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Rule Processing of HID++ Notifications | page |
Creating and editing most rules can be done in the Solaar GUI, by pressing the 'Rule Editor' button in the Solaar main window.
Rule processing is an experimental feature. Significant changes might be made in response to problems.
Note that rule processing only fully works under X11.
When running under Wayland with X11 libraries loaded some features will not be available.
When running under Wayland without X11 libraries loaded even more features will not be available.
Rule features known not to work under Wayland include process and mouse process conditions.
Under Wayland using keyboard groups may result in incorrect symbols being input for simulated input.
Under Wayland simulating inputs when modifier keys are pressed may result in incorrect symbols being sent.
Simulated input uses Xtest if available under X11 or uinput if the user has write access to /dev/uinput.
The easiest way to maintain write access to /dev/uinput is to use Solaar's alternative udev rule by downloading
https://raw.githubusercontent.com/pwr-Solaar/Solaar/master/rules.d-uinput/42-logitech-unify-permissions.rules
and copying it as root into the /etc/udev/rules.d
directory.
You may have to reboot your system for the write permission to be set up.
Another way to get write access to /dev/uinput is to run sudo setfacl -m u:${USER}:rw /dev/uinput
but this needs to be done every time the system is rebooted.
Logitech devices that use HID++ version 2.0 or greater produce feature-based
notifications that Solaar can process using a simple rule language. For
example, using rules Solaar can emulate an XF86_MonBrightnessDown
key tap
in response to the pressing of the Brightness Down
key on Craft keyboards,
which normally does not produce any input at all when the keyboard is in
Windows mode.
Solaar's rules only trigger on HID++ notifications so device actions that
normally produce HID output have to be first be set (diverted) to
produce HID++ notifications instead of their normal behavior.
Currently Solaar can divert some mouse scroll wheels, some
mouse thumb wheels, the crown of Craft keyboards, and some keys and buttons.
If the scroll wheel, thumb wheel, crown, key, or button is
not diverted by setting the appropriate setting then no HID++ notification is
generated and rules will not be triggered by manipulating the wheel, crown, key, or button.
Look for HID++
or Diversion
settings to see what
diversion can be done with your devices.
Running Solaar with the -ddd
option will show information about notifications, including their feature
name, report number, and data.
Solaar can also create special notifications in response to mouse movements on some mice.
Setting the Mouse Gestures
setting to a key enables special processing of mouse movements
while the key is depressed. Moving the mouse creates a mouse movement event.
Stopping the mouse for a little while and moving it again creates another mouse movement event.
Pressing a diverted key creates a key event.
When the key is released the sequence of events is sent as a synthetic notification
that can be matched with Mouse Gesture
conditions.
In response to a feature-based HID++ notification Solaar runs a sequence of
rules. A Rule
is a sequence of components, which are either sub-rules,
conditions, or actions. Conditions and actions are dictionaries with one
entry whose key is the name of the condition or action and whose value is
the argument of the action.
If the last thing that a rule does is execute an action, no more rules are processed for the notification.
Rules are evaluated by evaluating each of their components in order. The evaluation of a rule is terminated early if a condition component evaluates to false or the last evaluated sub-component of a component is an action. A rule is false if its last evaluated component evaluates to a false value.
Not
conditions take a single component and are true if their component
evaluates to a false value.
Or
conditions take a sequence of components and are evaluated by
evaluating each of their components in order.
An Or condition is terminated early if a component evaluates to true or the
last evaluated sub-component of a component is an action.
A Or condition is true if its last evaluated component evaluates to a true
value. And
conditions take a sequence of components are evaluated the same
as rules.
Feature
conditions are if true if the name of the feature of the current
notification is their string argument.
Report
conditions are if true if the report number in the current
notification is their integer argument.
Key
conditions are true if the Logitech name of the last diverted key or button pressed is their
string argument. Alternatively, if the argument is a list [name, action]
where action
is either 'pressed'
or 'released'
, the key down or key up events of name
argument are
matched, respectively. Logitech key and button names are shown in the Key/Button Diversion
setting. Some keyboards have Gn, Mn, or MR keys, which are diverted using the 'Divert G Keys' setting.
Modifiers
conditions take either a string or a sequence of strings, which
can only be Shift
, Control
, Alt
, and Super
.
Modifiers conditions are true if their argument is the current keyboard
modifiers.
Process
conditions are true if the process for focus input window
or the window's Window manager class or instance name starts with their string argument.
MouseProcess
conditions are true if the process for the window under the mouse
or the window's Window manager class or instance name starts with their string argument.
