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Handheld Daemon, a tool for configuring handheld devices.

Project description

Handheld Daemon (HHD)

Handheld Daemon is a project that aims to provide utilities for managing handheld devices. With features ranging from TDP controls, to controller remappings, and gamescope session management.

This configuration is exposed through an API, and there is already a Decky plugin for it (hhd-decky) and a web app for it (hhd.dev) that also works locally with Electron (hhd-ui).

It is the aim of this project to provide generic hid-based emulators for most mainstream controllers (xbox Elite, DS4, PS5, Joycons), so that users of devices can pick the best target for their device and its controls, which may change depending on the game.

Current Features (for both ROG Ally and Legion Go):

  • Fully functional DualSense and Dualsense Edge emulation
    • All buttons supported
    • Rumble feedback
    • Touchpad support (Steam Input as well)
    • LED remapping
  • Xbox 360 Style device emulation
    • No weird glyphs
    • Gyro and back button support (outside Steam)
  • Virtual Touchpad Emulation
    • Fixes left and right clicks within gamescope when using the Legion Go touchpad.
  • Power Button plugin for Big Picture/Steam Deck Mode
    • Short press makes Steam backup saves and wink before suspend.
    • Long press opens Steam power menu.
  • Hides the original Xbox controller
  • UI based Configuration
    • Generic API that can be used from bash scripts (through curl)
    • Decky Plugin
    • Webpac
  • Built-in updater.

Planned Features (in this order):

  • Steam Deck controller emulation
    • No weird glyphs
  • TDP Plugin
    • Will provide parity with Legion Space/Armory crate, hardware is already reverse engineered for the Legion Go.
  • High-end Over/Downclocking Utility for Ryzen processors
    • By hooking into the manufacturer ACPI API of the Ryzen platform, it will expose all TDP related parameters manufacturers have access to when spec'ing laptops.
    • No memory-relaxed requirement
    • Safe, as it is the method used by manufacturers (provided you stay within limits).

Installation Instructions

You can install the latest stable version of hhd from AUR or PyPi.

To ensure the gyro of the Legion Go with AMD SFH runs smoothly, a udev rule is included that disables the use of the accelerometer by the system (e.g., iio-sensor-proxy). This limitation will be lifted in the future, if a new driver is written for amd-sfh.

If you want display auto rotation to work, use the local steps and modify the 83-hhd.rules file to remove the iio udev rule. However, the gyro will not work properly.

Automatic Local Install

You can use the following bash scripts to install and uninstall Handheld Daemon (experimental). Then, update from Decky or the UI.

If your distro uses HandyGCCS/Handycon to fix certain key bindings by default you need to uninstall it. Disabling it is not enough, since it is autostarted by certain sessions (such as gamescope-session-plus). This includes both ChimeraOS and Nobara (see Installation Issues).

# Install
curl -L https://github.com/hhd-dev/hhd/raw/master/install.sh | sh

# Uninstall
curl -L https://github.com/hhd-dev/hhd/raw/master/uninstall.sh | sh

You can also install the Decky plugin.

curl -L https://github.com/hhd-dev/hhd-decky/raw/main/install.sh | sh

Then, reboot and go to hhd.dev to configure or read more in the configuration section.

Manual Local Installation

You can also install Handheld Daemon using a local package, which enables auto-updating. These are the same steps as done in the Automatic Install (also see Installation Issues).

# !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
# !!!! Delete HandyGCCS to avoid issues if you have it. !!!!
# !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

# Install Handheld Daemon to ~/.local/share/hhd
mkdir -p ~/.local/share/hhd && cd ~/.local/share/hhd

python -m venv --system-site-packages venv
source venv/bin/activate
pip install --upgrade hhd
# Substitute with the following to pull from github (may not always work)
# pip install git+https://github.com/hhd-dev/hhd

# Install udev rules and create a service file
sudo curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/hhd-dev/hhd/master/usr/lib/udev/rules.d/83-hhd.rules -o /etc/udev/rules.d/83-hhd.rules
sudo curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/hhd-dev/hhd/master/usr/lib/systemd/system/hhd_local%40.service -o /etc/systemd/system/hhd_local@.service

# Start service and reboot
sudo systemctl enable hhd_local@$(whoami)
sudo reboot

Update Instructions

Of course, you will want to update Handheld Daemon to catch up to latest features. You can either use the commands below or press Update (Stable) in one of the UIs (which runs these commands).

