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xsetwacom(1) |
FreeBSD General Commands Manual |
xsetwacom(1) |
xsetwacom - commandline utility to query and modify wacom driver settings.
xsetwacom [options] [command [arguments]]
This program queries or changes properties on the devices loaded by the wacom
driver. The modification of properties happens at runtime and is not
persistent through X server restarts.
- -d, --display display_name
- Connect to the X server specified in display_name; see X(7).
- -h, --help
- Prints a short help.
- -v, --verbose
- Enable verbose output, useful for debugging.
- -V, --version
- Display version number and exit.
Allowed commands are list, get, and set. The command may be
specified with or without one or two preceding dashes, i.e. --list is
equivalent to -list and list.
- list devices
- List known devices. Only input devices managed by the wacom driver are
listed.
- list parameters
- List known parameters. List all parameters suitable for the get or
the set command. Note that not all parameters are available on all
device types.
- list modifiers
- List the aliases for modifiers and other keys that can be used when
setting button action mappings.
- get device_name parameter
- Get the current settings for the parameter on the given device. Note that
not all parameters are available on all device types. The special
parameter name "all" may be provided to display all current
settings on the device.
- By default, options are printed on the commandline in the respective
format.
- The output format may be altered with one of the following options:
- -s, --shell
- Display the output in shell format, i.e. as shell commands to xsetwacom to
reproduce the same parameter.
- -x, --xconf
- Display the output in xorg.conf format, i.e. as option lines that may be
added to the InputDevice section in the xorg.conf.
- set device_name parameter [value]
- Set the parameter value on the given device to the value provided. Note
that not all parameters are writable, some are read-only and result in an
error when trying to be modified.
Not all parameters are available on all tools. Use the get command with the
parameter or "all" parameter for specific input tool applicable
parameters and current settings.
- Area x1 y1 x2 y2
- Set the tablet input area in device coordinates in the form top left x/y
and bottom right x/y. Top left and bottom right are defined in the
device's native orientation, regardless of the actual rotation currently
applied. Input outside of these coordinates will be clipped to the edges
of the area defined. Default: 0 0 x2 y2; with x2 and y2 tablet
specific.
- Button button-number [mapping]
- Set a mapping for the specified button-number. Mappings take the form of
either a single numeric button or an 'action' to be performed. If no
mapping is provided, the default mapping is restored. If button-number is
mapped to 0, the Button event is ignored.
Numeric button mappings indicate what X11 button number the
given button-number should correspond to. For example, a mapping of
"3" means a press of the given button-number will produce a
press of X11 button 3 (i.e. right click).
Action mappings allow button presses to perform many events.
They take the form of a string of keywords and arguments.
The "key" keyword is followed by a list of key
names. These can optionally be preceded by "+" for press and
"-" for release. If +/- is not given, press-and-release is
assumed, except for modifier keys which are left pressed. Key names can
be X11 KeySyms or some aliases such as 'shift' or 'f1' (the full list
can be seen with the list modifiers command).
To assign a key that is not in the modifiers list, use the
KeySym in /usr/include/X11/keysymdef.h with the XK_ prefix removed or
its actual value as is. For example, XK_BackSpace should be specified as
"BackSpace". "0xff80" can also be used to replace
"BackSpace" since it's the unique KeySym value of Backspace
key.
Here is a combined example: "key +a shift b shift -a
0xff0d" converts the button into a series of keystrokes. In this
example, "press a, press shift, press and release b, release shift,
release a, then press and release enter". "key +a +shift b
-shift -a 0xff0d" does the same thing.
The "button" keyword is similar except that its
arguments are X11 button numbers.
The "modetoggle" keyword is also recognized; it
takes no arguments, and toggles the device mode between relative and
absolute pointer tracking.
The "pan" keyword causes the driver to send scroll
events while the pen is dragged. This makes it easy to scroll through
lists and documents, pan around 2D canvases, and zoom in/out of 3D
scenes (exact behavior depends on application interpretation of
scrollwheel events). Dragging the pen up/down will send scrollwheel
down/up events; dragging it left/right will send scrollwheel right/left
events.
The events in the action mapping are sent when the physical
button is pressed. If the action mapping leaves any buttons or keys
pressed (such as a modifier key), they will be released when the
physical button is released.
Multiple keywords may be present in one action if desired: for
example "key +ctrl button 5 key -ctrl". Each keyword takes all
arguments until the next keyword.
A maximum of 256 presses and/or releases can be specified in
an action mapping.
The driver can only simulate physical key events but not
keysyms and xsetwacom translates the mapping sequence into such events.
Thus, symbols on the same physical key will generate the same event. For
example, '1' and '!' are on the same key on a US keyboard and thus have
the same keycode). For access to keys on a higher shift level, the
sequence should be entered as it would be typed on a physical keyboard.
For example, a exclamation mark is entered by the sequence of "key
+shift 1 -shift".
- BindToSerial [serial|0]
- Bind the device to the tool with the specified serial number. Once bound,
the device will ignore events from other tools. A serial of 0 means the
device is unbound and will react to any tool of the matching type.
Default: 0
- MapToOutput [output]
- Map the tablet's input area to a given output (e.g. "VGA1").
Output names may either be the name of a head available through the XRandR
extension, or an X11 geometry string of the form WIDTHxHEIGHT+X+Y. To
switch to the next available output, the "next" keyword is also
supported. This will cycle between the individual monitors connected to
the system, and then the entire desktop. The mapping may be reset to the
entire desktop at any time with the output name "desktop". Users
of the NVIDIA binary driver should use the output names "HEAD-0"
and "HEAD-1" until the driver supports XRandR 1.2 or later.
