PS/2 Mouse
Also be sure to read Mouse Input.
Overview
The PS/2 Mouse is a device that talks to a PS/2 controller using serial communication. Ideally, each different type of PS/2 controller driver should provide some sort of standard/simple "send byte/receive byte" interface, and the PS/2 Mouse driver would use this interface without caring about lower level details (like what type of PS/2 controller the device is plugged into).
Mouse Device Over PS/2
Here is the table of command a generic PS/2 compatible mouse understands:
Standard PS/2 Mouse Commands | |
---|---|
Byte | Description |
0xFF | Reset |
0xFE | Resend |
0xF6 | Set Defaults |
0xF5 | Disable Data Reporting |
0xF4 | Enable Data Reporting |
0xF3 | Set Sample Rate |
0xF2 | Get Device ID |
0xF0 | Set Remote Mode |
0xEE | Set Wrap Mode |
0xEC | Reset Wrap Mode |
0xEB | Read Data |
0xEA | Set Stream Mode |
0xE9 | Status Request |
The most common command reply is 0xFA from the master (mouse), which means acknowledge. You may then get a variable number of bytes afterwards depending on the command. You may also receive other command replies which may state that the master (mouse) has encountered an error decoding your command. For a more detailed list check out some of the links above or look through the Linux source tree.
First, you have to enable the mouse on the PS/2 bus. This requires sending one byte which is clocked over the PS/2 interface. You will then get a response regarding the result. By sending 0xF4 (Enable Data Reporting) the mouse should reply back with a 0xFA which means acknowledgement. Then afterwards as the mouse pointer is moved it will send back the generic packet format like below. Unless you enable an enhanced mode for the mouse (non-standard) this is what you will get when ever the mouse is moved.
Generic PS/2 Mouse Packet Bits | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
BYTE | 7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
0 | yo | xo | ys | xs | ao | bm | br | bl |
1 | xm | |||||||
2 | ym |
Code | Description |
---|---|
yo | Y-Axis Overflow |
xo | X-Axis Overflow |
ys | Y-Axis Sign Bit (9-Bit Y-Axis Relative Offset) |
xs | X-Axis Sign Bit (9-Bit X-Axis Relative Offset) |
ao | Always One |
bm | Button Middle (Normally Off = 0) |
br | Button Right (Normally Off = 0) |
bl | Button Left (Normally Off = 0) |
xm | X-Axis Movement Value |
ym | Y-Axis Movement Value |
Each X and Y axis value is relative. The mouse device does not track it's location in absolute coordinates. This should also be apparent by the 9-bit values. Instead, it sends back saying I moved this far to the left, to the right, down, or up. To keep track of a mouse position you need to accumulate these relative offsets into a absolute position offset in your code:
mouse_x = mouse_x + mouse_packet_rel_x mouse_y = mouse_y + mouse_packet_rel_y
Being these 9-bit values are signed the above pseudo would work.
Also, if you simply read the xm or ym fields you will get an 8-bit unsigned value. Which, if used as unsigned will yield incorrect behavior. If you convert it into a signed 8-bit value you will get behavior that is similar to correct, but strange artifacts will appear when the mouse is moved fast. The correct way to produce a 9-bit or greater signed value is as follows:
state = first_byte d = second_byte rel_x = d - ((state << 4) & 0x100) d = third_byte rel_y = d - ((state << 3) & 0x100)
The pseudo code above will cause ((state << 4) & 0x100) to equal 0x100 only if the signed bit (9'th bit stored in the first byte) is set. If the 9'th bit is set then the value is deemed negative, but the value in second_byte is not stored in one or two's complement form. It is instead stored as a positive 8-bit value. So, if second_byte is say a 2 then it will become 2 minus 0 since the negative (9'th bit) is off. But, if it is on then it will become 2 minus 0x100 which will produce the twos complement, or -2. It will also cause the register to be correctly sign extended no matter it's size.
Mouse Extensions
Here, an example of mouse that supports extensions. To maintain backwards compatibility you should have to activate these features through the PS/2 bus. Various mouse devices use different ways. Linux mouse drivers for example sometimes handle multiple different devices which all share the same standard packet format above, or at least support the compatibility mode described above.
IntelliMouse Explorer | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
BYTE | 7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
3 | vs | hs |
See Also
Articles
External Links
Implementations
- Linux (C,GPL)