Provided by: labwc_0.7.4-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       labwc - configuration files

DESCRIPTION

       Labwc uses openbox-3.6 specification for configuration and theming, but does not support all options. The
       following  files  form  the  basis  of the labwc configuration: rc.xml, menu.xml, autostart, shutdown and
       environment.

       No configuration files are needed to start and run labwc.

       In accordance with XDG Base  Directory  Specification,  configuration  files  are  searched  for  in  the
       following order:

       •   ${XDG_CONFIG_HOME:-$HOME/.config}/labwc
       •   ${XDG_CONFIG_DIRS:-/etc/xdg}/labwc

       When  $XDG_CONFIG_HOME is defined, it replaces (rather than augments) $HOME/.config. The same is the case
       for $XDG_CONFIG_DIRS and /etc/xdg.

       The XDG Base Directory Specification does not specify whether or not programs should (a) allow the first-
       identified configuration file to supersede any others, or (b) define rules for  merging  the  information
       from more than one file.

       By  default,  labwc  uses  option  (a),  reading only the first file identified.  With the --merge-config
       option, the search order is reserved, but every configuration file  encountered  is  processed  in  turn.
       Thus,  user-specific  files  will  augment  system-wide configurations, with conflicts favoring the user-
       specific alternative.

       The configuration directory location can be overridden with the -C command line option.

       All configuration and theme files except autostart and shutdown are re-loaded on receiving signal SIGHUP.

       Environment variables may be set within environment files, wherein each line defines shell  variables  in
       the  format  variable=value.  It is recommended to specify keyboard layout settings and cursor size/theme
       here; see environment variable section below for details. Within an XDG  Base  Directory,  a  file  named
       "environment"  will  be parsed first, followed by any file matching the glob "environment.d/*.env". Files
       within the environment.d directory are parsed in alphabetical order. Unless the --merge-config option  is
       specified,  labwc  will  consider a particular XDG Base Directory to have provided an environment file if
       that directory contains either the "environment" file or at least one "environment.d/*.env" file.

       Note: environment files are treated differently by Openbox, which will simply source the file as a  valid
       shell  script before running the window manager. Files are instead parsed directly by labwc, although any
       environment variables referenced as $VARIABLE or ${VARIABLE} will be substituted and the tilde  (~)  will
       be expanded as the user's home directory.

       The autostart file is executed as a shell script after labwc has read its configuration and set variables
       defined  in the environment file. Additionally, the environment variables WAYLAND_DISPLAY and (when labwc
       is built with Xwayland support) DISPLAY will be defined. This is the  place  for  executing  clients  for
       handling background images, panels and other tasks that should run automatically when labwc launches.

       The  shutdown  file  is  executed  as  a  shell  script  when labwc is preparing to terminate itself. All
       environment variables, including WAYLAND_DISPLAY and DISPLAY, will be available to the  script.  However,
       because  the script runs asynchronously with other termination tasks, the shutdown file should not assume
       that the display will be usable. This file is useful  to  perform  any  custom  operations  necessary  to
       finalize a labwc session.

       The menu.xml file defines the context/root-menus and is described in labwc-menu(5).

       There  is a small <theme> section in rc.xml, for example to set rounded corners, but the remainder of the
       theme specification and associated files are described in labwc-theme(5).

       rc.xml is the main configuration file and all its options are described in detail below.

CONFIGURATION

       This section describes rc.xml configuration options.

   SYNTAX
       Configuration must be wrapped in a <labwc_config> root-element like this:

           <?xml version="1.0"?>
           <labwc_config>

           <!-- settings -->

           </labwc_config>

       labwc parses XML in an element/attribute agnostic way. This is a design decision to increase config  file
       flexibility  and  keep  code  simple.  In  practical  terms, this means that `<a><b>c</b></a>` is usually
       equivalent to `<a b="c" />`. However, there are some caveats:

           1. In menu.xml, the attributes id, label and execute must be expressed as attributes rather  than  as
           separate child elements.

           2.  Ordering  of  attributes  can  sometimes  be  significant.  For  example,  when setting fonts via
           attributes rather than children,

               <font place="ActiveWindow" name="..." size="..." />

           will set a font for active window titles, while

               <font name="..." size="..." place="ActiveWindow" />

           will set a font as if place were unspecified, because name and size will be processed before place.

       In general, it is recommended that attributes not be  used  to  collapse  more  than  one  level  of  the
       configuration hierarchy.

