X keyboard extension

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The X keyboard extension, or XKB, defines the way keyboards codes are handled in X, and provides access to internal translation tables. It is the basic mechanism that allows using multiple keyboard layouts in X.

This article describes how to modify and create keyboard layouts. If you are looking for how to configure your keyboard, see Xorg/Keyboard configuration.

Warning: While working with XKB, it is possible that your X server may hang or crash, or that your keyboard may be put into an unusable state that can only be reverted by terminating your current session. Before making any changes, please follow #Precautions and preparations to make sure you can recover.

Precautions and preparations

To prepare for the possibility of your X server crashing or your keyboard being put into an unusable state:

  1. Make sure you have some way to terminate the session without using your keyboard. (Aside from a power button, having some way to killall X or reboot the host remotely may be a good idea.)
  2. Make sure you have saved all your work to prevent data loss.
  3. If you use GNOME, you can install gnome-tweaks to recover settings with the mouse. For example, when the keyboard becomes unusable, navigate to Keyboard & Mouse > Additional Layout Options with the mouse, and then check and uncheck all settings, which will reset the keyboard to the system behaviour.
Tip: To make debugging easier, stop applications such as xxkb(1) that switch keyboard layouts or otherwise actively change XKB state.

Getting and setting XKB layout

Using rules

Look inside /usr/share/X11/xkb/rules/ for *.lst files or the XKB Homepage to get ideas on how to configure rules. Your own configurations can go in /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d/.

For example one may want to remap their Caps Lock key to Escape:

90-custom-kbd.conf
Section "InputClass"
    Identifier "keyboard defaults"
    MatchIsKeyboard "on"

    Option "XKbOptions" "caps:escape"
EndSection
Note: Even if you faithfully recreate a working setxkbmap(1) command as an Xorg configuration file, it might not take effect at all due to Xorg bugs. [1] [2]

Using keymap

Use xkbcomp(1) (package xorg-xkbcomp) to manipulate XKB data. To get current configuration, run

$ xkbcomp $DISPLAY output.xkb

To upload the data back to the server, run

$ xkbcomp input.xkb $DISPLAY

Note that without $DISPLAY argument xkbcomp(1) will try to compile .xkb file into (mostly useless) .xkm file, without uploading anything to the server. It will, however, check the syntax and report errors.

Once the layout is ready, save it as ~/.Xkeymap and make ~/.xinitrc load it on startup:

~/.xinitrc
...

test -f ~/.Xkeymap && xkbcomp ~/.Xkeymap $DISPLAY

The actual file name is irrelevant. Note that unlike standard system-wide configuration via xorg.conf(5), this is a per-user keymap. Also, there is no problem changing XKB configuration while X is running.

Basic information on XKB

The core XKB functionality is quite simple, and it is necessary to have an idea on how it works before working on the keymaps.

Tools and values

Use xev (package xorg-xev) to get keycodes and to check how your keymap works.

$ xev -event keyboard
   KeyPress event, serial 45, synthetic NO, window 0x2200001,
       root 0xad, subw 0x0, time 183176240, (796,109), root:(867,413),
       state 0x1, keycode 21 (keysym 0x2b, plus), same_screen YES,
       XLookupString gives 1 bytes: (2b) "+"
       XmbLookupString gives 1 bytes: (2b) "+"
       XFilterEvent returns: False

Note keycode 21, state 0x1 and keysym 0x2b aka plus. Keycode 21 is what input device supplied to X, typically a physical key index of some sort. The state represents modifier keys, 0x01 is Shift. Keycode together with the state value is what X sends to the application in XKeyEvent(3) structure. Keysym and corresponding string is what the client obtained using XLookupString(3) and friends.

The bits in the state field have pre-defined names: Shift, Lock, Control, Mod1, Mod2, Mod3, Mod4 and Mod5, lowest to highest. Thus, Ctrl+Shift is 0x05, and so on. Client applications typically only check the bits they need, so an application with normal keyboard input and Ctrl+key shortcuts usually makes no distinction between Control and Control+Mod3 states.

Keysyms are numeric, too. A lot of them have names, declared in /usr/include/X11/keysymdef.h with KP_ prefix. However, the number is what clients actually receive. Keysyms are only important when an application expects some particular values; typically that is keys like arrows, Enter, Backspace, F-keys, and various shortcuts. For the rest, the string is used.

