NAME
wsmoused
—
wsmouse daemon
SYNOPSIS
wsmoused |
[-2dfi ] [-C
thresh] [-D
device] [-M
N=M]
[-p device]
[-t type] |
DESCRIPTION
wsmoused
listens for mouse events on the
specified device and communicates them to the
wscons(4) driver. Its purpose is to provide copy/paste functionality
on the console.
By default, the left mouse button is used to select text (in the
familiar click-and-drag fashion); the right button is used to extend the
selection; and the middle button pastes. This behavior can be modified
through the use of -M
, e.g. -M
2=3
maps the right mouse button to paste.
The options are as follows:
-2
- Indicate that the mouse has two buttons. In that case, the right button pastes.
-C
thresh- Set double click speed as the maximum interval in msec between button clicks. If omitted, the default value of 500 msec will be assumed. This option will have effect only on the cut and paste operations in the text mode console.
-D
device- Use device as the display control device. If
omitted,
wsmoused
will use the default value of /dev/ttyCcfg, which controls thewsdisplay0
display terminals. -d
- Enable debugging messages.
-f
- Do not become a daemon and instead run as a foreground process. Useful for testing and debugging.
-i
- Print the type and the protocol of the mouse and exit.
-M
N=M- Assign the physical button M to the logical button
N. You may specify as many instances of this option
as you like. More than one physical button may be assigned to a logical
button at the same time. In this case the logical button will be down, if
either of the assigned physical buttons is held down. Do not put space
around ‘
=
’. Button numbers start from one, assigned to the leftmost button. -p
device- Use device to communicate with the mouse. If this option is not present, the device opened is /dev/wsmouse (the multiplexer device that receives all mouse events from all wsmouse compatible mice on the system). For a serial mouse, you have to explicitly specify the serial port, i.e. device must be one of /dev/cua0[0-3].
-t
type- This option only applies to serial mice. It specifies the protocol used by
the serial mice. You may explicitly specify a type listed below or use
auto to let
wsmoused
automatically select an appropriate protocol for the given mouse, if the serial mouse respects the PnP COM specification.If this option is not specified, auto is assumed. Under normal circumstances, you need to use this option only if the mouse is not PnP compatible.
Valid protocol types for this option are the following:
- microsoft
- Microsoft serial mouse protocol. Most 2-button serial mice use this protocol.
- intellimouse
- Microsoft IntelliMouse protocol. Genius NetMouse, ASCII Mie Mouse, Logitech MouseMan+, and FirstMouse+ use this protocol as well. Other mice with a roller/wheel may be compatible with this protocol.
- mousesystems
- MouseSystems 5-byte protocol. 3-button mice may use this protocol.
- mmseries
- MM Series mouse protocol.
- logitech
- Logitech mouse protocol. Note that this is for old Logitech models. mouseman or intellimouse should be specified for newer models.
- mouseman
- Logitech MouseMan and TrackMan protocol. Some 3-button mice may be compatible with this protocol. Note that MouseMan+ and FirstMouse+ use intellimouse protocol rather than this one.
- glidepoint
- ALPS GlidePoint protocol.
- thinkingmouse
- Kensington ThinkingMouse protocol.
- mmhitab
- Hitachi tablet protocol.
wsmoused
will happily coexist with the X
Window System, provided that the mouse device is supported by
wsmouse(4). Serial mice do not have a
wsmouse(4) compatible driver, so wsmoused
has
to be killed before starting the X Window System.
EXAMPLES
To start wsmoused on the wsdisplay1
display terminals, using a two-button serial mouse connected to
/dev/cua0:
# wsmoused -2 -D /dev/ttyDcfg -p
/dev/cua0
To start wsmoused on the wsdisplay0
display terminals, using /dev/wsmouse with the left
and right buttons swapped (assuming a three button mouse):
# wsmoused -M 1=3 -M 3=1
SEE ALSO
HISTORY
The wsmoused
daemon is a slightly modified
version of the moused daemon from the FreeBSD
project, written by Michael Smith
<msmith@FreeBSD.org>.
Both inherit code from the XFree Project.