The third button is emulated by pressingīoth buttons simultaneously. Option Emulate3Buttons boolean Enable/disable the emulation of the third (middle) mouse button for mice which only have two physical buttons. In cases where the number of buttons cannot be auto-detected, the default value is 3. Option Buttons integer Specifies the number of mouse buttons. Option is mandatory, and there is no default setting. A common setting is "/dev/mouse", which is often a symbolic link to the real device. Option Device string Specifies the device through which the mouse can be accessed. There is noĭefault protocol setting, and specifying this option is mandatory. The "Auto" platform specifies that protocol auto-detection should be attempted. Not all protocols are supported on all platforms. ImPS/2, ExplorerPS/2, ThinkingMousePS/2, MouseManPlusPS/2, GlidePointPS/2, NetMousePS/2, NetScrollPS/2, BusMouse, SysMouse, WSMouse, USB, VUID, Valid protocol types include: Auto, Microsoft, MouseSystems, MMSeries, Logitech, MouseMan, MMHitTab, GlidePoint, IntelliMouse, ThinkingMouse, ValuMouseScroll, AceCad, PS/2, Option Protocol string Specify the mouse protocol. The following driver Options are supported: README.mouse document contains some detailed information about this. On others, it is always necessary to specify the mouse protocol in the config file. Works for any mouse that the OS's kernel driver supports.
#Logitech trackball mouse driver linux serial
On some platforms this is limited to plug and play serial mice, and on some the auto-detection The driver can auto-detect the mouse type on some platforms. This section only covers configuration details specific to this driver. Options that can be used with all input drivers. Please refer to nf(5x) for general configuration details and for This can be found in /usr/lib/X11/doc/, or online at. There is a detailed list of hardware that the mouse driver supports in the The mouse driver functions as a pointer input device, and may be used as the X server's core pointer. USB mice are only supported on some OSs, and the level of support for PS/2 mice depends on the OS. The driver supports most available mouse typesĪnd interfaces.