Provided by: sway_1.4-2_amd64 bug

NAME

       sway-input - input configuration file and commands

DESCRIPTION

       Sway  allows  for  configuration  of  devices  within  the  sway configuration file.  To obtain a list of
       available device identifiers, run swaymsg -t get_inputs.  Settings can  also  be  applied  to  all  input
       devices  by  using  the  wildcard,  *,  in  place of <identifier> in the commands below. In addition, the
       settings can be applied to a type of device, by using type:<input_type> in place of <identifier>.

       Tip: If the configuration settings do not appear to be taking effect, you could try using  *  instead  of
       <identifier>.  If it works with the wildcard, try using a different identifier from swaymsg -t get_inputs
       until you find the correct input device.

       Current available input types are:

       •   touchpad
       •   pointer
       •   keyboard
       •   touch
       •   tablet_tool
       •   tablet_pad
       •   switch

       Note: The type configurations are applied as the devices appear and get applied on top  of  the  existing
       device configurations.

INPUT COMMANDS

   KEYBOARD CONFIGURATION
       input <identifier> repeat_delay <milliseconds>
           Sets the amount of time a key must be held before it starts repeating.

       input <identifier> repeat_rate <characters per second>
           Sets the frequency of key repeats once the repeat_delay has passed.

       For more information on these xkb configuration options, see xkeyboard-config(7).

       input <identifier> xkb_file <file_name>
           Sets  all xkb configurations from a complete .xkb file. This file can be dumped from xkbcomp $DISPLAY
           keymap.xkb. This setting overrides xkb_layout, xkb_model,  xkb_options,  xkb_rules,  and  xkb_variant
           settings.

       input <identifier> xkb_layout <layout_name>
           Sets the layout of the keyboard like us or de.

           Multiple layouts can be specified by separating them with commas.

       input <identifier> xkb_model <model_name>
           Sets the model of the keyboard. This has an influence for some extra keys your keyboard might have.

       input <identifier> xkb_options <options>
           Sets extra xkb configuration options for the keyboard.

           Multiple options can be specified by separating them with commas.

       input <identifier> xkb_rules <rules>
           Sets files of rules to be used for keyboard mapping composition.

       input <identifier> xkb_switch_layout <index>
           Changes  the active keyboard layout index. This can be used when multiple layouts are configured with
           xkb_layout. A list of layouts you can switch between can be obtained with swaymsg -t get_inputs.

       input <identifier> xkb_variant <variant>
           Sets the variant of the keyboard like dvorak or colemak.

       The following commands may only be used in the configuration file.

       input <identifier> xkb_capslock enabled|disabled
           Initially enables or disables CapsLock on startup, the default is disabled.

       input <identifier> xkb_numlock enabled|disabled
           Initially enables or disables NumLock on startup, the default is disabled.

   MAPPING CONFIGURATION
       input <identifier> map_to_output <identifier>
           Maps inputs from this device to the specified output. Only meaningful if the  device  is  a  pointer,
           touch, or drawing tablet device.

       input <identifier> map_to_region <X> <Y> <width> <height>
           Maps  inputs from this device to the specified region of the global output layout. Only meaningful if
           the device is a pointer, touch, or drawing tablet device.

       input <identifier> map_from_region <X1xY1> <X2xY2>
           Ignores inputs from this device that do not occur within the specified region. Can be in  millimeters
           (e.g.  10x20mm  20x40mm)  or  in  terms  of  0..1  (e.g.  0.5x0.5  0.7x0.7).  Not all devices support
           millimeters. Only meaningful if the device is not a keyboard and provides events  in  absolute  terms
           (such  as  a  drawing  tablet or touch screen - most pointers provide events relative to the previous
           frame).

   LIBINPUT CONFIGURATION
       input <identifier> accel_profile adaptive|flat
           Sets the pointer acceleration profile for the specified input device.

       input <identifier> calibration_matrix <6 space-separated floating point values>
           Sets the calibration matrix.

       input <identifier> click_method none|button_areas|clickfinger
           Changes the click method for the specified device.

       input <identifier> drag enabled|disabled
           Enables or disables tap-and-drag for specified input device.

       input <identifier> drag_lock enabled|disabled
           Enables or disables drag lock for specified input device.

       input <identifier> dwt enabled|disabled
           Enables or disables disable-while-typing for the specified input device.

       input <identifier> events enabled|disabled|disabled_on_external_mouse|toggle [<toggle-modes>]
           Enables or disables send_events for specified input device. Disabling send_events disables the  input
           device.

