On Wed, Jul 20, 2016 at 12:54:05PM +0300, Arto Jantunen wrote:
> Peter Hutterer writes:
>
> > On Sun, Jul 17, 2016 at 02:56:50PM +0300, Arto Jantunen wrote:
> >> Is it possible to remap two finger tap to the middle button (button 2)
> >> without remapping the right side of the clickpad at the sam
Peter Hutterer writes:
> On Sun, Jul 17, 2016 at 02:56:50PM +0300, Arto Jantunen wrote:
>> Is it possible to remap two finger tap to the middle button (button 2)
>> without remapping the right side of the clickpad at the same time
>> (set-button-map seems to only do both at a time)? Searching fin
On Sun, 2016-07-17 at 14:56 +0300, Arto Jantunen wrote:
> Peter Hutterer writes:
> >
> > [Disclaimer: I'm jumping in because of the LWN quote of the week
> > and I'm
> > just reconstructing the emails from the archives, I'm not
> > subscribed.
> > Apologies if the thread breaks or any other side
On Sun, Jul 17, 2016 at 02:56:50PM +0300, Arto Jantunen wrote:
> Peter Hutterer writes:
> > [Disclaimer: I'm jumping in because of the LWN quote of the week and I'm
> > just reconstructing the emails from the archives, I'm not subscribed.
> > Apologies if the thread breaks or any other side effect
Peter Hutterer writes:
> [Disclaimer: I'm jumping in because of the LWN quote of the week and I'm
> just reconstructing the emails from the archives, I'm not subscribed.
> Apologies if the thread breaks or any other side effects. Please keep me in
> CC]
After this list discussion I switched my la
On 17/07/2016 05:49 , Theodore Ts'o wrote:
On Thu, Jul 14, 2016 at 01:57:13PM +1000, Peter Hutterer wrote:
libinput is a lot smarter than synaptics when it comes to palm
detection.
Question about libinput? The main reason why I'm using synclient
because I have a Thinkpad T540p which doesn't h
On Thu, Jul 14, 2016 at 01:57:13PM +1000, Peter Hutterer wrote:
> libinput is a lot smarter than synaptics when it comes to palm
> detection.
Question about libinput? The main reason why I'm using synclient
because I have a Thinkpad T540p which doesn't have hard buttons for
the "mouse buttons".
On Thu, 2016-07-14 at 14:13 +1000, Russell Stuart wrote:
> The second component is that apparently tapping doesn't work when
> > enabled. That's most probably a bug, file one against libinput at
> > bugs.freedesktop.org and it'll get fixed.
>
> Done.
For anyone still following along it is possibl
[Disclaimer: I'm jumping in because of the LWN quote of the week and I'm
just reconstructing the emails from the archives, I'm not subscribed.
Apologies if the thread breaks or any other side effects. Please keep me in
CC]
On Tue, 2016-07-12 at 07:48 +0300, Lars Wirzenius wrote:
> For me, the oppo
[Disclaimer: I'm jumping in because of the LWN quote of the week and I'm
just reconstructing the emails from the archives, I'm not subscribed.
Apologies if the thread breaks or any other side effects. Please keep me in
CC]
On Tue, Jul 12, 2016 at 09:36:16AM +1000, Russell Stuart wrote:
> On Mon, 2
On Thu, 2016-07-14 at 13:41 +1000, Peter Hutterer wrote:
Thanks for the thorough analysis.
> The second component is that apparently tapping doesn't work when
> enabled. That's most probably a bug, file one against libinput at
> bugs.freedesktop.org and it'll get fixed.
Done. Having to filing i
On 12 July 2016 at 19:29, Adam Borowski wrote:
> On Tue, Jul 12, 2016 at 06:39:28PM +0100, Adam D. Barratt wrote:
>> On Tue, 2016-07-12 at 16:34 +0100, Simon McVittie wrote:
>> > GNOME 3.22 will be released before squeeze freezes
>>
>> That seems a little unlikely. :)
>
> Yeah, it was a mistake to
On Tue, Jul 12, 2016 at 06:39:28PM +0100, Adam D. Barratt wrote:
> On Tue, 2016-07-12 at 16:34 +0100, Simon McVittie wrote:
> > GNOME 3.22 will be released before squeeze freezes
>
> That seems a little unlikely. :)
Yeah, it was a mistake to name two close releases such similar names.
We should h
On Tue, 2016-07-12 at 16:34 +0100, Simon McVittie wrote:
> GNOME 3.22 will be released before squeeze freezes
That seems a little unlikely. :)
Regards,
Adam
Guus Sliepen writes ("Re: synaptics vs libinput and GNOME 3.20 no longer
supporting synaptics"):
> I'm using XFCE, and recently when an apt-get upgrade caused the X server
> to use libinput instead of the synaptics driver, I had a very difficult
> time getting my touchpad
On Tue, 12 Jul 2016 at 12:52:08 +0200, 殷啟聰 wrote:
> Probably making Wayland the default GNOME session is the simplest (but
> impractical, probably) solution to this?
I think GNOME 3.20 on Wayland still has too many "papercuts" to be
something we can support as a long-term default. I'm using it mys
Hi everyone,
I don't know if this as a feedback from a user helps. If you login GNOME in
Wayland session, the touchpad settings comes back to the control panel. I
have been using GNOME on Wayland for several weeks and nothing is bad.