       The following three are therefore treated the same:

           <action>
             <name>Execute</name>
             <command>foot</command>
           </action>

           <action name="Execute">
             <command>foot</command>
           </action>

           <action name="Execute" command="foot" />

       The  benefit of the final one is brevity whereas the advantage of the first two is that you can add ' and
       " within the `<command>` block, for example:

           <command>sh -c 'grim -g "`slurp`"'</command>

       Elements at the same level can have the same name whereas attributes cannot.  Therefore,  where  multiple
       objects of the same kind are required (for example <action> and <keybind>) the top-node of the object has
       to be an element.

   BOOLEANS
       Note that in this manual, Boolean values are listed as [yes|no] for simplicity, but it's also possible to
       use [true|false] and/or [on|off]; this is for compatibility with Openbox.

   CORE
           <core>
             <decoration>server</decoration>
             <gap>0</gap>
             <adaptiveSync>no</adaptiveSync>
             <allowTearing>no</allowTearing>
             <reuseOutputMode>no</reuseOutputMode>
           </core>

       <core><decoration> [server|client]
           Specify server or client side decorations for xdg-shell views. Note that it is not always possible to
           turn off client side decorations. Default is server.

       <core><gap>
           The  distance  in  pixels  between  views  and  output edges when using movement actions, for example
           MoveToEdge. Default is 0.

       <core><adaptiveSync> [yes|no|fullscreen]
           Enable adaptive sync. Default is no.

           fullscreen enables adaptive sync whenever a window is in fullscreen mode.

       <core><allowTearing> [yes|no]
           Allow tearing to reduce input lag. Default is  no.  This  option  requires  setting  the  environment
           variable WLR_DRM_NO_ATOMIC=1. yes allow tearing if requested by the active window.

       <core><reuseOutputMode> [yes|no]
           Try  to  re-use  the  existing  output mode (resolution / refresh rate). This may prevent unnecessary
           screenblank delays when starting labwc (also known as flicker free boot). If the existing output mode
           can not be used with labwc the preferred mode of the monitor is used instead. Default is no.

       <core><xwaylandPersistence> [yes|no]
           Keep XWayland alive even when no clients are connected, rather than using a "lazy" policy that allows
           the server to launch on demand and die when it is no longer needed. Default is no.

           Note: changing this setting requires a restart of labwc.

   PLACEMENT
       <placement><policy> [center|automatic|cursor]
           Specify a placement policy for new windows. The "center" policy will  always  place  windows  at  the
           center  of the active output. The "automatic" policy will try to place new windows in such a way that
           they will have minimal overlap with existing windows. The "cursor" policy  will  center  new  windows
           under the cursor. Default is "center".

   WINDOW SWITCHER
       <windowSwitcher show="" preview="" outlines="" allWorkspaces="">
           show [yes|no] Draw the OnScreenDisplay when switching between windows. Default is yes.

           preview  [yes|no] Preview the contents of the selected window when switching between windows. Default
           is yes.

           outlines [yes|no] Draw an outline around the selected window when switching between windows.  Default
           is yes.

           allWorkspaces  [yes|no]  Show  windows  regardless of what workspace they are on. Default no (that is
           only windows on the current workspace are shown).

       <windowSwitcher><fields><field content="" width="%">
           Define window switcher fields.

           content defines what the field shows and can be any of:

               •   type Show view type ("xdg-shell" or "xwayland")

               •   identifier Show identifier (app_id for native  Wayland  windows  and  WM_CLASS  for  XWayland
                   clients)

               •   trimmed_identifier  Show  trimmed  identifier. Trimming removes the first two nodes of 'org.'
                   strings.

               •   title Show window title if different to app_id

               •   workspace Show workspace name

               •   state Show window state, M/m/F (max/min/full)

               •   type_short Show view type ("W" or "X")

               •   output Show output id, if more than one output detected

               •   custom A printf style config that can replace all the above fields are:
                   •   'B' - shell type, values [xwayland|xdg-shell]
                   •   'b' - shell type (short form), values [X|W]
                   •   'S' - state of window, values [M|m|F] (3 spaces allocated)
                             (maximized, minimized, fullscreen)
                   •   's' - state of window (short form), values [M|m|F] (1 space)
                   •   'I' - wm-class/app-id
                   •   'i' - wm-class/app-id trimmed, remove "org." if available
                   •   'W' - workspace name
                   •   'w' - workspace name (if more than 1 ws configured)
                   •   'O' - output name
                   •   'o' - output name (show if more than 1 monitor active)
                   •   'T' - title of window
                   •   't' - title of window (if different than wm-class/app-id)
               Recommend using with a monospace font, to keep alignment.
               •   custom - subset of printf options allowed -- man 3 printf
                   •   random text may be inserted
                   •   field length, example "%10" use 10 spaces, even if text uses less
                   •   left justify text, example "%-"
                   •   right justify text, example "%" instead of "%-"
                   •   example, %-10 would left justify and make room for 10 characters
               •   Only one custom format allowed now. Future enhancements may allow more than one.

           width defines the width of the field expressed as a percentage of the overall window switcher  width.
           The "%" character is required.

