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1Multi-touch (MT) Protocol 2------------------------- 3 Copyright (C) 2009 Henrik Rydberg <rydberg@euromail.se> 4 5 6Introduction 7------------ 8 9In order to utilize the full power of the new multi-touch and multi-user 10devices, a way to report detailed data from multiple contacts, i.e., 11objects in direct contact with the device surface, is needed. This 12document describes the multi-touch (MT) protocol which allows kernel 13drivers to report details for an arbitrary number of contacts. 14 15The protocol is divided into two types, depending on the capabilities of the 16hardware. For devices handling anonymous contacts (type A), the protocol 17describes how to send the raw data for all contacts to the receiver. For 18devices capable of tracking identifiable contacts (type B), the protocol 19describes how to send updates for individual contacts via event slots. 20 21 22Protocol Usage 23-------------- 24 25Contact details are sent sequentially as separate packets of ABS_MT 26events. Only the ABS_MT events are recognized as part of a contact 27packet. Since these events are ignored by current single-touch (ST) 28applications, the MT protocol can be implemented on top of the ST protocol 29in an existing driver. 30 31Drivers for type A devices separate contact packets by calling 32input_mt_sync() at the end of each packet. This generates a SYN_MT_REPORT 33event, which instructs the receiver to accept the data for the current 34contact and prepare to receive another. 35 36Drivers for type B devices separate contact packets by calling 37input_mt_slot(), with a slot as argument, at the beginning of each packet. 38This generates an ABS_MT_SLOT event, which instructs the receiver to 39prepare for updates of the given slot. 40 41All drivers mark the end of a multi-touch transfer by calling the usual 42input_sync() function. This instructs the receiver to act upon events 43accumulated since last EV_SYN/SYN_REPORT and prepare to receive a new set 44of events/packets. 45 46The main difference between the stateless type A protocol and the stateful 47type B slot protocol lies in the usage of identifiable contacts to reduce 48the amount of data sent to userspace. The slot protocol requires the use of 49the ABS_MT_TRACKING_ID, either provided by the hardware or computed from 50the raw data [5]. 51 52For type A devices, the kernel driver should generate an arbitrary 53enumeration of the full set of anonymous contacts currently on the 54surface. The order in which the packets appear in the event stream is not 55important. Event filtering and finger tracking is left to user space [3]. 56 57For type B devices, the kernel driver should associate a slot with each 58identified contact, and use that slot to propagate changes for the contact. 59Creation, replacement and destruction of contacts is achieved by modifying 60the ABS_MT_TRACKING_ID of the associated slot. A non-negative tracking id 61is interpreted as a contact, and the value -1 denotes an unused slot. A 62tracking id not previously present is considered new, and a tracking id no 63longer present is considered removed. Since only changes are propagated, 64the full state of each initiated contact has to reside in the receiving 65end. Upon receiving an MT event, one simply updates the appropriate 66attribute of the current slot. 67 68 69Protocol Example A 70------------------ 71 72Here is what a minimal event sequence for a two-contact touch would look 73like for a type A device: 74 75 ABS_MT_POSITION_X x[0] 76 ABS_MT_POSITION_Y y[0] 77 SYN_MT_REPORT 78 ABS_MT_POSITION_X x[1] 79 ABS_MT_POSITION_Y y[1] 80 SYN_MT_REPORT 81 SYN_REPORT 82 83The sequence after moving one of the contacts looks exactly the same; the 84raw data for all present contacts are sent between every synchronization 85with SYN_REPORT. 86 87Here is the sequence after lifting the first contact: 88 89 ABS_MT_POSITION_X x[1] 90 ABS_MT_POSITION_Y y[1] 91 SYN_MT_REPORT 92 SYN_REPORT 93 94And here is the sequence after lifting the second contact: 95 96 SYN_MT_REPORT 97 SYN_REPORT 98 99If the driver reports one of BTN_TOUCH or ABS_PRESSURE in addition to the 100ABS_MT events, the last SYN_MT_REPORT event may be omitted. Otherwise, the 101last SYN_REPORT will be dropped by the input core, resulting in no 102zero-contact event reaching userland. 