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author | philipl <philipl> | 2006-01-09 19:12:26 +0000 |
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committer | philipl <philipl> | 2006-01-09 19:12:26 +0000 |
commit | ee148a2f8ef97557ec2db501295ed8227699d2bf (patch) | |
tree | 9c227732c96ce30145730faabacf6a85bb95779c /man/vmmouse.man |
Initial release of the vmmouse driver for VMware virtual machines.
Diffstat (limited to 'man/vmmouse.man')
-rw-r--r-- | man/vmmouse.man | 228 |
1 files changed, 228 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/man/vmmouse.man b/man/vmmouse.man new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6dcf0f0 --- /dev/null +++ b/man/vmmouse.man @@ -0,0 +1,228 @@ +.\" $XFree86: xc/programs/Xserver/hw/xfree86/input/mouse/mouse.man,v 1.5 2002/12/17 20:55:21 dawes Exp $ +.\" shorthand for double quote that works everywhere. +.ds q \N'34' +.TH MOUSE __drivermansuffix__ __vendorversion__ +.SH NAME +mouse \- Mouse input driver +.SH SYNOPSIS +.nf +.B "Section \*qInputDevice\*q" +.BI " Identifier \*q" idevname \*q +.B " Driver \*qmouse\*q" +.BI " Option \*qProtocol\*q \*q" protoname \*q +.BI " Option \*qDevice\*q \*q" devpath \*q +\ \ ... +.B EndSection +.fi +.SH DESCRIPTION +.B mouse +is an XFree86 input driver for mice. The driver supports most available +mouse types and interfaces. USB mice are only supported on some OSs, +and the level of support for PS/2 mice depends on the OS. +.PP +The +.B mouse +driver functions as a pointer input device, and may be used as the +X server's core pointer. Multiple mice are supported by multiple +instances of this driver. +.SH SUPPORTED HARDWARE +There is a detailed list of hardware that the +.B mouse +driver supports in the +.I README.mouse +document. This can be found +in __projectroot__/lib/X11/doc/, or online at +http://www.xfree86.org/current/mouse.html. +.SH CONFIGURATION DETAILS +Please refer to XF86Config(__filemansuffix__) for general configuration +details and for options that can be used with all input drivers. This +section only covers configuration details specific to this driver. +.PP +The driver can auto-detect the mouse type on some platforms On some +platforms this is limited to plug and play serial mice, and on some the +auto-detection works for any mouse that the OS's kernel driver supports. +On others, it is always necessary to specify the mouse protocol in the +config file. The +.I README.mouse +document contains some detailed information about this. +.PP +The following driver +.B Options +are supported: +.TP 7 +.BI "Option \*qProtocol\*q \*q" string \*q +Specify the mouse protocol. Valid protocol types include: +.PP +.RS 12 +Auto, Microsoft, MouseSystems, MMSeries, Logitech, MouseMan, MMHitTab, +GlidePoint, IntelliMouse, ThinkingMouse, AceCad, PS/2, ImPS/2, +ExplorerPS/2, ThinkingMousePS/2, MouseManPlusPS/2, GlidePointPS/2, +NetMousePS/2, NetScrollPS/2, BusMouse, SysMouse, WSMouse, USB, Xqueue. +.RE +.PP +.RS 7 +Not all protocols are supported on all platforms. The "Auto" platform +specifies that protocol auto-detection should be attempted. There is no +default protocol setting, and specifying this option is mandatory. +.RE +.TP 7 +.BI "Option \*qDevice\*q \*q" string \*q +Specifies the device through which the mouse can be accessed. A common +setting is "/dev/mouse", which is often a symbolic link to the real +device. This option is mandatory, and there is no default setting. +.TP 7 +.BI "Option \*qButtons\*q \*q" integer \*q +Specifies the number of mouse buttons. In cases where the number of buttons +cannot be auto-detected, the default value is 3. +.TP 7 +.BI "Option \*qEmulate3Buttons\*q \*q" boolean \*q +Enable/disable the emulation of the third (middle) mouse button for mice +which only have two physical buttons. The third button is emulated by +pressing both buttons simultaneously. Default: off +.TP 7 +.BI "Option \*qEmulate3Timeout\*q \*q" integer \*q +Sets the timeout (in milliseconds) that the driver waits before deciding +if two buttons where pressed "simultaneously" when 3 button emulation is +enabled. Default: 50. +.TP 7 +.BI "Option \*qChordMiddle\*q \*q" boolean \*q +Enable/disable handling of mice that send left+right events when the middle +button is used. Default: off. +.TP 7 +.BI "Option \*qEmulateWheel\*q \*q" boolean \*q +Enable/disable "wheel" emulation. Wheel emulation means emulating button +press/release events when the mouse is moved while a specific real button +is pressed. Wheel button events (typically buttons 4 and 5) are +usually used for scrolling. Wheel emulation is useful for getting wheel-like +behaviour with trackballs. It can also be useful for mice with 4 or +more buttons but no wheel. See the description of the +.BR EmulateWheelButton , +.BR