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that they need to know.
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What Is Speakup?
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As mentioned previously, Speakup is a screen reader for the Linux
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operating system. One of the things which makes Speakup different from
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more traditional screen readers is that it is patched into the kernel. To
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explain what this means, Speakup is an integral part of the operating
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system. This means that when you turn on your computer and Linux starts,
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Speakup also starts, meaning you can hear all boot-up messages, and
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resolve any problems related to the computer not reaching the login
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prompt. In addition, when you shutdown your system you will receive speech
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feedback right until the message "Power down" is given, indicating you
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should turn off your computer.
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Speakup is written by Kirk Reiser and Andy Berdan. It is distributed under
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the terms of the GNU GPL. If you don't already know, GPL stands for
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General Public License, and is a license agreement that basically states
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that you are free to copy, modify and distribute Speakup, but may not turn
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any part of it into proprietary or commercial code without the permission
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of the author, Kirk Reiser.
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Currently Speakup supports the following speech synthesisers. Each
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synthesiser is given a keyword, which is how Speakup refers to that
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synthesiser.
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acntpc: Accent PC internal speech synthesiser.
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acntsa: Accent SA external speech synthesiser.
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apolo: Apollo II external speech synthesiser.
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audptr: Audapter external speech synthesiser.
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bns: Braille 'n Speak family of note-takers, including the Braille 'n
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Speak, Type 'n Speak, Braille Lite and Type Lite.
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decext: External DEC-Talk (for the older DEC-Talk and Multi-Voice speech
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synthesisers).
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dectlk: DEC-Talk Express external speech synthesiser.
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dtlk: Doubletalk PC internal speech synthesiser.
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ltlk: Doubletalk external or Litetalk speech synthesiser.
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spkout: Speakout external speech synthesiser.
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txprt: Transport external speech synthesiser.
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Speakup Resources
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The official Speakup home page is at http://linux-speakup.org, and the ftp
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site at ftp://ftp.braille.uwo.ca/pub/linux/speakup.
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Slackware Linux has recently become the first Linux distribution to
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include Speakup. You can find more information about Slackware at
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http://www.slackware.com, or download it at
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ftp://ftp.slackware.com/pub/slackware/slackware.
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Bill Acker also has an FTP site devoted to Speakup and Red Hat Linux at
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ftp://speakup.octothorp.org.
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There is an ever-growing group of Speakup users on the internet. They are
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all very friendly and willing to help each other with Speakup or Linux
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problems. The main interaction between Speakup users is via the Speakup
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mailing list. To subscribe, send a message to
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<speakup-request@braille.uwo.ca>. In the body of the message write the
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word "subscribe" (or "unsubscribe" to unsubscribe). Once you are
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subscribed to the list, send a message to everyone else on the list by
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emailing <speakup@braille.uwo.ca>.
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Some users also hang out on the Speakup reflector. In order to use this
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you should get and install a program called Speak Freely, which is
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available for both Linux and Windows. To connect, point your sfmike at
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lwl.braille.uwo.ca:4074.
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Various people, Matthew Campbell in particular, have done talks about
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Linux/Speakup on the ACB Radio Main Menu show. For more information, visit
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http://www.acbradio.org.
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Finally, you may contact Kirk directly at <kirk@braille.uwo.ca>. However,
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please remember that if Kirk gets lots of emails all asking the same thing
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he might get rather annoyed, so its always better to try the mailing list
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first!
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Speakup Screen Reading Keys
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Using Speakup it is possible to use a special reading cursor to look
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around the screen, without affecting the application's current operation.
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All of Speakup's reading keys are, by default, bound to keys on the
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numeric keypad. It is possible to change this default layout, but this
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will require some knowledge of how Linux keymaps work. If you feel like
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doing this then you should consult the document
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ftp://ftp.braille.uwo.ca/pub/linux/speakup/keymap-tutorial.
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Sometimes Speakup uses the 0, or insert key on the numeric keypad to
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provide more functions. In these cases hold down the insert key and press
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the other button. Note that although we call this the insert key, you
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cannot use the other insert key which is positioned in a block of six
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above the cursor keys.
