input-remapper/readme/usage.md
2022-10-16 14:56:21 +02:00

14 KiB

Usage

To open the UI to modify the mappings, look into your applications menu and search for 'Input Remapper'. You should be prompted for your sudo password as special permissions are needed to read events from /dev/input/ files. You can also start it via input-remapper-gtk.

First, select your device (like your keyboard) on the first page, then create a new preset on the second page, and add a mapping. Then you can already edit your inputs, as shown in the screenshots.

In the text input field, type the key to which you would like to map this key. More information about the possible mappings can be found in examples.md and below.

Changes are saved automatically. Press the "Apply" button to activate (inject) the mapping you created.

If you later want to modify the Input of your mapping you need to use the "Stop" button, so that the application can read your original input. It would otherwise be invisible since the daemon maps it independently of the GUI.

Troubleshooting

If stuff doesn't work, check the output of input-remapper-gtk -d and feel free to open up an issue here. Make sure to not post any debug logs that were generated while you entered private information with your device. Debug logs are quite verbose.

If input-remapper or your presets prevents your input device from working at all due to autoload, please try to unplug and plug it in twice. No injection should be running anymore.

Combinations

You can use combinations of different inputs to trigger a mapping: While you recorde the input (Recorde Input - Button) press multiple keys and/or move axis at once. The mapping will be triggered as soon as all the recorded inputs are pressed.

If you use an axis an input you can modify the threshold at which the mapping is activated in the advanced input configuration, which can be opened by clicking on the Advanced button.

A mapping with an input combination is only injected once all combination keys are pressed. This means all the input keys you press before the combination is complete will be injected unmodified. In some cases this can be desirable, in others not. In the advanced input configuration there is the Release Input toggle. This will release all inputs which are part of the combination before the mapping is injected. Consider a mapping Shift+1 -> a this will inject a lowercase a if the toggle is on and an uppercase A if it is off. The exact behaviour if the toggle is off is dependent on keys (are modifiers involved?), the order in which they are pressed and on your environment (X11/Wayland). By default the toggle is on.

Writing Combinations

You can write Control_L + a as mapping, which will inject those two keycodes into your system on a single key press. An arbitrary number of names can be chained using +.

UI Shortcuts

  • ctrl + del stops the injection (only works while the gui is in focus)
  • ctrl + q closes the application
  • ctrl + r refreshes the device list

Key Names

Check the autocompletion of the GUI for possible values. You can also obtain a complete list of possiblities using input-remapper-control --symbol-names.

Input-remapper only recognizes symbol names, but not the symbols themselves. So for example, input-remapper might (depending on the system layout) know what a minus is, but it doesn't know -.

Key names that start with KEY_ are keyboard layout independent constants that might not result in the expected output. For example using KEY_Y would result in "z" if the layout of the environment is set to german. Using y on the other hand would correctly result in "y" to be written.

Limitations

If your fingers can't type it on your keyboard, input-remapper can't inject it.

The available symbols depend on the environments keyboard layout, and only those that don't require a combination to be pressed can be used without workarounds (so most special characters need some extra steps to use them). Furthermore, if your configured keyboard layout doesn't support the special character at all (not even via a combination), then it also won't be possible for input-remapper to map that character at all.

For example, mapping a key to an exclamation mark is not possible if the keyboard layout is set to german. However, it is possible to mimic the combination that would be required to write it, by writing Shift_L + 1 into the mapping.

This is because input-remapper creates a new virtual keyboard and injects numeric keycodes, and it won't be able to inject anything a usb keyboard wouldn't been able to. This has the benefit of being compatible to all display servers, but means the environment will ultimately decide which character to write.

Analog Axis

It is possible to map analog inputs to analog outputs. E.g. use a gamepad as a mouse. For this you need to create a mapping and recorde the input axis. Then click on Advanced and select Use as Analog. Make sure to select a target which supports analog axis and switch to the Analog Axis tab. There you can select an output axis and use the different sliders to configure the sensitivity, non-linearity and other parameters as you like.

It is also possible to use an analog output with an input combination. This will result in the analog axis to be only injected if the combination is pressed

External tools

Repositories listed here are made by input-remappers users. Feel free to extend. Beware, that I can't review their code, so use them at your own risk (just like everything).

Advanced

Configuration Files

If you don't have a graphical user interface, you'll need to edit the configuration files. All configuration files need to be valid json files, otherwise the parser refuses to work.

