/etc/sysconfig/language /etc/sysconfig/console /etc/sysconfig/keyboard
Yo tengo estos que adjunto. El único problema que tuve fue al pasar de Suse 9.0 a 9.2 con los ficheros que no estaban en UTF-8 y claro no los convertí (en la documentación de Suse ponía que iba a convertirlos). Y con Kmail si me lo mandan con una coficación y no viene en el mensaje (esto no pasa siempre). El resto yo creo que me va bien. Saludos. ## Path: System/Console/Framebuffer ## Description: Framebuffer configuration ## Type: string ## Default: "" # # You may want to load a framebuffer display driver into your kernel # in order to be able to change graphics modes etc. with fbset in # console mode. # # Notes: Most people won't enter anything here, as: # * it won't work if you have vesafb already active # * its advantageous to have fb support compiled into your kernel # * Some XFree86 drivers (especially in XFree86-4.x) don't work # too well, if you enable framebuffer text mode. # # Example: # FB_MODULES="matroxfb_base vesa=0x182 fv=85 matroxfb_maven matroxfb_crtc2" # FB_MODULES="" ## Type: string ## Default: "" # # In case your kernel has framebuffer support (or you loaded the framebuffer # support into your kernel as a module above), you may want to change the # resolution or other parameters. This is done by secifying the parameters # to fbset. Use a mode from /etc/fb-modes and additional parameters as # -a, -depth <BPP>, -vyres <VYRES>, ... (See fbset manpage and/or fbset -h). # # Notes: # * vesafb does not (currently) support changing the display mode # * BEWARE! Don't set modes your monitor can't do. Watch out for the maximum # horizontal frequency. Old monitors might even be damaged if you exceed # their capabilities. # # Example: # FBSET_PARAMS="-a -depth 16 768x576-90 -vyres 10240" # FBSET_PARAMS="" ## Path: Hardware/Console ## Description: Text console settings (see also Hardware/Keyboard) ## Type: string ## Default: "" ## ServiceRestart: kbd # # Console settings. # Note: The KBD_TTY setting from Hardware/Keyboard (sysconfig/keyboard) # also applies for the settings here. # # Load this console font on bootup: # (/usr/share/kbd/consolefonts/) # CONSOLE_FONT="lat9w-16.psfu" ## Type: string ## Default: "" # # Some fonts come without a unicode map. # (.psfu fonts supposedly have it, others often not.) # You can then specify the unicode mapping of your font # explicitly. (/usr/share/kbd/unimaps/) # Normally not needed. # CONSOLE_UNICODEMAP="" ## Type: string ## Default: "" # # Most programs output 8 bit characters, so you need a table to # translate those characters into unicode. That one can be specified # here. (/usr/share/kbd/consoletrans/) # (Note: If your console is in utf-8 mode you don't need this.) # If your code does not use a unicode mapping at all (because you # e.g. explicitly specified UNICODEMAP="none") you may circumvent # the translation via unicode, but load a map which directly maps # 8 bit output of your program to a font position. # CONSOLE_SCREENMAP="trivial" ## Type: string ## Default: "" # # for some fonts the console has to be initialized with CONSOLE_MAGIC. # CONSOLE_MAGIC can be empty or have the values "(B", ")B", "(K" or ")K". # Normally not needed (automatically handled by setfont). # CONSOLE_MAGIC="(K" # Encoding used for output of non-ascii characters. # CONSOLE_ENCODING="UTF-8" ## Path: System/Environment/Language ## Description: ## Type: