-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 46
/
libinput-gestures.conf
208 lines (183 loc) · 8.61 KB
/
libinput-gestures.conf
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
# Configuration file for libinput-gestures.
# Mark Blakeney, Sep 2015
#
# The default configuration file exists at /etc/libinput-gestures.conf
# but a user can create a personal custom configuration file at
# ~/.config/libinput-gestures.conf.
#
# Lines starting with '#' and blank lines are ignored. Currently
# "gesture" and "device" configuration keywords are supported as
# described below. The keyword can optionally be appended with a ":" (to
# maintain compatibility with original format configuration files).
#
# Each gesture line has 3 [or 4] arguments separated by whitespace:
#
# action motion [finger_count] command
#
# where action and motion is either:
# swipe up
# swipe down
# swipe left
# swipe right
# swipe left_up
# swipe left_down
# swipe right_up
# swipe right_down
# pinch in
# pinch out
# pinch clockwise
# pinch anticlockwise
#
# command is the remainder of the line and is any valid shell command +
# arguments.
#
# finger_count is a single numeric digit and is optional (and is
# typically 3 or 4). If specified then the command is executed when
# exactly that number of fingers is used in the gesture. If not
# specified then the command is executed when that gesture is executed
# with any number of fingers. Gesture lines specified with finger_count
# have priority over the same gesture specified without any
# finger_count.
#
# Typically command will be _internal, or xdotool. See "man xdotool" for
# the many things you can action with that tool. Note that unfortunately
# xdotool does not work with native Wayland clients.
###############################################################################
# SWIPE GESTURES:
###############################################################################
# Note the default is an "internal" command that uses wmctrl to switch
# workspaces and, unlike xdotool, works on both Xorg and Wayland (via
# XWayland). It also can be configured for vertical and horizontal
# switching over tabular workspaces, as per the example below. You can
# also add "-w" to the internal command to allow wrapping workspaces.
# Ensure you install wmctrl if you use _internal.
# Move to next workspace (works for GNOME/KDE/etc on Wayland and Xorg)
# Move to next workspace
gesture swipe up 4 xdotool key super+shift+comma
gesture swipe down 4 xdotool key super+shift+period
# Move to next non empty workspace
gesture swipe right 4 xdotool key super+shift+j
gesture swipe left 4 xdotool key super+shift+k
# Switch Nord or Light
gesture pinch in 4 xdotool key super+ctrl+n
gesture pinch out 4 xdotool key super+ctrl+l
# Switch to last workspace
gesture swipe right 3 xdotool key super+Tab
gesture swipe left 3 xdotool key super+Tab
# enlarge and shrink
gesture pinch in 2 xdotool key ctrl+minus
gesture pinch out 2 xdotool key ctrl+plus
# NOTE ABOUT FINGER COUNT:
# The above command will configure this command for all fingers (i.e. 3
# for 4) but to configure it for 3 fingers only, change it to:
# gesture swipe up 3 _internal ws_up
# Then you can configure something else for 4 fingers or leave 4 fingers
# unconfigured. You can configure an explicit finger count like this for
# all example commands in this configuration file.
#
# gesture swipe up xdotool key super+Page_Down
# Move to prev workspace (works for GNOME/KDE/etc on Wayland and Xorg)
# gesture swipe down xdotool key super+Page_Up
# Browser go forward (works only for Xorg, and Xwayland clients)
# Browser go back (works only for Xorg, and Xwayland clients)
# NOTE: If you don't use "natural" scrolling direction for your touchpad
# then you may want to swap the above default left/right and up/down
# configurations.
# Optional extended swipe gestures, e.g. for browser tab navigation:
#
# Jump to next open browser tab
# gesture swipe right_up xdotool key control+Tab
#
# Jump to previous open browser tab
# gesture swipe left_up xdotool key control+shift+Tab
#
# Close current browser tab
# gesture swipe left_down xdotool key control+w
#
# Reopen and jump to last closed browser tab
# gesture swipe right_down xdotool key control+shift+t
# Example of 8 static workspaces, e.g. using KDE virtual-desktops,
# arranged in 2 rows of 4 columns across using swipe up/down/left/right
# to navigate in fixed planes. You can also add the "-w/--wrap" option
# to allow wrapping in any direction. You must configure your virtual
# desktops with the same column dimension.
