A guide to creating layouts

This guide is based on the original Kareema’s forum post.

A lot of information can be found in this thread.

Comments and corrections welcome.

Creating a new layout

Creating a layout is easy. You do not need to recompile things, just edit and test. It is easiest to start with an existing layout, with the layouts documentation at hand.

Get one of the existing keyboard layouts

Creating the keyboard layout

  • To be written: For the time being, take a look at Using non-latin language on Librem 5

  • Select and enable the input source you would like to change from the Region & Language section of the device settings. Perhaps use “A user-defined custom layout” listed under Other.

  • Find the correct name of the .yaml file associated with that input source. This can be found with the command

$ gsettings get org.gnome.desktop.input-sources sources

The output should be something like this: [('xkb', 'us'), ('xkb', 'de')] So for example “de.yaml” would be the correct name for the German keyboard layout. If the name of your layout is not translated correctly in the list, you can fix it by adding it and recompiling Squeekboard.

There is also associated files for that layout in landscape, terminal, number, emoji mode. They can be found at something analogous to us_wide.yaml, terminal/us.yaml, number/us.yaml, emoji/us.yaml, respectively.

Testing the layout

Copy your yaml file to ~/.local/share/squeekboard/keyboards/ for testing purposes. From there it should get picked up by squeekboard automatically. The yaml file will overwrite the default settings for that layout. If you want to go back to default, simply remove the file.

You can also use the test_layout tool from the -devel package to check it for errors:

$ squeekboard_test_layout ./mylayout.yaml
Test result: OK

Contributing your changes

If you want to share your layout with the world, the best way is to submit it to the Squeekboard project. The workflow is similar to any other GitLab-based project.

Above all, your layout should be working, be tested, not break anything, and make sense.

Fork your own copy of squeekboard

  • Best way would be to start with a fork of the squeekboard repository: Create a user account at https://gitlab.gnome.org/, go the the squeekboard git repository, press “Fork” in the web interface. You can find further instructions here.

  • Clone your fork locally with git clone and use the uri of your forked repo there

Edit your keyboard and get it merged

  • It may be useful to check out the generic guide how the workflow to contribute works

  • Create a branch: Name it “keyboard-layout-mylanguage” or whatever

  • Checkout your branch, edit your keyboard layout and commit your changes

  • Your layout must be correctly named, and in data/keyboards/.

  • Your layout must pass the test_layout tool with zero problems.

  • Your layout must be added to automatic tests. Remember to add the layout to src/resources.rs and tests/meson.build.

Get it merged

It’s always recommended to compile and run squeekboard before submitting your changes. This serves as a test that all is working. See instructions in the compiling section.

  • Push the local changes (to the branch of your fork of squeekboard)

  • Create a merge request for the branch to get your changes merged to the official squeekboard git repository

If your changes pass automated tests (CI), then the merge request will be reviewed by the maintainers, and you might be asked to change a thing or two.

Compiling and running Squeekboard

If you want your change to become part of official Squeekboard, or if you want to add a translation of your layout name, you will have to recompile Squeekboard and test your changes there.

Compile squeekboard

  • Follow the instructions found in “Building” section of the squeekboard’s README: Running squeekboard: README.md#building

Run squeekboard

  • Follow these instructions to run squeekboard: README.md#running

  • Additionally take a look at the contribution document for testing info

  • You can either test it locally on your Linux system or use the QEMU Librem 5 image

  • To test squeekboard locally, you need phoc. Either install it from a package for your distribution, for example with sudo apt install phoc for Debian based distributions, or compile it from the sources.