Only Sun USB keyboards and mouse devices are supported. System configurations with multiple USB keyboards and mouse devices might work but are not supported in the Solaris environment. See the following items for details.
A USB keyboard and mouse can be connected anywhere on the bus and can be configured as the console keyboard and mouse. Booting the system is slower if the keyboard and mouse are not on the root hub.
Do not move the console keyboard and mouse during a reboot or at the ok prompt.You can move the console keyboard and mouse to another hub at any time after a system reboot. After you plug in a keyboard and mouse, they are fully functional again.
SPARC – The power key on a USB keyboard behaves differently than the power key on the Sun type 5 keyboard. On a USB keyboard, you can suspend or shut down the system by using the SUSPEND/SHUTDOWN key, but you cannot power up the system.
The keys just to the left of the keypad do not function on third-party USB keyboards.
Multiple keyboards are not supported:
Multiple keyboards enumerate and are usable, but they are not plumbed as console keyboards.
The first keyboard that is probed at boot time becomes the console keyboard. The result of this probing might cause confusion if multiple keyboards are plugged in at boot time.
If you unplug the console keyboard, the next available USB keyboard does not become the console keyboard. The next hot-plugged keyboard becomes the console keyboard.
Multiple mouse devices are not supported:
Multiple mouse devices enumerate and are usable, but they are not plumbed as console mouse devices.
The first mouse that is probed at boot time becomes the console mouse. The result of this probing might cause confusion if you have multiple mouse devices plugged in at boot time.
If you unplug the console mouse, the next available USB mouse does not become the console mouse. The next hot-plugged mouse becomes the console mouse.
If you have a third-party composite keyboard with a PS/2 mouse, and the composite keyboard/mouse is the first one to be probed, it becomes the console keyboard/mouse even if the PS/2 mouse is not plugged in. Thus, another USB mouse plugged into the system cannot work because it is not configured as the console mouse.
Only two-button and three-button mouse devices are supported. A wheel-on-wheel mouse acts like a plain-button mouse. A mouse with more than three buttons functions like a three–button mouse.