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Linux/Documentation/input/uinput.rst

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  1 =============
  2 uinput module
  3 =============
  4 
  5 Introduction
  6 ============
  7 
  8 uinput is a kernel module that makes it possible to emulate input devices
  9 from userspace. By writing to /dev/uinput (or /dev/input/uinput) device, a
 10 process can create a virtual input device with specific capabilities. Once
 11 this virtual device is created, the process can send events through it,
 12 that will be delivered to userspace and in-kernel consumers.
 13 
 14 Interface
 15 =========
 16 
 17 ::
 18 
 19   linux/uinput.h
 20 
 21 The uinput header defines ioctls to create, set up, and destroy virtual
 22 devices.
 23 
 24 libevdev
 25 ========
 26 
 27 libevdev is a wrapper library for evdev devices that provides interfaces to
 28 create uinput devices and send events. libevdev is less error-prone than
 29 accessing uinput directly, and should be considered for new software.
 30 
 31 For examples and more information about libevdev:
 32 https://www.freedesktop.org/software/libevdev/doc/latest/
 33 
 34 Examples
 35 ========
 36 
 37 Keyboard events
 38 ---------------
 39 
 40 This first example shows how to create a new virtual device, and how to
 41 send a key event. All default imports and error handlers were removed for
 42 the sake of simplicity.
 43 
 44 .. code-block:: c
 45 
 46    #include <linux/uinput.h>
 47 
 48    void emit(int fd, int type, int code, int val)
 49    {
 50       struct input_event ie;
 51 
 52       ie.type = type;
 53       ie.code = code;
 54       ie.value = val;
 55       /* timestamp values below are ignored */
 56       ie.time.tv_sec = 0;
 57       ie.time.tv_usec = 0;
 58 
 59       write(fd, &ie, sizeof(ie));
 60    }
 61 
 62    int main(void)
 63    {
 64       struct uinput_setup usetup;
 65 
 66       int fd = open("/dev/uinput", O_WRONLY | O_NONBLOCK);
 67 
 68 
 69       /*
 70        * The ioctls below will enable the device that is about to be
 71        * created, to pass key events, in this case the space key.
 72        */
 73       ioctl(fd, UI_SET_EVBIT, EV_KEY);
 74       ioctl(fd, UI_SET_KEYBIT, KEY_SPACE);
 75 
 76       memset(&usetup, 0, sizeof(usetup));
 77       usetup.id.bustype = BUS_USB;
 78       usetup.id.vendor = 0x1234; /* sample vendor */
 79       usetup.id.product = 0x5678; /* sample product */
 80       strcpy(usetup.name, "Example device");
 81 
 82       ioctl(fd, UI_DEV_SETUP, &usetup);
 83       ioctl(fd, UI_DEV_CREATE);
 84 
 85       /*
 86        * On UI_DEV_CREATE the kernel will create the device node for this
 87        * device. We are inserting a pause here so that userspace has time
 88        * to detect, initialize the new device, and can start listening to
 89        * the event, otherwise it will not notice the event we are about
 90        * to send. This pause is only needed in our example code!
 91        */
 92       sleep(1);
 93 
 94       /* Key press, report the event, send key release, and report again */
 95       emit(fd, EV_KEY, KEY_SPACE, 1);
 96       emit(fd, EV_SYN, SYN_REPORT, 0);
 97       emit(fd, EV_KEY, KEY_SPACE, 0);
 98       emit(fd, EV_SYN, SYN_REPORT, 0);
 99 
100       /*
101        * Give userspace some time to read the events before we destroy the
102        * device with UI_DEV_DESTROY.
103        */
104       sleep(1);
105 
106       ioctl(fd, UI_DEV_DESTROY);
107       close(fd);
108 
109       return 0;
110    }
111 
112 Mouse movements
113 ---------------
114 
115 This example shows how to create a virtual device that behaves like a physical
116 mouse.
