Date: Mon, 27 Apr 2020 10:14:14 +0200 From: Malcolm Matalka <mmatalka@gmail.com> To: Niclas Zeising <zeising+freebsd@daemonic.se> Cc: "freebsd-current\@freebsd.org" <freebsd-current@freebsd.org> Subject: Re: Weird mouse behaviour Message-ID: <865zdljqg9.fsf@gmail.com> In-Reply-To: <6dfad31c-68f2-c38f-28ac-0696e73b41a9@daemonic.se> References: <86imhlv518.fsf@gmail.com> <6dfad31c-68f2-c38f-28ac-0696e73b41a9@daemonic.se>
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Niclas Zeising <zeising+freebsd@daemonic.se> writes: > On 2020-04-27 08:03, Malcolm Matalka wrote: >> I saw that there was another thread on this and I wanted to throw my >> experience in: my mouse was sluggish and tap-to-click did not work. I >> set the evdev mask back to 3 and it worked. >> >> I am on a Dell XPS 13. > > Hi! > Is this on CURRENT? When using X? > Can you verify that you have xf86-input-libinput installed? > You can change sensitivity and enable tap to click using xinput. > Regards Yes this is current, and I'm on commit 360355. Yes I do have it installed. And yes I am on X. The situation I was in this morning after installing the new kernel was things that previously worked no longer worked so I did the shortest path I could find to get them working, which was modifying this evdev. Is there a document on how one is supposed to configure their system in X? I have never used xinput, instead I have configured my trackpad through sysctl. I'm happy to do it the way that is considered correct but I've sort of pieced together how to get my system setup.
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