   RESISTANCE
       <resistance><screenEdgeStrength>
       <resistance><windowEdgeStrength>
           Resist  interactive  moves  and  resizes  of  a  window across screen edges or the edges of any other
           window, respectively.

           When an edge strength is positive, it indicates a distance, in pixels, that the cursor must move past
           any relevant encountered edge before an interactive move or resize  operation  will  continue  across
           that edge.

           When the strength is negative, any interactive move or resize operation that brings the cursor within
           the  absolute  value  of  the  specified  distance,  in  pixels, from any relevant edge will snap the
           operation to that edge. Thus, as a move or resize approaches an edge, it will "attract" the cursor to
           that edge within the specified distance. As the move or resize  continues  past  the  edge,  it  will
           provide resistance until the cursor has moved beyond the distance.

           A strength of zero disables the corresponding resistance effect.

           The default value for both parameters is 20 pixels.

   FOCUS
       <focus><followMouse> [yes|no]
           Make focus follow mouse, i.e. focus is given to window under mouse cursor. Default is no.

       <focus><followMouseRequiresMovement> [yes|no]
           Requires  cursor  movement  if  followMouse is enabled. It is the same as the "underMouse" setting in
           Openbox. If set to "no", labwc will additionally focus the window under the cursor in all  situations
           which  change the position of a window (e.g. switching workspaces, opening/closing windows). Focusing
           a different window via A-Tab is still possible, even with this setting set to "no". Default is yes.

       <focus><raiseOnFocus> [yes|no]
           Raise window to top when focused. Default is no.

   WINDOW SNAPPING
       Windows may be "snapped" to an edge or user-defined region of an output when  activated  with  SnapToEdge
       actions  or,  optionally, by dragging windows to the edges of an output. Edge snapping causes a window to
       occupy half of its output, extending outward from the snapped edge.

       <snapping><range>
           If an interactive move ends with the cursor a maximum distance range, (in pixels) from the edge of an
           output, the move will trigger a SnapToEdge action for that edge. A range of 0 disables  snapping  via
           interactive moves. Default is 1.

       <snapping><overlay><enabled> [yes|no]
           Show an overlay when snapping to a window to an edge. Default is yes.

       <snapping><overlay><delay><inner>
       <snapping><overlay><delay><outer>
           Sets  the  delay to show an overlay when snapping a window to each type of edge. Defaults are 500 ms.
           inner edges are edges with an adjacent output and outer edges are edges without an adjacent output.

       <snapping><topMaximize> [yes|no]
           If yes, an interactive move that snaps a window to the top edge will  maximize  the  window.  If  no,
           snapping  will  behave  as  it does with other edges, causing the window to occupy the top half of an
           output. Default is yes.

       <snapping><notifyClient> [always|region|edge|never]
           Snapping windows can trigger corresponding tiling events for native Wayland clients. Clients may  use
           these  events to alter their rendering based on knowledge that some edges of the view are confined to
           edges of a snapping region or output. For example, rounded corners may become square when  tiled,  or
           media  players may letter-box or pillar-box video rather than imposing rigid aspect ratios on windows
           that will violate the constraints of window snapping.

           •   When always is specified, any window that is snapped to either an output edge or  a  user-defined
               region will receive a tiling event.

           •   When region is specified, only windows snapped to a user-defined region will receive an event.

           •   When edge is specified, only windows snapped to an output edge will receive an event.

           •   When never is specified, tiling events will never be triggered.

           The default is "always".

   REGIONS
       <regions><region name="snap-1" x="10%" y="10%" width="80%" height="80%">
           Define  snap regions. The regions are calculated based on the usable area of each output. Usable area
           in this context means space not exclusively used by layershell clients like panels. The "%" character
           is required. Windows can either be snapped to regions by keeping a keyboard  modifier  pressed  while
           moving a window (Ctrl, Alt, Shift, Logo) or by using the SnapToRegion action. By default there are no
           regions defined.

