ubuntu配置屏摸屏驱动
Touchscreen
This page is a documentation of my dealings with various touchscreen devices I've encountered. In my experience, most modern devices work out of the box with both 10.04 LTS or 12.04 LTS, but lack the proper calibration or configuration. Some older devices, especially those embedded in laptops such as GD Itronix line of rugged computers, use serial interfaces which lack the configuration to work in Linux. The methods documented here should work with other distros as well.
Global Dynamics Itronix GoBook XR-1
This is a rugged laptop I picked up from ebay for a good price, which the seller wiped with Ubuntu 10.04 due to the expense of Microsoft's Windows relicensing fee. The device has an integrated serial touchscreen, and the manufacturer is notorious for hiding any and all documentation on legacy devices such as this one. With a little trial and error however, it's relatively simple to configure this and similar devices. This method should work for most GD products, including the newer GD8000 which replaced this device. Skip to the section for configuring serial devices for these machines.
Checking for touchscreen connectivity
When encountering a new device, the first order of business is to determine how the touchscreen is connected to your computer. If the touchscreen produces no events out of the box, check to see if it's an USB device or not:
lsusb
USB connection
Check the output for any reference to a touchscreen. If your touchscreen has an USB interface, and it isn't working, then you may need to blacklist the usbtouchscreen driver for it to work:
sudo modprobe -r usbtouchscreen
If your touchscreen begins to produce events, then you can permanently blacklist the usbtouchscreen driver:
echo "blacklist usbtouchscreen" | sudo tee -a /etc/modprobe.d/blacklist.conf
Some touchscreens might already have good or perfect calibrations, otherwise you'll need to continue to the calibration section.
Serial connection
If there is no reference to a touchscreen device in your lsusb output, the connection is most likely through one of your serial ports. The actual IRQ mapping varies between manufacturers. In the case of Itronix devices, the default is /dev/ttyS3. A simple way to check for connections is to check each one for events:
screen /dev/ttyS0
Touch anywhere on your screen to check for any character output. If nothing happens, quit screen by pressing Ctrl+A and then the '\' key to quit. Continue with /dev/ttyS1, etc. until you get a response. Once you've determined the device, we can try a few different drivers. In the case of Itronix (and most other devices using the Touchkit driver), the correct driver is touchit213.
sudo inputattach --touchit213 /dev/ttyS3
Will work for most touchkit screens. The calibration or one or more axes may be swapped, but if the calibration is approximate then it's probably the correct driver. Press Ctrl+C to try a new mode. inputattach supports any of the following modes, which includes external touchscreens which may attach through a physical serial port:
--h3600ts -ipaq Ipaq h3600 touchscreend --elotouch -elo ELO touchscreen, 10-byte mode --elo4002 -elo6b ELO touchscreen, 6-byte mode --elo271-140 -elo4b ELO touchscreen, 4-byte mode --elo261-280 -elo3b ELO Touchscreen, 3-byte mode --mtouch -mtouch MicroTouch (3M) touchscreen --touchit213 -t213 Sahara Touch-iT213 Tablet PC --touchright -tr Touchright serial touchscreen --touchwin -tw Touchwindow serial touchscreen --penmount -pm Penmount touchscreen --fujitsu -fjt Fujitsu serial touchscreen
If your device is built into a laptop, you'll have the best luck with the mtouch, touchright, touchwin, or touchit213 drivers. Likewise, non-Elo external touchscreens will most likely use touchit213. If your device is a tablet with stylus-only input, fujitsu is a popular maker of embedded tablet devices.
To attach the touchscreen at startup, edit your /etc/rc.local to look like the following:
/usr/bin/inputattach --daemon --always -t213 /dev/ttyS3 exit 0
Replace -t213 with your appropriate driver and /dev/ttyS3 with the correct device.
Again, don't worry if the calibration isn't perfect, or if an axis is inverted or reversed - this will be addressed in the calibration section.
Calibration
Thanks to the wonderful work of the freedesktop.org developers, calibration is no longer a black art in Linux. The calibration utility is included in Ubuntu 12.04 and later:
sudo apt-get install xinput-calibrator
And for 10.04, there's a ppa available:
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:tias/xinput-calibrator-ppa sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install xinput-calibrator
Packages and source files are available for other distros here.
The use is pretty straight forward. I had issues getting it to work properly with HAL, however this will work regardless:
xinput_calibrator --output-type xinput
Follow the instructions pressing each target, and the calibration output will be printed to the terminal. The calibration will be set immediately, but will not survive reboots. If you're using GDM, you can put the calibration command in your /etc/gdm/Init/Default. I placed calibration values for my XR-1 in both GDM and as a gnome startup script, since it uses automatic login:
/usr/bin/xinput set-prop "Sahara Touch-iT213 Serial TouchScreen" "Evdev Axis Inversion" 0 1 /usr/bin/xinput set-int-prop "Sahara Touch-iT213 Serial TouchScreen" "Evdev Axis Calibration" 32 27 2027 39 1977
Inverted/reversed axes
If your axes are swapped or reversed with the calibration output from xinput_calibrator (after a reboot or X restart), you may need to invert them explicitly, as I did with the XR-1.
xinput set-prop "Sahara Touch-iT213 Serial TouchScreen" "Evdev Axis Inversion" 0 1
The 0 and 1 in the above command enables axis inversion for the x or y axis (0=normal, 1=invert).
If your x and y axis are swapped, use the "Evdev Axis Swap" 1 verb:
xinput set-prop "Sahara Touch-iT213 Serial TouchScreen" "Evdev Axis Swap" 1
When you're satisfied with the result, you may need to perform calibration again with xinput-calibrator.
Troubleshooting
Different modes and drivers accept different xinput options. To get your touchscreen's device name, use xinput list. Individual driver options can be obtained by using xinput list-props <device name>, where <device name> is either the device name as a string or the id= number.
eGalax Touchscreens in 14.04LTS
After fighting with USB eGalaxy Touchscreens for a week or so the solution turned out to be quite simple. I've documented everything with photos here on Google Drive
Files
You can get the files here on the website of EETI eGalax
http://www.eeti.com.tw/drivers_Linux.html
Unzip the file
Just unzip the file in the current directory
gunzip /home/$USER/Downloads/eGTouch_v2.5.4330.L-x.zip
Here is a quick rundown of the steps
Ensure the Kernel Modules start on boot
Modify the file /etc/modules to add the modules usbtouchscreen and usbhid. These must come after lp and before rtc.
/etc/modules
=====================
Load the Kernel Modules (only the 1st time)
Then load the modules by hand the 1st time (or reboot)
sudo modprobe usbtouchscreen usbhid
Move the Daemon and Calibration Files
Move al the files in the folder /home/user/Downloads/eGalax/eGTouch_v2.5.4330.L-x/eGTouch64/eGTouch64withX to /usr/local/bin/ *Note the following command is one line
sudo rsync -avz /home/$USER/Downloads/eGalax/eGTouch_v2.5.4330.L-x/eGTouch64/eGTouch64withX /usr/local/bin/
Place Upstart Job
place the following Upstart job in /etc/init
/etc/init/egalaxtouch.conf
=========================
Start the Touchscreen Daemon
Start the touchscreen daemon with the following command
sudo service egalaxtouch start
Calibration
Calibrate the Touchscreen with eGTouchU
sudo /usr/local/bin/eGTouchU
For Dual Screen Configurations:
Follow the onscreen prompts of the config program for dual screen setup choose Left or Right mode!
最后附件中的内容是eGtouch驱动的安装与图形调试
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