GPM-1.20.7

Introduction to GPM

The GPM (General Purpose Mouse daemon) package contains a mouse server for the console and xterm. It not only provides cut and paste support generally, but its library component is used by various software such as Links to provide mouse support to the application. It is useful on desktops, especially if following (Beyond) Linux From Scratch instructions; it's often much easier (and less error prone) to cut and paste between two console windows than to type everything by hand!

[Note]

Note

Development versions of BLFS may not build or run some packages properly if LFS or dependencies have been updated since the most recent stable versions of the books.

Package Information

Additional Downloads

GPM Dependencies

Optional

texlive-20240312 (for documentation)

Kernel Configuration

Enable the following option in the kernel configuration and recompile the kernel if necessary:

Device Drivers --->
  Input device support --->
    -*-   Generic input layer (needed for keyboard, mouse, ...)          [INPUT]
    <*/M>   Mouse interface                                     [INPUT_MOUSEDEV]

Installation of GPM

Install GPM by running the following commands:

patch -Np1 -i ../gpm-1.20.7-consolidated-1.patch                &&
./autogen.sh                                                    &&
./configure --prefix=/usr --sysconfdir=/etc ac_cv_path_emacs=no &&
make

If texlive-20240312 is installed, build the GPM manual as dvi, ps, and pdf formats:

make -C doc gpm.{dvi,ps} &&
dvipdfm doc/gpm.dvi -o doc/gpm.pdf

This package does not come with a test suite.

Now, as the root user:

make install                                          &&

install-info --dir-file=/usr/share/info/dir           \
             /usr/share/info/gpm.info                 &&

rm -fv /usr/lib/libgpm.a                              &&
ln -sfv libgpm.so.2.1.0 /usr/lib/libgpm.so            &&
install -v -m644 conf/gpm-root.conf /etc              &&

install -v -m755 -d /usr/share/doc/gpm-1.20.7/support &&
install -v -m644    doc/support/*                     \
                    /usr/share/doc/gpm-1.20.7/support &&
install -v -m644    doc/{FAQ,HACK_GPM,README*}        \
                    /usr/share/doc/gpm-1.20.7

If texlive-20240312 is installed and you've built GPM manual as dvi, ps, and pdf formats, install them as the root user:

install -vm644 doc/gpm.{dvi,ps,pdf} /usr/share/doc/gpm-1.20.7

Command Explanations

./autogen.sh: This command creates the missing configure script.

ac_cv_path_emacs=no: This variable works around an issue causing the package fail to build with Emacs-29.4 installed. It also suppresses the installations of some Emacs support files shipped with GPM. These files are quite outdated and they should be superseded with Emacs-29.4 built-in GPM support. If you need to use Emacs-29.4 in Linux console with mouse support, you should install (or reinstall) Emacs-29.4 after GPM.

install-info ...: This package installs a .info file, but does not update the system dir file. This command makes the update.

ln -v -sfn libgpm.so.2.1.0 /usr/lib/libgpm.so: This command is used to create (or update) the .so symlink to the library.

Configuring GPM

Boot Script

Install the /etc/rc.d/init.d/gpm init script included in the blfs-bootscripts-20241209 package.

make install-gpm

Config Files

/etc/gpm-root.conf and ~/.gpm-root: The default and individual user gpm-root configuration files.

/etc/sysconfig/mouse: This file contains the name of your mouse device and the protocol it uses. To create this file, run the following as the root user:

cat > /etc/sysconfig/mouse << "EOF"
# Begin /etc/sysconfig/mouse

MDEVICE="<yourdevice>"
PROTOCOL="<yourprotocol>"
GPMOPTS="<additional options>"

# End /etc/sysconfig/mouse
EOF

Configuration Information

Examples of values to set MDEVICE, PROTOCOL, and GPMOPTS to are:

MDEVICE="/dev/input/mice"
PROTOCOL="imps2"
GPMOPTS=""

A list of which protocol values are known can be found by running gpm -m [device] -t -help. The MDEVICE setting depends on which type of mouse you have. For example, /dev/ttyS0 for a serial mouse (on Windows this is COM1), /dev/input/mice is often used for USB mice and /dev/psaux for PS2 mice. GPMOPTS is the 'catch all' for any additional options that are needed for your hardware.

Contents

Installed Programs: disable-paste, display-buttons, display-coords, get-versions, gpm, gpm-root, hltest, mev, and mouse-test
Installed Library: libgpm.so
Installed Directory: /usr/share/doc/gpm-1.20.7

Short Descriptions

disable-paste

is a security mechanism used to disable the paste buffer

display-buttons

is a simple program that reports the mouse buttons being pressed and released

display-coords

is a simple program that reports the mouse coordinates

get-versions

is used to report the GPM library and server versions

gpm

is a cut and paste utility and mouse server for virtual consoles

gpm-root

is a default handler for gpm. It is used to draw menus on the root window

hltest

is a simple sample application using the high-level library, meant to be read by programmers trying to use the high-level library

mev

is a program to report mouse events

mouse-test

is a tool for determining the mouse type and device it's attached to

libgpm.so

contains the API functions to access the GPM daemon