Manpages

NAME

mev - a program to report mouse events

SYNOPSIS

mev [ options ]

DESCRIPTION

The ’mev’ program is part of the gpm package. The information below is extracted from the texinfo file, which is the preferred source of information.

The ’mev’ program is modeled after ’xev’. It prints to ’stdout’ the mouse console events it gets.

’mev’’s default behaviour is to get anything, but command line switches can be used to set the various fields in the ’Gpm_Connect’ structure, in order to customize the program’s behaviour. I’m using ’mev’ to handle mouse events to Emacs.

Command line switches for ’mev’ are the following:
-C number

Select a virtual console to get events from. This is intended to be used for debugging.

-d number

Choose a default mask. By default the server gets any events not belonging to the event mask. The mask can be provided either as a decimal number, or as a symbolic string.

-e number

Choose the event mask. By default any event is received. The mask can be provided either as a decimal number, or as a symbolic string.

-E

Enter emacs mode. In emacs mode events are reported as lisp forms rather than numbers. This is the format used by the t-mouse package within emacs.

-f

Fit events inside the screen before reporting them. This options re-fits drag events, which are allowed to exit the screen border,

-i

Interactive. Accepts input from ’stdin’ to change connection parameters.

-m number

Choose the minimum modifier mask. Any event with fewer modifiers will not be reported to ’mev’. It defaults to ’0’. The mask must be provided either as a decimal number, or as a symbolic string.

-M number

Choose the maximum modifier mask. Any event with more modifier than specified will not be reported to ’mev’. It defaults to ’ ~0’, i.e. all events are received. The mask must be provided either as a decimal number, or as a symbolic string.

-p

Requests to draw the pointer during drags. This option is used by emacs to avoid invoking ’ioctl()’ from lisp code.

When the arguments are not decimal integers, they are considered lists of alphanumeric characters, separated by a single non-alphanumeric character. I use the comma (’,’), but any will do.

Allowed names for events are ’move’, ’drag’, ’down’ or ’press’, ’up’ or ’release’, ’motion’ (which is both ’move’ and ’drag’), and ’hard’.

Allowed names for modifiers are ’shift’, ’leftAlt’, ’rightAlt’, ’anyAlt’ (one or the other), ’control’.

When the ’-i’ switch is specified, ’mev’ looks at its standard input as command lines rather than events. The input lines are parsed, and the commands ’push’ and ’pop’ are recognized.

The ’push’ command, then, accepts the options ’-d’, ’-e’, ’-m’ and ’-M’, with the same meaning described above. Unspecified options retain the previous value and the resulting masks are used to reopen the connection with the server. ’pop’ is used to pop the connection stack. If an empty stack is popped the program exits.

Other commands recognized are ’info’, used to return the stack depth; ’quit’ to prematurely terminate the program; and ’snapshot’ to get some configuration information from the server.

BUGS

Beginning with release 1.16, mev no longer works under xterm. Please use the rmev program (provided in the sample directory) to watch gpm events under xterm or rxvt. rmev also displays keyboard events besides mouse events.

AUTHOR

Alessandro Rubini <rubini [AT] linux.it>
Ian Zimmerman <itz [AT] speakeasy.org>

FILES

/dev/gpmctl The socket used to connect to gpm.

SEE ALSO

gpm(8) The mouse server

The info file about ’gpm’, which gives more complete information and explains how to write a gpm client.