mse -- bus and InPort mice driver
device mse
In /boot/device.hints:
hint.mse.0.at="isa"
hint.mse.0.port="0x23c"
hint.mse.0.irq="5"
The mse driver provides support for the bus mouse and the InPort mouse,
which are often collectively called ``bus'' mice, as these mice are sold
with an interface card which needs to be installed in an expansion bus
slot. The interface circuit may come on an integrated I/O card or as an
option on video cards.
The bus and InPort mice have two or three buttons, and a D-sub 9-pin male
connector or a round DIN 9-pin male connector.
The primary port address of the bus and InPort mouse interface cards is
usually 0x23c. Some cards may also be set to use the secondary port
address at 0x238. The interface cards require a single IRQ, which may be
2, 3, 4 or 5. Some cards may offer additional IRQs. The port number and
the IRQ number are configured by jumpers on the cards or by software provided
with the card.
Frequency, or report rate, at which the device sends movement and button
state reports to the host system, may also be configurable on some interface
cards. It may be 15, 30, 60 or 120Hz.
The difference between the two types of the mice is not in mouse devices
(in fact they are exactly the same). But in the circuit on the interface
cards. This means that the device from a bus mouse package can be connected
to the interface card from an InPort mouse package, or vice versa,
provided that their connectors match.
Operation Levels [Toc] [Back]
The mse driver has two levels of operation. The current operation level
can be set via an ioctl call.
At the level zero the basic support is provided; the device driver will
report horizontal and vertical movement of the attached device and state
of up to three buttons in the format described below. It is a subset of
the MouseSystems protocol.
Byte 1
bit 7 Always one.
bit 6..3
Always zero.
bit 2 Left button status; cleared if pressed, otherwise set.
bit 1 Middle button status; cleared if pressed, otherwise set.
Always one, if the device does not have the middle button.
bit 0 Right button status; cleared if pressed, otherwise set.
Byte 2 Horizontal movement count in two's compliment; -128 through 127.
Byte 3 Vertical movement count in two's compliment; -128 through 127.
Byte 4 Always zero.
Byte 5 Always zero.
This is the default level of operation and the driver is initially at
this level when opened by the user program.
At the operation level one (extended level), a data packet is encoded in
the standard format MOUSE_PROTO_SYSMOUSE as defined in mouse(4).
Acceleration [Toc] [Back]
The mse driver can somewhat `accelerate' the movement of the pointing
device. The faster you move the device, the further the pointer travels
on the screen. The driver has an internal variable which governs the
effect of the acceleration. Its value can be modified via the driver
flag or via an ioctl call.
Device Number [Toc] [Back]
The minor device number of the mse is made up of:
minor = (`unit' << 1) | `non-blocking'
where `unit' is the device number (usually 0) and the `non-blocking' bit
is set to indicate ``don't block waiting for mouse input, return immediately''.
The `non-blocking' bit should be set for XFree86, therefore the
minor device number usually used for XFree86 is 1. See FILES for device
node names.
Driver Flags
The mse driver accepts the following driver flag. Set it in the kernel
configuration file (see config(8)) or in the User Configuration Menu at
the boot time (see boot(8)).
bit 4..7 ACCELERATION
This flag controls the amount of acceleration effect. The smaller
the value of this flag is, more sensitive the movement becomes.
The minimum value allowed, thus the value for the most sensitive
setting, is one. Setting this flag to zero will completely disables
the acceleration effect.
There are a few ioctl(2) commands for mouse drivers. These commands and
related structures and constants are defined in <sys/mouse.h>. General
description of the commands is given in mouse(4). This section explains
the features specific to the mse driver.
MOUSE_GETLEVEL int *level
MOUSE_SETLEVEL int *level
These commands manipulate the operation level of the mse driver.
MOUSE_GETHWINFO mousehw_t *hw
Returns the hardware information of the attached device in the
following structure. Only the iftype field is guaranteed to be
filled with the correct value by the current version of the mse
driver.
typedef struct mousehw {
int buttons; /* number of buttons */
int iftype; /* I/F type */
int type; /* mouse/track ball/pad... */
int model; /* I/F dependent model ID */
int hwid; /* I/F dependent hardware ID */
} mousehw_t;
The buttons field holds the number of buttons on the device.
The iftype is either MOUSE_IF_BUS or MOUSE_IF_INPORT.
The type may be MOUSE_MOUSE, MOUSE_TRACKBALL, MOUSE_STICK,
MOUSE_PAD, or MOUSE_UNKNOWN.
The model is always MOUSE_MODEL_GENERIC at the operation level 0.
It may be MOUSE_MODEL_GENERIC or one of MOUSE_MODEL_XXX constants
at higher operation levels.
The hwid is always 0.
MOUSE_GETMODE mousemode_t *mode
The command gets the current operation parameters of the mouse
driver.
typedef struct mousemode {
int protocol; /* MOUSE_PROTO_XXX */
int rate; /* report rate (per sec), -1 if unknown */
int resolution; /* MOUSE_RES_XXX, -1 if unknown */
int accelfactor; /* acceleration factor */
int level; /* driver operation level */
int packetsize; /* the length of the data packet */
unsigned char syncmask[2]; /* sync. bits */
} mousemode_t;
The protocol is either MOUSE_PROTO_BUS or MOUSE_PROTO_INPORT at
the operation level zero. MOUSE_PROTO_SYSMOUSE at the operation
level one.
The rate is the status report rate (reports/sec) at which the
device will send movement report to the host computer. As there
is no standard to detect the current setting, this field is always
set to -1.
The resolution is always set to -1.
The accelfactor field holds a value to control acceleration feature
(see Acceleration). It is zero or greater. If it is zero,
acceleration is disabled.
The packetsize field specifies the length of the data packet. It
depends on the operation level.
level 0 5 bytes
level 1 8 bytes
The array syncmask holds a bit mask and pattern to detect the
first byte of the data packet. syncmask[0] is the bit mask to be
ANDed with a byte. If the result is equal to syncmask[1], the
byte is likely to be the first byte of the data packet. Note that
this detection method is not 100% reliable, thus, should be taken
only as an advisory measure.
Only level and accelfactor are modifiable by the MOUSE_SETMODE
command. Changing the other field doesn't cause error, but has no
effect.
MOUSE_SETMODE mousemode_t *mode
The command changes the current operation parameters of the mouse
driver as specified in mode. Only level and accelfactor may be
modifiable. Setting values in the other field does not generate
error and has no effect.
MOUSE_READDATA mousedata_t *data
MOUSE_READSTATE mousedata_t *state
These commands are not supported by the mse driver.
MOUSE_GETSTATUS mousestatus_t *status
The command returns the current state of buttons and movement
counts as described in mouse(4).
/dev/mse0 `non-blocking' device node in the system without devfs,
`blocking' under devfs.
/dev/nmse0 `non-blocking' device node under devfs.
device mse
In /boot/device.hints:
hint.mse.0.at="isa"
hint.mse.0.port="0x23c"
hint.mse.0.irq="5"
Add the mse driver at the primary port address with the IRQ 5.
device mse
hint.mse.1.at="isa"
hint.mse.1.port="0x238"
hint.mse.1.irq="4"
hint.mse.1.flags="0x30"
Define the mse driver at the secondary port address with the IRQ 4 and
the acceleration factor of 3.
Some bus mouse interface cards generate interrupts at the fixed report
rate when enabled, whether or not the mouse state is changing. The others
generate interrupts only when the state is changing.
ioctl(2), mouse(4), psm(4), sysmouse(4), moused(8)
FreeBSD 5.2.1 December 3, 1997 FreeBSD 5.2.1 [ Back ] |