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Command: wsmouse | Section: 4 | Source: OpenBSD | File: wsmouse.4
WSMOUSE(4) FreeBSD Kernel Interfaces Manual WSMOUSE(4)
NAME
wsmouse - generic mouse support in wscons
SYNOPSIS
wsmouse* at ...
DESCRIPTION
The wsmouse driver is an abstraction layer for mice and other pointing
devices within the wscons(4) framework. It is attached to the hardware
specific drivers and provides a character device interface which returns
struct wscons_event via read(2). For use with X servers, "mouse events"
or "touch events" can be generated.
The wsmouse driver provides a number of ioctl functions to control
various parameters (see /usr/include/dev/wscons/wsconsio.h). The
wsconsctl(8) utility gives access to these variables.
Touchpad input is processed in one of two modes: In "absolute mode", the
wsmouse driver generates touch events. Absolute mode is activated by
synaptics(4). In "compatibility mode", which is the default, wsmouse
converts the input internally and generates mouse events. wsconsctl(8)
can query and set several configuration parameters for this mode. The
composite field names have the form mouse[N].tp.field where N is the
index of the wsmouse device. If N is omitted, commands apply to
/dev/wsmouse0.
mouse.reverse_scrolling
Reverse direction of scrolling.
mouse.scaling
The value is a scale coefficient that is applied to the relative
coordinates. It determines the base speed of the pointer.
mouse.tp.tapping
Contacts on the touchpad that are immediately released again can
be mapped to mouse button clicks. This list of three parameters
configures these mappings, in the order:
one-finger,two-finger,three-finger
Setting a parameter to a positive value enables that tap gesture
and maps it to the given mouse button. To disable all three tap
gestures at once, provide the single value of 0. Conversely, a
single non-zero value will enable one-finger, two-finger, and
three-finger tap gestures with their default mappings of left
button, right button, and middle button, respectively. If,
within a short time interval, a second touch follows a tap
gesture mapped to a left-button click, the button-up event is not
issued until that touch ends ("tap-and-drag").
mouse.tp.mtbuttons
This feature is supported for some clickpads. If enabled, two-
finger clicks - with the fingers side by side - generate left-
button events, and three-finger clicks generate middle-button
events.
mouse.tp.swapsides
If this parameter has a non-zero value, the order of software
button areas is inverted. If edge scrolling is enabled, the
scroll area is set up at the left edge of the touchpad.
mouse.tp.disable
A non-zero value disables pointer movement, tapping, and
scrolling. Software buttons (and external physical buttons) will
work as usual.
mouse.tp.edges
This field contains a list of four values that define the
relative sizes of the edge areas, in the order:
top,right,bottom,left
The unit is percent of the total height of the touchpad surface,
or of its total width, respectively. In order to mitigate the
effects of accidental touches, the driver ignores most types of
input from an edge area (see below). If an edge area contains
software buttons, they fill up the space provided.
The automatic configuration enables two-finger scrolling and sets up edge
areas at the vertical edges. On clickpads - where the device surface
serves as a single, large button - it provides three software button
areas at the bottom edge, for left-button, middle-button, and right-
button clicks. On some laptops with a trackpoint, the software buttons
are at the top edge. Vertical edge scrolling will be enabled on older
touchpads that do not report contact counts.
A touch that starts and remains in an edge area does not trigger pointer
movement. At the vertical edges and the top edge, tapping and two-finger
scrolling require that at least one touch is in the main area of the
touchpad (the exact behaviour of a single-touch device depends on its
firmware in this case). When multi-touch input is available, a touch is
ignored if it rests in the bottom area while there are other inputs -
movement, scrolling, or tapping -, and the driver continues to ignore it
as long as and whenever other touches are present.
FILES
/dev/wsmouse*
/usr/include/dev/wscons/wsconsio.h
SEE ALSO
ams(4), hilms(4), intro(4), lms(4), mms(4), pms(4), ubcmtp(4), ums(4),
utpms(4), wscons(4), wsmux(4), wsconsctl(8), wsmoused(8)
FreeBSD 14.1-RELEASE-p8 October 5, 2024 FreeBSD 14.1-RELEASE-p8