Keycode translation

XKB works mostly at the XLookupString stage, transforming incoming keycode into keysym according to its own internal state, which is group and state values:

   (keycode, group, state) → keysym

Group typically represents a "layout", as in US-English, French-AZERTY, Russian, Greek etc. There can be at most 4 groups.

Internally, the translation involves additional steps:

   (keycode [, group]) → type
   (state, type) → level
   (keycode, group, level) → S[keycode][group][level]

with S being the translation table (actually called xkb_symbols, see below).

Types are used to tell which modifiers affect which keys; essentially it is a way to reduce the third dimension of S. For example, a typical alphanumeric key is only affected by Shift, so its type is set to TWO_LEVEL, and

   (state, TWO_LEVEL) → level = ((state >> 0) & 0x01) = state & 0x01

is either 0 or 1. Thus it is S[keycode][0..4][0..1] instead of S[keycode][0..4][0..256].

Keysyms and states

In X terms, a and Ctrl+a means same keysym and different states, but a and A are different keysyms.

Generally it is XKB task to provide different keysyms, but states are handled later by individual applications.

Also, states in XKB have somewhat delayed effect, that is, you must have the state set prior to pressing a key.

Example: Ctrl+h can be configured to act as backspace in rxvt (application setting). This way rxvt will receive h keysym with Control bit set in the state value, and it will be clearly different from Backspace keysym. Alternatively, XKB can be used to make Ctrl+h combination generate Backspace keysym with Control bit set; in this case, rxvt will not see any difference between physical Backspace key and h key as long as Ctrl key is pressed. Making Ctrl+h combination generate Backspace keysym with no Control bit set is an XKB task, too, but it is much more difficult to implement than Control+Backspace.

Actions

Keysym obtained from the table above can also trigger some action:

   (keysym, state) → action

For XKB, setting or locking a modifier bit is an action, and so is any X server interaction like switching consoles, terminating the server, moving pointer etc. Actions do not generally affect keysyms, and generating a keysym is not an action.

There is only one possible action for each (keysym, state) pair.

Editing the layout

Start with whatever default configuration your server has. Whenever possible, make the changes gradually and test them.

The .xkb file produced by xkbcomp(1) is a simple text file. C++ style comments, // till the end of line, are allowed. Section names, as in xkb_keycodes "name-here", are irrelevant at this point and can be omitted.

xkb_keycodes

Keycode definition. The rest of the file does not use numeric keycodes, only symbolic keylabels defined in this section.

It is a good idea to leave only those keys the keyboard in question actually has here.

The labels themselves are arbitrary. They are only used in xkb_symbols section later.

xkb_types

This section comes before xkb_symbols, so take a look, but try not to make changes yet. Standard types depend a lot on virtual modifiers, which will be explained later. For now, just find the types you need. Start with the following: ONE_LEVEL, TWO_LEVEL, ALPHABETIC.

ONE_LEVEL keys are not affected by modifiers; typically it is Enter, Space, Escape, F keys, Shift/Alt/Ctrl keys and so on. TWO_LEVEL and ALPHABETIC keys produce different keysyms depending on Shift state. All alphanumeric keys are of these types. ALPHABETIC additionally respects CapsLock.

Type description themselves are quite simple. The line

   modifiers= Shift+NumLock+LevelThree;

means keys of this type are affected by Shift, NumLock and LevelThree bits only. Map lines like

   map[Shift+LevelThree]= Level4;

define which combination corresponds to which level value. xkbcomp(1) uses "LevelN" when dumping the data, but short and much more convenient "N" can be used as well.

level_name lines are irrelevant and can be ignored.

xkb_compatibility

Action definitions (interpret) and keyboard LEDs (indicator) among other things. You can remove stuff you do not have or do not use, like keypad actions, mouse control or extra modifiers.

Note that key+AnyOfOrNone(all) is equivalent to just key, but key is much easier to read.

Check groups switching if you need it. LockGroup(group=N) can be useful if you have four groups, otherwise ISO_Next_Group/ISO_Prev_Group are enough. LatchGroup can be useful for unusual setups.

xkb_symbols

The main section that defines what each key does. Syntax:

   key <LABL> { [ G1L1, G1L2, G1L3, ... ], [ G2L1, G2L2, G2L3, ... ], ... }

<LABL> is keylabel from xkb_keycodes section, GiLj is keysym for group i level j. The number of keysyms in each group must match the number of levels defined for this type (xkbcomp(1) will warn you if it does not).

