thanks for your reply; On Fri, Jul 18, 2014 at 11:50:39PM +0200, Yorick Hardy wrote: > Which X mouse driver are you using?
I was using "mouse", I now switched to ws > > What does "xinput list" output? > (And also "xinput list Mouse0" for Mouse0, change to whatever your mouse is > called in "xinput list".) # xinput list "Virtual core pointer" id=2 [XPointer] "Virtual core keyboard" id=3 [XKeyboard] "Virtual core XTEST pointer" id=4 [XExtensionPointer] "Virtual core XTEST keyboard" id=5 [XExtensionKeyboard] "Mouse0" id=6 [XExtensionPointer] "Keyboard0" id=7 [XExtensionKeyboard] # xinput list Mouse0 "Mouse0" id=6 [XExtensionPointer] Type is TOUCHSCREEN Num_buttons is 5 Num_axes is 2 Mode is Absolute Motion_buffer is 256 Axis 0 : Min_value is 0 Max_value is 1279 Resolution is 1 Axis 1 : Min_value is 0 Max_value is 799 Resolution is 1 > > I needed to use ws(4): > > $ cat /etc/X11/xorg.conf > Section "InputDevice" > Identifier "WSMouse" > Driver "ws" > Option "AutoServerLayout" "true" > Option "Device" "/dev/wsmouse" > EndSection > > If "xinput list WSMouse" (adjust as needed) includes "Type is TOUCHSCREEN" > then you should be able to > > xinput --set-prop --type=int --format=32 WSMouse \ > "WS Pointer Axis Calibration" 0 1279 0 799 > > or something like that. Here "WSMouse" is the identifier for the device in > /etc/X11/xorg.conf. If I understood correctly, "1279" and "799" need to be > set much higher for your device. If I remember correctly, the device needs > to be attached before starting X. thanks, with this I've been able to get is working properly: xinput --set-prop --type=int --format=32 Mouse0 "WS Pointer Axis Calibration" 0 9540 0 7210 > > I hope this information is of some use. Indeed it was very usefull, thanks a lot ! -- Manuel Bouyer <bou...@antioche.eu.org> NetBSD: 26 ans d'experience feront toujours la difference --