This project is yet another attempt to bring global multitouch gesture reconizers to GNU/Linux desktop environments. In those desktop environments, there are few applications that has native touch event support, but a large number of applications written for keyboard and mouse interactions only. For touch enabled devices, there is currently no support for multitouch gestures, such as pinch and rotate, on those legacy applications.
One approach to control legacy applications with multitouch gestures is that we first recognize those gestures and send keyboard-mouse event combinations to those legacy applications. There are a number of programs doing this quite well on laptops with high-quality touchscreens or touchpads, but they did not do very well on low-cost, non-hid optical touch interactive white boards. User experience on these interactive white boards with existing multitouch global gesture recognizer programs, such as Touchegg and ginn, was not quite satisfactory. It is probably due to the high amount of noise factor. We observed that even a small pinch with these programs ended up with a huge zoom on the target client window.
One of our requirements is to have a long press gesture triggering a right click event on the target window. Existing programs do not meet this requirement either. They are based on libgeis, which does not support long press gesture recognition, and neither does its backend libgrail.
Another drawback with existing programs is that it is not possible to have a kind of private window which is not affected by global gestures, so that only the local gestures for that specific window are in effect. Applications with native touch support are good candidates to be private windows. We do not want their native gestures to get blocked by our global gestures.
eta-gestemas is designed all of these requirements in mind. Having spent some time on existing projects' source code, cheifly Touchegg, ginn and Gestouch, eta-gestemas adopted the way Gestouch implements the gesture recognizers.
To address above-mentioned noise problem with low-cost, non-hid optical touch interactive white boards, eta-gestemas samples the touch events before gesture recognition process. This prevents client windows from receiving too many keyboard-mouse fake events, thus resulting a saner user experience.
We can define a global target, public targets and private targets. A public target (i.e. a window with gesture recognizers attached) is affected by both its local gesture recognizers and the ones defined in global targets. On the other hand, gesture recognizers of global target have no effect on private targets. Private targets may or may not define their local recognizers while remaining unaffected by the recognizers in global target.
Currently following gesture recognizers are implemented
- LongPressGestureRecognizer
- PanGestureRecognizer
- TwoTouchPinchGestureRecognizer
- SwipegestureRecognizer
- TapGestureRecognizer
Currently following gesture listeners are implemented
- XTestMove
- XTestScroll
- XTestZoom
- XTestSimple
- DBusVirtualKeyboard
XTestSimple is a way to define a single press/release keyboard-mouse combination in configuration file. Please see the default configuration file for a reference usage.
DBusVirtualKeyboard toggles the visibility of a D-Bus enabled keyboard. Besides sending fake keyboard-mouse events, gesture listeners can also control applications through D-Bus.
Each user can adjust the default configuration for his/her taste. Configuration
file is installed at /etc/eta/eta-gestemas/recognizers.xml
. When eta-gestemas
first runs, user configuration file is copied to
~/.config/eta/eta-gestemas/recognizers.xml
Please see
the default configuration file.
Run the following to build eta-gestemas on a debian based distro.
sudo apt-get install cmake libx11-dev libxext-dev libxi-dev libxtst-dev \
qt5-default libframe-dev
cd path/to/this/project
mkdir build && cd build
cmake .. -DBUILD_MAN=ON -DBUILD_DOC=ON
make
make test # To run automated tests
# if you don't want to install
cd build
./eta_gestemas recognizers.xml
# to install it
sudo make install
eta-gestemas & # Run it or restart for auto run
Create a topic branch off the master. Before merging it into master you should
rebase (preferably interactive rebase) it onto master. After rebasing, update
ChangeLog
to reflect your commit messages. You can use git2cl
tool.
Here is how you can do that.
git checkout -b topic/your-branch master
git commit -am "Add your changes"
git commit -am "Add your another change"
# Get remote changes on master
git checkout master
git pull --rebase
git checkout topic/your-branch # back to your branch
git rebase -i master # rebase onto master
# Update ChangeLog
sudo apt-get install git2cl # in case you don't have it.
git log topic/your-branch --pretty --numstat --summary --no-merges | git2cl > ChangeLog
git commit add ChangeLog
git commit --amend # Amend ChangeLog changes, but don't change last commit message
# Now we can merge topic/your-branch into master
git checkout master
git merge topic/your-branch # maybe with --no-ff
debian/sid
branch is dedicated to debian packaging. git-buildpackage
is used
for debian packaging. For a release build, tag the head of master branch with the
pattern vx.y.z and merge the tag into debian/sid branch. Edit debian/changelog
and build debian package.
Here is how you could create a debian package.
git checkout master
git pull
git checkout -b debian/sid
git merge vx.y.z # merge new tag
sudo apt-get install git-buildpackage # if you don't have it
gbp dch --release --auto # edit debian/changelog
git commit -am "New release x.y.z-d"
gbp buildpackage -us -uc --git-tag
If your distro has built-in gestures, you should first disable them. Run the following to use eta-gestemas with your touchpad, if you are using synaptics.
synclient TapButton2=0
synclient TapButton3=0
synclient ClickFinger2=0
synclient ClickFinger3=0
synclient HorizTwoFingerScroll=0
synclient VertTwoFingerScroll=0
- Works with KDE and LXDE.
- Failed to work with GNOME, Unity, XFCE for now.