Check /usr/include/X11/keysymdef.h for the list of possible keysyms. Aside from those listed, you can also use Unnnn for Unicode symbol with hex code nnnn, e.g. U0301 for combining acute accent. Note that a and U0061 are treated differently (for instance, most applications expect Ctrl+a, not Ctrl+U0061 because their numeric values are different.

Key types are also specified here, either as

   key.type = "T1";
   key <...> { ... };
   key <...> { ... };
   key <...> { ... };
   key.type = "T2";
   key <...> { ... };
   key <...> { ... };

or individually for each key:

   key <...> { type = "T", [ .... ], [ .... ] };

Key type may be different in different groups. This is somewhat counter-intuitive, but actually has some useful applications. To set types for each group, use this:

   key <...> { type[1] = "T1", type[2] = "T2", [ ... ], [ ... ] };

You can set labels for the groups using

   name[1] = "EN";     // group 1
   name[2] = "RU";     // group 2
   name[3] = "UA";     // group 3

This is what xxkb(1) will show if labels are enabled there.

The section also contains modifier_map lines. Leave them alone for now, or check Virtual Modifiers below.

xkb_geometry

A completely irrelevant section describing physical keyboard layout. Can be deleted without any consequences.

Basic examples

Check your existing layout first, as it likely contains standard definition for many common keys.

Throughout the text, "xkb_keycodes { text }" means "text" should be added to xkb_keycodes section. Whenever it is clear from context, section names are omitted.

Simple key assignment

Enabling additional (aka multimedia) keys:

   xkb_keycodes {
       <VOL-> = 122;       // check with xev
       <VOL+> = 123;
   }
   
   xkb_symbols {
       key.type = "ONE_LEVEL";
       key <VOL-> { [ XF86AudioLowerVolume ] };
       key <VOL+> { [ XF86AudioRaiseVolume ] };
   }

Escape on CapsLock, for Vim users mostly:

   key.type = "ONE_LEVEL";
   key <CAPS> { [ Escape ] };

Exchanging Ins and PrintScreen (in case they are reversed — happens on Dell laptop keyboards):

   key.type = "ONE_LEVEL";
   key <IN?>  { [    Print ] };
   key <PRSC> { [   Insert ] };

On some HP laptop keyboards, the above does not work. Instead, the keycodes themselves must be redefined:

   partial xkb_keycodes "insert" {
       alias <I118> = <IN?>;
       <INS>  = 218;
       <I218> = 118;
   };

Changing shift to a sticky key version:

replace

   key <LFSH> {         [         Shift_L ] };

with

   key <LFSH> {         [         ISO_Level2_Latch ] };

You might also need to add the following to /usr/share/X11/xkb/compat/basic

   interpret ISO_Level2_Latch+AnyOf(all) {
       useModMapMods=level1;
       action= LatchMods(modifiers=Shift,clearLocks,latchToLock);
   };
   interpret ISO_Level2_Latch+AnyOfOrNone(all) {
       action= LatchMods(modifiers=Shift,clearLocks,latchToLock);
   };

Multiple layouts

For regular alphanumeric keys, just add a second/third/fourth [ ] section to the key definition:

   key.type = "ALPHABETIC";
   key <AD01> { [ q, Q ], [ a, A ] };      // QWERTY-AZERTY
   key <AC02> { [        s,        S ],        // two cyrillic layouts
                [    U044B,    U042B ],
                [    U0456,    U0406 ] };

Layout switching is done by triggering action LockGroup:

   interpret ISO_Next_Group { action = LockGroup(group=+1); };
   interpret ISO_Prev_Group { action = LockGroup(group=-1); };

Typically this means placing ISO_Next_Group and ISO_Prev_Group keysyms in correct group/level positions. Note that groups wrap, so if you have two groups and hit ISO_Next_Group twice, you will return to the group you started with.

Cyclic switching between two or more layouts with a dedicated key:

   key.type = "ONE_LEVEL";
   key <RWIN> { [ ISO_Next_Group ] }

If you have more than two layouts and some keys to spare, it may be a better idea to have a dedicated key for each layout. Example for three layouts:

   key.type = "ONE_LEVEL";
   key <RCTL> { [ ISO_Next_Group ],    // g1: switch to g2
                [ ISO_Prev_Group ],    // g2: switch back to g1
                [ ISO_Prev_Group ] };  // g3: switch to g2
   key <MENU> { [ ISO_Prev_Group ],    // g1: switch to g3
                [ ISO_Next_Group ],    // g2: switch to g3
                [ ISO_Next_Group ] };  // g3: switch back to g1

With four layouts, you will likely have to use ISO_First_Group and ISO_Last_Group.

