This is my fork of sxiv's lisgd. https://git.sr.ht/~mil/lisgd
You can not select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
 
 
 

87 lines
3.0 KiB

.TH LISGD 1
.SH NAME
lisgd \- libinput synthetic gesture daemon
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B lisgd
[\fB\-d\fR \fIdevicepath\fR]
[\fB\-g\fR \fIgesturespec\fR]...
[\fB\-t\fR \fIthreshold\fR]
[\fB\-m\fR \fItimeoutms\fR]
[\fB\-o\fR \fIorientation\fR]
[\fB\-r\fR \fIdegreesofleniency\fR]
[\fB\-v]
.SH DESCRIPTION
.B lisgd
(or libinput synthetic gesture daemon) lets you bind gestures based on
libinput touch events to run specific commands to execute. For example,
dragging left to right with one finger could execute a particular command
like launching a terminal. Directional L-R, R-L, U-D, and D-U gestures and
diagnol LD-RU, RD-LU, UR-DL, UL-DR gestures are supported with 1 through
n fingers and can be bound to the screen's edges and/or made sensitive to
the distance of the gesture.
Unlike other libinput gesture daemons, lisgd uses touch events to
recognize synthetic swipe gestures rather than using the libinput's
gesture events. The advantage of this is that the synthetic gestures
you define via lisgd can be used on touchscreens, which normal libinput
gestures don't support.
This program was built for use on the Pinephone however it could be used in
general for any device that supports touch events, like laptop touchscreens
or similar. You may want to adjust the threshold depending on the device
you're using.
.SH OPTIONS
.TP
.BR \-d ", " \-d\ devicepath\fR
Path of the dev filesystem device to monitor (like /dev/input/event1).
.TP
.BR \-g ", " \-g\ nfingers,gesture,edge,distance,command\fR
Allows you to bind a gesture wherein nfingers is an integer, gesture is
one of {LR,RL,DU,UD,DLUR,URDL,ULDR,DLUR}, edge is one of * (any), N (none), L (left), R (right), T (top), B (bottom), TL (top left), TR (top right), BL (bottom left), BR (bottom right) and distance is one of * (any), S (short), M (medium), L (large). command is the shell command to be executed.
The -g option can be used multiple times to bind multiple gestures.
.TP
.BR \-m ", " \-m\ timeoutms\fR
Number of milliseconds gestures must be performed within to be registered. After
the timeoutms value; the gesture won't be registered.
.TP
.BR \-o ", " \-o\ orientation\fR
Number of 90-degree rotations to translate gestures by. Can be set to 0-3. For
example using 1; a L-R gesture would become a U-D gesture. Meant to be used
for screen-rotation.
.TP
.BR \-r ", " \-r\ degreesofleniency\fR
Number of degrees offset each 45-degree interval may still be recognized within.
Maximum value is 45. Default value is 15. E.g. U-D is a 180 degree gesture
but with 15 degrees of leniency will be recognized between 165-195 degrees.
.TP
.BR \-t ", " \-t\ distancethreshold\fR
Threshold in libinput units (pixels) after which a gesture registers. Defaults
to 300.
.TP
.BR \-v \fR
Enables verbose mode which prints debugging messages.
.SH SEE ALSO
lisgd was built as part of Sxmo; an project to create a Pinephone UI out of
simple and suckless programs. See: http://sr.ht/mil/Sxmo
.SH AUTHOR
.BR lisgd
is written by Miles Alan <m@milesalan.com>
.SH CONTRIBUTING
Bugs and feature dicussions can be sent to ~mil/sxmo-devel@lists.sr.ht