Note for the Beta branch: All configuration files are copied to: ~/.config/input-remapper/beta_VERSION/

The default configuration is stored at ~/.config/input-remapper/config.json, which doesn't include any mappings, but rather other parameters that are interesting for injections. The current default configuration as of 1.6 looks like, with an example autoload entry:

{
  "autoload": {
      "Logitech USB Keyboard": "preset name"
    },
  "version": "1.6"
}

preset name refers to ~/.config/input-remapper/presets/device name/preset name.json. The device name can be found with sudo input-remapper-control --list-devices.

Preset

The preset files are a collection of mappings. Here is an example configuration for preset "a" for the "gamepad" device: ~/.config/input-remapper/presets/gamepad/a.json

{
    "1,307,1": {
        "target_uinput": "keyboard",
        "output_symbol": "k(2).k(3)",
        "macro_key_sleep_ms": 100
    },
    "1,315,1+1,16,1": {
        "target_uinput": "keyboard",
        "output_symbol": "1"
    },
    "3,1,0": {
        "target_uinput": "mouse",
        "output_type": 2,
        "output_code": 1,
        "gain": 0.5
    }
}

This preset consists of three mappings.

  • The first maps the key event with code 307 to a macro and sets the time between injected events of macros to 100 ms. The macro injects its events to the virtual keyboard.
  • The second mapping is a key combination, chained using +.
  • The third maps the y-Axis to the y-Axis on the virtual mouse.

Mapping

As shown above, the mapping is part of the preset. It consists of the input-combination and the mapping parameters.

<input-combination>: {
    <parameter 1>: <value1>,
    <parameter 2>: <value2>
}

The input-combination is a string like "EV_TYPE, EV_CODE, EV_VALUE + ...". EV_TYPE and EV_CODE describe the input event. Use the program evtest to find Available types and codes. See also the evdev documentation

The EV_VALUE describes the intention of the input. A value of 0 means that the event will be mapped to an axis. A non-zero value means that the event will be treated as a key input.

If the event type is 3 (EV_ABS) (as in: map a joystick axis to a key or macro) the value can be between -100 [%] and 100 [%]. The mapping will be triggered once the joystick reaches the position described by the value.

If the event type is 2 (EV_REL) (as in: map a relative axis (e.g. mouse wheel) to a key or macro) the value can be anything. The mapping will be triggered once the speed and direction of the axis is higher than described by the value.

The following table contains all possible parameters and their default values:

Parameter Default Type Description
target_uinput string The UInput to which the mapped event will be sent
output_symbol string The symbol or macro string if applicable
output_type int The event type of the mapped event
output_code int The event code of the mapped event
release_combination_keys true bool If release events will be sent to the forwarded device as soon as a combination triggers see also #229
Macro settings
macro_key_sleep_ms 20 positive int
Axis settings
deadzone 0.1 float ∈ (0, 1) The deadzone of the input axis
gain 1.0 float Scale factor when mapping an axis to an axis
expo 0 float ∈ (-1, 1) Non liniarity factor see also GeoGebra
EV_REL output
rate 60 positive int The frequency [Hz] at which EV_REL events get generated (also effects mouse and wheel macro)
rel_speed 100 positive int The base speed of the relative axis, compounds with the gain (also effects mouse and wheel macro)
EV_REL as input
rel_input_cutoff 100 positive int The absolute value at which a EV_REL axis is considered at its maximum
release_timeout 0.05 positive float The time [s] until a relative axis is considered stationary if no new events arrive

CLI

input-remapper-control

--command requires the service to be running. You can start it via systemctl start input-remapper or sudo input-remapper-service if it isn't already running (or without sudo if your user has the appropriate permissions).

Examples:

Description Command
Load all configured presets for all devices input-remapper-control --command autoload
If you are running as root user, provide information about the whereabouts of the input-remapper config input-remapper-control --command autoload --config-dir "~/.config/input-remapper/"
List available device names for the --device parameter sudo input-remapper-control --list-devices
Stop injecting input-remapper-control --command stop --device "Razer Razer Naga Trinity"
Load ~/.config/input-remapper/presets/Razer Razer Naga Trinity/a.json input-remapper-control --command start --device "Razer Razer Naga Trinity" --preset "a"
Loads the configured preset for whatever device is using this /dev path /bin/input-remapper-control --command autoload --device /dev/input/event5

systemctl

Stopping the service will stop all ongoing injections

sudo systemctl stop input-remapper
sudo systemctl start input-remapper
systemctl status input-remapper

Testing your Installation

The following commands can be used to make sure it works:

sudo input-remapper-service &
input-remapper-control --command hello

should print Daemon answered with "hello". And

sudo input-remapper-control --list-devices

should print Found "...", .... If anything looks wrong, feel free to create an issue.