Probably making Wayland the default GNOME session is the simple
On Mon, 11 Jul 2016, Raphael Hertzog wrote:
> > We thought about backporting synaptics support back for Stretch, to give
> > more
> > time to libinput to mature and to other DEs to add support for it. Not sure
> > how
> > much work that would be though.
>
> Ok, let's try to convince upstream the
On Mon, Jul 11, 2016 at 04:34:22PM +0200, Raphael Hertzog wrote:
> it has been some time that GNOME 3.20 users have been unable to configure
> their touchpad[1] because:
> 1/ xserver-xorg-input-synaptics cherry-picked an upstream commit[2]
>that gives the priority to the synaptics driver to ha
On Tue, 2016-07-12 at 10:07 +0300, Lars Wirzenius wrote:
> I've been using the following script, with variations on the
> parameters to find a working setup. The values below are the best I
> could manage, and they aren't any good.
>
> #!/bin/sh
>
> synclient \
> TapButton1=1 \
> TapB
On Tue, Jul 12, 2016 at 03:52:56PM +1000, Russell Stuart wrote:
> Maybe libinput does the typing detection syndaemon does, but I can't
> find any evidence for it.
I remember trying the typing detection some years ago. It didn't help
me much, since the order of events, for me, tend to be that the m
On Tue, Jul 12, 2016 at 02:45:49PM +0900, Mike Hommey wrote:
> It's just probably that your config didn't have palm detection enabled
> with the synaptics driver. `synclient | grep PalmDetect` would tell you.
I've been using the following script, with variations on the
parameters to find a working
On Tue, Jul 12, 2016 at 07:48:44AM +0300, Lars Wirzenius wrote:
> On Tue, Jul 12, 2016 at 09:36:16AM +1000, Russell Stuart wrote:
> > Briefly: synaptics is much better touchpad driver than libinput.
>
> For me, the opposite is true. After Raphael's mail yesterday, I
> switched from the synaptics d
❦ 12 juillet 2016 06:48 CEST, Lars Wirzenius :
>> Briefly: synaptics is much better touchpad driver than libinput.
>
> For me, the opposite is true.
For me too. When the switch was done to libinput, my touchpad was
enabled again. I was first surprised but notice that palm detection was
pretty g
On Tue, 2016-07-12 at 07:48 +0300, Lars Wirzenius wrote:
> After Raphael's mail yesterday, I switched from the synaptics driver
> to the xinput one (by removing xserver-xort-input-synaptics) and
> since then, I've not had a single case of moving the mouse or
> clicking by tapping by accident. When
On Tue, Jul 12, 2016 at 09:36:16AM +1000, Russell Stuart wrote:
> Briefly: synaptics is much better touchpad driver than libinput.
For me, the opposite is true. After Raphael's mail yesterday, I
switched from the synaptics driver to the xinput one (by removing
xserver-xort-input-synaptics) and sin
On Mon, 2016-07-11 at 23:51 +0200, Raphael Hertzog wrote:
> Well, if some KDE/XFCE/etc. packages work only with synaptics and not
> with libinput, then we should get those packages updated to depend on
> xserver-xorg-input-synaptics, no?
I don't know about KDE/XFCE, but in the etc category is LXDE
On Mon, 11 Jul 2016, Raphael Hertzog wrote:
> I'm starting now to prepare updated packages with the above changes
> reverted... just to see how hard it is and whether it seems to work.
Please find attached the two patches that I came up with. The packages
compile and seem to work in so far that I
On 11/07/16 18:48, Michael Biebl wrote:
> Hi
>
> Am 11.07.2016 um 18:41 schrieb Raphael Hertzog:
>> On Mon, 11 Jul 2016, Emilio Pozuelo Monfort wrote:
>>> The other good option I can think of is to make GNOME prefer libinput by
>>> passing
>>> some options to X through gdm. No idea how feasible t
On Mon, 11 Jul 2016, Emilio Pozuelo Monfort wrote:
> > Looking at https://anonscm.debian.org/cgit/pkg-xorg/debian/xorg.git I see
> > that we have unreleased changes to not install the synaptics driver by
> > default. Timo or Emilio, can you upload those changes?
>
> That would break non-GNOME inst
Hi
Am 11.07.2016 um 18:41 schrieb Raphael Hertzog:
> On Mon, 11 Jul 2016, Emilio Pozuelo Monfort wrote:
>> The other good option I can think of is to make GNOME prefer libinput by
>> passing
>> some options to X through gdm. No idea how feasible that is.
>
> It would still break KDE or XFCE star
Hi,
On Mon, 11 Jul 2016, Emilio Pozuelo Monfort wrote:
> On 11/07/16 16:34, Raphael Hertzog wrote:
> > The best solution would be to have gnome-control-center handle properly
> > synaptics-managed touchpads but I don't think that upstream developers are
> > very open to that idea given that they h
On 11/07/16 16:34, Raphael Hertzog wrote:
> [ Bcc debian-x and debian-gtk-gnome, discussion on -devel as the topic
> crosses the boundaries of multiple teams ]
>
> Hello,
>
> it has been some time that GNOME 3.20 users have been unable to configure
> their touchpad[1] because:
> 1/ xserver-xorg
[ Bcc debian-x and debian-gtk-gnome, discussion on -devel as the topic
crosses the boundaries of multiple teams ]
Hello,
it has been some time that GNOME 3.20 users have been unable to configure
their touchpad[1] because:
1/ xserver-xorg-input-synaptics cherry-picked an upstream commit[2]
th
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