103 104 105Protocol Example B 106------------------ 107 108Here is what a minimal event sequence for a two-contact touch would look 109like for a type B device: 110 111 ABS_MT_SLOT 0 112 ABS_MT_TRACKING_ID 45 113 ABS_MT_POSITION_X x[0] 114 ABS_MT_POSITION_Y y[0] 115 ABS_MT_SLOT 1 116 ABS_MT_TRACKING_ID 46 117 ABS_MT_POSITION_X x[1] 118 ABS_MT_POSITION_Y y[1] 119 SYN_REPORT 120 121Here is the sequence after moving contact 45 in the x direction: 122 123 ABS_MT_SLOT 0 124 ABS_MT_POSITION_X x[0] 125 SYN_REPORT 126 127Here is the sequence after lifting the contact in slot 0: 128 129 ABS_MT_TRACKING_ID -1 130 SYN_REPORT 131 132The slot being modified is already 0, so the ABS_MT_SLOT is omitted. The 133message removes the association of slot 0 with contact 45, thereby 134destroying contact 45 and freeing slot 0 to be reused for another contact. 135 136Finally, here is the sequence after lifting the second contact: 137 138 ABS_MT_SLOT 1 139 ABS_MT_TRACKING_ID -1 140 SYN_REPORT 141 142 143Event Usage 144----------- 145 146A set of ABS_MT events with the desired properties is defined. The events 147are divided into categories, to allow for partial implementation. The 148minimum set consists of ABS_MT_POSITION_X and ABS_MT_POSITION_Y, which 149allows for multiple contacts to be tracked. If the device supports it, the 150ABS_MT_TOUCH_MAJOR and ABS_MT_WIDTH_MAJOR may be used to provide the size 151of the contact area and approaching contact, respectively. 152 153The TOUCH and WIDTH parameters have a geometrical interpretation; imagine 154looking through a window at someone gently holding a finger against the 155glass. You will see two regions, one inner region consisting of the part 156of the finger actually touching the glass, and one outer region formed by 157the perimeter of the finger. The diameter of the inner region is the 158ABS_MT_TOUCH_MAJOR, the diameter of the outer region is 159ABS_MT_WIDTH_MAJOR. Now imagine the person pressing the finger harder 160against the glass. The inner region will increase, and in general, the 161ratio ABS_MT_TOUCH_MAJOR / ABS_MT_WIDTH_MAJOR, which is always smaller than 162unity, is related to the contact pressure. For pressure-based devices, 163ABS_MT_PRESSURE may be used to provide the pressure on the contact area 164instead. 165 166In addition to the MAJOR parameters, the oval shape of the contact can be 167described by adding the MINOR parameters, such that MAJOR and MINOR are the 168major and minor axis of an ellipse. Finally, the orientation of the oval 169shape can be describe with the ORIENTATION parameter. 170 171The ABS_MT_TOOL_TYPE may be used to specify whether the touching tool is a 172contact or a pen or something else. Devices with more granular information 173may specify general shapes as blobs, i.e., as a sequence of rectangular 174shapes grouped together by an ABS_MT_BLOB_ID. Finally, for the few devices 175that currently support it, the ABS_MT_TRACKING_ID event may be used to 176report contact tracking from hardware [5]. 177 178 179Event Semantics 180--------------- 181 182ABS_MT_TOUCH_MAJOR 183 184The length of the major axis of the contact. The length should be given in 185surface units. If the surface has an X times Y resolution, the largest 186possible value of ABS_MT_TOUCH_MAJOR is sqrt(X^2 + Y^2), the diagonal [4]. 187 188ABS_MT_TOUCH_MINOR 189 190The length, in surface units, of the minor axis of the contact. If the 191contact is circular, this event can be omitted [4]. 192 193ABS_MT_WIDTH_MAJOR 194 195The length, in surface units, of the major axis of the approaching 196tool. This should be understood as the size of the tool itself. The 197orientation of the contact and the approaching tool are assumed to be the 198same [4]. 199 200ABS_MT_WIDTH_MINOR 201 202The length, in surface units, of the minor axis of the approaching 203tool. Omit if circular [4]. 204 205The above four values can be used to derive additional information about 206the contact. The ratio ABS_MT_TOUCH_MAJOR / ABS_MT_WIDTH_MAJOR approximates 207the notion of pressure. The fingers of the hand and the palm all have 208different characteristic widths [1]. 209 210ABS_MT_PRESSURE 211 212The pressure, in arbitrary units, on the contact area. May be used instead 213of TOUCH and WIDTH for pressure-based devices or any device with a spatial 214signal intensity distribution. 