# gesture swipe up _internal --cols 4 ws_up
# gesture swipe down _internal --cols 4 ws_down
# gesture swipe left _internal --cols 4 ws_left
# gesture swipe right _internal --cols 4 ws_right
#
# Example of 16 static workspaces, e.g. using KDE virtual-desktops,
# arranged in 4 rows of 4 columns across using swipe up/down/left/right
# to navigate in fixed planes, and also using swipe
# left_up/left_down/right_up/right_down to navigate diagonally. You can
# also add the "-w/--wrap" option to allow wrapping in any direction
# and/or diagonally. You must configure your virtual desktops with the
# same column dimension.
# gesture swipe up _internal --cols 4 ws_up
# gesture swipe down _internal --cols 4 ws_down
# gesture swipe left _internal --cols 4 ws_left
# gesture swipe right _internal --cols 4 ws_right
# gesture swipe left_up _internal --cols 4 ws_left_up
# gesture swipe left_down _internal --cols 4 ws_left_down
# gesture swipe right_up _internal --cols 4 ws_right_up
# gesture swipe right_down _internal --cols 4 ws_right_down
# Example virtual desktop switching for Ubuntu Unity/Compiz. The
# _internal command does not work for Compiz but you can explicitly
# configure the swipe commands to work for a Compiz virtual 2
# dimensional desktop as follows:
# gesture swipe up xdotool key ctrl+alt+Up
# gesture swipe down xdotool key ctrl+alt+Down
# gesture swipe left xdotool key ctrl+alt+Left
# gesture swipe right xdotool key ctrl+alt+Right
# Example to change audio volume:
# Note this only works on an Xorg desktop (not Wayland).
# gesture swipe up xdotool key XF86AudioRaiseVolume
# gesture swipe down xdotool key XF86AudioLowerVolume
###############################################################################
# PINCH GESTURES:
###############################################################################
# GNOME SHELL open/close overview (works for GNOME on Xorg only)
# KDE Plasma open/close overview
# gesture pinch in xdotool key ctrl+F9
# gesture pinch out xdotool key ctrl+F9
# GNOME SHELL open/close overview (works for GNOME on Wayland and Xorg)
# Note since GNOME 3.24 on Wayland this is implemented natively so no
# real point configuring for Wayland.
# gesture pinch in dbus-send --session --type=method_call --dest=org.gnome.Shell /org/gnome/Shell org.gnome.Shell.Eval string:'Main.overview.toggle();'
# gesture pinch out dbus-send --session --type=method_call --dest=org.gnome.Shell /org/gnome/Shell org.gnome.Shell.Eval string:'Main.overview.toggle();'
# Optional extended pinch gestures:
# gesture pinch clockwise <whatever command>
# gesture pinch anticlockwise <whatever command>
###############################################################################
# This application normally determines your touchpad device
# automatically. Some users may have multiple touchpads but by default
# we use only the first one found. However, you can choose to specify
# the explicit device name to use. Run "libinput list-devices" to work
# out the name of your device (from the "Device:" field). Then add a
# device line specifying that name, e.g:
#
# device DLL0665:01 06CB:76AD Touchpad
#
# If the device name starts with a '/' then it is instead considered as
# the explicit device path although since device paths can change
# through reboots this is best to be a symlink. E.g. instead of specifying
# /dev/input/event12, you should use the corresponding full path link
# under /dev/input/by-path/ or /dev/input/by-id/.
#
# You can choose to use ALL touchpad devices by setting the device name
# to "all". E.g. Do this if you have multiple touchpads which you want
# to use in parallel. This reduces performance slightly so only set this
# if you have to.
#
# device all
###############################################################################
# You can set a minimum travel distance threshold before swipe gestures
# are actioned using the swipe_threshold configuration command.
# Specify this value in dots. The default is 0.
# E.g. set it to 100 dots with "swipe_threshold 100".
# swipe_threshold 0
###############################################################################
# You can set a timeout on gestures from start to end. The default is
# the value commented below. It can be any value in float secs >= 0.
# 0 = no timeout. E.g. set it to 2 secs with "timeout 2".
# timeout 1.5