string(POSIX,ca_ES.ISO-8859-1,ca_ES.UTF-8,cs_CZ.ISO-8859-2,cs_CZ.UTF-8,da_DE@euro,da_DK.ISO-8859-1,da_DK.UTF-8,de_DE@euro,de_DE.ISO-8859-1,de_DE.UTF-8,el_GR.ISO-8859-7,el_GR.UTF-8,en_GB.ISO-8859-1,en_GB.UTF-8,en_IE@euro,en_IE.ISO-8859-1,en_US.ISO-8859-1,es_ES@euro,es_ES.ISO-8859-1,es_ES.UTF-8,fr_FR@euro,fr_FR.ISO-8859-1,fr_FR.UTF-8,gl_ES@euro,gl_ES.ISO-8859-1,gl_ES.utf-8,hr_HR.ISO-8859-2,hu_HU.ISO-8859-2,hu_HU.UTF-8,it_IT@euro,it_IT.ISO-8859-1,it_IT.UTF-8,ja_JP.eucJP,ja_JP.UTF-8,lt_LT.ISO-8859-13,lt_LT.UTF-8,nl_NL@euro,nl_NL.ISO-8859-1,nl_NL.UTF-8,ru_RU.ISO-8859-5,ru_RU.KOI8R,ru_RU.UTF-8,sk_SK.ISO-8859-2,sk_SK.UTF-8,tr_TR.ISO-8859-9,tr_TR.UTF-8,ko_KR.eucKR,ko_KR.UTF-8,zh_TW.Big5,zh_TW.UTF-8,zh_CN.GB2312,zh_CN.UTF-8) ## Default: "" ## Config: OpenOffice.org,groff,ispell,kde,kdm3,profiles,susehelp,susewm,tetex,wdm # # # Local users will get RC_LANG as their default language, i.e. the # environment variable $LANG . $LANG is the default of all $LC_*-variables, # as long as $LC_ALL is not set, which overrides all $LC_-variables. # Root uses this variable only if ROOT_USES_LANG is set to "yes". # RC_LANG="es_ES.UTF-8" ## Type: string ## Default: "" # # This variable will override all LC-variables!! # Again, ROOT_USES_LANG must be set to "yes", if an effect on the superuser # account is desired. # RC_LC_ALL="" ## Type: string ## Default: "" # # This defines the locale in which messages of programs and # libraries with i18n-support should appear if a translated # message catalog for the library or the program is installed. # This also provides localized yes/no answers. # RC_LC_MESSAGES="" ## Type: string ## Default: "" # # This defines the locale for character handling and classification. # The libc uses this value in language dependent function calls, such # as e.g. uppercase/lowercase mapping of foreign characters. # RC_LC_CTYPE="" ## Type: string ## Default: "" # # This defines the locale for sorting strings and characters. # It is used by the libc to obtain the alphabetical order of characters # (e.g. for string comparisons). # # To keep bash and possibly other apps from misbehaviour, you should # probably keep this at POSIX and set it only for the apps that need it. # RC_LC_COLLATE="POSIX" ## Type: string ## Default: "" # # This defines the locale for date and time output formats. # i.e.: 06/09/1999 vs. 09.06.1999 # RC_LC_TIME="" ## Type: string ## Default: "" # # This defines the locale for formatting and reading numbers. # i.e.: 1,234.56 vs. 1.234,56 # RC_LC_NUMERIC="" ## Type: string ## Default: "" # # This defines the locale for formatting and reading money values. # RC_LC_MONETARY="" ## Type: string(ctype) ## Default: ctype # # This defines if the user "root" should use the locale settings # which are defined here. # Value "ctype" means that root uses just LC_CTYPE. # ROOT_USES_LANG="ctype" ## Type: yesno ## Default: no # # Workaround for missing forward of LANG and LC variables # of e.g. ssh login connections. # AUTO_DETECT_UTF8="no" ## Type: string ## Default: "" # # This defines the locale for format of paper. # RC_LC_PAPER="" ## Type: string ## Default: "" # # List of installed language supports, use by YaST2 # INSTALLED_LANGUAGES="" ## Path: System/Environment/Language ## Type: string(scim,uim,kinput2,kinput2-canna,kinput2-wnn,nabi,wnn,atokx,xcin,none) ## Default: "" # # A default input method to be used in X11 can be selected here. # If this variable is set and a script with the same name # as the value of this variable exists in the directory /etc/X11/xim.d/ # this script is sourced when X11 is started to start an input method. # # The special value "none" (/etc/X11/xim.d/none) means: # Do not use any input method at all. # # For more details see the comments at the top of /etc/X11/xim. # INPUT_METHOD=""