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UCW keymap (wip)

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LEdoian 9 months ago
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UCW keyboard layout on XWayland
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:slug: ucw-keymap-on-wayland
:date: 2023-12-31 18:23
:tags: xkb, linux, xwayland
:category: random
:keywords: xkb, xorg, wayland, hack
:lang: en
:translation: false
:status: draft
This is a story/writeup of how I debugged UCW layout on XWayland. You may learn
here how keyboard layouts work on Linux.
Background: The UCW layout
==========================
The UCW keyboard layout is one of the interesting methods of typing Czech
letters on a rather American keyboard. The main idea is having a classic US
(QWERTY) layout, but without the CapsLock, which serves as a key to add
diacritics, so that e.g. Caps+s creates "š". It is naturally possible to
combine Caps with Shift to create uppercase letters, and because not all
letters can have diacritics in Czech (e.g. there is no "ǩ"), it also manages to
cover all the German and Slovak letters. (Sometimes, there are multiple
diacritics for a single letter, then the additional diacritics are nearby:
Caps+e is "é", Caps+w is "ě".) The CapsLock can still be pressed by using
Alt+Caps.
The layout has some nice features like avoiding deficiencies with the Czech
layout (diacritics on number row are too far, both round parentheses are on the
same key, other parentheses only with AltGr at random places, no asterisk, for
some reason we have "§" though, …). Another nice feature is that it is rather
interoperable: I am able to type on any computer with the "most standard"
layout and when writing in Czech I can just not press the CapsLock key and only
lose my diacritics, computers can have this layout system-wide even when
foreign people use it,…
I would not say many people use the layout but at least several my friends do
and I have come across several random people on the Internet who do also. More
on this below :-)
The important part is how the layout is set up. Fortunately, it is contained in
the xkeyboard-config database, so the following command just enables it in Xorg::
setxkbmap us,cz -variant ,ucw -option grp:caps_switch
Technically, this sets *two* layouts (or *groups*), which are switched by
pressing the CapsLock key. This has some disadvantages (I have managed a few
times to have the order accidentally swapped and layout switchers (or their
users) are sometimes confused), but actual issues are rare. Under X11, that is…
Corollary 1: I want UCW to work differently.
My custom keyboard layout?
--------------------------
I didn't like fact that UCW layout is in fact just an overlay and not a
"proper" level 3, so I started studying how to create a custom keyboard layout.
Few notable resources: `XKB page on ArchWiki`__, manpages for
`xkeyboard-config(7)`__, `setxkbmap(1)`__ and `xkbcomp(1)`__ and looking into
``/usr/share/X11/xkb/symbols/cz`` (found by grepping ``/usr/share/X11`` for
"ucw").
Another reason for creating my own layouts is various tweaks esp. on laptop
keyboards. For example, the laptop I am typing this sentence on has broken the
up arrow key, so I would like to map it somewhere. I use ``xmodmap`` for that,
but if this could be contained in a single layout, it would make stuff simpler
for me. (And as I will later learn, ``xmodmap`` `does not work well`__ with xkb
layouts…)
Also, I have another tweak on my keyboards: Compose key. This really calls for
the custom layout! And when at it, I should create one for the ttys as well…
But this had quite a low priority (the ``kbd.sh`` script in *all* my homes does
the job well enough), so I didn't get to it in time. Luckily, maybe if I were
quicker I would not end up in this rabbit hole. At this point, I knew the basic
stuff and was reasonably sure that I could hack it together, at least somehow;
what was stopping me was lack of time and not being sure how I want to manage
machine-specific tweaks in two different layout syntaxes (xkb for X11 and kbd
for ttys).
Aside: A few notes about xkb layouts for completeness
-----------------------------------------------------
This all has been described elsewhere in more detail, but it is useful to
know when debugging layouts, so I will mention it here again.
There are two forms xkb layouts may be specified. The low-level one is called
KcCGST (keycodes, compat, geometry, symbols, types) and describes very much
everything that should happen on any keypress. These actions are described in
subdirectories of ``/usr/share/X11/xkb/`` of the same name.
The high-level descriptions are called RMLVO (rules, model, layout, variant,
option) and are what you usually configure, either with ``setxkbmap`` or using
GUI tools. Files in ``/usr/share/X11/xkb/rules/`` describe the translation of
RMLVO to KcCGST (the XML files add human-readable names for the GUIs and the
like). Maybe confusingly, the RMLVO names of options and layouts are very
similar to the names of KcCGST compat and symbols, but are generally a
different thing AFAIK.
KcCGST also come in two forms: the readable one and the complete one. The
readable one does not determine everything in one file, instead including
others. The complete description is, well, complete. It is kind of similar to
the C preprocessing.