Setting
conditions checks the value of a Solaar setting on a device.
Setting
conditions take three or four arguments, depending on the setting:
the Serial number or Unit ID of a device, as shown in Solaar's detail pane,
or null for the device that initiated rule processing;
the internal name of a setting (which can be found from solaar config );
one or two arguments for the setting.
For settings that use keys or buttons as an argument the Logtech name can be used
as shown in the Solaar main window for these settings,
or the numeric value for the key or button.
For settings that use gestures as an argument the internal name of the gesture is used,
which can be found in the GESTURE2_GESTURES_LABELS structure in lib/logitech_receiver/settings_templates.
For settings that need one of a set of names as an argument the name can be used or its internal integer value,
as used in the Solaar config file.
Test
and TestBytes
conditions are true if their test evaluates to true on the feature,
report, and data of the current notification.
TestBytes
conditions can return a number instead of a boolean.
TestBytes
conditions consist of a sequence of three or four integers and use the first
two to select bytes of the notification data.
Writing this kind of test condition is not trivial.
Three-element TestBytes
conditions are true if the selected bytes bit-wise anded
with its third element is non-zero.
The value of these test conditions is the result of the and.
Four-element TestBytes
conditions are true if the selected bytes form a signed
integer between the third and fourth elements.
The value of these conditions is the signed value of the selected bytes
if that is non-zero otherwise True.
Test
conditions are mnemonic shorthands for meaningful feature,
report, and data combinations in notifications.
A crown_right
test is the rotation amount of a CROWN
right rotation notification.
A crown_left
test is the rotation amount of a CROWN
left rotation notification.
A crown_right_ratchet
test is the ratchet amount of a CROWN
right ratchet rotation notification.
A crown_left_ratchet
test is the ratchet amount of a CROWN
left ratchet rotation notification.
A crown_tap
test is true for a CROWN
tap notification.
A crown_start_press
test is true for the start of a CROWN
press notification.
A crown_stop_press
test is true for the end of a CROWN
press notification.
A crown_pressed
test is true for a CROWN
notification with the Crown pressed.
A thumb_wheel_up
test is the rotation amount of a THUMB WHEEL
upward rotation notification.
A thumb_wheel_down
test is the rotation amount of a THUMB WHEEL
downward rotation notification.
lowres_wheel_up
, lowres_wheel_down
, hires_wheel_up
, hires_wheel_down
are the
same but for LOWRES WHEEL
and HIRES WHEEL
.
True
and False
tests return True and False, respectively.
Mouse Gesture
conditions are true if the actions taken while the mouse's 'Gesture' button is held match the configured list when the 'Gesture' button is released.
The available actions are Mouse Up
, Mouse Down
, Mouse Left
, Mouse Right
, Mouse Up-left
, Mouse Up-Right
, Mouse Down-left
, Mouse Down-right
, and buttons that are diverted.
An example would be mapping Mouse Up
-> Mouse Up
. To perform this gesture, you would hold down the 'Gesture' button, move the mouse upwards, pause momentarily, move the mouse upwards, and release the 'Gesture' button.
Another example would be mapping Back Button
-> Back Button
. With this one, you would hold down the 'Gesture' button, double-tap the 'Back' button, and then release the 'Gesture' button.
Mouse movements and buttons can be mixed and chained together however you like.
It's possible to create a No-op
gesture by clicking 'Delete' on the initial Action when you first create the rule. This gesture will trigger when you simply click the 'Gesture' button.
Setting
conditions check device settings of devices, provided the device is on-line.
The first arguments to the condition are the Serial number or Unit ID of a device, as shown in Solaar's detail pane,
or null for the device that initiated rule processing; and
the internal name of a setting (which can be found from solaar config ).
Most simple settings take one extra argument, the value to check the setting value against.
Range setting can also take two arguments, which form an inclusive range to check against.
Other settings take two arguments, a key indicating which sub-setting to check and the value to check it against.
For settings that use gestures as an argument the internal name of the gesture is used,
which can be found in the GESTURE2_GESTURES_LABELS structure in lib/logitech_receiver/settings_templates.
For boolean settings '~' can be used to toggle the setting.
A KeyPress
action takes a sequence of X11 key symbols, such as "a" or "Control+a",
and simulates a chorded keypress on the keyboard to produce these symbols.
Use separate KeyPress
actions for multiple characters,
i.e., don't use a single KeyPress
like 'a+b'.
If a key symbol can only be produced by a shfited or level 3 keypress, e.g., "A",
then Solaar will add keypresses to produce that keysymbol,
e.g., simulating a left shift keypress to get "A" instead of "a".