   WORKSPACES
       <desktops number=""><names><name>
           Define workspaces. A workspace covers all outputs. Workspaces can be switched to with GoToDesktop and
           windows  can  be  moved  with  SendToDesktop.  See  labwc-actions(5) for more information about their
           arguments.

           The number attribute defines the minimum number of workspaces. Default is 1. The number attribute  is
           optional. If the number attribute is specified, names.name is not required.

       <desktops><popupTime>
           Define the timeout after which to hide the workspace OSD. A setting of 0 disables the OSD. Default is
           1000 ms.

       <desktops><prefix>
           Set the prefix to use when using "number" above. Default is "Workspace"

   THEME
       <theme><name>
           The name of the Openbox theme to use. It is not set by default.

       <theme><cornerRadius>
           The radius of server side decoration top corners. Default is 8.

       <theme><keepBorder> [yes|no]
           Even  when  disabling  server side decorations via ToggleDecorations, keep a small border (and resize
           area) around the window. Default is yes.

       <theme><dropShadows> [yes|no]
           Should drop-shadows be rendered behind windows. Default is no.

       <theme><font place="">
           The font to use for a specific element of a window, menu or OSD. Places can be any of:
           •   ActiveWindow - titlebar of active window
           •   InactiveWindow - titlebar of all windows that aren't focused by the cursor
           •   MenuItem - menu item (currently only root menu)
           •   OnScreenDisplay - items in the on screen display
       If no place attribute is provided, the setting will be applied to all
           places.

       <theme><font place=""><name>
           Describes font name. Default is sans.

       <theme><font place=""><size>
           Font size in pixels. Default is 10.

       <theme><font place=""><slant>
           Font slant (normal or italic). Default is normal.

       <theme><font place=""><weight>
           Font weight (normal or bold). Default is normal.

   MARGIN
       <margin top="" bottom="" left="" right="" output="" />
           Specify  the  number  of  pixels  to   reserve   at   the   edges   of   an   output   (typically   a
           display/screen/monitor). New, maximized and tiled windows will not be placed in these areas. The use-
           case  for  <margin>  is as a workaround for clients such as panels that do NOT support the wlr-layer-
           shell protocol.

           output is optional; if this attribute is not provided (rather than leaving it an  empty  string)  the
           margin will be applied to all outputs.

   RESIZE
       <resize><popupShow> [Never|Always|Nonpixel]
           Show  a small indicator on top of the window when resizing or moving. When the application sets size-
           hints (usually X11 terminal emulators), the indicator will show the dimensions divided by size  hints
           instead. In the case of terminal emulators this usually means columns x rows.

           The different values mean:
           •   Never Do not render the indicator
           •   Always Render the indicator while moving and resizing windows
           •   Nonpixel Only render the indicator during resize for windows using size-hints

           Default is Never.

       <resize><drawContents> [yes|no]
           Let  the  application redraw its contents while resizing. If disabled, an outlined rectangle is shown
           to indicate the geometry of resized window. Default is yes.

   KEYBOARD
       <keyboard><numlock> [on|off]
           When recognizing a new keyboard enable or disable Num Lock. Default is on.

       <keyboard layoutScope=""> [global|window]
           Stores the keyboard layout either globally or per window and restores it when switching back  to  the
           window. Default is global.

       <keyboard><keybind key="" layoutDependent="">
           Define a key binding in the format modifier-key, where supported modifiers are:
           •   S (shift)
           •   C (control)
           •   A or Mod1 (alt)
           •   H or Mod3 (hyper)
           •   W or Mod4 (super / logo)
           •   M or Mod5 (meta)

           Multiple  modifiers  can  be  combined  like A-S-f for Alt-Shift-f. The key itself can be any unicode
           character or a keyname like Return.

           Unlike Openbox, multiple space-separated key combinations  and  key-chains  are  not  supported.  The
           application  "wev"  (wayland  event  viewer) is packaged in a lot of distributions and can be used to
           view all available keynames.

           layoutDependent [yes|no] Make this specific keybind depend on the currently active  keyboard  layout.
           If  enabled,  a  keybind  using a key which does not exist in the currently active layout will not be
           executed. The physical key to trigger a keybind may also change along with the active layout. If  set
           to "no" (or is absent) the keybind will be layout agnostic. Default is no.

       <keyboard><keybind key="" onRelease="yes|no">
           onRelease,  when  yes,  fires  the keybind action when the key or key combination is released, rather
           than first pressed. This is useful to bind actions to only modifier keys,  where  the  action  should
           fire when the modifier is used without another key. Default is no.