The same idea can be implemented with only one key by utilizing TWO_LEVEL type:

   key.type = "TWO_LEVEL";
   key <MENU> { [ ISO_Next_Group, ISO_Prev_Group ],   
                [ ISO_Prev_Group, ISO_Next_Group ],   
                [ ISO_Prev_Group, ISO_Next_Group ] }; 

This way it is Menu for group 2 and Shift-Menu for group 3. To use Ctrl or Alt instead of Shift, replace TWO_LEVEL with PC_CONTROL_LEVEL2 or PC_ALT_LEVEL2 types respectively.

Switching using two modifier keys (Shift+Shift, Ctrl+Shift etc) can be done by using something other than ONE_LEVEL for these keys. Shift+Shift example:

   key.type = "TWO_LEVEL";
   key <LFSH> { [ Shift_L, ISO_Prev_Group ] };
   key <RTSH> { [ Shift_R, ISO_Next_Group ] };

To latch a group (aka toggle; set for the time you hold the key only), use LatchGroup action typically bound to ISO_Group_Latch keysym:

   key <RCTL> { [ ISO_Group_Latch ] }

Adjust ISO_Group_Latch definition in xkb_compatibility section to use the right group:

   interpret ISO_Group_Latch { action = LatchGroup(group=3); };

Check /usr/share/X11/xkb/symbols/group for more standard examples.

Caps hjkl as vimlike arrow keys

This article or section needs language, wiki syntax or style improvements. See Help:Style for reference.

Reason: The purpose of this section is not clear. (Discuss in Talk:X keyboard extension)

Creating keymappings that clear modifiers from the keypress is necessary if the target key is to be used in keyboard shortcuts. For instance, highlighting text from the main keyboard (Shift+Left), or changing chats in most messengers (Alt+Down) will not work if there is an additional Caps modifier sent. However, an additional modifier must be sent if a user rebinds a letter key by simply putting the keysym in the symbols section. Rebinding as follows permits functionality like AHK's blind command.

The types section (which defines layer mapping) must contain an entry such that:

  • When no modifiers are pressed, the first level of keysyms is used (lowercase letters).
  • When Shift only is pressed, the second level of keysyms is used (capital letters).
  • When Lock only is pressed, the third level of keysyms is used (the arrow keys)
  • When Shift and Lock are pressed, the third level of keysyms is also used (shift+arrow keys).

Add this to the bottom of your types section:

 xkb_types "complete" {
   ...
   type "CUST_CAPSLOCK" {
       modifiers= Shift+Lock; 
       map[Shift] = Level2;            //maps shift and no Lock. Shift+Alt goes here, too, because Alt isn't in modifiers.
       map[Lock] = Level3;
       map[Shift+Lock] = Level3;       //maps shift and Lock. Shift+Lock+Alt goes here, too.
       level_name[Level1]= "Base";
       level_name[Level2]= "Shift";
       level_name[Level3]= "Lock";
   };
 };

Now change caps from a lock (toggle) to a set (press) by modifying the already existing definition in compatability from LockMods to SetMods:

(Note that this means you cannot use capslock like normal)

 xkb_compatibility "complete" {
   ...
   interpret Caps_Lock+AnyOfOrNone(all) {
       action= SetMods(modifiers=Lock);
   };
   ...
 };

Finally, modify your symbols file as follows.

 xkb_symbols "pc_us_inet(evdev)" {
   ...
   key <AC06> {
       type= "CUST_CAPSLOCK",
       symbols[Group1]= [               h,               H,               Left],
       actions[Group1]= [      NoAction(),      NoAction(),   RedirectKey(keycode=<LEFT>, clearmods=Lock) ]
  };

Additional symbols

Typing more with the same keys.

Compose key

Easy to set up and extremely useful for entering common Unicode characters.

   key <RALT> { [ Multi_key ] };

Level3

The idea is similar to Alt or AltGr in their original meaning: alphanumeric keys get additional characters, activated by holding down some modifier key.