sudo systemctl stop hhd_local@$(whoami)
~/.local/share/hhd/venv/bin/pip install --upgrade hhd
sudo systemctl start hhd_local@$(whoami)

Uninstall instructions

To uninstall, simply stop the service and remove the added files.

sudo systemctl disable hhd_local@$(whoami)
sudo systemctl stop hhd_local@$(whoami)
rm -rf ~/.local/share/hhd
sudo rm /etc/udev/rules.d/83-hhd.rules
sudo rm /etc/systemd/system/hhd_local@.service
# Delete your configuration
rm -r ~/.config/hhd

Common Issues with Install

Missing Python Evdev

In case you have installation issues, you might be missing the package python-evdev. You can either install it as part of your distribution (included by Nobara and ChimeraOS) or automatically through pip with the commands above. However, installing this package through pip requires base-devel on Arch and python-devel on Nobara.

# Nobara/Fedora
sudo dnf install python-evdev
# Arch based distros (included by ChimeraOs)
sudo pacman -S python-evdev

# OR

# (nobara) Install Python Headers since evdev has no wheels
# and nobara does not ship them (but arch does)
sudo dnf install python-devel
# (Chimera, Arch) In case you dont have gcc.
sudo pacman -S base-devel

Having HandyGCCS Installed

If your distro ships with HandyGCCS Handheld Daemon will not work, you have to uninstall it.

# ChimeraOS
sudo frzr-unlock
sudo systemctl disable --now handycon.service
sudo pacman -R handygccs-git

# Nobara
sudo systemctl disable --now handycon.service
sudo dnf remove handygccs-git # (verify ?)

❄️ NixOS (experimental)

Update the nixpkgs.url input in your flake to point at the PR branch:

  inputs = {
    nixpkgs.url = "github:appsforartists/nixpkgs/handheld-daemon";

and add this line to your configuration.nix:

  services.handheldDaemon.enable = true;

Distribution Installation (not recommended)

You can install Handheld Daemon from AUR (Arch) or COPR (Fedora). Both update automatically every time there is a new release.

But, the auto-updater will not work, which is an important feature with devices without a keyboard.

# Arch
yay -S hhd

# Fedora
sudo dnf copr enable hhd-dev/hhd
sudo dnf install hhd

# Enable and reboot
sudo systemctl enable hhd@$(whoami)
sudo reboot

In case you do not want to reboot.

# Reload Handheld Daemon's udev rules
sudo udevadm control --reload-rules && sudo udevadm trigger
# Restart iio-proxy-service to stop it
# from polling the accelerometer
sudo systemctl restart iio-sensor-proxy
# Start the service for your user
sudo systemctl start hhd@$(whoami)

Configuration

UI Based

Go to hhd.dev and enter your device token (~/.config/hhd/token). That is it! You can also install the Electron version (hhd-ui) to use completely offline or as an app (updating it has to be done manually for now).

Using Decky

If you have decky installed, you can use the following command to install the Handheld Daemon decky plugin (visit hhd-decky for details).

curl -L https://github.com/hhd-dev/hhd-decky/raw/main/install.sh | sh

Then, just open up steam.

File based

The reason you added your username to the hhd service was to bind the hhd daemon to your user.

This allows Handheld Daemon to add configuration files with appropriate permissions to your user, in the following directory:

~/.config/hhd

The global configuration for HHD is found in:

~/.config/hhd/state.yml

You can modify it and it will hot-reload upon saving.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

What does the current version of HHD do?

The current version of HHD maps the x-input mode of the Legion Go controllers to a DualSense 5 Edge controller, which allows using all of the controller functions. In addition, it adds support for the Steam powerbutton action, so you get a wink when going to sleep mode.

When the controllers are not in x-input mode, HHD adds a shortcuts device so that combos such as Steam and QAM keep working.

Steam reports a Legion Controller and a Shortcuts controller instead of a PS5

The Legion controllers have multiple modes (namely x-input, d-input, dual d-input, and FPS). HHD only remaps the x-input mode of the controllers. You can cycle through the modes with Legion L + RB.

X-input and d-input refer to the protocol the controllers operate in. Both are legacy protocols introduced in the mid-2000s and are included for hardware support reasons.

X-input is a USB controller protocol introduced with the xbox 360 controller and is widely supported. Direct input is a competing protocol that works based on USB HID. Both work the same. The only difference between them is that d-input has discrete triggers for some reason, and some games read the button order wrong.

X-input requires a special udev rule to work, see below.