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The numbers 7, 8 and 9 on the numeric keypad read the previous, current
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and next lines respectively. When moving up or down, the reading cursor
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will be moved to that line. If you try pressing 7 when the reading cursor
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is on the top line of the screen, or 9 when the reading cursor is on the
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bottom line, then Speakup will respond "Top" or "Bottom" appropriately.
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To move to, and read the previous/current/next word, use 4, 5 and 6
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respectively. If you hear a beep, this means that you have past the end of
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a line, and have moved to a different line. If you try to press 4 when you
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are on the first word on the first line, or 6 when you are on the last
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word of the last line, then Speakup will respond "Top" or "Bottom" as
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before.
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Use the 1, 2 and 3 to read by characters. As when reading words the
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computer will beep when you move to a new line, and say "Top" or "Bottom"
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when you are at the top/bottom of the screen.
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To read from the top of the screen to the reading cursor use insert+8. Use
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insert+4 to read from the beginning of the line to the reading cursor, and
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insert+6 to read from the reading cursor to the end of the line.
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Insert+5 will spell the current word. Insert+2 will say the current
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character phonetically, using the millitary alphabet.
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Use the plus (+) key to read the entire screen. Insert+plus reads from the
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reading cursor to the bottom of the screen.
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The minus key (-) toggles between having the reading cursor parked or
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unparked. When the reading cursor is unparked, whenever the application
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moves the cursor to a different position, the reading cursor will also
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move. If parked, the reading cursor will always stay in its current
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position unless you actually move it. This is often useful if you just
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wish to monitor a particular part of the screen.
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Insert+minus causes the decimal and hexadecimal value of the current
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character to be read. Point (.) reads the current cursor position. This
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includes the point on the current screen as well as which virtual console
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is active. The minus key causes the color attributes of the current
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position to be spoken.
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To move the reading cursor to the top of the screen use insert+9, and use
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insert+3 to move to the bottom of the screen. Insert+7 moves to the
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beginning of the line, while insert+1 moves to the end of the line.
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You can press any key to temporarily mute speech (the best way is to use
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the control key). Pressing the enter key on the numeric keypad causes
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Speakup to be silent until another key is pressed. Insert+enter causes
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Speakup to stop talking until insert+enter is pressed again.
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The slash key (/) will cause Speakup to go to the row/column that you
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specify. The star key (*) toggles on cursor tracking. Cursor tracking is
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currently only experimental.
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Changing Speech Parameters
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Speakup now uses the /proc file-system to change parameters. Use the command
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echo value >/proc/speakup/parameter
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Here, parameter includes such things as rate, pitch, volume, etc. To find
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out the list of available parameters, type:
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ls /proc/speakup
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Value refers to the value you wish to set the parameter to. For example,
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to set the rate of the sixth fastest value you would enter
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echo 6 >/proc/speakup/rate
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Installing Linux With Speech
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Using Speakup it is now possible to install Linux with speech feedback.
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For full details on installing Linux refer to one of the many good books
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available, or the documentation that comes with your distribution of
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Linux.
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Finally, there is also another useful tool in the installer. This is
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Parted. It is a tool from which you can resize existing partitions.
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Changing Your Keyboard Layout
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One problem with Speakup is that in order to get the reading keys on the
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numeric keypad to work, you must use the US keymap during a talking
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installation of Linux. Later, you can change the keymap by using the
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following procedure:
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Firstly, download
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ftp://ftp.braille.uwo.ca/pub/linux/speakup/speakupmap.map. This is a
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keymap containing the Speakup key definitions.
