Keyboard and mouse connectors – Dell PowerEdge 7150 User Manual

Page 6

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Keyboard and Mouse Connectors

The system uses a Personal System/2 (PS/2)-style keyboard and supports a
PS/2-compatible mouse. Cables from both devices attach to 6-pin, miniature Deutsche Industrie Norm (DIN) connectors on the back panel of your computer.

Mouse driver software can give the mouse priority with the microprocessor by issuing IRQ12 whenever a new mouse movement is detected. The driver software also
passes along the mouse data to the application program that is in control.

Keyboard Connector

If you reconfigure your hardware, you may need pin number and signal information for the keyboard connector.

Figure B-4

illustrates the pin numbers for the keyboard

connector and

Table B-3

defines the pin assignments and interface signals for the keyboard connector.

Figure B-4. Pin Numbers for the Keyboard Connector

 

Mouse Connector

If you reconfigure your hardware, you may need pin number and signal information for the mouse connector.

Figure B-5

illustrates the pin numbers for the mouse

connector, and

Table B-4

defines the pin assignments and interface signals for the mouse connector.

Figure B-5. Pin Numbers for the Mouse Connector

 

 

8

PD6

I/O Printer data bit 6

9

PD7

I/O Printer data bit 7

10

ACK# I

Acknowledge

11

BUSY I

Busy

12

PE

I

Paper end

13

SLCT I

Select

14

AFD# O

Automatic feed

15

ERR# I

Error

16

INIT# O

Initialize printer

17

SLIN# O

Select in

18–25 GND

N/A Signal ground 

Table B-3. Keyboard Connector Pin Assignments 

Pin

Signal

I/O Definition

1

KBDATA I/O Keyboard data

2

NC

N/A No connection

3

GND

N/A Signal ground

4

FVcc

N/A Fused supply voltage

5

KBCLK

I/O Keyboard clock

6

NC

N/A No connection

Shell N/A

N/A Chassis ground

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