           The  example  below will trigger the launch of rofi when the super key is pressed & released, without
           interference from other multi-key combinations that include the super key:

               <keybind key="Super_L" onRelease="yes">
                 <action name="Execute" command="rofi -show drun"/>
               </keybind>

       <keyboard><keybind key=""><action name="">
           Keybind action. See labwc-actions(5).

       <keyboard><default />
           Load the default keybinds listed below. This is an addition to the openbox specification and provides
           a way to keep config files simpler whilst allowing your specific keybinds. Note that if no rc.xml  is
           found,  or  if no <keyboard><keybind> entries exist, the same default keybinds will be loaded even if
           the <default /> element is not provided.

             A-Tab - next window
             W-Return - alacritty
             A-F3 - run bemenu
             A-F4 - close window
             W-a - toggle maximize
             A-<arrow> - move window to edge
             W-<arrow> - resize window to fill half the output

           Audio and MonBrightness keys are also bound to amixer and brightnessctl, respectively.

       <keyboard><repeatRate>
           Set the rate at which keypresses are repeated per second. Default is 25.

       <keyboard><repeatDelay>
           Set the delay before keypresses are repeated in milliseconds. Default is 600.

   MOUSE
       <mouse><doubleClickTime>
           Set double click time in milliseconds. Default is 500.

       <mouse><scrollFactor>
           Set scroll factor. Default is 1.0.

       <mouse><context name=""><mousebind button="" direction="" action=""><action>
           Multiple <mousebind> can exist within one <context>; and  multiple  <action>  can  exist  within  one
           <mousebind>.

           Define a mouse binding. Supported context-names include:
           •   TitleBar:  The decoration on top of the window, where the window buttons and the window title are
               shown.
           •   Title: The area of the titlebar (including blank space) between the  window  buttons,  where  the
               window title is displayed.
           •   WindowMenu: The button on the left.
           •   Iconify: The button that looks like an underline.
           •   Maximize: The button that looks like a box.
           •   Close: The button that looks like an X.
           •   Top: The top edge of the window's border.
           •   Bottom: The bottom edge of the window's border.
           •   Left: The left edge of the window's border.
           •   Right: The right edge of the window's border.
           •   TRCorner: The top-right corner of the window's border.
           •   TLCorner: The top-left corner of the window's border.
           •   BLCorner: The bottom-left corner of the window's border.
           •   BRCorner: The bottom-right edge of the window's border.
           •   Client:  The  client  area  of  a window, inside its decorations. Events bound to Client are also
               passed to applications.
           •   Frame: Any part of a window, but events bound to Frame are not passed through to the application.
           •   Desktop: The desktop background, where no windows are present.
           •   Root: A synonym for Desktop (for compatibility).
           •   All: Anywhere on the screen.

           Supported mouse buttons are:
           •   Left
           •   Middle
           •   Right
           •   Side
           •   Extra
           •   Forward
           •   Back
           •   Task

           Supported scroll directions are:
           •   Up
           •   Down
           •   Left
           •   Right

           Mouse buttons and directions can be combined with modifier-keys (shift (S), super/logo  (W),  control
           (C), alt (A), meta (M) and hyper (H)), for example: <mousebind button="A-Right" action="Press">

           Supported mouse actions include:
           •   Press: Pressing the specified button down in the context.
           •   Release: Releasing the specified button in the context.
           •   Click: Pressing and then releasing inside of the the context.
           •   DoubleClick: Two presses within the doubleClickTime.
           •   Drag: Pressing the button within the context, then moving the cursor.
           •   Scroll: Scrolling in specified direction in the context.

       <mouse><default />
           Load  default mousebinds. This is an addition to the openbox specification and provides a way to keep
           config files simpler whilst allowing user specific binds.  Note that if no rc.xml is found, or if  no
           <mouse><mousebind>  entries exist, the same default mousebinds will be loaded even if the <default />
           element is not provided.

   TOUCH
           <touch deviceName="" mapToOutput="" />

       <touch deviceName="" />
           A touch configuration can be bound to a specific device. If device name  is  left  empty,  the  touch
           configuration  applies to all touch devices or functions as a fallback. Multiple touch configurations
           can exist. See the libinput device section for obtaining the device names.

       <touch mapToOutput="" />
           Direct cursor movement to a specified output. If the compositor is running in nested mode, this  does
           not take effect.

   TABLET
           <tablet mapToOutput="" rotate="0" mouseEmulation="no">
             <area top="0.0" left="0.0" width="0.0" height="0.0" />
             <map button="Tip" to="Left" />
             <map button="Stylus" to="Right" />
             <map button="Stylus2" to="Middle" />
           </tablet>

       <tablet mapToOutput="" />
           The  tablet cursor movement can be restricted to a single output. If the output name is left empty or
           the output does not exists, the tablet will span all outputs.