The output mapping configuration is a onetime setting and does
not track output reconfigurations; the command needs to be re-run
whenever the output configuration changes. When used with tablet
rotation, the tablet must be rotated before it is mapped to the new
screen. This parameter is write-only and cannot be queried.
- Mode Absolute|Relative
- Set the device mode as either Relative or Absolute. Relative means pointer
tracking for the device will function like a mouse, whereas Absolute means
the pointer corresponds to the device's actual position on the tablet or
tablet PC screen. Default: Absolute for stylus, eraser and tablet PC
touch; Relative for cursor and tablet touch.
- PressureCurve x1 y1 x2 y2
- A Bezier curve of third order, composed of two anchor points (0,0 and
100,100) and two user modifiable control points that define the curve's
shape. Raise the curve (x1<y1 x2<y2) to "soften" the feel
and lower the curve (x1>y1 x2>y2) for a "firmer" feel.
Sigmoid shaped curves are permitted (x1>y1 x2<y2 or x1<y1
x2>y2). Default: 0 0 100 100, a linear curve; range of 0 to 100 for all
four values.
- RawSample level
- Set the sample window size (a sliding average sampling window) for
incoming input tool raw data points. Default: 4, range of 1 to 20.
- Rotate none|half|cw|ccw
- Set the tablet to the given rotation:
none: the tablet is not rotated and uses its natural rotation
half: the tablet is rotated by 180 degrees (upside-down)
cw: the tablet is rotated 90 degrees clockwise
ccw: the tablet is rotated 90 degrees counter-clockwise
Rotation is a tablet-wide option: rotation of one tool affects
all other tools associated with the same tablet. When the tablet is
physically rotated, rotate any tool to the corresponding orientation.
Default: none
- Suppress level
- Set the delta (difference) cutoff level for further processing of incoming
input tool coordinate values. For example a X or Y coordinate event will
be sent only if the change between the current X or Y coordinate and the
previous one is greater than the Suppress value. The same applies to
pressure level (Z coordinate) and Tilt rotation values. With a current
absolute wheel (AbsWheel) or Tilt value the delta between it and the
previous value must be equal to or greater than the Suppress value in
order to be sent on. Suppress is a tablet wide parameter. A specified
delta level for one input tool is applied to all input tool coordinates.
To disable suppression use a level of 0. Default: 2, range of 0 to
100.
- TabletDebugLevel level
- Set the debug level for this tablet to the given level. This only affects
code paths that are shared between several tools on the same physical
tablet. A higher level means more fine-grained debug messages, a level of
0 turns debugging off for this tool. Requires the driver to be built with
debugging enabled. See also ToolDebugLevel. Default: 0, range of 0 to
12.
- TabletPCButton on|off
- If on, the stylus must be in contact with the screen for a stylus side
button to work. If off, stylus buttons will work once the stylus is in
proximity of the tablet (regardless of whether it is touching the screen).
Default: on for Tablet PCs; off for all other models.
- ToolSerialPrevious
- Get the serial number of the tool that was last in proximity last. This
serial number is updated whenever the tool goes out of proximity. If the
current tool went out of proximity once, this serial number is the one of
the current tool. This is a read-only parameter.
- Touch on|off
- If on, touch events are reported to userland, i.e., system cursor moves
when user touches the tablet. If off, touch events are ignored. Default:
on for devices that support touch; off for all other models.
- HWTouchSwitchState on|off
- If on, it means touch switch is turned off. That is, touch events are
reported to userland. If off, touch switch is turned on, i.e., touch
events are ignored. This is a read-only parameter. Initial touch switch
state is retrieved from the kernel when X driver starts.
- CursorProximity distance
- Set the distance at which a relative tool is treated as being out of
proximity. Beyond this distance the cursor will stop responding to tool
motion. The default value for pucks is 10 (Intuos Pro) or 42
(Intuos/Bamboo). The default value for pens is 30.
- Threshold level
- Set the minimum pressure necessary to generate a Button event for the
stylus tip, eraser, or touch. The pressure levels of all tablets are
normalized to 2048 levels irregardless of the actual hardware supported
levels. This parameter is independent of the PressureCurve parameter.
Default: 27, range of 0 to 2047.
- ToolDebugLevel level
- Set the debug level for this tool to the given level. This only affects
code paths that are specific to a given tool. A higher level means more
fine-grained debug messages, a level of 0 turns debugging off for this
tool. Requires the driver to be built with debugging enabled. See also
TabletDebugLevel. Default: 0, range of 0 to 12.
- PressureRecalibration on|off
- If the initial pressure of a device is != 0 the driver recalibrates the
pressure range. This is to account for worn out devices. The downside is
that when the user hits the tablet very hard the initial pressure reading
may be unequal to zero even for a perfectly good pen. If the consecutive
pressure readings are not higher than the initial pressure by a threshold
no button event will be generated. This option allows to disable the
recalibration. Default: on
- PanScrollThreshold distance
- This specifies the distance the pen must move (in tablet units) before a
scroll event is generated when using the "pan" action. Smaller
values will require less distance and be more sensitive. Larger values
will require more distance and be less sensitive. Default: 1300 or 2600
depending on tablet resolution (corresponds to 13 mm of distance).
This tool provides access to the device properties implemented in the
xf86-input-wacom X server input module. It does not work under a
Wayland compositor as the input module is not active.
- See https://github.com/linuxwacom/xf86-input-wacom/wiki/Wayland for
details.
-
Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@redhat.com>
Xorg(1), wacom(4x), xorg.conf(5), X(7)
More information is available at
https://github.com/linuxwacom/xf86-input-wacom
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