This is useful to diagnose and measure advanced characteristics of your monitor, such as the presence of flicker, automatic brightness limiters, etc. The adapter also reports the grey-to-grey data of your screen in great detail, in fact it will report the light intensity response of your setup to a black-white transition, in nits at a granularity of 0.1ms. It will contextualize the results by breaking down which parts of the latency can be safely attributed to some element of your setup (refresh rate, response time.) and computing what remains, the 'unattributed lag', a measure of how well your setup performs compared to how it can be expected to.
Monitor refresh rates, emulator configurations, polling rate, latency stability - the app will look into everything it can check and search for potential issues, and comment on whether your results seem in line with what your hardware should afford. Please help me solve it.With the click of a button in the companion app, you can not only test the lag of your Slippi setup, but also get a report from said app on the configuration of your setup. Libinput High Resolution Wheel Scroll Enabled (335): 1 Libinput Scrolling Pixel Distance Default (334): 15 Libinput Scrolling Pixel Distance (333): 15 Libinput Horizontal Scroll Enabled (332): 1 Libinput Send Events Mode Enabled Default (296): 0, 0 Libinput Send Events Mode Enabled (295): 0, 0 Libinput Send Events Modes Available (294): 1, 1 Libinput Left Handed Enabled Default (330): 0 Libinput Accel Custom Scroll Step (328): 0.000000 Libinput Accel Custom Scroll Points (327): Libinput Accel Custom Motion Step (326): 0.000000 Libinput Accel Custom Motion Points (325):
Libinput Accel Custom Fallback Step (324): 0.000000 Libinput Accel Custom Fallback Points (323):
Libinput Accel Profile Enabled Default (322): 1, 0, 0 Libinput Accel Profile Enabled (321): 1, 0, 0 Libinput Accel Profiles Available (320): 1, 1, 1 Libinput Accel Speed Default (319): 0.000000 Libinput Middle Emulation Enabled Default (350): 0 Libinput Middle Emulation Enabled (349): 0 Libinput Click Method Enabled Default (348): 1, 0 Libinput Click Method Enabled (347): 1, 0 Libinput Click Methods Available (346): 1, 1 Libinput Scroll Method Enabled Default (313): 1, 0, 0 Libinput Scroll Method Enabled (312): 1, 0, 0 Libinput Scroll Methods Available (311): 1, 1, 0 Libinput Disable While Typing Enabled Default (345): 1 Libinput Disable While Typing Enabled (344): 1 Libinput Natural Scrolling Enabled Default (310): 0 Libinput Natural Scrolling Enabled (309): 1 Libinput Tapping Button Mapping Default (343): 1, 0 Libinput Tapping Button Mapping Enabled (342): 1, 0 Libinput Tapping Drag Lock Enabled Default (341): 0 Libinput Tapping Drag Lock Enabled (340): 0 Libinput Tapping Drag Enabled Default (339): 1 Libinput Tapping Enabled Default (337): 0 Let's see the events by filtering out the motion events: $ xinput test 9|grep -v motionĮvent 1 (left click) and event 2 (right click) have been triggered by me.Īll the other events (4, 5, 6, 7) have been triggered automatically while I was simply moving the touchpad. I just fresh installed Kubuntu but I have this very annoying problem that, out of the blue, make it so that a lot of touchpad events get randomly triggered (pressed and released) and in that timespan I cannot do anything, meaning that I cannot even move the mouse because it doesn't do anything, I guess because there are all these events that needs to be handled in the meantime.