       <tablet rotate="" /> [0|90|180|270]
           The tablet orientation can be changed in 90 degree steps. Default is no rotation (0).  Rotation  will
           be applied after applying tablet area transformation.

           See also calibrationMatrix in libinput section below for advanced transformation.

       <tablet><area top="mm" left="mm" width="mm" height="mm" />
           By  default  the  complete  tablet area is mapped to the full output. The area element can be used to
           truncate the active area of the tablet surface. By truncating the active area, it is e.g. possible to
           maintain the same aspect ratio between output and tablet.

           The active tablet  area  can  be  specified  by  setting  the  top/left  coordinate  (in  mm)  and/or
           width/height  (in  mm).  If width or height are omitted or default (0.0), width/height will be set to
           the remaining width/height seen from top/left.

           Aspect ratio example: The dimensions of the tablet are 215mm x 115mm and the output has a  resolution
           of 3440x1440. When setting height to "90", because 215 x 1440 / 3440 = 90, the responsive tablet area
           height will be truncated to match the 21:9 aspect ratio of the output. By additionally setting top to
           "12.5", the active area is centered vertically on the tablet surface.

       <tablet mouseEmulation="" /> [yes|no]
           The  tablet  can be forced to always use mouse emulation. This prevents tablet specific restrictions,
           e.g. no support for drag-and-drop, but  also  omits  tablet  specific  features  like  reporting  pen
           pressure.

           Use the ToggleTabletMouseEmulation action for toggling between mouse emulation on and off.

       <tablet><map button="" to="" />
           Pen  and pad buttons behave like regular mouse buttons.With mouse emulation set to "no", which is the
           default, and if not     specified otherwise, the first pen  button  is  mapped  to  the  right  mouse
           button, the second pen button to the middle mouse button and a third pen button is mapped to the side
           mouse button.

           Supported map buttons are:
           •   Stylus
           •   Stylus2
           •   Stylus3

           The stylus buttons can be mapped to:
           •   Right
           •   Middle
           •   Side

           The tip cannot be remapped.

           When  using  mouse  emulation, all pen buttons emulate regular mouse buttons. The tip, stylus and pad
           buttons can be mapped to all available mouse     buttons. If not  specified  otherwise,  the  tip  is
           mapped  to  left mouse click, the first pen button (Stylus) is mapped to right mouse button click and
           the second pen button (Stylus2) emulates a middle mouse  button click.

           Supported map buttons for mouse emulation are:
           •   Tip
           •   Stylus
           •   Stylus2
           •   Stylus3
           •   Pad
           •   Pad2..Pad9

           See mouse section above for all supported mouse buttons.

   LIBINPUT
           <libinput>
             <device category="CATEGORY">
               <naturalScroll></naturalScroll>
               <leftHanded></leftHanded>
               <pointerSpeed></pointerSpeed>
               <accelProfile></accelProfile>
               <tap>yes</tap>
               <tapButtonMap></tapButtonMap>
               <tapAndDrag></tapAndDrag>
               <dragLock></dragLock>
               <middleEmulation></middleEmulation>
               <disableWhileTyping></disableWhileTyping>
               <clickMethod></clickMethod>
               <sendEventsMode></sendEventsMode>
               <calibrationMatrix></calibrationMatrix>
             </device>
           </libinput>

       <libinput><device>
           Define a new libinput configuration category (profile).

           CATEGORY Defines a category of devices (by type or name) to  apply  the  settings  that  follow.  The
           category attribute as optional. If no category attribute is provided, a 'default' device profile will
           created  that  will  act  as the fallback for all libinput devices. Category can be set to any of the
           following types:
           •   touch - Devices which have a defined width/height, but  do  not  support  multitouch  (i.e.  they
               cannot  track  multiple  locations  where the screen has been touched). Drawing tablets typically
               fall into this type.
           •   touchpad - Same as 'touch' but support multitouch. This typically includes laptop track pads with
               two-finger scroll and swipe gestures.
           •   non-touch - Anything not described above, for example traditional mouse pointers.
           •   default - Defines a device-category applicable to all devices not matched by anything else.  This
               can be useful for a fallback, or if you want the same settings to be applied to all devices.

           If the provided category value is different from all of the above key words, it will be used to match
           the device name directly.

           A list of device names can be obtained by running libinput list-devices (you may need to be root or a
           part of the input group to perform this).