EmulateWheelInertia , +.BR XAxisMapping , +and +.B YAxisMapping +options below. Default: off. +.TP 7 +.BI "Option \*qEmulateWheelButton\*q \*q" integer \*q +Specifies which button must be held down to enable wheel emulation mode. +While this button is down, X and/or Y pointer movement will generate button +press/release events as specified for the +.B XAxisMapping +and +.B YAxisMapping +settings. Default: 4. +.TP 7 +.BI "Option \*qEmulateWheelInertia\*q \*q" integer \*q +Specifies how far (in pixels) the pointer must move to generate button +press/release events in wheel emulation mode. Default: 50. +.TP 7 +.BI "Option \*qXAxisMapping\*q \*q" "N1 N2" \*q +Specifies which buttons are mapped to motion in the X direction in wheel +emulation mode. Button number +.I N1 +is mapped to the negative X axis motion and button number +.I N2 +is mapped to the positive X axis motion. Default: no mapping. +.TP 7 +.BI "Option \*qYAxisMapping\*q \*q" "N1 N2" \*q +Specifies which buttons are mapped to motion in the Y direction in wheel +emulation mode. Button number +.I N1 +is mapped to the negative Y axis motion and button number +.I N2 +is mapped to the positive Y axis motion. Default: "4 5". +.TP 7 +.BI "Option \*qZAxisMapping\*q \*qX\*q" +.TP 7 +.BI "Option \*qZAxisMapping\*q \*qY\*q" +.TP 7 +.BI "Option \*qZAxisMapping\*q \*q" "N1 N2" \*q +.TP 7 +.BI "Option \*qZAxisMapping\*q \*q" "N1 N2 N3 N4" \*q +Set the mapping for the Z axis (wheel) motion to buttons or another axis +.RB ( X +or +.BR Y ). +Button number +.I N1 +is mapped to the negative Z axis motion and button number +.I N2 +is mapped to the positive Z axis motion. For mice with two wheels, +four button numbers can be specified, with the negative and positive motion +of the second wheel mapped respectively to buttons number +.I N3 +and +.IR N4 . +Default: no mapping. +.TP 7 +.BI "Option \*qFlipXY\*q \*q" boolean \*q +Enable/disable swapping the X and Y axes. This transformation is applied +after the +.BR InvX , +.B InvY +and +.BR AngleOffset +transformations. Default: off. +.TP 7 +.BI "Option \*qInvX\*q \*q" boolean \*q +Invert the X axis. Default: off. +.TP 7 +.BI "Option \*qInvY\*q \*q" boolean \*q +Invert the Y axis. Default: off. +.TP 7 +.BI "Option \*qAngleOffset\*q \*q" integer \*q +Specify a clockwise angular offset (in degrees) to apply to the pointer +motion. This transformation is applied before the +.BR FlipXY , +.B InvX +and +.B InvY +transformations. Default: 0. +.TP 7 +.BI "Option \*qSampleRate\*q \*q" integer \*q +Sets the number of motion/button events the mouse sends per second. Setting +this is only supported for some mice, including some Logitech mice and +some PS/2 mice on some platforms. Default: whatever the mouse is +already set to. +.TP 7 +.BI "Option \*qResolution\*q \*q" integer \*q +Sets the resolution of the device in counts per inch. Setting this is +only supported for some mice, including some PS/2 mice on some platforms. +Default: whatever the mouse is already set to. +.TP 7 +.BI "Option \*qDragLockButtons\*q \*q" "L1 B2 L3 B4" \*q +Sets \*qdrag lock buttons\*q that simulate holding a button down, so +that low dexterity people do not have to hold a buttton down at the +same time they move a mouse cursor. Button numbers occur in pairs, +with the lock button number occurring first, followed by the button +number that is the target of the lock button. +.TP 7 +.BI "Option \*qDragLockButtons\*q \*q" "M1" \*q +Sets a \*qmaster drag lock button\*q that acts as a \*qMeta Key\*q +indicating that the next button pressed is to be +\*qdrag locked\*q. +.TP 7 +.BI "Option \*qClearDTR\*q \*q" boolean \*q +Enable/disable clearing the DTR line on the serial port used by the mouse. +Some dual-protocol mice require the DTR line to be cleared to operate +in the non-default protocol. This option is for serial mice only. +Default: off. +.TP 7 +.BI "Option \*qClearRTS\*q \*q" boolean \*q +Enable/disable clearing the RTS line on the serial port used by the mouse. +Some dual-protocol mice require the RTS line to be cleared to operate +in the non-default protocol. This option is for serial mice only. +Default: off. +.TP 7 +.BI "Option \*qBaudRate\*q \*q" integer \*q +Set the baud rate to use for communicating with a serial mouse. This +option should rarely be required because the default is correct for almost +all situations. Valid values include: 300, 1200, 2400, 4800, 9600, 19200. +Default: 1200. +.PP +There are some other options that may be used to control various parameters +for serial port communication, but they are not documented here because +the driver sets them correctly for each mouse protocol type. +.SH "SEE ALSO" +XFree86(1), XF86Config(__filemansuffix__), xf86config(1), Xserver(1), X(__miscmansuffix__), +README.mouse. |