           The  toggle  option  cannot be used in the config. If no toggle modes are listed, all supported modes
           for the device  will  be  toggled  through  in  the  order:  enabled,     disabled_on_external_mouse,
           disabled,  (loop  back).  If  toggle modes are listed, they will be cycled through, defaulting to the
           first mode listed if the current mode is not in the list. They will also not be  checked  to  see  if
           they are supported for the device and may fail.

       input <identifier> left_handed enabled|disabled
           Enables or disables left handed mode for specified input device.

       input <identifier> middle_emulation enabled|disabled
           Enables or disables middle click emulation.

       input <identifier> natural_scroll enabled|disabled
           Enables or disables natural (inverted) scrolling for the specified input device.

       input <identifier> pointer_accel [<-1|1>]
           Changes the pointer acceleration for the specified input device.

       input <identifier> scroll_button disable|button[1-3,8,9]|<event-code-or-name>
           Sets  the  button  used for scroll_method on_button_down. The button can be given as an event name or
           code, which can be obtained from libinput debug-events, or as a x11 mouse  button  (button[1-3,8,9]).
           If set to disable, it disables the scroll_method on_button_down.

       input <identifier> scroll_factor <floating point value>
           Changes  the  scroll  factor for the specified input device. Scroll speed will be scaled by the given
           value, which must be non-negative.

       input <identifier> scroll_method none|two_finger|edge|on_button_down
           Changes the scroll method for the specified input device.

       input <identifier> tap enabled|disabled
           Enables or disables tap for specified input device.

       input <identifier> tap_button_map lrm|lmr
           Specifies which button mapping to use for tapping. lrm treats 1 finger as left click,  2  fingers  as
           right  click,  and  3 fingers as middle click. lmr treats 1 finger as left click, 2 fingers as middle
           click, and 3 fingers as right click.

   SEAT CONFIGURATION
       Configure options for multiseat mode.

       A seat is a collection of input devices that act independently of each other.  Seats  are  identified  by
       name  and  the default seat is seat0 if no seats are configured. While sway is running, - (hyphen) can be
       used as an alias for the current seat. Each seat has an independent keyboard focus and a separate  cursor
       that  is  controlled  by  the  pointer  devices of the seat. This is useful for multiple people using the
       desktop at the same time with their own  devices  (each  sitting  in  their  own  "seat").  The  wildcard
       character, *, can also be used in place of <identifier> to change settings for all seats.

       Tip:  If  the  configuration settings do not appear to be taking effect, you could try using * instead of
       <identifier>. If it works with the wildcard, try using a different identifier from swaymsg  -t  get_seats
       until you find the correct seat.

       seat <name> attach <input_identifier>
           Attach  an  input device to this seat by its input identifier. A special value of "*" will attach all
           devices to the seat.

       seat <seat> cursor move|set <x> <y>
           Move specified seat's cursor relative to current position  or  wrap  to  absolute  coordinates  (with
           respect  to  the  global  coordinate  space).   Specifying  either  value  as  0 will not update that
           coordinate.

       seat <seat> cursor press|release button[1-9]|<event-name-or-code>
           Simulate pressing (or releasing) the specified mouse button on the specified  seat.  The  button  can
           either  be  provided as a button event name or event code, which can be obtained from libinput debug-
           events, or as an x11 mouse button (button[1-9]). If using button[4-7], which map  to  axes,  an  axis
           event will be simulated, however press and release will be ignored and both will occur.

       seat <name> fallback true|false
           Set this seat as the fallback seat. A fallback seat will attach any device not explicitly attached to
           another seat (similar to a "default" seat).

       seat <name> hide_cursor <timeout>
           Hides  the cursor image after the specified timeout (in milliseconds) has elapsed with no activity on
           that cursor. A timeout of 0 (default) disables hiding the cursor. The minimal timeout is 100 and  any
           value less than that (aside from 0), will be increased to 100.

       seat <name> idle_inhibit <sources...>
           Sets  the  set  of  input  event  sources  which  can prevent the seat from becoming idle, as a space
           separated list  of  source  names.  Valid  names  are  "keyboard",  "pointer",  "touchpad",  "touch",
           "tablet_pad", "tablet_tool", and "switch". The default behavior is to prevent idle on any event.

       seat <name> idle_wake <sources...>
           Sets the set of input event sources which can wake the seat from its idle state, as a space separated
           list  of  source  names.  Valid  names  are "keyboard", "pointer", "touchpad", "touch", "tablet pad",
           "tablet tool", and "switch". The default behavior is to wake from idle on any event.

       seat <name> keyboard_grouping none|smart
           Set how the keyboards in the seat are grouped together. Currently, there are two options.  none  will
           disable  all keyboard grouping. This will make it so each keyboard device has its own isolated state.
           smart will group the keyboards in the seat by their keymap and repeat info. This is useful  for  when
           the  keyboard  appears  as  multiple  separate  input devices.  In this mode, the effective layout is
           synced between the keyboards in the group. The default is smart. To restore  the  behavior  of  older
           versions of sway, use none.

       seat <name> pointer_constraint enable|disable|escape
           Enables  or disables the ability for clients to capture the cursor (enabled by default) for the seat.
           This is primarily useful for video games. The "escape" command can be used at runtime to escape  from
           a captured client.

       seat <name> xcursor_theme <theme> [<size>]
           Override  the  system  default  XCursor  theme.  The default seat's (seat0) theme is also used as the
           default cursor theme in XWayland, and exported through the XCURSOR_THEME and XCURSOR_SIZE environment
           variables.

SEE ALSO

       sway(5) sway-output(5) xkeyboard-config(7)

                                                   2020-02-17                                      sway-input(5)