       <libinput><device><naturalScroll> [yes|no]
           Use natural scrolling for this category if available.

       <libinput><device><leftHanded> [yes|no]
           Use your devices left-handed mode if available.

       <libinput><device><pointerSpeed> [-1.0 to 1.0]
           Set  the  pointer speed for this category. The speed is a number between -1.0 and 1.0, with 0.0 being
           the default in most cases, and 1.0 being the fastest.

       <libinput><device><accelProfile> [flat|adaptive]
           Set the pointer's acceleration profile for this category. Flat applies no acceleration (the  pointers
           velocity is constant), while adaptive changes the pointers speed based the actual speed of your mouse
           or finger on your touchpad.

       <libinput><device><tap> [yes|no]
           Enable or disable tap-to-click for this category. This is enabled by default for all categories.

       <libinput><device><tapButtonMap> [lrm|lmr]
           Set  the  buttons  mapped  to one-, two-, and three-finger taps to the left button, right button, and
           middle button, respectively (lrm) (the default), or to left button, middle button, and  right  button
           (lmr).

       <libinput><device><tapAndDrag> [yes|no]
           Enable  or  disable tap-and-drag for this category. Tap-and-drag processes a tap immediately followed
           by a finger down as the start of a drag.

       <libinput><device><dragLock> [yes|no]
           Enable or disable drag lock for this category. Drag lock ignores a  momentary  release  of  a  finger
           during tap-and-dragging.

       <libinput><device><middleEmulation> [yes|no]
           Enable  or  disable  middle  button  emulation  for  this  category.  Middle  emulation  processes  a
           simultaneous left and right click as a press of the middle mouse button (scroll wheel).

       <libinput><device><disableWhileTyping> [yes|no]
           Enable or disable disable while typing for this category. DWT  ignores  any  motion  events  while  a
           keyboard is typing, and for a short while after as well.

       <libinput><device><clickMethod> [none|buttonAreas|clickfinger]
           Configure the method by which physical clicks on a touchpad are mapped to mouse-button events.

           The click methods available are:
           •   buttonAreas  - The bottom of the touchpad is divided into distinct regions corresponding to left,
               middle and right buttons; clicking within  the  region  will  trigger  the  corresponding  event.
               Clicking the main area further up produces a left button event.
           •   clickfinger - Clicking with one, two or three finger(s) will produce left, right or middle button
               event without regard to the location of a click.
           •   none - Physical clicks will not produce button events.

           The default method depends on the touchpad hardware.

       <libinput><device><sendEventsMode> [yes|no|disabledOnExternalMouse]
           Optionally enable or disable sending any device events.

           The options available are:
           •   yes - Events are sent as usual
           •   no - No events are sent from this device
           •   disabledOnExternalMouse  -  This  device  does  not  send  events  if  an external mouse has been
               detected.

           It is possible to prevent events from a device in the config and then do a Reconfigure to temporarily
           enable / disable specific devices.

           By default, this setting is not configured.

       <libinput><device><calibrationMatrix> [six float values split by space]
           Apply the 3x3 transformation matrix to absolute device coordinates. This  matrix  has  no  effect  on
           relative events.

           Given a 6-element array [a b c d e f], the matrix is applied as
               [ a  b  c ]   [ x ]
               [ d  e  f ] * [ y ]
               [ 0  0  1 ]   [ 1 ]

           The most common matrices are:
               90 deg cw:      180 deg cw:     270 deg cw:     reflect along y axis:
               [ 0 -1 1]       [ -1  0 1]      [  0 1 0 ]      [ -1 0 1 ]
               [ 1  0 0]       [  0 -1 1]      [ -1 0 1 ]      [  1 0 0 ]
               [ 0  0 1]       [  0  0 1]      [  0 0 1 ]      [  0 0 1 ]

           visit https://wayland.freedesktop.org/libinput/doc/latest/absolute-axes.html#calibration-of-absolute-
           devices for more information.

   WINDOW RULES
       Two types of window rules are supported, actions and properties. They are defined as shown below.