215 216ABS_MT_ORIENTATION 217 218The orientation of the ellipse. The value should describe a signed quarter 219of a revolution clockwise around the touch center. The signed value range 220is arbitrary, but zero should be returned for a finger aligned along the Y 221axis of the surface, a negative value when finger is turned to the left, and 222a positive value when finger turned to the right. When completely aligned with 223the X axis, the range max should be returned. Orientation can be omitted 224if the touching object is circular, or if the information is not available 225in the kernel driver. Partial orientation support is possible if the device 226can distinguish between the two axis, but not (uniquely) any values in 227between. In such cases, the range of ABS_MT_ORIENTATION should be [0, 1] 228[4]. 229 230ABS_MT_POSITION_X 231 232The surface X coordinate of the center of the touching ellipse. 233 234ABS_MT_POSITION_Y 235 236The surface Y coordinate of the center of the touching ellipse. 237 238ABS_MT_TOOL_TYPE 239 240The type of approaching tool. A lot of kernel drivers cannot distinguish 241between different tool types, such as a finger or a pen. In such cases, the 242event should be omitted. The protocol currently supports MT_TOOL_FINGER and 243MT_TOOL_PEN [2]. 244 245ABS_MT_BLOB_ID 246 247The BLOB_ID groups several packets together into one arbitrarily shaped 248contact. This is a low-level anonymous grouping for type A devices, and 249should not be confused with the high-level trackingID [5]. Most type A 250devices do not have blob capability, so drivers can safely omit this event. 251 252ABS_MT_TRACKING_ID 253 254The TRACKING_ID identifies an initiated contact throughout its life cycle 255[5]. This event is mandatory for type B devices. The value range of the 256TRACKING_ID should be large enough to ensure unique identification of a 257contact maintained over an extended period of time. 258 259 260Event Computation 261----------------- 262 263The flora of different hardware unavoidably leads to some devices fitting 264better to the MT protocol than others. To simplify and unify the mapping, 265this section gives recipes for how to compute certain events. 266 267For devices reporting contacts as rectangular shapes, signed orientation 268cannot be obtained. Assuming X and Y are the lengths of the sides of the 269touching rectangle, here is a simple formula that retains the most 270information possible: 271 272 ABS_MT_TOUCH_MAJOR := max(X, Y) 273 ABS_MT_TOUCH_MINOR := min(X, Y) 274 ABS_MT_ORIENTATION := bool(X > Y) 275 276The range of ABS_MT_ORIENTATION should be set to [0, 1], to indicate that 277the device can distinguish between a finger along the Y axis (0) and a 278finger along the X axis (1). 279 280 281Finger Tracking 282--------------- 283 284The process of finger tracking, i.e., to assign a unique trackingID to each 285initiated contact on the surface, is a Euclidian Bipartite Matching 286problem. At each event synchronization, the set of actual contacts is 287matched to the set of contacts from the previous synchronization. A full 288implementation can be found in [3]. 289 290 291Gestures 292-------- 293 294In the specific application of creating gesture events, the TOUCH and WIDTH 295parameters can be used to, e.g., approximate finger pressure or distinguish 296between index finger and thumb. With the addition of the MINOR parameters, 297one can also distinguish between a sweeping finger and a pointing finger, 298and with ORIENTATION, one can detect twisting of fingers. 299 300 301Notes 302----- 303 304In order to stay compatible with existing applications, the data 305reported in a finger packet must not be recognized as single-touch 306events. In addition, all finger data must bypass input filtering, 307since subsequent events of the same type refer to different fingers. 308 309The first kernel driver to utilize the MT protocol is the bcm5974 driver, 310where examples can be found. 311 312[1] With the extension ABS_MT_APPROACH_X and ABS_MT_APPROACH_Y, the 313difference between the contact position and the approaching tool position 314could be used to derive tilt. 315[2] The list can of course be extended. 316[3] Multitouch X driver project: http://bitmath.org/code/multitouch/. 317[4] See the section on event computation. 318[5] See the section on finger tracking.