First of all, setting up the modifier.

   xkb_symbols { 
       key <LWIN> { [ISO_Level3_Shift ] };
       modifier_map Mod5 { ISO_Level3_Shift };
   }

Also, the following should already be defined in the relevant sections, but in case it is not:

   xkb_compatibility {
       interpret ISO_Level3_Shift { action= SetMods(modifiers=Mod5); };
   }
   
   xkb_types {
       type "THREE_LEVEL" {
           modifiers= Shift+Mod5;
           map[Shift]= Level2;
           map[Mod5]= Level3;
           map[Shift+Mod5]= Level3;
           level_name[Level1]= "Base";
           level_name[Level2]= "Shift";
           level_name[Level3]= "Level3";
       };
       type "FOUR_LEVEL" {
           modifiers= Shift+LevelThree;
           map[Shift]= Level2;
           map[LevelThree]= Level3;
           map[Shift+LevelThree]= Level4;
           level_name[Level1]= "Base";
           level_name[Level2]= "Shift";
           level_name[Level3]= "Alt Base";
           level_name[Level4]= "Shift Alt";
       };
   }

Note standard definitions have LevelThree instead of Mod5 in xkb_compatibility and xkb_types. As long as modifier_map above uses Mod5, there is no practical difference, you will end up using Mod5 bit anyway.

Now, the keys themselves, vi-style cursors in this case:

   key.type = "THREE_LEVEL";
   key <AC06> { [ h, H,  Left ] };
   key <AC07> { [ j, J,  Down ] };
   key <AC08> { [ k, K,    Up ] };
   key <AC09> { [ l, L, Right ] };

As you may find out using xev(1), this produces Mod5+Left instead of just Left. But that is ok as most applications ignore state bits they do not use. For an alternative solution, check Overlays below.

Meta, Super and Hyper

Real modifiers

Some applications (notably Emacs) allow meaningful use of higher state bits. It is usually assumed there are modifier keys called Meta, Super and Hyper on the keyboard beside standard Shift, Ctrl and Alt, which control these bits.

From XKB point of view this means setting Mod2, Mod3, Mod4 and Mod5 modifier bits. Because all you need is the bits themselves, there is no need to edit types like in the Level3 example above.

   xkb_compatibility {
       interpret Super_L { action = SetMods(modifiers=Mod3); };
   }
   xkb_symbols {
       key <LWIN> { [ Super_L ] };
       modifier_map Mod3 { Super_L };
   }

Standard definitions use Super modifier instead of Mod3 in xkb_compatibility. You can keep that, just make sure modifier_map line is in place.

Keep in mind there is no strict correspondence between ModN and named modifiers like Super, Hyper or even Alt. Mod1 is the only one that is widely used; some applications call it Meta, some Alt. For the others, check how particular application treats state bits, and/or check Virtual modifiers below.

Keysym tracking

At least one application (openbox) is known to track KeyPress/KeyRelease events for Meta_[LR], Super_[LR] and Hyper_[LR] keysyms instead of relying on the state bits. In such case

   xkb_symbols {
       key <LWIN> { [ Super_L ] };
   }

is enough and you can omit interpret and modifier_map lines.

Speaking of Openbox, note it actually allows both methods: "S-h" tracks Super_[LR] events while "Mod3-h" checks relevant state bit.

Preset configuration

XKB is often configured by specifying XkbTypes/XkbCompat/XkbSymbols, or XkbModel/XkbLayout (+XkbVariant/XkbOptions), or XkbKeymap, typically in /etc/X11/xorg.conf or /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d/*.conf, like this:

   Option  "XkbModel"    "thinkpad60"                                                                                                  
   Option  "XkbLayout"   "us,sk,de"                                                                                                    
   Option  "XkbVariant"  "altgr-intl,qwerty,"                                                                                          
   Option  "XkbOptions"  "grp:menu_toggle,grp_led:caps"        

These values define full XKB map (the one that can be dumped by xkbcomp(1)) by combining several files from /usr/share/X11/xkb. In fact, equivalent .xkb file for xkbcomp(1) can be obtained using setxkbmap -print:

$ setxkbmap -model thinkpad60 -layout us,sk,de -variant altgr-intl,qwerty \
       -option -option grp:menu_toggle -option grp_led:caps -print

Note include statements in the output. The files for each section are fetched from relevant subdirectories under /usr/share/X11/xkb, i.e.

   xkb_types { include "complete" };

means xkbcomp(1) will look for /usr/share/X11/xkb/types/complete. Plus signs mean concatenation, so

   xkb_keycodes { include "evdev+aliases(qwerty)" };

means

   xkb_keycodes {
       include "evdev";
       include "aliases(qwerty)";
   };

Parenthesis select named section from the file. Check /usr/share/X11/xkb/keycodes/aliases and note

   xkb_keycodes "qwerty" { ... };

this is the part aliases(qwerty) refers to. Finally, colons allow shifting parts of layout to another group.