           <windowRules>

             <!-- Action -->
             <windowRule identifier="" title="" type="">
               <action name=""/>
             </windowRule>

             <!-- Property -->
             <windowRule identifier="" serverDecoration="" />

           </windowRules>

       Criteria

       <windowRules><windowRule identifier="" title="" sandboxEngine="" sandboxAppId="" type="" matchOnce="">
           Define  a window rule for any window which matches the criteria defined by the attributes identifier,
           title, or type. If more than one is defined, AND logic is  used,  so  all  have  to  match.  Matching
           against  patterns  with  '*'  (wildcard)  and  '?'  (joker)  is  supported. Pattern matching is case-
           insensitive.

           identifier relates to app_id for native Wayland windows and WM_CLASS for XWayland clients.

           title is the title of the window.

           sandboxEngine is a sandbox engine name from the security context.

           sandboxAppId is a sandbox-specific identifier for an application from the security context.

           type                                  [desktop|dock|toolbar|menu|utility|splash|dialog|dropdown_menu|
           popup_menu|tooltip|notification|combo|dnd|normal] relates to NET_WM_WINDOW_TYPE for XWayland clients.
           Native  wayland  clients  have  type  "dialog"  when  they have a parent or a fixed size, or "normal"
           otherwise.

           matchOnce can be true|false. If true, the rule will only apply to the first instance  of  the  window
           with the specified identifier or title.

       Properties

       Property values can be yes, no or default.

       If  a  window  matches criteria for multiple rules which set the same property, later config entries have
       higher priority. default can be useful in this situation.

       <windowRules><windowRule serverDecoration=""> [yes|no|default]
           serverDecoration over-rules any other setting for server-side window decoration on first map.

       <windowRules><windowRule skipTaskbar=""> [yes|no|default]
           skipTaskbar removes window foreign-toplevel protocol handle so that it does  not  appear  in  clients
           such as panels and taskbars using that protocol.

       <windowRules><windowRule skipWindowSwitcher=""> [yes|no|default]
           skipWindowSwitcher removes window from the Window Switcher (alt-tab on-screen-display).

       <windowRules><windowRule ignoreFocusRequest=""> [yes|no|default]
           ignoreFocusRequest prevents window to activate itself.

       <windowRules><windowRule ignoreConfigureRequest=""> [yes|no|default]
           ignoreConfigureRequest prevents a X11 window to position and size itself.

       <windowRules><windowRule fixedPosition=""> [yes|no|default]
           fixedPosition disallows interactive move/resize and prevents re-positioning in response to changes in
           reserved output space, which can be caused by <margin> settings or exclusive layer-shell clients such
           as panels.

   MENU
           <menu>
             <ignoreButtonReleasePeriod>250</ignoreButtonReleasePeriod>
           </menu>

       <menu><ignoreButtonReleasePeriod>
           How long (in milliseconds) the initial button release event is ignored for. The reason for this logic
           and behaviour is to avoid a fast press-move-release sequence intended to just open the menu resulting
           in  the  closure of the menu or the selection of (typically the first) menu item. This behaviour only
           affects the first button-release. It is not anticipated that most users will want to change this, but
           the  config  option  has  been  exposed  for  unusual  use-cases.  It  is  equivalent  to   Openbox's
           `<hideDelay>`. Default is 250 ms.

   MAGNIFIER
           <magnifier>
             <width>400</width>
             <height>400</height>
             <initScale>2</initScale>
             <increment>0.2</increment>
             <useFilter>true</useFilter>
           </magnifier>

       <magnifier><width>
           Width of magnifier window in pixels. Default is 400. Set to -1 to use fullscreen magnifier.

       <magnifier><height>
           Height of magnifier window in pixels. Default is 400. Set to -1 to use fullscreen magnifier.

       <magnifier><initScale>
           Initial  number  of  times  by  which magnified image is scaled. Value is the default at boot; can be
           modified at run-time in a keyboard or mouse binding by calling  'ZoomIn'  or  'ZoomOut'.  Default  is
           x2.0.

       <magnifier><increment>
           Step by which magnification changes on each call to 'ZoomIn' or 'ZoomOut'. Default is 0.2.

       <magnifier><useFilter> [yes|no|default]
           Whether  to apply a bilinear filter to the magnified image, or just to use nearest-neighbour. Default
           is true - bilinear filtered.

   ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
       XCURSOR_THEME and XCURSOR_SIZE are supported to set cursor theme and size respectively. The default  size
       is 24. System cursor themes can typically be found with a command such as:

           find /usr/share/icons/ -type d -name "cursors"

       The  following  keyboard-configuration  variables  are  supported:  XKB_DEFAULT_RULES, XKB_DEFAULT_MODEL,
       XKB_DEFAULT_LAYOUT, XKB_DEFAULT_VARIANT and XKB_DEFAULT_OPTIONS.

       See xkeyboard-config(7) for details.

SEE ALSO

       labwc(1), labwc-actions(5), labwc-theme(5)

                                                   2024-07-20                                    labwc-config(5)