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Copy this file into the directory where your standard keymaps live. Copy
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the US keymap into the file standard.map using a command like:
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cp us.map standard.map
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Then type:
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diff -urN speakupmap.map standard.map >map.diff
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Now, copy the keymap for your language to standard.map, for example:
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cp uk.map standard.map
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And finally type:
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patch -p0 <map.diff
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Now copy standard.map back to the original filename for your native
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keymap, renaming it first. For example:
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cp uk.map uk.map.old
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mv standard.map uk.map
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Load this keymap by typing:
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loadkeys uk.map
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Using Speakup On A Shared Machine
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Previously, using Speakup on a computer that a sighted person also used
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was a problem - you would probably need two different kernels. However,
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you can now specify the default synthesiser to be "none", so that your
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sighted colleague won't have any problems. Now, when you wish to use the
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computer with speech, enter a command like the following at the boot
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prompt:
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linux speakup_synth=synthname speakup_ser=0
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Where synthname refers to one of the synthesisers listed earlier, and
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0 is the serial port the synth is connected to if it is not detected
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automatically.
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Installing Speakup From Scratch
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If you want to install Speakup from scratch, then you will need to
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recompile your kernel. The following is a rough list of things you should
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do:
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Get the latest kernel source from
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ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/vw.x/linux-w.x.y.z.tar.bz2.
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At the time of writing the latest kernel was 2.6.27.7.
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Also get the Speakup source. Probably it is best to get the CVS verision.
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Unpack the kernel in /usr/src like this:
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cd /usr/src
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tar xjf linux-2.6.27.7.tar.bz2
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Then make sure that the linux symlink points to it:
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rm -f linux
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ln -sf linux-2.6.27.7 linux
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Run the speakup-checkout script in source/k in the Slackware tree to patch
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speakup into your kernel. Hit enter at the first prompt. At the second,
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enter the password for the CVS site. This is:
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please
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You should probably start with Slackware's config file for the kernel.
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Copy it from the Slackware tree (whereever you have it) into the kernel
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sources in /usr/src:
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cp kernels/speakup.s/config /usr/src/linux/.config
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Now you can configure and compile the kernel by typing:
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cd /usr/src/linux
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make menuconfig (select the options you want)
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make
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To copy the new kernel into place and reinstall LILO, use this:
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rm -f /boot/vmlinuz /boot/System.map
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cp arch/i386/boot/bzImage /boot/vmlinuz
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cp System.map /boot/System.map
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lilo
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Please note that the above information is by no means sufficient to teach
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someone to compile their kernel. There are many books/tutorials that cover
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this topic in much more depth.
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Using The CVS Version Of Speakup
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[ Pardon the redundant nature of this section. The previous one had recommended
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using the speakup-1.00 release tarball, which probably will not work as well
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with the 2.6 kernel in Slackware -- Pat ]
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CVS, which stands for Concurrent Versions System, is a tool that allows a
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development version of a product to exist alongside the official release.
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In terms of Speakup, the CVS version is newer than the stable release, but
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is also likely to be less reliable as it hasn't been fully tested, and any
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new piece of code added could potentially introduce more bugs. However,
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using CVS means that you can try out new features and give feedback. If
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you're a developer then you can work on the code as well.
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Speakup comes with a script called "checkout" which contacts the CVS
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server, downloads the program and applies all the patches. In order for
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this to work you must have a clean copy of the Linux kernel source in
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/usr/src/linux. The first time you run the checkout script you can run it
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from anywhere, but after the first time you will want to run the script
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from /usr/src/linux/drivers/char/speakup to do future updates.
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If you haven't already got a copy of the checkout script you can download
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it from ftp://ftp.braille.uwo.ca/pub/linux/speakup/checkout. After
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downloading it you will need to make it executable. You can do this by
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entering the command:
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chmod 755 checkout
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from the directory where the script is. To run the script type:
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./checkout
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You should be prompted with "No CVSROOT set hit return to select
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anonymous". Just hit enter, and you will be asked for a password. All
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anonymous passwords on the Speakup CVS server are the single word
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"please". Kirk says that if you can't say please then you can't have what
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you want! If everything went all right you should see multiple CVS
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updating and patching messages.
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Good luck in your Linux adventures. If you found this document useful and
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have successfully installed Linux then please let me know. Equally, if you
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don't like it then tell me also.
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You may reach the author via email at ss@saqibshaikh.com. You may also
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like to visit his home page at http://www.saqibshaikh.com.
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