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Signed-off-by: Nico Schottelius <nico@ikn.schottelius.org> |
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support | ||
todo | ||
Announce | ||
doc.gpm.in | ||
FAQ | ||
HACK_GPM | ||
infofilter | ||
Makefile.in | ||
manpager | ||
mktxt | ||
README.1.20.2 | ||
README.etouch | ||
README.gunze | ||
README.microtouch | ||
README.synaptics | ||
README.twiddler |
NEW FEATURE IN BETA-2 OVER BETA-1 (ONLY TWIDDLER CHANGES) Fixed typo in twiddler.c which prevented compiling Fixed segfault when using more than one thumb-key at a time Should fix problem when non-ascii chars appear in the cfg file Changed algorithm for dhouble-click Added shift etc. support Added VT change and Execution of commands DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF GPM SUPPORT FOR THE TWIDDLER KEYBOARD Gpm-1.14 and later support the twiddler keyboard, by HandyKey Corp. (the keyboard is described at www.handykey.com). This document describes the current status of the gpm decoder. Mouse support ============= Motion ------ The mouse functionality of the keyboard is supported by gpm. Three decoders are currently available: - a "static" decoder, which turns twiddler position to mouse displacement. The decoder locks the mouse when the ``mouse'' button is pressed and any further motion moves the cursor, as long as ``mouse'' is kept down. This is compiled if "-DTWIDDLER_STATIC" (for example by invoking ``make CC="gcc -DTWIDDLER_STATIC"''. - a "ballistic" decoder, which turns twiddler position to mouse speed. If the keyboard is hole vertical the mouse cursor won't be moved. To compile this decoder -DTWIDDLER_BALLISTIC must be used. - a "mixed" decoder, that behaves like the static one when the device is near-to-vertical and like the ballistic one for large inclination. This is compiled by default Problems ........ The current decoder doesn't allow tuning the parameters at run time. I plan to implement twiddler chords to change the resolution, acceleration and threshold of the mixed decoder, and the other ones as well. If different people routinely use different decoders, I'll make it possible to choose which decoder to run. I will also implement the chord to switch up/down. Buttons ------- The first (left) mouse button is bound to the right key ("a", green, R000). The other buttons are bound to M000 ("e", blue) and L000 ("SP", red). This is consistent with the twiddler manual. To ease using the fingers like with conventional mice, keys 0R00 and 00R0 (i.e., "b" and "c") are bound to the middle and right button as well. Since someone prefers to reverse the order of the keys (i.e., L000 is the left mouse button), they will use "-B 321" on the gpm command line. To ease them, 0L00 is bound to the middle button, and 00L0 is bound to the *left* button. Thus, with "-B 321" it will be the right button. In summary: Left button (B1): R000 R000 Middle button (B2): M000 0R00 Right button (B3): L000 00R0 For people using "-B 321" Left button (B1): L000 L000 Middle button (B2): M000 0L00 Right button (B3): R000 00L0 Problems ........ None, by now. Keyboard support ================ Configuration file ------------------ The keyboard map is stored in run-time tables within gpm. There is no precompiled table, so a configuration file is needed. I chose not to precompile values because that would mean to pre-parse a configurazion file, and provide documentation as well. Using a compulsory configuration file reliefs my workload :-) The file "gpm-twiddler.conf" that appears in the gpm configuration includes the default keyboard map, and can be used right away. If the file is not in place, gpm will complain about its absence. By default the file must live in /usr/etc (or /usr/local/etc, or whatever you gave as a prefix to ./configure). The behaviour is similar for different installation prefixes. The file is not installed by "make install". If the file is missing, gpm will exit producing a message like this: ./gpm: /usr/etc/gpm-twiddler.conf: No such file or directory The distributed configuration file includes its own documentation. If you want to add keys to the default file, you can avoid editing it by writing a "gpm-twiddler.user" file and putting it in the same directory as gpm-twiddler.conf. Gpm will read both files, in sequence, but won't complain if gpm-twiddler.user doesn't exist. Gpm will print an error message for any incorrect line in any of the configuration files: error messages include the file name and the line number where the error appears, as well as a description of the type of error. If any error is encountered, gpm will exit. The daemon will print a warning message for any redefined key, but will use the new definition. Therefore, if you want to redefine keys in your user file, just redirect standard error to /dev/null after checking you are willing to override default definitions. General information ------------------- A key press is reported when any key of the chord is released: this avoides reporting false keys when a multi-key chord is being composed. The twiddler driver in gpm implements auto-repeat. Auto-repeat is invoked by double-clicking a chord and keeping it pressed. If the double-click takes more than .3 seconds, it won't be considered a double-click; auto-repeat will start .5 seconds after the double-click. Gpm unblanks the screen when keys are composed using the twiddler. Problems -------- Gpm doesn't currently report keypresses to the X server. You should use other twiddler drivers for Linux if you need this functionality. For example get the driver by Jeff Levine (there is a link to the driver in www.handykey.com). I would like to thank HandyKey Corp. for sending a twiddler keyboard to me and Torben Fjerdingstad for his help in testing out the driver.