So this is what's confusing me here. It's clear that your laptop has a proper kernel driver and we don't need the acpi-support event handler for these keys, but I can't figure out which handler is actually being used on these keys because there's no /etc/acpi/if-asus-eee.sh script in acpi-support.
Does /etc/acpi/if-asus-eee.sh exist on your system? If so, what does 'dpkg -S /etc/acpi/if-asus-eee.sh' return?
> /etc/acpi/events/thinkpad-volume-up
And that script was supposed to have been removed in the jaunty version of acpi-support. What does 'dpkg -S /etc/acpi/events/thinkpad-volume-up' return?
Finally, can you run 'acpi_listen' and press each of the volume keys, then paste the output? That will decisively confirm which acpi-support scripts we need to get rid of.
> action= /etc/acpi/ if-asus- eee.sh volupbtn.sh
So this is what's confusing me here. It's clear that your laptop has a proper kernel driver and we don't need the acpi-support event handler for these keys, but I can't figure out which handler is actually being used on these keys because there's no /etc/acpi/ if-asus- eee.sh script in acpi-support.
Does /etc/acpi/ if-asus- eee.sh exist on your system? If so, what does 'dpkg -S /etc/acpi/ if-asus- eee.sh' return?
> /etc/acpi/ events/ thinkpad- volume- up
And that script was supposed to have been removed in the jaunty version of acpi-support. What does 'dpkg -S /etc/acpi/ events/ thinkpad- volume- up' return?
Finally, can you run 'acpi_listen' and press each of the volume keys, then paste the output? That will decisively confirm which acpi-support scripts we need to get rid of.