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wiki.mbirth.de/know-how/hardware/_posts/2009-02-10-logitech-v400.md

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---
title: Logitech V400
layout: default
created: 2009-02-09 20:24:26 +0100
updated: 2009-02-10 00:06:10 +0100
toc: false
tags:
- know-how
- hardware
- logitech
- mouse
- usb
---
![Logitech V400]({{ site.url }}/assets/logitech_v400.jpg)
* **Support:** [logitech.com](http://www.logitech.com/index.cfm/428/144&cl=us,en)
Enable all settings in SetPoint
===============================
Install [uberOptions](http://www.mstarmetro.net/~rlowens/uberOptions/) to enable ALL settings in the *Logitech SetPoint* application.
Remapping buttons in Linux
==========================
You can use the following command to remap the buttons:
xinput set-button-map <device-id> <button1> <button2> <button3> ... <buttonN>
The `<device-id>` is shown in the `xinput list` output as *Logitech USB Receiver [XExtensionPointer]* - you can use the name as a string or the id number.
You can query the actual button state using `xinput query-state <device-id>`.
The mouse has following button-ids:
| Button | ID |
|:----------------------|:--:|
| Left mouse button | 1 |
| Right mouse button | 3 |
| Wheel button | 2 |
| Wheel up | 4 |
| Wheel down | 5 |
| Wheel left | 6 |
| Wheel right | 7 |
| "Up" button | 9 |
| "Down" button | 8 |
See [remapping mouse buttons]({% post_url 2009-07-17-remapping-mouse-buttons %}) on what buttons X11 recognizes.
According to this the default configuration (`xinput set-button-map <device-id> 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9`) already gives the correct button assignment.
If you prefer to swap the thumb buttons so that "Up" is *Thumb1* and "Down" is *Thumb2* you can do this using the following command:
# input id: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
xinput set-button-map <device-id> 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 9 8