Unlike XkbTypes/XkbCompat/XkbSymbols/XkbGeometry values, which define relevant .xkb file sections directly, XkbModel, XkbLayout and XkbRules refer to additional non-xkb files found under /usr/share/X11/xkb/rules/ that match model and layout values to specific symbols and geometry. XkbKeymap refers to complete keymaps. Check Ivan Pascal page for detailed description.

Just like with xkbcomp(1) approach, this kind of configuration can be done on the fly: use setxkbmap(1) without -print option.

The files from /usr/share/X11/xkb are a good source of examples, especially when it comes to standard keyboard features with nontrivial XKB implementation (e.g. keypad/NumLock handling). Also, these are the files you have to edit to push your changes upstream. Check X Keyboard Config Rules before doing it though.

xmodmap

xmodmap is not directly related to XKB; it uses different (pre-XKB) ideas on how keycodes are processed within X. In particular, it lacks the notion of groups and types, so trying to set more than one keysym per key is not likely to work. In general, except for the simplest modifications of keymaps or pointer button mappings, xkbcomp(1) should be used instead.

Indicators

As in "keyboard LEDs". Indicator names are used to match the to the physical LEDs in xkb_keycodes section. Otherwise, they are irrelevant. Indicators not matched to any LED are called "virtual"; xkbvleds(1) (package xorg-xkbutils) can be used to check their state. Example:

   xkb_keycodes {
       indicator 1 = "LED1";       // first physical LED
   }

Indicators always reflect specified part of XKB internal state. Two common modes is showing modifier state:

   xkb_compatibility {
       indicator "LED1" { modifiers = Lock; }; // CapsLock indicator
   }

or current group:

   xkb_compatibility {
       indicator "LED1" { groups = 0x06; };    // "group 2 or group 3 is active"
   }

The values are bitmasks. For groups, bit 1 is group 1, bit 2 is group 2 and so on.

Modifiers and types

At some point it may become necessary to clean up types section, and/or to introduce unusual types.

Types and modifiers are tightly connected, so it makes a lot of sense to start with the modifier bits first, before doing anything with the type descriptions.

Decide which bits you will use. There are only eight of them, and of those, Shift, Control and Mod1 are widely used in applications, and Lock (aka CapsLock) has pre-defined meaning which also may be hard to override. The remaining four, however, are fair play.

Warning: four standard types, ONE_LEVEL, TWO_LEVEL, ALPHABETIC and KEYPAD, receive special treatment in xkbcomp(1). They may work differently just because they are named this way. Avoid deleting them. If some changes do not work as expected, try adding a new type instead.

Using real modifiers in standard types

Depending of your base configuration, there may be a lot of unused standard types like EIGHT_LEVEL or PC_RCONTROL_LEVEL2. Remove them to avoid doing unnecessary work.

Now, some standard types use virtual modifiers. If you decide to use them, check Virtual modifiers below and skip this section. Otherwise, it is a good idea to get rid of them completely. Check the types you need, and either replace them with corresponding real ones, or remove relevant definitions. Example:

   type "KEYPAD" {
       modifiers= Shift+NumLock;
       map[Shift]= Level2;
       map[NumLock]= Level2;
       level_name[Level1]= "Base";
       level_name[Level2]= "Number";
   };

if you use Mod2 for NumLock, change the type to

   type "KEYPAD" {
       modifiers= Shift+Mod2;
       map[Shift]= Level2;
       map[Mod2]= Level2;
       level_name[Level1]= "Base";
       level_name[Level2]= "Number";
   };

if you are not going to have NumLock modifier, change it to

   type "KEYPAD" {
       modifiers= Shift;
       map[Shift]= Level2;
       level_name[Level1]= "Base";
       level_name[Level2]= "Number";
   };

Do the same in xkb_compatibility section too. Once it is done, you should be able to remove all "virtual_modifiers" lines in the file.

