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There are a few methods to help you determine if you are running a Wayland environment or an Xorg environment.
- The environmental variable $XDG_SESSION_TYPE will let you know the basic type of your environment ($echo $XDG_SESSION_TYPE).
- More specifically, the tool xiswayland can help you determine whether the X server in use is Xwayland. Please note, xiswayland has the optional flag "
--verbose
" available.
Many Linux-based login screens have a small settings icon in the bottom right corner for choosing your graphics environment.
In Wayland enviroments, libinput provides the functionality previously provided by xf86-input-wacom. Please see Wayland for more information.
See the Device IDs page.
See Building the driver and Configuring X
Both GNOME and KDE configuration GUIs are available. See Graphical Configuration Tools.
See Calibration.
See the Configuration Basics, xsetwacom and xorg.conf and xsetwacom Example Scripts.
In order to have your tablet configuration, set by run-time xsetwacom commands, survive the use of a KVM switch or other hotplug event the Linux Wacom Project hosts wdaemon. This is an update by Peter Hutterer of the original ''wdaemon'' by Aristeu Rozanski. The original wdaemon is linked at the bottom of the section Linuxwacom Tablet Hotplugging. Wdaemon is different from other solutions, such as daemons that monitor DBus for hotplug events and reapply a xsetwacom script, in that it provides a permanent virtual kernel device that looks exactly like the physical tablet to userspace. In effect it virtually disables tablet hotplugging.
There are many different types of styli, mice, and pucks. All of them work to varying degrees, so if you are running into trouble, please send an email to the mailing lists.
You may want to try the latest xf86-input-wacom release to see if support for your device has been added. If you are using a build of the linuxwacom backports, try the highest release number. The latest release is likely to support more tools.
Note, tilt is only supported with protocol V tablets, which includes the Intuos series and Cintiq 21UX/20WSX/12WX/21UX2. Any other tablets don't have tilt, no matter if you have the tilt option in your xorg.conf or not.
See Dual and Multi-Monitor Set Up.
See ''Rotate'' in Xsetwacom and also Rotation.
Yes, but only for devices configured via Configuring-X. If you have your devices configured in the xorg.conf, you can work around this by switching virtual terminals after replugging your tablet. That is, press Ctrl + Alt + F1 together then release them (screen turns to console); and press Ctrl + Alt + F7 together then release them (screen returns back to normal). On some distributions (e.g. Fedora), the original X session runs on VT1, hence substitute the commands with Ctrl + Alt + F2 and Ctrl + Alt + F1.
The xf86-input-wacom driver does support some non-wacom tablets including those by Hanwang, N-Trig, and Waltop. For KYE and UC-Logic graphics tablet support and additional Waltop information see the [https://sourceforge.net/apps/mediawiki/digimend/index.php?title=DIGImend DIGI''mend'' project].
Wacomcpl is not packaged with xf86-input-wacom and will not work with it. For an explanation see External-Applications#graphical-configuration-tools.
You are. Linux Wacom is an open source project and driven by Linux users with Wacom tablets such as yourself. John Joganic took up the code in November of 2002 and created this project. The source code was written by at least two dozen individuals, most of them are not directly involved in the project any more. Ping Cheng has assumed the project administrator since 2003. You can help out by testing, reporting bugs, documentation on this wiki and of course by writing patches (see the mailing lists).
- Building The Driver
- Tablet Operation
- xsetwacom
- External Utilities
- Debugging
- Contributing