If a key symbol is not available in the current keymap or needs other shift-like keys,
then Solaar cannot simulate it.
If Solaar can determine the current key modifiers (shift, control, etc.)
any key symbols that correspond to these modifier keys are not pressed,
so if the shift key is currently down on a keyboard Solaar will not bother to simulate a shift key.
Simulating input in Linux is complex. Solaar has to try to determine which keyboard key corresponds to which input character as it cannot directly simulate inputting a key symbol. Unfortunately, this determination can go wrong in several ways and is more likely to go wrong under Wayland than under X11.
A MouseScroll
action takes a sequence of two numbers and simulates a horizontal and vertical mouse scroll of these amounts.
If the previous condition in the parent rule returns a number the scroll amounts are multiplied by this number.
A MouseClick
action takes a mouse button name (left
, middle
or right
) and a positive number, and simulates that number of clicks of the specified button.
An Execute
action takes a program and arguments and executes it asynchronously.
A Set
action changes a Solaar setting for a device, provided that the device is on-line.
Set
actions take three or four arguments, depending on the setting.
The first two are the Serial number or Unit ID of a device, as shown in Solaar's detail pane,
or null for the device that initiated rule processing; and
the internal name of a setting (which can be found from solaar config ).
Simple settings take one extra argument, the value to set the setting to.
For boolean settings '~' can be used to toggle the setting.
Other simple settings take two extra arguments, a key indicating which sub-setting to set and the value to set it to.
For settings that use gestures as an argument the internal name of the gesture is used,
which can be found in the GESTURE2_GESTURES_LABELS structure in lib/logitech_receiver/settings_templates.
All settings are supported.
Solaar has several built-in rules, which are run after user-created rules and so can be overridden by user-created rules.
One rule turns
Brightness Down
key press notifications into XF86_MonBrightnessDown
key taps
and Brightness Up
key press notifications into XF86_MonBrightnessUp
key taps.
Another rule makes Craft crown ratchet movements move between tabs when the crown is pressed
and up and down otherwise.
A third rule turns Craft crown ratchet movements into XF86_AudioNext
or XF86_AudioPrev
key taps when the crown is pressed and XF86_AudioRaiseVolume
or XF86_AudioLowerVolume
otherwise.
A fourth rule doubles the speed of THUMB WHEEL
movements unless the Control
modifier is on.
All of these rules are only active if the key or feature is diverted, of course.
Solaar reads rules from a YAML configuration file (normally ~/.config/solaar/rules.yaml
).
This file contains zero or more documents, each a rule.
Here is a file with six rules:
%YAML 1.3
---
- Key: [M2, pressed]
- Set: [198E3EB8, dpi, 3000]
- Execute: [notify-send, Increased mouse speed]
...
---
- Key: [Host Switch Channel 2, pressed]
- Set: [43DAF041, change-host, 1]
- Set: [198E3EB8, change-host, 1]
- Execute: [notify-send, Switched to host 2]
...
---
- MouseGesture: [Mouse Up, Mouse Down]
- Execute: [notify-send, Locking]
- Execute: xflock4
...
- Feature: CROWN
- Process: quodlibet
- Rule: [ Test: crown_start_press, KeyPress: XF86_AudioMute ]
- Rule: [ Test: crown_pressed, Test: crown_right_ratchet, KeyPress: XF86_AudioNext ]
- Rule: [ Test: crown_pressed, Test: crown_left_ratchet, KeyPress: XF86_AudioPrev ]
- Rule: [ Test: crown_right_ratchet, KeyPress: XF86_AudioRaiseVolume ]
- Rule: [ Test: crown_left_ratchet, KeyPress: XF86_AudioLowerVolume ]
...
---
- Feature: THUMB WHEEL
- Rule: [ Modifiers: Control, Test: thumb_wheel_up, MouseScroll: [-2, 0] ]
- Rule:
- Modifiers: Control
- Test: thumb_wheel_down
- MouseScroll: [-2, 0]
- Rule: [ Or: [ Test: thumb_wheel_up, Test: thumb_wheel_down ], MouseScroll: [-1, 0] ]
...
---
- Feature: LOWRES WHEEL
- Rule: [ Or: [ Test: lowres_wheel_up, Test: lowres_wheel_down ], MouseScroll: [0, 2] ]
...
Here is an example showing how to divert the Back Button on an MX Master 3 so that pressing the button will initiate rule processing and a rule that triggers on this notification and switches the mouse to host 3 after popping up a simple notification.