Switching a single modifier bit

Basically all you need is a keysym with a relevant interpretation entry. Example for Mod5 switching with LWIN key, with ISO_Level3_Shift for keysym:

   xkb_compatibility {
       interpret ISO_Level3_Shift { action = SetMods(modifiers=Mod5); };
   }
   
   xkb_symbols {
       key <LWIN> { [ISO_Level3_Shift ] };
   }

Aside from SetMods, you can also use LockMods or LatchMods. SetMods makes a regular "on while pressed" modifier key. LockMods makes an "on/off" switch like CapsLock or NumLock. LatchMods means "on until next keypress" aka sticky modifier

modifier_map

Modifier map is a table that maps each of eight modifier bits to at most 4 keys:

   modifier_map Mod1 { Alt_L, Alt_R };

In the core protocol, without XKB, it means more or less the same thing as

   interpret Alt_L { action = SetMods(modifiers=Mod1); };
   interpret Alt_R { action = SetMods(modifiers=Mod1); };

XKB does not use modifier map in its original meaning. Within XKB, its only function is to map virtual modifiers (see below).

However, the table is easily accessible by clients, and there is one counter-intuitive (but well-known) trick involving it: modifier map is used to tell which of ModX bits is Alt. Because of this, it is a good idea to have one modifier mapped to Alt_L or Alt_R as shown above. Unless you have very good reasons to do otherwise, it should be Mod1.

Multiple keyboards

XKB allows setting keymap for a single connected physical keyboard only. This feature can be extremely useful for multi-keyboard setups when keyboards in question are different; consider a laptop with a full-size USB keyboard attached.

First of all, use xinput (package xorg-xinput) to get device IDs:

   AT Translated Set 2 keyboard                id=11   [slave  keyboard (3)]

Now,

$ xkbcomp -i 11 file.xkb $DISPLAY

or

$ setxkbmap -device 11 ...

will set keymap for specified keyboard only. Dumping XKB configuration works too:

$ xkbcomp -i 11 $DISPLAY file.xkb

Note xkbcomp -i11 will not work and will not give a clear error message either. Make sure you have space after -i.

Debugging XKB

When keys do not work as expected, the first thing to check is XKB internal state: modifiers, effective group and control bits. All three can be used to drive LEDs; use xkbvleds(1) to check them

   indicator "LED1" { modifiers = Lock; };
   indicator "LED2" { groups = 2; };
   indicator "LED3" { controls = audiblebell; };

Additionally, xkbwatch(1) shows all (real) modifiers together with their lock/latch status. Modifiers are also reported by xev(1). xxkb(1) can be used to monitor effective group, but make sure two_state mode is off.

In case interpretations section does not work well, make sure to check for duplicated "interpret" blocks. Better yet, try commenting out anything related to specific keysym. See section 9.2 for explanation.

It also makes sense to check what exactly the server got by downloading the keymap back with

$ xkbcomp $DISPLAY out.xkb

The results tend to be different from the input file. There is no known work-around for this.

Virtual Modifiers

One of the most troublesome parts of XKB, virtual modifiers appear prominently in all standard keymaps, despite being a relatively minor and mostly useless feature. The term itself is grossly misleading, and most of the docs do not help much either.

So, first of all: virtual modifiers are not modifiers in the same way real modifiers are. If anything, it is a way to name some of the real modifiers. They are not 16 more bits that can be used in level definitions. They are 16 possible names, each referring to one (or some, or none) of the 8 modifier bits.

Real modifier bits are called Shift, Lock, Control and Mod1-Mod5. There are no Alt among them. Virtual modifiers were introduced to allow saying something like

   #define Alt Mod1

to applications willing to use this information.

It is possible to make a usable layout without defining virtual modifiers at all. Among standard modifiers, only Alt/Meta actually need such treatment, because Shift and Control are real modifiers anyway and NumLock is not normally used as a modifier.

Also, unlike most of the keymap-related things that affect any application using basic Xlib functions, virtual modifiers must be queried explicitly using XKBlib calls. Not all applications actually do that.

Defining virtual modifiers

The mapping between virtual and real modifiers is defined in a rather weird way using keysyms as a medium. Refer to XKBproto for some reasons behind this. Real modifiers M are assigned to a key using

   modifier_map M { <keysym> };

Virtual modifiers V can be assigned to a key using

   interpret <keysym> { virtualMod = V; };

If a virtual modifier V shares at least one keysym with a real modifier M, it is bound to M.

Note that virtual modifier names are not pre-defined and must be declared in xkb_compatibility and xkb_types sections before using them:

   xkb_compatibility "complete" {
       virtual_modifiers LevelThree,NumLock,Alt;
   }

Keysym interpretation

Virtual modifiers can be used in interpret <keysym> blocks as if they were defined to the respective real modifiers. For a virtual modifier V not bound to any real modifier, this means

   #define V

type declaration, and

   interpret <key> { }
   interpret <key>+V { }

blocks will be treated as duplicates. Only one of them, the last one in the file, will work. xkbcomp(1) usually gives a warning in cases like this.