Other gamepad modes

HHD remaps the x-input mode of the Legion Go controllers into a PS5 controller. All other modes function as normal. In addition, HHD adds a shortcuts device that allows remapping the back buttons and all Legion L, R + button combinations into shortcuts that will work accross all modes.

I can not see any controllers before or after installing HHD

Your kernel needs to know to use the xpad driver for the Legion Go's controllers.

This is expected to be included in a future Linux kernel, so it is not included by default by HHD.

In the mean time, apply the patch, or add a udev rule:

/etc/udev/rules.d/95-hhd.rules

# Enable xpad for the Legion Go controllers
ATTRS{idVendor}=="17ef", ATTRS{idProduct}=="6182", RUN+="/sbin/modprobe xpad" RUN+="/bin/sh -c 'echo 17ef 6182 > /sys/bus/usb/drivers/xpad/new_id'"

You will see the following in the HHD logs (sudo systemctl status hhd@$(whoami)) if you are missing the xpad rule.

              ERROR    Device with the following not found:
                       Vendor ID: ['17ef']
                       Product ID: ['6182']
                       Name: ['Generic X-Box pad']

Yuzu does not work with the PS5 controller

See above. Use yuzu controller settings to select the DualSense controller and disable Steam Input.

Freezing Gyro

The gyro used for the PS5 controller is found in the display. It may freeze occasionally. This is due to the accelerometer driver being designed to be polled at 5hz, not 100hz. If that is the case, you need to reboot.

The gyro may exhibit stutters when being polled by iio-sensor-proxy to determine screen orientation. However, a udev rule that is installed by default disables this.

If you do not need gyro support, you should disable it for a .2% cpu utilisation reduction.

No screen autorotation after install

HHD includes a udev rule that disables screen autorotation, because it interferes with gyro support. This is only done specifically to the accelerometer of the Legion Go. If you do not need gyro, you can do the local install and modify 83-hhd.rules to remove that rule. The gyro will freeze and will be unusable after that.

Touchpad Behavior is different after install/is not part of dualsense

By default, in the Legion Go the handheld daemon uses a virtual touchpad with proper left/right clicks, which work in gamescope. If you use your device outside gamescope and find this problematic, switch Touchpad Emulation to Disabled. If you want to use your touchpad for steam input, set the option to Controller and use the Right Touchpad under steam.

HandyGCCS

HHD replicates all functionality of HandyGCCS for the Legion Go, so it is not required. In addition, it will break HHD by hiding the controller. You should uninstall it with sudo pacman -R handygccs-git.

You will see the following in the HHD logs (sudo systemctl status hhd@$(whoami)) if HandyGCCS is enabled.

              ERROR    Device with the following not found: 
                       Vendor ID: ['17ef']
                       Product ID: ['6182']
                       Name: ['Generic X-Box pad']

Buttons are mapped incorrectly

Buttons mapped in Legion Space will carry over to Linux. This includes both back buttons and legion swap. You can reset each controller by holding Legion R + RT + RB, Legion L + LT + LB. However, we do not know how to reset the Legion Space legion button swap at this point, so you need to use Legion Space for that.

Another set of obscure issues occur depending on how apps hook to the Dualsense controller. Certain versions of gamescope and certain games do not support the edge controller, so switch to Dualsense or Xbox emulation modes if you are having issues.

Disabling Dualsense touchpad

The Dualsense touchpad may interfere with games or steam input. You can disable it with the following udev rule. Place it under /etc/udev/rules.d/99-hhd-playstation-touchpad.rules

# Disables all playstation touchpads from use as touchpads.
ACTION=="add|change", KERNEL=="event[0-9]*", ATTRS{name}=="*Wireless Controller Touchpad", ENV{LIBINPUT_IGNORE_DEVICE}="1"

Contributing

Either follow Automatic Install or Manual Local Install to install the base rules. Then, clone, optionally install the userspace rules, and run.

# Clone Handheld Daemon
git clone https://github.com/hhd-dev/hhd
cd hhd
python -m venv venv
source venv/bin/activate
pip install -e .

# Install udev rules to allow running in userspace 
# optional; great for debugging
sudo curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/hhd-dev/hhd/master/usr/lib/udev/rules.d/83-hhd-user.rules -o /etc/udev/rules.d/83-hhd-user.rules
# Modprobe uhid to avoid rw errors
sudo curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/hhd-dev/hhd/master/usr/lib/modules-load.d/hhd-user.conf -o /etc/modules-load.d/hhd-user.conf

# You can now run hhd in userspace!
hhd
# Add user when running with sudo
sudo hhd --user $(whoami)

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