libevdev  1.4.4
A wrapper library for evdev devices
Enumerations | Functions
Initialization and setup

Initialization, initial setup and file descriptor handling. More...

Enumerations

enum  libevdev_grab_mode { LIBEVDEV_GRAB, LIBEVDEV_UNGRAB }
 

Functions

struct libevdev * libevdev_new (void)
 Initialize a new libevdev device. More...
 
int libevdev_new_from_fd (int fd, struct libevdev **dev)
 Initialize a new libevdev device from the given fd. More...
 
void libevdev_free (struct libevdev *dev)
 Clean up and free the libevdev struct. More...
 
int libevdev_grab (struct libevdev *dev, enum libevdev_grab_mode grab)
 Grab or ungrab the device through a kernel EVIOCGRAB. More...
 
int libevdev_set_fd (struct libevdev *dev, int fd)
 Set the fd for this struct and initialize internal data. More...
 
int libevdev_change_fd (struct libevdev *dev, int fd)
 Change the fd for this device, without re-reading the actual device. More...
 
int libevdev_get_fd (const struct libevdev *dev)
 

Detailed Description

Initialization, initial setup and file descriptor handling.

These functions are the main entry points for users of libevdev, usually a caller will use this series of calls:

struct libevdev *dev;
int err;
dev = libevdev_new();
if (!dev)
return ENOMEM;
err = libevdev_set_fd(dev, fd);
if (err < 0) {
printf("Failed (errno %d): %s\n", -err, strerror(-err));

libevdev_set_fd() is the central call and initializes the internal structs for the device at the given fd. libevdev functions will fail if called before libevdev_set_fd() unless documented otherwise.

Enumeration Type Documentation

Enumerator
LIBEVDEV_GRAB 

Grab the device if not currently grabbed.

LIBEVDEV_UNGRAB 

Ungrab the device if currently grabbed.

Function Documentation

int libevdev_change_fd ( struct libevdev *  dev,
int  fd 
)

Change the fd for this device, without re-reading the actual device.

If the fd changes after initializing the device, for example after a VT-switch in the X.org X server, this function updates the internal fd to the newly opened. No check is made that new fd points to the same device. If the device has changed, libevdev's behavior is undefined.

libevdev does not sync itself after changing the fd and keeps the current device state. Use libevdev_next_event with the LIBEVDEV_READ_FLAG_FORCE_SYNC flag to force a re-sync.

The example code below illustrates how to force a re-sync of the library-internal state. Note that this code doesn't handle the events in the caller, it merely forces an update of the internal library state.

1 struct input_event ev;
2 libevdev_change_fd(dev, new_fd);
3 libevdev_next_event(dev, LIBEVDEV_READ_FLAG_FORCE_SYNC, &ev);
4 while (libevdev_next_event(dev, LIBEVDEV_READ_FLAG_SYNC, &ev) == LIBEVDEV_READ_STATUS_SYNC)
5  ; // noop

The fd may be open in O_RDONLY or O_RDWR.

It is an error to call this function before calling libevdev_set_fd().

Parameters
devThe evdev device, already initialized with libevdev_set_fd()
fdThe new fd
Returns
0 on success, or -1 on failure.
See also
libevdev_set_fd
void libevdev_free ( struct libevdev *  dev)

Clean up and free the libevdev struct.

After completion, the struct libevdev is invalid and must not be used.

Note that calling libevdev_free() does not close the file descriptor currently asssociated with this instance.

Parameters
devThe evdev device
Note
This function may be called before libevdev_set_fd().
int libevdev_get_fd ( const struct libevdev *  dev)
Parameters
devThe evdev device
Returns
The previously set fd, or -1 if none had been set previously.
Note
This function may be called before libevdev_set_fd().
int libevdev_grab ( struct libevdev *  dev,
enum libevdev_grab_mode  grab 
)

Grab or ungrab the device through a kernel EVIOCGRAB.

This prevents other clients (including kernel-internal ones such as rfkill) from receiving events from this device.

This is generally a bad idea. Don't do this.

Grabbing an already grabbed device, or ungrabbing an ungrabbed device is a noop and always succeeds.

Parameters
devThe evdev device, already initialized with libevdev_set_fd()
grabIf true, grab the device. Otherwise ungrab the device.
Returns
0 if the device was successfull grabbed or ungrabbed, or a negative errno in case of failure.
struct libevdev* libevdev_new ( void  )

Initialize a new libevdev device.

This function only allocates the required memory and initializes the struct to sane default values. To actually hook up the device to a kernel device, use libevdev_set_fd().

Memory allocated through libevdev_new() must be released by the caller with libevdev_free().

See also
libevdev_set_fd
libevdev_free
int libevdev_new_from_fd ( int  fd,
struct libevdev **  dev 
)

Initialize a new libevdev device from the given fd.

This is a shortcut for

1 int err;
2 struct libevdev *dev = libevdev_new();
3 err = libevdev_set_fd(dev, fd);
Parameters
fdA file descriptor to the device in O_RDWR or O_RDONLY mode.
[out]devThe newly initialized evdev device.
Returns
On success, 0 is returned and dev is set to the newly allocated struct. On failure, a negative errno is returned and the value of dev is undefined.
See also
libevdev_free
int libevdev_set_fd ( struct libevdev *  dev,
int  fd 
)

Set the fd for this struct and initialize internal data.

The fd must be in O_RDONLY or O_RDWR mode.

This function may only be called once per device. If the device changed and you need to re-read a device, use libevdev_free() and libevdev_new(). If you need to change the fd after closing and re-opening the same device, use libevdev_change_fd().

Unless otherwise specified, libevdev function behavior is undefined until a successfull call to libevdev_set_fd().

Parameters
devThe evdev device
fdThe file descriptor for the device
Returns
0 on success, or a negative errno on failure
See also
libevdev_change_fd
libevdev_new
libevdev_free