Client side notes

Handling XKB virtual modifiers on the client side requires some non-trivial server interaction. Most applications just do not bother, sticking with 8 real modifiers supplied in XKeyEvent.state.

However, it is possible for an application to obtain virtual modifiers associated with a key press. Gtk, for instance, has [3] which may or may not be used in particular application.

Some others may implement something that looks like virtual modifier support, but actually is not. Check Openbox example in section 5.3.3.2. Regarding Alt handling, check section 8.3.

XKB control bits

A bunch of bit flags affecting various aspects of XKB functionality. To control them, use {Set,Latch,Lock}Controls actions.

Mouse control

XKB allows controlling mouse pointer from keyboard. When set up properly, it can be extremely useful. However, its usability depends a lot on particular physical keyboard layout and on user's individual preferences.

From XKB point of view it is relatively simple to implement, one should just trigger relevant actions. Fairly complete implementation can be found in /usr/share/X11/xkb/compat/mousekeys.

Note that the actions will not work unless MouseKeys control bit is set:

   interpret Pointer_EnableKeys { action= LockControls(controls=MouseKeys); };

Because most keyboards do not have dedicated mouse control keys, combining MouseKeys and one of the Overlay flags may be a good idea:

   interpret Pointer_EnableKeys { action= LockControls(controls=MouseKeys+Overlay1); };

This allows moving pointer control keys to appropriate overlay block:

   xkb_keycodes {
       <MUP> = 218;
       <MDWN> = 212;
       <MLFT> = 214;
       <MRHT> = 216;
   }

   xkb_symbols {
       key   <UP> { [    Up ], overlay1 = <MUP> };
       key <LEFT> { [  Left ], overlay1 = <MLFT> };
       key <RGHT> { [ Right ], overlay1 = <MRHT> };
       key <DOWN> { [  Down ], overlay1 = <MDWN> };

       key <MUP>  { [ Pointer_Up ] };
       key <MDWN> { [ Pointer_Down ] };
       key <MLFT> { [ Pointer_Left ] };
       key <MRHT> { [ Pointer_Right ] };
   }

This way it is possible to assign non-mouse actions to the keys used to control mouse, and thus, for example, use modifier keys to generate mouse buttons events.

Local XKB folder

You can set an X keymap from a local file using the following command:

$ xkbcomp keymap.xkb $DISPLAY

where keymap.xkb must have a structure like

keymap.xkb
xkb_keymap {
    xkb_keycodes  { ... };
    xkb_types     { ... };
    xkb_compat    { ... };
    xkb_symbols   { ... };

    // Geometry is completely optional.
    // xkb_geometry  { include "pc(pc104)" };
};

You can use includes from this file, where the inclusion refer to a local folder instead of /usr/share/X11/xkb. You need to use the -I/path/ parameter of xkbcomp(1) for that. Full example:

$ xkbcomp -I$HOME/.xkb $HOME/.keymap.xkb $DISPLAY
$HOME/.keymap.xkb
xkb_keymap {
    xkb_keycodes  { include "evdev+aliases(qwerty)" };
    xkb_types     { include "complete" };
    xkb_compat    { include "complete" };
    xkb_symbols   { include "pc+custom+inet(evdev)" };
};

The symbol file must have the same name as specified in the xkb_symbols right above.

$HOME/.xkb/symbols/custom
partial alphanumeric_keys xkb_symbols "custom" { ... };

Configuration tools

Most desktop environments allow for changing XKB options via their settings managers. Other relevant tools include:

  • input-remapper-gitAUR - a GUI tool for key remapping.
  • klfcAUR - Keyboard Layout Files Creator is a CLI utility for generating layouts from a JSON specifiation into various formats.

Troubleshooting

Setting layout via xorg.conf or .xinitrc doesn't work

If you are able to sucessfully set an XKB layout after starting Xorg, via setxkbmap(1), but not at startup using an Xorg configuration file or ~/.xinitrc (either with xkbcomp(1) using a precompiled XKB map or setxkbmap(1)), then you might have an input method enabled which is overriding XKB. This behavior exists and can be disabled for Fcitx and Fcitx5.

I have an USB keyboard and the settings get lost upon unplugging it

Using rules instead of static keymap configuration will give you a more flexible and permanent key mapping that does not need to be reloaded manually (or by a script).

See also