I’ve got a Raspberry Pi 5 which I’ve got set up and am slowly installing things on via Docker Compose, but I’ve realised that I’m unable to copy or even highlight text. It’s like there’s a phantom click or something. The mouse works on my other laptop, but that’s got its own problems. Anyone know how to fix it?

  • sabreW4K3@lemmy.tfOP
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    11 months ago

    All help is welcome. And I apologise, but do you mind speaking to me like a newborn baby? How do I check if it’s X or Wayland? How do I check if the mouse is numbered and in what order? How do I check the dmesg? Nope, no other device has pointer capabilities.

    • mumblerfish@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      If X is running you should be able to grep something with systemctl status | grep Xorg, else it should return nothing.

      Not sure what the numbered buttons are about.

      dmesg has a command with the same name that outputs it. I don’t think is is normally available nowadays, replaced by sudo journalctl. Not sure what it might tell you. But if it outputs some warning about input devices maybe?

      Otherwise, to see if it is an X vs Wayland issue, you can perhaps try and start a X- or wayland-only window manager. On the login screen, you may have options for sessions like ‘gnome’ and ‘gnome (X)’, one should be wayland and the other X. If nothing looks like that, then you can install i3 (X-only) and Sway (wayland-only). Logout of either by… I think it is mod+shift+e. If you start one, test, try the other. If they both fail, it is the fault of something on some lower level, otherwise you atleast know if it is an X or wayland specific error.

        • mumblerfish@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          Ah, did not know the grep would be visible there. OK. Then you are running wayland. If you try and install i3 (which only works with X). Launching i3 from the login prompt will start X, and then you can try the mouse again. If it works there it is a wayland problem.

            • mumblerfish@lemmy.world
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              11 months ago

              Not sure. I know very little about wayland. It can be that the WM you are running supports both X and Wayland. If that is the case, it may already exist a session option in the login prompt for that. If there are no such option you would have to research how to make one if it is possible for that wm. Otherwise you can also just try startx, I don’t remember the syntax, but you should be able just start X with a terminal with that command (ctrl+alt+backspace used to be the keys to shut it down). So if all you need is a terminal to perform your test (or can be started from a terminal), that should work too.

              All of this is just to figure out if it is a wayland issue or not. After that I’m not sure what to do anyway. Perhaps there is some other path that will solve your issue more directly, but nothing comes to mind.