NAME¶
gen_keymap —
generate a keyboard map decision tree
DESCRIPTION¶
gen_keymap generates a decision tree from a set of
keyboard maps which can be used to help a user decide which keyboard map to
use. The program using the decision tree typically asks the user to press some
keys; at each step, it examines the returned keycode and uses it to prune the
list of possible keyboard maps until there is only one left.
OPTIONS¶
--version
- Show program's version number and exit.
-?,
--help
- Show help text.
-v,
--verbose
- Be more verbose.
-mMINLEN,
--minlen=MINLEN
- Too-short keymaps are skipped (default: 30 entries).
-g,
--graph
- Generate a hopefully-nice-looking .dot file.
--maps
- Print the to-be-processed keymaps
-i,
--installer
- Input files are in d-i map form.
-IDIRS,
--inc=DIRS,
--include=DIRS
- Add a directory to the search path.
-oFILENAME,
--output=FILENAME
- Set output file (default: stdout).
-fFILTER,
--filter=FILTER
- Include only the branches leading to these keymaps.
-uUSEONLY,
--useonly=USEONLY
- Start generating the tree based only on these keymaps. (The difference
between
--filter and
--useonly is that the
former generates the whole tree and then prunes it, while the latter only
generates a reduced tree to begin with. This may have implications for
performance on large trees.)
-sSKIP,
--skip=SKIP
- Keymaps to skip.
-t,
--test
- Test the generated maps.
--interactive
- Ask user to choose among indistinguishable keymaps.
AUTHORS¶
gen_keymap was written by Matthias
Urlichs ⟨smurf@debian.org⟩. This manual page was written
by Colin Watson ⟨cjwatson@ubuntu.com⟩.