A keyboard input remapper for Linux/Wayland systems, written by @wez
I couldn't find a good solution for the following:
- Remap the
CAPSLOCK
key so that it producesCTRL
when held, butESC
if tapped - Remap N keys to M keys. Eg:
F3
->CTRL+c
, andALT+LEFT
toHOME
evremap
works by grabbing exclusive access to an input device and maintaining
a model of the keys that are pressed. It then applies your remapping configuration
to produce the effective set of pressed keys and emits appropriate changes to a virtual
output device.
Because evremap
targets the evdev layer of libinput, its remapping
is effective system-wide: in Wayland, X11 and the linux console.
Here's an example configuration that makes capslock useful:
# The name of the device to remap.
# Run `sudo evremap list-devices` to see the devices available
# on your system.
device_name = "AT Translated Set 2 keyboard"
# If you have multiple devices with the same name, you can optionally
# specify the `phys` value that is printed by the `list-devices` subcommand
# phys = "usb-0000:07:00.3-2.1.1/input0"
# Configure CAPSLOCK as a Dual Role key.
# Holding it produces LEFTCTRL, but tapping it
# will produce ESC.
# Both `tap` and `hold` can expand to multiple output keys.
[[dual_role]]
input = "KEY_CAPSLOCK"
hold = ["KEY_LEFTCTRL"]
tap = ["KEY_ESC"]
You can also express simple remapping entries:
# This config snippet is useful if your keyboard has an arrow
# cluster, but doesn't have page up, page down, home or end
# keys. Here we're configuring ALT+arrow to map to those functions.
[[remap]]
input = ["KEY_LEFTALT", "KEY_UP"]
output = ["KEY_PAGEUP"]
[[remap]]
input = ["KEY_LEFTALT", "KEY_DOWN"]
output = ["KEY_PAGEDOWN"]
[[remap]]
input = ["KEY_LEFTALT", "KEY_LEFT"]
output = ["KEY_HOME"]
[[remap]]
input = ["KEY_LEFTALT", "KEY_RIGHT"]
output = ["KEY_END"]
When applying remapping configuration, ordering is important:
- Dual Role entries are always processed first
- Remap entries are applied in the order that they appear in your configuration file
Here's an example where ordering is important: on the PixelBook Go keyboard, the function key row has alternate functions on the keycaps. It is natural to want the mute button to mute by default, but to emit the F8 key when holding alt. We can express that with the following configuration:
[[remap]]
input = ["KEY_LEFTALT", "KEY_F8"]
# When our `input` is matched, our list of `output` is prevented from
# matching as the `input` of subsequent rules.
output = ["KEY_F8"]
[[remap]]
input = ["KEY_F8"]
output = ["KEY_MUTE"]
-
How do I list available input devices?
sudo evremap list-devices
-
How do I list available key codes?
evremap list-keys
-
Is there a GUI for editing the config file? Yes, take a look at Evremap-GUI
$ sudo dnf install libevdev-devel # redhat/centos
## or
$ sudo apt install libevdev-dev pkg-config # debian/ubuntu
$ cargo build --release
To run the remapper, invoke it as root (so that it can grab exclusive access to the input device):
$ sudo target/release/evremap remap my-config-file.toml
Or, grant an unprivileged user access to evdev
and uinput
.
On Ubuntu, this can be configured by running the following commands and rebooting:
sudo gpasswd -a YOUR_USER input
echo 'KERNEL=="uinput", GROUP="input"' | sudo tee /etc/udev/rules.d/input.rules
For some platforms, you might need to create an input
group first and run:
echo 'KERNEL=="event*", NAME="input/%k", MODE="660", GROUP="input"' | sudo tee /etc/udev/rules.d/input.rules
as well.
A sample system service unit is included in the repo. You'll want to adjust the paths to match your system and then install and enable it:
$ sudo cp evremap.service /usr/lib/systemd/system/
$ sudo systemctl daemon-reload
$ sudo systemctl enable evremap.service
$ sudo systemctl start evremap.service
If you're using Runit instead of Systemd, follow these steps to create a service.
- Create a directory called
evremap
and create a file calledrun
under it
sudo mkdir /etc/sv/evremap
sudo touch /etc/sv/evremap/run
- Copy these lines into the run file
#!/bin/sh
set -e
exec <PATH_TO_EVREMAP> remap <CONFIG>
Replace <PATH_TO_EVREMAP>
with the path to your evremap executable and <CONFIG>
with the path to your configuration file.
- Finally, symlink the evremap directory to
/var/service
sudo ln -s /etc/sv/evremap /var/service
To make an OpenRC service, create the file /etc/init.d/evremap
with the following contents...
#!/usr/bin/openrc-run
supervisor=supervise-daemon
command="<PATH_TO_EVREMAP>"
command_args="remap <CONFIG>"
Replace <PATH_TO_EVREMAP>
with the path to your evremap executable and <CONFIG>
with the path to your configuration file.
Make the file executable...
chmod +x /etc/init.d/evremap
Enable the service with...
rc-update add evremap
Start the service with...
rc-service evremap start
That feature is not implemented.