The XKB Configuration Guide Kamil Toman, Ivan U. Pascal November 2010 Abstract This document describes how to configure Xorg XKB from a user's point of view. It covers the basic configuration syntax and gives a few examples. This version covers Xorg server versions 1.8 and later, used with the data files from the xkeyboard-config project. 1. Overview The XKB configuration system consists of a number of components. Selecting and combining the proper parts, you can achieve most of the configurations you might need. Unless you have a completely atypical keyboard, you really don't need to touch any of the xkb component files themselves. Some desktop environments now provide integrated graphical configuration tools for setting XKB configuration as part of your desktop session. The instructions in this document are provided for those without such support, those who need to configure XKB before the session startup (such as at the login screen), or those who need to perform more advanced configuration than those tools provide. 2. Selecting an XKB configuration The easiest and most natural way to specify a keyboard mapping is to use the rules component. As its name suggests, it describes a number of general rules on how to combine the bits and pieces into a valid and useful keyboard mapping. All you need to do is to select a suitable rules file and then to feed it with a few parameters that will adjust the keyboard behaviour to fulfill your needs. The parameters are: o XkbRules - the file of rules to be used for keyboard mapping composition o XkbModel - the name of the model of your keyboard o XkbLayout - the layout(s) you intend to use o XkbVariant - the variant(s) of the layout(s) you intend to use o XkbOptions - extra xkb configuration options The rules file used depends on your system. The rules files commonly used with Xorg are provided by the xkeyboard-config project. On Linux systems, the evdev rules are most commonly used, on other systems the base rules are used. Some additional rules files exist for historical reasons, but are no longer widely used. In general, it's best to simply not specify the rules file, in order to use the default rules selected automatically by the X server. For each rules file there is a description file named .lst, for instance base.lst which is located in the xkb configuration subdirectory "rules" (for example /usr/share/X11/xkb/rules). 2.1 Basic Configuration Let's say you want to configure a PC-style American keyboard with 104 keys as described in base.lst. It can be done by simply writing several lines from below to a new configuration file in /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d, such as /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d/90-custom-kbd.conf. Section "InputClass" Identifier "keyboard defaults" MatchIsKeyboard "on" Option "XkbModel" "pc104" Option "XkbLayout" "us" Option "XKbOptions" "" EndSection The values of the parameters XkbModel and XkbLayout are really not surprising. The parameter XkbOptions has been explicitly set to empty, meaning no options. The parameter XkbVariant has been left out, meaning that the default variant (the first variant in the file, often named 'basic') will be loaded. Of course, this can also be done at runtime using the utility setxkbmap. The shell command loading the same keyboard mapping would look like: setxkbmap -model pc104 -layout us -option "" The configuration snippet and the shell command will be very similar for most other layouts (internationalized mappings). If you wanted to enable the Ctrl+Alt+Backspace sequence to terminate the X server by default, you could create a configuration snippet /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d/90-zap.conf containing: Section "InputClass" Identifier "keyboard defaults" MatchIsKeyboard "on" Option "XKbOptions" "terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp" EndSection This would be equivalent to running the shell command: setxkbmap -option "terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp" 2.2 Advanced Configuration Since XFree86 4.3.x, you can use multi-layouts xkb configuration. What does it mean? Basically it allows you to load up to four different keyboard layouts at a time. Each such layout will reside in its own group. The groups (unlike a complete keyboard remapping) can be switched very fast from one to another with some key combination. Let's say you want to configure your new Logitech cordless desktop keyboard, you intend to use three different layouts at the same time - US, Czech and German (in this order), and that you are used to the Alt+Shift combination for switching among them. Then the configuration snippet could look like this: Section "InputClass" Identifier "Logitech Cordless" MatchIsKeyboard "on" Option "XkbModel" "logicordless" Option "XkbLayout" "us,cz,de" Option "XKbOptions" "grp:alt_shift_toggle" EndSection Of course, this can also be done at runtime using the utility setxkbmap. The shell command loading the same keyboard mapping would look like: setxkbmap -model logicordless -layout "us,cz,de" \ -option "grp:alt_shift_toggle" 2.3 Even More Advanced Configuration Okay, let's say you are more demanding. You do like the example above but you want to change it a bit. Let's imagine you want the Czech keyboard mapping to use another variant than basic. The configuration snippet then changes into: Section "InputClass" Identifier "Logitech Cordless" MatchIsKeyboard "on" Option "XkbModel" "logicordless" Option "XkbLayout" "us,cz,de" Option "XkbVariant" ",bksl," Option "XKbOptions" "grp:alt_shift_toggle" EndSection That seems tricky but it is not. The logic for setting variants is the same as for layouts, which means that the first and the third variant settings are left out (set to basic), and the second is set to bksl (a special variant with an enhanced definition of the backslash key). Analogically, the loading at runtime will change to: setxkmap -model logicordless -layout "us,cz,de" \ -variant ",bksl," -option "grp:alt_shift_toggle" 2.4 Basic Global Options For a list of available options, with a short description of what they do, see the section starting with "! option" in the rules/*.lst files. 3. Keymap XKB Configuration This is the formerly used way to configure xkb. The user included a special keymap file which specified the direct xkb configuration. This method has been obsoleted by the previously described rules files which are far more flexible and allow a simpler and more intuitive syntax. The obsolete method is preserved merely for compatibility reasons. Avoid using it if possible.