The readable KcCGST are what is stored in the filesystem as well as what you
get from ``setxkbmap -print`` and may serve as a good starting point for
tweaks. To get the complete ones one can use ``xkbcomp $DISPLAY -``.
The processing of these description is `different`__ in Xorg and in Wayland. If
I were to bet where the bug is before digging into it, this sounds like a very
likely culprit.
A wild friend has appeared
==========================
… and he had a problem and asked me if I would have a look into it. Apparently,
`group switching didn't work in XWayland`__. At first, I wanted to work it around
by finally creating the Unified UCW keymap™, but I wanted to learn more about
XKB (from TODO GUIDES), which took me quite long, again. (Studying, working,
helping with camps *and* fixing layouts takes some time…)
Also, since the issue is apparently bigger, solving all group switches would be
a better and more useful solution than just hacking up the Unified UCW keymap
(even though I want my tweaks to eventually be xkb-based anyway).
I had very little experience with Wayland until then, mostly because X11 worked
for me rather well. I tried running Sway few times before, but usually quickly
reverted to using Xorg for various reasons (Nvidia GPU in laptop, very laggy
mouse, maybe *this exact* issue with UCW layout) which I didn't feel like
solving at that moment.
I wanted to help my friend, though, so I started looking more into using Sway
on another laptop and reading about internals of input system on `Peter
Hutterer's blog`__ TODO NAME SPELLING? Occasionally I would randomly google
(`with DuckDuckGo`__ :-D) for the issue with group switching, just in case…
The nerd snipe issue
====================
`TODO SOMEONE`__ on GitHub found out an interesting workaround: when they
*disabled* the group switch, the UCW layout *started working*. Complete "huh?"
moment, I knew I wanted to know more about why that worked. The
`xkeyboard-common(7) manpage`__ says about more group switching options, so I
randomly tried switching by Menu key in XWayland (using ``setxkbmap`` even
though it complained and was supposed to do nothing), and ended up with *both*
CapsLock and Menu adding diacritics.
After a bit of mathematic thinking (more in my `comment of the main issue`__) I
concluded that it was actually working fine, just that the ``SetGroup`` action
was evaluated *twice*, which would overflow back to the first group when two
layouts are set (probably the most common case). Mathematic term for this issue
is "arithmetic in the Z_2 group" :-)
Corollary 2: A simple workaround is adding the UCW overlay twice, e.g.
``setxkbmap us,cz,cz -variant ,ucw,ucw`` (and thus changing the algebraic group
to be Z_3).
I think that another workaround would be to change the ``compat`` rules for
XWayland, but it feels nasty to have such a quirk in xkeyboard-config database.
Changing them for everyone (in ``compat/evdev`` directly) might break other
systems, so that also does not seem to be a good way.
Corollary 3: We are fixing XWayland (or the way it processes events from Wayland).
Learning what happens
=====================
I continued reading, this time mostly `who-t's post series about custom
layouts`__, `core Wayland protocol`__ as well as the source code of various
tools (``xev``, ``wev``, ``xkbcli interactive-wayland`` &c.) Given that I knew
very little about the inner workings of the stack, I wanted to find some code
that would be run and "enhance" it with so many debug prints that I would
understand what was the state of various parts of the Xwayland's "stacked xkb".
I kind of knew that one part of this is *somewhere* in the XWayland server,
whose code felt intimidating, so I wanted to determine where to start nudging
it from what APIs the clients use.
.. tip::
Downloading various packages in Linux is rather simple, as well as their
rebuilding. In Arch, I can get the package's PKGBUILD just with ``yay -G
package``, build it with ``makepkg`` and install it using ``yay -U
package-….pkg.tar``. Makepkg also has some options which allow me to tweak
the source code after downloading it and before building it.
Other distros are probably similar, e.g. for Debian-based distros one can
use ``apt source``, ``debuild`` and ``apt install`` to do the same.
One interesting observation is that contrary to my expectation, XWayland does
not seem to use libxkbcommon (according to the ``/proc/PID/maps`` file). This
can have several reasons, but its source code also contains a slightly tweaked
version of (Xorg-style) xkb, which might mean I will be dealing with `the ugly
code`__ :-/ (Actually, XWayland might not process key events itself, instead
just passing them to clients, but this seems inconsistent with the issue what
else would be introducing the second group switch?)
.. understanding xev, XKeyEvents &c.
.. Note: neither xev is very barebones and does very little postprocessing of
events. (naturally.)
.. X11: state: 0x2000, sway: 0x4000 or 0x0. These state bits are *not*
mentioned in libX11 docs… (bits 13 and 14)
.. TO-MENTION:
- nested compositor issues
- the IM resolves compose? (I could bisect it, but too lazy)
- copy my issue comment in case link rots.
- list of all the packages I had downloaded and compiled
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