Clickpad software button behavior
“Clickpads” are touchpads without separate physical buttons. Instead, the whole touchpad acts as a button and left or right button clicks are distinguished by the location of the fingers or the number of fingers on the touchpad. “ClickPad” is a trademark by Synaptics Inc. but for simplicity we refer to any touchpad with the above feature as Clickpad, regardless of the manufacturer.
The kernel marks clickpads with the INPUT_PROP_BUTTONPAD property. Without this property, libinput would not know whether a touchpad is a clickpad or not. To perform a right-click on a Clickpad, libinput provides Software button areas and Clickfinger behavior.
Note
The term “click” refers refer to a physical button press and/or release of the touchpad, the term “button event” refers to the events generated by libinput in response to a click.
Software button areas
The bottom of the touchpad is split into three distinct areas generate left, middle or right button events on click. The height of the button area depends on the hardware but is usually around 10mm.
Left, right and middle button events can be triggered as follows:
if a finger is in the main area or the left button area, a click generates left button events.
if a finger is in the right area, a click generates right button events.
if a finger is in the middle area, a click generates middle button events.
The middle button is always centered on the touchpad and smaller in size than the left or right button. The actual size is device-dependent. Many touchpads do not have visible markings so the exact location of the button is unfortunately not visibly obvious.
Note
If middle button emulation is enabled on a clickpad, only left and right button areas are available.
If fingers are down in the main area in addition to fingers in the left or right button area, those fingers are are ignored. A release event always releases the buttons logically down, regardless of the current finger position
The movement of a finger can alter the button area behavior:
if a finger starts in the main area and moves into the software button area, the software buttons do not apply to that finger
once a finger has moved out of the button area, it cannot move back in and trigger a right or middle button event
a finger moving within the software button area does not move the pointer
once a finger moves out out of the button area it will control the pointer (this only applies if there is no other finger down on the touchpad)
On some touchpads, notably the 2015 Lenovo X1 Carbon 3rd series, the very bottom end of the touchpad is outside of the sensor range but it is possible to trigger a physical click there. To libinput, the click merely shows up as a left button click without any positional finger data and it is impossible to determine whether it is a left or a right click. libinput ignores such button clicks, this behavior is intentional.
Clickfinger behavior
This is the default behavior on Apple touchpads. Here, a left, right, middle button event is generated when one, two, or three fingers are held down on the touchpad when a physical click is generated. The location of the fingers does not matter and there are no software-defined button areas.
On some touchpads, libinput imposes a limit on how the fingers may be placed on the touchpad. In the most common use-case this allows for a user to trigger a click with the thumb while leaving the pointer-moving finger on the touchpad.
In the illustration above the red area marks the proximity area around the first finger. Since the thumb is outside of that area libinput considers the click a single-finger click rather than a two-finger click.
Special Clickpads
The Lenovo *40 series laptops have a clickpad that provides two software button sections, one at the top and one at the bottom. See Lenovo *40 series touchpad support for details on the top software button.
Some Clickpads, notably some Cypress ones, perform right button detection in firmware and appear to userspace as if the touchpad had physical buttons. While physically clickpads, these are not handled by the software and treated like traditional touchpads.