UbuntuHelp:Logitech MX610
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Introduction
This guide describes how to obtain full functionality of the Logitech MX 610. It is still a work in progress. Here, all commands are in fixed-font, like this
.
General Mouse
Don't even touch the "ConfiguredMouse" default in /etc/X11/xorg.conf
- just add a new input device:
Section "InputDevice" Identifier "MX610" Driver "evdev" Option "Name" "Logitech USB Receiver" # see 'cat /proc/bus/input/devices' Option "Phys" "*/input0" # this is the mouse part Option "WHEELRelativeAxisButtons" "4 5" # vertical wheel Option "HWHEELRelativeAxisButtons" "7 6" # horizontal wheel EndSection
Then add it to the devices list:
Section "ServerLayout" [...] Inputdevice "MX610" "SendCoreEvents" EndSection
Side buttons
Install imwheel
from universe
. Then change /etc/X11/imwheel/startup.conf
to
# Configuration file for setting imwheel startup parameters. # Set this to "1" to make imwheel start along with your X session. IMWHEEL_START=1 # Specify the command line parameters to pass to imwheel. # Simply uncomment the bottom line, and if necessary replace # the default options with your own. A button spec of "0 0 8 9" # will grab the thumb buttons of most mice. "0 0 0 0 8 9" should # work for mice with a scroll wheel with two axes. Keep in mind # that each button number must be separated by a space. IMWHEEL_PARAMS='-b "0 0 0 0 8 9"'
Now add the following code to either /etc/X11/imwheel/imwheelrc
(system-wide config) or ~/.imwheelrc
(per-user config) - your choice:
".*" None, Thumb1, Alt_L|Left None, Thumb2, Alt_L|Right
After restarting imwheel
or rebooting you can go back and forth with the side-buttons.
Volume Keys
No additional software is required to use the volume keys. All you need to do is use "Keyboard Shortcuts." The same can be said for the E-Mail button. By default, they just work in Ubuntu. Getting the IM button to function is a little bit more interesting...
Notification LEDs and their respective buttons
Bill Hard, a KDE developer, has been working on the notification LEDs since 3/7/2006. We will use his work.
- To start, download mx610hack-0.3.tar.gz here.
- Extract the archive.
- Open a console and change the working directory to where you extracted the archive using the
cd
command. - Compile using the usual
./configure
,make
,sudo make install
procedure.
To gain an understanding of how to issue commands, issue the command mx610hack --help
. To get the lights to work for a user, the device must be writable to him/her. To do so, you will need to modify permissions. To do this:
- Open the udev rules for editing:
sudo nano /etc/udev/rules.d/40-permissions.rules
. - At the end, add the following line:
KERNEL=="hiddev*", MODE="0666"
- Save and exit by pressing Ctrl+O, Enter (you're overwriting the file), and finally Ctrl+X
To make use of the light, you can either write a script to execute once you have new mail or install the "mail-notification" package by issuing the command sudo apt-get install mail-notification
. Don't forget to turn it off somehow.
IM (for Gaim users)
According to this thread in Ubuntu Forums, it is possible to get Gaim to cooperate with this mouse.
- Download the plugin source here.
- Extract the package.
- Open a console and change the working directory to where you extracted the archive.
- Install the gaim-dev package:
sudo apt-get install gaim-dev
. - Compile and install:
make
thenmake install
. - Restart Gaim (if running) and enable the plugin via Tools -> Plugins
Caveats: The IM button toggles the buddy list if and only if the buddy list has focus.
Finishing Up, Acknowledgments
You will need to restart udev: /etc/init.d/udev restart. This could cause things to go quirky, so you may want to consider restarting the whole computer altogether.