jscal(1)jscal(1)NAMEjscal - joystick calibration and remapping program
SYNOPSISjscal [options] <device‐name>
DESCRIPTIONjscal calibrates joysticks and maps joystick axes and buttons. Cali‐
brating a joystick ensures the positions on the various axes are cor‐
rectly interpreted. Mapping axes and buttons allows the meanings of
the joystick's axes and buttons to be redefined.
On Debian systems the calibration settings can be stored and later
applied automatically using the jscal-store command.
OPTIONS-c, --calibrate
Calibrate the joystick.
-h, --help
Print out a summary of available options.
-s, --set-correction <nb_axes,type,precision,coefficients,...>
Sets correction to specified values. For each axis, specify the
correction type (0 for none, 1 for "broken line"), the preci‐
sion, and if necessary the correction coefficients ("broken
line" corrections take four coefficients).
-u, --set-mappings <nb_axes,axmap1,axmap2,...,nb_buttons,btnmap1,btn‐
map2,...>
Sets axis and button mappings. n_of_buttons can be set to 0 to
remap axes only.
-t, --test-center
Tests if the joystick is correctly calibrated. Returns 2 if the
axes are not calibrated, 3 if buttons were pressed, 1 if there
was any other error, and 0 on success.
-V, --version
Prints the version numbers of the running joystick driver and
that which jscal was compiled for.
-p, --print-correction
Prints the current correction settings. The format of the out‐
put is a jscal command line.
-q, --print-mappings
Prints the current axis and button mappings. The format of the
output is a jscal command line.
CALIBRATION
Using the Linux input system, joysticks are expected to produce values
between -32767 and 32767 for axes, with 0 meaning the joystick is cen‐
tred. Thus, full‐left should produce -32767 on the X axis, full‐right
32767 on the X axis, full‐forward -32767 on the Y axis, and so on.
Many joysticks and gamepads (especially older ones) are slightly mis‐
aligned; as a result they may not use the full range of values (for the
extremes of the axes), or more annoyingly they may not give 0 when cen‐
tred. Calibrating a joystick provides the kernel with information on a
joystick's real behaviour, which allows the kernel to correct various
joysticks' deficiencies and produce consistent output as far as joy‐
stick‐using software is concerned.
jstest(1) is useful to determine whether a joystick is calibrated: when
run, it should produce all 0s when the joystick is at rest, and each
axis should be able to produce the values -32767 and 32767. Analog
joysticks should produce values in between 0 and the extremes, but this
is not necessary; digital directional pads work fine with only the
three values.
SEE ALSOffset(1), jstest(1), jscal-store(1).
AUTHORSjscal was written by Vojtech Pavlik and improved by many others; see
the linuxconsole tools documentation for details.
This manual page was written by Stephen Kitt <steve@sk2.org>, for the
Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used by others).
jscal Jul 11, 2010 jscal(1)