117 
118 .. code-block:: c
119 
120    #include <linux/uinput.h>
121 
122    /* emit function is identical to of the first example */
123 
124    int main(void)
125    {
126       struct uinput_setup usetup;
127       int i = 50;
128 
129       int fd = open("/dev/uinput", O_WRONLY | O_NONBLOCK);
130 
131       /* enable mouse button left and relative events */
132       ioctl(fd, UI_SET_EVBIT, EV_KEY);
133       ioctl(fd, UI_SET_KEYBIT, BTN_LEFT);
134 
135       ioctl(fd, UI_SET_EVBIT, EV_REL);
136       ioctl(fd, UI_SET_RELBIT, REL_X);
137       ioctl(fd, UI_SET_RELBIT, REL_Y);
138 
139       memset(&usetup, 0, sizeof(usetup));
140       usetup.id.bustype = BUS_USB;
141       usetup.id.vendor = 0x1234; /* sample vendor */
142       usetup.id.product = 0x5678; /* sample product */
143       strcpy(usetup.name, "Example device");
144 
145       ioctl(fd, UI_DEV_SETUP, &usetup);
146       ioctl(fd, UI_DEV_CREATE);
147 
148       /*
149        * On UI_DEV_CREATE the kernel will create the device node for this
150        * device. We are inserting a pause here so that userspace has time
151        * to detect, initialize the new device, and can start listening to
152        * the event, otherwise it will not notice the event we are about
153        * to send. This pause is only needed in our example code!
154        */
155       sleep(1);
156 
157       /* Move the mouse diagonally, 5 units per axis */
158       while (i--) {
159          emit(fd, EV_REL, REL_X, 5);
160          emit(fd, EV_REL, REL_Y, 5);
161          emit(fd, EV_SYN, SYN_REPORT, 0);
162          usleep(15000);
163       }
164 
165       /*
166        * Give userspace some time to read the events before we destroy the
167        * device with UI_DEV_DESTROY.
168        */
169       sleep(1);
170 
171       ioctl(fd, UI_DEV_DESTROY);
172       close(fd);
173 
174       return 0;
175    }
176 
177 
178 uinput old interface
179 --------------------
180 
181 Before uinput version 5, there wasn't a dedicated ioctl to set up a virtual
182 device. Programs supporting older versions of uinput interface need to fill
183 a uinput_user_dev structure and write it to the uinput file descriptor to
184 configure the new uinput device. New code should not use the old interface
185 but interact with uinput via ioctl calls, or use libevdev.
186 
187 .. code-block:: c
188 
189    #include <linux/uinput.h>
190 
191    /* emit function is identical to of the first example */
192 
193    int main(void)
194    {
195       struct uinput_user_dev uud;
196       int version, rc, fd;
197 
198       fd = open("/dev/uinput", O_WRONLY | O_NONBLOCK);
199       rc = ioctl(fd, UI_GET_VERSION, &version);
200 
201       if (rc == 0 && version >= 5) {
202          /* use UI_DEV_SETUP */
203          return 0;
204       }
205 
206       /*
207        * The ioctls below will enable the device that is about to be
208        * created, to pass key events, in this case the space key.
209        */
210       ioctl(fd, UI_SET_EVBIT, EV_KEY);
211       ioctl(fd, UI_SET_KEYBIT, KEY_SPACE);
212 
213       memset(&uud, 0, sizeof(uud));
214       snprintf(uud.name, UINPUT_MAX_NAME_SIZE, "uinput old interface");
215       write(fd, &uud, sizeof(uud));
216 
217       ioctl(fd, UI_DEV_CREATE);
218 
219       /*
220        * On UI_DEV_CREATE the kernel will create the device node for this
221        * device. We are inserting a pause here so that userspace has time
222        * to detect, initialize the new device, and can start listening to
223        * the event, otherwise it will not notice the event we are about
224        * to send. This pause is only needed in our example code!
225        */
226       sleep(1);
227 
228       /* Key press, report the event, send key release, and report again */
229       emit(fd, EV_KEY, KEY_SPACE, 1);
230       emit(fd, EV_SYN, SYN_REPORT, 0);
231       emit(fd, EV_KEY, KEY_SPACE, 0);
232       emit(fd, EV_SYN, SYN_REPORT, 0);
233 
234       /*
235        * Give userspace some time to read the events before we destroy the
236        * device with UI_DEV_DESTROY.
237        */
238       sleep(1);
239 
240       ioctl(fd, UI_DEV_DESTROY);
241 
242       close(fd);
243       return 0;
244    }
245 

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