From a4c9ba0b62eccc91bf980b762c441e9f319e9262 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Marty Date: Sat, 12 Jan 2019 13:19:21 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] Update /.config/libinput-gestures.conf --- .config/libinput-gestures.conf | 193 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 193 insertions(+) create mode 100644 .config/libinput-gestures.conf diff --git a/.config/libinput-gestures.conf b/.config/libinput-gestures.conf new file mode 100644 index 0000000..0f84d06 --- /dev/null +++ b/.config/libinput-gestures.conf @@ -0,0 +1,193 @@ +# Configuration file for libinput-gestures. +# +# 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 +# pinch in +# pinch out +# +# 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 xdotool, or wmctrl. 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: +############################################################################### + +# Gestures with 4 fingers: Move around desktops +# next dekstop +gesture swipe right 4 _internal ws_up +# previous desktop +gesture swipe left 4 _internal ws_down +# hide all windows (show desktop) +gesture swipe down 4 xdotool key Control_L+F12 +# show all open windows +gesture swipe up 4 xdotool key Control_L+F10 + +# show desktop grid +gesture swipe right_down 3 xdotool key Control_L+F8 +# show activity manager +gesture swipe left_down 3 xdotool key Super_L+q +# Show all open windows of desktop +gesture swipe up 3 xdotool key Control_L+F9 +# minimize window (Super_L = Meta; Next = PgDown) +gesture swipe down 3 xdotool key Super_L+Next + + +# 45degree Gestures with 3 fingers: control tab & browsing behavior +# next tab +gesture swipe right 3 xdotool key Control_L+Tab +# previous tab +gesture swipe left 3 xdotool key Control_L+Shift+Tab +# new tab +gesture swipe right_up 3 xdotool key Control_L+t +# close tab +gesture swipe left_up 3 xdotool key Control_L+w + +# 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. + +# Move to next workspace (works for GNOME/KDE/etc on Wayland and Xorg) +# gesture swipe up _internal ws_up + +# 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 _internal ws_down +# gesture swipe down xdotool key super+Page_Up + +# Browser go forward (works only for Xorg, and Xwayland clients) +# gesture swipe left xdotool key alt+Right + +# Browser go back (works only for Xorg, and Xwayland clients) +# gesture swipe right xdotool key alt+Left + +# 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 across using swipe up/down/left/right to +# navigate in fixed planes. Must match how you have configured your +# virtual desktops. +# gesture swipe up _internal --col=2 ws_up +# gesture swipe down _internal --col=2 ws_down +# gesture swipe left _internal --row=4 ws_up +# gesture swipe right _internal --row=4 ws_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) +#gesture pinch in xdotool key super+s +#gesture pinch out xdotool key super+s + +# 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 +# gesture pinch anticlockwise + +############################################################################### +# 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, use the corresponding full path link under +# /dev/input/by-path/*. +# +# 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