Crates.io | rdev |
lib.rs | rdev |
version | 0.5.3 |
source | src |
created_at | 2020-02-22 10:22:29.254874 |
updated_at | 2023-06-26 09:20:11.289928 |
description | Listen and send keyboard and mouse events on Windows, Linux and MacOS. |
homepage | https://github.com/Narsil/rdev |
repository | https://github.com/Narsil/rdev |
max_upload_size | |
id | 211450 |
size | 150,292 |
Simple library to listen and send events globally to keyboard and mouse on macOS, Windows and Linux (x11).
You can also check out Enigo which is another crate which helped me write this one.
This crate is so far a pet project for me to understand the Rust ecosystem.
use rdev::{listen, Event};
// This will block.
if let Err(error) = listen(callback) {
println!("Error: {:?}", error)
}
fn callback(event: Event) {
println!("My callback {:?}", event);
match event.name {
Some(string) => println!("User wrote {:?}", string),
None => (),
}
}
When using the listen
function, the following caveats apply:
The process running the blocking listen
function (loop) needs to be the parent process (no fork before).
The process needs to be granted access to the Accessibility API (i.e. if you're running your process
inside Terminal.app, then Terminal.app needs to be added in
System Preferences > Security & Privacy > Privacy > Accessibility)
If the process is not granted access to the Accessibility API, macOS will silently ignore rdev's
listen
callback and will not trigger it with events. No error will be generated.
The listen
function uses X11 APIs, and so will not work in Wayland or in the Linux kernel virtual console
use rdev::{simulate, Button, EventType, Key, SimulateError};
use std::{thread, time};
fn send(event_type: &EventType) {
let delay = time::Duration::from_millis(20);
match simulate(event_type) {
Ok(()) => (),
Err(SimulateError) => {
println!("We could not send {:?}", event_type);
}
}
// Let ths OS catchup (at least MacOS)
thread::sleep(delay);
}
send(&EventType::KeyPress(Key::KeyS));
send(&EventType::KeyRelease(Key::KeyS));
send(&EventType::MouseMove { x: 0.0, y: 0.0 });
send(&EventType::MouseMove { x: 400.0, y: 400.0 });
send(&EventType::ButtonPress(Button::Left));
send(&EventType::ButtonRelease(Button::Right));
send(&EventType::Wheel {
delta_x: 0,
delta_y: 1,
});
In order to detect what a user types, we need to plug to the OS level management of keyboard state (modifiers like shift, CTRL, but also dead keys if they exist).
EventType
corresponds to a physical event, corresponding to QWERTY layout
Event
corresponds to an actual event that was received and Event.name
reflects
what key was interpreted by the OS at that time, it will respect the layout.
/// When events arrive from the system we can add some information
/// time is when the event was received.
#[derive(Debug)]
pub struct Event {
pub time: SystemTime,
pub name: Option<String>,
pub event_type: EventType,
}
Be careful, Event::name, might be None, but also String::from(""), and might contain not displayable Unicode characters. We send exactly what the OS sends us, so do some sanity checking before using it. Caveat: Dead keys don't function yet on Linux
In order to manage different OS, the current EventType choices is a mix and match to account for all possible events. There is a safe mechanism to detect events no matter what, which are the Unknown() variant of the enum which will contain some OS specific value. Also, not that not all keys are mapped to an OS code, so simulate might fail if you try to send an unmapped key. Sending Unknown() variants will always work (the OS might still reject it).
/// In order to manage different OS, the current EventType choices is a mix&match
/// to account for all possible events.
#[derive(Debug)]
pub enum EventType {
/// The keys correspond to a standard qwerty layout, they don't correspond
/// To the actual letter a user would use, that requires some layout logic to be added.
KeyPress(Key),
KeyRelease(Key),
/// Some mouse will have more than 3 buttons, these are not defined, and different OS will
/// give different Unknown code.
ButtonPress(Button),
ButtonRelease(Button),
/// Values in pixels
MouseMove {
x: f64,
y: f64,
},
/// Note: On Linux, there is no actual delta the actual values are ignored for delta_x
/// and we only look at the sign of delta_y to simulate wheelup or wheeldown.
Wheel {
delta_x: i64,
delta_y: i64,
},
}
use rdev::{display_size};
let (w, h) = display_size().unwrap();
assert!(w > 0);
assert!(h > 0);
We can define a dummy Keyboard, that we will use to detect what kind of EventType trigger some String. We get the currently used layout for now ! Caveat : This is layout dependent. If your app needs to support layout switching, don't use this! Caveat: On Linux, the dead keys mechanism is not implemented. Caveat: Only shift and dead keys are implemented, Alt+Unicode code on Windows won't work.
use rdev::{Keyboard, EventType, Key, KeyboardState};
let mut keyboard = Keyboard::new().unwrap();
let string = keyboard.add(&EventType::KeyPress(Key::KeyS));
// string == Some("s")
unstable_grab
feature)Installing this library with the unstable_grab
feature adds the grab
function
which hooks into the global input device event stream.
By supplying this function with a callback, you can intercept
all keyboard and mouse events before they are delivered to applications / window managers.
In the callback, returning None ignores the event and returning the event lets it pass.
There is no modification of the event possible here (yet).
Note: the use of the word unstable
here refers specifically to the fact that the grab
API is unstable and subject to change
#[cfg(feature = "unstable_grab")]
use rdev::{grab, Event, EventType, Key};
#[cfg(feature = "unstable_grab")]
let callback = |event: Event| -> Option<Event> {
if let EventType::KeyPress(Key::CapsLock) = event.event_type {
println!("Consuming and cancelling CapsLock");
None // CapsLock is now effectively disabled
}
else { Some(event) }
};
// This will block.
#[cfg(feature = "unstable_grab")]
if let Err(error) = grab(callback) {
println!("Error: {:?}", error)
}
When using the listen
and/or grab
functions, the following caveats apply:
The process running the blocking grab
function (loop) needs to be the parent process (no fork before).
The process needs to be granted access to the Accessibility API (i.e. if you're running your process
inside Terminal.app, then Terminal.app needs to be added in
System Preferences > Security & Privacy > Privacy > Accessibility)
If the process is not granted access to the Accessibility API, the grab
call will fail with an
EventTapError (at least in macOS 10.15, possibly other versions as well)
The grab
function use the evdev
library to intercept events, so they will work with both X11 and Wayland
In order for this to work, the process running the listen
or grab
loop needs to either run as root (not recommended),
or run as a user who's a member of the input
group (recommended)
Note: on some distros, the group name for evdev access is called plugdev
, and on some systems, both groups can exist.
When in doubt, add your user to both groups if they exist.
Event data returned by the listen
and grab
functions can be serialized and deserialized with
Serde if you install this library with the serialize
feature.