A SUSE Hack Week 20 Project: Show Me The Key: A screenkey alternative that works under Wayland via libinput.
Just run following command to install from official repository:
# apt install showmethekey
$ yay showmethekey
Or use other AUR helpers.
First add archlinuxcn repo to your system.
# pacman -S showmethekey
Packages can be found in my OBS project.
# zypper ar https://download.opensuse.org/repositories/home:/AZhou/openSUSE_Tumbleweed/home:AZhou.repo
# zypper in showmethekey showmethekey-lang
Leap users please replace URL for Tumbleweed with URL for your Leap version.
To install the package on Fedora Workstation, run the following commands:
sudo dnf copr enable pesader/showmethekey
sudo dnf install showmethekey
If you are running an Atomic Desktop (Fedora Silverblue, Fedora Kinoite, Fedora Sericea, etc), run:
export RELEASE=40 # or whichever release of Fedora you are running
sudo curl -o /etc/yum.repos.d/showmethekey.repo https://copr.fedorainfracloud.org/coprs/pesader/showmethekey/repo/fedora-$RELEASE/pesader-showmethekey-fedora-$RELEASE.repo
rpm-ostree install showmethekey
Please help package showmethekey to your distribution!
- libevdev
- udev (or systemd)
- libinput
- glib2
- gtk4
- libadwaita
- json-glib
- cairo
- pango
- libxkbcommon
- polkit
- meson
- ninja
- gcc
$ git clone https://github.com/AlynxZhou/showmethekey.git
$ cd showmethekey
$ mkdir build && cd build && meson setup --prefix=/usr . .. && meson compile && meson install
$ showmethekey-gtk
For detailed usage please run usage dialog from app menu!
You need to toggle the switch to start it manually and need to input admin password to polkit authentication agent's dialog, because we need superuser permission to read keyboard events (this program does not handle your password so it is safe). Wayland does not allow a client to set its position, so this program does not set its position in preference, and you can click the "Clickable Area" in titlebar and drag the floating window to anywhere you want.
Users in wheel
group can skip password authentication.
There is no official Wayland protocol allowing toplevel clients to set their own position and layer, only users can change those things. But don't worry, users are always allowed to do those things by themselves if their compositors support it.
For example if you are using GNOME Shell (Wayland), you can right click the "Clickable Area" on title bar to show a window manager menu and check "Always on Top" and "Always on Visible Workspace" in it.
If you are using KDE Plasma (Wayland), you can right click "Floating Window - Show Me The Key" on task bar, check "Move to Desktop" -> "All Desktops" and "More Actions" -> "Keep Above Others".
For Sway users, you can add following configurations into ~/.config/sway/config
to enable floating and sticky (thanks to haxibami's blog post:
for_window [app_id="one.alynx.showmethekey" title="Floating Window - Show Me The Key"] {
floating enable
sticky enable
}
screenkey is a popular project for streamers or tutorial recorders because it can make your typing visual on screen, but it only works under X11, not Wayland because it uses X11 functions to get keyboard event.
This program, instead, reads key events via libinput directly, and then put it on screen, so it will not depend on X11 or special Wayland Compositors and will work across them.
This part exists because of Wayland's security policy, which means you cannot run a GUI program with sudo
(see https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Running_GUI_applications_as_root#Wayland). It's suggested to split your program into a GUI frontend and a CLI backend that do privileged operations, and this is the backend, a custom re-write of https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/libinput/libinput/-/blob/master/tools/libinput-debug-events.c, based on libinput, libudev and libevdev.
It generates JSON in lines like {"event_name": "KEYBOARD_KEY", "event_type": 300, "time_stamp": 39869802, "key_name": "KEY_C", "key_code": 46, "state_name": "PRESSED", "state_code": 1}
.
A GUI frontend based on GTK, will run CLI backend as root via pkexec
, and show a transparent floating window to display events.
If you debug with libinput, you'll find it needs root permission, too. Because this program support both Wayland and X11, it does not get input events via display protocol, actually it's reading directly from evdev interface under /dev
. And if you want to interact with files under /dev
, you need root permission. screenkey does not needs root permission because it's heavily X11-based, it gets input events from X server instead of /dev
, which already done it. And because of this it will never support Wayland.
This is a pkexec bug that it's tty authentication does not work, see https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/polkit/polkit/-/issues/17. Most DEs have their own authentication agents, but if you are not using them, pkexec will try to make itself an agent, and you get this bug.
A possible workaround is #2 (comment), actually you can use any agents, not only the gnome one.
If you changed translatable strings, don't forget to run meson compile showmethekey-update-po
in build directory and then edit po files, and please check if there are fuzzy
tag in comment, you should remove them and make translation exact, otherwise it will not work.
If you added new source files with translatable strings, don't forget to add it to showmethekey-gtk/po/POTFILES.in
before running meson compile showmethekey-update-po
. File paths in POTFILES.in
should be relative to project directory.
If you want to add languages, first add a country code in showmethekey-gtk/po/LINGUAS
, then run meson compile showmethekey-update-po
, you will get a new .po
file with your added country code. If this language needs UTF-8 encoding, don't use words like zh_CN.UTF-8
in showmethekey-gtk/po/LINGUAS
or file name, because RPM's find_lang script may ignore them sometimes, and you should change to charset=UTF-8
manually in the header.
As I want some clear name that hints its usage, but screenkey
is already taken and I think visualkey
sounds like Visual Studio
and it's horrible. My friend @LGiki suggests Show Me The Key
which sounds like "Show me the code" from Linus Torvalds. At first I think it's a little bit long, but now it is acceptable so it's called showmethekey
or Show Me The Key
.
The Chinese translate of this program name should be 让我看键
, and it's only used for app window title, debug output, package name, desktop entry name and floating window title should not be translated. (The floating window title is important because some compositors relies on it to write window rules so you should never translate it!!!)
Program icon made by Freepik from www.flaticon.com.