I started playing with Linux, having installed Mint (Ubuntu based, which is Debian based – for more details). Linux Mint is very user friendly (unlike Linux 15 years ago), but it does have its peculiarities (especially for us coming from decades of DOS & Windows use). One of the “problems” for me was simple mouse scroll button speed change. Here’s how I fixed that.
For solving this I used Imwheel. The procedure is relatively simple and straight forward, with a few tweaks (noted in this post). It boils down to this:
If you have any questions (or additions and corrections), please use the BikeGremlin forum:
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1. Installing Imwheel
You can open Software Manager, search for “Imwheel”, then click “Install”, after which you will be asked to enter your root password and that’s it.
Of course, you could use the command prompt (CTRL+ALT+T is the keyboard shortcut, not WIN+R – note to self 🙂 ). Imwheel is installed using the following command (you will be prompted for a root password after pressing Enter):
sudo apt-get install imwheel
If all went well, you will see something like this:
2. Configuring Imwheel
Configuration boils down to creating a .sh file with an appropriate code, then running it. I did it the following way:
I created an “Utils” directory in my “Home” directory (that is “/home/relja/Utils”). Of course, you can put the file anywhere you want.
Then I opened a text editor, copied the needed code (found at this page – thank you) and saved it as “mouse.sh” – you can name it however you like, as long as you know the file name and directory where it’s saved at.
Needed file contents:
#!/bin/bash
# Version 0.1 Tuesday, 07 May 2013
# Comments and complaints http://www.nicknorton.net
# GUI for mouse wheel speed using imwheel in Gnome
# imwheel needs to be installed for this script to work
# sudo apt-get install imwheel
# Pretty much hard wired to only use a mouse with
# left, right and wheel in the middle.
# If you have a mouse with complications or special needs,
# use the command xev to find what your wheel does.
#
### see if imwheel config exists, if not create it ###
if [ ! -f ~/.imwheelrc ]
then
cat >~/.imwheelrc<<EOF
".*"
None, Up, Button4, 1
None, Down, Button5, 1
Control_L, Up, Control_L|Button4
Control_L, Down, Control_L|Button5
Shift_L, Up, Shift_L|Button4
Shift_L, Down, Shift_L|Button5
EOF
fi
##########################################################
CURRENT_VALUE=$(awk -F 'Button4,' '{print $2}' ~/.imwheelrc)
NEW_VALUE=$(zenity --scale --window-icon=info --ok-label=Apply --title="Wheelies" --text "Mouse wheel speed:" --min-value=1 --max-value=100 --value="$CURRENT_VALUE" --step 1)
if [ "$NEW_VALUE" == "" ];
then exit 0
fi
sed -i "s/\($TARGET_KEY *Button4, *\).*/\1$NEW_VALUE/" ~/.imwheelrc # find the string Button4, and write new value.
sed -i "s/\($TARGET_KEY *Button5, *\).*/\1$NEW_VALUE/" ~/.imwheelrc # find the string Button5, and write new value.
cat ~/.imwheelrc
imwheel -kill
Update:
WordPress’s front end messes up the code, replacing two “minus signs” with a long dash. So, I’ve made a simple downloadable mouse-sh.zip file if it helps:
https://files.bikegremlin.com/downloads/mouse-sh.zip
Then, in the command prompt, go to the directory and run the file. Before running the script, you must give it the execution rights using the command “chmod +x” In my case:
cd /home/relja/Utils
chmod +x mouse.sh
./mouse.sh
Here’s how it looks like on screen, you’ll get to set mouse scroll speed:
I chose 3. After clicking at “Apply”, you’ll see something like this:
If you aren’t happy with the newly set mouse scroll speed, just run the “mouse.sh” again, as expained in picture 5.
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3. Configuring Imwheel to run after each restart
For this I used “Startup Applications”.
On the next screen click the ” + ” sign and choose “Custom command” option.
The last step is shown and explained in the picture 9:
You can try restarting the computer, to make sure mouse scroll speed is still working properly.
Troubleshooting
As Alex added in the comment section, there can be a problem with the functioning of extra mouse buttons (with some mouses that have extra buttons, in addition to the standard two and the wheel). The solution is limiting imwheel to the scroll only (wheel up: 4, and wheel down: 5). For Linux Mint, it is the following command:
imwheel -b "4 5"
“-b” is the switch that basically says “deal only with the listed buttons”. This can also be added to the command line – (2) in picture 9.
For more details (manual), type this in the command prompt:
man imwheel
If you have any questions (or additions and corrections), please use the BikeGremlin forum:
www.bikegremlin.net
The BikeGremlin forum page for comments regarding this article:
https://www.bikegremlin.net/threads/altering-mouse-scroll-speed-in-linux-article-comments.97/
Is Imwheel still up-to-date?
You will find a couple of alternative options here: https://askubuntu.com/questions/285689/increase-mouse-wheel-scroll-speed/
I implemented an own small script which also supports mouse scroll wheel acceleration. It’s a simple Python script which you can just run in the background.
https://github.com/albertz/mouse-scroll-wheel-acceleration-userspace
Don’t know about imwheel being up-to-date, but it still works fine on several computers I had set it up on.
Thanks for the links. 🙂
Still works for me in 2021, I hope this feature will be integrated in Wayland soon!
Thank you very much
Nice “how to guide” Relja!! This has been bugging me for so long. Works a treat on Ubuntu 20.04 LTS with my Logitech M525 mouse. Fastest scolling ever. I love it!
Thanks for the feedback, Jamie. 🙂
It worked perfect for me. Thanks for the tutorial.
Tested this on Zorin OS. Works like a charm.
Many thanks to Relja for sharing this with us!
Hi Bogdan,
You’re welcome, glad it could help. 🙂
Thanks for the feedback regarding Zorin OS distro.