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HELP.md
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HELP.md
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# The problems with overwriting keys
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# Why does key-mapper not use xkb configs?
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Branches for some of that stuff exist to archive it instead of loosing it
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forever.
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@ -51,17 +51,18 @@ capabilities ignore many of those keycodes. 140 works, 145 won't, 150 works.
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mouse buttons with a single symbol file. Key-mapper listens for key events
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in /dev and then writes the mapped keycode into a new device in /dev. For
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example, if 10 should be mapped to Shift_L, xkb configs would disable
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key 10 and key-mapper would write 50 into /dev, which is Shift_L in xmodmaps
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output. This sounds incredibly simple and makes me throw away tons of code.
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This conflicts with the original keycodes though, writing custom keycodes
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into /dev/uinput makes the original keycode not mapped by xbk symbol files,
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and therefore leak through. In the previous example, it would still write '1',
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and then after that the other key. By adding a timeout single keys work, but
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holding down a button that is mapped to shift will (would usually have
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a keycode of 10, now triggers writing 50) write "!!!!!!!!!". Even though
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no symbols are loaded for that button.
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key 10 and key-mapper would write 50 into /dev, which is Shift_L in the system
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mapping. This sounds incredibly simple and makes me throw away tons of code.
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**The Sixth idea** continues with the fourth. The described problem is
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But somehow writing into the new /dev file makes the original keycode
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not mapped by xbk symbol files, and therefore leak through. In the
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previous example, it would still write '1', and then after that the
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other key. By adding a timeout single keys work, but holding down a
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button that is mapped to shift will (would usually have a keycode of
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10, now triggers writing 50) write "!!!!!!!!!". Even though no symbols
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are loaded for that button.
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**The Sixth idea** The described problem is
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because the second device that starts writing an event.value of 2 will
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take control of what is happening. Following example: (KB = keyboard,
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example devices)
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@ -73,12 +74,15 @@ though KB1 maps shift+a to c! And if you reverse this, hold
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shift on KB2 first and then a on KB1, the xkb mapping of KB1
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will take effect and write c!
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In the context of the fifth idea, KB1 would be the mouse, KB2 would be
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the new /dev device. The KB1 keycode comes first and is then realized as
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'!' when KB2 comes in and applies a different mapping.
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Which means in order to prevent "!!!!!!" being written while holding down
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keycode 10 on the mouse, which is supposed to be shift, the 10 of the
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key-mapper /dev node has to be mapped to none as well. But that would
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prevent a key that is mapped to "1", which translates to 10, from working.
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That means instead of using the output from xmodmap to determine the correct
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So instead of using the output from xmodmap to determine the correct
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keycode, use a custom mapping that starts at 255 and just offsets xmodmap
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by 255. The correct capabilities need to exist this time. Everything below
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255 is disabled. This mapping is applied to key-mappers custom /dev node.
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@ -87,15 +91,15 @@ However, if you try to map Shift to button 10 of your mouse, and use
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mouse-shift + keyboard-1, you need to press keyboard-1 again to do anything.
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I assume this is because:
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- mouse-10 down
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- keymapper says: shift down
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- keymapper says: 50 down
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- xkb mapping: 10 is none. 50 is shift.
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- keyboard-10 down (down again? X/Linux ignores that)
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- keyboard-10 up
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- keyboard-10 down, "!" written
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**Seventh, final solution** By grabbing the mouse device (EVIOCGRAB) this
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won't happen. Since this prevents all the keycodes from doing stuff, no
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empty xkb symbols file is needed anymore. I can basically do the fifth idea
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from above.
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empty xkb symbols file is needed anymore.
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# How I would have liked it to be
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