On Tuesday 12 June 2007 01:12, Zephaniah E. Hull wrote:
> On Tue, Jun 12, 2007 at 01:07:13AM -0400, Dmitry Torokhov wrote:
> > Hi Zephaniah,
> >
> > On Saturday 09 June 2007 04:48, Zephaniah E. Hull wrote:
> > > EVIOCGRAB is nice and very useful, however over time I've gotten
> > > multiple requests to make it possible for applications to get events
> > > straight from the event device while xf86-input-evdev is getting events
> > > from the same device.
> > >
> > > Here is the least invasive patch I could think of, it changes the
> > > behavior of EVIOCGRAB in some cases, specificly behavior is identical if
> > > the argument is 0 or 1, however if the argument is true and != 1, then
> > > it does a 'non exclusive grab', a better name might be handy.
> > >
> > > What this does is allow the events to go to everything that's using
> > > evdev to get events, but grabs it from anything else. About as close to
> > > what people want as I can get, and fairly non-invasive.
> >
> > Unfortunately this also robs non-legacy input handlers (such as
> > rfkill-input) of input events. Does xf86-input-evdev really needs to
> > grab devices exclusively? I guess we can't abandon the standard
> > keyboard driver until X supports hotplugging. How close is it to
> > support devices coming and going?
>
> Er, to explain.
>
> The current EVIOCGRAB does an exclusive grab that prohibits rfkill-input
> and friends from working.
>
I understand that.
> As it is the only way to disable the legacy input handlers,
> xf86-input-evdev has been using it since we added it.
>
Like I said I would love if xf86-input-evdev did not grab the
device at all.
> The patch is to let us cause only things that use /dev/input/event<n> to
> get events, thus, a non-exclusive grab.
>
> This basicly disables the legacy input handlers, and it's the least
> invasive patch I could think of.
>
But rfkill-input is not a legacy handler. My objection is that with your
solution you still will rob handlers such rfkill-input of events.
> Going for a separate ioctl would also work, but in some ways it would
> make supporting it more of a pain.
>
> I don't care _that_ much either way, as long as we can get a way to
> disable the legacy events while allowing other things to get the events
> too.
>
> Zephaniah E. Hull.
> >
> > If we can't remain as is until X hotplug is ready then I'd rather had
> > a separate ioctl that disables legacy input handlers (keyboard, mousedev)
> > for a given input device.
> >
> > --
> > Dmitry
> >
>
--
Dmitry
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